Newsroom: (541) 346-5511 Room 300, Erb Memorial Union PO. Box 3159, Eugene, OR 97403 E-mail: editor@dailyemerald.com Online Edition: www.dailyemerald.com Oregon Daily Emerald Editor in Chief: Jessica Blanchard Managing Editor: Jeremy Lang Editorial Editor: Julie Lauderbaugh Assistant Editorial Editor: Jacquelyn Lewis Thursday, January 24,2002 Editorial Student committee surprisingly powerful The Student Health Advisory Com mittee doesn’t have the same prominence as student/faculty boards for the Athletic Department or University administrative issues. But with the resignation of University Health Center Director Dr. Gerald Fleischli, the committee now will play a vital role — finding a new director. Hiring a new director will display SHAC’s important power sharing. Students serving on the board offer their opinions on how the health center is run. They will de cide whether the new director should have a stronger background as a doctor or an ad ministrator. SHAC members also helped with hiring the new director of nursing. Compared to other student/faculty com mittees, SHAC has considerable decision making weight. The Athletic Department student task force has yet to make any real progress or affect the decisions administra tors make. SHAC is a group where student voice has influence and a quantifiable impact on the health center’s administrative deci sions. The health center should be ap plauded for making SHAC a success, and the way the group is used should serve as a model for more University student/faculty committees. Where there’s smoke, there’s fines On Friday night, when you stop by your neighborhood bar for a drink, you might notice some thing seems a little different. The same three guys are sitting at the bar that sit there every other night, and the jukebox is still playing someone's ques tionably bad selection. But you breathe in, and it’s no longer the traditional smoky haze that leaves you smelling like an ashtray. It's clean air — at least in most Eugene bars. More than a year ago, amid an excess of media coverage and local debate, the Eugene City Council made the decision to prohibit smoking in public establish ments, effective in bars on Jan. 1, 2002. As the deadline loomed closer, many of the bars in town became construction zones as bar owners raced against the clock to finish con struction on covered smoking decks or rooms. And as we rang out 2001, we also said goodbye to smok ing in bars and hello to a smoke-free 2002. Personally, the smoke-free thing does n't seem like a hard concept. If you smoke, do it outside or in the Columnist designated areas. But several Eugene bars are claiming it's too difficult for their clientele to comprehend or for their staff to enforce. The owner of O’DonneH's Irish Pub, Shon O’Donnell, complained in a Jan. 19 Regis ter-Guard article that he’s constantly re minding patrons not to light up. And when they do? He slides them an ashtray and tells them they can't smoke in the bar. Does anyone else see this as a mixed message? Local customers know they can't smoke in restaurants and bars. With the amount of media coverage and politi cal debate that the local controversy has seen in the past year and a half, it would be hard for a recluse to claim ignorance. Yet in several bars — including O'Don nell's and Max's Tavern — bar owners are claiming that they can't seem to stop cus tomers from smoking. Of course, when you're providing ashtrays at the bar, it tends to send customers a message that doesn't exactly coincide with the new anti-smoking ban. I don't buy the excuse that it's too “tough” for bar owners and workers to “police” their customers smoking habits. It's a bar, and bartenders typically deal with bigger problems than asking a cus tomer to step outside for a smoke — such as cutting off an unruly inebriated patron or breaking up fights. They seem to do a pretty good job of announcing last call at 2 a.m. or pulling drinks at 2:15 a.m. And why? Because no bar wants to lose its liquor license for breaking laws regarding alcohol distribution. No license, no liveli hood. If they tied smoking violations to losing a liquor license, bartenders would be armed with fire extinguishers to put out “illegal” cigarettes. So why is everyone whining about be ing fined? After all, they are breaking the law. From the complaints aired in the Register-Guard article, you’d think that the Lane County Health Department is sneaking around in trench coats, peering through back windows in a sneaky effort to catch patrons with cigarettes. In reality, alleged infractions are investigated only when someone calls Lane County's no smoking complaint line. And it's those filing complaints that are telling a differ ent story than the bar owners who re ceived fines this past week. The bars that are receiving citations are breaking the law, and they are doing it on purpose. Regardless of how they are fined or who files a complaint, it doesn't change the fact that it is the bar that's breaking the law. The majority of Eugene bars are complying. What makes a handful of resisters so special? E-mail columnist Rebecca Newell at rebeccanewell@dailyemerald.com. Her opinions do not necessarily reflect those of the Emerald. Letters to the editor ‘Payne’ in the NRA In a time when it is more evident than ever that Americans must be responsible for not only their own personal safety, but for the safety of their neighbors, it’s disappointing to see the kind of prejudice and stu pidity displayed in Pat Payne’s col umn (“Bunglers can boil in their own stew,” ODE, 01/08). I’m a life member of the National Rifle Association. I’ve been a mem ber for more than 25 years. The au thor's disrespect of elected NRA President Charleton Heston is an insult to every NRA member. It was meant as an insult, and I take it as a personal and organizational insult. I voted for Mr. Heston and am proud of the job he’s doing for our association. Payne owes an apology, which I imagine he is both too arrogant and cowardly to tender. As for his con demnation of Attorney General John Ashcroft, I can only say it’s about time the United States had an attorney general who respects both the wisdom of the authors of the Constitution and the maturity of the American people. I assume Payne feels that he’s too immature to own any dangerous device and that, by extension, all people are too immature to be trust ed with them, or that only he has the native intelligence to decide what devices and technologies his fellow citizens can be trusted to own. Holding either of these beliefs should be enough of a sign of a prej udiced mind to take the credibility from any of Payne’s writing. I realize the column was intend ed to be humorous. However, cloaking purposely insulting com ments about any group of people as humor is rude and transparent. I suggest the Emerald remind Pat Payne of that fact. Glenn R. Vandergriff Centreville, Va. Bilingualism a necessity, not a nuisance The editorial on the language re quirement being a “nuisance” was extremely short-sighted (“No, Non, Nein; In any tongue, ‘no’ to lan guage requirement,” ODE, Jan. 17). Assuming one can now predict ex actly what will be of use and value in future life is extremely naive and a bit arrogant. The world doesn’t revolve around the English language. If you ever intend to successfully deal with individuals from various countries and cultures, you’ll find any language skills of value. While classrooms aren’t the “best” way to learn a language, all students can’t go to another country for immer sion learning, either. You learn things about language in a class that you’ll never learn in daily usage. I lived in Europe unexpectedly, in a country whose language I had nev er studied, yet the skills I had from Latin in elementary school (amaz ingly useful), and French in high school/college, enabled me to leam, read and speak very quickly. I was able to use everything I had learned to live there very successfully. Don’t write off any education (es pecially not anything as fundamen tal as language skills) just because your narrow focus doesn’t allow you to see the practical applicabili ty now. Life is rarely interested that you have a plan about what you will do, what your career will be. The world has a tendency to throw curveballs at you. It will amaze you how useful the things you have learned may turn out to be when you least expect it. Rand Stamm parkingAransportation manager Department of Public Safety National insecurity I hope I am not the only one to see the contradiction. President Bush builds an international coali tion to fight terrorism, which is a valuable and worthy effort by any measure. With this, Bush draws people together to dismantle the forces that endanger us all. Bush abandons international treaties on global warming, chemi cal weapons and land mines, and now he abandons a key treaty to our national security, the Antibal listic Missile Treaty. With this, Bush thumbs his nose at the con cerns of others. According to our National Academy of. Sciences,. Europe stands to become another Siberia; a global warming disaster could befall them in a decade. As sea level rises, small island nations may cease to exist. War-torn peo ples around the world are maimed and killed by abandoned land mines. By abandoning the ABM treaty, Bush can race forward with his ill conceived and useless missile de fense program, a technology whose absurdity was horribly demonstrat ed on Sept. 11. Will Russia be more willing to negotiate nuclear arms reductions? Not likely. Will China, India, Pak istan and North Korea shun nuclear weapon and missile development? It is not likely. So are we more se cure with a missile defense system? Not at all. Bush’s motivation is easy to track. The money trail leads to those who purchased his presiden cy. Bush pays his political debts with the currency of our collective security. Beyond politics and be yond arrogance, this is immoral. Eldon Haines Eugene