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 Editor in Chief: . Jessica Blanchard Managing Editor: Jeremy Lang Editorial Editor: Julie Lauderbaugh Assistant Editorial Editor: Jacquelyn Lewis Monday, February 26,2002 Editorial Fund basic repairs before purchasing new bricks The University has begun a campaign this year in hopes of raising funds to repave the intersection of 13th Avenue and University Street to celebrate the school’s 125th anniversary. The advertising campaign for the project urges donors to purchase an engraved brick or “paver” — a stone block larger than the brick — to reserve their place at the “Heart of Campus.” The Office of University Advancement is selling the bricks (which cost $125 each, in honor of the Universi ty’s anniversary year) and pavers (which are $1,876 each, the same as the University’s found ing year) to honor their achievements and create a permanent legacy for themselves. What was the University thinking? Beautifica tion of campus is important, but the school is fac ing a multimillion-dollar deficit and some build ings and programs are falling apart at the seams because the University has lacked the funding to do even the most basic repairs and maintenance. How logical is it to ask potential donors to pony up for a campus beautification project when the school could benefit far more from soliciting do nations in other areas? Fundraisers would make a bigger impact on students by seeking donations for academic programs or scholarships, or build ing construction or remodels — far more practical causes than lining the streets outside the Erb Memorial Union with attractive bricks. Brick and paver buyers would fare better by creating a permanent legacy by contributing to ac ademic research, scholarships or athletics. Cer tainly the repaving would be more aesthetically pleasing, but it is hard to believe that this particu lar project will create more of a “Heart of Campus” than what already exists. There are a number of improvement projects around campus that could make better use of hefty donations instead of bricks and pavers in front of the EMU. Editorial Policy editorial board. Responses can be sent to letters@daiiyemeraid.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 rigntto edit for space, grammar and style. ‘Iron Mike’fits boxing to a T’ C C T ron Mike” Tyson is I back in the news, in .Lease you’ve been hid ing under a rock for the past month or you’re not into sports. Undisputed World Heavyweight Champion Lennox Lewis finally bit the bullet and agreed to fight Tyson on April 6 in Las Ve gas, a break Tyson has been itching for since Lewis first won the title. Then, just when his sagging career was fac ing possi ble re vival, Tyson mucked things up by attacking Lewis’ en tourage at a press conference last month. Nevada’s boxing commis sion quickly denied Tyson’s request for a license in a 4-1 decision. “I am a human be ing,” Tyson was quoted as saying to the commissioners, “but I haven’t been treated that way. I haven’t been writ ten that way.” He then demonstrated his humanity by going out to the parking lot and publicly calling Lewis a coward. “I’m going to fight him anytime I see him in the streets,” he said. Human being Mike Tyson has served three years in prison for sexual assault and one year for “road rage” as sault. He also was suspend ed from boxing for a year af ter the infamous ear-biting incident against Evander Holyfield. On top of that, Nevada police are currently investigating two separate rape charges against him. Oh, the humanity! The Association of Boxing Commissioners has called for all states to uphold Neva da’s decision. My old stomp ing ground, Texas, flirted Rorick Columnist with hosting duties. Eddie Gossage of Dallas’ Texas Mo tor Speedway, home to mon ster trucks, drag racing and NASCAR, was a contender but ultimately declined. “We cannot sell our val ues,” Gossage said. “Texas Motor Speedway is a clean cut, family-oriented ven ue.” Beer-guzzling, mullet headed rednecks may take their families out to the races, but I’d hardly call them clean-cut. Gossage briskly ended the interview when a reporter brought this to his attention. In the end it didn’t matter, though. Gov. Rick Perry actc ally wanted to arrest the fighter for failing to register as a sex offender. With his recommendation, Texas De partment of Licensing and Regulation Executive Direc tor Bill Kuntz denied Tyson Steve Baggs Emerald license request. “Psycho Mike-o” was able to get a license in Georgia. It should be noted, however, that that state’s only require ments are $10 and proof of physical, not mental, fit ness. Not everyone was hap py about the lax rules, though. Gov. Roy Barnes, in a touching Valentine’s Day speech to a women’s group, said his state should not grant any privileges to a “sexual predator” like Tyson. Tyson’s camp, sens ing a little hostility, moved on to the next state. Colorado Gov. Bill Owens echoed Perry and Barnes’ sentiment, saying a Tyson fight would tarnish his state’s image. Lucky for Tyson, there is one place with an image so foul not even he could tarnish it fur s ther: Washington, D.C. The Boxing and Wrestling Com mission voted unanimously, 3-0, to grant Tyson a license last week. That’s right. Our nation’s capital has embraced a man no one else will touch. But before you condemn Wash ington for reaffirming its sleaziness once again, con sider the logic behind deny ing Tyson a license in the first place. Can anyone really be too brutal for boxing, America’s most violent “sport”? This is a game where the surest way to win is to beat an opponent un conscious with one’s bare hands. Nice guys just don’t do that for a living, so is it any wonder boxing attracts scumbags like Tyson? E-mail columnist Aaron Rorick at aaronrorick@dailyemerald.com. His opinions do not necessarily reflect those of the Emerald. Harvard professors libertarian legacy will live on In 1971, the academic world was awash with quotes from John Rawls’ “Theory of Jus tice.” Rawls’ book covered the philosophic basis for a bureaucrat ic welfare state which would re distribute wealth'in order to help the disadvantaged. In 1974, Harvard professor Robert Nozick’s book, “Anarchy, State, and Utopia” demolished Rawls’ ideas. Nozick argued that since the rights of the individual are primary, nothing more than a mini mal state is. justified. Nozick’s book won the National Book Award and was named one of the “Hundred Most Influential Books Since the War” by the New York Times. Regretfully, on Jan. 23, Nozick, extolled by many as “a brilliant and provocative scholar,” died of > stomach cancer at age 63. Law professor Alan Dershowitz, longtime friend of Nozick, said Nozick “was a University profes sor in the best sense of the term. He was constantly rethinking his own views and sharing his new ideas with students and colleagues. His unique philosophy has influenced generations of readers and will continue to influence people for generations to come.” What was this unique philoso phy? In the opening sentence of “Anarchy, State and Utopia,” Noz ick wrote, “individuals have rights, and there are things no person or group may do to them” (without vio lating their rights). According to Nozick, the state may not use its co ercive apparatus for the purpose of getting some-citizens toaid ethersr or Guest Commentary Tonie Nathan in order to prohibit activities to peo ple for their own good or protection. It would seem Nozick’s book is more timely today than ever, given ongo ing debate over assaults on individ ual rights by newly adopted federal laws such as the Patriot Act. Also included in “Anarchy, State and Utopia” are: an impor tant new theory of distributive jus tice; a model of utopia which sup ports the theory of the minimal state; and the integration of ethics, legal philosophy and economic theory into a profound and unified position in politicaLphilosophy. In the 1970s, Nozick’s challeng ing views put him in a firestorm of controversy, gaining him consider able attention and influence in the world beyond Harvard. “Anarchy, State, and Utopia” transformed him from a young philosophy professor, known only within his profession, to the reluctant theoretician of a na tional political movement exempli fied by the Libertarian Party, today the third-largest political party in this country. Nozick’s book unwit tingly boosted the party’s prestige in academic circles and increased pub lic support for the party’s limited government position. In his youth, Nozick was a member of the radical left who converted to a libertarian per spective as a graduate student af ter reading conservative econo mist Friedrich Hayek and liber tarian economists Milton Fried man and Murray Rothbard. Nozick used his teaching as a way of working out his ideas. With one exception, Nozick never taught the same course twice. Speaking without notes, Nozick would pace restlessly back and forth, drawing his students into a free-ranging discussion of the top ic at hand. Nozick said, “Present ing a completely polished and worked-out view doesn’t give stu dents a feel for what it’s like to do original work in philosophy and to see it happen, to catch on to doing it.” His importance and influence on students is unquestionable. Tonie Nathan graduated from the University in the Class of 71