Commentary Oregon Daily Emerald Friday, June 3, 2005 NEWS STAFF (541)346-5511 JEN SUDICK EDITOR IN CHIEF STEVEN R. NEUMAN MANAGING EDITOR JARED PABEN AY1SHA YAHYA NEWS EDITORS MEGHANN CUNIFT PARKER HOWELL SENIOR NEWS REPORTERS MORIAH BAI.INGIT ADAM CHERRY BRITTNI McCLENAHAN EMILY SMITH EVA SYLWESTER SH ELDON TRAVER NEWS REPORTERS CLAYTON JONES SPORTS EDITOR JON ROETMAN SENIOR SPORTS REPORTER STEPHEN MILLER BRIAN SMITH SPORTS REPORTERS RYAN NYBURG PULSE EDITOR AMY EIGHTY SENIOR PULSE REPORTER JOSHUA LINTEREUR PULSE REPORTER CAT BALDWIN JOHN PALMER PULSE CARTOONISTS AILEE SLATER COMMENTARY EDITOR GABE BRADLEY ANNEMARIE KNEPPER CHUCK SLOTHOWER JENNIFER MCBRIDE COLUMNISTS ASHLEY GRIFFIN SUPPLEMENT FREELANCE EDITOR LAUREN WIMER SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER NICOLE BARKER TIM BOBOSKY PHOTOGRAPHERS KATE HORTON zanerttf PARTTIME PHOTOGRAPHERS BRIT FURTWANGLER GRAPHIC ARTIST DUSTIN REESE SENIOR DESIGNER ELLIOTT ASBURY WENDY KIEFFER AMANDA LEE JONAH SCHROGIN DESIGNERS SHADRA BEESLEY JEANNIE EVERS COPY CHIEFS KIMBERLY BLACKF1ELD JOSH NORRIS SPORTS COPY EDITORS GREG BIISLAND AMBER LINDROS NEWS COPY EDITORS JENNY GERWICK PULSE COPY EDITOR ADRIENNE NEISON ONLINE EDITOR WEBMASTER (541) 346-5511 JUDY RIEDL GENERAL MANAGER KATHY CARBONE BUSINESS MANAGER LAUNA DE GIUSTI RECEPTIONIST JERED NAGEL PATRICK SCHMERBER HOLLY STEIN IANA SWANSON ROB WEGNER (LAROLYN ZIMMERMAN DISTRIBUTION ADVERTISING (541)346-3712 MELISSA GUST ADVERTISING DIRECTOR TYLER MACK SALES MANAGER MATT BETZ HERON CALISCH-DOLEN MEGAN HAMLIN KATE HIRONAKA MAEGAN KASER-LEE KELLEE KAUFTHEIL MIA LEIDELMEYER SHANNON ROGERS SALES REPRESENTATIVES CLASSIFIED (541) 3464343 IRINA SHANAMAN CLASSIFIED MANAGER KORALYNN BASHAM AN DO KATY GAGNON KERI SPANGLER KATIE STRINGER CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ASSOCIATES PRODUCTION (541) 3464381 MICHELE ROSS PRODUCTION MANAGER TARA CI/IAK] PRODUCTION COORDINATOR JEN CRAMLET KRISTEN DICHARRY CAMERON GAUT SABRINA GOWETTE JONAH SCHROGIN DESIGNERS The Oregon Daily Emerald is pub lished daily Monday through Fri 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 or use of papers is prosecutable by law. ■ In my opinion a Deep, dark secret So now we know. W. Mark Felt is Deep Throat. Felt, former second-in-command of the FBI, fed information about the Watergate break-in, investigation and cover-up to Washington Post reporter Bob Woodward, who with Carl Bern stein led the journalistic world in in forming the public about one of the greatest scandals in American history. Deep Throat’s identity has been a puzzle for more than three decades, during which time Woodward, Bern stein and the two other people who knew his identity — former Post edi tor Ben Bradlee and Woodward’s wife — guarded the secret. Suspicion has long centered on Felt as Deep Throat, especially after James Mann wrote a May 1992 article for The Atlantic magazine that champi oned the idea. Slate columnist Timo thy Noah has advanced Mann’s view for years. But until this week, it’s all been guessing games. That changed Tues day when Vanity Fair dropped the bomb, releasing from its upcoming July issue a story written by John D. O’Connor, a lawyer friendly with Felt’s family. In the story, O’Connor quotes Felt as saying, “I’m the guy they used to call Deep Throat.” After some initial dithering, Woodward and Bernstein confirmed Deep Throat’s identity Tuesday. Felt did his nation an enormous service by blowing the whistle on Wa tergate. Richard Nixon’s henchmen broke into private offices and tape recorded conversations at the direc tion of the president’s closest advisers, who, with the president himself, con cealed the crime and lied about it to the American people. Domestically, Watergate was just the tip of the iceberg of the Nixon ad ministration’s misdeeds. The Nixon White House ordered the Internal CHUCK SLOTHOWER TAKING ISSUE Revenue Service to conduct tax audits of its political enemies. The CIA opened mail, installed wiretaps and conducted break-ins against U.S. citi zens. Executive branch agencies used illegal methods to surveil American citizens, subvert political opponents and quash dissent. At the same time, Nixon and his predecessor had lied their way into dramatically expanding the Vietnam War, which cost roughly 58,000 Amer ican lives and many more Viet namese. Nixon continued to cynically mislead the American people on Viet nam at every opportunity, from the unconstitutional bombing of Cambo dia to Nixon’s pre-election “secret plan” to end the war. Nixon handed control of American foreign policy al most entirely to Henry Kissinger while keeping Congress in the dark. This is a long way of saying that the Watergate cover-up was simply the first crime to nail Nixon to the cross. Felt deserves credit for helping the Post inform the public about an aspect of the Nixon administration’s misdeeds. Felt is not perfect. He was convicted of authorizing illegal FBI break-ins, though he was pardoned by Ronald Reagan while his case was on appeal. He may have had a personal vendetta against Nixon, who passed him over for the top post at the FBI. Now 91, Felt also betrayed Wood ward and Bernstein by handing a huge scoop to Vanity Fair — Wood ward and Bernstein deserved to be the first to tell the world Deep Throat’s identity. Also, the behavior of Felt’s family indicates an attempt to profit from his courage. Yet, without whistleblowers like Felt and Daniel Ellsberg, the man who leaked documents concerninggovem ment treachery in Vietnam, democracy would suffer from lack of oxygen. “I’ve come to think of whistleblow ers as good people,” said Ken De Bevoise, a University assistant profes sor who has taught many classes on Watergate as well as Vietnam. “One of the dangers of government is when it becomes too separated from the people. And the best way to do that is secrecy, of course.” Nixon had that nailed, and it took Felt, Ellsberg, Woodward and Bernstein to tell the American people what they needed to know. However, as DeBevoise pointed out, Woodward and Bernstein’s role in Watergate is probably overstated. “They had very, very little impact on Watergate,” DeBevoise said. “All the time, behind the scenes, ... the Justice Department was doing the same investigation, and that was what brought Nixon down, was the legal system, the courts of the coun try. And that would have gone on had Woodward, Bernstein, Felt, any of those guys never even existed.” Fair enough. But Felt, at the very least, provided valuable information to Woodward and Bernstein that clued the public into the scandal while the wheels of justice slowly turned. Felt stands as an example of pro found individual courage, and his case reaffirms the value of anony mous sources to quality journalism — without him, Nixon may have gotten away with it for far longer. chuckslothower@dailyemerald. com INBOX Editor’s note: These letters are all in response to Jennifer McBride’s May 25 column, “10 reasons not to kill Bush.” Add family man to the list Jennifer McBride’s “ 10 reasons not to kill Bush” column left out a few reasons not to kill President Bush. Did the fact that he is a father, husband, son, broth er and uncle escape thought? Publish ing a piece outlining the reasons to not kill someone, reasons which have noth ing to do with his role as a family head and caring human being, is absolutely reprehensible. Thank you for providing me with more information about why I view most around my campus as short sighted and hateful toward our nation and leader. Chris Harrelson Georgia Any death is a tragedy The main “reason” to “stop praying” that Bush be killed is that for anyone to be killed is a tragedy, for any president to get killed is a tragedy for an entire na tion. Jennifer McBride seems to have some trouble figuring this one out. Jerry Peragine Pennsylvania Cheney would do better I am a retired libertarian Republican living in Thailand. I saw this column on the Drudge Report and found it well written, thoughtful and insightful. My only point of disagreement is the seg ment on the vice president. Cheney is much brighter and less religious than George W. Bush and thus would do a better job both at home and abroad. Jack Kirwan Thailand Shocked at the uninformed Beautifully put, Ms. Jennifer McBride. I’ve tried and failed to come up with the words to describe what you so simply and clearly phrased: “I am too often shocked by the vitriolic repulsion many people feel for our leader and America in gener al, especially because the loathing is often poorly informed. Liberalism has to be more than a college fad or a collection of loudmouths whose idiotic comments stir headlines. The rabid dislike some people feel for a man they’ve never even met makes me ashamed to be a Democrat.” I’m shocked as well — not only do I find these people often fundamental ly uninformed, but their arrogance and hypocrisy (decrying with every sound bite they’ve ever heard on NPR every American foreign policy choice they remember to spout out while at the same time enjoying every benefit derived therefrom and sacrificing nothing to enact their supposed “be liefs”) almost overwhelms me, and I have to exclude people from my life lest I hemorrhage from frustration and nausea or worse. Robert Kabakoff New York 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. 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 venfication The Emerald reserves the right to edit tor space, grammar and style. Guest submissions are published at the discretion of the Emerald. ■ Out loud “I just had to lock myself in the room and say ‘stay stoned, don’t go outside.’” — West Univer sity Neighbors Chair Drix Rixmann, on his at tempts to not bring home too much of the free goods left in alleys by departing students. “The Senate and the Executive once again substantially increased the incidental fee. (It) is hypocrisy at its finest — student leaders voting to increase their own fees while lobbying the state legislature for a tuition freeze.” — Mike Sherman, former ASUO senator, on the activity of this year’s ASUO Student Senate. “I didn’t even have a black instructor on this campus until my third term here.” — University senior Margarita Smith, on the necessity of of fering courses through the University’s Office of Multicultural Academic Support. “I just took it all in, and it just came out perfect.” — Oregon’s Sarah Malone, after setting new school and personal records for the javelin throw in the NCAA West Regional Championships. “The fire alarm goes on and people don’t leave.” — University Fire Protection Manager Chuck Campbell, on the need to take campus fire safety seriously. “As a first draft, it has many drafts to go.” — University emeritus math professor Richard Koch, asking for clearer definitions within the University’s Five-Year Diversity plan. “Eugene prides itself on being an independ ent-minded community that supports inde pendent businesses. But every time I say that I have to remind myself how many independent businesses have gone out of business in the last 10 years.” — Evon Smith, whose parents founded the Smith Family Bookstore. “Not to beat the subject to death, but I would have liked to see individual senators take responsibility for what happened on the retreat.” — Former ASUO Senator Austin Shaw-Phillips, looking back on the Sunriver retreat. “They need to spend more money on things like education and Social Security. I’m a polit ical science major, so like, I think differently.” —■ University sophomore Anh Nguyen, on a Senate bill to lift federal restrictions on stem cell research. “If you’re trying to run a baseball team and you can’t pay your free agents what other teams are paying, you’re going to lose your top players.”— Associate professor of physics Stephen Hsu, discussing University faculty salaries. “Every man dies, not every man really lives.” — A quote on University student Joel Nathan Meyer’s Thefacebook profile. Meyer drowned Sunday at Lake Shasta. EDITORIAL BOARD Jennifer Sudick Editor in Chief Ailee Slater Commentary Editor Steven R. Neuman Managing Editor Shadra Beesley Copy Chief Adrienne Nelson Online Editor CLARIFICATION On June 1, the Emerald ran an article ("University’s food services hold clean inspection reports") citing the num ber of violations in recent EMU and residence hall eatery health inspections. Andrew Smash’s score was not in cluded, and representatives from the company said stu dents were asking why. The Lane County Environmental Health Department does not usually release the scores of businesses that are in the process of dosing. The busi ness’ score was a 98 out of 100, with two violations. — Emily Smith