Features Editor: John Liebhardt johnIiebhardt@dailyemerald. com Thursday, March 14,2002 f=— Get some entertainment Needing a study break? Check out the Pulse calendar for this week’s events. wwwJailyemeralri.com Promoter Marc Moscato (left) tells sophomore Mike Spangenberg about JAMCONatabake sale outside the University Bookstore on Wednesday afternoon. Adam Amato Emerald Adam Amato Emerald Devin Dinihanian (left) and Jevon Cutler work to raise interest in JAMCON in a class Wednesday. The pair performs in the band Chevron in Geriinger Hall as part of JAMCON. The future of art By Alix Kerl Oregon Daily Emerald After the pressures of dead week, students can watch a robot-fu eled film, gaze through home crafted kaleidoscopes, and take a ride on the trippy “galaxy glider”. These things and more will appear at JAMCON, a multimedia art event from 7 to 10 p.m. Saturday in Gerlinger Hall. JAMCON is a forum for new and experimental art than isn’t made for commercial reasons. Marc Moscato, a graduate art student and one of the organizers of JAMCON, said that he wants to create a new forum for Eugene artists to express themselves. “Art here is very commercially ori ented; there is a lot of arts and crafts made by hippies for the Saturday Mar ket,” Moscato said. “We’re trying to get people to open their minds up to new and interesting things.” JAMCON will open with a collabo ration of video, dance and music, fol lowed by a group of bands that will play in a ‘jukebox’ performance. In the jukebox, the bands Chevron, Lit tle 2s, Alamoconspiracy and Mine37 will take turns playing songs and Turn to JAMCON, page 7A Film festival challenges patriarchy, discusses ‘girl power’ ■The Womens Center tackles issues of feminism in the media during its annual festival By Jen West Oregon Daily Emerald From “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” to Britney Spears, the phenomenon of “girl power” has generated millions of dollars in entertainment revenues. But men continue to be on the receiving end of this multimillion-dollar money-maker that has been driven by women. The Women’s Center will address these and other issues about feminism in the media through its sixth annual “Women’s Film Festival 2002,” running at 5 p.m. Friday and Saturday in 207 Chapman Hall. Men making money oil ot feminism is problematic,” said Heather Mitchell, events coordinator at the Women’s Center. She said the film festival will address issues such as “what it is to be sexy,” and will include a variety of feminist theo ries from around the world. “The films all challenge the higher structure of patriarchy,” Mitchell said,' and they will “focus on personal and political experiences of women in U.S. and abroad.” Lidia Karmadjieva, editor-in-chief of the Siren, the Women’s Center newslet ter, said feminism manifests itself in a variety of ways in many countries. Dur ing communist control in her native country of Bulgaria, feminists tried to make women like men, she said. Turn to Power, page 7A Courtesy Photo Clockwise from far left: ‘Hammering It Out: Women in the Construction Zone,’‘A Boy Named Sue’and ‘Righteous Babes’ are three of the films that will be shown this weekend during the ‘Women’s Film Festival 2002.’ Pulse brief ‘Fight Club’ author will join ‘Reactin' in the Rain’ University alumnus Chuck Palahnuik will speak on Ken Kesey’s life and art at 7 p.m. to day in the University Bookstore. The discussion will be a part of “Readin’ in the Rain,” a new city-wide reading program that currently features reading and discussions of Kesey’s novel “Sometimes a Great Notion.” Palahnuik, a 1986 journalism graduate, hit the literary scene in 1996 with the release of the comically perverse, male-bonding drama “Fight Club.” 20th Century Fox subsequently made the book into a hit movie starring Brad Pitt and Edward Norton. Palahnuik is also the author of three other books, including his most recent “Choke.” His fifth novel, “Lullaby” will be published in the fall. Don’t expect Palahnuik to read from his own work, said Tom Gerald, author events coordinator at the Bookstore. Rather, Palah nuik would like to lead a discussion on Kesey. “Chuck is an artist who has great respect for what Kesey did,” Gerald said. “And he very specifically wants this discussion to be about Ken Kesey.” Gerald said he ap proached Palahnuik to participate in “Reading in the Rain” because he sees a strong simi larities between the two Oregon novelists. Gerald called Kesey books such as “One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest” and “Some times a Great Notion” allegories that tapped straight into the Zeitgeist of a generation. He said Palahnuik also connects in a similar vein with a younger generation. “Just ob serving younger people, Chuck really has plugged into something that rings true to their generation.” —John Liebhardt