IN THIS ISSUE
Soccer pushes to season’s end
Hauntings in Harper Joy
Walla Walla Bookstores
Despite a string of disappointing losses, women’s soccer remains optimistic. page 7
Students tell their eeriest tales of the specters and spooks residing in Harper Joy Theatre. page 4
Small bookstores provide used and new books to keep it local. page 5
WHITMAN COLLEGE Walla Walla, WA Volume CXXVII Issue 7 whitmanpioneer.com October 28, 2010
Alpha Phi selected to be fourth sorority by HADLEY JOLLEY Staff Reporter
The Alphi Phi sorority will be returning to Whitman next fall as the fourth sorority on campus, pending faculty approval this spring. Whitman’s Panhellenic Extension Committee announced the decision, part of an effort to reduce overcrowding in the existing three sororities, on Monday, Oct. 25. In early October, representatives from Alpha Phi, along with Gamma Phi Beta and Alpha Gamma Delta, came to Whitman to tour the campus and make presentations about their sororities. The Panhellenic Extension Committee and other participants-largely sorority members--who attended these presentations then discussed their preferences. Alpha Phi was favored in part because it had previously been on campus until the 1980s. “There are quite a few Alpha Phi alums in Walla Walla, and a lot of [them] went to Whitman and were Alpha Phis at Whitman thirty years ago . . . They are really going to be willing to help this chapter and get it started,” said junior Heather Smith, president of Whitman’s Panhellenic Association. Other factors the committee considered were the strength of Alpha Phi’s local chapters at other schools, which could provide support for the new chapter, as well as how Alpha Phi
functioned at small liberal arts institutions like Whitman. According to Smith, Alpha Phi gave a compelling presentation of the sorority in terms of public relations. “They really showed us that they know how to market themselves,” Smith said. “They know how to change their marketing techniques based on where they are; so they were really interested, more so than the other groups, in really tailoring their marketing to Whitman’s campus, which is really important when they are a new group coming to Whitman to attract Whitman students. [The] excitement they showed to work with our Panhellenic and everyone on our campus was really impressive.” While Alpha Phi accepted the invitation to come to Whitman, there is one more step to ensure they come to campus: a faculty vote which will occur in the spring. Smith hopes that Dean of Students Chuck Cleveland will write a letter in support of the new sorority, and believes it is likely as he has already shown his support of the process. “We’re hoping that the faculty will see that the Dean of Students supports this and that they’ll also support this,” she said. “We could have gone to the faculty for approval during any time in the process. We could have done it in the fall or last spring. But we decided to wait to the very end to show them that we’ve done all our research and we’ve done it really well.”
HONG Contestents (from left) Ben Serrurier, Matt Bangcay, Matt Oakes, Etienne Moshevich, Etienne Moshevich, Joe Wheeler, Eliot Stone, all seniors, reherse their group dance for the Friday, Oct. 29 event.
Mr. Whitman gets personal
A student’s mother’s struggle with glioblastoma, a type of brain cancer, inspires her to make the disease a focus of fundraising efforts for the annual beauty pageant by ALYSSA GOARD Staff Reporter
The eight young men contending for the title of Mr. Whitman filed into the basement of Prentiss Hall on the night of Tuesday, Oct. 26, practicing graceful slides and almost seamless spins across the dance floor for their opening number. The ninth annual Mr. Whitman competition, to be held Friday, Oct. 29 at 7 p.m. in Cordiner Hall, promises to be one of the most unforget-
table events on campus. Mr. Whitman is a philanthropy event put on by Whitman’s Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, which works from summertime onward to prepare and fundraise. As is the tradition, four independent senior gentlemen and one representative chosen from each fraternity show off their bodies and talents. This year’s competition features Matt Bangcaya, Charlie Procknow, Ben Serrurier, Etienne Moshevich, Matt Oakes, Reed Ferris, Joe Wheeler and Eliot
Coalition addresses hate crimes
Teams debate dry seasons by TYLER HULBURT Staff Reporter
“On campus you are dealing with a wet culture,” said Scott Shields, head coach of Whitman’s varsity cross country. There is no denying it: alcohol plays a large role on the Whitman campus. This presence of alcohol can be a major difficulty when it comes to varsity athletes looking to perform to the best of their abilities. Head Athletic Trainer John Eckel sees alcohol as a risk to athletes’ health and performance. “It’s a diuretic. Complications with diuretics include cramps and heat exhaustion,” Eckel said. “It also leads to impaired judgment and slow reaction time.” These impaired judgments and slowed reactivity can lead to physical injuries that can drastically affect an athlete’s entire season. Because of the potential harmful effects of alcohol on an athlete’s body, different varsity teams have a variety of policies regarding alcohol use during season. Volleyball and women’s soccer have chosen to implement dry seasons, meaning that they do not drink alcohol at all during the season. Other teams, including men’s soccer and women’s tennis, cross country and swimming, do not go to this extreme, but do institute a 48-hour rule. This means that athletes are not allowed to consume alcohol 48 hours before a competition. While this does allow for studentathletes to still drink some alcohol, in particular cases it can cause athletes to effectively go dry for long stretches in their season. For men’s soccer, which usually has DRY SE A SON, page 7
QUOTES of
THE WEEK
Stone, all strutting their stuff to the “get jiggy with it” theme: “The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air.” “The reason why this event works so well . . . is because it brings together a broad range of guys from all areas of Whitman,” said junior Abby Neel, Kappa Kappa Gamma Philanthropy Chair and organizer of the event. “And the parody of having all the gentlemen involved with the pageantry creates a fun atmosphere and shows just MR . WHITMAN, page 3
by HADLEY JOLLEY Staff Reporter
FENNELL Walla Walla residents display political signs. Sen. Patty Murray-D is making a last-minute visit to Walla Walla on Saturday Oct. 30.
Student political involvement decreases during off-year election by MOLLY JOHANSON Staff Reporter
Two years ago, hundreds of Whitman students were involved in efforts to elect President Barack Obama. And while there may not be as much excitement this year, many Whitman students are involved in campaigning and getting out the vote in the upcoming election which takes place Tuesday, Nov. 2. “It’s extremely important for young people to vote,” said senior Clara Van Eck, the president of the Young Democrats on campus. “They have issues that the rest of the population doesn’t have—specifically, education.”
In this area, funding is always the issue. Van Eck points out that, in the last two years, the tuition for college has risen seven thousand dollars, while average grant and scholarship amounts have only gone up two thousand dollars. Van Eck, who became a Washington resident this year, looks forward to voting here and paying back the state that showed her “compassion and inclusion” in the form of scholarships, even when she wasn’t a resident. First-year Kayvon Behroozian feels that voting is essential to one’s civic duty. “If you’re going to complain about
government issues, take part in the voting process as your civic duty to make your complaints valid,” he said. In the Aug. 17 primary, only 46 percent of the Walla Walla area voted. “For the amount of enthusiasm for this election and for this much education, I would expect the voting figures to be higher,” said State Committeewoman for the Republican Party Sandra Richardson. As a way to get people voting on campus, Young Democrats set up a voter registration table in Reid Campus Center for a week earlier in October. They registered more than 50 students to vote either here or in their ELECTION, page 3
In response to the increased attention given to suicides of bullied gay teenagers and students, Coalition Against Homophobia is putting together a gallery to increase awareness of this issue. The club decided to put on the gallery in the Glover Alston Center featuring pictures and biographies of GLBTQ youth who committed suicide, as well as YouTube videos from the “It Gets Better” and “Make it Better” projects spawned in the wake of Rutgers student Tyler Clementi’s suicide on Sept. 22. They also plan on having a discussion after the gallery. It is currently a big time for GLBTQ issues on campus: Oct. 15 was Coming Out Day, and forthcoming in November is the annual Matthew Shepard Lecture entitled “Don’t Ask Don’t Tell: How We Got It, How We Can Get Rid of It,” Transgender Day of Rememberence and the gallery at the GAC. “We want to look at and critically examine the ways that the media has been giving attention to these suicides, and how effective that has been, and the reasons behind it,” said senior Liam Mina, co-president of Coalition Against Homophobia and Whitman’s GLBTQ intern. Both Mina and junior Mehera Nori agree that the media attention gives the false impression that the rash of suicides is something new. Nori also criticized the media for only focusing on white students. “What I really hope to address with the gallery is one, that this isn’t new . . . this isn’t a string of suicides, this is an ongoing thing that just hasn’t been addressed until now, and two, the diversity of people who have subjected to harassment and bullying and some of them have tragically taken COALITION, page 3
{ }{ }{ } { } “The United States must be patient and also be sure that our democracy is worth emulating.”
“Bicycling and walking are sometimes not viable options, and many students find it difficult to run errands or go across town without a car.”
“The W Club is truly a complementary process combining the quest for excellence in the classroom and on the field.”
“Origami is an art form which prompts thinking beyond simple animal-like shapes.”
OPINION
NEWS
SPORTS
A&E
by Gary Wang page 6
by Shelly Le page 2
by Pamela London page 7
by Nate Lessler page 4