Newsroom: (541) 346-5511 Suite 300, Erb Memorial Union P.O. Box 3159, Eugene, OR 97403 Email: editor@dailyemerald.com Online Edition: www.dailyemerald.com —-Oregon Daily Emerald Commentary Editor in Chief: Michael J. Kleckner Managing Editor. Jessica Richelderfer Editorial Editor. Pat Payne Friday, February 21,2003 Share your view on the war resolution Next Friday, the University Assembly will meet to hear and possibly vote on a resolution opposing war with Iraq. The meeting, from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. in the Student Recreation Cen ter, is something of a historic occasion. Rarely before has the assembly called itself together with legislative authority to take up an issue of critical importance to the world, the nation and each of us individually. In recognition of the importance of this event and the need for critical discourse between those in favor of such a resolu tion and those opposed, all next week the Emerald will open the Commentary page to opinions about the resolution and the meeting. Whether the assembly should take a stance on the issue and whether opposi tion to war is the correct stance to take are important questions in which every member of the campus community has a stake. Let the community know what you think — this decision needs dialogue. Guest commentaries can be short or long. Please just keep in mind the Emer ald’s limitations. Submissions can be no longer than 550 words, and opinions of 250 words or less will be run as letters to the editor. Writers must include name, address and phone number for verification purposes. Submissions dropped off in person will need a legal form of identification for verification purposes. If you submit something and we call you to verify it, please return the call quickly so that we have a better chance of getting it in the paper by next Friday. To get you started, a guest commentary and a letter to the editor on the topic are printed in today’s paper. Additionally, here’s my opening salvo. The assembly absolutely should pass the proposed resolu tion. I’m opposed to this war because it won’t achieve disarma ment, and instead it will lessen our national and personal secu rity by encouraging those who see America as a violent bully. It’s because of this contradiction and threat to our safety that the University must stand against this war. And I don’t think such a resolution will change the tenor of discourse in the classroom any more than any other stance taken by the University has. The state of Oregon’s position that universities can consider nothing other than cost when choosing outside contractors is overtly political, and it could create a “hostile environment” for those opposed to sweatshop labor. But it doesn’t and it has n’t, because our professors, by and large, value discourse and a diversity of thought. That’s my opinion; please tell us what you think. MichaelJ. Kleckner The editor's office Contact the editor in chief at editor@dailyemerald.com. His views do not necessarily represent those of the Emerald. SADDAM f FIRST I'M GONNA RIP YOUR, HEART OUTAND FEED IT TAYA, THEN IU FORNICATE WITH YOUR LOVELY WOMEN f THE TEAM IS ON THE GROUND,SIR. YOU THINK THEY'LL SCAKE SADDAM OUT OF IRAQ ? IF THERE ARE TWO PEOPLE THAT ftXJLD SCARE SADDAM INTO EXILE, TACKD AND TYSON, urs Peter Utsey Emerald Keep absolute statements to yourself Guest commentary I read with a combination of bemuse ment and disdain “University’s neutral ity shows support of Iraq war,” (ODE, Feb. 12), and felt compelled to respond as a member of this campus and the surrounding community. What seems ironic to me is the willing ness Todd Pittman has to assert an opin ion not held by everyone on this campus as though it were embraced and accepted as the norm, and yet the rapidity with which he would deny this University the right to take the opposing position. It leads me to a conclusion that I have per sonally held for quite some time: That democracy, in its purest form, its both in herently evil and untrustworthy. Let me ask you, Mr. Pittman, had Ore gon, via the voters, approved Measure 13 — in case your pre-candescent memory has failed you, this is the measure spon sored by the OCA that would have made it illegal to discuss homosexuality in the classroom — would you have nodded your head and acknowledged the majori ty’s right to determine such a position? 1 think not. You would have com plained, bellyached and screamed that it was not the state’s place to make such a statement, and you would have been right. We live in a constitutional repub lic, whose rule of law is set up in such a way that the minority is protected from the savagery and passion that often times accompanies the majority. You very rightly pointed out that as far as the Iraqi war issue is concerned, it is one “that the University community is not in agreement.” If this is the case, how dare you assert the right to speak on everyone’s behalf when you have openly acknowledged that yours is not a view shared by everyone? Are you now claiming that there are, in fact, absolute rights and wrongs? Be ware the dangers of such a stance, sir, for it would readily place you In the same court and arena as the Christian right, a place I am confident, you would not like to find yourself. In concluding* let me ask.you ;a very simple question. Pretend for a moment that you were born and raised in a con servative state somewhere in the Mid west, and because of economic reasons were forced to attend a conservative state university in that area. Let us as sume you were passionately against the war with Iraq, but then the campus vot ed, your view was soundly defeated and the University took an official pro-war position. Would you be at all comfort able with this, as a taxpayer and stu dent? I think not. Given that, then, how can you presume to make such a moral statement on behalf of the entire Uni versity campus? Scott Austin lives in Eugene. Letters to the editor Local papers miss athletic story “Faculty aims to slow athletics ‘arms race’” (ODE, Feb. 17) caught the editors of The Register-Guard and The Oregonian with their pants down. Both commercial newspapers have chosen to protect their inter ests in the college game by ignoring a story that could develop into the most significant about sports in the past century. While praise is due the Emerald, they also made a serious mistake — not in a fact, but in burying the big story near the bottom of the ar ticle. Not until the 27th paragraph was reference made to the fact that the big boys — university boards of trustees — finally have recognized the problem of excessive athletics spending, and will address it at meetings with faculty senate lead ers and the NCAA. If those who control education purse strings — administration and trustees — don’t take serious action soon, college sport is headed over the cliff of financial and moral disas ter. The city newspapers ignored the story, even though it was featured (with deserved recognition to Uni versity faculty) in The New York Times exactly a month before the Emerald article. It also appeared in a recent issue of The Chronicle of Higher Education. We’ll need to count on the Emer ald staying on top of the story, while self-serving editors of the commer cial press persist in ignoring a major story until it explodes in their faces. George Beres Eugene Column sheds light on Iraq threat I just wanted to say that I really enjoyed “Time for action against Iraq” (ODE, Feb. 17), and while reading it, I was reminded of the elo quent words of Tony Blair in a speech in Glasgow, Scotland, on Sat urday. At one point, Blair said, “At every stage, we should seek to avoid war. But if the threat cannot be re moved peacefully, please let us not fall for the delusion that it can be safely ignored.” Salena De La Cruz’s conclusion was as forceful and well-put as the al ways straight-talking Secretary' of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, who said on Jan. 15: “Let me go back to what’s been going on up on the Hill. They have been trying to connect the dots about Sept. 11. What did somebody know? How did it happen? Was there some way to stop it and save the lives of those 3,000 people? “In the case of Iraq, the task is to connect the dots before there’s a smoking gun. If there’s a smoking gun, and it involves weapons of mass destruction, it is a lot of people dead; not 3,000, but multiples of that.” Her column very neatly and con cisely summed up why it is so urgent that the threat posed by Saddam Hussein and his addiction to weapons of mass destruction be dealt with once and for all. I think her excellent column today will go some distance in helping the anti war crowd understand just what is at stake here. Sean Walston sixth-year graduate physics Eugenics proposal should prompt action In 1729, Jonathan Swift pub lished “A Modest Proposal.” The pamphlet concerned a plan to sell poor Irish Catholic babies into a meat market to feed rich land own ers. The satirical piece was address ing the overwhelming poverty and unemployment of his countrymen. Probably to Swift’s disappointment, the article did not cause the shock he intended, and was largely dis missed as a joke. Peter Sur did not have this prob lem. While I do not know him and therefore couldn’t state for certain whether he believes his stance in “Selective euthanasia can save the world” (ODE, Feb. 7), the tone of his article suggests not. Rather, he seems to be following Swift’s model, begging awareness for problems which require more creative an swers than those currently offered. The response to this article has been disappointing. Yes, eugenics plans should be considered evil. But what solutions should be consid ered in a government that will not provide adequate funding to care for the homeless, sick, prisoners and other “undesirables”? What’s more, how better to take care of the dissi dents whose freedoms our govern ment seems bent on suppressing? Our nation is burdened by prob lems that our leaders would rather ignore than address. However, un less Sur’s plan is carried out, we cannot expect society’s problems to simply “go away.” This proposal should be seen as a call to action, not to mobilize for selective eu thanasia, but to invent creative and constructive solutions to the very real issues we face. Surely we can do better than Sur’s. Katie Drueding junior history Put your butt where your mouth is I read the Oregon Daily Emerald almost every day. And I’ve been noticing an increase in passionately worded commentaries and letters to the editor praising the merits of a “preemptive” attack on Iraq and de ploring all of us willy-nilly (even trea sonous) “peaceniks,” who aren’t convinced that such a war would be either necessary or just. So, I’m wondering, why aren’t all of you pro-war (and oh so knowl edgeable) tough-talkers in the mili tary? I mean, shouldn’t someone who believes so passionately in a hy per-militaristic foreign policy be will ing to put their pro-war butts on the line for their supposed convictions? Paul Griffes senior geography