Pulse Editor Jacquelyn Lewis jacquelynlewis@dailyemerald.com Tuesday, April 8,2003 - Oregon Daily Emerald On Thursday Music meets modern life in the School of Music's Music Today Festival Contained planting for brown thumbs Nika Carlson D.I.Y. living I am officially turning into my mother. An acquaintance pointed it out last month when she said she was shocked I wrote about scrapbooks. While I fail td see how gold picture comers and rock ‘n’ roll are intrinsically opposed, I can see her point. Last month it was scrapbooks. Over spring break, it was spring cleaning. And on Friday, I eagerly browsed the gar dening section at Smith Family Book store. Those spades are thrillas. A friend of mine recently planted a tiny vegetable gar den in a planter on her postage-stamp apartment deck. With my column deadline fast ap proaching and no ideas in sight, I stole hers. Planting sea son is starting, and growing vegetables seems very D.I.Y. in a Victory Garden kind of way. The more I thought about it, howev er, the more excited I was at the thought. I’m brown thumb all over the place, as proved by many failed at tempts at raising houseplants. Growing food, however, is different. I have vivid childhood memories of the sweet smell of fresh dirt, the sun on my back while sowing seeds, and snap peas fresh from the backyard. Houseplants just sit around looking green and pretty, but fruits and vegetables are workhorses. They produce something useful, some thing to look forward to. Growing a gar den is like growing a baby — except then you eat it. I am confident my little neonate will live through the summer. And it will be little. I have a huge back yard now, but I’ll be moving in July to an apartment with limited space. I want to be able to take my produce with me, so I’m planting in containers. Container gar dening is an easy way to grow in small spaces with almost guaranteed success. It is an “adventurous undertaking, com plete with thrilling risks and extraordi nary rewards,” Barbara Pleasant wrote in the National Home Gardening Club’s guide to container gardens. Stop laugh ing, this is serious. Pleasant knows what’s up. She is guiding me into a brave new world of parsley, cherry tomatoes and leafy greens. After finding a few books for advice, I set out to find some starter plants. Some vegetables are slow growers, so it’s best to buy starters instead of seeds. Herbs, es pecially, should be bought as starters. I wove my way through the patchouli clouds and the muu muu booth at the first Saturday Market. I picked up basil, parsley, oregano and chive transplants, as well as cherry tomato and snow pea plants and lettuce. I’m growing carrots and onions from seeds. Starters can be picked up at any nursery, but I wanted to buy organic, directly from a small, local farm. Containers can also be bought at nurs eries, but a more cost-effective and Turn to Carlson, page 10 Needles and pins Acupuncture, a millenia-old treatment, has grown in popularity for alleviating headaches and back pain Ryan Bornheimer Senior Pulse Reporter The numbers speak for themselves. When licensed acupuncturist Dina Harmon opened her clinic in 1997, there were eight such establishments in Eugene. As of today, there are nearly 40. The ancient Chinese healing art might be a per fect fit for alternative treatment-friendly Eugene. However, the increased interest in acupuncture rep resents a more widespread trend: People suffering | from various levels of ailments are seeking to re lieve the pain without drugs or the prospect of go ing under the knife. Acupuncture has emerged from this demand as a viable treatment without side effects and with proven benefits. Acupuncture has been traced back at least 2.000 years. However, some experts claim the Jiff art has been practiced in China for as long as 4.000 years. The treatment involves the insertion of fine needles into the body at specific points for the re lief of health problems. Depending on the nature of the ailment, needles are usually placed be tween a quarter-inch to an inch below the skin. While modem Western medicine has failed to explain how acupuncture works, traditional prac tice is based on ancient Chinese theories of the flow of Qi (energy) and Mood through pathways § in the body. In general, acupuncture is believed |§| to restore the energetic balance of the body. Harmon said the most common treatment is for neck and back pain. But acupuncture is im plemented for relief of allergies, headaches, re productive complications, high blood pressure — even drug addiction and smoking. Harmon recounted the story of a 40-year-old woman with a knee-related ailment who was wheel chair bound when she arrived for treatment. A se ries of operations left her with little relief and “knees the size of basketballs.” “A year later, she was snowboarding,” Harmon said. Stuart Greenleaf, resident practitioner at Acupunc ture Alternatives, located at 1245 Charnelton St. #3, has been practicing acupuncture for 22 years. He said Ore gon was among the first states to license practitioners in the early 1970s. As widespread as the healing art has become, only two schools remain, both in Portland, that offer comprehensive acupuncture training. Greenleaf said acupuncture is part of a larger practice of natural health treatments, which include herbology, nutri tional supplements, heat and massage therapy. He specializes in electrical enhancement acupuncture, a . gift Hi 1 Mm™ ' I mmm Turn to Acupunture, page 10 photo illustration Adam Amato Emerald Courtesy The Misanthrope'opens on Friday at the Robinson Theatre. Moliere’s ‘challenging’ comedy addresses hypocrisy, deception The Misanthrope’ revels itself both as a stem comedy and as a challenge for the cast and crew Theater review' Aaron Shakra Pulse Reporter The Robinson Theatre gets misan thropic Friday, when it opens one of Moltere’s most enduring plays, “The Misanthrope.” Director Jeffrey Mason said the main concern of “The Misanthrope” is the is sue of conformity. It revolves around Al eeste, a disillusioned man who decides to speak only the truth, no matter what the offense or consequence. Alceste eventually becomes enamored with Celmiene, a coquette who embodies everything Alceste claims to protest. Ma son said the theater department chose to mount the play because it was a chal lenge for both students and those Turn to Misanthrope, page 11