Oregon Daily Emerald Thursday, February 10, 2005 NEWS STAFF (541)346-5511 FEN SUDICK EDITOR IN CHIEF STEVEN IE NEUMAN MANAGING EDITOR FARED PABEN AYISHA YAHYA NEWS EDITORS MECHANN CUNIFF PARKER HOWELL SENIOR NEWS REPORTERS MORIAH BALINCIT AMANDA BOLSINGER ADAM CHERRY KARA HANSEN EVASYLWESTER SHELDON TRAVER NEWS REPORTERS CLAYTON JONES SPORTS EDITOR ION ROETMAN SENIOR SPORTS REPORTER STEPHEN MILLER BRIAN SMITH SPORTS REPORTERS RYAN NYBURG PULSE EDITOR NATASHA CH1LINCERLAN SENIOR PULSE REPORTER AMY LICHTY PULSE REPORTER CAT BALDWIN PULSE CARTOONIST DAVID IACERNAUTH COMMENTARY EDITOR CABE BRADLEY JENNIFER MCBRIDE A1I.EE SLATER TRAVIS WII.LSE COLUMNISTS ASHLEY GRIFFIN SUPPLEMENT FREELANCE EDITOR DANIELLE HICKEY PHOTO EDITOR LAUREN WIMER SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER TIM BOBOSKY PHOTOGRAPHER NICOLE BARKER ERIK BISHOFF PART-TIME PHOTOGRAPHERS BREr FURTWANGLER GRAPHIC ARTIST KIRA PARK DESIGN EDITOR DUSTIN REESE SENIOR DESIGNER WENDY KIEFFER AMANDA LEE BRIANNE SHOUAN DESIGNERS SHADRA BEESLEY IEANNIE EVERS ropy rt-tiFFQ KIMBERLY BLACKF1ELD PAULTHOMPSON SPORTS COPY EDITORS AMBER UNDROS NEWS COPY EDITOR LINDSAY BURT PULSE COPY EDITOR ADRIENNE NELSON ONLINE EDITOR SLADE LEESON WEBMASTER BUSINESS (541)346-5511 IUDYRIEDL GENERAL MANAGER KATHYCARBONE BUSINESS MANAGER REBECCA CRITCHETT RECEPTIONIST AIBING GUO ANDREW LEAHY JOHN LONG HOLLY MISTELL HOLLY STEIN DISTRIBUTION ADVERTISING (541)346-3712 MELISSA GUST ADVERTISING DIRECTOR TYLER MACK SALES MANAGER MATT BETZ HERON CALI SO I-DOLEN MEGAN HAMLIN KATE HIRONAKA MAEGAN KASER-LEE MIA LEIDELMEYER EMILY PHILBIN SHANNON ROGERS SALES REPRESENTATIVES KELLEE KAU FIT I El L AD ASSISTANT CLASSIFIED (541) 346-4343 TR1NA SHANAMAN CLASSIFIED MANAGER KATY GAGNON SABRINA COWETTE LESLIE STRAIGHT KERI SPANGLER KATIE STRINGER CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ASSOCIATES PRODUCTION (541) 346-4381 MICHELE ROSS PRODUCTION MANAGER TARA DAN PRODUCTION COORDINATOR JEN CRAM LET KRISTEN DICHARRY CAMERON GAUT JONAH SCHROCIN DESIGNERS The Oregon Daily Emerald is pub lished daily Monday through Frn day during the school year by the Oregon Daily Emerald Publishing Co. Inc., at the University of Ore gon, Eugene, Ore. The Emerald operates independently of the University with offices in Suite 300 of the Erb Memorial Union. The Emerald is private property. Unlawful removal dr use of papers is prosecutable by law ■ In my opinion Bridging the Atlantic During his tenure as secretary of state, Colin Powell ranked as the most immediately likable visible member of the first-term Bush administration. After receiving wide bipartisan sup port at his confirmation, Powell worked both as the president’s spokesman and, for a while, as a steady, audible foil to the administra tion’s swelling hawkishness. As the term wore on and the war on terror demanded increasingly tight devotion to the administration’s ideology, his credentials remained impressive, but his reputation as a thoughtful, inde pendent counterpoint waned. It is in part for this reason that in coming Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice’s first weeks at the post seem, well, refreshing, if not cheery. Her first-term hawkishness has given way, at least so far, to a more amica ble public demeanor: Her latest trip took her to Paris, where she told an audience of diplomats and students at Institute d’etudes politiques, the elite French politics school, that America and Europe ought to move beyond a “partnership of common threats” to one of “common opportunities, be yond the transatlantic community.” While setting Rice’s first major keynote speech in Paris underscores that Franco-American (and, largely, Euro-American) relations have been defined since 2002 more by disagree ments over presumptively common TRAVIS WILLSE RIVALLESS WIT threats than partnerships, European diplomats seem largely pleased with Rice’s recent, more dovish overtures. French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier proffered at a joint press con ference “a new phase, a new sheet” in Euro-American affairs. Using — oddly appropriately — family therapy lan guage, his program for revitalizing the relationship called on both “to speak and listen more to each other, and re spect each other’s convictions.” Right-of-center former French Pres ident Valery Giscard d’Estaing offered measured praise, hailing her talk the “affirmation of a new line of Ameri can foreign policy,” but pointed out the difficulty of America’s ostensible goal: “The main aim of America is to see the spread of freedom, but that is not enough to organize the world.” Whether Rice’s visit guarantees a new foreign policy more palatable to Old Europe has yet to be seen: After the (relative) unilateralism of the in vasion of Iraq (and France’s and Ger many’s disapproval), even paranoid cynicism might be due. Europe and the American public alike will get a better taste of what international (mis)adventures Bush’s second term will hold when the president visits Brussels this month. If parliaments are as welcoming to fu ture U.S. foreign policy efforts as diplo mats have been to Rice’s overture, the present appears to be a remarkable op portunity to realign interests between the world’s two most important eco nomic powers, and one that the Bush administration ought to embrace legiti mately. (Much of Old Europe’s press re mained more skeptical: In a BBC trans lation, the French daily Liberation asked whether the Bush administration has “really undergone a strategic conversion to the virtues of multilateralism and dia logue [or if Rice’s speech is] a mere tac tical adjustment resulting from his diffi culties in Iraq.”) A steadier Euro-American foreign policy relationship might presage more danger in the Middle East: While the United States has busied it self in Iraq, the European Union has been the primary player in Iran’s nu clear energy debacle. At best, the com bined international pressure might el bow the rogue state into dropping its nuclear ambitions outright. But such optimism, too, is best counterweight ed by a healthy dose of cynicism. traviswillse@dailyemerald.com ■ Guest commentary Media cuts threaten independence For more than a century, the Oregon Daily Emerald and other student pub lications have served students and the University community well, both as vi brant contributors to the campus and by providing important learning expe riences for student journalists. It is my general policy to stay out of public de bates about funding student publica tions on campus, in order to protect the independence of the publications and of student government. However, as both a journalism educator and as a member of this community, I am deeply concerned about recent ac tions of the Programs Finance Com mittee toward the Emerald and the Oregon Commentator. Independent student publications make it possible for student journalists to serve the campus community by act ing as watchdogs for the public inter est. At the same time, independent student media are all to some degree dependent on the financial support of the organizations and individuals whom they must aggressively investi gate. This ambiguous position — true of independent student media on every campus — requires that funding sources take special care to avoid even the appearance of censorship. Even when we do not approve of the content of their speech, we must con tinue to uphold and protect students’ right to speak. The cutting of the Emerald’s budget and the continued challenging of the Commentator’s mission statement ap pear to be based on disagreements over the content of the publications. If this is the case, the PFC is acting in clear conflict with established legal principals. These publications do not have for mal ties to the School of Journalism and Communication, yet the opportu nity to work on publications that are truly student run is for many of our students a defining part of their experi ence at the University. Taking full re sponsibility for the content of inde pendent student publications is an important lesson for student journal ists. They must understand journalists’ legal and ethical obligations and expect to be held to high standards. When student journalists fall short of our expectations, readers and ad vertisers must hold them accountable by means other than content-based funding cuts that have the real poten tial to chill all student speech on cam pus. To do otherwise threatens the ex istence of independent student media at the University. Tim Gleason is dean of the School of Journalism and Communication INBOX Emerald blows Sunriver 'scandal' out of proportion Am I the only one who thinks this ASUO Sunriver “scandal” is complete ly overblown? Normally, the pages of the Emerald merely serve as a diver sion on my way to the crossword puz zle in the back, but I couldn’t help but notice how much controversy was de veloping around this completely nor mal (and equally irrelevant) incident. So a few University students drank a few beers and took a few hits. Big deal. I know they are elected officials and should be role models and every thing, but honestly, I’m glad that our student senators are normal human beings who partake in a few normal human vices. The students elected them, after all. Is it any surprise that they behave the same way as those who put them in office? You can retort with all the idealistic rhetoric that you want, but honestly, the events at Sun river affected nobody except the people who were there. This relentless news coverage is simply making things worse. The real villain here is the uptight student who has decided that this issue is his busi ness. If the Emerald is looking for something interesting to write about, write an investigative article about the repressed emotional trauma that might drive a person to petition for the ruination of his peers. Evan Stewart Undergraduate OREGON DAILY EMERALD LETTERS POLICY Letters to the editor and guest commentaries are encouraged, and should be sent to tettefs@daityemerald.com or submitted at the Oregon Daily Emerald office EMU Suite 300 Electronic submissions are preferred Letters are limited to 250 words, and guest commentaries to 550 words. Authors are limited to one submission per calendar month Submissions should include phone number and address for verification. The Emerald reserves the right to edit for space, grammar and style. Guest submissions are published at the discretion of the Emerald ■ Editorial PFC hiatus hints at structural revamping It is a damn shame that a branch of our student government needs to be disman tled in order to ensure a fair budget hear ing for campus publications, but here we are. This delay is exactly what the doctor ordered. The ASUO Constitution Court did what needed to be done and they should be commended for temporarily suspend ing Programs Finance Committee mem bers Eden Cortez, Dan Kieffer and Mason Quiroz, leaving the PFC unable to contin ue its monkey-business-as-usual. The fact remains that these three mem bers have admitted in public they are un willing to maintain viewpoint neutrality. They might as well have said, “We are un fit to be in student government.” Their performance during the Feb. 1 Oregon Commentator budget hearing throws into doubt every budgetary decision that has been made by the PFC this year. Fortunately or unfortunately, depending on how you look at it, the PFC will have to revisit all of its funding decisions and make some cuts, in order to meet their benchmark. Hopefully they will analyze the role their personal biases, either for or against certain programs, played in their decisions and attempt to apply a more fair standard. This process should, of course, be undertaken without the services of Cortez, Kieffer and Quiroz. In fact, Quiroz should never have been let back to his post after denouncing the PFC during the Feb. 1 hearing: “I don't support this part of the branch of student government anymore. ... I resign from my position right now. You guys are sleeping with the devil.” But it was he who brought the fight for gender-identity sensitivity to a budget process and warped it into a fight for free speech. He has nobody to blame but himself. Recent comments by ASUO president Adam Petkun has reassured us that the Com mentator will survive this brouhaha one way or another. We should now turn our attention to creating structural change within student government to ensure that we don’t have to deal with this year after year. EDITORIAL BOARD Jennifer Sudick Steven R. Neuman Editor in Chief Managing Editor David Jagernauth Shadra Beesley Commentary Editor Copy Chief Adrienne Nelson Online Editor ■ ’Security for toe Future' misstated Rep, Peter DeFazio’s plan for Social Security reform, DeFazio's plan would lift the cap on wages subject to the payroll tax and would also offer an exemption from the tax on the first $4,000 of wagas. in Brian Smith's column on Wednesday, Smith used quotes from a Feb. 8 column by ESPN’s David Schoenfield that were attributed to an advance copy of Jose Canseco's upcoming book, “Juiced ” The quotes were later revealed to be falsified by Schoenfield. in an initial version of his column, Schoenfield made no reference to the quotes as a hoax. The Feb. Sedition of the story included mention that “’secured an advance copy,* was also to be known as ‘makingtt up.’" The Emerald regrets toe errors,