Commentary Oregon Daily Emerald Thursday, October 20, 2005 NEWS STAFF (541)346-5511 PARKER HOWELL EDITOR IN CHIEF SHADRA BEESLEY MANAGING EDITOR MEGHANN M. CUNIFE IARED PABEN NEWS EDITORS EVA SYI,WESTER SENIOR NEWS REPORTER KELLY BROWN KATY GAGNON CHRISTOPHER HAGAN BRITENI MCCLENAHAN NICHOLAS WILBUR NEWS REPORTERS JOE BAILEY EMILY SMITH PART-TIME NEWS REPORTERS SHAWN MILLER SPORTS EDITOR SCOTT J. ADAMS LUKE. ANDREWS JEFFREY DRANSFELDT SPORTS REPORTERS AMY LICHTY PULSE EDITOR TREVOR DAVIS KRISTEN GERHARD ANDREW MCCOLLUM PULSE REPORTERS AILEE SLATER COMMENTARY EDITOR GABE BRADLEY JESSICA DERI.ETH ARMY EEITI COLUMNISTS DM BOBOSKY PHOTO EDITOR NICOLE BARKER SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER KATE HORTON ZANE RITT PHOTOGRAPHERS KAJIE GLEASON PART-TIME PHOTOGRAPHER JONAH SCHROGIN DESIGN EDITOR JOHN AYRES JONNYBAGGS MOLLY BEDFORD KERI SPANGLER DESIGNERS CHRIS TODD GRAPHIC ARTIST AARON DUCHATEAU ILLUSTRATOR ALEXANDRA BURGUIERES REBECCA TAYLOR COPY CHIEFS JENNY DORNER BRYN JANSSON JOSH NORRIS JENNA ROHRBACHER MATT TIFFANY COPYEDITORS ST EVEN NEUMAN ONLINE/SUPPLEMENTS EDITOR TIMO THY ROBINSON WEBMASTER BUSINESS (541)346-5511 JUDY RIEDL GENERAL MANAGER KATHY CARBONE BUSINESS MANAGER JAUNA DEGIUSTI RECEPTIONIST RYAN JOHNSON RANDY RYMER CORRIEN MUNDY DISTRIBUTION ADVERTISING (541)346-3712 MELISSA GUST ADVERTISING DIRECTOR MIA LEIDELMEYER SALES MANAGER KELLEE KAUFTHF.IL JOHN KELLY LINDSEY FERGUSON WINTER GIBBS KATE HIRONAKA DESI MCCORMICK STEPHEN MILLER KATHRYN O'SHEA-EVANS EMILY PHILB1N CODY WILSON SALES REPRESENTATIVES BONA LEE AD ASSISTANT CLASSIFIED (541)3464343 TR1NA SHANAMAN CLASSIFIED MANAGER USA CLARK AN DO AMANDA KANTOR KERI SPANGLER KAnE STRINGER CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ASSOCIATES PRODUCTION (541) 3464381 MICHELE ROSS PRODUCTION MANAGER KIRA PARK PRODUCTION COORDINATOR JAMIE ACKERMAN CAMERON GAITT CATTLIN MCCURDY ERIN MCKENZIE JONAH SCHROGIN TERRY STRONG DESIGNERS 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 Memonal Union. The Emerald is private property. Unlawful removal or use of papers is prosecutable by law. Although Jake was worried about being placed into Carson Hall with a com plete stranger, everything had gone smoothly for the f irst two weeks.... Everything changed however, when he made a startling discovery.... Aaron DuChateau | Illustrator ■ Guest commentary Presidents' tips for community to have a fun, safe Halloween Dear University of Oregon and Lane Community College students, Halloween is a time of celebration and exciting activities at the University and LCC. Both schools are planning many events for the Halloween week end, and you are all invited to attend. While we know that most Univer sity and LCC students drink respon sibly, and that many students don’t drink at all, we urge you to remem ber your obligations as a Eugene community member. From past ex perience, we have learned that the actions of a few intoxicated or irre sponsible individuals can ruin an entire party and threaten the safety of other community members, not to mention create an unfavorable im age of college students. As you plan for your weekend, be cooperative with neighbors, police or other per sons who may come to discuss any issue of concern. Assist your friends in making sound decisions so situa tions won’t escalate. There are a few things you can do if your party gets out of control: 1. Call the police if uninvited guests disrupt your party, or if your guests won’t pay attention to your requests to behave and obey the law. Call before things get too out of control. Police will view your attempt to keep things under control as a good thing. 2. Respond positively if a police offi cer comes to your house. The officer is most likely responding to a complaint. Make sure the person interacting with the police officer at the front door is sober and responsive to the officer’s re quests. Do as much as possible to com ply with what the police are asking you to do. Enlist the help of your friends and housemates. 3. Interfering with a police officer makes a bad situation worse. Use common sense and cooperate. Don’t throw bottles at or near police offi cers. If you have committed a crime and a police officer asks you to identi fy yourself, you will need to do so. Giving a false name is a separate of fense, and will likely worsen what might have been a warning or a cita tion into a trip to jail. 4. Understand that you can be arrest ed. A police officer may take someone into custody for any violation of law that carries a potential jail penalty. This includes most state criminal laws and many city ordinances. For some viola tions, an officer may detain you while verifying your identity and issuing a ci tation. 5. When a police officer asks you to dear an area, leave right away. If you stick around after the warning to watch what’s going to happen, you may be cited for interfering with a police officer. If police warn that they are going to use tear gas, you need to leave the premises as fast as you can. We hope you will have a great time this year at Halloween parties. Take ex tra care to make sure your parties are under control. Thanks for your cooper ation and have a great weekend! Adam Walsh is President of the Associated Students of the University of Oregon Jeremy Riel is President of the Associated Students of Lane Community College INBOX Tactless cartoonist should take more care I’m an avid reader of the Oregon Dai ly Emerald, and I find that for a free newspaper, it’s pretty good. Normally I glare over the political cartoon on page 2, because last year I found the car toonist’s brand of liberalism insulting. Yet the cartoonist last year never went after any student groups on campus, and mostly stayed on political bashing. This year, on the other hand, the new cartoonist Aaron DuChateau has gone after student groups, such as the College Republicans. Even though I am not a Republican, and have no affilia tion with this group, I still feel threat ened by this cartoon. If DuChateau can so freely depict the College Republicans as drunks, without any action on their part to support his assault, what’s to stop the cartoonist from making racist commentary about the Black Student Union or depicting the religious groups on campus as extremists? Mr. DuChateau has the right to his opinion and freedom of speech, but he should also take into account the repercus sions of his actions. A large portion of the publicity student groups get comes from the Emerald, and any unfounded, unfair, bad publicity they get directly af fects their membership and in some cases funding. If Mr. DuChateau can’t be tactful, I hope that the Emerald will consider getting a syndicated cartoonist; one whose professionalism will be an asset to the paper rather than a liability. Katie Wells University Sophomore ■ Editorial Ethics do not only apply when convenient Although The New York Times has endured much criticism for the actions of its once-mar tyred, now-demonized reporter, Judith Miller, we cannot forget that some of the improprieties now causing such a stir were brought to light by the paper itself. And some of them weren’t. On Sunday, the paper turned inward and pub lished a self- critical investigative article on the se ries of events that occurred at the Times. The re porting on Miller came to a critical and now controversial conclusion: “Interviews show that the paper’s leaders, in taking what they considered to be a principled stand, ultimately left the major decisions in the case up to Ms. Miller, an intrepid reporter whom editors found hard to control.” Despite Miller’s reputation as a “divisive” loose cannon, her editors apparently did not review her notes from interviews with her confidential source. If they had, they might have learned that she seemingly recorded the name of CIA agent Valerie Plame during a conversation with I. Lewis Libby, Vice President Dick Cheney’s chief of staff. She claims Libby hinted at Plame’s role, but did n’t identify her by name. The stories also imply that Miller intentionally misidentified Libby, her unnamed source, with the understanding that Libby’s motivations for the disclosure were politically motivated. Times editors probably didn’t handle the Miller controversy in the best possible manner. During Miller’s imprisonment, Times editors suppressed Times reporters’ coverage of her source and other issues — apparently, they didn’t want to compro mise her legal situation, according to the Times. In the end, the editors’ decision to report on their own inadequacies remedies some of these prior missteps. The stories reveal that Miller’s ac tions were not as lofty as previously pegged. These revelations do not dilute our previous assertions that imprisonment of journalists rep resents a serious offense to journalism, nor does it negate the need for a federal shield law. This story underscores why courses on com munication law and media ethics should be re quired, not optional, at this University’s School of Journalism and Communication. Such classes provide students with a foundation for an ethical career, and prepare them for the world of mod em journalism. Miller’s actions also strengthen the case for the adoption of a strong and binding code of ethics. We cannot de-certify an unethical journalist, as doctors or lawyers can disbar a corrupted mem ber of their profession, nor should we be able to do so. But creating a universal code would be a good first move. Such a code should clarify how confidential sources should be used — to help provide the public with information it wouldn’t otherwise receive. The Miller scandal has again cast one of the nation’s most prominent sources of news in a du bious light. Miller is partially responsible, as are Times’ editors, who made a noble but perhaps misguided attempt to protect one of their own. Yet we must encourage newspapers to follow the Times’ recent example, investigating and report ing news even if it is embarrassing. raSes awareness of violence" should have stated that the • Because of an editor’s error, the photo caption accom panying Wednesday's “Torrey campaign hinges on educa tion” should have stated that Jim Torrey is running for state Senate.