Mount Hood

Cyber-Stalking: Focus on Technology Workshop

By KATRINA PENAFLOR
 Campus Life Editor

January is stalking awareness month, and on Wednesday, Jan. 28, Abby’s House presented a workshop on cyber stalking and its connection to technology.

Andrea Hugmeyer, assistant director of Abby’s House, welcomed three speakers: Charisse Loughery, Kjerstin Stanavige, and Samantha Hughes. They discussed what exactly is considered stalking, what to do if being stalked, protection measures, and resources.

Stalking, according to the online website, www.ncjrs.gov/stalkingawareness, “refers to harassing or threatening behavior that an individual engages in repeatedly,” or as Loughery, Western’s student conduct coordinator stated: “a pattern of repeated unwanted contact.”

Some examples of stalking behavior are: unwarranted phone calls, unwanted gifts, tracking of a person’s phone or computer, or damage toproperty.

Loughery also mentioned that students should be mindful of the language they use when referencing stalking. Saying, “I’m about to stalk someone on Facebook” is taking the term out of context and belittling the meaning of something serious.

Stanavige, the second speaker, focused primarily on technology. She wanted students to recognize the hazards of posting too much personal information
online.

“Nothing you post is truly private,” Stanovich said.

Managing the privacy settings of Facebook, Tumblr, or other social media outlets are important to make sure personally identifiable information is not readily accessible to anyone who wants it.

Hughes, an Abby’s House advocate, spoke about apps, protection, and prevention.

Hughes informed students about dangerous new apps that are used for stalking, like Stealthgenie or Myspy. If unknowingly downloaded to a person’s phone by an outside party, these apps can give access to someone’s GPS, camera, call logs, and microphone all without the owner knowing.

Apps like Myspy will not typically appear on the home screen of a phone. Ways to spot them are to look for a fast draining battery without use, camera flashes going off without taking a picture, or changes to your location setting. Hughes advised prevention methods like periodically changing passwords or setting two-factor authentication.

Hughes gave students a list of helpful apps like Circle 6 or Glympse that can safely send your location to a preapproved list of friends if you feel in danger or worried. The Abby’s House app is also a good resource.

If someone is being stalked, as a victim, it is important to not respond or talk back to the stalker, and to find a resource to seek help. Help can be found at the Student Conduct offices on the first floor of Ackerman, Public Safety, Monmouth Police Department, Student Health and Counseling, and Abby’s House.

Kevin Gutierrez, a psychology major and co-outreach coordinator at Abby’s House, enjoyed the presentation and said, “Everyone should know what they are exposed to and ways to keep yourself safe. Be mindful what you post online.”

Wolves Celebrate Literary Creativity

By AMANDA CLARKE
 Staff Writer

The Northwest Passage held the Fall Release Party on Wednesday, Jan. 28, in the Calapooia room of the Werner University Center from 7 to 8 p.m. The event was DJed by KWOU radio.

Twenty-six audience members heard published writers reading their works, including fiction by Jesse Poole and poems from contributors such as Stephanie Stuckey. A song by one contributor was also played, and contributor’s photos were acknowledged.

“I’ve never shown my work to peers outside the classroom,” Stuckey said. “I think it’s a way for fellow Wolves to come together.”

The Northwest Passage has “been ongoing twice a year since about 1961,” said Bethany McWhorter, the editor-in-chief of the Northwest Passage, and its purpose is “to display student’s creative work and display a literary facility on campus.”

“It was really enjoyable watching these pieces come to life,” said Kristin Eck. “I think it gives students and faculty an opportunity to share their work with campus and to work as a cooperative group of intellectuals.”

At the end of the event, a copy of the Northwest Passage was signed by all contributors present.

McWhorter said the Northwest Passage has changed over the years.

“It’s evolved immensely from the time it started,” McWhorter said. “My goal, as editor is no censorship, and to have more experimental stuff, within reason.”

Flashback Friday: Celebrating Western’s Beloved Mascot

By CHERENE O’HARA
 Freelancer

He can be seen cheering at football games on the sidelines. He will never hesitate to take a photo or shake a hand. And most importantly, he is the heart and soul of Western Oregon University.

Wolfie, as students and faculty know him, has become a key figure on Western’s
campus.

However, it wasn’t until 1928 that the university gained its own mascot.
According to the Western Oregon University Archives, from 1893 to 1927, the university had no mascot, and what is now WOU was known as the Oregon State Normal School.

Then in 1928 football coach Larry Wolfe suggested to students that the team be given a name, thus beginning the search for a mascot.

The student newspaper, then known as the LAMRON, ran a story in October 1928 suggesting names such as the Owls or the Knights and asked for other suggestions.

Later that month an editorial was printed, suggesting the team be named in honor of coach Larry Wolfe. By November, the decision was made, and from then on Western was officially known as the Wolves and our mascot as Wolfie.

The Wolf mascot quickly became a major fixture on campus; his picture was first taken with the football team in fall 1929.
Wolfie523
Since 1928, Wolfie has taken on many different forms, both as a live mascot and as a student wearing a costume.

In 1988, a Malamute dog named “Wolf” was purchased with the intention of replacing a student-in-costume style mascot. Wolf was purchased and taken care of by students. He remained the mascot for eight years before retiring in May 1996.
Wolfie will always be a major part of campus life.

Over the years, he has been found on student handbooks, fliers, at sporting and
community events, or just walking around campus.

Though Western has gone through many name changes and Wolfie has been in many different forms, he will always be the mascot that leads our school.

Wolves upset No. 8 Seattle Pacific

By GUY PERRIN
 Freelancer

The women’s basketball team snapped their five-game losing streak in dramatic fashion last week as they knocked off the No. 8-ranked Seattle Pacific University Falcons 67-62 on Thursday, Jan. 22.

Forward and team leader, Dana Goularte returned from injury to help the Wolves (5-11, 2-6 GNAC) storm back from an eight-point halftime deficit to hand Seattle Pacific (16-2, 6-2 GNAC) just their second loss of the season.

The Falcons came in shooting 40 percent on three-pointers as a team on the season but were stifled all night and finished just 4-21 from beyond the arc, good for 19 percent. Sami Osborne continued her strong run of play, leading the Wolves with 16 points, including a perfect 6-6 from the free-throw line.

Goularte provided a necessary spark off the bench, scoring 10 points while also leading the team in rebounds and assists with six of each. Guards, Elise Miller and Katie Goddard chipped in 11 and 10 points respectively as the Wolves finished with four players in double figures.

The Wolves were unable to keep their momentum going on Saturday, Jan. 24, suffering a 59-57 loss to Montana State Billings during the ROOT Sports game of the week.

Guard Jordan Mottershaw led the Wolves with 18 points and forward Sami Osborne hauled in 10 rebounds for the Wolves (5-12, 2-7 GNAC).

Montana State forward Kayleen Goggins was able to squeak in the game-winning layup as time expired to steal the victory for the Yellowjackets (11-8, 3-6 GNAC).

After a closely contested first half, the Yellowjackets managed to open up a 10-point lead midway through the second half before the Wolves battled all the way back to tie the game with just over 90 seconds to play. The comeback ultimately came up short when Goggins was able to sink a difficult shot at the buzzer to ensure the victory for Montana State.

The Wolves enter a 3-game road trip, starting with Saint Martin’s University in Lacey, Washington on Saturday, Jan. 31.

Wolves win two on the road

By JACOB HANSEN
 Staff Writer

Western Oregon men’s basketball won both games last week in dominant fashion, scoring a season high 114 points during their 114-75 win against Simon Fraser on Jan. 22.

The Wolves also beat Western Washington 90-87 on Jan. 24 in a comeback led by guard Julian Nichols who scored the final seven points of the contest. With these two wins Western Oregon (16-3, 8-1 GNAC) is now ranked No. 24 in the latest National Association of Basketball Coaches poll. This is the first time in program
history that the Wolves men’s basketball team has been ranked in the top 25 teams in the country.

Along with two wins, guard Jordan Wiley was awarded in the Great Northwest Athletic Conference for his performances. Wiley was named GNAC Player of the Week thanks to a career performance against Simon Fraser and a key three-point basket
late versus Western Washington.

Wiley scored a career high 26 points while making an impressive 7-for-8 from three point range against Simon Fraser (5-14, 2-7 GNAC). He also snagged six rebounds and two steals.

In the following match against the Vikings of Western Washington (10-9, 3-6 GNAC) Wiley contributed 15 points to the win including a late three pointer that helped to seal the win for the Wolves.

During the Western Washington game, forward Andy Avgi became the newest member of the 1000 point club with his first basket from the free throw line. That night he also had a team high 21 points and a team high five rebounds.

“It felt good to beat a team that hadn’t been beaten on their home count in over a year at their place.” Avgi said.

During the win against Simon Fraser the Wolves dominated from down low, as two forwards had more than 20 points. Marwan Sarhan had a season high 20-point performance to accompany Avgi’s 23. As a team, Western Oregon combined to shoot
43-for-74 (58.1 percent) from the field. The Wolves were also a combined 10-of-22 (45.5 percent) from beyond the three-point line and 18-of-23 (78.3 percent) at the free throw line.

“We got significant contributions from all 11 guys in uniform tonight. We defended with great intensity and attacked their pressure with purpose,” said head coach Brady Bergeson.

During the Saturday night win against Western Washington Nichols added 18 points that included 15 in the second half, to go along with a game-high eight assists, three steals, and a pair of rebounds. His clutch play helped to rally the Wolves from behind late in the game. As a team, Western Oregon combined to shoot
31-for-55 (56.4 percent) from the field that included a 7-of-15 (46.7 percent)
showing from beyond the three-point line and a 21-for-23 (91.3 percent) performance at the free throw line.

“We had to dig down deep to get this one done,” said Bergeson. “[Western Washington] outplayed us for 17 minutes in the second half. We outplayed them for the final three. I’m very proud of the toughness we displayed on the road.”

The Wolves, who are 16-3 overall and 8-1 in the GNAC, are riding a current six-game winning streak and have won 15 of their last 16 games dating back to mid-November.

The Wolves will host a pair of GNAC games this week beginning on Thursday, Jan. 29 against Montana State University Billings starting at 7 p.m. Two days later, Western Oregon will welcome the Falcons of Seattle Pacific University on Saturday
Jan. 31, starting at 7 p.m.

ROOT Sports partnership with GNAC adds exposure for Western

By RACHEL SHELLEY
 Sports Editor

ROOT Sports serves as a local and regional network for sports broadcasting around
Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana, and Alaska, reaching 3.4 million homes.

Regionally, ROOT is operated by DIRECTV in four different regional networks, featured in over 22 states and reaches 13 million households. The network has exclusive programming and distribution partnerships with over 25 teams and conferences including the Northwest region, Pittsburgh, Rocky Mountain and the Southwest.

ROOT sports is home of the Seattle Mariners, Seattle Seahawks, Seattle Sounders
FC, Portland Timbers, and Gonzaga Bulldogs, but most importantly broadcasts for the Great Northwest Athletic Conference and the Western Oregon University Wolves.

Many students have already experienced a ROOT sports game including the women’s
basketball game on Jan. 24. The men will be televised on Feb. 11 at 8 p.m. when they take on Saint Martin’s in Lacey, Washington. These games are a part of a 10-game GNAC package from December through February.

Students who work during the basketball games get to experience working with a
sports broadcasting network. KWOU Station Manager Iain Dexter had his own positive
experience broadcasting the game with the ROOT crew.

“The experience working with ROOT Sports was incredible,” Dexter said. “Getting
the opportunity to meet and work with them was exciting as a college student. The guys worked with were helpful and easy going, making the experience more enjoyable.

“Having ROOT come to Western is great for the exposure of our school and students,” Dexter said. “Having a game air in the entire Northwest will hopefully bring more students to our school and bring us more opportunities for exposure.”

The next opportunity for Western exposure will be the men’s basketball game on Feb. 11 but anyone can watch GNAC games throughout February on TV depending on their cable package.

The peril of online courses

By Haunani Thomas Managing Editor
By Haunani Thomas
Managing Editor

Speaking as a college student with self-diagnosed “senioritis,” getting out of bed is highly exasperating, to say the least. Waking up to go to class is comparable to taking out the trash: nobody wants to do it. Luckily, online education is extremely convenient.

You can complete assignments from the comfort of your own bedroom and continue to stay there because guess what? No assigned meeting times! Who wouldn’t refuse that offer?After taking two online classes within the past two terms, me.

But with convenience also comes laziness, a lack of urgency and, ultimately, procrastination. Case in point: last term I turned in my last two Writing for the Web projects late. As in last-day-of-finals-week late (Sorry, Dr. Lewis.)

If you know me, turning in homework is one of my biggest phobias. It gives me anxiety and makes me feel like I did when I watched Black Swan: extremely uncomfortable. That being said, the reason why I am not fond of online classes is because I turn in my homework late. If I didn’t make it clear before, I’d like to point out that it is very out-of-character for me to submit past due assignments.

Very.

Last school year I was enrolled in Marketing and the Internet. It was a hybrid class meaning we completed the coursework on our own time and only met for exams.

Although I totally bought into the idea of not having to attend class (again, who wouldn’t be?), all of the coursework started building up.

Instead of having a regular lecture, we’d have readings, videos, audio lectures and case studies to complete, in addition to responding to each other on Moodle. I am 100 percent sure I did more reading for that class alone than the entire “Harry Potter” series. I know this because I’ve read the entire series.

Thrice.

What I’m trying to say is that I don’t think I’ve ever put that much effort into a
“normal” class. Although the readings weren’t difficult, there were just so many details that I was unsure of which ones would be important on the exams. There was no real interactive communication between us and our professor. We responded to prompts just because we were supposed to, not because we truly wanted to share our standpoint(s). Half of the responses were just students regurgitating what other students, who had actually done the readings, had an opinion about.
Additionally, I sucked at submitting assignments on time. No need to sugar coat it.

When I had an assignment or project due on Wednesday, I waited until Wednesday morning to begin, thinking I could wake up at nine and finish said assignment before two.

There’s just something about physically attending class that gives me incentive to complete work on time.

Which brings us to this: online coursework should be supplementary to in-class discussion, assignments, etc.

For example, the majority of the homework assigned for Math 111 was online.

Although the problems took forever (or really like three and a half hours) to complete, I was able to get them done… eventually.
It is an understatement to say that I am terrible at math. So, the online portion of the class was not to blame for my poor overall performance. It actually saved my grade.

However, the online assignments made it easier for our professors to assign homework without having to grade it. I also liked that our textbook was offered online because I can’t stand lugging around textbooks for every class. Plus, I don’t know what I would have done without the “View an Example” feature on Pearson MyLab.

Therefore, in the future, I’d like to refrain from taking an online-based class due to my tendency toward procrastination and laziness that develops whenever I do so.

In spite of that, I do think professors should utilize online homework if it complements the coursework and the professor’s instruction. Based on my experiences, I believe that online education should be used as one of many mediums to teach and, not relied on as the sole vehicle for teaching and learning.

There’s just something about face-to-face, in-class interaction that is not well-replicated via online courses. However, the struggle for waking up to go to class will always remain.