Newsroom: (541) 346-5511 Room 300, Erb Memorial Union PO. Box 3159, Eugene, OR 97403 E-mail: editor@dailyemeralcl.com Online Edition: www.dailyemerald.com ' Editor in Chief: Jessica Blanchard Managing Editor: Michael J. Kleckner Editorial Editor: Julie Lauderbaugh Assistant Editorial Editor: Jacquelyn Lewis Monday, November 19,2001 Editorial Act of discrimination brings up question An unfortunate event occurred on Thursday night when Emerald reporters attempted to attend a news briefing for local media at McKenzie Willamette Hospital. Our student journalists were dis criminated against because of their casual appearance and lack o f paperwork. After it was confirmed that Emeritus Physics Professor Bernd Crasemann and his assistant opened an envelope with a granular substance and feared they may have been exposed to anthrax, an unidentified University employee checked himself into the hospital. The employee was scared that he had come into contact with the biological agent while handling the suspicious letter. The magnitude of this incident prompted the Emerald to send reporters and photographers to the hospital for a media briefing to discuss the situation. Many other local news reporters were present to hear what hospital spokes people had to say. However, Emerald reporters were not ; immediately allowed into the conference because they apparently didn’t look like “real” journalists and did not have “press passes.” Hospital workers and security team members further complicated the situation by shuffling our news team back and forth between hospital entrances four times. They were told to go to the different entrances for the briefing, and wasted more than 30 minutes searching for a viable entrance. Finally, after the conference was virtually over and oth er members of the press (notably television news crews) were leaving to prepare their stories, security let the Emer ald reporters inside. After more than half an hour of cut ting through red tape, our reporters were able to question Tom Hambly, McKenzie-Willamette’s manager of emer gency services. Luckily, Hambly realized the importance of getting news to University students and granted us an interview. Getting accurate, thorough and balanced news to stu dents is the Emerald’s primary concern, especially when an event such as this happens on campus. But more importantly, the incident raises serious ques tions: Who determines what a “legitimate” reporter looks like or what a “legitimate” news organization is? Who is sues press passes? If those who issue the passes don’t like the way a news organization covers a story, can they re voke the passes? These issues are being discussed by the Eugene Police De partment, which has formed a committee to look into media | access issues. Right now, the committee is seeking input on an identification policy that would require members of the media to provide credentials to gain access to events. Credentials or not, members of the media need access to sources in order to inform the public. The Emerald re porters were trying to do just this, and they showed identi fication and told the security guards the name of the hos pital’s spokesperson, who they had been instructed to ask for when they arrived. The hospital should apologize for the embarrassing incident. More weeks = more education In case you haven't figured it out yet, students at the University question ably enjoy a quarter-based educa tional system. Three times a year, 10 weeks at a time, we drag ourselves through the mud of an academic rut. Every term it is the same old thing. For the first and last weeks, you basi cally do nothing. Weeks four and five quickly arrive — along with the midterms. Pretty soon it is week eight, and you have finally just started to un derstand the underlying theme of the course. By this point, you see the light at the end of the tunnel, and the words “getting a good grade” are replaced with “just hoping to pass.” The quarter system does have some advantages. While all your high school bud dies are heading back to their se mester schools, you are sitting back enjoying the wonderful days of a late Oregon summer. Students in a quarter sys tem get the oppor tunity to take 50 percent more classes than our semester counterparts. This adds variety and more room for those classes we really want to take. The quarter system also makes the tor ment of having to take a required math class at a liberal arts college much less painful. Proponents of the quarter system also argue that students can graduate in a shorter amount of time. This is fine for those who are going to college to simply get their credentials, but some students are here for much more. If you are attending college for its original purpose of gaining knowledge, then the semester system is much more learning-based. Switching to a semes ter system would provide us all the op portunity to obtain a higher quality ed ucation. We could complete an assignment, receive it back and actual ly have a chance to learn from our mis takes before the next assignment is due. Most classes in the quarter system produce a measure of a student's per formance entirely too late for it to be corrected. This isn't an excuse for lazi Oliver Columnist Peter lltsey Emerald ness, but a rational observation that a quarter system is a barrier to the actual process of learning. Being a college student in today's world is much different than in the past. Students must manage a full load of classes, a part-time or sometimes full-time job and — they hope — with the time left, a social life. In the quarter system, if you have to work the night shift the day before a quiz and do poor ly, it will haunt you for the rest of the term. The semester system should not be implemented just so we can all spend more weeknights at the bars, but we must be realistic and understand that college is much more than just quizzes, papers and midterms. Fifteen weeks of school gives stu dents more time to take in the informa tion, analyze it and then finally under stand it. It is also a good idea for stu dents at a research university to actually have time to do research. Time, though, is at the top of every col lege student's wish list, and the quarter system just makes it even worse. The bottom line is the quarter sys tem pumps students through like a fac tory with a bad product. The Universi ty needs to follow the lead of the nation's top universities and transition into a semester system for its own good — as well as its students. Jeff Oliver is a columnist for the Oregon Daily Emerald. His opinions do not necessarily reflect those of the Emerald. He can be reached at jeffoliver@dailyemerald.com. Letters to the editor Radical Arabs threaten Israel Pat Payne is correct in pointing out the relationship between Nazis and Arab extremists, but he does not go far enough back in history (“End home grown terrorism,” ODE, 11/06). In fact, a number of Arab leaders, most notably the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, were no torious Nazi sympathizers during World War II. The Grand Mufti did everything within his power to make it impossible for the Jews and Arabs of Palestine to live in peace, agitating Arab attacks on the Jewish inhabitants who lived in the region or immigrated there upon their release from the Nazi concentration camps. These attacks were a major cause of the United Nations’ partition of Palestine that resulted in the creation of the state of Israel. This legacy of anti-Jewish racism has persisted among the radical Arabs to the present day and is one major reason why Israel cannot put its own security at risk. They are living among a sea of people who will not be satisfied until Israel is obliterated. Geoff Cooper law student Right against rights In response to Attorney General John Ashcroft’s order to take action against Oregon doctors who prescribe lethal drugs for terminally ill patients: I just love how Republicans support states’ rights, except when they don’t like what the states are doing. Chuck Slothower freshman pre-journalism Stein for governor Only one candidate for governor has taken a stand against the crippling rate increases approved by the state Public Utility Commission. It was Beverly Stein. She demanded that the commis sion demonstrate some leadership by rolling back rate hikes. It’s not the first time that Bev Stein has stood up to the PUC. In the late 1970s, she sued the PUC on behalf of senior citizens and was successful in postponing a rate increase. Stein is one candidate demonstrating leadership in this time of economic cri sis. We’re already in a recession, and increases in the cost of living and natu ral gas when we’re already in a reces sion will absolutely cripple some man ufacturing companies. I wonder where the other candidates are on this issue. That’s only one of the many reasons I’m supporting Stein for governor. Arnold H. Ismach emeritus professor of journalism University of Oregon Poll Results Every week, the Emerald prints the results of our online poll and the poll question for next week. The pol I can be accessed from the main page of our Web site, www.dalfyemerald.com, We encourage you to send us feedback about the poll questions and results. Last week’s poll question: Do you agree with Oregon’s assisted suicide faw? Results: 88 total votes Yes — 65 votes, or 73,9 percent No — 22 votes, or 25.0 percent Don't know — 1 vote, or 11 percent The results speak for themselves; Oregonians voted for choice. This week’s poll Question: What is your favorite aspect of Thanksgiving break? The choices; Food Football Pilgrims No class Don't know