Mount Hood

Cocktail Corner

By: Rachael Jackson
Campus Life Editor

Want to host a summer party and impress your friends, but you don’t want to buy the various (and expensive) ingredients to make it happen? Well then, these recipes are for you.

The Miami Vice
Traditionally served as a blended pina colada poured into the glass with a blended strawberry daiquiri, this is a sweet summertime drink. I am not sure where the name comes from, but I am guessing from the television show due to the color of the drink.

Ingredients:
Strawberry Daiquiri Sobe*
Pina Colada Sobe
Rum (I use Malibu, but Bacardi 151 is used in the original drink)

Fill a glass with ice, pour in a shot or three of the rum, and layer with the Sobe drinks. If you have a blender, you can blend them separately with the rum added to keep the colors from mixing together.

Moscow Mule
I replace the more expensive ginger beer with ginger ale and fresh ginger in this classic drink.

Ingredients:
Ginger ale
Ginger
Lime
Vodka

Shave off a bit of ginger into your glass. I like a lot, but I also like to torture my taste buds. You can add some sugar as well to tame the spiciness. Add ice over the ginger, pour in a shot of vodka, add ginger ale, then squeeze in half a lime.

Greyhound
Add sugar and club soda to make it spritzy.

Ingredients:
White grapefruit juice
Vodka

Pour vodka and juice over ice. Garnish with a slice of fresh grapefruit if you want to be classy.

Variations:
Make it a Paloma by using ruby red grapefruit juice and tequila instead.
Add salt to the rim and make it a Salty Dog.

“Don’t forget, don’t ever forget”

By: Conner Williams
Editor-in-Chief

Powerful feelings accompanied all those that traveled through campus May 4-5. At a glance or from a distance, the scene appeared to be a beautiful display of blooming flowers under the springtime sun, with all colors of the rainbow glimmering in the expanse of the fresh, green landscape encompassing Western’s serene setting.

But upon further inspection, the scene changed drastically.

What first seemed to be a colorful spectacle of a springtime botanical pleasantry was, in fact, a brutal reminder of one of the greatest tragedies in human history: the Holocaust.

27,660 miniature flags poked out of the grass along the walkways carving their way through the heart of campus as part of Western’s role in Holocaust Remembrance Day.

Each flag represented about 500 people killed during the Holocaust.

True figures are impossible to measure, and all that we have are approximations; an estimated 13.8 million people.

The flags were separated out by color to represent a different denomination of people:

Yellow for Jewish adults – 8,534 flags representing 4,267,000 deaths

Small yellow for Jewish children – 3,500 flags representing 1,750,000 deaths

Brown for Roma and Sinti (Gypsies) – 1,000 flags representing 500,000 deaths

Pink for homosexuals – 30 flags representing 15,000 deaths

White for Jehovah’s Witnesses – 6 flags representing 3,000 deaths

Orange for mentally/physically disabled – 500 flags representing 250,000 deaths

Red for Soviet prisoners of war – 6,600 flags representing 3,300,000

Blue for Polish Catholics – 6,000 flags representing 3,000,000 deaths

Lime for Spanish republicans – 40 flags representing 20,000 deaths

Green for Serbians – 1,400 flags representing 700,000 deaths

Jennifer Murphy-Schwanke, a senior sociology major, has experienced tragic loss herself. She lost two of her three kids.

“To think that each flag doesn’t even represent one [person], it represents that many more … I’m a parent and it just hits me that there’s that many people that have lost family and it hasn’t even been 100 years yet,” said Murphy-Schwanke.

“There are parallels today, and if I could tell anyone one thing – not that I’ve been touched by it myself but to just think of the families that have been – take five minutes and attempt to put yourself in their shoes,” Murphy-Schwanke said. “Don’t forget, don’t ever forget.”

As part of Holocaust Remembrance Day, Deb Mrowka, whose family largely survived the events of the Holocaust, spoke on May 5 about her family’s incredible journey through the internment camps, particularly her mother’s amazing unbreakable willpower in the face of immeasurable odds.

Mrowka used to bring her mother, Eline Hoekstra Dresden, with her when they traveled to different speaking events in order to offer commentary and answer questions, but Dresden is now unable to do so since she has reached 93 years of age.

Mrowka spoke of the history of World War II and the conception of the Nazi Party’s rise to power as Germany attempted to rebuild after economically shattering war reparations pulsed through the country after World War I.

Perhaps one of the most compelling moments of Mrowka’s presentation was when she commented on the carefully orchestrated psychological manipulation the Nazis executed on their victims. She spoke of how they were “so smart” in the way they allowed for slight glimmers of hope to be allowed in the Nazi Party’s captives for the sole purpose of ripping it away later on. In one instance, Mrowka spoke of people who were forced out of their homes but were allowed to bring a suitcase full of whatever they could fit in it, which allowed for a small sense of hope that the victims might be able to trade something they owned for their life.

“The difference between being a victim and a survivor is your attitude,” Mrowka said. “If you keep the attitude of being a victim, you’ve let the perpetrator win.”

Mrowka’s family hailed from Utrecht, in the Netherlands, and upon realizing that some parts of western Europe were no longer safe for Jews when the war began in 1939, they took in two Jewish refugee children whose parents had sent them way from Germany.

After the Netherlands was invaded, German authorities found the two orphans and forced their relocation back to the orphanage, where they were ultimately deported to the Auschwitz concentration camps and murdered.

Dresden graduated from high school in 1940 and was forced out of college in 1941 when the Nazis expelled Jews from all schools, afterwards seizing Dresden’s family home in the Netherlands.

Dresden became pregnant in 1941 and had to walk to the hospital to give birth since Jews were not allowed to use any other forms of transportation. She bore a son, Daantje, who she gave up when he was three months old to a non-Jewish family that volunteered to hide him for safekeeping.

Somehow, the family was kept in contact with and Dresden was reunited with Daantje when he was three years old after she was liberated from an internment camp in the Netherlands called Westerbork on April 12, 1945.

In 1958, Dresden, her husband, and their five children, including Mrowka, emigrated from the Netherlands to a rural area near Portland, Oregon.

Brianna Martinez, a sophomore exercise science major, touched on her feelings of the presentation and about Western’s contribution to Holocaust Remembrance Day.

“I’ve always been interested in the Holocaust, and to hear someone’s story is so much different than reading about it in a textbook in a history class,” Martinez said after Mrowka’s presentation.

“[The flag display] definitely makes me sad, to think that each one represents 500 people, it’s crazy to think about,” said Martinez.

Amanda Owren, a sophomore psychology major, noted Mrowka’s overall lighthearted tone when discussing the events that her family endured.

“It says a lot about the person that they’re able to go through that and still have a positive attitude and look back on it without just negative thoughts,” said Owren. “I know if I went through that, I couldn’t do it.”

“She’s definitely like her mom, she’s so strong,” Martinez added.

Towards the end of her presentation, Mrowka alluded to similarities between the rhetoric of her family’s past and that of the current political climate in the United States.

“It scares me the way that some people are voting … Just like in Germany in those days, people had to blame somebody,” said Mrowka. “And so, if you follow that rhetoric and you blame other people in regards to immigration and these other things, that’s just not American.”

“We are an awesome country and we should celebrate the differences in people instead of negating them,” stated Mrowka.

Contact the author at journaleditor@wou.edu or on Twitter @journalEIC

Leicester defies 5,000 to 1 odds

By: Jamal Smith
Sports Editor

Almost everyone can appreciate an underdog story in sports, whether it is a Cinderella team who defies all odds to upset the heavy favorite or a team that comes back from a seemingly insurmountable deficit to shock the world. On May 2, Leicester City F.C. pulled off one of the craziest upsets in sports history when they were crowned champions of the Barclays Premier League.

Before the start of the season, English sports bookies gave Leicester City 5000:1 odds of winning the championship. “This is a genuine black-swan event,” said a spokesman for Ladbrokes bookmakers in an interview with Bloomberg News. “If you simulated the Premier League 5,000 times, Leicester should win it once. We’re not going to be around for another 5,000 Premier Leagues to see if that’s the case.”

Although England’s Barclays Premier League is considered the most competitive soccer league in the world, there is a huge disparity between the teams normally at the top and the teams near the bottom. In fact, before Leicester City’s improbable victory, only four teams had won the league in the past two decades: Chelsea, Manchester City, Manchester United, and Arsenal.

Then there is the fact that Leicester City has never in their club’s history finished in the top five teams of the league. In 2004, Leicester had a tough year and because of their poor record, they got regulated to England’s second-tier league, and then in 2008, Leicester was bad enough to get bumped down even further: to the third tier.

Leicester only spent one year in the England’s third-tier league, they finished the season at the top of the league and moved up. Then, after spending five years in the second-tier, in 2014 Leicester moved up to the Premier League and finished in 14th place, just six points away from moving back down again.

Even this season as Leicester began pulling off result after result, it seemed like nobody gave them a chance to win. So, when Leicester pulled off the incredible upset on Monday, the city of Leicester was in absolute jubilation. Fans hugged and kissed complete strangers in celebration.

Fans will never forget this incredible victory, and the improbable win goes to show that anything can happen in sports.

Contact the author at jsmith15@wou.edu or on Twitter @journalsportWOU

When hard works pays off

By: Jenna Beresheim
News Editor

In honor of “May the Fourth,” the 24th annual Leadership Recognition Night portrayed the theme of “Leadership Awakens” – celebrating in true “Star Wars” style.

The evening was an invitation-only event that celebrates specific students from campus who have gone above and beyond expectations. Awards are both peer-selected and staff-selected, with only a few handpicked students making it past a campus committee to win larger awards, such as the Klush Tum Tum, Distinguished Student Leader, Julia McCulloch Smith Outstanding Graduating Student, and Delmer Dewey Outstanding Graduating Student awards.

To follow the “Star Wars” theme, giant balloon lightsabers created the stage backdrop, cardboard cut-outs of characters lined the walls, and even the food was themed. There was Jedi Juice, Obi-Wan Kabobs, and Princess Leia Cinnabuns.

Megan Haberman, the assistant director for Student Leadership and Activities, has hosted the event for seven years with the help of other staff and faculty members around campus.

“Usually my position announces assigned awards, but this year I swapped with my partners to announce the winners that I knew personally because their accomplishments meant so much to me,” Haberman said.

“My assistant, Jordyn Ducotey, helped me so much and took the creative reins when it came to decorating and setting up for the event, I knew I could trust her to do an amazing job,” Haberman said.

Among the winners, Molly Hinsvark, a senior education major, received the Who’s Who award, which recognizes individuals for their involvement within the community.

“This year I’ve been really challenging myself to better the LGBT*Q+ community,”said Hinsvark, “I’ve been at Stonewall for three and a half years, and put on four programs this year alone.”

Specific awards, such as the Klush Tum Tum, are awarded to students who stand out overall on campus.

This award focuses on a student who personifies “the heart of [Western],” meaning this individual goes above and beyond for organizations both on and off campus. The term is borrowed from the Chinook jargon, meaning “heart for people.” The award also attempts to highlight a student who may slip under the radar for being seen as outstanding – recognizing someone who truly works hard because they are passionate and devoted.

The winner of the Klush Tum Tum award this year was Kevin Alejandrez. John Goldsmith won the Delmer Dewey Outstanding Graduating Student award and Han Nguyen won the Julia McCulloch Smith Outstanding Graduating Student.

Finally, the Distinguished Student Leader awards went to Emmi Collier and Bryan Kelley.

For a full list of award recipients, paper handouts can be found at the Information Desk in the Werner University Center.

Contact the author at Jberesheim11@wou.edu or on Twitter @WOUjournalnews

Disney announces nine new live action classic movies

By: Ashton Newton

Disney is a smart studio and they generally get things very right. They have Marvel and Lucasfilm under their belt, which have been getting huge amounts of praise and attention, but following the success of “The Jungle Book,” Disney has announced that they are going back to some of their classics.

Disney has announced live-action versions of nine classic tales, and while no official dates have been tied to the films, Disney says the earliest release would be July 2017.

First on Disney’s list is a live-action movie based off of Cruella Deville, simply titled “Cruella” with Emma Stone set to star.

Angelina Jolie is reprising her role as Maleficent in a sequel and Jon Favreau will be returning to direct “The Jungle Book 2.” A “Jungle Book” sequel may get dicey though, with Andy Serkis and Warner Bros. planning a darker version of the film to release next year.

Director Tim Burton is making his return to Disney with a new “Dumbo” film with “Transformers” writer Ehren Kruger penning the script.

Reese Witherspoon will be starring as Tinkerbell in a Tink-centered film, written by “Finding Dory” writer Victoria Strouse.

“A Wrinkle in Time” and “The Nutcracker” films are also being made.

Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson will star in “Jungle Cruise,” a film based off of the popular Disneyland ride. “Pirates of the Caribbean” also started off as a Disneyland ride, which inspired the film series.

Emily Blunt is going take on the iconic role of Mary Poppins for a sequel to the 1964 classic.

This lineup of movies is on top of the huge lineup of Marvel films on the way, including “Captain America: Civil War,” which released May 6, and the six “Star Wars” films Disney hopes to release by 2020.

Lastly, “Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales” is in development, with Johnny Depp, Orlando Bloom, and Keira Knightly all returning. The film is set to release May 2017.

It’s safe to say that Disney knows that they’re doing and have a long-term plan for their films, with both classics and fresh content.

Contact the author at anewton15@wou.edu

Idiot of the week

By: Jamal Smith
Sports Editor

When Johnny Manziel was selected with the 22nd overall pick in the 2014 NFL Draft by the Cleveland Browns, Cleveland fans celebrated like they had won the Super Bowl. Cleveland fans had good reason to be excited; Manziel electrified the college football world in his rookie season, becoming the first rookie quarterback in college football history to pass for 3,000 yards and rush for 1,000 yards on his way to becoming the 2012 Heisman Trophy winner.

Fast-forward two years and Johnny “Football” is making the headlines every week, but not for the right reasons. In this year’s NFL offseason, Manziel was released from the Browns, his agent, and his sponsors after weekly reports surfaced of Manziel’s excessive partying. Without an NFL team, Manziel’s life looks like a tragedy unfolding right before our eyes.

Manziel recently made the news yet again when the former Texas A&M star turned himself in on a domestic violence misdemeanor stemming from an incident in January involving his ex-girlfriend Colleen Crowley. Manziel was subsequently booked and released on a $1,500 bond.

Although Manziel’s stay in jail was brief, he left behind a mugshot that has gone viral. In the photo, Manziel is beaming with a smug, defiant grin. Then, shortly after his release, Manziel took to Twitter to show his defiance yet again by tweeting, “Just thankful I had a shirt this time.” The tweet was deleted shortly after it was posted to his account.

The tweet Manziel posted referenced a 2012 mug shot taken of a shirtless Manziel after he was arrested for disorderly conduct in a bar fight.

Manziel had the potential to be a great professional football player; however, his smug, defiant, and privileged attitude have attributed to his fall from grace. Stay tuned, this most likely isn’t the last time you will see Manziel in the news.

Contact the author at jsmith15@wou.edu or on Twitter @journalsportWOU

Ted Cruz allegedly seen picking up newly dry cleaned Zodiac Killer costume

By: Katrina Penaflor
Managing Editor

In a mom-and-pop dry cleaners in Dallas, Texas, it has been reported—and I use the term reported very loosely—that a man looking oddly similar to Ted Cruz was seen picking up some sort of Zodiac Killer-esque costume on May 5.

The costume, which may or may not be just an oversized black hoodie, was washed by an employee named Robin.

“I was given very specific directions by the man who placed the order to not remove the Cruz 2016 button from the garment. I tried to tell the man it would affect the cleaning, and that Cruz had recently ended his campaign, but he said, ‘leave it on, dammit,’” Robin said.

Robin was unfortunately unable to identify the man beyond saying he had brown hair. When asked what name was left on the order form, Robin showed a copy and under “name” it read “noT the ZoDiaC KiLleR.”

The second eyewitness, who wishes to be unnamed for obvious reasons, said Cruz entered the dry cleaner wearing a white button down shirt that definitely needed to be tailored, and when he exited the establishment he had the black cloak on and was wearing black framed glasses.

“That’s when I knew it was the Zodiac Killer,” he said. “I also saw him get in a gold minivan that was driven by a blonde woman in a pink pant suit. She even got out of the car and yelled at him to hurry up.”

Another Cruz spotting, which can definitely not be confirmed because I overheard two teenage boys talking about it while I waited in line at McDonald’s, said Cruz was also seen earlier that morning at a nearby Party City.

He allegedly asked an employee where their costume selection was, and quickly grew furious when he discovered they had sold out of their adult size large Zodiac Killer costumes.

He left the store in a rage, accidently punching and elbowing multiple employees and shoppers in the face on his way out.

Contact the author at journalmanaging@wou.edu or on Twitter @JournalKatrina