Mount Hood

My Mom’s Basement

By: Rachael Jackson
 Staff Writer

My Mom’s Basement lies on the outskirts of downtown Monmouth in a quiet looking blue building. Enter inside the building and you’ll find yourself in a surprisingly open venue set up specifically for tabletop gaming.

The store was opened six years ago by Michael Haynes with the vision to provide a place to play good games with sociable people.

My Mom’s Basement is modeled to resemble just that: your mom’s basement. Electrical boxes are left bare to full view and faux bricks are painted on the walls to mimic a childhood of playing games in the basement with friends and family. The store was decorated with a relaxed and low-key vibe in mind.

My Mom’s Basement is an open space to players of any age and experience. For example, card games like Pokémon and Yu-Gi-Oh draw in middle and high school students on Thursdays.

Gregory Grimes, senior education major, compares the atmosphere of My Mom’s Basement to competitive places he has visited in Salem.

“People are a bit more respectful,” Grimes said. “The owners understand the games themselves and are willing to help you if you have questions.”

One local patron, Andrew Pratt, suggested that those interested in learning the popular tabletop game Dungeons & Dragons can come by at 5:00 p.m. on Wednesdays to create a character with the help of more skilled players. At 6:00 p.m. a group that sometimes reaches over 30 people embarks on a night of socializing through games.

With all the rules and possible storylines, tabletop gaming may seem intimidating to get into. My Mom’s Basement provides a welcoming setting with helpful people willing to show you the ropes. The games played here are geared towards recreation, not competition.

It also provides a sanctuary for the weary college student looking for a quiet time. Howard Haynes, Mike Haynes’ father, shared a story about two girls that came in during finals week. They rushed in and grabbed a game, sitting together to play privately. After an hour and a half of playing they put the game away and rushed back out to the next final.

For those not interested in tabletop gaming may find something more enticing to play on one of the computers, Xbox 360s, or an older console offered.

Stop by the shop after 12:00 p.m. on any day besides Monday to check it out or join in a game.

Crusaders topple Wolves in a hard-fought battle

By: Jamal Smith 
Sports Editor

The Western Oregon women’s basketball team fell at home to Northwest Nazarene University (NNU) 63-51 on Saturday, Jan. 23.

Freshman Natalie DeLonge (C) led the Wolves in scoring with 10 points, shooting 4-of-8 from the floor in just 19 minutes of play. Junior Jordan Mottershaw (G) and Michelle Bromagem (G) each tallied 8 points.

After NNU scored the first four points of the game, the Wolves pounced on the Crusaders by hitting two consecutive 3-pointers, one from Mottershaw and the other from Bromagem.

Building off the momentum from the deep ball, the Wolves held the lead throughout most of the first quarter by taking high percentage shots in the paint, but costly fouls and turnovers caused the score to be even at 14-14 by the end of the quarter.

In the remainder of the half, the Crusaders started hitting shots and creating turnovers, which proved to be one of the Wolves biggest problems of the night. By the half time whistle, Western had only added eight points and NNU’s lead ballooned to 36-22.

Although the Wolves found their shooting touch again in the second half, NNU kept hitting their shots. Every time the Wolves came close to bringing the score within single digits, the Crusaders would answer by creating turnovers or going on scoring runs.

With just under two minutes remaining in the game, Western brought the score to 51-60 off two made free throws from senior Emily Howey (C), but ultimately were unable to stop NNU in crunch time.

Western shot 15 of 50 from the floor including 5 of 15 from beyond the 3-point arch. The Wolves committed 24 turnovers that led to 28 Crusader points, and only created four points on NNU’s 15 turnovers. NNU also won the battle of the boards, out-rebounding WOU 38-34.

The Wolves hit 20 of 23 from the charity stripe and set a season-high free throw percentage of 0.870 percent, up from their season average of 0.679 percent.

The loss brings Western’s overall record to 3-15 and 2-8 in GNAC play.

Up next, the Wolves travel to British Columbia, Canada to take on Simon Frasier University on Saturday, Jan. 31.

The next home game is on Thursday, Feb. 4 against the University of Alaska Fairbanks. Tip-off is at 7 p.m., and the game is a pink-out, meaning fans are asked to wear pink in support of their team. Two days later, on Saturday, Feb. 6, the Wolves host the University of Alaska Anchorage also at 7 p.m. in the New P.E. Building.

Wolves jump to No. 1 in GNAC

By: Jamal Smith 
Sports editor

The No. 4 Wolves jumped to the top of the GNAC with two consecutive home victories. One over the University of Alaska Anchorage (UAA) on Thursday, Jan. 21 and the University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF) on Saturday, Jan. 23.

The first match-up, against the UAA Seawolves, ended 76-66 in Western’s favor.

Redshirt-senior Andy Avgi (F) led all scorers with 31 points on 13-21 shooting from the floor, he also had 3 assists, 4 blocked shots and 2 steals. Senior Jordan Wiley (G) was the only other Western player to reach double digits, scoring 17 points. Wiley was a perfect 8-8 from the free throw stripe.

UAA came into the game ranked first in the GNAC with a conference record of 7-0; however, they had not yet played the red-hot Wolves. From the opening tip, the Wolves pressured UAA with stifling defense and held the Seawolves to 0.286 percent shooting in the first half.

The GNAC’s leading scorer, UAA guard Sekou Wiggs, was held to only 4 first half points, all of which came from the free throw line. The Wolves intensity and defensive prowess gave them a 33-23 advantage at the break.

In the second half, Wiggs and the rest of the Seawolves showed why they were undefeated in the conference. With seven minutes remaining for the game, UAA fought their way back and then took the lead when Wiggs hit a lay-up to give UAA a 60-57 advantage. Wiggs exploded with 22 second half points.

Although momentum had swung in UAA’s direction, the Wolves refused to give up. Senior Devon Alexander (G) hit a 3-pointer to even the game and then Avgi’s shot from beyond the arch gave Western the lead once again.

With 1:53 remaining in the game and the Wolves up 70-66, Western’s defense came up big again by holding UAA scoreless in the final two minutes.

On Saturday, the Wolves again found a way to come out victorious, defeating the UAF Nanooks 64-59.

Avgi again earned the game’s top scoring honors with 24 points; Wiley had 17 points and Alexander tallied 13 points.

Western struggled shooting the ball early in the first half, but with the Nanooks up by 5 points at the 9:37 mark, the Wolves began to light it up from a distance. Avgi hit two, Nichols hit one, and Wiley drained four 3-pointers to give the Wolves a 38-27 advantage going into half time.

The Wolves’ momentum carried over into the second half and they increased their lead to 47-31 with 15 minutes remaining for the game. UAF, who currently sits in third place in the GNAC, refused to back down and came within three points of the lead with 1:22 remaining.

An Avgi 3-pointer and a couple drained free throws from Nichols iced the game and proved to be too much for the Nanooks to come back from.

The two home victories improve the Wolves’ overall record to 16-2 and 9-1 in GNAC play.

Avgi’s phenomenal two games culminated his third GNAC Player of the Week award this season. Avgi, who was named to the Bevo Francis watch list last week, is currently ranked second in the GNAC in scoring (21.8 ppg), fourth in field goal percentage (58.2 percent), fourth in 3-point percentage (45.8 percent), and ninth in blocked shots (1.0).

Next, Western will look for revenge on Saturday, Jan. 30 when they host Central Washington University (CWU). The 77-81 loss to CWU on Dec. 31, 2015 is the Wolves only conference blemish.

Who I Hate Today

By: Declan Hertel
Entertainment Editor

DeclanColor

This is not going to be a rage-vomit like some of my other pieces. You can put away your hate-ponchos and anger-umbrellas, my children, for you will not be soaked with my vitriol today.

I had an epiphany a few nights ago. I have been using an ad-blocking software since the day I heard that was a thing. Unless airing on a certain February Sunday, nobody likes ads. So downloading a free thing that allowed me to block those suckers was a no-brainer.

I eventually had it turned off on pretty much every website, and most of the ones it remained active on just hadn’t asked me to not use it yet. It’s the right thing to do; these sites rely on ad revenue to keep their services free. As a regular user, I am only hurting myself by blocking their ads.

But the epiphany I had was about the site that I originally downloaded it for: YouTube. YouTube never asked me to turn it off, so I never did. But I wasn’t hurting YouTube by denying the ads, I realized I was hurting the creators.

A lot of folks don’t even think about online video as a viable enterprise, even as creators such as Philip DeFranco and Rooster Teeth have built veritable media empires out of it. It hasn’t yet reached legitimacy, despite it quickly becoming one of our most common ways to get information, not to mention its increasing prevalence as a pastime. But I’ll let you in on a piece of inside knowledge: it ain’t free to make that stuff.

Geoff Ramsey of Rooster Teeth spoke about this on the Off Topic podcast: there’s a weird level of entitlement amongst consumers of internet media, that they’re doing the creators a favor by watching their videos at all. In regards to Pewdiepie, one of the most successful YouTubers ever, they say, “he’s got millions of dollars already and a mansion and whatever.” Ramsey says of this: “Yeah, but you know who doesn’t? My crew.”

And that’s what it is. This is a real industry, people. People are trying to make a living producing content for you to watch, for FREE, and all they ask of you is an extra few seconds of your time, an extra few seconds that allows them to do what they love by giving them money to do it. For the love of independent creators everywhere, please: get rid of your ad-blocker.

Musings from a woman on the edge

By: Katrina Penaflor 
Managing Editor

For all the people out there struggling with just about everything in their early 20s, I’m with you.

I’ve often heard the phrase “mid-life crisis” to describe people in their 40s who panic halfway through their life because they’re making a difficult transition into a more serious stage of adulthood.

Well, I’m not in my 40s, although my addiction to Lifetime movies and constantly using the phrase “kids these days” could lead you to believe otherwise, but I do very much believe I’m in the transitional stage of a quarter-life crisis.

Or maybe that’s not even the correct phrase to use here. But I think a lot of students can understand the feeling I’m trying to portray: nearing the end of college where everything tends to get more and more confusing.

I always think, “Wow, I’ve been in college for four years now, I’ve totally got a handle on things.” Wrong. The only thing I have a handle on is a glass of wine after a long week of asking for advice from friends who are succeeding at the whole “being an adult thing” better than I am.

Like, in the office of The Journal the other day our EIC asked if I could call back a person I just spoke to on the phone. He mentioned “*67,” or “*65” or something—see I can’t even remember the right phrase—and I literally had no idea what he meant.

This lead to the questions, could I handle working in an office setting? Do I even want to work in an office in the future? I have no freakin’ clue.

Senior year of college has turned into an endless track of these kinds of questions. So, what is my advice for people suffering a potential quarter-life crisis like I am? I don’t think I have any, because if I did I’d be filtering it into my soul on a daily basis.

I guess the best thing I can say is that no one actually has it all figured out, or ever fully will.

The Mack returns to fight racial injustice

By: Conner Williams 
Editor in Chief

“We take all we want from black culture, but will we show up for black lives?”

The popular Seattle-based rapper/producer-duo Macklemore & Ryan Lewis recently debuted a new track entitled “White Privilege II” that analyzes a variety of different racial issues while simultaneously providing the rapper’s personal narrative on his role in the fight for racial justice.

The song itself is a mix between Macklemore’s inner conflict with himself about his place in the discussion as well as a social outcry for the end of systematic white privilege.

Macklemore admits repeatedly that he has exploited hip-hop to benefit himself, saying lines like, “Fake and so plastic, you’ve heisted the magic (in reference to his 2012 debut album “The Heist”), you’ve taken the drums and the accent you rapped in, your brand of hip-hop it’s so fascist and backwards.”

And while Macklemore is known for creating music that provides a narrative for social justice in many aspects, he questions his motives for doing so repeatedly. The song opens up with the line, “Pulled into the parking lot, parked it, zipped up my parka, joined the procession of marchers, in my head like ‘is this awkward? Should I even be here marching?’”

Macklemore wishes to show solidarity with Black Americans, but he isn’t quite sure how to do so, as his very presence may be seen as hypocritical or unwanted. He condemned his own use of social media to show support for Mike Brown by saying, “You can join the march, protest, scream and shout, get on Twitter hash-tag and seem like you’re down, but they see through it all, people believe you now?”

The rapper received a significant amount of hate when he won the Grammy for album of the year for “The Heist” over Kendrick Lamar’s “Good Kid, M.A.A.D. City” a few years ago. However, Macklemore posted a photo of a screenshot text he sent to Lamar on his Instagram page in which he admitted that Lamar should have won and that he “got robbed.”

Many believe that Macklemore won the Grammy because of his ethnicity, which is not something that the rapper would disagree with based on his reaction to the victory, and it is part of the white privilege that he discusses in his new song.
The prevalence of white privilege in our society rears its ugly head in many ways. For example, the rate of incarceration for black men in the United States is about 1 in 15, while that for white men is about 1 in 106, according to the Center for American Progress. Additionally, the Bureau of Justice Statistics estimates that one in three black men can expect to go to prison in their lifetime. The U.S. Sentencing Commission also stated that black men receive prison sentences that are 10 percent longer than those of white men for the same crime.

The third verse of the track consists of a scenario where a woman approaches Macklemore in what sounds like a restaurant. She begins the conversation by saying she knows he’s by himself and that he doesn’t want to be disturbed, but that her kids love his music so much and are always singing, “I’m gonna pop some tags,” and that he is the only hip-hop artists she lets her kids listen to. She praises him for his song “Same Love,” in which he advocates for gay rights. She only lets her kids listen to him because he “gets it,” that “all that negative stuff isn’t cool.” “The b—–s and the hoes and the gangs and the thugs, even the protest outside, so sad and so dumb. If a cop pulls you over, it’s your fault if you run.”

She was referring to a protest in which participants chanted, “Hands up, don’t shoot!” in reference to the killing of Mike Brown when he was shot in August 2014 while he was unarmed. But yes, it was his fault that he was gunned down while he was unarmed. Macklemore shakes his head and puts down his dishes in the background of the conversation.

Macklemore & Ryan Lewis’ new album “This Unruly Mess I’ve Made” is set to release on Feb. 26.

Making sacrifices and working hard

By: Jamal Smith 
Sports editor

It is 8:00 a.m. at the start of the week on a cold and brisk 39 degree morning. As the sun begins to expose itself onto the horizon through the ominous grey clouds, the football team is arriving for morning workouts in the weight room below the stadium at McArthur Field.

As the players walk through the heavy steel doors, they are greeted by their strength and conditioning coach, Cori Metzgar.

Although the football season wrapped up over three months ago, the Wolves are already working hard in preparation for the upcoming season.

The life of a student athlete is a difficult one with year-round training, including making sacrifices that regular students don’t have to make.

“[The football team] has workouts four days a week and conditioning two days in the mornings,” said tight ends coach Jason Slowey. “They are up at 6:30 in the morning.”

Sacrificing their time and sleep is nothing compared to the hard work that each player puts in.

“The offseason for us is a pretty intense time,” said coach Metzgar. “We have eight hours a week to train the guys. We train on mobility, flexibility, prehab work, conditioning, agilities, biometrics, strength, and power work in the weight room.”

“The goal coming from eight weeks off from the season is to get them ready for spring ball, but also, to put on mass and add strength and power, especially for the younger kids,” added Metzgar. “For the older kids, it’s about developing their speed and power.”

“We spend three hours a week out on the turf doing speed and conditioning work, and we spend about five hours a week in the weight room consisting of an hour of stretching, mobility and prehab work, and four hours of lifting,” continued Metzgar.

The heavy offseason routine provides every player an opportunity to improve the things that they need to work on in order to gain a bigger role before next season begins. Some players want to gain muscle mass while others want to increase their agility.

Sophomore defensive lineman Casey Gates sees the offseason as an opportunity to achieve his personal goals.

“More than anything with me being a football player, I want to gain mass, muscle and power, but especially with coach Metzgar’s contribution, I’m really looking to increase my athletic abilities as well as my overall skill work,” said Gates.

“Playing at this level requires more than just physical strength because everyone has that at our level, so you really have to work on all skills to be the best football player that you can be,” said Gates.

Last season was filled with highs and lows. After dropping three of their first five games at the start of the season, the Wolves caught fire and won their next six games, including a 24-22 victory over the No. 6 ranked team in Division-II ball, Northern Alabama.

The upset victory propelled the Wolves into playoff contention, and a victory in their last game against the GNAC’s top team, Humboldt State University, would have made Western the GNAC Champions and given them an automatic Division-II playoff berth.

Unfortunately, the Humboldt State Jacks defeated the Wolves 29-13 and the season ended on a sour note.

That loss has stuck in the back of the mind of every player and has provided motivation for improvement.

“Our mindset now is to stay dedicated and hungry because last season we had achievements, but we weren’t able to accomplish all of our goals,” added Gates. “Because we were able to achieve some of our goals but not all of them, we are really working hard.”

Vince Lombardi once said, “The price of success is hard work, dedication to the job at hand, and the determination that whether we win or lose, we have applied the best of ourselves to the task at hand.”

The Wolves hope that with hard work and dedication, next year will be the year Western can win the GNAC.