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 Thursday, March 14,2002 Editor in Chief: Jessica Blanchard Managing Editor: Jeremy Lang Editorial Editor: Julie Lauderbaugh Assistant Editorial Editor: Jacquelyn Lewis Editorial University's bike fee plan needs to bit the dusty trail he University is doing a great job of JL. fees. The latest proposal comes courtesy of the Department of Public Safe ty and would create a nonsensical $5 bicy cle registration for all bikes on campus. The proposed fee contradicts every green friendly transportation message the Uni versity has been pushing for the past few years and is a complete waste of the De partment of Public Safety’s time. The threat of constant fees, coupled with rising tuition, makes it appear as though the University is taking measures designed to wring our wallets dry. Students, faculty and staff who choose to ride bikes to campus shouldn’t be pun ished with fees for their environmentally conscious decision. By raising the cost of riding bicycles on campus, students will be discouraged from cycling to school and may be forced to find alternate modes of transportation. Patrons of the bus system, walkers and bikers are all doing their part to help keep traffic congestion away from the University and pollution at bay. Using bicycles is a pol lution-free alternative to driving and taking the bus. Forcing students to register their bi cycles for a fee discourages environmental ly sound transportation. Another pitfall of the proposed fee is that DPS officers will have to take the time to en force the bicycle registration fees. That regu lation will take manpower away from other, more important DPS duties, such as keeping our campus safe and issuing parking tickets. DPS will either have to hire more people to keep tabs on bike registration scofflaws or else force current officers to add the duties to their already busy schedules. If DPS so desperately needs the revenue from the bike fees, it should take it up with the administration and not try to push the burden onto the backs of the already over taxed students. Although the bicycle registra tion fee is small in itself, combined with all of the other proposed increases, it adds up fast. nickel-and-diming its students with a barrage of proposed new Editorial Policy This editoriai represents the opinion of the . Emerald editorial hoard. Responses can he sent to ietters#dailyemerald,eoro, tetters to the editor and guest com mentaries are encouraged. Letters are limited to 250 words and guest commentaries to 550 words, Please include contact information. The Emerald reserves the right to editfor space, grammar and style. , Editorial Board Members Jessica Blanchard editor in chief Jeremy Lang managing editor Julie lauderhaugh editorial editor Jacquelyn Lewis assistant editorial editor Goida Portillo community representative LeonTovey newsroom representative i Cats need only nine lives I’m a cat person. I don’t carry pictures of my cats in my wallet, and they don’t have their own rooms or any thing. But I have been known to chase the occasional stray kitten around the parking lot, crooning, “Heeere kitty, kit ty.” But, when I heard about “cc”, the cat scientists recently cloned, I recoiled. Sure, “cc” looks like a regular kitten, but the possibilities emerging from pet cloning technology creep me out in a freaky, “Pet Cemetery” sort of way. They also open a messy can of ethical and moral worms. It’s like a science fiction movie. Compa nies with cutesy names like PerPETuate and Genetic Savings & Clone have al ready been processing and storing pet DNA for years, with hopes of cloning them for their owners someday. Even weird er, according to the U.S. News & World Report, one out of 10 pet owners would clone a pet and “de signer pets could tap into a huge market.” Companies could use cloning research not only to create genetic copies of beloved pets, but also produce specialty animals, like hypoallergenic cats and even pets that glow (a French lab has already created a fluorescent rabbit). The Humane Society has argued that it’s unwise to consider cloning animals when so many cats and dogs already need homes. What will happen to the millions of stray pets if we start produc ing made-to-order animals? But those mourning the loss of their favorite pets probably won’t take much comfort in that argument. A Texas man had his white steer, Chance, cloned after it died last year. His new steer was appropriate ly named Second Chance. Grief after the death of a pet is under standable, but trying to bring that animal back to life in the form of a clone is not. Companies like Genetic Savings & Clone Steve Baggs Emerald appear suspiciously as if they’re about to make a profit from grief, although they claim that’s not their purpose. People who have recently lost a pet need time to grieve over their losses. Then, if they de cide they want a new pet, they should adopt one from their local animal shelter or Humane Society. A common reaction for parents is to re place a child’s pet as soon as it dies so the child never knows what happened. That would be much easier if the pet could be cloned. But the death of a pet teaches children important lessons about griev ing. Parents would be hard-pressed to clone Grandma. Donna Schuurman, from Portland’s Dougy Center for Grieving Children, told U.S. News & World Report, “One of the dangers of cloning a pet for a child is sim ply to say, ‘Here, let’s replace this,’ as if you don’t grieve for the loss. How does that translate when Dad dies?” Still, others claim the benefits out weigh the costs. Cloning projects could bring back endangered species and ere ate helpful animals like specialized guide dogs. Most companies claim their interests lie more in these areas, rather than pet cloning. But we already have expert breeders and methods for re vamping populations of endangered species. We don’t need to add cloning to the mix, since it is expensive and risky — it costs $20,000 to clone a single cow, and cloned animals have exhibited health problems such as a short lifes pan, obesity and arthritis. Most importantly, we should remember that we are dealing with living creatures. Cloning research is valuable but it should be confined to creating cells and tissue dedicated to causes such as curing dis eases and possibly creating “spare parts,” but never, ever to create whole beings. Wealthy pet-owners will just have to forgo the possibilities of resurrecting “Fi fi” or bragging about their glow-in-the dark poodles. The stakes are just too high. Email assistant editorial editor Jacquelyn Lewis at jacquelynlewis@dailyemerald.com. Her opinions do not necessarily reflect those of the Emerald. Letters to the editor Old sports story is pathetic Regarding the article on the back of the March 6 Emerald, “Debate ensues over No. 1 Conference” — why on earth would you print an article written before the college basketball season? I mean seriously, this is just pathetic. Please start caring about what you print, unless you really think we won’t notice. Raman Sposato senior journalism Close the campus to private autos The University is patting itself on the back for being “green” just because it was rated exemplary in four out of 17 categories in a recent study by the National Wildlife Feder ation (“University ranks high on national green-friendly study,” ODE, March 7). But what really separates the green from the non-green is where the rubber hits the road, and we don’t see transportation listed here as one of the categories where the University shines. Not surprising when you look at how many University faculty, staff and stu dents drive to campus. From where we live, campus is a 20-minute walk, a 10-minute bike ride or a half-block walk to a direct bus line, yet we see our student neighbors driv ing to class most of the time. Homeowners in our neighborhood are arguing about where we should build struc tures to redirect traffic flow instead of look ing to the source of the problem. With in creasing enrollment, it’s time for the University to get serious about developing a plan that gives people incentives to leave their cars at home. Close the campus to private autos. Re structure parking fees to reward each car free commute. Provide additional covered bike parking and a fleet of campus bikes and electric vehicles for getting around on campus and running lunchtime errands. For more transportation solutions, check out the University of California at Davis (www.taps.ucdavis.edu/LRP.htm). Their much larger campus has been car-free for more than 20 years. That’s what we call green! Jim and Sharon Blick Eugene Need-based financial aid must have funding Students are currently facing many prob lems concerning higher education. Budget cuts, declining services and increased tu ition are some of these problems. Employ ment is especially difficult to find as well. These factors contribute to the difficulty of financing a higher education. Unmet need for students of higher edu cation has devastating effects on Oregon students. In response to much-demonstrat ed financial need in Oregon, the Oregon Opportunity Grant was created. This grant is designed to provide financial assistance for tuition, books and other higher educa tion-related costs. Currently, the grant covers a minute 11 percent of the total cost of education. Fur thermore, it does not reach all eligible stu dents. Nearly 10,000 eligible students are denied funding each year. This is due to the poor funding of this need-based program. With the proposed budget cuts, at least 1,700 and possibly 3,000 students will lose their grants. Students rely on the grant to attain a higher education. Without it, these stu dents wity not have the financial means to afford post-secondary education. It is im perative that funding for programs similar to and including the grant be prioritized. These programs provide the skills neces sary for people to successfully enter or re turn to the workforce. Mike Martell pre-business administration