Student volunteers can work to improve water quality and earn internship credit at the same time. Page 3 A frustrating year Head coach Carl Ferreira and Duck vollleyball could snag thier first Pac-10 win tonight. Page 5 http://www.dailyemerald.com Ttiesday, November 20,2001 Since 1 900 University of Oregon Eugene, Oregon Volume 103, Issue 61 Harmony in motion Breema movements, from the Middle East, helped one student ‘escape and connect’ with herself By Diane Huber Oregon Daily Emerald Avishai Pearlson says it’s im possible to understand Breema bodywork without experiencing it. “Pull on your earlobes with your hands, relax your shoulders and feel the weight of your shoulders force your hands to slip off your earlobes and into your lap,” he instructed. This particular Breema exercise is called “Sinking into the Lake.” The licensed massage therapist and Breema practitioner is co-owner of Breema Northwest, a center in down town Eugene devoted to Breema — exercises that incorporate massage and meditation. At the center, the curly-haired, soft-spoken instructor teaches Breema exercises, gives Breema bodywork sessions — similar to massage therapy — and teaches as piring instructors. Next term, he will bring Breema to the University in a class offered Tues days and Thursdays from noon to 12:50 p.m. The focus of his class is “short, playful and meditative” individual ex ercises to relieve stress, relax and con centrate on the body, he said. The move ments range from lying down, sitting, standing and hopping, he said. “They work on flexibility, release tension and revitalize us,” he said. Breema is based on nine “principles of harmony,” including no judgment, no extra, body comfortable, firmness and gentleness, full participation, no hurry/no pause, mutual support, sin gle moment/single activity and no force. The principles provide guide lines for Breema, but they also provide a life philosophy, Pearlson said. He said all of the principles of Breema work together to help people find their presence, which he ex plains as having a direct connection with the body. “Being present is having a direct ex perience about being alive, rather than interpreting life in the mind — rather than always thinking about the past and the future,” he said. Junior Jessica Lurie took the Breema class offered spring term and plans to take it winter term as well. She liked the class because it gave her time to “escape and connect” with herself, she said. Although she said she doesn’t use the exercises at home, she does incor porate the principles into her daily life. For example, she said she tries to concentrate on just one activity at a time, which stems from the principles “no extra” and “single moment/single activity.” “When my mind starts to wander, (the principles) help me focus and con centrate,” she said. She said in class Pearlson described how people always walk through cam pus “head first,” and he encouraged his students to walk “from the center. ” “When I’m walking around campus, I try and remember I’m not just trans porting my head to another class,” she said. Yoga instructor Elayne Quirin also took Pearlson’s class spring term. The difference between Breema and yoga, she said, is that Breema focuses more on pressure points, massage and work ing with your hands. Yoga, on the other hand, involves different postures. But she added that certain character istics of Breema are very similar to yoga. “They have a very similar philoso phy in that they bring the presence into the body, into the moment,” she said. Pearlson has been teaching Breema since 1991. He discovered the body work at an open house at The Breema Center in Oakland, Calif. Turn to Breema, page 4 Thomas Patterson Emerald Avishai Pearlman demonstrates the seif-Breema exercise called Maple Tree, which releases tension from the neck and shoulders. The hands are clasped behind the neck during a deep inhale and swift exhale. Court strikes down Washington school’s energy fee ■ Officials say they cannot yet speculate on the impact of the ruling in Oregon By Kara Cogswell Oregon Daily Emerald Charging students an energy surcharge fee is not legal in Wash ington anymore, but students are still working to end the energy fee in Oregon. A King County Superior Court judge ruled Nov. 9 that the Univer sity of Washington energy fee, which would have cost each stu dent about $135 this year, amounted to a tuition increase. And under Washington law, tu ition increases can only be author ized by the state legislature. The university added the fee this year to compensate for rising ener gy costs. In August, Jasmin Weaver, a former Washington student pres ident, filed a lawsuit against the school to remove the fee. The university does not plan to appeal the ruling and will refund about $1.4 million, with interest, to its 22,204 students. But it remains to be seen whether the Washington ruling will have any implications for students here. “It’s such a great win, but we’re still not sure how it’s going to af feet Oregon,” ASUO Vice Presi dent Joy Nair said. Nair and ASUO President Nil da Brooklyn have been outspoken opponents of the fee because it was added without being ap proved by students. Students involved in ASUO have been working with OSPIRG, the Ecological Design Center and other student groups to organize an energy conservation campaign, Nair said. The group has met with Univer sity Provost John Moseley several times, and he has been very sup portive of their efforts to lower the fee through energy conservation, she said. “The coalition is growing expo nentially in numbers,” Nair said. “And I think we have really proven to the administration that involving students initially in any process will greatly benefit the University and save money.” John Wykoff, legislative direc tor for the Oregon Student Asso ciation, said state differences in how tuition and fees are approved could affect whether the ruling will set a precedent for a similar ruling in Oregon. In Washington, the legislature sets tuition, and the board of re Tum to Energy fee, page 4 Eugene assesses terrorism readiness ■After the campus mail threat, local officials determine the city is ‘reasonably well prepared’ for a bioterrorist attack By Leon Tovey Oregon Daily Emerald Are Eugene and the University pre pared for a bioterrorist attack? Yes. No. Maybe? In the wake of Thursday’s mail threat in Willamette Hall, local officials are working to assess how prepared the community is for a threat of this nature. Although Lane County Public Health officials announced Monday that final tests on the letter received by Universi ty physics professor Bemd Crasemann were negative for anthrax, the incident has raised concerns about the level of readiness in Eugene. “We are as prepared to deal with this as anyone,” said Eugene Mayor Jim Tor rey. “Are we prepared to anticipate an attack? No, but I don’t think anyone in this country is.” Torrey was at a conferem discussing Lane County’s level of pn aredness when he heard the news about the inci Tum to Bioterrorism, page 4 State board divides over OSU branch ■The meeting resulted in two new proposals for budget cuts, one of which excludes the Bend campus By John Liebhardt Oregon Daily Emerald The State Board of Higher Education rejected a budget-cutting proposal Mon day because of objections to funding the Oregon State University-Cascade Cam pus in Bend. In a 6 to 4 vote, the board struck down Oregon University System Chancellor Joseph Cox’s plan for budget cuts man dated by Gov. John Kitzhaber at the seven Oregon campuses. The vote forces Cox to create two different budget-cutting pro posals: One proposal will outline budget cuts that include funding for the Cascade Bend campus, and the second plan will be drawn as though the $7.2 million cam pus has been eliminated. The board will vote via e-mail Tues day afternoon, and Cox will report the Turn to Budget cuts, page 4