Newsroom: (541) 346-5511 Room 300, Erb Memorial Union PO. Box 3159, Eugene, OR 97403 E-mail: editor@dailyemerald.com Online Edition: www dailyetnerald.com Fridayjanuary 18,2002 Editor in Chief: Jessica Blanchard Managing Editor: Jeremy Lang Editorial Editor: Julie Lauderbaugh Assistant Editorial Editor: Jacquelyn Lewis Yesteryear’s Editorial Development ofpersonality £ { ^ olleges, by reason of the present-day sys I tem of education, turn out types rather V^_Jthan personalities. Their graduates are the product of large-scale production, a condition which has arisen out of the attempt on the part of educational institutions to absorb the heteroge neous mass which yearly comes to them in in creasing bulk for higher education.” This is the in dictment against American colleges by a writer in a recent issue of the Daily Iowan. This is by no means the first expression of opin ion that colleges and universities are failing to turn out personalities. That the student who comes to col lege with a spark of genius is soon molded into the conven tional type has been the con tention of a certain class of writers for years. Without a doubt the influ ence is toward the subordina tion of individuality, and with the ever-growing pro portion between the number of instructors and the number of students there seems to be little opportunity for remedying the condition. There are other con tributing factors, othdr than large classes, howev er, which might continue to exist even if that con dition were remedied. University of Oregon 125th ANNIVERSARY Originally published on January 18,1923 If the college student has aggressiveness he can preserve his own personality. Although the sys tem tends to develop him along conventional lines, he will not be transformed into a “type” un less he is passive. Of all American institutions the college should be the first to teach citizens to think. Yet there is the same criticism against college students on this score as against the mass of American people. It is not unreasonable to think that Edison’s statement that only two percent of the population ever really thinks is not far amiss for those registered in col leges and schools of higher learning. If students will come to college with an air of agreeable aggressiveness, institutions will be in a better way to teach them to think. And when stu dents learn to think, personalities rather than types will be developed. Mental stagnation and passiveness are the undoing of higher education in America. Until students learn to fight their own battles the contentions of the critics will go unanswered. Editor’s note: This editorial was taken from the fan. 18, 1923 edition of the Oregon Daily Emerald. Letters to the Editor and Guest Commentaries Policy Letters to the editor and guest commentaries are sncourapd. Letters are limited io 250 words and guest commentaries to 550 words. Please include contact information. The Emerald reserves the rightto edit tor space, grammar and style. Iditorial Board Member Jessica Blanchard editor In chief Jeremy Lang managing editor Goida Portillo community representative Julie Lauderbaugh editorial editor Jacquelyn Lewis assistant eoitorial editor Patricia Hachlen community representative LeonTovey newsroom representative Peter Utsey Emerald The president’s J)VCtZCl logic Last weekend, President George W. Bush fainted and fell from a couch after choking on a pretzel while watching a football game. The president reportedly cut his face and bruised his lip when he fell to the floor and now sports an inflamed bruise on his left cheek. The Emerald editorial board felt like being conspir acy theorists this week, and created the top five “real” causes behind the pretzel debacle: 0 The President is seriously ill. In August, Bush had three “sun-in duced” lesions removed from his face because they were potentially cancer causing. Now Bush has another le sion on his cheek. Is this a coinci dence? We think not. 0 Buddy, the Clintons’ recently-de ceased First Dog, has come back to haunt the Bush family. Buddy was killed by a car Jan. 2 in New York and may have returned to the White House to wreak havoc in his old “haunting” grounds. ° Kenneth Lay, Enron Corp.’s chair man, is upset about the way the com pany’s scandal has been covered in the media, and is out to divert atten tion from himself by creating specula tion about Bush’s health. ° Bush received “subliminable” messages that said punching himself would be good “strategery.” ° First Lady Laura Bush got mad because he was watching football in stead of paying attention to her, and socked him. Editor’s note: All of these conspira cies were created in good humor and are not meant to be taken seriously. Letters to the editor Erb Essentials is blowing smoke Unlike the University Bookstore and Lane Com munity College’s bookstore, some members of the EMU Board of Directors appear indifferent to im portant ethical issues associated with selling to bacco. Instead, revenue was cited as reason enough to continue selling tobacco in Erb Essentials. Given that University Bookstore tobacco sales were less than 1 percent of total annual sales, the decision to discontinue was apparently less diffi cult than the one before the EMU Board of Direc tors. However, appearances can be deceptive. Profits from the convenience store support EMU programs, but the $30,000 generated last year in profits from tobacco sales equates to a tiny percent of total EMU income. In addition, with record stu dent enrollment, the EMU should be benefiting from increased consumption and incidental fees. The University finds itself in an increasing mi nority. The majority of Pacific-10 Conference schools don’t sell tobacco, including the Universi ty of Washington, which recently discontinued to bacco sales in three campus outlets, even though they faced losses similar to the University. Similar events have taken place at other colleges. Tobacco is responsible for more suffering and death than all other legal and illegal substances combined. A decision on campus tobacco sales should’ve been about severing ties with an inhei ently unethical industry and establishing an envi ronment for students that discourages harmful tobacco use. It’s a shame the EMU Board chose to ignore stu dent health in favor of a small share in tobacco in dustry profits. Julia Martin Eugene Puck you I found Hank Hager's piece (“U.S. hockey team hopes win will unite America,” ODE, 1/15) both ridiculous and sexist. Hager states that “the actions of September have magnified what the men of the United States do in February.” He didn’t mention that the United States won the first ever gold medal in women’s hockey in 1998. The U.S. men's hockey team, how ever, has represented the absolute worst in sports manship in past Olympics, through lack of team work on the ice and poor conduct that created an inaccurate representation of the American athlete. Since when did the horrors of Sept. 11 become the backdrop for someone's “Mighty Ducks” fan tasy? The murder of thousands of American citi zens created a wound on the soul of our country — a wound that can't be healed with something as mi nuscule as a sporting event victory. I suggest Hager choose his words carefully, and pick his sports heroes with even greater caution. RaecheIM.Sims junior journalism, women’s studies ©the story ■ % j about the of the Indian Subcontinent ("Conflict and the art of communication" ODE, 1/17), the caption that ran with the photo || was incorrect. The Students of the Indian Subcontinent wifi not be celebrating ^ Diwali on Saturday in Agate Hall. The Emerald regrets the error.