news - The Western Front
Transcription
news - The Western Front
Tuesday, July 22, 2008 Issue 5 | Summer 2008 westernfrontonline.net the Western Front An independent student newspaper serving Western Washington University since 1970. Western Libraries make changes after student suggestions PG. 3 Bellingham Slam win championship PG. 10 Return of the Nightlight PG. 7 Western's scholarly journal collection in jeopardy by Zack Hale The Western Front “Scholarly communication is in crisis,” Western Dean of Libraries Chris Cox said. Drastic price increases for scholarly journal subscriptions are impeding universities and scholars from purchasing publications necessary for research and learning, he said. As a result, university libraries including Western’s are being forced to increase budget requests to keep pace with rising costs, trim marginal journals from their collections and pursue new ways to achieve unfettered scholarly communication. According to Western's 2009-2011 budget request, Western Libraries would require a $431,000 funding increase over the next two years to maintain its current level of journal subscriptions. Without an influx of money, approximately 225 journal titles in business and economics, humanities, so- cial sciences, education and sciences and technology could potentially be cancelled, according to the budget report. A number of driving factors have led to this predicament, Cox said. Because disciplines have fragmented and become more specialized, a greater number of journals are being published, he said. In addition, many journal companies have merged under the auspices of reduced costs to consumers, only to implement continued price hikes as publishing power is consolidated, 2008 Bivalve Bash and Low Tide Mud Run photo by Jon Bergman THE WESTERN FRONT Kai Vansickle, 13, or Mt. Vernon collapses after the Low Tide Mud Run as part of the 6th annual Samish Bay Bivalve Bash on July 19 at Taylor Shelfish Farms. Vansickle finished in 14th place. See story on page 11, multimedia presentation at Westernfrontonline.net Four alcohol related violations over 24 months and establishments can lose their liquor license for good by Shana Keen The Western Front Bartender Chris Balph preps for the night’s customer by slicing dozens of limes. A little after 6 p.m., a customer orders a beer and heads to one of the pool tables. After five years of serving drinks at The Royal Inn, Balph knows by the end of the night he will have to cut off about five people for drinking too much. Overservice in bars, taverns, clubs and grocery stores is one of the biggest concerns for the Washington State Liquor Control Board. The board, establishment owners and employees all work together to make sure intoxicated people do not get served drinks, said Susan Reams, communications consultant for the liquor board. Any person who is apparently under the influence cannot be sold any alcohol, according to Revised Code of Washington 66.44.200. Selling alcohol to an intoxicated person results in a violation from the liquor board. Four violations of any kind from the liquor board in a 24-month period terminate the establishment’s liquor license. Establishments can also receive see Overserved page 4 see Journals page 5 Parking opposite Ridgeway Commons reduced significantly Mud run Overserved and shut down he said. In essence, many commercial journal publishers have a monopoly over information that academic disciplines depend on, he said. Book and journal costs to North American libraries have risen 227 percent between 1986 and 2002, according to Create Change, an organization whose founders include the Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL) and the Asso- Bellingham liquor violations over the last 24 months The Royal Inn- no charged citations in the past 24 months Cap Hansen’s Tavern- no charged citation in the past 24 months The Fairhaven Martini Bar- one overservice violation in Feb. 2007 Downtown Johnny’s Restaurant and Nightclub- three violations total, one for overservice allegedly resulting in fatality in June 2007 The Smart Shop- three violations for overservice; one in May 2007 and two in March 2008 The Horseshoe Café- one violation for overservice in June 2007, under review Information provided by the Washington State Liquor Control Board by Jory M. Mickelson The Western Front The steep section of Highland Drive behind Ridgeway Commons will soon be safer for bicyclists and pedestrians. The city of Bellingham will begin construction on Highland Drive, from Morey Avenue to West College Way near the former water tower during the month of July. The proposed project includes removing the angled parking along this stretch of road and replacing it with parallel parking, a bike lane and a graveled pedestrian path. The project will result in the loss of approximately 50 parking spaces near campus. When the project is completed it will provide a safer, gravel walkway for pedestrians that is because it will be buffered from the road by parallel parking spots. Clark Williams, superintendent of transportation and communication for the City of Bellingham, said that before the city went ahead with the project, there were a series of meetings with campus officials including Carol Berry, Western’s manager of sustainable transportation; Tim Wynn, Western’s director of facilities management and Randy Stegmeier, Western’s director of public safety. “I thought it was quite courteous of the city to ask the university, who is the most impacted, for input on a project on city property,” Carol Berry said. Berry said there are not a large number of bicyclists on Highland Drive, but pedestrians need access to homes and community resources in the neighborhood such as the Shalom Center. The new plan reduces the dangers caused by angled parking, Berry said. Some larger vehicles protrude into the roadway causing bicyclists already traveling up a steep hill to swerve into traffic, she said. Williams said that the longer vehicles in angled parking spaces also cause problems for busses that have to maneuver around the cars on bus routes to and from Western’s campus. News See more online at www.westernfrontonline.net page Want to learn more about... ...the Bellingham Gay Pride Celebration? ...the Mt. Baker summit? ...Relay for Life? ...the Baja BBQ? ...Bike Polo? ...then check out westernfrontonline.net for exclusive multimedia content Corrections In the Friday July 11 issue, the story titled "Helpful services on Western's campus" stated that the Wade King Student Recreation Center offered free massages. This information is incorrect. The Western Front regrets this and any other errors. Western Washington University Building 251 The Western Front Communications Bellingham, WA 98225 SEND PRESS RELEASES TO: press@westernfrontonline.net EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT (360) 650-3162 Editor in chief: . ..................................... Colin Simpson, editor@westernfrontonline.net Managing editor: ............................ Brett Williams, managing@westernfrontonline.net Photo editor: . ......................................... Mark Malijan, photo@westernfrontonline.net Online editor: ......................................... Jon Bergman, online@westernfrontonline.net Copy editor: .............................................. Rogelie Rael, copy@westernfrontonline.net News editor: . ......................................... Taylor Scaggs, news@westernfrontonline.net Art and Life editor: ..................... Kaleb Gubernick, artandlife@westernfrontonline.net Sports and Opinion editor: Jesse Amorratanasuchad, sports@westernfrontonline.net Faculty adviser: ............................................ Stephen Howie, stephen.howie@wwu.edu ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT (360) 650-3161 Advertising manager: ...........................................................................Michele Anderson Business manager: . ........................................................................... Alethea Macomber The Western Front is published twice weekly in the fall, winter, and spring quarters and once a week in the summer session. The Western Front is the official newspaper of Western Washington University, published by the Student Publications Council and is mainly supported by advertising. Opinions and stories in the newspaper have no connection with advertising. News content is determined by student editors. Staff reporters are enrolled in a course in the department of journalism, but any student enrolled at Western may offer stories to the editors. Members of the Western community are entitled to a single free copy of each issue of The Western Front. news | westernfrontonline.net | Tuesday • July 22, 2008 Students voice their opinions on Western's libraries Noise, laptop late fines and group study space among students top concerns after May survey by Jeff Ehrhardt The western Front What do students want out of their library? This was the question behind the Western library “14 Days to Have Your Say” blog last May. During the period between May 7 and May 21, students and faculty voiced their suggestions on what could be done to improve the library. “We wanted to see what students wanted to talk about,” Rick Osen, head of Library Administrative Services, said. “We had no idea what to expect with the responses.” The library staff is now in the process of going through the 600 responses to blog discussions to determine which policies to implement. The topics that received the most replies included reinforcing noise policies, setting up group study areas available by reserve, installing a south campus book-drop and changing the laptop late return fee. The issues with library noise and the laptop fees are the first changes being made because they generated the most responses during the 14-day period, with 52 posts being made for noise alone. Osen said other issues will be addressed as responses are sorted out. Currently the laptop overdue fee is $10 per hour and does not have a maximum limit. Blog posters complained that, because there is no warning of when the twohour checkout time was up, it’s easy to go over the time limit without realizing it. The issue with the laptops was being discussed between the Associated Students Board of Directors and library staff. The current proposal is to lower the fee to $5, said Andrea Goddard, AS vice president of academics. Another issue that came up in the blog was the use of group study rooms. Groups of students who were trying to find a place to study often found that lone students took the study rooms up for themselves, Osen said. These study groups then ended up in open areas and the noise they made distracted other students, Osen said. The solution being put forth for the study area problem was to allow groups of students to reserve the study rooms ahead of time, Osen said. Finding a solution to the study area problem was especially important since new technology will be installed in the study rooms next year, Goddard said. Interactive whiteboards, which can project im- photo by Mark Malijan THE WESTERN FRONT Western senior Jamie Shepherd works on his political science project in a group study room on the fourth floor of Wilson Library, June 20, 2008. Groups can now reserve rooms by contacting Circulation Services. ages from computer monitors for students to interact with, will be placed in study room areas throughout the library, Goddard said. “The new policies will ensure these areas will be available to all,” Goddard said. “Not just to first-come, first-serve.” Study rooms are now marked with signs informing students that they can be reserved said Martha Mautino, a reference librarian. Reservations must be made at one of the library desks a day before a group wants to use it in advance. Another issue was the lack of quiet zones outside the study rooms. Western junior Shayla Urie said she wanted to see more quiet areas for groups to study in to keep them from disturbing the other students in the library. A new book-drop location in the south campus area was also in discussion to make it easier to return books, Osen said. At this time most of the buildings in the south campus areas were open for the possibility of a book-drop, although no solid decision had been made by library administrators. Osen said changes to the laptop fee, the noise policies and study room policies will be decided and implemented before the start of fall quarter. “We want to show the people coming back that we’re doing something with the blog,” Osen said. | NEWS Tuesday • July 22, 2008 | The Western Front Juried competition to determine new addition to outdoor sculpture collection by Aaron Weinberg The Western Front photo by Mark Malijan THE WESTERN FRONT "Bigger Big Chair," a sculpture on South Campus was chosen by a similar competition in 2007. The Western Art gallery sent out approximately 100 invitations to artists to participate in its juried competition for a new sculpture on campus. The artists must submit their previous works to the Washington State Arts Commission by Sept. 1 to be included in the competition. In late September or early October, a select group of the outdoor sculpture advisory board and two people from the community will select the winner of the competition. Western Art Gallery director Sarah Clark-Langager said that the board will choose and artist and allow them to propose what they want to build and where they would want to put it on campus. Clark-Langager said she predicts an artist to be chosen by November and a new sculpture on campus by 2009. The last sculpture chosen by a juried competition was “Bigger Big Chair” by Bellingham native David Ireland. The 8 foot tall sculpture, installed in September 2007, sits atop a hill adjacent to South Campus Drive. The outdoor sculpture advisory board is made up of ClarkLangager, Dean of College of Fine and Performing Arts Ron Riggins, art department chair Madge Gleeson, facilities management director Tim Wynn, art patron Virginia Wright and art professor Sebastian Mendes. Two community members are chosen to join the board based on their art knowledge and their interest in the outdoor sculpture collection. Western also receives sculptures through donation. The Wright Fund has brought the last five donated sculptures to campus, such as “Two-Part Chairs, Right Angle Version (a Pair),” located in the Wilson Library. The sculpture consists of two granite chairs sitting on opposite sides of the doorway leading into the Wilson Library from beneath the sky bridge. Western has 28 sculptures on campus, ranking it among the top ten universities in the nation in terms of sculpture collections. The top ten includes prestigious universities such as Stanford and Yale. OVERSERVED: Downtown Johnny's, Smart Stop among those with high number of violations from 1 goes out with her friends to have a good time, socialize and maybe have a drink or two. For her, being able to talk and actually hear each other is more important so she goes out to low-key bars when it is not busy. Shields said she feels bartenders should keep an eye on the number of drinks people have, but in the big picture, it is up to each individual to take responsibility for his or her actions. The line where Howard cuts someone off varies with every situation and person, he said. Everyone’s alcohol tolerance is different. Weight, height and drinking experience all play into it, Howard said. Sometimes it is violations for selling to an underage person and other offenses. The establishment gets different fines or liquor license suspensions depending on whether it has had any violations in the past 24 months. The intoxicated person can face photo illustration by Mark Malijan THE WESTERN FRONT a $1,025 fine. Over service in bars, taverns, clubs and grocery stores is one of the biggest concerns for The Smart Shop on Holly Street rethe Washington State Liquor Control Board. Intoxicated persons can face a $1,025 fine, ceived two violations for selling alcohol to and if establishments are caught over serving, or violate any other liquor board regulation, an intoxicated person in March, Reams said. more than four times in 24 months, they face revocation of their liquor license. These violations resulted in a 15-day liquor license suspension from May 9 through 24. some people can hold their liquor better and ferent set of difficulties than other smaller In May 2007, the store received a citation do not show the obvious signs. places, he said. When one bartender nofor the same violation. The liquor board’s officers tices something, Balph said that bartender Multiple attempts to along with local police go in makes the round upstairs and downstairs speak to the owner of The “If they can't say it, they can't have it. But we try not to places and look for obvious to make certain that everyone knows. Smart Shop were denied. signs of intoxication exhibited Someone ordering drinks for other get to that point. People are in here drinking and we're Downtown Johnny’s not. So we always have that unique prespective." by the patrons, Reams said. people is a red flag for the bartender to Restaurant and Nightclub also -Brad Howard, bartender at Cap Hansen's They perform some of the same keep an eye on the group, Howard said. has three various violations tests police use when determin- Cap Hansen's is small enough so Howard in the last 24 months, Reams ing drunken driving, she said. can see every seat in the place. This alsaid. One of these violations, alleged over- hard to tell while other times it is obvious, If the officers decide that an intoxicated lows him and the other bartenders to keep service resulting in a fatality, is under review he said. person has been served, the establishment a closer eye on the patrons, Howard said. pending a hearing. “If they can’t say it, they can’t have it,” and the intoxicated person can get written Another thing Howard looks out for Multiple calls to the nightclub went un- Howard said. “But we try not to get to that up. at the tavern is people on their “21 run.” answered. point. People are in here drinking, and we’re The Royal and Cap Hansen’s Tavern Howard said an urban myth exists that evBrad Howard has been a bartender at not. So we always have that unique perspec- have not received any violations in the last eryone on their 21st birthday needs to go Cap Hansen’s Tavern for four years. Cutting tive.” 24 months, Reams said. Communication to as many bars as possible and drinks as people off is part of the job, he said. That Howard said most people know the between the door staff and all the bartend- many shots as possible. This situation puts requires keeping an eye on customers and obvious signs of intoxication. Staggering, ers at the Royal helps keep intoxicated the bartenders on high alert to make sure noticing changes in them, he said. slurring words and tripping over things are people from getting a drink, Balph said. everyone is being safe in the levels of alcoWestern senior Lindsey Shields said she signs everyone can pick up on, he said, but As a two-story bar, the Royal has a dif- hol consumption, he said. news | westernfrontonline.net | Tuesday • July 22, 2008 JOURNALS: Western Libraries searching for alternative methods in acquisition of peer reviewed materials access others’ work will require a multipronged approach. Grassroots movements and cooperative practices have emerged as ciation of Research Libraries (ARL). On prices continue to rise, most with the goal average, book and journal prices have been of streamlining scholarly communication rising approximately 7 percent each year, while making it more accessible and afoutpacing the rate of inflation by roughly 4 fordable. percent, according to the group. Firstly the Open Access movement adWestern gave its libraries and addition- vocates free online access to peer-reviewed al $50,000 last year, and another $10,000 journal articles. In addition to universal acthis year in order to address this problem, cess, this would allow aspiring researchers’ Cox said. findings to reach an audience of unprece“That’s pretty generous,” Cox said. dented size, and expedite what is currently “Granted it’s a drop in the bucket as it relates a tedious publishing process, Cox said. to our problem, but S e c o n d l y, they [Western] are Copyright pracshowing that they “We [can't] maintain the status quo tices are also an understand.” area of concern. for scholarship and research that is Because it is Karla Hahn, diunlikely Western happening on this campus without rector of the Ofwill award the li- some sort of new solution.” fice for Scholarly brary $431,000, -Donna Packer, C o m m u n i c a t i o n the library will be Head technical services at the ARL, said working closely copyright practices Coordinator should promote a with faculty members to pare down system where reits journal collecsearchers, scholars tion, Cox said. and students have the broadest and easiest “We have to continue to work with possible access to new findings. faculty to look at the journal lists and ask, “It’s important that we move out of ‘what are you working with your students a lot of the boxes that have been keeping to use, what do you need for your research research and scholarship in a contained and what don’t you need?’ because we can’t mode,” Hahn said. continue to buy all of these things. It’s just When faculty members fully transfer not feasible,” Cox said. their copyrights to publishers, they relinWestern junior Brooke Higgins, a sci- quish control over the dissemination of their ence major, said having access to a variety work, she said. A different approach would of journal articles is important. give publishers the right to first publication, “Last quarter I had a class that required while authors of the work retain rights to eight journal articles for a project and I publish after a specified date, she said. would find ones that I needed to use, but Hahn pointed to Harvard University as we didn’t subscribe to them,” she said. a school that has taken the lead. Harvard Removing the stumbling blocks that faculty members recently decided to allow faculty members and students encounter Harvard to keep a copy of their work afwhen they try to publish their findings or ter publication and to make their findings from 1 The Scholarly Journal Problem: By the numbers 227 - The percentage book and journal costs have risen from 1986 to 2002 7- The percentage book and journal costs have risen per year, outpacing inflation rates by 4 percent. 431,000 - The amount of money Western libraries needs over the next two years to maintain current journal subscriptions. 60,000 - The amount of money Western gave to cam- pus libraries over the last two years to address the rising cost of scholarly journals. numbers provided by Create Change and Western Libraries available, free of charge on the Internet. Cox said he would like the library to begin engaging in discussions with faculty about entering into a similar arrangement, where an institutional research repository containing research drafts and finished products are kept. Currently, when faculty members are published in journals their university is not subscribed to, the university can not access their own faculty members’ work without subscribing to the journal or buying the article, Cox said. A third approach is for libraries to enter into consortiums to increase their purchasing power, Cox said. Western is a member of the Orbis Cascade Alliance, a grouping of 35 universities, colleges and community colleges that exists to facilitate the free flow of scholarly materials be- Biolife (3x5) FILL (3x1) tween member libraries. Orbis membership allows Western to maximize its purchasing power by allowing the library and other Orbis members access to discounted bulk packages from the publisher. Consortium membership also means more sharing. Last year Western faculty and students received more than 30,000 items from other libraries free of charge. Head technical services coordinator Donna Packer said that despite the promise of these emerging movements, the high price of journal subscriptions means something will have to give in the future. “The key point to remember here is that there is no way we can maintain the status quo for scholarship and research that is happening on this campus without some sort of new solution,” she said. ART | Tuesday • July 22, 2008 | The Western Front L A U H H LIFE story by Sarah Gordon photo by Kathryn Bachen THE WESTERN FRONT PLA ome resembled sparkling works of art with vibrant pinks, yellows and blues with vinyl tape twisted around their shapes. Some had glitter. Others were hoops of black PVC pipe. S Families and college students swung their hips to the steady rhythm of reggae music with a hula hoop circling around them, dancing the night away in the summer weather at DJ Yogoman’s Wild Rumpus at Boundary Bay Brewery and Bistro Wednesday night. Yogoman’s Wild Rumpus, the family-oriented part of the night, takes place from 8-10 p.m. After 10 the event becomes 21-and-over until midnight. The event started up again this year in the second week of May and will continue through September. Later in the night the event turned into the 21 and over Reggae Night as families left. More than 100 people filled the packed outdoor beer garden and picked up any leftover hoops or even brought their own. The high turnout is not unusual for the event, said DJ Jordan Rain, also known as DJ Yogoman. The popularity of Reggae Night has grown to the point that hoops have to be put away later in the night due to the over-crowding, and many have started to make the art of hooping a culture of its own in the Bellingham community, he said. “People dancing to me is the most important because it’s having freedom of expression,” Rain said. “But I also think it’s awesome how people have taken hooping to a higher level and turned it into an art form. It’s taken a leap into our culture.” The idea of using hula hoops was sparked when Rain used to DJ at the 3B Tavern in Bellingham nine years ago and noticed that people were hesitant to dance, he said. “I noticed people were stiff and didn’t want to get on the dance floor,” Rain said. “So I used the hoops as an icebreaker and eventually people started bringing their own. It’s a novelty because it gives people a reason to get up and dance and do something ridiculous.” Eventually a version of the 3B hula event came to Boundary Bay as Reggae Night, and the brewery has held the event for about five years. Rain plays reggae and general music from the 50s to the present, though he specializes in Jamaican music from the 60s. Over time he realized that the natural rhythm of the hula hoop matches that of a reggae beat, he said. Western senior Christine Tabert said she has come to the reggae hula hoop night almost every week and feels it has become a tradition for her and her friends. “It’s a lot of fun to hula hoop to reggae music,” and westernfrontonline.net | Tuesday • July 22, 2008 Tabert said as she continued to circle her hips with a hoop. “It’s a little bit different than dancing, and it’s a different place. Good music and a good summer time.” Coming every week has improved her hooping skills, she said. John Smith and his family sold hoops from their hula hoop making business, HoopSmith, at the event and lent hoops to some of the participants. Smith and his family have been making hoops for about four years. It takes about 20 to 40 minutes to make them, depending on the size and decoration of the hoop, and they cost anywhere from $25-35 to buy. Fairhaven Fun-To-Shop owner, hula hoop performer and instructor Jamie Berg, also known as Ms. B Hooping Allure, also sells hula hoops through the Smith family business and teaches private hula-hoop classes. Berg said she comes to the reggae event regu- TURN THE NIGHT LIGHT BACK ON! by Marisa Willis photo by Kathryn Bachen THE WESTERN FRONT The Nightlight Lounge, located at 211 E. Chestnut St., has been closed since January of this year. photo by Kathryn Bachen THE WESTERN FRONT Bill Burtchett of Bellingham hula hoops with a lighted hoop at Boundary Bay's Reggae Night June 25. “I can keep it up for longer periods of time,” Tabert said. “I never used to hula hoop before, and I’ve improved quite a bit. I’m even trying to learn some tricks.” Western graduate and Boundary Bay waitress Samantha Ring took a break in between waiting tables to hoop for a couple minutes. Ring said she has placed second in hula hoop contests at the 3B Tavern and Broken Spoke Festival, an event celebrating bicycling and more, and she feels the hooping is lighthearted and fun to keep around, she said. “I love the way it brings out the young at heart,” Ring said. “It’s really laid-back. You can make a fool out of yourself and it’s all good. People need a venue where they can dance and just let loose.” larly and recommends that people try to hula hoop because it is good for their health. “It’s so good for you and your posture if you take a moment out of your busy day,” Berg said. “I can do it anywhere and it truly makes me happy. I love how I can share it with everyone and I love what it does for my body.” Western senior Latasha Nix said she purchased a hula hoop at the Bellingham Farmers Market. Though she has only seen a hula hoop dance event at the Boundary Bay, she said she believes it will get more popular and catch on. “The whole community comes together, and it’s a fun night,” Nix said. “It brings me back to when I was little and it makes me feel like a kid again.” A Portland-based rock band will help reopen the doors of Bellingham’s Nightlight Lounge for the first time since it closed in January, bringing the club one step closer to its rumored September comeback. Conquest, a local promotions company, will be working with the club’s owner, Matt Feigenbaum, to host an all-ages show July 24 featuring Menomena, Conquest founding member Sergio Colón said. “Everything is so undefined with the Nightlight,” Colón said. “The space is there, the sound system is there, it has the same owner, just the alcohol is gone. Why isn’t this space being used?” Proceeds from the Menomena show, along with four other all-ages shows Conquest has confirmed for the summer featuring the likes of Idiot Pilot, No-Fi Soul Rebellion, Mirah, JFK from Grayskul, Grieves, Grynch and Lucky Brown, will help to reopen The Nightlight, Colón said. Without a specific amount in mind, Colón said his company wants to raise money for The Nightlight and take advantage of a venue he considers one of the best in Bellingham, all while throwing quality shows. “This is all so the club can get started on the right foot,” Colón said. The Nightlight is currently being wasted, Colón said. The Menomena show is about having the opportunity to walk back through the doors and into the 550person capacity space of the club, he said. “The all-ages factor is huge,” he said. “We’re allowing everyone to experience the magic of The Night- light. This has never been done before.” And it is not just minors who are excited for the Menomena show. Students of all ages are looking forward to seeing the group in Bellingham. “I really do love [Menomena’s] song ‘Muscle ‘N Flo,’ Western senior Angela Snedker said. “I can’t wait to see them perform it live.” Snedker said she went to shows at The Nightlight before it closed and thought it was a great venue with a “The space is there, the sound system is there, it has the same owner, just the alcohol is gone. Why isn't this space being used?.” - Sergio Colón, Conquest founding member lot of space for the audience to see the bands perform. When it closed down in January after three-anda-half years, The Nightlight joined the ranks of out-ofcommission clubs such as the 3B Tavern, The Factory and Chiribin’s. For some, it may best be remembered for its weekly ‘80s Night. Western senior Callie Moore remembers Thursday nights at The Nightlight fondly. “You would go and the line would be wrapped around the block,” Moore said. “Then you’d get inside, and it would all be completely worth it.” In owner Feigenbaum’s formal announcement of the reason for The Nightlight’s closure, he wrote: THE WESTERN FRONT “Money. Ultimately, not enough of it. That’s why this decision had to be made.” Colón, setting the record straight, said any rumors that had surfaced about The Nightlight reopening in July or August were the shows Conquest had planned. He said the rumored time frame that Feigenbaum has released is for The Nightlight to be up and running its normal business hours by the end of September. For some, September cannot come soon enough. Recent Western graduate Ryan Leacy said he is practically counting down the days until The Nightlight is once again open for business. “The drinks were hard and the party was harder,” Leacy said. “It’s a place that produced great music and at the end of the night it always resulted in a good time.” Colón said he was disappointed with the closing of many prominent venues in Bellingham. “Anytime there is something great, it gets taken away from us,” Colón said. “The town has taken a hit [with The Nightlight closing.] We’re trying to fill the void that Bellingham has been lacking.” Places like Boundary Bay Brewery and Bistro and Callaloo Caribbean Kitchen have done a great job stepping up to bring in great show, Colón said. But it is going to take everyone working together to give Bellingham the unique and diverse musical culture it deserves, he said. “The people here want it. It’s almost a necessity,” Colón said. | | art and life Tuesday • July 22, 2008 | The Western Front CAROL GUESS: The write stuff by Jory Mickelson THE WESTERN FRONT Carol Guess is small and compact. Her shoulder-length, blond hair frames the delicate features of her round face. She might be mistaken for a graduate student, but Guess, 40, is actually an associate English professor at Western and the author of a new book. Guess’s book “Tinderbox Lawn,” which will be released Oct. 1, is a collection of prose poems—a kind of poetry printed as prose. Prose poems are compact and use striking images and figures of speech. “The new book represents a hybrid of the novel and poetic forms,” Guess said. “Each poem functions separately, but as a whole they act as a fragmented sort of novel.” Guess’s new book stems from three years of writing. Part of putting “Tinderbox Lawn” together was sorting through hundreds of pages of work and trying to decide what it would all become, she said. Guess said she began to see small blocks of text that fit together and began trimming down the material. Kathleen Rooney is co-publisher of Rose Metal Press, the publishing company for “Tinderbox Lawn.” Rose Metal wants to discover and promote work that may not be marketable with the big publishing houses, she said. Rooney said she was struck by the poetric voice in “Tinderbox Lawn” This is Rose Metal Press’s first book with Guess. “I love the music in Carol’s writing, the sound and rhythms and the rhyme in it,” Rooney said. Guess said she writes fiction, essays, poems and novels. She said she likes writing novels, but teaching takes time, and so she has switched to shorter genres. Guess started writing poetry when she began teaching at Western 10 years ago. Initially, Guess was responsible for five creative writing classes and one queer studies class at Western. Then, two years ago, she went from teaching full-time to half-time so she could spend more time on her writing. Guess now teaches two creative writing classes and one queer studies class. Guess excels at giving individual attention and personal time to students, Western alumni Amelia Bowler said. Bowler took two writing classes taught by Guess. In the 400-level fiction writing class she took, Bowler said two out of the three days were devoted to working independently. Guess encourages her students with her willingness to pay attention to their needs, Bowler said. Guess also focuses on students’ personal development is something she really appreciates, she added. “The classes I took from her were the best classes I took at Western,” Bowler said. When Western hired Guess, she said she made it clear that teaching queer studies was something she wanted to do. Guess never took a queer studies class when she was in school and had to translate her own experiences into academic courses. She said she feels teaching queer studies is a calling. “The political situation for queer people has improved enormously in the decade that I have taught,” she said. “But there is still a long way to go. Teaching these classes is a form of activism.” Being a lesbian has given Guess an outsider’s perspective as a writer, she said. She said it gives her an opportunity to see things in new ways. “Academically, my sexuality can be an obstacle,” she said. “Queer studies aren’t always seen as an accepted area of inquiry.” Guess said she has been pegged as both a “woman writer” and a “lesbian writer.” She said if these labels provoke someone to pick up her work, then it is a good thing, but if not, it is a shame. With her new book, she said she feels these categories do not apply. She said she wrote the book to express the feeling of falling in and out of love, something everyone has experienced. Guess said she believes gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender literature is at a turning point. Queer writers and queer culture are being assimilated and the category of queer literature is very permeable, she said. Queer writers do not see themselves pegged as such and heterosexual writers can pick up queer themes, she said. Guess says unfortunately the readership for queer writing has not been broadened. “The categories of woman and lesbian still apply commercially,” she said. “As a writer, I have to think about that.” opinion Tuesday • July 22, 2008 | The Western Front Got food waste? Donate to charities Opinion of the editorial board Western has prided itself in being a green campus. The philosophy of sustainability has been placed into many aspects of campus life from the buildings around the university and the greenery in the area to our dining services, such as student dining halls and retail food outlets like the Miller Market and the Arntzen Hall Atrium. In an attempt to be more sustainable, effort has been made to eliminate food waste in the student dining halls and, to a lesser extent, in those retail food outlets. However, food waste from Western’s retail eateries, specifically the Atrium, was incredibly high in the fall and winter, according to food waste logs obtained by the Front. Large amounts of products such as sandwiches, salads and soups were thrown out. For instance, on October 18, 54 deli sandwiches, 31 bagels, 17 salads and 8 gallons of soup were all discarded. On October 26, only one week later, 33 bagels, 46 deli sandwiches, 25 salads and 23 subs were all trashed. In one day alone, on October 29, the Atrium had to discard 72 deli sandwiches. This is unacceptable. Employees at the Atrium indicated that the reason waste was so high in the fall was because of a “first-in-first-out” method that was used to keep product as fresh and plentiful as possible, regardless if it was the middle of the day or the end of operating hours. Because of this method, and several other factors, predicting food production became difficult during the school year. Weather, foot traffic, class schedules and events on campus all affect each retail store’s food sales and catering to the needs of the students each day becomes much more difficult. Thus, food could be vastly over-produced, resulting in large amounts of waste. Fortunately, changes have been made over the course of the last year. Due to pressure from students and employees, food waste at the Atrium has almost halved, sources say. Ira Simon, director of dining services, attributed the change to a closer observation of purchasing and preparation. Additionally, dining services donates large amounts of food to local charities during periods where production will be shutting down for a long period of time, such as the breaks between different academic quarters. Leftover food is also taken to dining halls after retail food outlets close for the evening. Although Simon indicated that this has helped with waste, he was vague about the specif- ics and unable to indicate how much food waste was saved and given to the dining halls or how often. Sources said in the Atrium this might have occurred one or two days a week but not often. For food that is thrown out, composting has been implemented to at least create something usable out of the waste. But despite these efforts, it still seems there will be a large amount of food wasted if not given to dining halls or saved until the end of a quarter to be donated in a lump sum. If the rates from the fall are indicative of anything, a large amount of waste is still coming out of the Atrium and, presumably, the other retail food outlets on campus. What should be done about this? As Western progresses in its efforts to become a sustainable campus it seems Sodexho’s waste management is falling behind. One option is simple: donate it all. Rather than composting waste, donate it. Rather than sending old food to dining halls, where it can again be left alone and wasted, donate it. Food Not Bombs, for instance, is a fine non-profit for the food waste to be sent. Any concern about the food being a few days old should not bother Sodexho. Under the Bill Emerson Good Samaritan Donation Act, institutions such as Western are exempt from responsibility for food that is old or expired if it is donated in good faith except for instances of gross negligence or intentional misconduct. This being said, the food that goes to waste could be put to better use by donating to local charities. Sodexho should at least assure students that it is doing everything it can to contribute to the entire sustainability of campus. The editorial board is comprised of Editor-in-Chief Colin Simpson, Managing editor Brett Williams, Opinion editor Jesse Amorratanasuchad and Arts and Life editor Kaleb Gubernick. page Viking Voices Opinions from around campus What do you use the Western library for? Jolie Bender-Rubio Senior "I check out foreign and big release movies. It's a good place to nap, too." Let your voice be heard! Send letters to the editor that are no longer than 250 words to opinion @ westernfrontonline.net Vanessa Trippel Senior "I use the library for text books. The reserved section is handy." Government subsidizing hurts tuition Stephen Nichols Columnist In 1965, President Johnson signed the Higher Education Act which allocated billions of tax dollars for low-interest student loans. The goal was to make college more affordable, but since 1965 tuitions have skyrocketed. But instead of making college more affordable, the increase in financial aid by the federal government has – in a perverse inversion – actually caused a great deal of the rise in cost of tuition. It may sound counter-intuitive that the government could cause something to become more expensive by subsidizing it, but the correlation between increases in financial aid and increases in tuition is worth examining. As a result of federal aid, universities have absolutely no incentive to keep tuition down and every incentive to raise tuition. Why shouldn’t the university raise tuitions? The government has deep pockets and has shown its commitment to the nation’s universities by handing out more tax dollars to them every year. All a university has to do to get more money from the feds is raise tuition. Of course, the university still has to show that it can somehow justify its costs. So the universities’ administrations spend extravagant amounts of money on projects of dubious academic value. They build new buildings, put high-tech computers in every classroom, and commission expensive works of public art (see man humping bear in front of the Wilson library). The abundance of federal dollars has also led to a general lack of focus on academic goals at the university. The university can afford to indulge itself in a variety of academically unsound classes and departments. The proliferation of departments such as Canadian-American studies, Women’s studies and classes such as, well, almost anything offered in Fairhaven’s course catalog is evidence enough of rampant academic self-indulgence. The abundance of funds made available by the government to universities has made it unnecessary for universities to limit their expenditures to more essential fields of study. In fact, the continual influx of new money from the government makes it unnecessary for universities to limit their expenditures on anything at all. It should come as no surprise that administrations at campuses across America have swelled in size of faculty and budget with each increase of federal aid. Even the teachers have become remarkably inefficient as a result of the federal governments generosity with taxpayer dollars. Professors with tenure can get away with teaching fewer classes without any resulting decrease in their salaries because the university can always hire more teachers and pay for their salaries with yet another increase in tuition. At the same time, federal aid has also protected universities from any significant market pressure from prospective students to lower costs. The only circumstance in which universities would ever have the incentive to lower its prices is if enrollment is shrinking as a result of high tuition. The government’s willingness to continually raise the amounts of financial aid distributed to match the rising price makes it unlikely that universities will ever face this pressure to lower costs. So while students and their parents are building ever larger mountains of debt to pay the cost of college, the universities get richer and then raise tuition yet again to get even more rich. This vicious cycle ensures that the cost next year will be even higher than it is now. As long as the federal government continues to increase the amount of federal aid that it distributes, tuition inflation will continue. It may be time to send Johnson’s Higher Education Act to an ash heap in history. Doug Ober Graduate Student "For Tibetan-English dictionaries" Kayla Brogden Senior "I meet with study groups in the Sky Bridge." Compiled by Stephanie Castillo page 10 Tuesday • July 22, 2008 | The Western Front sports Slam defeat Express in IBL Championship 118-111 victory seals first championship in 61 years for Bellingham-based basketball team by Jeff Twining THE WESTERN FRONT The championship would not be decided by last second heroics – there would be no miraculous buzzer-beating shot. Instead, the game would ultimately be decided by two free throws with 5.4 seconds left. In front of a boisterous, sold-out crowd of more than 1,100 people at the Whatcom Pavilion, Paul Hafford stepped to the line hoping to add to a five-point lead, which would ensure the Bellingham Slam their first International Basketball League (IBL) championship. Hafford calmly gathered himself as the Slam dance team continued to hand out celebratory confetti. As the crowd quieted in anticipation, Hafford effortlessly drained both free throws. The Bellingham Slam had just upset the defending champion Elkhart Express 118-111 in a physical game that would not be decided until the last few minutes. “With about 15 seconds left we finally knew we had the game won,” Hafford said. “I just went to the line and focused on the free throws, knowing the game was in the bag.” The Slam capped off their first year in the IBL with a hard-fought, seven-point victory. Hafford and Tyler Amaya shared the honor of co-MVP and IBL Commissioner Mikal Duilio was on-hand to present the championship trophy to team captain Brandon Hartley. In only their third year of operation, photo by Jon Bergman THE WESTERN FRONT The Bellingham Slam pose after winning the International Basketball League Championship in their first year in the league. The Slam defeated the Elkhart Express 118-111. the Bellingham Slam brought the city of Bellingham its first professional basketball championship since the Bellingham Fircrests won the Pacific Coast Professional Basketball League title in 1947. General manager Bob Hofstetter said the Fircrests didn’t play on a national level and their championship didn’t really compare with the Slam’s. Hafford led the Slam with a career high 30 points and 10 rebounds, while Amaya had 20 points, 13 rebounds and six assists coming off the bench. Jacob Stevenson added 24 points and Ryan Diggs had 19 for the Slam. To open the game, the Express quickly jumped out to an 18-4 lead, the largest for either team. The Express led 22-11 halfway through the first quarter when Slam head coach Rob Ridnour called his first timeout. “They started fast and hit a bunch of shots early,” Ridnour said. “We knew that wasn’t going to last the whole game, and we just had to fight through it.” After the timeout, tournament co-MVP and former Western basketball player Tyler Amaya entered the game for the first time, and the Slam quickly turned the 11-point deficit into a 30-28 lead – outscoring the Express 19-6 through the final six minutes of the quarter. The Slam held the lead from that point until the Express finally tied it up at 70 points each midway through the third quarter. With 13 lead changes throughout the game, the Slam were able to regain the lead for good near the end of the third quarter when former Western standout Ryan Diggs scored seven consecutive points. The Slam maintained a two-point lead, at 83-81, going into the fourth quarter. The Express missed six free throws in the fourth quarter while Hartley, Jacob Stevenson, Diggs and Hafford all made pairs of free throws in the final 1:20 to lock up the championship. photo by Jon Bergman THE WESTERN FRONT Former Western student Ryan Diggs of the Bellingham Slam charges the basket against Byron Allen of the Elkhart Express. “I’ve never won a championship in my life before,” Hafford said. “I know some guys out here have won league titles but not all of us. It’s an incredible feeling.” Ridnour coached the 1999 and 2000 Blaine High School basketball teams to Washington state high school championships – teams that included NBA player and son Luke Ridnour, who was in attendance Friday night. “It’s an awesome feeling to bring home a championship,” Ridnour said. “I give a lot of credit to these guys because they have so much team chemistry. It’s different than my Blaine championship teams because there is so much camaraderie here.” The Slam are comprised primarily of former Division-II players. Paul Hafford, who attended Portland State, is the one exsee Slam page 12 sports | westernfrontonline.net | Tuesday • July 22, 2008 11 photo by Jon Bergman THE WESTERN FRONT Matt Roetcisoender, 21, leads the pack to the finish line of the Low Tide Mud Run. The Mt. Vernon native posted a record time of 58.75 seconds in the adult leg of the mud run and was one of nearly 200 participants this year. Stuck in the mud photo by Jon Bergman THE WESTERN FRONT Dan Angel, 8, reacts to a shower of cold water after the Kids' Mud Run during the sixth annual Bivalve Bash. Angel was one of 61 children who participated in this year's event. by Christy Thacker THE WESTERN FRONT Cool, slimy goop splattered through the overcast bay air. More than 200 bodies slogged their way through the shin-deep, oyster-filled muck of Samish Bay Saturday. The 250-yard, low-tide mud run was the feature event of the sixth annual Bivalve Bash. More than 1,000 people gathered at Taylor Shellfish Farms for oysterthemed fun, food and education. Activities ranged from an oyster shell sculpture competition and crab races to the strenuous children- and adult-division mud runs. “I don’t know how many low-tide mud runs there are or how often we get to play in the mud,” Bivalve Bash manager and promoter Kate McDermott said. “This is a day that your inner child can really shine through.” MudUp, one of the event’s key sponsors, was also among the crowd at the bash. MudUp representatives educated spectators about clean water awareness, restoration and practices through an informational booth and their costumed promoter called the Mud Monster. “This is a great way to bring people out, have a good time and teach them about the clean water link,” said Bill Dewey, Taylor Shellfish Farm public affairs representative. “Instead of always doom and gloom, let’s have some fun.” Bill Taylor, president of Taylor United, hosted the run. Taylor created the event with the company’s promotion and events coordinator Jon Rowley in 2003. The men wanted to find a way to spread the importance of clean water in the Getting dirty while learning at the Bivalve Bash and Mud Run Pacific Northwest in a fun and entertaining way, Taylor said. “We wanted to do something that was intriguing and brought attention to water quality,” Taylor said. Before the race, runners made a trip to the first-ever duct tape tent, put on by Super Jock ‘n Jill, a Seattle-based fitness clothing and shoe store. Aside from duct taping shoes to legs, glasses to heads and anything else that might fall off during the run, the company provided prizes for the top three winners in each division, Super Jock ‘n Jill manager Ty Whitten said. First place runners received new shoes while second and third were awarded gift certificates to the store. At 12:23 p.m., when the tide was at its lowest, competitors set off trudging through the cool bay mud course. Exhausted runners battled against the sinking grip of the sludge with every stride while they fought to cross the finish line. Taking just one step into another competitor’s footprint or losing pace for a split second could lead to knee-deep immobility or even worse—a mouth full of mud. Western junior Katie Moore was signed up for the race by a friend only a few days before the event. Moore went into the race knowing nothing except to use a lot of duct tape, she said. “If I could have stayed faster and kept my shoe on that would have changed everything for me,” she said at the finish line. The race was also the first for winner Matt Roetcisoender, a 21year-old Central Washington University student. Roetcisoender currently holds the fastest time in mud run history at 58.75 seconds. see Mud run page 12 12 | Tuesday • July 22, 2008 | The Western Front SLAM: Hafford leads Bellingham Slam with career-high 30 points, 10 rebounds from 10 ception. In contrast, the Express roster is filled with 11 players who played basketball for Division-I schools. Ridnour said he never thought of his players as former Division-II athletes. “I think all of our guys had the ability to play Division-I – they’re that good,” Ridnour said. “Most of them have played professionally overseas so they have that experience.” One reason the Slam has such good chemistry is because they have six former Western basketball players, including brothers Jared and Jacob Stevenson and one former WCC player, guard Charlie Vann, Hofstetter said. “It’s awesome being able to play with my older brother,” Jacob Stevenson said. “We only played together one year at Western, and he was the competitive one trying to outscore me. Now we’re just two teammates. There still is some sibling rivalry though." Hofstetter, who helped start the Slam organization, said he wants it known the Slam are not just another semi-pro team; in fact, they are not considered semi-pro at all. “I usually compare the level we’re on with Double-A baseball,” Hofstetter said. “Most people understand the baseball levels. We’re right below the NBA Developmental League so they could be considered the Triple-A of basketball.” The IBL was founded a few years ago and is on the rise, Hofstetter said. Some of the IBL rules include teams only getting one timeout per quarter – without the timeouts carrying over between quarters – a 22-second shot-clock, sevenseconds to advance the ball past half court and quicker inbounds to keep the flow going. “It’s definitely a run-and-gun league,” Amaya said, “It’s a lot of fun being able to score a lot of points, but you still have to focus on playing defense on your man. It isn’t just about outscoring opponents.” Another unique trait to the IBL is the physicality of the game in which referees generally ‘let the guys play,’ Ridnour said. The championship was that type of game, very physical with the refs constantly hounded by fans after every call. As the season comes to a close, Hofstetter said most players will begin to look to play on other teams during the traditional winter basketball season. By the time the new year comes, the Bellingham Slam will begin offering contracts to players. MUD RUN: Water preservation and care are major efforts for Bivalve sponsors from 11 “It’s hard to bring up your legs,” Roetcisoender said. “When you get to the end, they feel like Jell-o.” At the end of the race, dirty runners filed in line for a gold painted oyster shell medal and a turn to wash off. Taking the mud with them, they headed for hot food, beer and grilled oysters. The mud run is a major fundraiser for the Skagit Conservation Education Alliance (SCEA), one of the event’s main sponsors. Everyone except runners and children under six paid a general admittance fee of $5 at the door. Adult runners paid $13 for online registration or $23 on-site registration to participate in the mud run. Part of the proceeds go toward SCEA to help promote clean water awareness programs throughout Washington. MudUp also benefited from the bash, advancing and promoting its campaign to clean up the water and surrounding shorelines of the Puget Sound, MudUp spokesperson Sian Wu said. Three environmental groups — The Trust for Public Land, The Nature Conservatory and People For Puget Sound—came together to form the Alliance for Puget Sound shorelines in May 2007. MudUp.org is the centralized place where the Alliance posts events, activities and opportunities for individuals and groups to help clean up the Sound, Wu said. The effort also sends out the Mud Monster, a mascot who tells children his story of having to leave his home in the Puget Sound due to toxic waste and pollution. “Because [the Puget Sound] looks so beautiful on the surface, [people] don’t see the troubles below,” Wu said. According to MudUp.org, the Puget Sound is one of the most contaminated and damaged channels in the United States. MudUp.org stated that storm water run-off, rapid development and toxic chemicals contribute to much of the pollution. photo by Jon Bergman THE WESTERN FRONT Bellingham local Keri Bennett, 29, builds a replica of Stonehenge out of oysters called "Oysterhenge."