Newsroom: (541) 346-5511 Room 300, Erb Memorial Union RO. Box 3159, Eugene, OR 97403 E-mail: editor@dailyemerald.com Online Edition: wwwdailyemerald.com Friday.' member2,2001 Editor in Chief: Jessica Blanchard Managing Editor: Michael J. Kleckner Editorial Editor: Julie Lauderbaugh Assistant Editorial Editor: Jacquelyn Lewis Yeste year's Editorial Halloween Halloween has come and gone with hardly a passing notice from University students. It seems true there were a number of parties based loosely upon the occasion, the most laudable in our minds being the Sigma Alpha Mu celebration for the children of Pearl Buck School. One of the most enterprising fraternities added a new twist to the trick or treat routine. Going University of Oregon 125th ANNIVERSARY Nov. 2, 1959 around to different women’s liv ing organiza tions, the group would demand a hearty buss from the girl who an swered the door as ful fillment of the treat. It is report ed they met with outstanding success. Downtown the pace was a lit tle swifter. Three gorgeously dyed chickens squawked discor dantly with one frightened hen taking time out to lay an egg on the sidewalk as she fled down the street. It was a pathetic sight however, no matter what you think of chickens. The movie houses were crammed. Two sports cars raced up Willamette Street, weaving through crowded traffic. The only thing they proved was how ignorant drivers of flashy sports cars can be. The final episode occurred late that night. A couple, strolling about the fountain, in Eugene’s city center, pointed laughingly at the foam created from a box of laundry soap dumped into the pool. The young lady, fascinated by the bubbles, began kicking at them. One particularly vigorous thrust with her foot sent her shoe flying through the air. It landed neatly in the center where it bobbed far out of reach. The maiden’s distress was relieved however when her gallant escort, shoes and stockings in hand, waded out and retrieved it. We hope the girl thanked her hero properly afterward. She was laughing too hard when we last saw her being hurried away by the fellow. GTF is a J-O-B Guest Commentary Kay S. Byber “Man, I wanna be a math GTF!” —Actual quote from a student, when told I “only" teach one class per term Not that I want to discourage anyone from going to grad school or anything, but I think there might be just a wee bit of misunder standing among undergraduates as to just what is involved in being an “overpaid GTF,” as the Oregon Commentator referred to us last week. So I thought I’d give a bit of a rundown on the real scoop. I am a student and a teacher at the same time. On the student end, I take classes, do research and study for huge exams—to the time of about 20-40 hours a week. I also teach a class each term. This means I give lectures, hold of fice hours, write and grade exams, compute and agonize over final grades, and organize a course Web site, for another 16-20 hours a week. GTF as teacher Pop quiz: Which takes longest? (a) Writing, proofreading and copying a 50 minute midterm (b) Grading the midterm (for about 35 students) (c) Writing make-up exams for two students who overslept Actually they all take about the same amount of time, seven to 10 hours each. This in the middle of having my own midterms to take! This is why, heartless as it seems, I nev er give make-up exams. I also grade over sev eral days, to avoid insanity. GTF as student “Why would you want to study math?” I am often asked with a sneer. “What’s it good for, anyway?” I am sure that many well-meaning students truly don’t mean to insult me when they say this. Maybe it’s some sort of weird way of con veying admiration. Anyway, aside from its myr iad applications in biology, chemistry, physics, economics, statistics and every other science, math is good for expanding your brain to under stand abstract concepts. Think of it as weightlifting for your mind. And, despite popular opinion, even theoreti cal math is beautiful. Algebraic topology, for ex ample, has no practical use at all that I know of, but I study it because it fascinates me to consid er worlds that are totally unlike our own. Believe it or not, I learn a lot by teaching. GTFs unfortunately don’t get to decide what should be taught. We’re handed a syllabus and told, “You have 10 weeks. Good luck.” So part of becoming a good teacher is figuring out what to emphasize and what to let the students figure out on their own. For example, in order to demonstrate a new concept clearly, should I avoid examples with a lot of messy algebra? Or should I give harder examples that might pre pare students better for the homework? Both my teacher and student experiences affect my decisions on these and similar issues. Despite these challenges, I find teaching im mensely rewarding. After straining my own brain to learn the material required for my grad uate work, it is often a refief to consider ideas I have mastered. But the most satisfying aspect of teaching is to see the fight of understanding in students’ faces. It is an honor and a joy to bring a great concept to your attention, and to see 35 si multaneous flashes of epiphany. Have a great year, and I’ll see you in class! Kay S. Byler is a graduate teaching fellow in mathematics. Letters to the editor U.S. government trains terrorists Every American knows by now that Osama bin Laden is the current devil of American foreign policy. He is the one who seems to be behind the attacks of Sept. 11. We are informed that he is a Saudi Arabian from a wealthy family who holds to an extreme fundamentalist version of the Islamic faith. Hardly a likable fellow. The only problem is, like all devils, he is partly myth. Not that he doesn’t exist, or for that matter, play a leading role within certain terrorist networks! He is such a power, but the various states now lining up to volunteer in the “war against terror ism” know quite well that he is not the lynchpin in worldwide terrorism. He is simply a major player specifically within the terrorist networks that have associa tions with Islamic fundamentalism. But another fact that has been men tioned, but not explained is that bin Laden was once a CIA operative. He learned what he knows from this intelli gence agency of the U.S. government. What was he trained for? To carry out ter rorist activities for the CIA, or so one would have to assume. Like so many of America’s enemies of the past several years, bin Laden is also a former ally who has gone renegade. This is the sort of com pany that all states seek, the sort of allies every ruling class courts. Why, then, trust our leaders when they call us to fight these terrorists they trained? Brenton Gicker student Lane Community College Patriotism means respecting dissent I agree with graduate student Sean Walston’s description of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks as “an atrocity” (“Peace activists are hypocrites,” ODE, 10/22). I'm less comfort able with his description of peace activists as guilty of “ideological arrogance” and of being “hypocritical and intellectually dishonest.” Walston argues that “others have paid the ultimate price ... in defense of the principles we as a nation hold dear.” Freedom of speech is, of course, one of those important principles; yet, in my opinion, Walston and others who label dissenters as unpatriotic dishonor those who died by wanting to deny the freedom they died for to citizens who question the infallibility of our governmental leaders or who examine the wisdom of their fre quently self-serving policies. The current revival of this sort of divi sive and illogical nastiness posing as patriotism is merely an updating of the McCarthyism of the 1950s and the “Love It or Leave It” nonsense of the ’60s and ’70s. True patriotism to me means sup porting what's supportable and question ing what isn’t. I prefer this approach to blind lockstep obedience. As an ex-Marine, a teacher for 39 years, a father of three University of Oregon graduates and a grandfather, I fly the flag proudly, but that doesn’t mean I want to hide behind it or wear it as a blindfold. Jerome Garger Eugene Peter Utsey W£ Survived I Amp iHey SAIP ftlOTHIrifr wouuo B€ TH6- $AMC. \