Pulse Editor Jacquelyn Lewis jacquelynlewis@dailyemerald.com Thursday, February 27,2003 Oregon Daily Emerald On Tuesday The long and short of it: Pulse takes on mullets. Modem America recalls ‘50s era, social challenge, Kerouac’s ‘beats’ Joseph Bechard Edge Culture Columnist These days, a lot of our values don’t quite jive with the values of the turkeys who call the shots. As the future of the United States becomes increasingly uncertain, all we can do to reassure ourselves is look to the past for some sense of hope; a feeling that things will be better again. Today’s parallels to heightened Gold War madness and obsessive 1950s America are irresistible. Commercial ism swept across the country. Politi cians warned of hidden threats from people hell-bent on destroying our way of life — whatever that is. They asked everyone to settle down into some good ol’ fashioned American pursuits. Blind patriotism was rampant, and there was a general tightening of the collective American sphincter. Similar to the way many of us feel now, a number of post-World War II American youth felt like things needed to be shaken up, that it was time to dis cover a new, more meaningful way of life. In the late 1940s, the war was over, America was in a new era and the famous beat writer Jack Kerouac began criss crossing the states in what became a lifelong search for good times and spiritual calm amidst a world of suffering. Kerouac always said he came from the heart. Supposed ly, he coined the term “beat” to unite a sense of beatitude with a feeling of being “pooped.” He represented an unheard voice in America interested in joy, piety, existentialism, ex citement, love and humanity. He wrote about America, Christianity, Buddhism, jazz, writing and the people he met, as if they were all part of one big earthly kick. His semi-au tobiographical works impart an excitement and respect for life that inspires people to search for meaning or identity. He is often credited for creating a “rucksack revolution” in the late fifties consisting of young, backpacked wanderers looking for who they really were. However, there is a lot of myth behind Kerouac’s politics. He would say he had none. Art came first for Kerouac and he typically shied away from political discussion. Unlike most of the beats, however, Kerouac was more conservative. He had compassion for the soldiers in Viet nam giving their lives for the country he loved so much, and he couldn’t speak out against the conflict like many of the other beats. He was also ashamed that people connected him with the hippie movement. More importantly, though, Kerouac despised weapons and killing. His respect for beauty and life was at odds with the nature of war. The lessons he taught were meant to lift peo ple above belligerent mentalities and focus America on what really mattered. So what does really matter? Kerouac would say that it’s not fame or power, money or things, but life that matters. Humility, passion, joy and ex uberance were the driving forces behind the poetic dynamo. He was a romantic in a time when people were supposed to be jaded; he was a true American who loved his country and wanted only the best for it — even if that meant challenging the tenets of those who make the rules. Unfortunately, after the beat craze took off in the late 1950s, Kerouac started experiencing the fame that even tually took his life. A movement that had once been very pure and personal to him became a joke and a commer cial trend. This fame, coupled with the public’s misunderstanding of the work to which he dedicated his life, took a serious toll on Kerouac. His hope for America dwindled, and he began drinking more heavily than before. In 1969, his drinking fi nally caught up to him at the age of 47, and America’s heart lessness killed yet another dreamer. Contact the Pulse columnistatjosephbechard@dailyemerald.com. His views do not necessarily represent those of the Emerald. Joseph Bechard Cultural Obstetrician Metalsmithing students craft innovative displays using donated sapphires Helen Schumacher Pulse Reporter Students can see the results of cre ative craftsmanship and the donation of several sapphires in the LaVeme Krause Gallery in an exhibit titled “Blue.” The stones were given to last term’s intermediate/advaneed metalsmithing students with instructions to find inno vative ways to set the stones. Visiting Assistant Professor Tracy Steepy taught the course. “The stones were anonymously donated to the University,” Steepy said. “They went to the geology department first, and then they found their way to us and we were able to use them in a stone setting class. And so everyone Turn to Sapphire, page 6A Photos by Jeremy Forrest Emerald Metalsmithing students shied from traditional stone-setting techniques, instead embracing unusual, avant-garde designs. Students produce dance show The all-student produced “Kinetic Intenf concert features original compositions by University students Jacquelyn Lewis Pulse Editor University dancers maneuvered and balanced their way through the past few months, choreographing, rehearsing and re-choreographing for the all-student-produced concert, “Kinetic Intent.” The show opens tonight at 8 p.m. in the Uni versity’s Frances Dougherty Dance Theatre. Later performanc es will be Feb. 28 and March 1 at 8 p.m. The concert comprises eight choreographic works, including graduate dance student Leslie Gallagher’s “Incarnation.” Four dancers will perform the piece — a tapestry of linear move ment, improvisation and rhythmic manipulation with a Middle Eastern flavor. Gallagher said “Incarnation” has transformed dramatically since she first conceived the idea last spring. When dancers per formed the piece at last year’s Graduate Loft Series, it was set to music by Tool, a stark difference from its current, trance-like score by the band Hana. Senior Philippa Anderson said her experience as a dancer in “Incarnation” has ebbed and flowed throughout months of rehearsals. “Every choreographer that you’ll ever work with is really Turn to Dance, page 7A Jacquelyn Lewis Emerald A dancer from Amy Gaeth's "For the Love of Dance (FTLD)" soars through the air. The choreography incorporates 15 dancers and a live DJ.