Newsroom: (541) 346-5511 Room 300, Erb Memorial Union RO. Box 3159, Eugene, OR 97403 E-mail: editor@dailyemerald.com Online Edition: www.dailyemerald.com Tuesday, April 16,2002 Editor in Chief: Jessica Blanchard Managing Editor: Jeremy Lang Editorial Editor: Julie Lauderbaugh Assistant Editorial Editor: Jacquelyn Lewis It was a story that could have been out of an episode of “Boston Public.” In fact, it actu ally did become one: A teacher, in a communications class, is trying to foster a discussion on hurtful speech and uses the “n” word as an example. He means no harm or offense, yet an African American student complains merely because he was a white man using the “n” word. The teacher is fired for his actions after a promi nent minister threatens a boycott of the institution if the teacher is not fired. The differ ence here is that in real life, the teacher — professor, ac tually — went to court. Ken neth Hardy, a former communications teacher at Jefferson Community College of Louisville, Ky., had this situation unfold on him. His employers, the college’s dean and president, claimed that he did not have the freedom to speak at will in the classroom, since the classroom is a workplace and employees can be subject to speech restrictions on the job. Fortunately, the Sixth Cir cuit Court disagreed. Hardy was legally in the right to make such statements in his classroom as part of an academic discussion. Last month, the Supreme Court upheld Hardy’s claims by refusing to take Jefferson Community College’s appeal. It’s easy and proper to argue that these words are inappropriate in most settings— just not this one. It wasn’t as if the teacher was a rav ing racist who had accosted the first African American student he saw and shouted the word at him or her. He didn’t scrawl it out of malice on a locker or a house. He didn’t intone it menacingly as he burned a cross. What Hardy did, instead, was to use the words to a positive end: using the speech of the racists to explain to his stu dents just how die words hurt oth ers, in the hopes of instilling in them the reasons for not using racial slurs. To then turn around and ac cuse him of racism for the mere ut terance of the words, even with no racial animus attached but merely because the professor was Cau casian, is the height of absurdity. The college’s actions explicitly state what has become an unspo ken reality on campuses, includ ing here at the University. Free in quiry and legitimate speech are only allowed as long as they are politically correct or will not sub ject the school to any embarrass ment. This is the feared “pall of or thodoxy” that in many cases was the impetus for preserving the free speech of the classroom in the courtroom. Yet should there be a clamor to fire these professors, no matter how personally distressing and of fensive their speech is? Of course not. Even evil speech (and mark my words, the “n” word is as evil as speech comes) can be a spring board to discussion in an academ ic setting if used in a constructive manner, as Hardy apparently was trying to do. “It is the purpose of the free speech clause ... to protect the market in ideas ... to an audi ence to whom the speaker seeks to inform, edify or entertain,” as the court put it in their ruling. I am one who can claim an al Steve Baggs Emerald most unending hatred of the Nazis, the Klan and others who would seek to impose an artificial “supe riority” over others through words or violence. Their views deserve no First Amendment protection that we rightfully give to more con structive speech. Yet, once we stop legitimate discussions aimed at trying to come to grips with the mindset of those who would use such words, then it is the begin ning of the end of academic debate as we know it. E-mail columnist Pat Payne at patpayne@dailyemerald.com. His opinions do not necessarily reflect those of the Emerald. Pledge shows students care It’s about caring. The Graduation Pledge of Social and Environ mental Responsibility is not a hippie fad coming from the “back woods of Eugene.” It’s about caring. The pledge is not a “political agen da” or “misplaced environmental ism” that “taints” the graduation ceremony. It’s about caring. The editorial board argues in its April 9 editorial, “University shouldn’t hop onto pledge band wagon,” that the pledge of respon sibility detracts from the gradua tion ceremony and should only be done “on their own time.” On the contrary, to many students, the pledge is what their graduation is all about. And after 17 years of school, from kindergarten to col lege seniors, they have earned their “own time” at graduation. Even the editorial board mem bers admit that the University al lows the pledge as an option, but they do not explain that the idea is completely student-developed and student-initiated. Thus, the Uni versity has no more connection to this form of expression than it does to a peace sign plastered on a grad cap or a lei around a neck. Personal expressions at graduation are noth ing new. At graduation, it’s custom ary to show who we are and who we want to be. The pledge is an opportunity for students to show others that they will examine their future employ ers’ relationship to our world and the people that inhabit it. Pinning a green ribbon on a graduation gown Guest Commentary Michael Bendixen is simply a symbol that shows where a student’s values lie. The pledge is a vow that reminds a student to ponder how caring fits into the job search. It does not de fine how a student should critique a job but leaves the choice open to the student. The pledge just asks the ribbon-wearer to consider envi ronmental and social implications. Because it is often frustrating to find work that doesn’t exploit oth ers, the pledge cards conveniently list places where a student could look for jobs. The pledge is an idea that celebrates a student’s accom plishments but also reminds diem to look to the future and make responsible decisions. It’s not a political scheme, but just a personal decision to care about others and our world. In this sense, the pledge is quintessential ly what our education stands for. It’s a chance where we can take all we learned in school, from algebra ic expressions to business manage ment, and use it in a practical and moral way—to help others. We get a chance to step out of the sphere of our selfish interests, ever just for a moment, so we can im prove our world and society even by the slightest margin. Those who wish to stop others from the benign option of signing a card and wearing a green ribbon or graduation day need to hear Bob Dylan’s cry, “Don’t stand in the doorway. Don’t block up the hall,” in his song, “The Times They Are A-changin’.” We should look to those wear ing green ribbons as heroes for caring, and we can pick up an ar ticle of the April 9 Emerald to see who’s in the way. Michael Bendixen is a senior English and environmentalstudies major. Letter to the editor Campus protesters take a break Where have all the University of Oregon student activists gone? The theory of an Oregon daily newspaper is activists have chosen to hide under a rock, along with oth er paranoid people, after the Sept. 11 attacks. Someone else suggested all student energy was dissipated in euphoria over football and basketball success. Can this be the campus where student insistence got the Universi ty to join the Worker Rights Consor tium despite the administration's greedy reluctance? If so, it’s time for them to make more noise over the cave-in of the State System of High er Education when the University begged it to make membership in the WRC illegal with retroactive state rules. None of us was there to hear that secret discussion. But can anyone doubt such a conspiracy? Those shenanigans to get “Saint Philip” to honor his stadium prom ise are trifles compared to silence of students about Israel's invasion of Palestine. Horrors of dozens of Is raeli children dying in suicide bomb blasts and of hundreds of Palestinian children dying at the hands of Israeli invaders should have students marching in the streets. They should be demanding that this nation deserves a leader unwilling to play the psycho-patsy role of George Bush to the psycho pathic militarism of the Israeli prime minister. But it’s spring quarter—a time for fun on campus, no matter the guilt one eventually will feel for being a quiet accomplice, instead of the nation's conscience. George Beres Eugene 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 550 words. Please Include contact Information, The Emerald reserves the right to edit for space, grammar and style.