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, April 11,2002 Oregon Daily Emerald Editor in Chief: Jessica Blanchard Managing Editor: Jeremy Lang Editorial Editor: Julie Lauderbaugh Assistant Editorial Editor: Jacquelyn Lewis Editorial Campus news offers good, bad, offensive for public office. Nilda Brooklyn is running for the State Board of Higher Education, Greg McNeill is running for the Oregon House and Maco Stewart is a candidate for Eugene City Council. All are representing the University well by becoming involved in the political realm. ■ Jeers to the International Students Asso ciation’s spring newsletter for printing a highly offensive “Crash course in speaking Chinese.” Some of the lowlights included “Wan bum lung — a person with tuberculo sis” and “Chin tu fat — you need a face lift.” If the ISA wants support from both American and international students, they should avoid reinforcing ignorant stereotypes — es I pecially when there is a large constituency of | Chinese students in their own organization. ■ Cheers to the Department of Public Safety for holding a campus safety forum tonight and starting a “yellow jacket” walk ing program this spring. DPS is showing a commitment to campus safety with their in terest in hearing student concerns. Cheers are also in order for DPS for nixing the pro posed bicycle registration fee — an idea that was bound to fail from the get-go. ■ Jeers to Lane Transit District for cut ting bus routes. Although the service claims to be losing money, they certainly aren’t los ing it from University students. We’re LTD’s best-paying customers, forking out $375,000 for the 2001-02 school year alone to ride the bus. Bus routes servicing the Uni versity shouldn’t suffer just because LTD needs to downsize. Ihe Emerald editorial board pres ents, for your reading pleasure, our latest collection of cheers and jeers: ■ Cheers for students running 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 said guest commentaries to 550 words. Please include contact information, The Emerald reserves the right to edit for space, grammar and style. ■I : . . editor in chief Jeremy Lang managing editor Julie Lauderbaugh editorial editor Jacquelyn Lewis . assistant editorial editor Peter Hockaday newsroom representative Jerad Nicholson community representative Audri jrd llilomm unity representative! ||ORRECTIOK In the article “Victim voices need for awareness on campus" {ODE, March 10)t the dale of the attack on student Gwynne Engelking should have been identified . , M M » J ) M > I M M f f I » I f I > I »» • aKYI Steve Baggs Emerald Fear of a drug-free world Privacy for teenagers is a fallacy. And if you disagree, you must have something to hide. That’s the new reality in Oregon. Well, not exactly new. Such fanatical, paranoid theorizing has existed as long as teenagers have. Only recently has such madness been reinforced by Oregon courts. But we’ll get to that in a moment. For now, let’s don our rose-colored ski goggles and take a trip with the “Ghost of High School Injustices Past.” If you stood up to your varsity football coach when he asked you to sign a pledge to not drink or do drugs during the season, it couldn’t possibly have been because you objected to promising not to do something he had no reason to assume you’d ever do in the first place. Oh no. It’s because you were a junkie, undoubt edly sneaking off to your car to “ride the black pony” before that crucial third peri od health quiz. Same thing goes for the contemporary practice of drug screening. Most parents summarily reject the no tion of idealism for its own sake among their teenage children. However, this was not the case in Oakridge, where Ginelle Weber’s parents supported her in her genuinely good fight against Oakridge High School and its mandatory drug testing policy for all stu Letters to the editor Pledge is symbolic responsibility In response to the April 9 commentary ti tled “University shouldn’t hop onto pledge bandwagon,” the writers were slanted and uneven-handed in their stance. The edito rial board hardly considered true reasons for supporting the pledge. Instead, the edi torial board hung out a laundry list of rea sons for not pledging symbolic support for social and environmental responsibility. The primary reasons for discouraging the pledge were lack of student interest, the po litical bias of the pledge and the dampen I ing of diversity. The truth of the matter is that students have interest in the pledge, which is why it is being promoted by them. Now that the is sue is before us, to not support the pledge is political bias of another kind, that of in explicably supporting social and environ II mental irresponsibility. Lastly, not every dent athletes, which resulted in her being dropped from the volleyball team. Last month, a Lane County judge ruled that Weber’s rights were violated when she was expelled from the sports pro gram, but the ruling upheld the basic con stitutionality of such random drug testing. Not exactly a re sounding victory for student rights. Espe cially when you take into consideration that Oakridge is but one of 13 high schools around Oregon currently uti lizing such invasive and unjustifiable drug testing policies. Luckily for us civil libertarians, the rest of the nation seems to be making more headway in the fight against anti-student rights fanaticism. Recently, a Denver appeals court judge struck down an Oklahoma school’s policy of mandatory urine testing for all students involved in non-athletic extracurricular activities. In Texas, a high school attempt ing to implement similar policy for all stu dents met with an identical fate. What does this recent turn of events tell TenPas Columnist university is jumping on the “bandwagon.” Only a few universities have agreed to pro ceed with the pledge. The University of Oregon failing to support the pledge is, in a sense, defeating diversity because the mi nority idea is being discouraged. Whether students understand their so cial and environmental responsibilities or not is a whole different issue. Students can choose or not choose to sign the pledge. Those that do sign the pledge will symboli cally support social and environmental re sponsibility and be promoting diversity. Javier Ayala Eugene EWEB board needs to listen to ratepayers On March 19, I attended the Eugene Water and Electric Board public hearing regarding rate hikes and have the follow ing observations: 1. The three members who voted for the increase (led by board President Dorothy Anderson) had apparently already made us? First of all, that the American Civil Liberties Union is working overtime to protect all students from being punished for a crime they aren’t even being tried for, and second, that at least in other states, the courts are listening. More important is the fact that parents are continuing to wage this losing battle against their kids. And it is a losing battle. Not just because the courts are, for the most part, siding with the students, but rather because there is simply no victory to be had from ex cluding kids from activities based on ex perimental or recreational drug use. Take away a teenager’s ability to play vol leyball, football or even to work on the school paper or yearbook, and what do you leave them with? A newly ffeed-up chunk of time to get high and stare at the television. Take away a teenager’s ability to get ac cepted to college by preventing them from taking part in extracurricular activities and you’ve freed up the rest of his or her life to find new and more efficient ways to get high. Take away a teenager’s hopes for the fu ture, and you may as well get high yourself. You’ll need something to ease the pain of the perfect, drug-free world you’ve created. E-mail columnist Jacob TenPas atjacobtenpas@dailyemerald.com. His opinions do not necessarily reflect those of the Emerald. up their minds as to how they were going to vote, prior to any public input. 2. Public input is supposed to be weighed and carefully considered. Clearly it was not. 3. Many excellent cost-cutting ideas were given during public testimony. The board patently chose to ignore them. 4. Anderson told the audience that they were “spoiled” by the low power prices EWEB charges. This is not only an insulting comment to make, but it is arrogant as well. It is also important to note that during public testimony, it was suggested that the rate hike decision be delayed by two weeks. If the board had done this, it would have at least given the appearance that they had given some consideration to public input. The board has clearly shown how much contempt they have for the ratepayers by not even listening to them. EWEB needs to scour its budget for additional cost savings and clean its own house before they dip further into the ratepayer’s wallet. Mark Hudson Eugene 4