Newsroom: (541) 346-5511 Suite 300, Erb Memorial Union P.O. Box 3159, Eugene, OR 97403 E-mail: editor@dailyemerald.com Online: www.dailyemerald.com Wednesday, January 14,2004 Oregon Daily Emerald COMMENTARY Editor in Chief: Brad Schmidt Managing Editor: Jan Tobias Montry Editorial Editor: Travis Willse El 01X0 RIAL. Professors should put ethics before book profits The beginning of a new term is always rife with a twofold sense of anticipation and loss — anticipation for new classes and experiences and loss as students shell out hundreds for overpriced and often uninterest ing textbooks. The only thing worse, it seems, is shelling out hundreds for sleep-inducing walls of text written by the same profes sors who teach the class. This often gives the student not only a sense, however justified, that the professor can't re late to budgetary difficulties of many students, but also that the professor is out to make a quick buck on the backs of poor college kids. nowever, tnat s not to say mat all professors at me Uni versity are incapable of writing decent, well-researched text books or that all professors are out to rip off the student body We're fully aware that the University employs a large number of impeccable educators who, at one time or an other, have put together textbooks that don't require a DayQuil to read. But the idea that professors would create a product that they could potentially profit from and force their own stu dents to buy it seems wholly unethical. After all, if a pro fessor is going to lecture on everything he or she wrote in the book anyway, then the necessity of buying, much less reading, the text is drastically reduced. Furthermore, class readings should give a breadth of views and angles to the subject in question, something that is distinctly lacking when you read a chapter one night and hear the same ma terial the next day. Some teachers who require their own books, such as journalism Professor Janet Wasko, remedy this problem by assigning other books to provide different perspectives, which is a partial solution to the ethical dilemma. "If someone is only using a book that they've written, that could be perhaps problematic," Wasko told the Emerald. "I don't know what other professors do, but I use a book that I've written. I always use a lot of other readings because I think that's an important point that there should be a lot of perspectives presented. I never just use my own book." Professors who don't keep royalties from their books also seem a bit more fair, although the problem of diver sity in reading still exists. It's reasonable to assume that these professors, with their expertise in the field, require their own textbooks simply to contribute to the under standing of the subject. But perhaps professors could ac complish this greater understanding just as easily by mak ing class notes available online or putting together a course packet, which is quite a bit lighter on the wallet than a textbook. We urge professors who do assign their own books to forfeit their royalties earned from University students, per haps giving them instead to a charity or educational organ ization, or make the purchase optional. At the very least, these professors should always explain to the class the rea soning behind assigning the book. As journalism Professor Kyu Youm told the Emerald: "I think it’s professionally unethical, and that kind of thing should not be condoned, unless his textbook is the best in the whole world," he said. "Some professors are using their textbooks because they are ego-inflated." EDITORIAL POLICY This editorial represents the opinion of 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 and guest commentaries to 550 words. Authors are limited to one submission per calendar month. Submission must include phone number and address for verification. The Emerald reserves the right to edit for space, grammar and style. r THESE \ DA/Y\N POLITICIANS AIN'T GITTIN' ME TO VOTE FOR RAISIN' . V TAKES'. y r HONEY, ^ YOUR WELFARE CHECK IS k HERE! > OREGON IrtEAErH Pl-AN Eric Layton Illustrator All wired up Walking from the Lillis Business Complex to the EMU last week, I counted 12 people on cell phones. There they were; just walking down the street, chatting it up, and there I was with my hands stuffed in my coat pockets, counting the people who were talking on cell phones. I wonder if I'm missing something. My roommates think I'm an oddity be cause I don't want a cute little phone. My boss asked me if I would consider buying one. My dad thinks, "It would probably be a good idea for you to have one in case something happens." I asked him, "Dad, what's going to happen?" Everyone who knows me tells me I'm hard to get a hold of, almost impossible to track down, MIA. They tell me they worry about where I am and if I'm safe. I wonder how they think a phone is going to keep me from harm. I guess if worse came to worse I could throw it at someone Chuck it at their head, then run like the dickens. I can see it now. As a society, it seems we are becoming more and more dependent on technology. We are obsessed with being in touch, in stantly. We carry laptops, cell phones, pagers and PDAs because we don't want to miss anything. With this influx of technology we are see ing a loss of personal privacy. My best friend answers her phone while she's on the toilet. She's had whole conversations with her pants around her ankles. Nothing is going to stop her from staying connected. But is all this connection good for us? If the way the U.S. government is currently working is any indicator, by the time I'm ready to have children they won't need to worry about telling people where they are. Instead of carrying phones, they will be im planted with a homing chip at birth, and anyone who is looking for diem could locate their personal little blip on a Global Posi tioning System screen. I feel like I need time to myself; time when people can't get in touch with me and don't know where I am. I don't feel bad when someone calls my house and I'm not there. I think there are very few times in life when a message is so urgent that it can't be returned later in the day with only mi nor consequences for lateness. When I was a teenager, growing up in my parents' house; the rule was, “Call by midnight and let us know you're safe" That was it At 16,1 drove to Colorado with a friend for two weeks; we didn't know the name of the lodge we were going to be staying at the phone number or exactly when we'd be back. My mom stood on the porch the morning we left, waving and telling us simply to be safe. When I was 17, Mom followed in my footsteps and headed out the door to trav el across the country in a Volkswagen van for six months. I didn't ask for her itiner ary or a phone number where she could be reached. I just stood on the porch the morning she left and told her to be safe and to call if she got lonely. 1 believe we need time in our lives to be alone with our thoughts and our environ ment, and I fear our movement toward a completely technological society will ulti mately destroy any chance we have of achieving solitude. Contact the columnist at aimeerudin@dailyemerald.com. Her opinions do not necessarily represent those of the Emerald. Focus on the crime, not the motive l ne editorial society must address issue of hate-based violent crime" (ODE; Dec. 4, 2003) presents an obvious thesis: Violent crime is wrong and should be stopped. As stated, the fact that we need days of remembrance clearly demon strates an embed ded problem with our cultural paradigm. However, what I find problematic may not be what the editorial staff intended. Our focus should be on violent crimes, not just hate-based violent crimes. Violence should be abhorred universally, because it is not about sexual orientation or race or national origin. Whether violence is motivated by hate or by another means is not most rele vant. What is the most relevant is the fact that violent crimes occur. Is it less wrong that GUEST COMMENTARY somebody was violently killed because of a bank robbery than because of a hate issue? I would venture to say no. Cultural and polit ical differences cannot and should not be limited, whether that means loving every body or hating everybody. What can and should be limited is criminal activity as a mode of political expression. We must separate the political or cultural agenda from the crime Are all Palestinians who advocate a sovereign state also advocates of suicide bombings? Of course not Whether we agree with a particular political or cultural agenda does not advocate nor imply advocacy of violence as a means to our political or cul tural ends. Hating disliking or disagreeing with someone is not a crime violent crime as an expression of that belief is the crime The reason to establish this discourse is to combat the fallacious implication that those who oppose same-sex dvil unions promote violence as a means to their goals. The edi torial staff has used violent crimes as a red herring to promote a narrow political agen da. It is not requisite that people agree with a group politically or culturally in order to not want to kill them. I do not believe that same-sex dvil unions should be legalized. However, this belief does not make me empathetic to those who use violence as a mode of expression. Praise should be given to the editorial staff for raising the issue that violent crimes are wrong and should be stopped. Howev er, the staff and anyone else who couples dif fering political and cultural agendas with crime should be rebuked. David Carr is a junior majoring in political science., , , , , ,