Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Eugene weekly. (Eugene, Oregon) 1993-current | View Entire Issue (April 1, 2004)
this: Which forces will work through us? ... There are forces of destruction and creativity. I choose creativity.” Visit www.kucinich.us for campaign news and statements on issues from animal rights to organic farming and depleted ura- nium. To contact local groups, call 744-7608 in Eugene/Springfield, 767-0770 in Cottage Grove, 758-3118 in Corvallis, and 997-3345 in Florence. Deadline for registering to vote in the May 18 primary is April 27. Ballots arrive in the mail around April 28. — Kate Rogers Gessert BEACH CLEANUP NETS NEAR-RECORD 40 TONS ism? What are the characteristics of effective movements for social change? Can violence ever be justified in the pursuit of such goals?” Knox was a graduate student at Kent State University in English literature and helped to organize SDS there in 1967. She now lives in Eugene, earned her doctorate and is on staff at the Center for Advanced Technology in Education, College of Education at UO. Marks-Fife was active in Kent, Ohio with first the Kent Committee to End the War in Viet Nam and then SDS from 1966-1969. She has since moved to Eugene and has worked in social services and continued as an activist for peace and social justice. writers: do you just wanna rock? WRITE MUSIC REVIEWS FOR EUGENE WEEKLY! We are now accepting submissions of CD reviews by local writers. What’s in it for you? You’ll just do it for the glory . . . (These are unpaid reviews, but you’ll get to see your work in print!) What’s in it for us? We’ll boost our music coverage and get rockin’ reviews from the experts (that would be YOU) who know what’s really happening in the music world. Reviews should be between 100 and 200 words, on any musi- cal genre, and should be emailed to cal@eugeneweekly.com under the subject heading: “Local CD Review.” Please include complete information about the CD, including band name, album name, year and record label, contact information so we can reach you, as well as a short bio about yourself. For addi- tional guidelines and information, contact Jacquelyn at Eugene Weekly: 484-0519, Ext. 26 Under mixed skies last weekend, more than 4,700 volunteers turned out to partici- pate in the Great Oregon Spring Beach Cleanup. The entire Oregon Coast, minus some inaccessible parts, was cleaned of de- bris that had accumulated during the stormy winter months. Volunteers removed an esti- mated 40.2 tons of trash from the coastline. This was the second highest tonnage col- lected during the 19-year history of the Spring Beach Cleanup. Forty-two tons were collected in 1999. WEATHERMAN ACTIVISM COMPARED TO POST-9/11 Vietnam-era radical student leaders Mark Rudd, Carolyn Knox, David Powell and Robin Marks-Fife will be speaking in Eugene on “Social Movements: Then and Now” in a two-day gathering this weekend at UO. The Oscar-nominated documentary film The Weather Underground will be shown at 7 pm Friday, April 2 at 180 PLC on campus, and will be followed by a discussion with Rudd and other former members of The Weather Underground. Two workshops on Saturday will further explore issues of activism, violence and non- violence, and protest and dissent in the post 9/11 era. The workshops run from 10 am to noon and 1:30 to 3:30 pm at 240 McKenzie Hall at UO. The Weather Underground emerged as an offshoot of the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) in 1969, and was responsible for a series of bombings and other violent acts against symbols of U.S. government and corporate power. The group was controver- sial both among the general public and among progressive political activists, many of whom felt that it discredited the left more than it built its cause. Organizers say the film and discussion will examine several questions, among them: “What is our responsibility as Americans for the inequalities of globalism? What would real social justice look like, not just in America but throughout the world? How do we as a society define violence and terror- APRIL 1, 2004 9