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 Wednesday, March 6,2002 Editor in Chief: Jessica Blanchard Managing Editor: Jeremy Lang Editorial Editor: Julie Lauderbaugh Assistant Editorial Editor: Jacquelyn Lewis Editorial Advertising revenue should not decide news (U-WIRE) LOS ANGELES — ■■""led Koppel’s hair may not be as funny as David Let JL terman’s gap, but the host of ABC’s “Nightline” has provid ed a respectable, intelligent news outlet for more than two decades. It is deplorable that ABC is considering bumping “Night line” in favor of Letterman’s “Late Show.” Society has already taken a turn for the worse when it comes to favoring entertainment over news. ABC was the last bastion for late-night news junkies, a refuge from repetitive, looped CNN stories and the pot-shot hu mor of Jay Leno, Letterman and reality dating shows. In Los Angeles, “Nightline” was an outlet that viewers could turn to after weathering the fluff that passes for local news. A fire could destroy downtown but here stations lead with a Robert Downey Jr. drug arrest. Industry analysts point out that “Nightline,” which debuted as a special show during the Iran hostage crisis in 1979, has watched its audience erode because of cable options. But vvhat it boils down to is money. Advertisers can’t hock beer and video games to an audi ence that is considered older and less lucrative. ABC can charge much more to advertisers for Let terman’s “Top Ten” than for a serious analysis of current world events. That is where ABC has gone wrong. Money talks, but integri ty in television is almost extinct. The network should leave “Nightline” as a shining example that television can still educate and inform, regardless of ratings and advertising dollars. If Letterman jumps to ABC, a dangerous precedent will be set. Let the laugh tracks begin. This guest editorial is courtesy of the University of Southern California’s campus newspaper, the Daily Trojan. Letters to the Editor and Guest Commentaries Policy Letters to the editor and guest commentaries are encouraged. Letters are limited to 250 words and guest commentaries to 550words. Please include contact information. The Emerald reserves the right to edit tor space, grammar and style. Consumers need to educate themselves Having attended a presenta tion by Jim Keaty and Leslie Kretzu detailing their experiences living with Nike workers in Tangerang, In donesia, I felt compelled to reply to Vada Manager’s guest commen tary (“Nike cares for its contract employees,” ODE, Feb. 12). Manager stated Nike’s products are made at factories that regularly undergo independent monitoring. In fact, the monitoring organiza tions utilized by Nike are Price WaterhouseCoopers, who is paid by Nike to provide monitoring services, and the Fair Labor Asso ciation, of which Nike is a founder and board member. Hard ly the impartial scenario implied by “independent monitoring.” It’s no accident corporations choose to locate factories in coun tries with notoriously lax enforce ment of labor, health and safety standards. Even when monitors discover violations, their reports are paper tigers without the teeth to force factories to make required Guest Commentary Char Heitman changes. Companies realize the cost of hiring monitors is an in vestment in corporate image that helps maintain profits. Manager also referred to the Global Alliance for Workers study (underwritten by Nike to the tune of $7.8 million, incidentally) stat ing that “a majority of workers ex pressed satisfaction with their rela tionship with their superiors and managers.” This is not surprising considering that interviewees who meet with monitors are hand picked by management and inter views are done with management often acting as translators. How honest is a worker likely to be about factory conditions and supervisors with a supervisor present? Manager also talked about wages and benefits. At minimum wage, workers in Indonesia receive 300,000 to 350,000 rupiah, which is $26 a month or 76 cents per day. Many people reason that since costs in the country are lower, workers can afford to make less. According to calculations by Keaty and Kretzu, however, a meal of rice and veggies, a soft drink (less ex pensive than bottled water, local water being non-potable) and a bag of peanuts cost 62 percent of a workers daily wage. That would be like an American minimum wage worker paying $31 for a sandwich, chips and drink! Or imagine not being able to afford the medicine and doctor’s office visit for a sick child because it costs 654 times your daily wage. Even the Indonesian govern ment admits the minimum wage meets only 80 percent of an indi vidual employee’s financial needs. Yet, economically struggling coun tries are pressured by foreign gov ernments, corporations and finan cial institutions to maintain a “favorable investment climate,” which encourages the suppression of labor movements and attempts to increase minimum wages. Taking advantage of exploitable workers under deplorable labor conditions is how companies can realize the gargantuan profits which make it possible to amass obscene personal fortunes (Phil Knight’s net worth: $52 billion) and offer lucrative endorsement contracts. Is it right for Tiger Woods to make $100 million or the University of Michigan $25 million for wearing Nike products while the laborers can not even meet their basic needs working 60 hours a week to make them? This is a complex issue without easy answers. But rather than ac cept the corporate party line, edu cate yourselves. As consumers, we are part of the equation. I urge you to go to: /www.nikewages.org./FAQs.html #Anchor-49575/ for an excellent in-depth analysis of this issue. Char Heitman is an instructor at the American English Institute. Steve Baggs Emerald Letters to the editor Student renters need to take action A housing code functions to define standards of safety, sani tation and livability within a city. Currently, the city of Eu gene lacks the presence of a code that not only holds renters and landlords accountable for the condition of their buildings, but also provides a tool for solving disputes over housing issues. The lack of housing standards affects University students and community members alike, and students need to advocate around housing standards in Eu gene in order to protect their rights as renters and ensure proper living conditions within their community. ASUO is running a student awareness campaign to bring this issue to the attention of the students and city councilors of Eugene. Running through Thurs day, ASUO will be putting on a week of action encouraging stu dents to voice their own com plaints about the conditions of their housing situations. During the week, a table will be set up outside the EMU for students to drop by and share their griev ances, which will then be shown to visitors from the city council during the final day. Through the week of action, students can educate themselves about the issue of a city housing code, as well as voice their own opinions of complaints to be heard by the city council and oth er students. Ian Henri junior English Think before acting Whether as groups, nations or individuals, we humans are capa ble of atrocious acts. The rationale for these typically boils down to “you don’t think or behave like 1/ we think you should.” True-be liever fanaticism underlies our species’ abhorrent, murderous history. As beings who usually do know what love and caring and safety feel like, what can we pos sibly be thinking when we permit ourselves — en masse as a nation, or solo as an individual — to per petrate suffering? I submit that in “thinking” lies the answer to this question: How many of us have ever really stopped and watched our “own” thought process? Even doing this for a few moments, the watcher may discover that thoughts are “thinking themselves” — that thoughts arise and leave constant ly, and none of it is “me.” To then believe — much less commit war and murder on the basis of — those thought forms, those little voices inside our heads, is a gen uinely psychotic act. Yet it happens all the time, giv en holy sanction in fact by mul lahs, priests and rabbis (not to mention presidents and prime ministers) who all believe their “own” internal voices. The reme dy isn’t just to “think good thoughts,” as the bumper sticker advises; it is to question the rela tive usefulness and lovingness of one’s thoughts, before acting on them. A truly compassionate and peace-loving culture will teach its members to still themselves, check the unreality of thoughts and beliefs, and then act with awareness. Vip Short Eugene