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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 pnvate property. Unlawful removal or use of papers is prosecutable by law ■ Guest commentary Imbeciles rule; leaders stay silent “Sometimes I wonder whether the world is being run by smart people who are putting us on or by imbeciles who really mean it.” So said Mark Twain, who could have been dis cussing the troubling attempt to si lence and punish the Oregon Com mentator for speech a vocal minority finds offensive. With respect to this latest sad chap ter for intellectual freedom on college campuses, the actions of the adminis tration (the smart people putting us on) and the student government (the other group mentioned by Twain) offer evi dence that neither is accountable enough to be entrusted with an annual student government budget worth tens of millions of dollars. The simple context: One former stu dent senator of unknown gender, Toby Hill-Meyer, claims to have felt threat ened by farcical words published in the Commentator and attributed to Robo cop. I suppose we can all understand lying awake at night fearing the fiction al enforcer, though it remains unclear to dispassionate observers how this Robo-phobia spiraled into an all-out war on the single most provocative po litical voice on campus. This latest attack on the Commenta tor follows a natural pattern. In 1990 an earlier incarnation of the Programs Fi nance Committee attempted to defund the magazine for its unpopular content. In 2002 the PFC tried to force the Com mentator to change its mission state ment (accompanied by a bizarre edito rial by the Emerald that supported the move), and this year a particularly driv en and notably small-minded minority has again taken aim at the Commenta tor because it doesn’t toe the liberal line. It happens like clockwork, be cause the never-changing beast of stu dent government is populated by an ever-changing group of individuals who can’t learn from past mistakes. That PFC members were unable to understand their duties is not surpris ing. The personnel turnover in student government, driven by a continually changing student body, prevents cru cial legal and administrative institution al memory. That’s why they have edu cational retreats every year, such as the one held in October — the one in which student “leaders” wasted stu dent money and have continued to re main unaccountable to the students. Despite that, President Frohnmayer’s administration is even worse. Accord ing to Hill-Meyer, he was encouraged by members of the administration this year to seek redress over his concerns by way of the PFC, a body charged with allocating student fees in a fash ion that doesn’t punish political points of view. That advice is inconsistent with both the unwritten policy of this administration not to overtly interfere in student politics, as well as being in consistent with the very clearly stated First Amendment. Yet the president — never shy of lauding his own experi ence arguing before the Supreme Court — has remained supremely silent in an instance when leadership is needed. It was notable that School of Jour nalism and Communication Dean Tim Gleason broke his traditional silence to warn of a government body trying to si lence the press. But while the proxi mate funding problem for the Com mentator likely will be corrected in the near future, the ongoing problems of a politically biased and often corrupt stu dent government remain. Even as student government rou tinely attempts to silence a publica tion that receives a relatively meager amount of money for printing (none goes to the all-volunteer staff), mil lions of dollars have been laundered away from campus to OSPIRG. That organization ships boatloads of cash to Portland for volunteer stream walks and a tidal wave of liberal lob bying interests. It is because the stu dent fee funds this kind of unworthy goal that student leaders fight so hard to protect the institution, which now must be addressed at the state level. At its core, the question at hand is simple: Should millions of student dol lars be entrusted to a small cadre who are too immature to respect the rights of those with whom they disagree philosophically? Should that miniature fortune be entrusted to an administra tion that counsels violating the law and whose president is unwilling to stand up for what is right? Millions of extorted student dol lars should not be in the hands of smart people willing to play dumb while violations of the First Amend ment run rampant, nor should it be in the hands of Twain’s (and Ore gon’s) imbeciles. Experience tells us neither group will change, so the student fee process has to. Bret Jacobson, an alumnus of the University, the Commentator, and the Emerald, lives and works in the Washington, D.C. area INBOX Students: Make your voices heard, prevent tuition hike Attention all college students: It is time for us to work together. In the next few months, by voicing our concerns, we can fight to make higher education more of a human right and less of a commodity. Regardless of our differ ences, we can all identify as students — people who value education. Unfor tunately, the President's budget for Fis cal Year 2006 includes the elimination of almost 50 educational programs, along with a misleading increase in the Pell Grant allocation as balancing the cuts. How is the proposal to increase the Pell Grant misleading? Well, it can negatively affect many students and put them in the hole even more than they were before. One example of this is the elimina tion of the TRIO program, which is pro posed in the budget. TRIO is a student support program that provides many resources for first-generation college students, low-income students and oth ers. One of the services they provide is free tutoring. Now, if I were awarded an additional $100 from a Pell Grant next year but did not have access to TRIO, I would have to pay for the serv ices of tutor. A tutor costs at least $10 an hour. If I were to incur the cost of a tutor once a week for 10 weeks each term ... well, you get the point. This is only one of the services TRIO provides and only one of the nearly 50 education programs that could be elim inated by the President’s budget pro posal. As students we need to investi gate this proposed budget and take action by demanding not only an in crease in Pell Grant funding but also in the Perkins loan, Federal Work Study and all other education programs. Write your senators! Jordan Thierry Eugene Measure 37 claims threaten Oregonians' quality of life It has started. Measure 37 claims have begun rolling in, and eight waivers have been granted in Yamhill and Jackson counties. County commis sioners have approved the least prob lematic applications, but what’s next? Many Oregonians live here and love their state because of the quality of life. Our quality of life results in large part from Oregon’s system of land use plan ning. Having grown up in a small coastal town near San Francisco, I have come to appreciate the benefits of intel ligent and rigorous land use planning. Half Moon Bay is made up of farmers, ranchers and fishermen, as well as ur banites who value the sanctuary out side of the city. Area residents value the quality of life in the town and have pre sented only rare challenges to the town’s land use laws. As a result, the town has retained its small-town charm and historic character. Ten miles to the east, lack of land use planning has created a different land scape. Along Highway 101, single fami ly homes, fast food restaurants, and in dustrial complexes mingle to create a jumble of development that stretches for miles. No one wants Oregon to re semble a California suburb. The passage and potential abuse of Measure 37 presents this possibility. With every Measure 37 waiver, Ore gon’s quality of life is slowly eroded. The few large, corporate landowners that funded Measure 37 should not be permitted to take our way of life away. Erin Ganahl School of Law Student association lobbies for Higher Education Act As a student at the University, I have the great privilege of being in school. Many students seeking further educa tion do not have the same opportunity to advance either because of their economic or immigration status. The United States Students Association aims to break barriers that keep students all over the country from reaching higher education. This year USSA is focused on reau thorizing the Higher Education Act, which funds need-based financial aid programs such as the Pell Grant. They are also directing their energy to the original Development, Relief and Edu cation for Alien Minors Act, which would extend in-state tuition to undoc umented students. For the past few years, the University has sent a delega tion of students to our nation’s capitol to lobby Congress regarding higher ed ucation issues. Prior to visiting con gressmen and congresswomen, thou sands of postcards are collected with student signatures as one of USSA’s tac tics to persuade our elected officials to prioritize higher education. As students who have the privilege to be here, we need to extend the op portunity for those who do not. Sign a postcard of support to let our represen tatives and senators know that students are ready and able to take action. Jael Anker-Lagos Eugene ■ Out loud “We have groups saying, ‘You’ve got to look at this,’ but I don’t know that we will.” — Uni versity Vice President for Student Affairs Anne Leavitt on whether the administrative committee formed to determine whether some out-of-town and part-time University students are paying an unfair amount of incidental fees will recommend changes to next year’s manda tory enrollment fee. “We really try to build the bridge between ac ademia and the real world.’’Oregon Natural Hazards Workgroup Director Andre LeDuc de scribing the group, a program of the Universi ty’s Community Service Center. The group re cently received a $100,000 Disaster Resistant University Grant from the Federal Emergency Management Agency for a project aimed at lim iting the campus’s risk of natural disaster. “I wouldn't answer the marijuana questions. You know why? Because I don't want some lit tle kid doing what I tried.” — George W. Bush, prior to being elected president, during a pri vate conversation with his former friend, the ironically named Doug Wead, who secretly taped his conversations with Bush and released the recordings this week. “Most Californians believe it’s inappropri ate for violent convicts to enjoy overnight vis its that may result in a pregnancy. It’s bad so cial policy, and it is unfair to the taxpayers of California.” — Republican Assemblyman Chuck DeVore discussing his bill, AB 212, which would end conjugal visits for violent felons. “Yeah, conjugal visit sex. That is happen ing! ” — Jason Alexander as George Costanza on the “Seinfeld” episode “The Postponement.” “We don't retract anything we do here be cause we never lie and make things up on this program.” — Rush Limbaugh during his na tionally syndicated radio program on Feb. 15. “Nobody ever said there was. You guys just believed the myth out there that was — that was — that was promulgated. Nobody ever said there was.” — Rush Limbaugh on Nov. 8 denying that the Bush administration ever sug gested there was a connection between Iraq and the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. “If we're successful in Iraq ... we will have struck a major blow right at the heart of the base, if you will, the geographic base of the ter rorists who have had us under assault now for many years, but most especially on 9/11.” — Dick Cheney suggesting a connection between Iraq and Sept. 11, as he often did. “The people of Oregon have approved Ore gon's Death with Dignity Act not once, but twice, and the lower courts have upheld Ore gon's law not once, but twice." — Oregon Gov. Ted Kulongoski, reacting to news that the U.S. Supreme Court will hear a challenge to the act when its 2005-06 term begins. — From Associated Press and Oregon Daily Emerald news reports and radio transcripts from the Media Matters for America Web site EDITORIAL BOARD Jennifer Sudick Editor in Chief David Jagemauth Commentary Editor Steven R. Neuman Managing Editor Shadra Beesley Copy Chief Adrienne Nelson Online Editor OREGON DAILY EMERALD LETTERS POLICY Letters to the editor and guest commentaries are encouraged, and should be sent to letters@dailyemerald.com or submitted at the Oregon Daily Emerald office, EMU Suite 300. Electronic submissions are preferred. Let ters are limited to 250 words, and guest commentaries to 550 words. Au thors 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, gammar and style. Guest submissions are published at the discretion of the Emerald.