clips
Bomb threat
proves false
While students were in the
middle of midterm exams on
Monday afternoon, an uniden
tified man called the intramural
sports office and said he had
planted a “small bomb in the
women's locker room by the
pool," said Marlene Olson, a
work-study student who an
swered the call.
Campus Security officers
evacuated Gerlinger Hall at
about 12:15 p m , said Dennis
Kelley, a security officer.
The caller said that a bomb
would be detonated at 12:55
p m Campus security officers
said no bomb was located and
people were allowed to re-enter
the building at 1:15 p.m
The caller was irrational and
apparently blamed the in
tramural program for “spats
with his girlfiend," Kelley said
“He said we had taken his
girlfriend away from him with
sports," Olson said
While Olson kept the caller on
the line, other staff members in
the intramural office contacted
Pacific Northwest Bell to have
the call traced, but their efforts
were unsuccessful.
“Ma Bell tried to trace it, they
found the line and said no one
was on it," Olson said
“We talked for about 20 min
utes while we tried to trace the
call,” Olson said “It was bas
ically an obscene phone
call he was pretending he
was my father — I guess I was
his daughter.”
"We don’t have the slightest
idea who it is, he was real vague,
he was really depressed," Olson
said
Olum, faculty
talk about cuts
University Pres Paul Olum
has called an emergency meet
ing of the University Assembly
on Wednesday to discuss a
possible new round of budget
cuts
The 3:30 p.m meeting will be
in 150 Geology Classified and
management staff representa
tives have also been invited to
attend
‘‘The discussion will center
around the chancellor s recent
instructions to us to prepare a
new list of possible program
reductions or eliminations for
the 1982-83 budget year," Olum
said
Chancellor Roy Lieuailen
asked the presidents of the
eight colleges and universities
in the state system of higher
[February
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education to submit their
proposals to him by Feb 28. The
chancellor had been instructed
by the Oregon Legislature to
look at program cuts as a pos
sible way to abolish the $49 per
term tuition surcharge imposed
at the start of winter term.
Olum said last Thursday that a
list from the chancellor’s staff
does not represent the program
reductions the University would
propose.
Among the 10 schools and
departments listed were the law
school and the school of com
munity service and public af
fairs.
Program joins
prize finalists
The Resident Teacher Mas
ter's Degree Program in the
College of Education is one of
three finalists for the Distin
guished Program in Teacher
Education Award from the As
sociation of Teacher Educators.
The other finalists are the
University of Texas and Ford
ham University. Announcement
of the award is expected to be
made Feb. 17 at the ATE annual
meeting in Phoenix, Ariz.
The University program, one
of 24 in the country, combines
work toward a master's degree
with a year of full-time teaching
in a public school. The pro
gram's goal is to help young
teachers who have a basic
teaching certificate reach mas
ter’s teacher status.
The program currently has 25
students, with 16 teaching in the
Eugene 4-J School District, five
in the Springfield School Dis
trict, tow in the Crow
Applegate-Lorane School
District and one each in Junc
tion City and Fern Ridge School
Districts.
The entry in the ATE compe
tition uses the Eugene 4-J pro
gram as the model.
Other school districts which
have participated in the pro
gram during the past five years
include Coos Bay, Gresham,
Hillsboro, Redmond, Roseburg
and South Umpqua, according
to Virginia Schwartzrock, clin
ical professor for the program.
She said the program is un
ique because the cooperative
arrangement between {he
University and the school dis
trict can be tailored to meet the
needs of both urban and rural
schools.
For example, the supervisors,
chosen from among the top
teachers and curriculum
specialists in the district, can
supervise several teachers in
one school or several teachers
at different schools.
"There is considerable com
petition for spots in this pro
gram, and currently we have
students from six states,”
Schwartzrock said. She noted
that studies of the program have
shown that a high percentage of
its graduates remain in teaching
as a career and many move into
leadership roles in their
schools.
The program is an outgrowth
of one started in the 1960s with
grants from the Ford Founda
tion.
Imported
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