November 8, 2011

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THENORTHERNLIGHT

November 8, 2011

University of Alaska Anchorage

www.thenorthernlight.org

We’re still Occupied

Note taking mania Which notetaking method is superior?

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an international humanitarian organization dedicated to providing medical treatment and protection to the ravaged areas of Somalia and its fleeing refugees. The organization’s primary agenda is to assist those in need; it remains neutral in all armed conflicts and operates outside of any political, military, or religious undertakings. “A lot of these nonprofit organizations can’t get inside Somalia to help the refugees out, and so things continue to worsen,” said Anderson. “But Doctors

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Frazer and McDonald weigh in on Obama’s student loan plan

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Opera turns 50 Anchorage Opera celebrates its “Golden” season

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Growing Pains Young UAA hockey team has fallen on hard times Protesters sit around a make-shift propane heater late Saturday night, outside of the Performing Arts Center near town square. Photo By Spencer Mitchell/TNL

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News of the devastation in Somalia continues to grow with each passing day. A crippling drought is the worst in six decades. A ravaging famine, is killing Somali children in droves and spreading disease through the southern region of the country. Bloody civil war, raging between rival warlords for the past 20 years and displacing hundreds of thousands of families. All across Somalia, refugee camps overflow with those fleeing the capital and other unsafe areas, but are poorly equipped and slowly dwindling in food supplies. Militant groups, especially Al-Shabaab restrict the arrival of much-needed medical support. Students for Somalia, a studentrun fundraising group through the UAA Psychology Department, would like to help combat these troubling realities. Supervised by psychology doctoral candidates Rebecca Robinson and Lisa Wade, the students are organizing two fundraising events to benefit the ravaged country. From Nov. 29 to Dec. 1, one group of students will be running a bake sale and information booth at the Student Union, handing out flyers and raising awareness toward the plight in Somalia. On

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Features.....04

4 million people 3.7 million people

.5% .5%

ETHIOPIA

4.6 million people 4.5 million people

% 44 % 40

Food Security No Data

ALI A

Current

Assistant Features Editor

Violence & Famine in Somalia & East Africa

Stressed

SOM

Whats happening @ TheNorthernLight.org

By Alden Lee

Dollo Ado

1%

KENYA

Crisis

3.8 million people 3.5 million people

1%

Emergency Famine

Ala-yasir

Refugee camp

Dadaab

Population % in Danger Population % Food Insecure Graphic by cj beaudrie/TNL

Nov. 30, the second group will be holding a fundraiser at the Anchor Pub on 4th Avenue, selling t-shirts to the 21-and-older crowd. Nick Anderson, a 22-yearold psychology major, is quite optimistic for the turnout of these fundraisers. “The situation in Somalia is a crisis I think everyone responds to,” Anderson said. “We’ve got a very active community here in Anchorage.” All proceeds collected from these events will be given to Doctors Without Borders (Médecins Sans Frontiéres),

Opinion.....06

News Editor

Occupy Anchorage protestors were prepared for a late night runin with the police last Wednesday night. Amber Helman said that around 1 p.m. that day, police had “coffee with us,” and discussed their first amendment rights. The police told them they would be back when the park closed to review with any new protestors. From 11 p.m. to 1 a.m. the group roughly doubled from ten to around 20 people, but no police showed up. “we are live & the cops aren’t evicting us!” read a Facebook status on the Occupy Anchorage page at 5:36 a.m. As of Nov. 5, protesters have occupied around Town Square Park for 15 days. Like most city parks, the park on F and 6 street closes at 11 p.m. Protesters have maneuvered around the city ordinance by protesting on the sidewalk. A tent with the first amendment painted in white letters appeared Oct. 29. Police wanted to clarify that afternoon that the tent cannot be used for sleeping. Helman emphasized that it is only being used for storage, and that the tent is an important symbolic gesture. “If they tell us to take it down, they’re literally taking down our first amendment,” Helman said. About 40 people rotate duties to keep the 24/7 protest active. Helman, along with fellow protester Tim Huit, believes that there is growing participation in the movement, though for Occupy Anchorage, less people are showing up because of the cold. “I believe there are people dedicated enough,” Huit said. “I’ve been a long term activist, I’ve worked with the homeless and what now. It’s convenient now that there’s a downtown protest to join.” Analyzing OWS, OA A philosophy and anthropology graduate from UAA, Huit sees Occupy Wall Street as a way to create change at a local level. “When the sociologists and anthropologists are done studying this, they will see that for each community [occupy protests] gave a forum to local issues that haven’t been addressed yet,” he said. A current social worker, Huit sees homelessness as one of Anchorage’s greatest problems. Anthropologist Peter Wood disagrees. Though he has sympathy for the movement, in a Polaris lecture last Friday night in the library, Wood said he sees Occupy Wall Street largely as a performance. “They thought they had a certain class position, and discovered that they didn’t,” Woods said. Wood is the president of the National Association of Scholars, a former Professor of Anthropology at Boston University, and writes for the Chronicle of Higher Education.

Toe 2 toe

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By Matt Caprioli

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A&E.....B2

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