Oregon Daily Emerald Thursday, June 23, 2005 Bret Furtwangler | Graphic artist* NEWS STAFF (541)346-5511 SHADRA BEESLF.Y EDITOR IN CHIEF GABE BRADLEY NEWS EDITOR NICHOIAS WILBUR NEWS REPORTER SHAWN MILLER SPORTS EDITOR RYAN NYBURG PULSE EDITOR All.EE SLATER COMMENTARY EDITOR I1M BO BOSKY PHOTO AND ONLINE EDITOR WENDY K1EFFER DESIGN EDITOR IENNY GERW1CK COPY CHIEF BRET FURTWANCLER GRAPHIC ARTIST BUSINESS (541)346-5511 IUDYRIEDL GENERAL MANAGER KATHY CARBONE BUSINESS MANAGER ALEX CORBIN ALAN FULLERTON RYAN (OHNSON DISTRIBUTION ADVERTISING (541)346-3712 MELISSA GUST ADVERTISING DIRECTOR MIA LE1DELMEYER SALES MANAGER KELLEE KAUFTHEIL STEPHEN MILLER KATIE STRINGER CODY WILSON SALES REPRESENTATIVES CLASSIFIED (541) 3464343 TRINASHANAMAN CLASSIFIED MANAGER KORALYNN BASHAM KATY GAGNON KER1 SPANGLER CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ASSOCIATES PRODUCTION (541)3464381 MICHELE ROSS PRODUCTION MANAGER KIRA PARK PRODUCTION COORDINATOR The Oregon Daily Emerald is pu6 lished daily Monday through Fri day dunng 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 Memonai Union The Emerald is private property. Unlawful removal or use of papers is prosecutable by law. ■ Guest commentary Creationism evolves wrong way Christian fundamentalists have often been accused of wanting to radically alter the laws and institutions of the United States. Actually, it is usually the other way around; most of the time those fundamentalists only try to pre vent America’s laws and institutions from being radically altered. For in stance, fundamentalists may insist on the preservation of Christmas symbols and celebrations. However, there is one area in which many Christian fundamentalists do in deed want to impose radical change: the teaching of Biblical creationism vs. evolution in public schools. After losing favor since 1925 be cause of Tennessee v. John Scopes, the creationist movement is beginning to once again make serious inroads. For example, IMAX theaters in several southern cities are refusing to show “Volcanoes of the Deep Sea” for fear of offending patrons, because the film makes a reference to evolution. In Dover, Pa., school administrators earli er this year ordered biology teachers to declare in class that “Darwin’s theory... is a theory, not a fact. Gaps in the theo ry exist for which there is no evi dence.” In an Atlanta suburb in 2002, stickers were placed on textbooks stat ing that “evolution is a theory, not a fact.” In January, a judge ruled the stickers unconstitutional. In 1999, the Kansas state board of education voted to remove most refer ences to evolution from state education standards, a decision that was reversed two years later. According to a CBS poll conducted last fall, two-thirds of Americans favor teaching creationism in public schools together with evolution and 37 percent want to completely replace the teach ing of evolution with creationism. Saying that evolution is a theory is like saying that the earth revolving around the sun is a theory. Or that plate tectonics (continental drift) is a theory. Or that the idea of atoms mak ing up our world is a theory. Just be cause such scientific elements are not apparent to the human eye doesn’t mean they aren’t factual. Evolution is a fact. It simply happens that because it involves time periods spanning hundreds or thousands of generations, evolutionary change is often much too slow for humans to perceive. In some cases, however, natural se lection does occur quickly enough for us to perceive. Through mutations, new strains of antidote-resistant viruses are always emerging. The same holds true for pesticide-resistant insects. There is also the famous ex ample of the peppered moth near Manchester, England. Starting out with light-colored wings, they were camouflaged as they rested on tree trunks of the same color. But, as in dustrial pollution made the trees dark, birds picked off the lighter-col ored moths. Mutant moths born with black wings survived, reproduced, and multiplied. Through observing a petri dish of bacteria, evolution can be witnessed in a matter of hours. Adding a certain antibiotic kills the majority of the bac teria, but some of the bacteria are im mune and go on to mass-reproduce. To take a human example, it is re vealing that Nepalese Sherpas are gen erally much better at climbing Mt. Everest than anyone else. It is not just because of skill, but because their bod ies seem to have adapted genetically to the extreme environment, according to scientists. How did this adaptation take place? Not because God decided one day to give all Sherpas a better oxygen processing capability than other popu lations, but because of natural selec tion: The people whose bodies could not process oxygen in a high-altitude environment failed to survive, and failed to reproduce. Suppressing the teaching of evolu tion or presenting it as a controversial “theory” would be a huge step back ward in education. Meanwhile, proponents of a con cept called intelligent design argue that it is difficult to imagine how cer tain complex phenomena could have been constructed gradually through evolution, and conclude that an intel ligent being must have played a part. If science cannot explain how cer tain biological components were con structed (a big if in itself), then that point could be made in class. It would be up to students to draw their own conclusions as to how such unex plainable things came about, just as it is tip to them to draw their own con clusions as to what causes gravity. (Could it be God?) I think we can all agree that ques tioning the study of evolution, and instead teaching that the world as we know it was created some 6,000 years ago, in six days, would certainly be foolhardy. Patrick D. Chisholm is principal of Accentance, LLC, a writing and editing firm in Chantilly, Virginia. OREGON DAILY EMERALD LETTERS POLICY Letters to toe editor and guest commentanes are encouraged, and should be sent to letters@datlyemerald com or submitted at toe 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 toe right to edit for space, grammar and style. Guest submissions are published at toe discretion of toe Emerald. ■ Editorial Oregonians have history of rebelling against Feds When the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the federal government could prosecute med ical marijuana users, those citizens who rely on cannabis to live a normal life became a lit tle nervous. Elderly cancer patients could face serious consequences for the possession of what is, by the laws of their state, a perfectly legal medicine. Fortunately for many marijuana users, they live in Oregon. After the Supreme Court’s attempt to override the decisions of individual states, the Oregon State Depart ment of Human Services consulted our State Attorney General and determined that the medical marijuana program should contin ue to run as normal. For thousands of can cer patients, AIDS victims, and other users who rely on the medicinal value of the cannabis plant, Oregon’s gung-ho attitude means that the lives of these patients can continue to run as normal. Cliched though it may be, the truth remains that without Ore gon’s insistence on medical marijuana pro grams, sick grandmothers would be forced to buy their medicine in unsafe, possibly ille gal environments. The federal government should remember, as Oregon obviously has, that making medical marijuana illegal has little effect on drug dealers and harms those with real, medical needs. Aitnougn the federal government still has the right to seize and prosecute those medical marijuana users, Oregon is taking a huge step in the right direction by run ning this state by the will of the people rather than the ill-thought out approach of our national officials. The medical marijuana situation is not the first time our state has taken a rebellious and important stand. Oregon legalized physician assisted suicide, and has continued that tra dition despite the undercutting of John Ashcroft. After being approved by voters three times, the Death with Dignity Act re mains strong thanks to citizens and politi cians alike who refuse to let their voices be silenced by an overzealous attorney general. Issues related to health policy have histori cally been delegated to the states, and Ore gon did not hesitate to remind the Bush Ad ministration of this fact. Multnomah County handed out marriage licenses to gay couples during a time of na tional unrest over the meaning of marriage. As with medical marijuana and the Death with Dignity Act, our state once again made its individual views known to the nation. Al though those marriage licenses were eventu ally revoked (as per the new statewide opin ion that marriage was a union between man and woman), it was at the time exciting to see Oregon take a bold, individual stand. In another act of defiance, Portland was the first city in the country to pull out of the FBI-led anti-terrorism effort in April. Instead, the FBI agent in charge of Oregon, Robert Jordan, aimed to provide all of Portland’s of ficers with anti-terrorism training. Oregon might be a humble representative of the Pacific Northwest, but it is a brave one. Oregonians should be proud of their state’s ability and willingness to fight. EDITORIAL BOARD Shadra Beesley Ailee Slater Editor in Chief Commentary Editor Tim Boboksy Photo and Online Editor