September 06, 2007
Transcription
September 06, 2007
COYOTE THE CAMPUS NEWSPAPER OF ALBERTSON COLLEGE 6 SEPTEMBER 2007 - ISSUE #1 EDITOR’S NOTE DEAR STUDENTS, FACULTY, STAFF, AND FRIENDS, This year will be different. The vibe is palpable. Change is thick and you can see it on the faces of faculty, students, and staff. New Age voodoo-speak aside, this year is going to stand in stark contrast to the dulled ennui of last year. The energy is in the air. Last year was characterized by a subdued party scene, delayed critical announcements, and controversies/scandals that ranged from petty to pathetic (t-shirts, sexual harassment). The Kappa Sigmas were put on probation early and kept a dry profile (mostly… somewhat…). The party houses were sparse and spread. There were positive points, such as the challenge grant renewal, the Capture the Moment exhibit that brought thousands to the campus, and girls volleyball knocking off 18 straight in-conference w’s. The Coyote also won first place in general excellence (all hats off to the previous editor). But overall, everyone agrees – last year was apathetic, at best. This year will be different. School hasn’t even started and the freshmen have already become intimately acquainted with the legend of MWP. There are 292 freshmen, constituting one of the largest incoming classes in ACI/C of I history, a total of 28 more than last year. While they have the same GPA as last year’s class, their top percentile students performed far better on the standardized tests. We also have 17 transfer students, representing Ethiopia, Japan, China, Rwanda, Afghanistan, Belarus, India, Swaziland, Nepal, the United Kingdom, Brazil, Mongolia and Canada. Six of these students are Davis scholars. The scores, size and diversity of this new class are all stunning (and sobering, for hotshot upperclassmen who can’t locate Swaziland on a map―it’s alright, there’s always Ms. South Carolina). This year will be different. EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Brad Baughman COVER: Aimee Nicole Cartier FACULTY ADVISOR Alan Minskoff COPY EDITING AND LAYOUT: Brad Baughman, Aimee Nicole Cartier, Jordan Drake, Kim Stiens, Daniel Thrasher, Lael Uberuaga-Rodgers, Patrick Watson 2 CONTRIBUTORS Wes Ashworth, Jessica Austin, Brad Baughman, Howard Berger, Sarah Beukelman, Kerry CostiganGaldes, Patrick Dougherty, Jordan Drake, Griffin Hewitt, Ben Jarvis, Kyle Kunkler, Emilie McDonagh, B o b b y Po w e r s , K i m S t i e n s , Sam Suyehira, Daniel Thrasher, Lael Uberuaga-Rodgers, Patrick Watson Hotshots and humble sophomores alike should have no problem shaking off sobriety. Party houses form a crescent around the village, from the fraternities all the way down Oak row and out past the ASB president’s to 2011. For those of you who don’t drink, take heart – the dorms are so full this year that singles are being used as doubles. Normally this would be a bad thing, but at a college only two blocks away from Farm City, located in town known only for a murder that happened 100 years ago and a man who supplied potatoes during WII, a few extra faces around campus could really spice up the mix. Also, Berger is back at his bench, instead of in Israel, and toting a clipping from the U.S. News and World Report that lists merely basking in his presence under a tree as one of the “Most popular cultural and campus events.” This same magazine moved Albertson College up an entire tier, from fourth to third (see page 11). Other professors who also made a splash in recent news include Jasper LiCalzi, whose expertise on Idaho politics and bathroom etiquette landed him quotes locally and nationally, and even claims to have heard his “drip drip drip” line ripped off by other analysts and pundits. Perhaps the biggest reason things are different is the looming Foundation decision. The school has gathered close, put its nose to the grindstone, and stayed calm under the magnifying glass-glare of professional evaluation. The State of the College address filled the Langroise Recital Hall steps and balconies. President Hoover announced to an anxious crowd that negotiations are pending, and that big news is on the way come November. Some good. Some bad. With more energy than ever, some young, some experienced, some anxious, some tense but confident, there is no doubt in anybody’s mind ― this year will be different. Sincerely, Brad Baughman Editor About: The Coyote is the student-run campus publication of Albertson College of Idaho. We provide a forum for student, faculty, staff and administrative voices. The opinions presented here are not necessarily those of The Coyote or Albertson College. Submissions and Letters: The Coyote reserves the right to edit all submissions for style, length and grammar. Articles should be submitted in 10 pt. Times New Roman, single spaced and with paragraphs indented five spaces. Articles may be submitted by emailing them as a Microsoft Word file to brad.baughman@ yotes.albertson.edu or coyote@ albertson.edu Payment: The Coyote pays $0.03 per word, $15 for an original piece of art, $30 for an original cover and $5 per photograph. Letters to the editor are welcomed and will be printed as space allows. Letter may be edited for grammar. Letters can be emailed to [email protected] or sent to the address below: Writers will be reimbursed for costs pertaining to reporting at the discretion of the editorial board. Reimbursement must be sought in advance. The Coyote Albertson College 2112 Cleveland Blvd. Box 52 Caldwell, ID 83605 Advertise and Anything Else: Contact editor Brad Baughman at [email protected]. edu. Subscriptions: Subscriptions are availible for $25 Anonymous letters will not be per year. printed. 6 SEPTEMBER 2007 TABLE OF CONTENTS THE COYOTE ANSWER THIS By BRAD BAUGHMAN Q: What has the Larry Craig scandal At ACI, punctuality is an integral liberal arts value. taught you about bathroom etiquette? NEWS Wars 6 Spam By Kyle Kunkler the Troops 7 Blame By Kim Steins 17 17 Worth 11 Million to Caldwell 8 ACI 18 By Lael Uberuaga-Rodgers Side Locos’ Latest Artwork 8 East Coyote Staff 24 Evaluated by Pappas Group 9 ACI By Coyote Staff d’Albertson 9 Tour By Brad Baughman is a Lockdown 10 This ACI’s New Emergency Plan of the College Address 11 State By Patrick Watson Briefs 11 Sports Ben Jarvis and Coyote Staff Band Gets New Director 11 Concert By Ben Jarvis FEATURE Creek Festival 12 Indian By Patrick Watson Sandwich 14 Club By Kerry Costigan-Galdes Low Prices and Double 16 Wal-Mart: Standards Real People Live in Kosovo By Jessica Austin A Migrating Understanding By Daniel Thrasher “If you maintained the proper distance and kept one stall in between, you won’t have to worry about it.” Bobby Powers, junior “Always check the quality of the turf before stepping out onto the field.” Andrew Griffin, sophomore “Don’t go into a bathroom with Larry Craig.” Chantel Varland, sophomore The Next Chapter for Spencer Cobrin by Sarah Beukelman Benching with Berger by Howard Berger ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT 20 Music Review: Spoon’s “Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga” By Jordan Drake 20 Movie Review: Superbad By Griffin Hewitt 21 New Professors on Campus By Brad Baughman 22 September Calendar By Daniel Thrasher 23 Horoscopes “Not to pick up toilet paper off of the bathroom floor. Who does that?” Ashley Carvalho, sophomore “I’m struggling to find a phrase that includes the word ‘glory hole.’” Patrick Dougherty, senior “Always remember to thoroughly wash your hands ― especially after using them to solicit sex.” Brenden Hoffman, sophomore By Wes Ashworth ISSUE #1 3 OPINION THE COYOTE EDITORIAL BOARD PATRICK WATSON News Editor KERRY COSTIGAN-GALDES BRAD BAUGHMAN Editor-in-Chief JORDAN DRAKE LAEL UBERUAGA-RODGERS HATS OFF: BEER MILE DEUX For the second time this year, the track and cross country team ran the semi-annual Beer Mile. Six costume-clad runners ran four laps around the block down on Oak and Wisconsin, a combined distance of just under a mile. In between each lap, the runners chugged a Coors Original Over fifty students (and two parents) attended the event. The most ridiculous costume was worn by Rich Thomas (RTom) who came as a shirtless mohawked Spartan, complete with sword and shield, which he used to hack away at his opponents. The most ridiculous non-costumes were not-worn by Nick Schossow and Alex Goold. Upon losing they announced, “We suck,” poured beers over there heads, stripped naked, and took another lap. My hat goes off to the team, for being a solid unit of friends and athletes whose display of courage, dignity, and hilariously masochistic tendencies gave us all a great way to start the weekend, and will continue to inspire us as a campus throughout the year. My hat also goes off to this year’s winner, Rich Hatch, and his time of 7:20, which only goes to show that a true athlete can drink four beers and still run a mile several minutes faster than this writer can while sober. For more information on what a “Beer Mile” is, check our www. beermile.com. ACI Summer Update Terteling got new computers...finally. A peaceful recognition garden donated in honor of John W. Wagers ‘57 was installed in that awkward gray area behind Strahorn. Photos courtesy of Patrick Watson 4 ROAD RAGE Construction? More like de-struction You realize it’s September, right? Oh, you did? You already knew? Okay, I just wanted to make sure. I could have sworn it was, too, but when I woke up this morning and looked out my front window I saw the construction on Blaine that was promised to be finished by late May, then mid June, then early July, then sometime in August, remained incomplete. Thought I’d lost a few months of my life for a moment there. Perhaps because of a personal bias against the construction I’m not the best person to write this. I tend to consider myself a pretty level-headed person, but this is one topic that, no matter the time or place, gets me livid. Allow me to start at the beginning: I moved into a house on Blaine Street at the beginning of June. At the time, both Blaine and Cleveland had been torn up for several months, traffic restricted to one lane or the other in either direction to accommodate renovation of both streets’ inconveniently high curbs, surgery I considered, while cosmetic, practical. I soon realized the house lacked air-conditioning, so it was necessary I leave the windows open at all times to facilitate airflow; because of the nearby construction, however, every surface in the house was coated in a fine layher of dust before long, a minor fault, though, and one I was willing to overlook because it wouldn’t be for long. June turned into July, and seemingly no progress had been made. Actually, I take that back: at the beginning of July, crews came in to tear up the curb immediately in front of the house, as well as the driveway leading to the garage, allowing access to parking only by the back alley. The heat got hotter, the dust got dustier, and I found myself becoming severely annoyed. Adding to my annoyance was the fact my summer internship was in Boise, and in order to get to and from the city I had to brave further construction woes at the freeway overpass at 21st Street and on the freeway itself, which was often closed to only one lane moving both east and west. At evening rush hour it could take me upwards of two hours to get home. My car, too, lacked air. Only by mid August did the crews return to work. And what a return it was! Within a week’s time, almost every single road between 10th and 22nd had been ripped apart, blocked and inaccessible to both thru-traffic and residents alike. Towering piles of dirt languished by the wayside. After a week of heavy travel, veritable craters had formed where thousands of tires had driven over sections of street that had been, for some reason or other, I’m sure, peeled away in the middle of the thoroughfare. And now it is September. The original plan, as I was informed early on, was to tear up and finish first the north sides of Blaine then Cleveland, then the south sides of each street. Only one chunk of block, only one block of street, only one street at a time. It’ll be finished by late May, I was told, then mid June, then early July, then sometime in August. A letter apologizing for the delays and inconvenience was delivered to the house last week. Apparently, ‘unforeseen difficulties’ have been the cause. No further detail was given, so what exactly those difficulties were we may never know. Too little. Too late. I received in my inbox today a message that contained the following: “The road construction on Cleveland Boulevard is expected to have major traffic impacts between 10th and 22nd (including in front of the College) over the next several weeks. Crews will be removing the roadway down to the gravel base and will leave it that way for 4-6 weeks (or more) until they repave it.” That’s right, they will “leave it that way” until, you know, whenever. The message continues: “This work is expected to be in front of the College during the second week of October, but could happen earlier or later depending on the schedule. There will likely be a time when the parking lots near Hayman, Voorhees and Finney will be inaccessible.” In other words, there is no end in sight, and it’s only going to get more arduous from here. The delays experienced on these two roads, easily among the most heavily traveled in the city, will probably continue indefinitely. This entire operation has been a botched one, in timing, in scope, in execution, and likely in completion. I will be very surprised if construction is finished before December, even more so if the result is an effective one. Your tax dollars at work. -Jordan Drake 6 SEPTEMBER 2007 Letters to the Editor LETTERS TO THE EDITOR The Wide World of Technology Dear Coyote, As the summer comes to a close and I start planning to make the big trip back to Caldwell for another enthralling school year, I think back on all that I have accomplished in the past few months. For all of you who don’t already know, my most recent hobby/interest has become technology and the role it plays in the grand scheme of life. This summer was not only a break from the hardships that accrue as an Albertson College student but also a chance for me to really invest some quality time walking down the road that I like to call Technology Way. Although I would like to say that technology is number one on my priority list, I also have to be aware of my other duty as a barista at the newly opened Dutch Bros, corner of Overland and Millennium way in Meridian, Open 5 a.m. and 10 p.m. Sunday - Thursday, and 5:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. Friday-Saturday (Tips welcome). When this summer started I hadn’t realized what exactly I would be getting myself into by opening the door that is technology. After a conversation with a good friend Courtney Maria aka “Tech Court,” I had a realization, though in her insightful words. She said to me, “Look, we are living in an age of technology….it is around every corner.” This being said after a heated discussion on the role technology will play in our future, these words hit me like a pound a bricks. It was then I knew that I needed to dive head first and waist deep into technology. After endless hours of research, selfsearching, and pure thinking I came up with what I like to call, “The 5 types of technology,” technology of the past, technology of the future, technology of ISSUE #1 THE COYOTE the present, celestial technology, and the most important, technology of NASA.” Now this is just the beginning of my journey, it took many hours of deep concentration to be able to sort through and account for all technology that is apart of the human race. Technology is defined in many terms, as many different things too many different people and because of this is a very complicated subject. To give you a little taste on what I spent my summer doing here is an excerpt from my journal “Technology; A Key to the Past, Present and Future” “…sitting here in the dark realizing the grandeur that is technology I classify the use of laser beams to destroy visible age marks as technology of the present, and the use of laser beams to destroy future alien invaders as technology of the future.” This is only a small portion of what I expect to be a few thousand page overview of technology through out the age of humans. After a five hour shift of serving coffee I would go home and spend most of the rest of my time on my journal. This summer I worked countless hours into the night preparing for what I expect to be a truth breaking account of the role of technology in my life. I really have to give a straight up shout out to all those involved in my journey whether you knew it or not, my first grade teacher Mrs. Truman for allowing us computer lab time every Wednesday, My mom Lynn Ward for always keeping me up to date with the latest technology in cell phones and of course Lael Ugooga booga for all our many weekends spent working out all the intricacies that are technology. KNOW SOMETHING WE DON’T? HAVE AN OPINION ABOUT US OR THE COLLEGE? WANT A LITTLE FAME & MONEY? GET PUBLISHED! Write or illustrate for The Coyote. Or submit a letter to the editor. [email protected] From Jen Ward 5 OPINION THE COYOTE War Stories: The Golden Age of Student_Official By KYLE KUNKLER Speech is so restricted in society today. Of course you have the right to say almost anything you want in the United States and many other liberal nations, but the fact of the matter is that people often don’t say what’s on their mind. Fear of persecution, harassment, and otherwise dreading a damaged reputation for violating some the advent of internet blogs has given a digital homeland to every crazy on the internet who wants to say whatever the hell they want, whether it be about the need to overthrow the US government so we can truly achieve a perfect anarchical state, to the need to send Lindsay Lohan and every other doped-up, alcoholic movie star in from the need to send Mexican immigrants back to Mexico, to whether student government were being tools for backing the administration on a football team that virtually no students wanted, to whether or not Ronald Reagan deserved to die. No topic was sacred or off-limits! And some of the e-mail threads got to be 60-70 e-mails long ever-changing (and often ridiculous) politically-correct norm causes people to cower from the prospect of truly expressing themselves. Hardly what I would call a fertile ground for free speech. But a new technology is removing these socially-constructed barriers, if only slowly, and believe it or not Albertson College had its own little niche in this free speech market in the past. It’s called electronic discourse, and it’s changing the way everyone, from idiots to intellectuals, can exchange ideas on anything and everything affecting their communities. For example, Hollywood to an island so they can stop contaminating our society. If you believe it and want to tell the world about it, rest assured there are others just like you on the internet that share your beliefs. Well as I mentioned before, Albertson College used to have its’ own little niche in this crazy little world of digital discourse, yet chose to throw it away three years ago for the sake of practicality. Let me tell you about spam wars. Slightly different from blogs, spam wars gave every student access to send a emails to the entire campus. Spam wars were waged on everything before they trailed off, clearly involving the entire campus in the discussion process. A bastion of free speech at it’s greatest! But if things were so great back then, why did spam wars go away? What could have possibly prompted the abandonment of such a miraculous tool at Albertson College? Money. Back in the day, e-mail accounts were limited to 20 megabytes, and these huge e-mail threads, being multiplied 800 times over after being sent to every student on campus, were eating up precious server space. IT was posed with the decision of buying larger servers, or doing away with spam wars. Regrettably the almighty dollar won out. But the great news is that this dilemma has dissipated in the last couple years. IT no longer even controls the student e-mail servers; Microsoft does, the limits on the accounts are over 2 gigabytes, large enough for even the biggest spam war! It seems as if the conditions might be ripe for the reestablishment of freer speech on the ACI campus. But admittedly there are other concerns opponents of spam wars often cite. What about the students that don’t want to participate in spam wars? Why should they also receive 80 e-mails a day? Well in all honesty folks, the delete button is just as easy to press as the send button. A minor inconvenience for the spreading of freer communication. And secondly, I even know a few people who, although regularly dreading spam wars, throughout the year usually found one or two topics interesting and chose to join in. But if that tool wasn’t available for them, sure they wouldn’t have had to delete their e-mails as much, but they also wouldn’t have had the chance to participate in one of our most sacred civil liberties when they wanted it. You can’t be a fair-weather fan as far as free speech is concerned. The need to protect it from never-ending threats is an obligation we must uphold, even if we don’t agree with how everyone uses it. Because if you let it slip away, the next time you want to tell everyone that Lindsay Lohan should be sent to a deserted island, you just might not have that chance. The Barracuda breakdown on digital SPAM: Courtesy of Barracuda Networks 6 6 SEPTEMBER 2007 Blame the Troops OPINION THE COYOTE By KIM STIENS Since the Iraq War started, there has been dissent. It was only a simmer at the beginning, with most of Congress and the American people being swept up in mistakes and ideals. Over the years, however, the force behind this dissent has raged to a boil and the clear need for policy change is acknowledged by almost all. Dissent is healthy; it is the hallmark of a successful democracy. It means we’re doing enough to be noticed, and we’re still allowing opposing points of view. There is one area, however, concerning the war, where people refuse to aim their blame, and that is the ground troops. The general sentiment in America is that the soldiers are immune from blame. This failed effort is the fault of an administration; these proud men and women are serving their country to the best of their ability, and they would seem to deserve nothing but praise. “Support the Troops” has become a hollow rallying phrase: it is taken as universal that everyone supports the troops, we just all support them in different ways. But should the troops be immune to the criticism? The answer to that question is dependent largely on political ideology. The Bushies would contend that to say a word against the troops or their efforts is to materially harm them, and is tantamount to aiding and abetting the enemy: treason. I suspect that these are the same types of people who would argue that the soldiers of the Third Reich, feeling a surge of nationalist empowerment and a newfound sense of political efficacy, were ordered to do the terrible, terrible things they did and were merely “swept up,” somehow, in the whole idea. Such circumstances would seem to release these soldiers from culpability. Of course, I like to think the American military is a little different. More ISSUE #1 than that, the Germans could definitely be seen as victims of group think, given that their new society involved a sort of collectivism that placed the nation above the individual in almost all cases. America, however, is the country of rugged individualism. More than any other country in the world, we pride our system in instilling in is citizens the ability to be responsible for themselves, to evaluate their actions in terms of their effects on the collective and on themselves, and to hold their nation to the highest of standards. So why should the soldiers actually carrying out the war be released from responsibility? Because it is in “bad form” to criticize soldiers in harm’s way? These are not people who are being forced to pull the trigger by any means; we have a volunteer army. There are severe penalties for insubordination in any army; imprisonment, beating and starving (yes, I’m certain it happens), and the dreaded “dishonorable discharge.” But a recent poll of 2000 soldiers by the military newspaper “Stars and Stripes” showed that one out of three soldiers felt the war had “no value” or “little or no value.” One third. That’s a huge amount of dissent within the armed forces themselves. What possible good could come of blaming not only the ideologues but also those responsible for executing those ideologies? While the penalties for refusing to go to Iraq or carry out the orders that make the war are stiff, imagine if one third of the army did it. Not only would the penalties likely lighten (due to strained prison resources and what I would anticipate to be a lessening of the stigma of dishonorable discharge) for such revolt but the orders would not be carried out, and would eventually stop coming. The men and women on the ground have a power much stronger and much more direct than Congress to stop the war. While it is not unheard of globally for an army to refuse to carry out orders their Prius’. These are hardcore people who got into the army due to a genuine sense of responsibility or need. From what I understand, the soldiers who want to get out of Iraq aren’t running scared, they would just love to be in a part of the military that they think is worth their time and lives. Iraq? Not so much. Afghanistan? Gung-ho! Perhaps feeling a real backlash from the American people for their personal roles in this awful war would get the ball and these actions changing what orders came down (the Israeli army in Lebanon serves as a good example of this), it has never really applied to the United States army. But would the long-term consequences of these soldiers doing what they think is right by themselves and their country be worth ending this war? Absolutely. The armed forces are not replete with surly teenagers eager to get out of the army and smoke pot in rolling. As long as we refuse to criticize or blame the troops for the wars they carry out, we reinforce the idea that they have no choice but to carry out orders they disagree with to further a war that they, most of Congress and most of Americans, want to end. These aren’t brain dead automatons here; these are people that were told all through childhood and adolescence that dissent is the highest form of patriotism; maybe they just need to be reminded of that. 7 NEWS ECONOMIC IMPACT OF ACI ON CALDWELL: (2005-2006) THE COYOTE ACI Worth Over 11 million Dollars to Caldwell What exactly does it mean to be a “college town?” I tend to think of towns like Moscow, Idaho, where the University is the lifeblood of the entire surrounding community. Or Cambridge, Massachusetts, a town whose name would ring few bells if it weren’t for a nice little college a few people have heard about, and whose law school was mentioned in Legally Estimated direct econom- Blonde I and II. And while for me, ACI is pretty much the only reason I’m in Caldwell, I’m ic impact from all types not so elitist as to think that the entire town would come crashing down if it weren’t for ACI. However, you’d be surprised at the impact we have on our little Farm City. of ACI spending: Last spring, ACI students Rachel Burkett, Rachel Odio, Tom Patchin, and Jennifer Shrum $6,349,026 conducted a study on the economic impact of ACI on Caldwell. Their findings landed them an article in the Idaho Press Tribune and no doubt, lauds from their project advisor, Jim Estimated indirect ecoAngresano, and distribution of the report by the Hoov-dawg himself. What they found was nomic impact from all pretty significant: During the 2005-2006 academic year, ACI had an economic impact of than $11 million on the Caldwell economy. Furthermore, the college created over 300 jobs, kicktypes of ACI spending: started the social scene, and was responsible for boosting the Caldwell economy via student $4,825,260 and faculty spending outside the college. To be consistent, the study intentionally omitted from its Estimated total economic results the boost to Caldwell banks by the ACI community. impact from all types of During a given academic year, the total balance of ACI-related accounts in Caldwell banks is between $3 million and $10 ACI spending: million, giving banks lending power, which fosters economic $11,174,286 growth in the area of consumer spending. Though the report focused on the economic impact Number of jobs directly of ACI on Caldwell, in their report, Burkett, Odio, Patchin A Caldwell Fine Arts’ performance of The created by ACI: Nutcracker in Jewett draws crowds from and Shrum also pointed out that ACI offers non-economic the Caldwell Community. benefits to the town as well. ACI athletics drew crowds to 238 Caldwell, and visiting teams and fans spent an estimated $129,000. ACI hosts many cultural events, including concerts, operas, plays, and art exhibitions (many of you may remember Estimated number of Capture the Moment, the collection of Pulitzer Prize-winning photography that visited ACI indirect jobs created due last spring). Our clubs, sports teams and Greek Organizations have contributed to commuto ACI: nity-wide fundraising efforts, from running soccer camps, to Indian Creek cleanup, to raising money for CASA. 60 If ACI weren’t around, what would happen to Caldwell? Well, I don’t think the entire city would declare bankruptcy (wait, can cities even do that?) But it’s good to know that we’re *Results: ACI – CALDWELL having a positive impact on our local community, and besides, when we’re getting kicked out 2005-2006 ECONOMIC IMof Burke’s Valley Bowl for being too rowdy, we can yell out these stats as we’re being escorted PACT STUDY, by Shrum, to the door. ―Lael Uberuaga-Rodgers Patchin, Odio, and Burkett Jennie Shrum,08 Tom Patchin, ‘07 Rachel Odio, ‘08 Rachel Burkett, ‘08 *To read the full report, contact the Coyote at [email protected] East Side Locos & Co. Paint to Show Campus Pride On July 4th, the Caldwell Police recieved over 75 reports of graffiti. The college was tagged in several places. “This happens every two or three years,” Campus safety director Allan Laird. “We’re in no more danger than any other time. The school is just as safe as before.” Left - ESL x 3 on the back of the softball scoreboard Middle - ESL in permanent marker on the steps of McCain Bottom Right - This small pink tagging (outlined in photoshop) is bearly visible in black and white, but sits subtly on the corner of Oak and Wisconsin, and has been attributed to the polemical group known as Alto Cinco. 8 6 SEPTEMBER 2007 NEWS THE COYOTE Taylor St. John’s Tour d’Albertson Marshal Scholar gives perspective on the group that evaluated the ACI ACI Evaluated by Pappas Consulting Group Last January, the J.A. and Kathryn Albertson Foundation hired the Pappas Consulting Group, based out of Connecticut, to evaluate the college with two questions in mind: 1. Is Albertson College of Idaho a viable institution worth continued support? 2. What are the cost parameters and operating expenses that need to be met in order for the college to be on a solid financial footing, able to operate without continued financial support from the foundation? From March 20 to 22, the Pappas Group toured the college. They conducted over fifty interviews with students, faculty and staff. Over 224 individual documents, including 59 board meeting minutes, were placed into a special online file for study. They were also given a tour of the campus by Taylor St. John, ‘07. (see far right, “The Tour d’ACI”) On May 15th, Hoover and the Chair of the ACI Board of Trustees, Jerry Baur, met with four of the Albertson Foundation members to receive the Pappas Group report, which emphasized a number of things ISSUE #1 about the college: • An unusual sense of community and collegiality enhances the educational experience of students, sustains and attracts faculty and staff morale in the face of low salaries. • An extraordinary positive faculty-student relationship. • The college operates in a generally effective and efficient manner. • Strong leadership, especially in Academic and Student Affairs and Business and Finance. • Effective and knowledgeable trustees. • Shared vision of Top 100 liberal arts colleges even as that has constrained enrollment. • Positive town and gown relationship. • Faces significant deferred maintenance and new facility issues. ▪ Concluded that the college’s vision is probably a much greater challenge than the college has realized and maybe impossible to achieve―would require very significant increase in ACI’s endowment. ―Brad Baughman Coyote - What was your impression of Dr. Alceste Pappas? Taylor - My first impression was “wow, Alceste is a firecracker.” She assimilated information incredibly fast and asked well-designed questions to get the information she wanted, yet she was really friendly and had an army of wry comments ready for any occasion. I actually gave the tour to the entire Pappas group, which included two men and two women, and I had a very positive, personable impression of all. C - How long was your tour? T - About an hour and a half. C - Who all did you happen to run into during the tour? T - We peeked into a few classrooms and talked with almost everyone we ran into, but I had also arranged with Chris Rifer, Ben Thomas, Derek Erstad, Stephen Lowman and several others to talk about their experience with specific programs or places at ACI. But my favorite run-in was totally spontaneous- we happened upon Berger holding court on his bench, and the Pappas Group loved it! C – In your opinion, did Dr. Pappas seem genuinely impressed? T - Definitely- they all made many positive comments about the energy and the talent of the people on our campus, and seemed to really like the atmosphere. That said, they were definitely not impressed with Hayman’s bathrooms or Boone’s laboratories-they actually looked pretty horrified! C - Did Dr. Pappas make any comments, or ask questions, about other areas of the college? T - I was impressed with how many details she and the entire group already knew about the school. They mainly asked questions about being a student here and about how we used our facilities. T - How were you selected? C - That is classified information. Actually, I have no idea, but I was really honored and excited to be asked to lead their first tour. C - How did you select who you “ran into”? T - That’s classified too! Dr. Hoover and I thought they deserved a wider range of opinions and better, more specific information than I alone could provide, so I had arranged with students and faculty who could talk personally about certain areas of the college. I remember Dr. Maughan was a hit with the group, and one of the consultants shared his specialty, which almost turned my tour of ACI into a tour of the British Empire, but . . . C - Were there any surprises, or simply unforeseen developments along the way? How did you handle them? T - The plan was for me to drive Dr. Hoover’s Cadillac golf cart during the tour, and understandably, I was pretty excited. On the way to the cart, I told Alceste and the group about my experience driving a golf cart into a tree when I was nine, and they suddenly decided to walk during the tour. They kindly told me it was because the campus was so compact-and in the end it was probably better to walk because we met more people. Other than that, the tour was pretty relaxed and low-key, but when we stopped at Berger’s bench, I was steeling myself in case they got treated with some vintage Berger verbal shock therapy. ―Brad Baughman 9 NEWS THIS IS A LOCKD WN Chemical spills, hostage situations... nothing your Dean of Students can’t handle In the case of a disaster at ACI ― a bomb threat, chemical spill, earthquake, fire, influenza pandemic, disruptive student, inclement weather, or hostage situation ― dean of students Paul Bennion has done a lot of thinking so that all you have to worry about is… well… freaking out. This summer Bennion typed out a 24 page document called Emergency Procedures Guidelines, which outlines everything from which administrator gets called first if a student dies to the code for snapping the campus into lockdown mode. Most of the procedures are about as generic as the FBI terms of usage blue screen before your Friday night DVD rental, but a few of them might just make you duck and cover. 1. The Emergency Protocols section mentions the possible use of a siren to initiate a lockdown situation. Will ACI use a siren? We have proposed the use of a siren that is loud enough to cover the entire campus. The Governance Committee is discussing the funding of this, which would cost approximately $10,000. I believe the proposed location would be on top of Sterry, but it could be located atop any centrally located building. 2. The Protocols section also mentions a mass text/email to initiate a lockdown. How will this work and will it be effective? The experts suggest that a mass voice and text messaging system is one of the most effective ways to communicate a lock down, evacuation or some other message of high importance. The system we are exploring is known as PENN (Personal Emergency Notification Network) Alert. The Governance Committee is discussing this, as well. It is very reasonably priced, approximately $1200. As you suggest, the next step would be to obtain all student, faculty and staff cell phone or other primary phone number to make sure we reach as many students as possible. This will undoubtedly be a challenge. mittee some guidelines in which to follow or questions to discuss should that specific crisis happen. Section IV (Life Threatening Behaviors) was probably the one area that was drafted in large part in direct response to the VT and ACI incident you mention. Modulator Siren Signal Description: The Modulator Siren Series controller provides a flat frequency response from 200 to 2000 Hz for excellent voice reproduction and with the MCP Controller produces warning signals such as: • WAIL (ATTACK) • STEADY (ALERT) • FAST WAIL • ALTERNATING STEADY 3. Section VIII deals with Disruptive Students. How much of this section is a response to the incident last year at Virginia Tech? Also, last year ACI had an off-campus incident involving Russian roulette. How did ACI handle the situation? • PULSED WAIL • PULSED STEADY • WESTMINSTER CHIMES The recommended approach for any emergency planning document is referred to as “All Hazards”. This means that no matter what the cause is, you have a general procedure to deal with the consequence. Sections II & III are meant to meet the intent of this “All Hazards” approach. W e then decided to specifically mention potential crisis with the intent of giving the Emergency Response Com- • Custom tones can be purchased upon special request. *not to scale Student most likely to fret about disaster, by Major – Life threatening behaviors – Psychology Influenza Pandemic – Biology Hostage Situation – Creative Writing Death of Student – Philosophy Injury to Students – Exercise Science Bomb Threat – Political Economics Inclement Weather - … New Orleans? 10 6 SEPTEMBER 2007 NEWS THE COYOTE STATE OF THE COLLEGE ADDRESS On Thursday, Aug 30, Albertson College of Idaho president Bob Hoover delivered his annual state of the college address to a packed Langroise recital hall. Students, faculty, administrators, trustees and other members of the ACI community were in attendance. Subjects addressed included the J.A. and Kathryn Albertson Foundation decision following the Pappas Group recommendation, the college’s new U.S. News and World Report ranking, and the college’s enrollment status. The address began with an update on the Albertson College board of trustees. Hoover announced that trustee Jack Lemley has completed his two terms on the board. Lemley, as well as current chair of the board Jerry Baur, received honorary degrees at the Convocation on Sunday Sept 2. Four new trustees were also announced including Candy Dale, Tim Hopkins, Ray Melville and Paul Street. Dale, Melville and Street are alumni of the college. President Hoover also mentioned that there is the possibility of the board gaining a fifth new member by its meeting in October. Hoover, along with respective department heads, went on to announce new faculty and staff. New hires include staff members in the development office, admissions, physical plant, athletics, student life and campus safety. New faculty include assistant and visiting professors in English, biology, chemistry, music and psychology. (See page 21 for profiles on new faculty) President Hoover went on to discuss the Pappas Report and the J.A. and Kathryn Albertson Foundation’s potential decision to adjust ACI’s funding plan in reaction to it. (See page 9 for more information on the Pappas Report.) “Frankly, I don’t have much to report,” Hoover said of the Foundation’s decision. In early July, the college submitted a response to the Pappas Report to the Foundation. It contained several corrections to the report as well as a proposed funding plan for the college. The Foundation is currently in discussion over the matter. “The [Foundation’s] announcement when it comes will surprise all concerned,” Hoover said. “Good and bad in some ways.” The president added that he will probably have something to announce about the future of the college’s funding in November after the Foundation meets again in October. President Hoover then went on to discuss the U.S. News and World Report Top 100 American liberal arts colleges. Despite controversy about the rating system such as concerns that it does not fully reflect the quality of the schools it evaluates, the potential of Albertson College entering the top 100 remains an important part of the J.A. and Kathryn Albertson foundation grant. In the revised ranking, ACI moved up from the fourth tier to the third tier reflecting a four-year average freshman retention SPORTSBRIEFS Men’s Tennis team in works for ACI The addition of a Women’s Varsity Tennis team last year looks to be a first step in improving tennis at ACI. Athletic Director Marty Holly told the paper that the school is in the process of raising money for new courts, allowing our current women’s team to compete here at the school. Also, once the money is raised and the courts finished, it is expected that the addition of a Men’s varsity team would not be far behind, hopefully as soon as September of 2008. Keep your eyes open for fast flying fluorescent yellow balls in the near future! --Ben Jarvis ISSUE #1 Women’s Soccer The Albertson College of Idaho women’s soccer team received its first-ever regional ranking in the 19 years of the program this afternoon, as the NAIA released the first Region I Top-5 poll of the season. The Lady Yotes (2-2) sat in the No. 4 spot, thanks to road wins over Rocky Mountain and Great Falls, and a tough 1-0 loss at Carroll. Concordia holds the top spot in the regional poll, followed by Carroll, Simon Fraser, ACI, and Rocky Mountain. rate increase from 68 percent to 78 percent as well as a 10 percent increase in graduation rate. The average rate does not include the 2006 freshman retention rate of 86 percent. Other statistics from the 2006 freshman included that 40 percent of the students were in the top 10 percent of their high school class and 25 percent were in the top 7 percent of the national SAT and ACT pools. The U.S. News also reported that Alumni giving has increased over the past several years. This is another important consideration in the ranking system. President Hoover continued his address with a description of Albertson College’s current enrollment situation. As of Aug 30, the college had 292 new students up from 264 at the same time the previous year. Of these students, 60 percent are female and 40 percent are male. Also, 15 are heritage scholars and 17 are international students from such countries as Nepal, India, Ethiopia, Rwanda and China. Although the number of new students changes daily this time of year, Hoover assured that it is very likely the college will be exceeding the budgeted number of 797 full-time students. This means that the college will likely receive a tuition profit for the upcoming school year. Hoover thanked Vice President for Enrollment Management John Klockentager for his efforts on this front. President Hoover continued on to discuss how several college initiatives such as the possible addition of a new residence hall are on hold until November when more information is known about the Albertson Foundation’s decision. Hoover ended the state of the college address on a hopeful note, reassuring that the efforts put forward by the college and its staff may still pay off in the near future. “The best can be around the corner if we keep doing what we’re doing,” he said. --Patrick Watson Concert Band Gets New Director The retirement of Concert Band director and music historian Terry Stone last year meant that there were two very large shoes to fill in the music department this Fall. Luckily, that’s where Sandon Mayhew steps in. Sandon, one of Boise’s most acclaimed Jazz musicians, will replace Terry as director of the concert band, and is looking to make this year into an extremely productive and fun foray into new styles that he draws inspiration from. If you have the inclination, feel free to strike up a conversation with him about Frank Zappa, and you might get an idea of just one of the legitimate composers Sandon has considered adding to the repertoire of the 2007-2008 concert band. Don’t let that intimidate you from dusting off your horn and signing up, the band is always looking for new members who play any instrument (yes, even percussion), and you can register the first week of school. If you aren’t interested in large ensemble playing, but are still musically inclined, don’t forget about the recoding studio, and make sure to check out the public drive for recorded music from ACI students. --Ben Jarvis 11 NEWS THE COYOTE Caldwell Festival to in Downtown R An uncovered Indian Creek, refurbished stree By PATRICK WATSON The creek demonstration site near Avenue Avenue. On Saturday September 15, the city of Caldwell will be holding its fifth annual Indian Creek Festival. From 8 a.m. to 7 p.m., classic cars, military vehicles and vendors will occupy city blocks along what is expected to be a significantly revitalized Indian Creek. Last April, the Caldwell city council passed resolution 52-07 requiring all downtown public buildings to comply with LEED sustainability standards. The adoption of these state-of-the-art development standards is part of a continuing effort by the City of Caldwell to revitalize the economy and cityscape of its downtown. LEED, which stands for Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, is a nationally accepted rating system which establishes benchmarks for environmentally friendly building designs. Caldwell’s consideration of the environment as it pursues building projects represents an important step in the redevelopment of its downtown. A primary aspect of Caldwell’s downtown redevelopment is the redesign of streetscape and park- ing configuration. In June, the city hired HDR — a national architecture and engineering firm with an office in Boise — for consultation and design services in the redevelopment. HDR, whose recent work includes Boise’s environmentally friendly Banner Bank Building, was hired to provide a variety of services including the assessment of existing streetscape layouts and working with the city to develop guidelines for its vision of sustainable design for the downtown. Among the various aspects of sustainable design are cost-saving measures such as energy efficiency, water efficiency and eco-friendly building materials. In early August, HDR submitted to the City of Caldwell a first draft response including graphic renderings that depict potential street scenes incorporating particular architecture, colors and materials. HDR is now in the revision process of tailoring their recommendations to fit Caldwell’s design guidelines more specifically. In addition to streetscape upgrades, the construction of a mixed-use, LEED certified city hall is envisioned as part of down- town Ca structure town Cal would in governm restauran seat audi also inclu Cald for quali the city h The RFQ couraged ing conc desired the struc The four dev design s proposal process, decide w city hall p see publi garding t in the we The which ha for sever icant pro rently, a ing from between Street is Indian C Septemb An artist’s rendering of a future Caldwell streetscape. 12 6 SEPTEMBER 2007 NEWS THE COYOTE Mark Turning Point Redevelopment etscapes and a new city hall are in the city’s near future. aldwell’s redevelopment. The e would be located in downldwell along Indian Creek and ncorporate — in addition to mental offices — retail shops, nts, office space and a 300itorium. Plans for the city hall ude residential housing units. dwell issued an RFQ (request ifications) to contractors for hall project over the summer. Q outlined the project and end developers to submit buildcept proposals meeting the functional specifications of cture. city received proposals from velopers each with compelling suggestions. While the four ls are still in the evaluation the Caldwell city council may which developer to hire for the project by Sept 17. Expect to ic informational meetings rethe downtown redevelopment eeks and months to come. day-lighting of Indian Creek, as been on the city’s agenda ral years, has also made signifogress over the summer. Curdemonstration site stretchm Tenth to Ninth Avenues Cleveland Blvd. and Arthur s unearthed and landscaped. Although it is behind the original schedule of being fully uncovered and landscaped between Kimball and fifth streets by Sept 15, there is still a chance the creek project can be completed by mid-November assuming several design aspects move forward. According to redevelopment coordinator Dennis Cannon, this year is an important milestone in Caldwell’s downtown redevelopment process. “By the end of the summer, the downtown will see its biggest change in decades and will be ready for the next big step in its redevelopment,” he said. With numerous intended events and activities, the Indian Creek Festival is expected to attract over 3,000 individuals this year. The day will begin with a pancake breakfast at 8 a.m. and end with a street dance starting at 4:30 p.m. Attendees will encounter new events to the Festival such as a cardboard kayak race sponsored by Saint Alphonsus West Valley Medical Center. Old standby events such as the rubber duck race and tug-of-war across the creek are also planned. There will also be a kids’ activities area for younger Festival-goers. Although downtown Caldwell and Indian Creek still have a long way to go before being fully revitalized, the expected community involvement at the Indian Creek Festival provides great hope for the future of the project. As the redevelopment’s motto suggests, downtown Caldwell should — and very likely will — be an excellent place to “Live, work, play and shop.” An aerial view of the revitalized creek. Creek Festival ber 15, 2007 A section of the creek located at Kimball and Blaine. ISSUE #1 13 FEATURE THE COYOTE Club Sandwich By KERRY COSTIGAN-GLADES Get the skinny on a few clubs at ACI Some people were just no fun in high school. They joined too many clubs and took on too many responsibilities: sports, student body positions, academic clubs, volunteer work. Actually, there is a good chance you were one of them: most of those kids were working hard to get into a great college and, well, here you are. There is no rule that says you have to continue to be a no-fun killjoy in college though. You’re already here, so it’s time to find one thing you really love to do and focus. Organizations at Albertson range from pre-professional clubs and honor societies to political and religious groups so there is no shortage of opportunities for the savvy student. It can be difficult to find a group that is perfect for you though, especially when there are upwards of fifty at ACI. Even if you made a checklist and tried a new club every week, you wouldn’t be anywhere near the end by the time summer rolls around again. Of course, there are ways to scope out your options without investing quite as much time and energy into the search. Gossip; er, word of mouth, is always a good place to start if you’re looking to find people like you who already get together on a regular basis and publish a newsletter. An even better place to start your search is the Coyote Bazaar, an event held annually at Albertson to help introduce students to all that college club life has to offer. Or, it would be a better place to start if it were attended by more than a smattering of students and club representatives each year. Unfortunately, most of us will be, once again, too preoccupied with new roommates, new classes, and new hookup opportunities to hotfoot it to the Bazaar this year. So unless you’re planning to cart a checklist of ACI club names around with you for the next nine months, you have only one place to turn: your friendly neigh- borhood Coyote. (You did at least know it was coming, didn’t you?) We’ve submitted questions to all the current club and organization leaders asking about past successes and future plans for their respective clubs. From those who responded by deadline, we have chosen the best, most interesting replies (and maybe one that made us laugh…) to reprint here. The following six groups represent a pretty diverse cross section of Albertson’s ‘club scene’ but if, after reading the following interviews, you still don’t see what you’re looking for, remember, there’s always the checklist. Our Questions and Their Answers 1. What’s the point? 2. How many active members did your group have last year? 3. Are there any special requirements that must be met for people to join? 4. What was the most exciting thing the club did last year? 5. How many events did you put on last year? What were they? 6. What are the perks? 7. If an anonymous donor gave the group one million dollars, what would you do with the money? 8. What’s the cost? 9. Anything else you’d like to add? Who: Rebecca Holmes for Gay-Straight Campus Alliance How: Contact [email protected] for more information. 1. ...Homos are fun. Straight people are fun. Put the two together and a WHOLE LOTTA fun happens! Seriously, our club is all about making ACI a safe place to be no matter what your gender or sex identity. We are open to all conversations including just talking about life in general. Questioning? Come on into our office in McCain and we’ll be happy to have a chat! 2. Oh, I’d say about twenty people are se- 14 riously involved in our group. Yes, more sign up and occasionally come to meetings but really a good core of about twenty people work hard together to put on shows, events, and activities like Same-Gender Hand-Holding Day and the National Day of Silence last year. Consequently, I have about twenty best friends whom I can rely on for anything. I hope they all feel the same way! 3. Besides the “no hate” rule, (don’t bring hate into our meetings; only support) there are no requirements. Be as little or as much involved as you want! We encourage our members to participate in any way that they would like. People have different talents and those talents should be used differently! 4. I’d have to say, hands down, the drag show at the end of the Day of Silence. We held a ceremony at the end of the day, 5:00 pm, to thank everyone for their involvement. Then the drag kings involved in our club dressed it up for a few numbers and solos! We had awesome guest speakers who really made us think about life and how some people have to live it a little harder. We had amazing Grecian catering and the whole show was just a party. 5. Same-Gender Hand-Holding Day: Selfexplanatory. Held twice a school year, once per semester, this day includes wearing the rainbow and holding hands with the same gender visibly. Day of Silence: Day to protest the silence felt by those bullied because of their gender status in schools. Purple ribbons and an oath of silence until 5:00 pm. Drag Show: Just for fun at the end of the Day of Silence. Gotta lighten it up a bit! October/November protests all over Boise regarding the HJR2 bill (constitutional marriage amendment). . . . Okay, we were kinda slacking last year. This year, we need more help. We’re doing a whole bunch more. Speaking of which… ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW LIVE PARTICIPATION show will be THIS OCTOBER! Admission is $5... So get your corset on, guys, and get ready to do the TIME WARP AGAIN!!! Props (toast, rice, etc.) will be provided. 6. As I mentioned above, we’re a pretty tight-knit group. I’m pretty sure that everyone involved in GSCA is comfortable talking to anyone else within the group about pretty much anything. We are support for each other. We care about each other. We are active in the GLBT community and that is impressive on a resume…and we have the most fabulous pizza at our meetings. 7. Have a lube-wrestling contest/Olympics on the quad. And a band. And bring in a drag troop from Portland or Seattle… and DONATE to help others suffering from discrimination. We’d make a lot more fun activities available for FREE to students and the people in our community… OR, whatever the club voted on. Those are just my ideas! 8. The best things in life are free, brothers and sisters. We do request donations for membership fees but we as an organization realize that not everyone is made of money. Whatever you want to put in, you can. We’re working on t-shirts but usually every year we make the shirts together as a club. (This year, tie-dye!) 9. We rock the Kasbah. We work because we know that we have each other and that we are powerful people; we have the ability not to even worry about the person sitting next to us-- all people are people and deserve respect just the same. Who: Joe Hilby for Albertson Kendo Club How: Contact [email protected] for more information. 1. The Kendo Club was created to allow those people who are interested in learning about the art of Japanese fencing the opportunity to do so at little to no cost. Once a member of the Kendo Club you will be able to attend lessons in Boise free of charge. Our club provides limited transportation (four spots) to the Idaho Kendo Kai (I.K.K.) Dojo on a regular basis three times a week. Our goal is to provide a fun and friendly environment in which to learn this incredible martial art. 2. Unfortunately, Kendo Club membership was low last year due to the fact that it was started late in the year. However, the I.K.K. has a membership of about ten students and three sensei. 3. There are only two requirements. The first is that you maintain a friendly and respectful attitude toward your teachers and peers, and the second is that you join the 6 SEPTEMBER 2007 FEATURE club. 4. Our club was present at a Shimpan (Kendo Referee) seminar as well as an Iaido (Sword Drawing) seminar. Both were twoday seminars and were run by some of the most high-ranking sensei in the US. 5. Membership in Albertson Kendo Club will allow you free lessons at our local Kendo Dojo as well as transportation to those lessons. 6. It may sound boring but such a large sum of money would do little to change this club. Kendo is a relatively cheap activity, where the people and their attitudes are the most important factors. But a trip to Japan comes to mind. 7. As I have said, lessons are free, but gear is not. The most immediate cost will be your Shinai (bamboo sword), which costs around $20. I am unsure if our club will have the funds to help you with this but we remain hopeful that we will be able to provide some financial help. 8. This next year we are planning to be more noticeable on campus. This will include on-campus practices, seminars, and hopefully we will be able to hold tournaments on campus. Who: Rachel Odio for the Alliance for Community Transformation (ACT) How: Contact [email protected] for more information. 1. The point: Humanity-- human rights, welfare, quality of life, that sort of thing. We’re open to environmental activism, too but that’s really TERRA’s domain. ACT currently participates with Amnesty International and STAND (Students Take Action Now: Darfur), which is why you will see lots of invitations to write letters or call your senators about prisoners of conscience and Darfur, among other topics. But ACT was founded as an independent group so that it could participate in a variety of organizations as well as organize its own activities. Our goal is to increase awareness and encourage action in local, national, and global issues. I hope people will join because they realize how much need there is for someone to both care and act-- and I hope they will stay because ACT helps them do just that. 2. Although ACT received the New Organization of the Year Award, we were a small group, with an average of at least five people showing up at events on a rotating basis. 3. All are welcome but hopefully with an actual interest in participation (not just resume fillers)! ISSUE #1 4. My personal favorite was the meal fundraiser. Something about driving down the road with so much food packed into my van that I had a wall of cardboard behind and beside me felt very satisfying. awesome pictures, write GOOD articles for the yearbook, attend tons of events, and dedication since it’s a small group and you get paid for it. Interviews will most likely be required since it’s a full year job. 5. At least seven: Several letter-writing meetings (maybe three or four throughout the year?), Blood Diamond invitation, Lord of War showing, Global Economy Dinner/International Rescue Committee fundraiser, HJR2 (Idaho constitutional marriage amendment) speeches, Darfur documentary showing, and $3,747 in food raised through extra meals for the local Western Idaho Community Action Partnership food bank. 4. Most exciting thing the club did? Built the book. Being published is always exciting. 6. Sometimes there’s food… But seriously, in addition to hopefully feeling like you’re doing a little bit of something for the world, there is A LOT of leadership opportunitys! You can help with events or design your own with other members’ help-- plus, four of last year’s officers graduated… 7. How many stamps and envelopes will a million dollars buy? Assuming the donor gave us the liberty to choose, we would probably research projects and charities to donate it. Personal pick off the top of my head: microfinance! 8. So far: $0. 9. This year’s agenda includes continued participation with Amnesty and STAND, as well as a mosquito net awareness campaign and fundraiser project. Even if you don’t feel like you have the time to help organize, let us know what events, topics, or activities you’d like us to see. Better yet, let us help you organize it yourself! Who: Brittney Nelson for the Trail Yearbook How: Contact [email protected] for more information. 5. We don’t put on events normally. We attend all the events other people put on so they can be documented. 6. Perks? Let’s just be honest. It’s the money people are after. Also, being able to have some control over what goes into the yearbook is nice. Free food might also be an option if we’re hitting a deadline. 7. If someone gave our group a million dollars, I’d pay every student to get his or her mug shot taken so we could have a real mugs section. Then I would buy some amazing lenses for the cameras, some new cameras while we’re at it, and more computers with software updates. The rest… pay the staff more, use all the expensive colors in the book, and have one of those covers that costs so much. 8. The cost is nothing. Unless you count time, in which case the cost could be close to your life when deadlines approach. But you get into events… Who: Lael Uberuaga-Rodgers for the Outdoor Program (OP) How: Contact [email protected] for more information. 1. Idaho has fantastic outdoor opportunities out there for the taking, and OP has the funds, gear, leaders, and education to get you out there into nature. Plus, the people that go on OP trips together have some pretty special bonds (ask anyone from Spring Break in Moab last year). 1. Why stay? Because you’re getting paid, my friend. And because we have to have a staff to put a yearbook together. The point is rather obvious. Put together a kick-ass yearbook so you can look back many years from now and remember all those nights you forgot due to Jungle Juice consumption. (An added perk: you can make fun of all the other people whose forgotten nights are also pictured.) 2. Since OP isn’t exactly a club with members or membership, it’s kinda hard to estimate numbers. There were probably 20 people really involved but I’d say 50 to 75 unique people did at least one OP trip throughout the year. 2. I believe there were five people last year. Most of them graduated. We currently have two lined up for this year. I know… hold back the crowds. 4. As far as sheer excitement goes, I remember standing on the 10 foot wide section of a 200 foot high or so sandstone arch in Utah. The South Fork raft trip was also a blast. 3. People need to have some kind of yearbook skill to join. We’re in need of photographers in particular. Yearbook skills include being able to write captions, take 3. We love to see new faces all the time-no experience is required! But please don’t whine. 5. Fall Break-- City of Rocks climbing trip, hotsprings trip to Atlanta, ponderosa State Park Yurt/Snowshoe trip, stargazing at the THE COYOTE Bruneau Sand Dunes Spring Break trip to Moab, Utah and Arches and Canyonlands National Park, Banff Film Festival, and probably at least two more I can’t remember since I wasn’t director last year. 6. If you get into it and like it, you can run for OP director and get valuable leadership experience, which never hurts your resume. And yes, friendship and camaraderie, yadda yadda yadda. 7. Take everyone on the eco-trip of their choice. 8. If you just want to rent gear, the prices are excruciatingly cheap (see our webpage on the main ACI site for a rental list). Trips are all-inclusive, with transportation, food, and accommodations (the ground is free) all paid for as part of the trip cost. And the trip costs are pretty cheap too, often FREE (which never hurts). Who: Griffin Hewitt for the Crazy 88’s Film Critics Association How: Contact [email protected] [email protected] for more information. 1. The ultimate goal of the Crazy 88’s Film Critics Association is to seek out and destroy bad movies, or at least rate these bad films very poorly with condescending comments. Joining this club will also allow members the luxury of dressing up like gorillas and tap dancing in a large bowl of potato salad. 2. Last year, we were not a club; this year, we are one. 3. In order to join the club, a potential member must despise the movie Wolf Creek and the drunken queen of blow, Lindsey Lohan. 4,5,6. The club is currently starting it’s first year. 7. If the Crazy 88’s received one million dollars, we would build a series of sculptures from elbow macaroni depicting scenes from The Never-Ending Story and place them all over the ACI campus for everyone’s enjoyment. 8. Joining up is free but a new member is more than welcome to pledge his or her immortal soul to the club. *Replies may have some minor editing. So there you have it people. Corsets, sword dancing, helping people in need, a little green for your pocket, breathtaking views, potato salad, and friendship and camaraderie, yadda, yadda, yadda. Now get out there and overexert yourself! 15 SUMMER ESSAY THE COYOTE : Low Prices and Double Standards By WES ASHWORTH They are arguably the most polarizing multimillion dollar company of the present day. Despite their love/hate status, millions enjoy low prices and convenience at Wal-Mart’s super centers. I, too, shop there routinely and originally thought they would be a solution to my employment problem. They eventually became more problematic than I could have possibly imagined. The situation was this; I needed a summer job and wanted to work somewhere with minimal customer interaction. Why not work as a freight unloader for Wal-Mart? I could mindlessly muscle boxes all day in some sequestered backroom without worrying about customers and their sometimes agonizing, insistent whims, all at a place I often shop. What a great deal! Well, three months of experience opened my eyes to what a raw deal that really was. Spoiler alert…being a Wal-Mart employee sucked, don’t work there. Before I elaborate, let me clarify: The job duties and general requirements themselves were not too bad. I worked 2-11 pm Thursday through Monday. I could sleep in and still had time to relax after work. I also received a 10% discount card good on general (non-food) merchandise. The unloading crew I worked with was laid back and often entertaining; a few co-workers had a couple bolts loose, but those stories are for another day. The position involved unloading freight off trucks and loading them onto departmentalized pallets. If time permitted, we stocked shelves until the evening, when we pulled the pallets onto the sales floor. We also did random tasks like bringing in carts, bagging groceries, or other “special projects” when time permitted. For the first month, the job breezed along until a couple of huge problems popped up. First of all, the atmosphere was incredibly depressing. During breaks in the lounge, nearly every associate I saw complained about their job or the company. One cashier even referred to the checkout registers as a “Twi- 16 light Zone.” The ‘Associates Only’ areas around the store’s outer edges reminded me of a Nazi camp with Sam Walton as our Führer. Training modules on the computer “re-educated” associates to the Wal-Mart way, while propaganda posters of the ever-smiling Sam Walton, posted everywhere, reminded them of Wal-Mart’s core beliefs. Communication meetings—a.k.a. wastes of time—emphasized sales numbers, stock prices, and were followed with a Wal-Mart cheer to keep the troops’ morale up—an epic failure on their part. Several managers worked like mindless Wal-Mart zombies, working their way up the corporate ladder with good behavior and strong sales, albeit disregarding employer-employee courtesy. Instead, their focus was set on their ultimate dream, the self-designated pinnacle of their fruitless lives. “Maybe twenty five years from now, I can own my own store!” Of all the companies I’ve worked for, this was the most depressing and most filled with self-serving employees. Secondly (and most importantly), the management is naïve, hypocritical, and shoddy. They bring double standards to a whole new level, asking one thing and demanding something completely different. For instance, the company was vehemently intolerant of overtime. You must leave when your shift ends, or kill the overtime on another day. However, many times our crew was too small to unload all of the freight in the allotted time, especially when utilizing an inefficient unloading method. Added to this were numerous errands we were forced to do that served only to waste our time. Even when we asked for help, the managers ignored us until we were so far behind, the whole store would suffer and they could not bury their heads in the sand any longer. At the end of the day, one manager tells us to go home at our scheduled shift completion; another says to stay until all of the new freight is out. If we stay, we get yelled at for having overtime. If we go, we get yelled at for not finishing. It is a lose-lose situation. The managers also have no idea what goes on in the backroom, yet behave like they know it all. The freight trucks varied in size and number, from 1300 pieces up to almost 3000 pieces each. Yet they said each needed to be done in the same amount of time, regardless of size and number of unloaders. We objected and were shot down. How does that work? Oh I get it, unloaders are brain-dead grunts. But wait, that condescension violated a core Wal-Mart belief, respect for the individual! Hypocrites. In summation, I’m sick of retail and glad my tenure at WalMart is over. I’m tired of the daily hypocrisy and disrespect. Sadly, one of my co-workers planned on working there for the rest of his life. An experience like that, and the prospect of such a hopeless future, really makes one appreciate the benefits of an education. 6 SEPTEMBER 2007 SUMMER ESSAY THE COYOTE Real People A Migrating Understanding Kosovo By DANIEL THRASHER Live in By JESSICA AUSTIN I sat down next to a lady, middle aged but pretty. We were waiting for the train to arrive at Bergamo’s station and take us to Venice. My four years of Italian language in high school came back to me in fleeting soap-bubble form as she tried to ask me very simple questions. Words popped up and then burst just as I had almost grasped how to form a sentence. But I understood her when she slowed down and spoke about herself. She was in her thirties, from Kosovo; a very tornup place, she reminded me. She had just finished working for a year in Italy, away from her three brothers, their children, and the rest of her family. She wasn’t married and had to travel away from home to make any money. She showed me the gifts she had bought for cheap at a market. I repeated ‘Bella’ to her, and she smiled. Who knew? Real people live in Kosovo. It may sound ignorant of me to be so astounded by a ten minute almost-conversation with a lady from Kosovo. But it was real. And later, as my trip continued I sought out more real experiences in the streets of the ancient and highly “touristed” cities. Venice. Florence. Rome. Living as a transient out of a suitcase for three weeks was hard enough on my enthusiasm, but I became sobered by the ease with which real life could elude me, the ease with which every aspect of life could be mass-marketed. Take Catholicism for one Euro! Take a guided tour for ten! My resistance seemed futile. I had been bound and gagged and tossed on the ‘Tourist Ride’ as soon as my plane had touched down in Milan. But I found ways to ignore it all and get lost on a walk from the Coliseum to Termini Train Station. Get blessed by a Buddhist monk in a high end fashion mall. Get introduced to a clothes-artist and his wife off a back-street in Amalfi and listen to why they hate ‘Made In China’. Or simply get caught off guard in the Piazza Signoria of Florence when the performer-pretending-to-be-a-statue argued with the gelato-stand-man. Real people live in Italy too. And I knew that before I went, but I didn’t tell anyone that while I was excited to “see the sights,” I was more excited to see the people. ISSUE #1 If anyone’s ever worked fast food before, you probably know that it can get a bit monotonous once you’ve gotten the hang of it. It’s mostly taking an order among items that change only occasionally, putting items in a bag, and collecting money. Naturally, I tried to find other ways to occupy myself during the unending long hours. And I turned to an unlikely source for that. We all hear stories about Mexicans, aliens, and immigration. Heck, we go to school in Caldwell. Since I’d taken Spanish for four years, I decided to try to talk to the enigmatic “wizards of oz,” the ones who always cooked the food but otherwise hid out of sight and did their own thing. At first it was rare–– just a “como estas” and “bien y tu”. As they realized that I knew more Spanish than the average gringo, they began to start conversations with me. A Mexican man that worked there told me about how he found a wife and learned to speak English through tapes, and how it’s nearly impossible to learn a language unless you work at it every day. He told me he’d had to do it to talk to his wife, and she learned Spanish so she could speak to him as well. I began to look at learning a foreign language in a wholly new way. After four years learning this language, I had never really considered just how human it was. That element is surprisingly missing. It’s a class on grammar, vocabulary, and conventions, but not on humanity. You know that hilarious joke you heard? You can tell it in Spanish and it evokes a laugh. That awesome part of that movie? Yep, you can appreciate it in Span- ish. Instead of just looking at it as a language to put on a resume, it became as real as my own native language, something a textbook has never conveyed to me. One of my closest Spanish-speaking friends there nicknamed an overweight girl that worked with me “la gorda” because she couldn’t pronounce her name. They are people with wonderful senses of humor, and they use Spanish to convey them. Something about that just gets lost in translation from foreign language classes. More than just nuances of the language jumped out at me over the summer there. All of these Mexicans lived in a trailer park not too far from the restaurant. Even though they lived in the same city as so many of us, they were practically self-contained and ostracized, with their own culture and their own language. One bragged to me about how much she had saved up, despite the fact that she sent half of her earnings home to her mother so that her mother could survive in Mexico. She wanted to be able to go back to Mexico, but she couldn’t until she saved up a certain amount, and she was only halfway there. They all earned the same paycheck as I did, if not a little more, but they were trying to feed their entire families both here and abroad off of that money. When all you hear is how the Mexicans are trying to steal our jobs, you don’t stop to think just how hard it must be for them. Most told me they hate it here. There was a book I skimmed through that one of them owned––which translates to “English for Immigrants”–– that highlighted the sorts of conversations that they would need to know to do things in the United States. Even after all the years I’ve taken, I would be incredibly uncomfortable trying to conduct myself in a foreign language, in a foreign country. Although it evokes every cliché in the book, I feel that the lessons I learned this summer are greater than anything I ever learned in school. Rather than list them, I’ll let you draw your own conclusions. But I formed a bond with many people that I’m not sure I would have thought likely before, despite the language and culture differences we possess. We learned from each other just how alike our differences are. 17 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT THE COYOTE THE NEXT CHAPTER FOR Spencer Cobrin By SARAH BEUKELMAN Hit nineties drummer spills all on sensitivities, glory days, and varied plans Spencer Cobrin supplied the beats for one of the best, and most controversial, Irish rock albums of the early nineties. Cobrin was a member of Morrissey’s band from 1991 – joining the group at the age of 22 – until he left in 1998. Many fans consider him to be the best drummer Morrissey has ever worked with. And who could forget the way he licked his way around an ice cream in the video for “We Hate It When Our Friends Become Successful”? A couple years after Cobrin left Morrissey’s band, he formed Elva Snow with Australian singer Scott Matthew. (Elva Snow’s self-titled album is available on CD Baby’s website and I highly recommend it. Get it while you can.) Elva Snow has since dissolved and Cobrin has left the world of bands and live gigs to focus on composing for film, which he is exceedingly good at. Credits include music for the documentary My Child: Mothers of War and the film Send in the Clown. Samples of his work are available for listening at his MySpace page (http://www.myspace. com/spencercobrin). Cobrin’s page features songs he co-wrote with Mor- rissey, Elva Snow tracks, and compositions for film. As a guitarist, pianist, and drummer, his music is noteworthy for its range and emotionality. Cobrin and I recently discussed what it was like recording Your Arsenal and what life is like post-Morrissey. I discovered an artist who is funny, intelligent, and yes, a little bit sweet. Your Arsenal is one of my essential albums. What are a few of your essential albums? Art Blakey’s Indestructible, Joni Mitchell’s Blue, and Tchaikovsky’s Romeo and Juliet Overture. What is your favorite song on Your Arsenal? “The National Front Disco”. How was it in the recording studio when you were recording? Had you become comfortable working with Morrissey and your other bandmates by this point? It was exciting but overshadowed by my lack of skill and confidence on the drums, and within myself, I was very insecure and had no self-esteem whatsoever. I had to try very hard; I was the least talented in the band and had to really dig deep. Have you found self-esteem? Is the present day Spen- 18 cer Cobrin more secure in his abilities than ’91-’92 Spencer Cobrin? Looking back and comparing myself then and now, I’ve grown a lot. I also challenged myself to do things I would never have done. Morrissey fans are known for being particularly enthusiastic. Was it overwhelming or did you embrace (pardon me for saying it) the rock and roll lifestyle? I loved life on the road. I didn’t set out to be a rock and roll cliché, nor did I become one, thankfully, but I did my share of partying (and still do!) It was a joyous time. Coming off the road was very hard though – living on adrenaline for months at a time – it’s not surprising people turn to paraphernalia to keep the high going; it can be quite a comedown. How did you manage to stay away from “paraphernalia” as you put it? Loaded question! Do you still keep in touch with any of your former bandmates? A couple of them wrote me recently. It has been 10 years since I’ve heard from them. How did you make the decision to get into scoring? Do you long for the days of touring and live gigs? I thought it would be a great creative outlet for me, something to explore and see if I actually had a proclivity for it. I started to meet filmmakers and test the waters. Of course I always throw myself into the deep end, but real life experience is better than books. It hasn’t 6 SEPTEMBER 2007 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT COBRIN Cont’d been easy but I’m doing something that I never thought I could do. What else lies beneath!? I haven’t missed the touring at all, which is strange. Maybe I just had enough of it. It would be fun to play live again but I don’t pine for the days of old. That was a rich chapter of my life and I’ve moved onto the next. Are you working on anything currently? Most recently I scored a heist/ feature film, Daylight Robbery and am writing cello arrangements for Scott Matthew’s debut album. Do you write a lot of music for yourself on the side? If so, are you interested in working with lyricists? Just for fun? I’ve been pretty busy with film and other projects recently that that is all I’ve had time for, but maybe when things calm down again, which they invariably will. What plans do you have for the months ahead? I would really like to travel for a while and get away from this damn laptop! Your location is listed as both London and New York. In an interview you said that London doesn’t feel like home. Has this changed for you? Yes, definitely, having been living in NY for 10 years I love going back to London. I see it through new eyes. I love that everything is so green, that’s the first impression one gets immediately departing the airport, green everywhere. It was shocking having not seen ISSUE #1 it for so long. In an interview for MorrisseyTour. com you described yourself/your music as “romantic, emotional, and THE COYOTE departed from my personal feelings of musical expression, except for working on projects where you are fulfilling someone else’s vision. Of course, I can assimilate that too, but I still lean towards the tragic romantic nature of art, or being, unrequited love namely. What is your philosophy on love? Oh boy, I’m not one to really expound on this but I suppose love is like an all-consuming sickness, if you’ve got it bad, it’s bad, but if you’ve got it good, you’re lucky, and if you’ve had it but lost it, it’ll screw you up, it’s a crazy thing. sad”. Would you still describe yourself that way? Also referring to the interview: [the author claims that there is a Good Spencer Cobrin who is approachable and easygoing and “other” Spencer Cobrin who is a bit standoffish] are there two Spencer Cobrins? Which one is answering my questions? No, not two, just confused, lost! I haven’t On a fan site from 1995 someone described you as “so painfully sweet, it was untrue” when you autographed a fanzine. Do you think of yourself as sweet? No! Ha. I’m just not a bastard. Are you a reader? What books do you enjoy? I’m currently going through my Greek mythology phase, but I’m kinda picky, if it doesn’t grab me then forget it. Live Earth took place recently. Did you catch any of it? Do you think an event like this will produce any significant lasting changes? My TV has about four channels and I don’t really watch TV that much anyway. And not unless there was a shift on a global scale by big business and government now. There is obviously much more awareness and talk on the subject but how much change do you really see taking place? It’s way too slow to have any lasting effect. It’s pathetic. America being the leading power is so far behind the eight ball on this, it has the resources and power to make a significant impact almost overnight, which is needed right now, but is leading us down a road to disaster. What’s the deal with the ice cream in the “We Hate It When Our Friends Become Successful” video? How do things like that get into videos? Do you laugh about it now? It was improvised. They gave me an ice cream and I just went with it – it’s called being a ham! Plus I’m pretty self-deprecating. I really didn’t care what people thought, seems like a lot of people took it way too seriously. They seem to get really defensive or attack me for it. That’s been my experience, it’s very odd. But one has to have a laugh and I just couldn’t resist it. One silly question: who do you allow to call you Spenny? Second silly question: Can I call you Spenny? I don’t allow, people just take advantage of me. [I read this imagining Cobrin saying this with the deepest of sighs. Oh the bother of being called Spenny!] You can call me Shirley. WATCH IT ON YOU TUBE! Sure, most of you were four when Morrissey’s, Your Arsenal, topped billboards charts, but that doesn’t mean you catch the old videos on the world wide web. Search “Morrissey,” and “We Hate It When Our Friends Become Successful.” It’s really “laughable.” 19 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT THE COYOTE Spoon: They’re Ga Ga-Great! By JORDAN DRAKE After ten years together it can be difficult for a successful rock band to keep its focus. Maybe your songwriting has lost its freshness. Maybe the group’s chemistry is feeling strained. Maybe a bumper crop of followers has driven the sound you pioneered into the ground, making it tired and stale. Maybe it’s time to call it quits, burn out instead of fade away. Then again, maybe the band you’re in is Spoon, in which case none of the above will ever be applicable. That’s right, ten years and six albums into their career Britt Daniel and company have crafted a masterpiece in Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga. I use the word ‘crafted’ for a reason: every bit of Ga Ga has been meticulously planned. From the stray bass notes that begin the record to the thirty or so seconds of silence that end it, it’s clear the whole package has been treated with painstaking care, ultimately carved into its lean thirtysix minute running time by the most obsessive of obsessors. “Hyperbole!” you shout. Not so, I reply. It certainly sounds like a Spoon album, but to say it skirts the line between one and the next (say 2001’s funky Girls Can Tell and 2002’s fantastically brusque Kill the Moonlight) would be cutting it short. Though they employ the same basic minimalist tenets of Spoon’s previous albums, trimmed and pared and snipped to perfection, the songs here are far more dense and rich. Indeed, the band borrows heavily from its catalog, and certain tracks (namely “Rhthm and Soul” and “My Little Japanese Cigarette Case”) sound like they might fit perfectly on previous releases, but Ga Ga, equally nostalgic and groundbreaking, is far more than the sum of its parts. Take, for instance, piano-driven centerpiece “The Ghost of you Lingers,” which brings to mind Moonlight’s ghostly, ethereal “Paper Tiger” while simultaneously abandoning its familiarity and accessibility. Then there’s “You Got Yr. Cherry Bomb,” far and away the best song Spoon has ever released. Despite Daniel’s downer tale about a failing relationship, the music itself sparkles: tambourines ring loud and clear atop Jim Eno’s crisp, expressive drumming and a horn section adds a soulful punch to the procession, but when every other sound drops out of the mix and Daniel uses the bridge to proclaim, “Life can be so fair, let it go on and on” accompanied solely by hand claps and chimes, the effect is nothing short of thrilling. Ga Ga’s production is immaculate, from the curt, staccato pulse of “Eddie’s Ragga,” the jazzy horns of Billy Joel-ish (and Jon Brion produced) “The Underdog.” Every song here is a winner, and by the time things wind down on “Black Like Me,” another piano ditty vaguely akin to Moonlight’s “Vittorio E,” the realization hits: this is a turning point in the evolution of music. “Don’t make me a target!” Britt Daniel yowls on Ga Ga’s opening track, but it would be in our best interest to ignore his plea. No other band on the planet is more deserving of the attention. You need look no further. Spoon has delivered the album of the year. Superbad: Get Ready for Mc “Laughin’” By GRIFFIN HEWITT Having survived a summer full of scurvy-ridden seafarers, a web-slinging vigilante, an aging Bruce Willis with a cast of a thousand explosions and two warring robotic factions causing millions of dollars worth of computerized collateral damage, it’s a comforting thought in the minds of filmgoers that the end of the summer does not necessarily spell out the demise of entertaining cinema. Superbad is the new film in question reteaming the current kings of comedic happenstance -- Judd Apatow (The 40 Year Old Virgin, Knocked Up) and writer/actor Seth Rogen. Arriving just in time to rinse the Hollywood-ized, effects-drenched blockbusters from recent memory, Superbad is a movie centering on the lives of three high schoolers: Evan, Seth, and Fogell a.k.a. McLovin. This particular trio is an atypical version of the variety of adolescent geeks that writer and director John Hughes dreamed up in his widely popular and cliché-creating 80’s comedies. Superbad veers away from the all-too-familiar trite labeling of its characters as “unpopular losers,” and rather offers the audience a multi-faceted glimpse into the layers that make each of these young men unique. Early in the film, it is abundantly clear 20 what one member of the trio’s main objective is by a lament from Evan: he openly admits he wished that girls didn’t get so freaked out by boners. From this point forth, the story glides seamlessly from one vulgarity-rich discussion to the next, never missing an opportunity to make any reference to male camel-toes or dry-humping a leg. Like most movies, Superbad moves forward like a self-confident teenager, striding boldly from joke to joke, never missing an intended target. The only drawback in such a fool-proof construction comes in the form of the actual execution of the story. The first third of the film lays the groundwork for what promises to be an uproarious comedy but quickly mutates into an endearing misadventure with minor points of hilarity serving more as punctuation marks to a consistent and often-times authentic-feeling plot. Despite shifts in comic tone, this film still works and delivers at an even pace. The true moments showcasing Superbad’s charm come in the form of two of the most irresponsible police officer characters in recent media history played with pitch-perfect momentum by Bill Hader and Seth Rogen. Despite being inept at their chosen profession, they can be heard drunkenly spouting dialogue like “I assume you all have guns and crack” or “Prepare to get fucked by the long dick of the law!” As stealing of scenes goes in most works of cinema, Hader and Rogen have developed their own specific brand of snapping to attention the focus of their viewers with ridiculous efficiency. Superbad is just the latest example of how a well-written film with truly dynamic characters as the focal point of the story can adeptly resuscitate the institution of low-brow humor with a renewed appeal. 6 SEPTEMBER 2007 THE COYOTE New Professors on Campus Gilbert ‘Gib’ Nelson Scott Knickerbocker has never been on facebook so he doesn’t know what “status” means. Updated 19 minutes ago Hometown:Most recently, Eugene, Oregon (hometown: Ashland, Oregon) Activities:Playing acoustic roots music (guitar, banjo, fiddle), running marathons, rock climbing, whitewater kayaking, telemark and Nordic skiing, cycling, backpacking Interests:See above. Also: Poetry, ecological literary criticism, foxes and salamanders, mountains, baking pies. Music:Old-time Appalachian, blues, Hot Club jazz and swing, jugband, alt-country, Gillian Welch, Doc Watson, Grateful Dead, Ella Fitzgerald, some indie rock, The Pixies, Bach’s cello suites, late Beethoven, Erik Satie, Mole in the Ground (my band) T.V. Shows:Kill your television! (okay, okay, I confess: sometimes “King of the Hill”) Movies:I *Heart* Huckabees, Little Miss Sunshine, Bagdad Cafe, Wings of Desire, Amelie, What’s Eating Gilbert Grape?, The Muppet Movie, Kitchen Stories, Oh Brother Where Art Thou? Books:Too many to mention. Good books. Right now I’m reading _The Old, Weird America: The World of Bob Dylan’s Basement Tapes_ by Greil Marcus, and _Wanderlust: A Natural History of Quotes:Walking_ by Rebecca Solnit “Don’t squat with your spurs on.” --Will Rogers Education“I am at two with nature.” --Woody Allen Info:BA (1998) Principia College, MA (2002) and PhD (2006) Subjects:University of Oregon. I taught previously at Principia College and University of Oregon English, Writing, and Environmental Studies John Thurston is a graduated cylinder. Updated 8 hours ago Hometown:Louisiana Activities:Fencing, rock climbing and mountain biking Interests:German, carpentry, cooking Music:most recently: The Black Keys and Junior Kimbrough T.V. Shows:Shows? no, not really Books:I am trying to read everything by Albert Camus. I am also a fan of Douglas Adams EducationUndergrad at Centenary College of Louisiana in Shreveport, Info:Louisiana, Graduate work at Rice University in Houston, Texas, Postdoctoral work at the University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa. I taught for almost three years at The University of Iowa. Subject:chemistry ISSUE #1 is a commuter. Updated 3 days ago Hometown:Boise. I went to Roosevelt Grade School, Meridian High School and BSU. Activities:I am the minister for a small Church of Christ in Marsing, Idaho. I provide legal representation for a couple of Religious/ Charitable organizations. Interests:I enjoy strumming the guitar (mostly where no one else can hear). My wife and I enjoy traveling, staying at bed and breakfasts and taking in local sites. Theatre. Music:My iPod indicates Sons of the Pioneers, Grateful Dead and Sondheim musicals -- in that order. T.V. Shows:Serenity Movies:Old science fiction and horror movies. Books:Old Testament Studies and Theology Quotes: “I desire mercy, not sacrifice.” EducationBS, Boise State University (Chemistry); M.Div., Abilene Christian Info:University; MS, Abilene Christian University (Chemistry); JD, University of Idaho, College of Law. I spent 10 years as a research chemist for The Dow Chemical Company in Houston, Texas. I attended Law up at the University of Idaho and have a solo law practice here in Caldwell. I have been teaching chemistry courses for Treasure Valley Community College for several years (this quarter I’m teaching Organic Chemistry and Business Law there) Subjects:chemistry Paul Moulton is unloading boxes from his move to Caldwell. Updated last week Activities:teaching, researching, running, backpacking, x-country skiing, gardening, playing with my children, playing the piano. Interests:eighteenth- and nineteenth-century music, Navajo culture, Scottish culture, popular music, my wife (this list is not in order of priority), my children, church. Music:Yes, all. T.V. Shows:What’s T.V.? Movies:Children of Heaven (Iranian) Books:Yes, I’ve read some. Most recent favorite is the John Adams biography by David McCullough. Quotes:“Mankind [is] your business.” adapted from Dicken’s Christmas Carol. EducationB.A. in humanities and music at Brigham Young University, Info:M.M. and Ph.D. studies in musicology at Florida State University. 21 September Calendar CALENDAR THE COYOTE By DANIEL THRASHER Monday Tuesday Wednesday 5 • Delta Tau Delta Book Swap 12 PM McCain Thursday 6 • Classes begin Friday 7 • Delta Tau Delta BBQ 3 PM- 7PM Hayman Porch Saturday Sunday 8 • Volleyball vs Oregon Tech 7 PM - 9 PM JAAC 9 • Volleyball vs. Southern Oregon 7 PM - 9 PM JAAC 10 11 12 • Greek Council • Guitar Hero 11:30 AM- 1 PM McCain 13 14 15 16 • Volunter Fair • Coyote Soccer • Coyote Soccer 11:30 AM- 1 PM 6 PM- 12 AM McCain and Boone McCain • Coyote Bazaar 11:30 AM - 1 PM McCain • Late Night 9 PM- 10PM KAIC 17 24 19 20 21 18 • First Year Program • Foam Party • Greek Council • Bowling Night 11:30 AM- 1 PM McCain • Late Night 9 PM- 10PM KAIC Burke’s Bowl Reading byAuthor Joy Passanante 7:30 PM- 9:30 PM McCain 25 26 27 • Greek Council 11:30 AM- 1 PM McCain • Late Night 9 PM- 10PM KAIC 22 Vs. Corban vs. Northwest Christian 4-6 PM • LadyYote Soccer 2 PM- 4 PM Vs. Northwest • OP Raft Trip 2- 4 PM 12 PM • Phreakin’ Phrenzie OP office • Registration Closed • Indian Creek 1 PM Festival • OP Bonfire/ Campout Quad 22 • Langroise Trio 23 07-08 7:30 PM Langroise Recital Hall 28 29 • LadyYote Soccer Vs. Corban 4 PM- 6 PM Grounds • Lady Yote Soccer vs. Warner Pacific 2 PM- 4 PM • Vollyeball vs.Northwest • Volleyball vs. Evergreen State 7 PM- 9 PM JAAC • Movie in the Pool 30 • Weiser River Trail 6 SEPTEMBER 2007 Your Horoscope Annoying FAQs. Annoying garage bands. Annoying couples. Another annoying set of horoscopes for your pleasure. Our astrologer takes her usually caustic tone for the last issue of the year, but we know she (yes, our anonymous astrologer has lady parts), along with the rest of the staff, wishes you a very merry September. Libra (September 23-October Capricorn (December 22- January 19): 23): Libra, starting off the year on Although you may have spent the entire sum- a high note doesn’t need to be taken mer trying to work on your figure, you still have a long way to go, Capricorn. literally. Scorpio (October 24- Novem- Aquarius (January 20- February 18): ber 21): Your need to spend cash Like a large tree being cut down, your luck will will only be hindered by the fact that you have no cash because you have already spent it all on things that don’t need to be mentioned; like alcohol, for example. Sagittarius (November 22- December 21): Your spe- soon run out. Watch out for false friends. Pisces (February 19March 20): Your one night encounter may leave you burning like the sun. There is a medication available for that, Pisces. Aries (March 21- April cial someone will leave you 19): Like a former NFL star with a mark soon. It is highly pleading guilty to dogfighting charges, advisable to buy a scarf and wrap it your temperament will also be a cause of around your neck. scandal for you. Be wary of losing your temper. If found, however, please return it to the rightful owner. Taurus (April 20-May 20): Just like people from Australia speak Australian, your stupidity will only dig you into deeper holes, Taurus. Damn it. The CIA’s been texting me all weekend. ISSUE #1 Gemini (May 21- June 21): A windfall may land in your lap this month, Gemini. The size is unknown. However, walking through doorways backwards in public places will increase your luck dramatically. Cancer (June 22-July 22): This month, you may want to spend some time alone and some time with friends. Just make sure that your friends are not all in your head, Cancer. Leo (July 23- August 22): You will suffer from a bad hair day this month, Leo. So bad that someone will want to take a lawnmower to your head and hack off all your hair. Virgo (August 23- September 22): You may think that your leadership skills are highly effective this month, Virgo. However, that is because you’re only listening to yourself and avoiding the grumblings all around you. 23 BENCHING WITH BERGER THE COYOTE From Jerusalem to Caldwell, With Anticipation! By HOWARD BERGER Every time my plane pulls back from the gate at Ben Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv, Israel, I get weepy. Every time the plane starts to taxi down the runway, I get teary. I do hate leaving Jerusalem and Israel as I never know if I will be back. You just don’t know what the year will hold: possible problems with health, with finances, or with friends or family, COULD prevent my hopeful return to Eretz Yisrael--The Land of Israel. So as the plane takes off for that very long flight back to Boise, Idaho, I look away from the window and say a quick prayer for my return. BUT, as the hours pass-so painfully slowly-- and the little map on the back of the seat in front of me shows our plane over Canada, my mood changes. Sadness gives way to expectation and anticipation. As our plane passes over Hudson’s Bay, my mood becomes more and more excited. Images in my mind about the hills and buildings that are Jerusalem dissolve and are replaced by images of that cluster of buildings that are our campus. A new academic year is about to begin and I look forward to it as much as I looked forward to my summer in 24 Jerusalem. To me, that is a good life: I loved taxi-ing at the Boise airport in June and I loved landing in Boise in August. A new academic year is about to begin and I look forward to it immensely--especially because the school year begins in the Hebrew month of Ellul. The month of Ellul runs from August 14th until the beginning of the High Holy Days, Rosh Hashannah, which begin this year at sundown, Sept 12th. The month of Ellul is THE month of anticipation as it precedes the holiest days of the Jewish year--the days when each Jew confronts God and gives an accounting of her/his life. The month of Ellul is preparation. As it is stated in the Jewish tradition: “All the month of Ellul, before eating and sleeping, let every person look into their soul and search their deeds.” Note--it does not say, look into your life and see ALL, and ONLY, the blemishes and failures!! One is commanded to examine all of one’s life-to ascertain what is working in one’s life and what is not; to determine what was done well and what was done not so well; to figure out, in one’s life this year, what needs to be perpetuated, what needs to be enhanced, what needs to be transformed, what needs to be amended etc. By the time Brad Baughman has published this in the Coyote, my personal accounting of the past year will have begun. In modern Israeli Hebrew, the word for “accounting” is “Heshbone.” It is the same word for a bill or check at the end of a meal. At any restaurant in Israel, someone will ask the server for the heshbone--for the bill so you can pay and leave. It is an end and a beginning. You pay for what you ordered, and enjoyed, and then get on with the day or with the evening. So it is at this time of year. One does not have to accept the existence of God, to understand that one should pay for what one did and didn’t do. In the month of Ellul, however, it is I, Howard Berger, who must assess my past year--it is up to me to honestly and courageously say: “This is what I ordered this year--what is my heshbone?” But once confronted and accepted, the event is over, and like the heshbone at the end of a meal, it is time to get on with the day or the evening. At nightime, September 22nd, I will have paid the heshbone, and I will prepare to face the new year with intense passion. The year, 2006-2007 has been a very good year. My health has been solid; I maintain great friendships with old friends and made a host of new ones at the college; my car has required a minimum of maintanence; I was able to return to Jerusalem this past summer; and Albertson College grew and flourished. I expect no less of this upcoming year--2007-2008!! So as my very long plane ride came to an end, the sadness I experienced leaving Israel was in the past. I looked foward--to what I am now doing--engaging in that sacred, majestic period of self-study; awaiting to pay my heshbone for the past year; and eagerly anticipating the wonders and joys and adventures, (and some disappointments, to be sure) that are in store for me this coming year--which will be my 25th year at this marvelous college! To all of you who are lucky enough to be returning to Albertson College and to all of you who are lucky enough to be beginning at Albertson College, I pray that God “renew for each of us a very good year.” Amen. 6 SEPTEMBER 2007