Newsroom: (541) 346-5511 Room 3po, Erb Memorial Union PO. Box 3159, Eugene, OR 97403 E-mail: editor@dailyemerald.com Online Edition: www.dailyemerald.com Tuesday, January 29,2002 Editor in Chief: Jessica Blanchard Managing Editor: Jeremy Lang Editorial Editor: Julie Lauderbaugh Assistant Editorial Editor: Jacquelyn Lewis Editorial University must stay out of users’ personal files University students, staff and faculty should be aware that the school’s serv er monitoring is infringing on individ uals’ rights to privacy. Nothing protects users from having the personal files they transfer on University servers examined on suspicion of illegal activity. The way the University’s “Acceptable Use Policy” operates now does not protect students from privacy invasion, and a new policy is in order that specifically addresses users’ rights. A draft policy is currently waiting for ap proval by University general counsel Melinda Grier, but Grier has been remarkably tight lipped about the policy’s progress. When considering the proposed policy, Grier should take a cue from the University of California system. Those schools operate un der a policy that disallows examination of campus network users’ files without consent of the user. Exceptions are made only in emergency situations when there is a threat to person or property, or when there is con crete evidence a law has been violated. The University of California schools have shown through the implementation of this policy that they respect the privacy of their students instead of restricting what students can and cannot download. The University of Oregon should be protecting students from privacy violations in the same vein. Students and faculty should be treated as adults and trusted to use the University’s server respon sibly. Otherwise, students are forced to cen sor themselves in order to avoid raising sus picion among bandwidth monitors. University of Oregon computer use moni tors have every right to observe account users who are using excessive bandwidth, because those people are detracting from server avail ability. However, monitoring bandwidth us age is different from taking the extra step of checking a user’s hard drive and potentially invading their privacy — a distinction that needs to be clarified in the University of Ore gon’s new privacy policy. Privacy is an issue that affects everyone on campus, especially those who have no choice but to use the University’s server. Action on the current draft policy needs to be taken immediately to ensure the privacy of users. Searching personal files is ethically unacceptable, and students, staff and faculty should be protected from University-led privacy invasions. Editorial Policy This editorial represents the opinion ot the Emerald editorial board. Responses can be sent to letters@dailyemerald.com. Letters to the editor and guest commentaries are encouraged. Letters are limited to 250 words and guest commentaries to 550 words. Please include contact information. The Emerald reserves the right to edit for space, grammar and style. So YsfoetaY it hurts I was just reading up on John Walker Lindh, the “American Taliban,” and I must say I am morally perplexed. How does one pass judgment on such an individual? Aaron Rorick Columnist The real story of little Johnny Walker (Lindh is his father’s name; he evidently prefers his mother’s) began in 1997, when, at age 16, he sold his hip-hop col lection and converted to Islam. It’s hard to fault him here. When I was 16,1 con verted to agnosticism. A friend of mine became a Taoist and another a Pente costal, of all things. Still another “con verted” from punk rock to techno. My point is this: 16-year-olds are freaking crazy. We all went through drastic changes in those years. Most of us were lucky enough not to have ex-hippie, so-liberal it-hurts parents will ing to support and _ fund our radical ten dencies. My mother sure as heck wasn’t sending me off to agnostic camp in Sweden, or wherever agnostics come from. But Walker’s parents were different. Only a year after his conversion, they sent him to Yemen so he could learn the archa ic form of Arabic spoken there, the form closest to the original language of the Ko ran. He came home for a while, then went back to Yemen and on to Pakistan. In 2000, about six months before his capture, he made his way to Afghanistan. One report says he was given the choice, upon completing his military training, of either becoming an al-Qaida fighter or a Taliban warrior. He chose the Taliban because of that govern ment’s immersion in Islamic law. An other report says Walker claimed, dur ing his imprisonment, that he was indeed affiliated with al-Qaida. Neither is verifiable, as far as I can tell. But at the time of his capture, he was only a lowly Taliban foot soldier. Steve Baggs Emerald Does this make him a traitor? When he joined the Taliban, they were not our enemies. He did not sign on for a war against America. And when that war came, what was he to do? Respectfully resign his commission? “Hey, Ahkmed, I’m afraid this whole thing with the United States is a bit of a conflict of interest for me. If I could just pack up my stuff and be on my way... I’m sure you understand.” I’m not positive, but I believe our Army can still shoot deserters on sight if they like. I doubt the Taliban was any less stringent. Then what was John Walker’s crime? Choosing a way of life fundamentally op posed to our own? If this is treasonous be havior, half of Eugene should be behind bars. Was participating in the prison upris ing at Mazar-e Sharif a crime worthy of Q&py American died, and no one /jjT claims Walker killed him. He jg/ did what everyone else does in a riot — go with the flow and f punishment? Only one try not to get shot or trampled to death — and he was shot in the leg. After careful analysis, I must say Walker is on trial for his political and social beliefs, nothing more. But still, part of me wants to condemn him. He chose to participate in a govern ment that routinely brutalized its citizens, shot women for going to school or work and beat people for watching television or listening to music, according to pundits on the news shows. He made himself into an oppressor, so it is somewhat poetic jus tice that his rights as a free-thinking American are being oppressed. Walker shunned modem American lib erties, abandoned them for medieval fun damentalism, so why should he have them now? At the same time, tolerance for differing viewpoints, even those as despi cable as the ones adopted by Walker, is an essential part of the American ideal. E-mail columnist Aaron Rorick ataaronrorick@dailyemerald.com. His opinions do not necessarily reflect those of the Emerald. The multi-tongued have the edge In an Emerald editorial published Jan. 17 (“No, Non, Nein; In any tongue, ‘no’ to language requirement”), the editori al board argued that the University’s for eign language requirement for students pursuing a bachelor of arts was, for a ma jority of students, “nothing more than a bother.” I would like to take the opportu nity to present the other side of the issue. While the University has an obligation to prepare its graduates professionally, it has an equally important obligation to do so scholastically. Language is a way of accomplishing both goals. The fact of the matter is foreign lan guages constitute an important part of most universities’ liberal arts curricula. The editorial board suggested language study be required only of students who felt a genuine need or interest in learning a foreign language in college, such as business or journalism majors. These majors can certainly benefit from foreign languages, but why stop there? All students stand to benefit from a second language. Even if few people make careers solely out of their abilities in other languages, this background can certainly give you an edge in your field — as well as the job market. Going into business? Try Japanese or Mandarin CfijnqsexI^ucation? We desperately Guest Commentary Mike Turay need bilingual teachers in our public schools. Psychology? Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung are better in German. Art? Appreciate it more with French or Ital ian. Social work? Everything from Spanish to Somali would be useful. Science? Russian was the language of an incredible amount of scientific re search done in the last century. When looking for jobs after college, a second language can give you an edge over your equally qualified — but monolin gual — competition. No academic discipline can claim to have its body of knowledge discovered, researched and categorized solely in Eng lish, even if the English language and its literature are avidly studied and written about in hundreds of other languages. To deliberately limit yourself to Eng lish is to practice a form of linguistic iso lationism, which is out of step with 21st century realities. It demonstrates poor scholarship on the part of a serious stu dent by refusal of access to a larger share of the world’s common body of knowl edge, particularly when it comes to majors and fields of expertise. English is the world’s most widely spoken language. It’s easy to fall into the trap of thinking that this makes learning other languages nothing more than a tedious academic exercise. This is an attitude to be resisted when the world’s peoples and societies are be coming more interconnected — and in terdependent — at a rate unprecedent ed in human history. Foreign languages are more than sets of strange vocabu lary, senseless grammar and frustrating irregular verbs; they are windows into the physical and cultural worlds which their speakers inhabit. Without making an effort to step into the mindsets of other peoples, you end up with a limit ed, distorted view of your own. By taking the time to acquire even only a working knowledge of another language — especially one relevant to your field of study — you’re able to become a more well-rounded student, develop a clearer picture of the people and societies which use that language, and add to your resume what can be a very valuable skill in to day’s tighter job market. Mike Turay graduated from Portland State University in 2000.