Greek guard riles reporter at Duck game Hyped up for the Cal football game, a few friends and I arrived at Autzen Stadium in plenty of time to secure good student seats for the game. We thought. reporter's notebook frank shaw We walked up to a huge section of empty seats about halfway up the stadium and on the 20 yard-line and sat down. “Hey!" a drunken student yelled as he staggered up to us. "You can't sit there." We looked around in confusion, thinking perhaps we had gotten turned around and were trying to sit in the reserved seat sec tions. No, this was the right spot. Student section, no reserved seats. We said as much to our inebriated friepd. "No, we're saving these six rows of seats for our friends,” he slobbered. "They'll be here later." We sat down. "You can leave now and find some other seats, or you can leave when all our friends get here," he said. We stood there and argued for a while. These aren’t reserved seats, we pointed out. If your friends wanted to get good seats, they should have come early. As we stood arguing, more people started to trickle in to the "reserved seats." The guard started to try to herd these new in terlopers out. We moved to other seats a few rows down. By the ‘time we, had settled, the section had been filled with other f^ns, and our Neanderthal friend was trying to secure a new section a few rows up. A man and his wife walked up. “You can't sit here," he tried. "Have you ever seen a mad Marine, boy," the man hollered. "I'll wipe that smile off your face." He, too, went and sat somewhere else. A few minutes later the guard received reinforcments in the form of his "friends" who started to arrive in various stages of drunkeness. You guessed it, they were from a fraterni ty. We stayed in our seats. About half way through the first quarter we wished we hadn't. We saw people hand-passed up and and down the stands. We watched people stag ger up the aisle and and stop to chat with their friends — effectively blocking our view. We heard discussions about parties and girls. We listened to two girls moan about not having Vuarnets for the glare, and we listened to an in-depth discussion on the relative merits of the different finger nail polishes. It was.. .um.. .stimulating conversation. But we didn't get to see the game. I don't really have any complaints about friends sitting together. But what burns me up is the idea of Greeks “reserving" stu dent seats. I paid the same amount of money for my tickets as anyone else. I'll sit where I want. So next time, Greeks, if you could cut the tailgater just a little bit shorter, get there earlier and don't post the guards. You'll make more friends that way. letters /Twilight' I write in response to your arti cle about the SEARCH program (Oct.6). I would especially like to address the questions surroun ding "Twilight of Western Thought." I have taken two terms of the three term course. Though I was cautioned about taking a 400 level sociology course as a sophomore, I looked forward to the challenge. I was not to be disappointed. It was extremely challenging, cover ing topics new to me (such as nihilism and psychoanalysis) and shedding new light onto old sub jects. If it were not for Doug Groothuis' teaching ability and his sincere desire to see his students succeed, I'm sure I would have either dropped the class or receiv ed a very poor grade. Not only was the class itself mind-expanding but the instructor made a con scious effort to see that the students understood the ideas ex pressed. He encouraged, and received, student feedback throughout the two terms. The course was not an easy A. Today, two years later, the challenge of the class continues to encourage me to explore and examine the ideas and topics it presented. After all, isn't that what education is- all about' Tom Simpson senior, telecommunications Draft rally The Associated Students of Lane Community College are honored to be co-sponsoring a rally with the Associated Students of the University of Oregon in voicing our common opposition to draft registration and the linkage of financial aid. There is a move in Congress to repeal this discriminatory law. It is our obligation to have extensive lobbying efforts to encourage our representatives to support this repeal and also to become active in the process of building support for the repeal. This law is not only discriminatory because it forces people to incriminate themselves, but it is also discriminatory against lower-income people. It is a very dangerous precedent to compel universities and colleges and their financial aid offices to become police officers of the state. This is another example of the Reagan administration priority on military development while maintaining a blatant insensitivity to social needs. We are witnessing diminishing support for education while unprecedented spending goes to military madness. The students of LCC are proud to work with students from the University on such urgent com mon goals. Students from LCC will be attending the rally at the University courtyard on Friday, Oct. 14 at 12:30 p.m. In order for our concerns^ to be heard, we must join our efforts together. Bryan Moore, ASLCC president Nigel Griffith student resource center director Cathy Benjamin communications diret tor Stephen Wysong, cultural director Humanist I write this letter in reaction to a recent Maranatha demonstration against abortion in the EMU cour tyard. I feel compelled to express my views and the views of many modern humanists on the subject. In contemporary society the deci sion is made daily which living creatures shall live and which shall die. That decision is based upon what we determine to be the level of the living creature's con sciousness. Cows, we determine, have a level of consciousness so low that it is acceptable to kill them for their beef. Some people take exception to this; the majori ty do not. Many argue that whales have a consciousness level so high ,that it is morally wrong to kill them for their blubber. I raise these two issues because they are interrelated to the abortion issue. A fertilized egg is, at this stage of development, a one-celled creature. It does not, by defini Hraann Ptlllv Fmmld tion, have any consciousness. I will open myself to the charge of sensationalism, but I must point out the stark fact that a mosquito has more consciousness than a fertilized egg. The United States Supreme Court has decided that the killing of a fertilized egg does not constitute the taking of a human life. Furthermore, it has left to the individual states the power to determine at what point the human embryo is to be con sidered a human life. Many of us in the humanities feel that this distinction should be based upon the embryo's level of con sciousness, its ability to feel pain and fear. These capacities do not exist for the fertilized egg. It is up to the embryologists, the experts, to tell us when they do. For now the working model appears to be three to six months. To this view many will counter that it is the human potential which counts. In response we can only say that it is safer to consider things as they are, and not as they might become. Others will counter that human kind is en dowed with a soul. This conten tion is religious in nature and thus has no place in the discussion determining the laws of our secular society. Keith Bowen senior, English Reservations We agree with your reservations about the use of the terms "vagrant" and "transient" ("Police May Abuse Task Force Plan," Sept.30) as they are so vague as to be meaningless. However, we disagree that the recent Vagrancy Task Force report (or any other authority, for that matter) "allows (police) carte blanche to stop and cite any person or groups." We simply do not have that kind of discretion, that kind of power. You ask what stops us from "citing as vagrant" someone who is hanging out on 13th Avenue. The U.S. Constitution and its in terpretations make it clear that "vagrancy" is not a crime. If there is no crime being committed or none has been committed, there can be no citations. Please be assured we do not in terpret the Vagrancy Task Force recommendations as advice to harass students of the University or anyone else in this community. On the contrary, the work of the Task Force has focused attention on problems on homelessness, joblessness, and hunger and has made us even more conscious of our need to be sensitive to those problems and to remain a con structive force within this city. lames Packard chief, Eugene police No message The problem with Maranatha's anti-abortion position from a religious perspective, that tji^re_ is no message from Cod about abortion in that Jewish-Christian document known as the "Bible,” upon which Maranatha seeks to base its views. Two things the Bible does sug gest about the origins of human life are: human life begins when Cod breathes the spirit of life into a potential being (Gen.2:7, Hebrew word nephesh means both breath and spirit); and human beings are co-creators of life along with God (Gen. 4:1). From these descriptions, a cou ple things are clear to me: "to be" as a human being is to be able to enter into relationships with other human beings and with God on the levels of dialogue, choice, and action: this happens at birth when the energizing spirit of life sur faces the newborn into the com munity of interacting life. And as a co-creator of life, a mother has the choice (just as God does) to effect the creation of a human being or not effect it. The creative act is not mandated. God endowed human beings with freedom to choose what we will affirm as fruits of our lives and what we will not affirm. To accept the gift of human life is to accept both the pain and the joy of responsible choosing. One of our most significant choices is whether or not to actualize a new human being through birth. That will always be done with fear, trembling, and joy. Stuart Shaw Wesley foundation Hearsay Melissa Martin's article on SEARCH in the Oct. 6 issue of the Emerald is a compilation of opi nion, rumor and hearsay. According to the article, "the SEARCH program is a persistent problem," an opinion shared by Paul Holbo and supposedly some unidentified complainers. Neither Martin nor Holbo explain precise ly win/ is complaining or why. Holbo has concerns, but there are no specific allegations from other quarters against the SEARCH program. Certainly any instructor, whether a faculty member or SEARCH instructor, has an obliga tion not to indoctrinate students. Had this been happening in SEARCH, I doubt the prgram would have survived for 15 years. If there are legitimate areas for concern which haven't already been addressed, let's hear about them from a spectrum of past and present SEARCH instructors, faculty sponsors, students and staff. There is more to this pro gram than one person's concerns, "The Twilight of Western Thought," and anonymous unspecified complaints. Incidentally, if anyone happens to "pass mustard," I hope they see a doctor. Kathy Bogan graduate, art EUGENE. PLASMA CORP, 1071 OLIVE ST. EUGENE PLA5MA EARN MONET VlH\LE. SAVING UVES. DONATE TOUR PLASMA l\ - * EUGENE PLASMA t4<»U-22m W Zx t ui 4-UTH EXP. date OOT. 31,1963 NEW OOHORS-THISAD ISWORTOMP0 ONXOURZwd DOHfflON Page 3