Mount Hood

Western Oregon staff member performs in “Dr. Dolittle”

BY JENNIFER HALLEY
CAMPUS LIFE EDITOR

 

For this weekend only, Salem’s community theatre, Pentacle Theatre, is presenting the musical “Dr. Dolittle,” at Central High School in Independence.

Patrick Moser, interim director of Werner University Center, is one of the performers.

The play is designated as a fundraiser for Pentacle, and according to Moser, all proceeds go to the theatre itself and its future productions.

“Dr. Dolittle” is an extra production by Pentacle and is produced with a limited set. It is based off the books by Hugh Lofting, as well as the Fox movies, starring Eddie Murphy.

The production starts Friday, Jan. 8 at 7:30 p.m., with two performances at 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 9. A final matinee will be performed at 2 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 10.

Students Share Their Talents through Karaoke

BY AMANDA CLARKE
STAFF WRITER

Open-Mic Night was held in the Willamette Room of the Werner University Center by the Student Activities Board on Tuesday, Jan. 6 at 7 p.m.

Members of the audience volunteered and sang karaoke songs.

“It gives students a break and a chance to get their talents out,” said Kara Kelsey, a member of the SAB.

There was a wide variety of music, including Spanish songs, songs by the Beach Boys and “Happy Birthday,” which was performed for one of the audience members.

“I really like to get the audience involved,” SAB Small Programs Coordinator Kevin Alejandrez said, who participated in the karaoke and let the audience pick the song he sang.

Members of Kappa Delta Chi also performed.

The next Open Mic Night will be held on Tuesday, Feb. 3.

Growing English tutoring program serves international students well at college

BY ALI ALJOHANI
 FREELANCER

FOR MORE INFO
WHAT: Free English language tutoring
WHO: International students and other non-native English speakers
WHERE & WHEN: 12 to 5 p.m. Monday to Thursday in APSC 501, and 7 to 10 p.m. Monday to Thursday in room 228 in the library (by drop-in or appointment)

 

With international student enrollment rising, Western created an English Tutoring Center (ETC) last fall to help non-native speakers of English practice their language skills.

Last term, tutors provided 160 hours of assistance to 59 individuals, who visited the ETC a total of 153 times.

According to Dr. Robert Troyer, linguistics professor and director of the ETC, international students need support for the reading, researching, speaking, and listening demands of other classes and of informal situations.

He said that the ETC is meant to provide whatever English help students want, from help with assignments to conversation practice.

Western had 351 international students enrolled this fall.

Most have taken English classes with professors who focus on the understanding of the language, but the professors in university classes focus on the topic.

As a result, some international students have a hard time getting the information from their classes.

“Our international students enter WOU often with little exposure to English outside of English classes for language learners,” Troyer said.

The ETC helps students with speaking, listening, and reading comprehension including reading source materials and paraphrasing them for use in academic papers – basically everything except writing which students can get help with from the Writing Center, Troyer said.

Tutors must have specific skills to be allowed to provide their services. “All of the tutors except one have been through or are currently working on a Certificate Program for Teaching English as a Foreign Language,” Troyer explained.

“I recruit tutors from our TEFL program because they are undergraduates who have the specific skills needed to help international students with English – and being tutors gives them more experience working with language learners.”

The ETC provides jobs and experience for students. There are both volunteers and paid positions. The ETC is open 32 hours per week, with at least one, and sometimes two, tutors present the whole time.

“I have always loved helping people, and I have a passion for languages, so becoming an English Tutor made sense,” said ETC tutor Alex O’Neil, an ASL studies major and linguistics minor.

“I love meeting new people from different cultures and backgrounds, and I enjoy learning from my students as well as helping them.”

Because American and international students have different cultures, there is a gap between them.

O’Neil advised her fellow tutors to assure their students that they are in a safe place and that they can speak their mind, and don’t have to be embarrassed by their language skills.

She said that everyone has some area to improve in, and that they will figure it out. Also, some students are more focused on accuracy, so they take their time gathering their thoughts, she added, counseling patience for tutors.

“The ETC is a great program, with kind tutors,” said international student Abdulaziz Aleid. “They help me with speaking, listening,
and reading. Also, the ETC is a chance for the international students to know more about American culture.”

One final word of advice from O’Neil is directed toward American students: “I think it would be awesome if we just talked with them in and out of class, to help them feel more welcome.

Obviously, it would be nice if we could make study groups with them, but even going as far as to talk with them about their home country and their interest
is a step in the right direction.”

No appointments are necessary, but the web page tells who is tutoring at which times. From the search box in the upper right corner of any WOU webpage, type
‘English tutor’ to find the webpage with hours, locations, and tutors.

Veteran Success Center supports ex-military students

BY ALLISON OPSON CLEMENT
NEWS EDITOR

The Veteran Success Center helps college students who’ve served in the military connect to each other and find resources they need.

It offers a space for the variety of presentations and meetings it hosts, as well as a hang-out area.

The center opened its own location in the Werner University Center earlier this year, and is growing as a resource to student veterans.

“There does need to be something out there for student veterans,” said Veterans Coordinator Kyle Rodgers. “College is hard for anybody.”

With the added challenges vets face re-entering academia, it’s important that they have somewhere to turn when they need help, he explained.

A 2012 study by the Colorado Workforce Development Council estimates that 3 percent of student veterans graduate from university; 88 percent drop out within their first year.

Rodgers says that those numbers may not an entirely accurate reflection of current trends, at Western in particular, but noted that such reports can highlight a major problem that needs to be addressed.

“Some of the stuff is pretty minor,” Rodgers said of the challenges student veterans have to deal with. “But then, some of the stuff is pretty serious.”

Cody Knight, veteran liaison, said that the age and experience gap between traditional students fresh out of high school and military veterans can create a huge divide.

The Veteran Success Center helps people navigate their GI Bill benefits gaps and caveats, which may have a significant impact on the ability of a veteran to continue their education.

Student veterans are supposed to have a full ride to college, and yet their drop-out rates are consistently above average, in some cases by a wide margin.

By and large, Rodgers said, the GI Bill is still a big advantage, but negotiating through it takes some work.

“All that stuff kind of compounds,” Rodgers said. The center can help bridge the gap to success. There are hundreds of programs to support veterans, and he can tell them where to look.

Drop in support groups and other meetings are held on Tuesday. Along with Rodgers, two work study students are paid by the VA. All three are veterans.

According to Knight, more people are coming in this term, now that news of the Veteran Success Center on campus is spreading.

Rodgers’ role focuses on the recruitment to and retention of veterans at Western. Students who are connected to campus are more successful academically, and are less likely to leave. Rodgers says he tries to put on at least one program every week or every other week.

One presenter helps with resumes; another helps with financial planning.

“Even though you’re 22, 23, and expected to know all this, you don’t,” Rodgers said.

In addition to helping individual veterans, if many people have the same problem or idea, Rodgers can help them get together and make it actionable.

“We can then bring a collective voice to ASWOU or the administration,” Rodgers said.

Rodgers said that it is important to get the Veteran Success Center and the people it supports involved in the community.
They helped with the Toys for Tots drive, and Rodgers said that he is trying to raise more awareness this term; for fall, he said, it was a learning curve figuring out what works to get veterans’ attention.

“We bring our collective knowledge here to help each other,” said Dolan Kasnick, the third member of the center’s team. The center is intended to help get ex-military students better connected to campus, and help them succeed in their time here.

Having the center also helps out the rest of campus, said Rodgers, because it frees up the registrar’s office from veterans’ questions, which helps streamline their process more, and they may be able to provide more assistance.

Veterans should come to the center, first, even before approaching the Registrar’s office.

Western’s Veteran Success Center is also home to an affiliated chapter of the national Student Veterans of America (SVA), which is dedicated to providing help to ex-military members, for graduation and beyond.
This allows the center to offer SVA-exclusive scholarships and additional opportunities to Western’s student veterans. Western’s SVA chapter has about 40 members.

“It’s nice to be able to come in here to talk to other guys who know what you’re talking about,” Knight said.

Kasnick said the goal is to collaborate to help today’s veteran students, and also to enrich the life of future returning military service members at Western.

“It’s that whole thing of not having to go it alone,” Rodgers said. “It’s nice to at least know where resources are.”

The Veteran Success Center is located in room 108 of the WUC.

Christmas as a college student

IMG_97352

BY HAUNANI TOMAS
MANAGING EDITOR

In lieu of the post-Thanksgiving weekend,
Christmas time has arrived in full
effect. Our favorite holiday songs pepper
the radio stations and every girl listens to
Mariah Carey’s rendition of “All I Want for
Christmas is You,” at least once a day.

However, something has changed this
year compared to last: you’re a year older.
(Obviously). Although it may just seem like
another 365 days have passed, the years add
up.

In unsuccessfully attempting to avoid
sounding like the Grinch, Christmas is just
not as thrilling as it was all those years ago.
Activities ranging from Black Friday
shopping to opening presents on Christmas
Day are just plain different from what they
used to be.

SHOPPING

Your Black Friday shopping isn’t for you
anymore. Rather, it’s for your mother’s coworkers
and presents for extended family.
You’ll easily spend $50 at Bath & Body
Works alone, taking advantage of the ridiculous
hand soap and candle deals that
could come in handy for any potential lastminute
presents (a.k.a. the people you forgot
about).

If you’re lucky enough to squeeze in
some “me” shopping time, you’ll most likely
sin in the form of overpayment at any of
the following: Target, Target or, probably,
Target. And, if we aren’t struggling enough
already, we’ll find every reason to spend the
majority of our November paycheck at our
favorite department store.

PRESENTS

The pressure of picking out presents
increases dramatically. You can’t get away
with buying merchandise from the school
bookstore anymore.

Also, there no longer exists a plethora of
peculiar-shaped, mysterious presents bearing
your name underneath the tree. Your
presents are most likely in a boring box,
containing clothes (that you picked out) or,
even better, gift cards to buy clothes.

Your response to the ever-probing question
“What do you want for Christmas?” always
begins with “I don’t know…” when in
reality, there exists a mentally stored yearround
list that only seems to grow. You just
don’t want to admit it to anyone because if
you want it, it makes sense if you just buy
it, right?

CHRISTMAS DAY

Sleeping in on Christmas day isn’t an option,
especially if you have younger siblings.
Throughout the entire term we rise and
shine at the ripe hour of seven in the morning
to attend our eight o’clock classes. We’ve
already paid our dues in the form of sleepdeprivation
every Monday and Wednesday
(or maybe Tuesday and Thursday).

Waking up early isn’t as holly-jolly as it
used to, mostly because a prolonged slumber
now trumps our gifts, which will still be
waiting under the tree after noon. They’re
not going anywhere.

CELEBRATIONS

For all you over-twenty-oners, Christmas
becomes yet another excuse to celebrate
with some (or a lot of) booze. Did
you really think you could finally start that
detox over winter break to cleanse your
body of all the tequila shots you’ve downed
throughout the term?

Two-words: peppermint schnapps.

Along with (hopefully responsible)
boozing, comes the return of the multitude
of ugly sweater parties. This is the only
time of year when having the most hideous
Christmas sweater is actually a compliment.
I repeat, the only time of the year.

DECORATIONS

Decorating the Christmas tree becomes
another task on your chore list when you
realize that you’re probably, or definitely,
going to be responsible for cleaning, packing
and storing all of the ornaments.

Every. Single. One.

The responsibility of cleaning up the
Christmas tree is all yours now. Not your
mom’s.

When driving around town to see who
has the most Christmas lights and frontyard
décor, I can only think of two things:
my mileage per gallon and how insanely
high everyone’s electricity bill must be at
the beginning of January.

However, for those of you who have
Christmas lights in your room year-round,
there’s no real surprise there.
Regardless, of how un-holly-jolly things
might be during the holidays, it is still the
most wonderful time of the year.

Portraits of a University: “Steward of the Mind”

 

As part of a new weekly Journal column, Nathaniel Dunaway meets with Western Oregon University students to discuss their lives and their experiences in the world of higher education. In doing so, he hopes to find an answer to the question what does it mean to be a college student in the 21st century?

This week, Music Composition major Kit Mills discusses his decision to return to school, and the challenges he faces as a husband and father.

As Kit and I began our conversation, a student in the study area near us began playing Chopin on the piano. His music provided a particularly apt ambiance to Kit’s musings on the power of classical music.

A conversation with Kit Mills

The decision to go back to school had to do with wanting to expand my opportunities, but also wanting to take the first step towards jumping through the hoops of becoming a college professor. I’m not settled on that, but it’s certainly something I’ve done before and like doing. I worked as an adjunct professor at community college in Washington. I wasn’t sure if getting a doctorate was the route I wanted to go, but I thought I would at least try a masters, and let that be kind of a litmus test for whether or not I wanted to go on to doctoral work. Jury’s still out on this.

Two years ago, I thought I was headed to the Berklee College of Music graduate studio performance program at their new campus in Valencia, Spain, after a successful audition as a drummer. However, they offered no financial aid and I have a strong aversion to debt. So after Berklee didn’t pan out, I started thinking more about working on the compositional side. I love sharing classical music with people; it’s such a huge world of music and there are a lot of points where classical music has influenced a lot of things we take for granted in our own popular culture. There’s so much beauty that’s been the product of so many minds over the centuries. I’m one of those people who loves nature. I love great views of the ocean. I grew up in the Puget Sound area, on Whidbey Island. My enjoyment is doubled by sharing beautiful things with others, and having them enjoy it too. I’m interested in doing that with music. Anybody who says there’s nothing in classical music that they can like clearly hasn’t started to tap into it. It’s like someone who just eats McDonalds all the time and says “nah, there’s nothing else good out there.”

My parents have both had a long-standing engagement with music. I grew up with a guitar-playing dad and a piano-playing mom. I have a lot of memories of us singing and harmonizing together. A played a lot of drums throughout middle school and high school, and didn’t really know a whole lot about classical music. When I went to college, at Wheaton College, near Chicago, I had originally planned to be an engineering major, but it didn’t pan out because I found there is a distinct difference between high school physics and college calculus-based physics. So really quickly I found myself fishing around for what to do. Long story short though, I got into some music theory classes, and felt initially, as a lot of people do coming into classical stuff for the first time, pretty intimidated. There’d be kids in my class who’d been studying the violin since the age of three. So I was intimidated until we came to the point where we used our ears to listen and transcribe, to tell what was going on in a piece of music, and it was there that I realized that all that childhood stuff that I’d done, all the singing with my family, all the music-making around the house, had given me a really good ear. I ended up majoring in composition. I suppose most people who tackle composition have at least a little bit of a dream of being the next Beethoven. Maybe I did to begin with. But no matter what, we should try to be good stewards of the minds we have. We should be working towards a real mastery of whatever it is we’re interested in.

One reason I’m interested in classical music is because so much of it has withstood the test of time. It’s clear that there are elements of Bach’s music that somehow still speak to people. Sooner or later every artist has to grapple with the things that we all wonder about; life and death, love, friendship, matters of faith, matters of upheaval. So much of the music we now blithely take for granted was often produced in times of great turmoil. Beethoven was working on one of his symphonies with cotton stuffed in his ears while Vienna was bombed by the French. Mozart wrote a lot of music while he was broke and ill. Somehow these guys have found a way to put things down that have just lasted.

I have a wife and a young son, and it’s almost as if I have two different lives. I have one life where I engage as a student, and I have another life where I set that all aside and I come home as a parent and spouse. The big trick is prioritizing. I’ve been so determined to do this without taking any loans, without going into any debt, and we — my wife and I — have practiced living frugally, as musicians, so that’s good. But the challenge is now to be frugal with my time. I definitely find I have a very good excuse for not having free time.

What I would council any student who’s serious about learning is to first recognize that learning isn’t just something that happens in the hallowed halls of academia. Learning is a life-long vocation. It’s something that continually engenders curiosity over the years. You don’t have to be a music major to love music, or a literature major to love literature, you don’t have to be a sports science major to be interested in the workings of the human body. I suggest one learns to recognize that there are great assets here at a university, where you have the chance to really grow as a person. Some of that is through book-learning and some of that’s through life-learning.

I hope students take time to just be still. Put down your cell phone or tablet, stop, and smell the roses (when they’re in bloom), and admire the autumn leaves. Most days this fall, if you’ve watched me walking homeward, you’ve likely seen me with a leaf in hand to take home to show my wife and son. An important component of being a student is to learn to be a student of the world around you, and to learn to enjoy it.

 

 

Fighting to understand: Why is fighting allowed on the ice?

Rachel Shelley Sports Editor
Rachel Shelley
Sports Editor

I am an avid connoisseur of sports. College, professional, intermural, I even catch myself stopping on the World Series of Poker when it’s on TV; I have always just been attracted to competition in any form. That being said, being a life-long fan and athlete myself, I have what I would call an expertise in sports.

Although, there is one question I have never answered nor has anyone ever answered for me. Why are hockey fans allowed to openly fight during the games while no other sport can throw a punch … or two … .or clear the bench in a brawl.

According to hockeyroundtable.com, a website created by hockey fans for fans, it explains the “Three Reasons Why Hockey Fights Are Allowed.”

1. Hockey fights provide a way for the players to police themselves
2. Hockey fights are a great way to change the momentum of a game
3. Hockey fights provide entertainment value.

I love hockey. I have been to countless Portland Winterhawks games and seen countless fights, some bloody and some just a little weak. I thoroughly enjoy watching two very aggressive, large and adrenaline-pumped men fight on ice skates, but the three reasons why hockey fights are allowed seem unconvincing to me as to why hockey can and other sports cannot.

Wouldn’t you love to see Lebron James take on Joakim Noah after a blocked shot? Or end the age-old question, is it the size of the dog in the fight or the size of the fight in a dog while Nate Robinson takes on well, anyone, after a blood pumping play? I would.

Professional sports are aggressive; if an athlete isn’t “0-100” per say, they won’t perform at the level they need too in order to keep up with the momentum or level of play.
My question is, why can hockey players’ fight during a game with an at best 5-minute major, rarely an ejection, but a NBA basketball player can barely throw an elbow without it being a larger penalty, let alone throw a punch, or any professional sport for that matter.

If active fighting in sports were legal in all professional sports, how much would that change the game?

Would Brandon Meriweather of the Washington Redskins still receive the two-game suspension for an illegal hit on a wide receiver? My first thought, safety. Of course he is suspended because he was threatening the safety of the player by hitting in an illegal way. Isn’t throwing your gloves and face guard off and openly punching a player, might I add, in skates, threatening the safety of a player?

I am unsure if I will ever understand why fighting is allowed in hockey, but not in any other professional sport.