Whitman Pioneer - Fall 2010 Issue 9

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IN THIS ISSUE

Rocky Horror Picture Show

Soccer season comes to a close

Thanksgiving challenges our assumptions

Student fans of the cult classic will perform at the film’s annual showing this weekend. page 4

Men’s soccer finishes the season with a second place showing, and seniors say so long. page 6

Columnist Lauren McCullough argues that Americans let their values slip during Thanksgiving. page 7

WHITMAN COLLEGE Walla Walla, WA Volume CXXVII Issue 9 whitmanpioneer.com November 11, 2010

Harry Potter-themed event series anticipates final film by NATE LESSLER Staff Reporter

Students should not be surprised if Whitman starts to take on qualities of Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry over the upcoming week. WEB and KWCW’s “The Witching Hour” are cooperating to produce a series of Harry Potter-themed events. The series started on Nov. 7th and will continue until the release of the first part of the seventh Harry Potter film. The events, which WEB expects to be popular, will include everything from a Quidditch match to a scavenger hunt for horcruxes to a Harry Potter-themed feast in Jewett Dining Hall. The idea for the event series originated during a brainstorm amongst WEB members at the start of the year. “[We realized] that there is this whole month leading up to the seventh movie coming out and that we should do [some activities] . . . and it sort of grew from there to three weeks of activities,” said WEB special events coordinator sophomore Kelley Hall. “It’s a little nerve-wracking just thinking about how many events are happening in such a short amount of time,” said Hall. Sara Rasmussen and Mehera Nori, the hosts of KWCW’s The Witching Hour also had the idea to host Harry Potter related activities before the movie’s opening and joined Hall to coordinate the event when they heard of WEB’s plan. “The challenging part [has been] having to condense our love for Harry Potter and all the events we wanted to do,” said Nori “When we first started planning we were just like spitballing outrageous [ideas for events] that we wanted to do, which ultimately were not feasible.”

ASWC attendance at Board of Trustees meeting sets precedent by SHELLY LE Staff Reporter

KLAG Seeker Taylor Chock ‘12 catches “snitch” Lillian Bailey ‘13 at the WEB and KWCW-sponsored Quidditch match on Sunday, Nov 7.

“We wanted the Pio to print as the Daily Prophet!” said Rasmussen jokingly. Luckily, the event coordinators were able successfully condense their creative ideas down into a series of six events and two radio broadcasts by The Witching Hour. Coordinating the Great Hall Feast, which will occur in Jewett Dining Hall

on Nov. 17, was easier than the team had originally expected. Most of the Jewett chefs had read the Harry Potter series and were very willing to cook English food and Harry Potter themed deserts. But many of the events have provided large challenges for the coordinators. Quidditch, which occurred on Nov. 7th and involved students running around on broomsticks, throwing balls and

chasing after runners wearing gold, was particularly difficult to organize. “Its hard to be out [in November]. We are at the mercy of the weather,” said Hall prior to the event. “We are going to have four games going at once . . . we are going to need 16 hula hoops, and a bunch of brooms . . . It’s just a lot of equipment.” HARRY POT TER , page 4

Last week, ASWC-appointed student representatives presented for the first time in front of Whitman’s trustees at the fall Board of Trustees meetings, held from Thursday, Nov. 4 to Friday, Nov. 5. Senior ASWC senator Gary Wang and juniors Hannah Moskat and ASWC Finance Chair Matt Dittrich were nominated by ASWC President senior Carson Burns to represent the student body to the trustees. The Board of Trustees meets three times per year, in November, February and May, and the meetings are a time for the both the trustees and overseers to come together and discuss matters ranging from the college’s budget to the faculty plan to shift to a 5-course teaching load to overall student life on campus. Faculty and student appointees are invited to sit on various committees to offer their insights on Board agenda items. While ASWC appointees have been allowed to sit in on past committee meetings, this year’s meeting marked the first time that ASWC representatives were given time to present on issues concerning the Whitman student body. Senior John Loranger, chair of the ASWC Student Affairs Committee, along with Burns and Dittrich presented in front of the Board during a Friday luncheon. According to Loranger, they BOARD OF TRUSTEES, page 2

Four Loko too ‘loco’ for Washington state, drink’s ban forthcoming by HADLEY JOLLEY Stsff Reporter

Washington state will ban the sale of Four Loko and other alcoholic energy drinks containing caffeine beginning Thursday, Nov. 18. The ban, which was announced on Wednesday, Nov. 10, follows bans in Michigan, Utah and Oklahoma within the past week. These bans were sparked in part by an incident at Central Washington University in early October where multiple students lost consciousness and were rushed to the

hospital after consuming numerous Four Lokos in combination with other alcoholic beverages. CWU’s Department of Physical Education, School and Public Health said Four Loko contains as much alcohol as a six pack of beer and as much caffeine as five cups of coffee. Test results from the students hospitalized at CWU showed no traces of any date rape drug, but all nine had blood alcohol levels ranging from .12 to .35. Authorities say this upper level is equivalent to being under surgical anesthesia, and four times the legal limit for adults.

blue moon’s Big Art showcases previous volume in new venue by NATE LESSLER Stsff Reporter

Whitman College’s annual literary arts magazine blue moon will be having its largest annual publicity event this Friday, Nov. 12. The event, known as Big Art, will occur at a new venue and involve live music, refreshments and a gallery of student artwork. “It’s basically a publicity event; at the same time it’s to showcase the previous year’s magazine,” said blue moon editor-in-chief senior Lara Mehling. “It comes out so late in the school year that there’s not really a chance have any activities except for the release party . . . we kind of try to almost get more mileage out of [the previous edition of] the magazine and use [the event] as publicity so people know about submissions and what the magazine is about.” This is the first year the event will take place at The Underground, a nearby venue which rents itself out for concerts and other events. Big Art will not only consist of live readings by writers previously published in blue moon, but will also involve a silent auction of large prints of artwork published in blue moon. Postcards of these art pieces will also be available

for 50 cents. The event will also feature live music by the student bands The Bachmann Sextet and Chastity Belt, as well as free treats and coffee from the Patisserie, which is located adjacent to The Underground. Although the venue of Big Art has changed most years, the change this year was due to a switch in ownership of Merchants (now known as Olive), where the event was held last year. “With the renovations at Olive, I thought the space wasn’t as convenient anymore,” said Mehling. “I went to Olive initially and expected they would be okay with doing it again but the new owner wasn’t interested so I had to find a new place . . . Whenever there are cafes opening and closing in Walla Walla and the ownership changes, the location of the event changes. It hasn’t really been one regular location.” The new location will furnish the event with more of a gallery-like style. And even though the event is no longer taking place in a public space, Mehling hopes the public will still attend. “I’m not sure what [the turnout] will be,” said Mehling. “The room is not huge but it’s a three hour event and it’s on a Friday night, and it’s open to BIG ART, page 4

Four Loko retains its popularity in part because it is inexpensive, which suggests that students become intoxicated for less money. “It’s very cheap. It’s $2.59 [per can], and supposedly it’s like five beers,” said one student, “Joe”, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. While Four Loko is fairly popular at Whitman, neither Health Center Director Claudia Ness nor Assistant Dean of Students Clare Carson could name a specific Whitman incident related to Four Loko or similar drinks. Both, however, caution

that drinks that combine both alcohol and caffeine share risks beyond those of other alcoholic beverages. “When you’re going to mix anything with alcohol, that can lead into alcohol poisoning. When you put the stress of caffeination on top of that, it’s going to doubly stress the cardiovascular system,” said Ness. Beyond the implicit health risks, Ness and Carson said that the caffeine in Four Loko and similar drinks can mask the effects of intoxication, which can lead to increased drinking, an increased risk of

alcohol poisoning and an increased chance of doing something dangerous, like driving drunk. “So if you drink a whole drink, you’re consuming a lot of alcohol, which is a depressant, and you’re also getting a stimulant. Generally, some who people drink alcohol, get signals that say when they’ve gotten too depressed with the alcohol. Well, this counteracts those signals, so somebody could be highly intoxicated by not getting those signals,” said Carson. For students who drink Four Loko, FOUR LOKO, page 3

Deadline for Sustainability Revolving Loan Fund applications looms by ALYSSA GOARD Staff Reporter

Following several other environmentally conscious colleges and universities such as U.C. Berkeley, Harvard and William and Mary, Whitman’s Sustainability Advisory Committee initiated the Sustainability Revolving Loan Fund (SRLF) in the spring of 2009. According to Whitman Campus Sustainability, the SRLF is a 50,000 dollar line of credit designated for campus improvements that will significantly benefit Whitman’s sustainability efforts by conserving resources and improving efficiency. Last year the program offered loans of up to 25,000 dollars. The projects funded by the loans are expected to replenish the fund so that future generations of Whitman students can afford to sponsor new projects without having to rely on endowment. The loans are intended to be payed back through the proposed projects within five years. Students, faculty, staff and departments are invited to submit applications for funds from the SRLF up until 5 p.m. on Monday, Nov. 15. Applications include an in-depth plan and schedule for the project’s financial and sustainability progress. Senior Nat Clarke, who serves as one of Whitman’s campus sustainability coordinators, constructed a model

HONG Zoe Pehrson ‘13 and Nat Clarke ‘11 show the fruits of their labor, a model farm located on the Hall of Science’s rooftop greenhouse, which was funded through the Sustainability Revolving Loan Fund.

farm on the Hall of Science’s rooftop greenhouse through the SRLF fund. Clarke calls SRLF a “tremendous” opportunity and commented that even the application process can teach skills such as “grant-writing, budgeting, project management, and, most importantly, creative thinking.” Submitted proposals will be reviewed by a committee of staff, faculty, alumni and student members. They will announce their decisions to the applicants the week after Thanksgiving break. The proposed ideas faculty and students have suggested for individual projects include reducing energy use through residence hall energy moni-

tors, creating biodiesel from Bon Appétit vegetable oil and reducing energy use in academic buildings. In the past, projects funded by the SRLF have included the chemical recycler requested by the Chemistry Department, which greatly reduced the amount of hazardous waste shipped for disposal, as well as the “Paper Phoenix” project which turned old letterhead into notebooks to be sold in the bookstore. As William and Mary’s wesbite espouses: “It is good to think of ourselves as a helpful and contributing part in the plan of a cosmos, and as participators in some far reaching destiny.”


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