Mount Hood

Two finishing runs puts the Wolves in playoffs

Simson Garcia | Sports Editor

Tied with Montana State and Simon Fraser at 13-13 in conference record, Wolves softball clinched the fourth and final playoff spot on senior day, April 29, beating out Montana. After shutting out Simon Fraser 8-0, the opposing team reversed the doubleheader, shutting the Wolves out 4-0 on April 28. A second opponent, the Western Washington Vikings, entered Western’s home field on April 29. Their doubleheader matchup started after a rain delay, but the Wolves eventually concluded their home stand with two game playoff clinching runs: 11-10, and 11-2.

The Wolves celebrated two seniors, pitcher Lizzet Dominguez and outfielder Zoe Clark, in their final career home games.  

“I’m just so proud of everyone. I think this is a perfect time for everyone to gel as we go into playoffs,” Dominguez commented.

Only one hit traveled past Western’s defense as pitcher Haley Fabian, junior, almost added a complete no hitter in the shutout. The visiting team swung hard and got their lone hit in the fifth inning, but most contact was limited to fly outs.

Western’s offense went to work in every inning earning one hit in each and 12 overall on the game. The Wolves quickly got to the bag early with junior infielder Ryanne Huffman. She stole both second and third bases in aims for home base and the games first score.

Three home run shots were also delivered by the Wolves in the takedown of their opponents.

While hitting came in bunches in game one, Wolf bats only found two while runners on base couldn’t reach home in the immediate rematch. Simon Fraser’s Alia Stachoski, second in GNAC pitching in strikeouts, got the Wolves looking and missing, fanning six in her complete game.

With two final home games to go, the Vikings were all that were left for the Wolves. The game provided the most action throughout the four-game span, as both teams batted a combined 30 total hits. The Wolves got out quickly with five runs in the first inning but it was the Vikings’s turn in the fifth. Washington filled the bases and a three-run double to left field got them back in it to tie, 5-5.

Both teams battled all the way up until an extra inning with the game, at 10 runs apiece. With two outs and two on, Western’s left fielder Ayanna Arceneaux, sophomore, singled to the right side for the walk-off game winner.

The walk-off and momentum flowed into the final matchup beginning where they left off with Arceneaux batting in two. Clark delivered, however, in her final home performance. Her first homer help put the Wolves up by several notches at 6-0.

Clark’s second home run to center field delivered the final play of the game.

“I think it’s great going into this weekend into the GNAC tournament with everybody being zero-zero. We’ll just go in with all the fight that we have and leave it all out on the field,” said Clark.

Before the GNAC tournament officially starts, one more away game is to be played with Western traveling to Portland for a matchup with Northwest Nazarene on May 3 at 7 p.m.

Contact the author at journalsports@wou.edu

Photo by: wouwolves.com

25 years of celebration

Sam Dunaway | News Editor

Bells that decorate clothing ring with every step, a drum beat that’s so loud that it vibrates the walls. Positive energy radiated from the arena during Multicultural Student Union’s 25th annual Pow Wow — the largest annual celebration of Native American culture on Western’s campus.

“With the Native American people, we don’t have many ways of coming together and celebrating,” explained Nick Sixkiller, master of ceremonies for the event and member of the Cherokee of Oklahoma tribe. Sixkiller has been the emcee for Western’s annual Pow Wow for nearly a decade.

The Pow Wow provides an opportunity for Native Americans to share various dances from their culture. These dances include both the men’s and women’s Fast and Fancy Dance, the Jingle Dress Dance and the men’s and women’s Traditional Dance that, according to Sixkiller, “represents all of our Indian nations.”

All dances have a story; the Jingle Dress Dance originated from a Ojibwe man’s vision that provided instructions for a dance that would cure his ill daughter. Regalia, or Native American outfits, for the Jingle Dress Dance include rows of metal cones, referred to in the Ojibew language as ‘ziibaaska ‘iganan,’ that ring with every step. Sixkiller commented that, when the arena is filed with dancers, “it sounds like a rainstorm in Oregon.”

Native American dances are fluid and allow an opportunity for personal expression.

“Your vision is in your own head dancing and you just gotta listen to the drum beat,” Sixkiller explained. The drum beat represents the heartbeat of Mother Earth and how she gives life to the native people. “There’s no one style of dancing. It’s what’s in your body and how you want to dance this style.”

In addition to the entertainment for the 12-hour event on April 28, Native American vendors brought in handmade items to share their culture with others.

One of the vendors, Tina, is a South American Indian from the Andes. She displayed hand carved wooden flutes, rings made from coconut shells and twisted wire jewelry.

“In the old times, we didn’t have electricity, we didn’t have anything,” said Tina. “So what we learned to do is things by hand. We learned how to weave, we learned how to do jewelry, we learned how to work with the animal furs. We just had the whole time in our hands.”

Since she moved to Oregon, she shares her love of working with her hands with her friends and children. She fondly looks back on the days growing up in the Andes.

“It was busy, busy life,” Tina remembered, smiling. “It was wonderful.”

Pow Wows are not only an opportunity to entertain with song and dance, but they are also a time for Native Americans to gather and educate others on their history. Sixkiller hopes that more people learn about the true story of the Native Americans.

“We’re the first persons here on this land and we’re ignored. And we can’t change it,” Sixkiller expressed. “It’s just irritating. We’re trying to get teachers in schools to talk more about natives in truth rather than what the old history books are talking about.”

He explained that one way that people can learn about the culture is attending an event like this.

“I’d like to invite everybody to come to a Pow Wow and learn more about American Indians and not what history has taught them over the years,” Sixkiller encouraged.

“I feel like we aren’t really shown Native Americans and their culture,” said MSU’s Social Membership Director and sophomore Gabbie Acevedo-Solis. “It’s good to be aware and be informed as well as celebrate.”

Acevedo-Solis also encourages individuals to experience the various Native American dances at their annual Pow Wow. She explained that the positive energy on the dance floor spreads throughout the audience and can be felt by everyone; “You have to see it for yourself and you’ll realize how beautiful it really is.”

Contact the author at journalnews@wou.edu

Photo by: Paul F. Davis

Getting thrifty near Monmouth

Caity Healy | Lifestyle Editor

Thrift shopping is an activity that has a large appeal amongst many college students; it offers cheap options, outlandish finds, a challenge — at times — and the feeling of knowing whatever you find will set you apart from others.

While it’s easy to thrift at places like Goodwill, as you can almost always count on there being something worth finding, sometimes looking at smaller local shops can offer an even more exciting quest. At locations just down the road from Western sit several shops, each with their own personality and style, that are worth checking out. Next time you’re about to embark on your next treasure hunt, make your way down to one of these; you never know what you might find.

 

Blast Off Vintage

Located at 1223 Commercial St SE, Salem, Oregon

With a substantial collection of random items — from skateboards, to vinyl, to vintage attire and random band tees — this store has something for everyone.

 

Robin’s Roost

Located at 283 S. Second St, Independence, Oregon

Furniture, jackets, vases and many other treasures can be found by spending a little time hunting at this location.

 

Consignment Monster

488 E. Ellendale Ave Suite 2, Dallas, Oregon

All of their merchandise is arranged in a clean, organized way, so you’ll have an easy time navigating through their fair-priced items. By checking their Facebook, you can see the items they are looking for people to bring in for consignment.

 

Same As It Never Was Vintage

Located at 386 S. Main St, Independence, Oregon

Offering unique items, some of it handmade, this store sells everything at a great value and can guarantee you’ll leave with something unique.

 

Funky Munky Urban Consignment Boutique

Located at 3989 Commercial St SE, Salem, Oregon

Selling clothes and accessories that are trending this season, you’ll get all the brands you know and love for a fraction of the price. They will take and sell your seasonal items.

 

Fashion Sense

Located at 150 C. St, Independence, Oregon

High-end clothing, furniture and decor sold for far less than you’d find elsewhere, this location is worth taking a look around in. They will also purchase your clothing from you.

 

Contact the author at chealy16@wou.edu

Photo by: Caity Healy

Podcast Roundup

Zoë Strickland | Editor-in-Chief

“Decoder Ring”

Hosted by Willa Pasket, TV critic for Slate, “Decoder Ring” aims to demystify certain aspects of culture. The podcast was launched on April 29 and has only produced one episode — a 30-minute piece on the history of the Laff Box, the first laugh-track machine. According to Slate’s website, every month Pasket will, “take on a cultural question, object, idea, or habit and speak with experts, historians and obsessives to figure out where it comes from, what it means and why it matters.”

“Decoder Ring” is interesting to listen to because it does just that. The show makes listeners think about aspects of culture that may not be on their mind — I can honestly tell you that I had never thought about laugh tracks as in-depth as this show talked about them.

Photo by: player.fm

“I Need My Space”

“I Need My Space” is a podcast put out by Inverse, a website that’s aimed at exploring science, innovation and new ideas. The show is hosted by Rae Paoletta, senior editor for the site, and comedian Steve Ward. While “I Need My Space” explores questions relating to space and intergalactic travel, it does so in a more lighthearted way than podcasts like “StarTalk Radio.” Paoletta and Ward interview both space experts and space enthusiasts to answer a myriad of questions that range from “what do aliens really look like?” to “why do we love shooting things into space?”

“I Need My Space” is a must-listen for people who are interested in space, but who also love to ponder the questions that may be less serious. It’s important to know what Elon Musk is doing, but it’s also fun to think about what life in a spacecraft is like.

Photo by: Inverse.com

“Dear Franklin Jones”

I discovered this podcast while scrolling through the available podcast options in the Google Play store. “Dear Franklin Jones” follows Jonathan Hirsch, the show’s producer, as he tries to uncover the truth about a group led by Franklin Jones that he was raised in — the group has been deemed controversial because of speculation that they’re a cult.

The ‘cast consists of seven short episodes that document Hirsch’s journey as he tries to understand Jones’s effect on Hirsch life, family and the lives of the people who followed Jones. “Dear Franklin Jones” is an explorative podcast that follows the same vein of productions like “Missing Richard Simmons” — Hirsch uses extensive interviews, research, as well as his own self-reflection to work towards uncovering information about Jones.

Photo by: www.stitcher.com

“Nancy”

“Nancy” is the only podcast on this list that wasn’t introduced in April 2018 — but it turned a year old in April. Hosted by Kathy Tu and Tobin Low, the podcast focuses on showcasing different perspectives from people in the LGBTQ+ community. Though the podcast begins with Tu and Low talking about their individual coming out stories, it shifts into being a podcast that relies on interviews with celebrities like Lena Waithe and Nico Tortorella, or people closer to their lives like their moms.

Though “Nancy” helps give a voice to people throughout the community, it stands out because of the heart that Tu and Low have. Both hosts are clearly invested in the stories that they’re presenting and it shows.

Photo by: npr.org

Contact the author at journaleditor@wou.edu

Teacher and coach guides students and athletes

Simson Garcia | Sports Editor

One coach and one player, in one frustrating lacrosse game, came together on the sidelines. The player was down on himself after his team’s struggles on the field, losing to that end. The coach pulled him to the side, calmed him down and talked to him.

“I had to reassure him that ‘hey, everything’s going to be alright man. It’s just a setback.’ I pretty much took him through the way I would through my students,” said Ronald Rothstein.

Rothstein is a Western alumni, who’s also an assistant coach for Western’s lacrosse club team and an instructional assistant for the Salem-Keizer school district. The students Rothstein currently works with, according to him, “have a long range of different diagnoses like autism spectrum, ADHD, or they’re emotionally disturbed or another way to put it, emotionally dysregulated, so they don’t have the right coping mechanism to channel their frustration, anxiety, and sadness.”

He specifically teaches in a classroom of 12 students, teaching academics, writing, reading and other basic education.

“But we also have a big emphasis on teaching them to control their behavior, how to manage self-control, how to manage being obedient and following expectations,” Rothstein commented.

The last part is something that’s important in Rothstein’s classroom.

“That’s a key phrase I use, ‘teaching them to follow expectations’ because a lot of kids like to bend the rules and not follow the same expectations as others.” Rothstein explained that it’s one of the factors that holds his students back from transitioning into the traditional classroom.

“My classroom has less students, more staff so that way we’re giving these students more undivided attention to help them with their behavior issues,” mentioned Rothstein.

Initially wanting to be a social studies teacher, with social sciences eventually being the degree he’d attain, a change occurred. Leading up to his graduation in 2014, he came to a realization that he no longer, for the time being, wished to follow up on his major to become a social studies teacher. The minor in special education was the degree he followed up on after gaining experience to his resume.

“The job I had at the time, while in college, was a group home, called Work Unlimited. It’s a non-profit that houses adolescents and adults with developmental disabilities,” Rothstein said.

While there Rothstein taught them life skills: how to follow a schedule and basic needs like cooking, cleaning and chores.

Work Unlimited helped Rothstein help others. It was at this particular job where Rothstein learned how to help his future students cope with behavioral issues, build a self regulatory skill to keep them from hurting others or themselves, and a de-escalation process that calmed them down if they got angry or frustrated.

A master’s degree in special education is now planned for Rothstein.

“It’s been something I’ve been wanting to do for quite some time now … I’m attending a school in Boston in the fall. I’m going to get what’s called an Applied Behavioral Analysis,” Rothstein mentioned.

Obtaining the latter makes him a nationally certified behavioral analyst, something that will stretch his opportunities to find work in his specialized area.

Rothstein’s been able juggle both worlds of classroom and field, and mentioned like in the first example of how he’s been able to transfer his teaching skills back and forth between classroom and field.

An avid sports enthusiast his entire life, he started playing full contact football in kindergarten while growing up in New York. He was a three-star athlete in high school, playing in all years.

But the biggest sports blast off in his life, or “shock” rather, came with the game of lacrosse at Western.

“It was the best chapter in my life in sports,” said Rothstein. Rothstein played goalie throughout his years on the field.

The chapter had four parts — all successful seasons, with storybook endings.

“We had this motto, ‘we shocked the world,’” Rothstein commented.

Western won their conference championship in Rothstein’s first three years. Up to that point, the team had won six straight conference titles, but lost in the first round of the Nationals each time. His most significant year, he states, came during his senior year in 2014 when his team went 15-1 before losing in an upset to Western Washington for the conference championship. The Wolves’s at large seed, however, enabled them to earn a legitimate seed in the playoffs. They’d finally got past the first round before “going out with a bang” as Rothstein expressed, to eventual champions Grand Valley State.

Now an assistant coach for Western’s lacrosse team, a position he’s held for two years, he hopes to “bring that swagger back” with the new batch of lacrosse athletes.

“We have a lot of incoming freshman, a lot of them look to have that tenacity to come out and put in the work,” said Rothstein.

After a discussion with the lacrosse athlete, Rothstein wanted to note that “life gets tough, but it only gets better.”

His go-to quote he uses with both his students and athletes is by Ralph Waldo-Emerson; “Nothing great could ever be achieved without enthusiasm.”

“I try to come in every practice like ‘hey, c’mon let’s go, let’s keep the momentum going’, or, I go in the classroom and I’m like ‘hey c’mon let me help you, we got this, we’re okay,’” Rothstein said.

Rothstein commented that he does this to motivate and so “people can see that and pass it on, because that will make everyone achieve and be successful.”

Contact the author at journalsports@wou.edu

Photo by: Ron Rothstein

Initiative Petition 22 threatens Oregon immigrants

Sam Dunaway | News Editor

Thirty-one years ago, the Oregon sanctuary law was put in place to prevent Oregon law enforcement agencies from “detecting or apprehending” individuals solely based on federal immigration law violations. A new initiative petition seeks to place a measure on the November ballot to repeal this law and remove Oregon’s sanctuary state title.

“I believe it’s something that would put a lot of communities under attack and fear,” explained Unidos Vice President and sophomore Monica Ortiz.

Western’s Unidos Club strives to act as a “support system to everyone who identifies as undocumented and/or are DACA recipients” according to the Unidos OrgSync. The club hosted an informational workshop on April 26 which aimed to educate students about the proposed ballot measure.

The main organization behind the campaign for IP 22 is Oregonians For Immigration Reform, or OFIR. According to their website, OFIR “works to stop illegal immigration as well as reduce legal immigration to a more environmentally, economically and socially sustainable level here in Oregon and across the United States.”

Unidos President Cristina Garcia, however, believes that the measure would only incite hate in Oregon.

“It would cause more division,” Garcia stated. Because the ballot measure would allow law enforcement to stop individuals on the basis of citizenship, she believes that it would lead to an unsafe environment.

“People of color wouldn’t feel comfortable walking around, because they’d be targeted by police,” explained Garcia.

The workshop explained the purpose of the initiative, the organizations such as OFIR that are behind it and ways that students can get involved such as voting and telling others what IP 22 is.

Garcia encourages students to get informed on the initiative petition; “We’re trying to let people know that this is what it is, don’t sign it.”

In addition to the informational workshop, a timeline of immigrant rights history with significant events including the signing of the federal anti-immigration bills in 1996 and the Oregon sanctuary state law passing in 1987 was displayed. Ortiz believes that Oregonians can create positive changes for the future.

“I believe that now is the time to do something about changing the timeline, doing something positive and helping pass something that is helping communities, not bringing them down and in fear,” expressed Ortiz.

Contact the author at journalnews@wou.edu

Photo by: LATimes.com

Packing for a picnic

Caity Healy | Lifestyle Editor

As the sun begins making a more regular appearance, now’s the perfect time to take advantage of every second of sunshine you can fit into your day. Unfortunately, for many, finding time to just hangout and bask in the warmth isn’t exactly an option. An easy way to make some time, even if only for 30 minutes, is by bringing your regular indoor meals to the outdoors.

By setting out a blanket on the grass, bringing a couple friends with you and making some yummy recipes, you’ll have the ingredients of a perfect picnic. While you can ultimately bring whatever dishes you’d like, packing your meals in Mason jars makes for an environmentally-friendly, simple and aesthetically pleasing meal. Follow the instructions on some of these quick and easy Mason jar recipes that will leave your mouth watering and have you begging for another break in the sun.

 

Black Bean Salad

At the bottom of your jar, pour about ¼ cup of your favorite salsa. On top of this, add 1 ¼ tsp of sour cream (this can be substituted with Greek yogurt for a lighter meal). Dice half of a tomato and add this on top, then follow it up with about ¼ of a chopped red onion. Next, add about ¼ of a can of drained black beans on top of that. Purchase corn, and add about ¼ cup on top of that. Top all of this with half of a sliced avocado, a sprinkle of jack or cheddar cheese and some chopped romaine lettuce. Leave divided to keep the produce as fresh as possible, but mix together before eating.

Inspired by organizeyourselfskinny.com

 

Fruit and Yogurt Parfait

In a bowl, combine a single serving container of Greek yogurt (any flavor you’d like), with 2 tsps of milk, ⅓ cup of granola and 1 tsp of chia seeds. Once mixed together, scoop half and put it at the bottom of your jar. Top this with your choice of mixed berries, which can be fresh or frozen. Top this again with the yogurt mixture, and cap it off with the last of your berries. Refrigerate this overnight for best results.

Inspired by iowagirleats.com

 

Apple Pie in a Jar

This one is less of a recipe, and more of an easy way to transport a classic dessert that can be easily altered to save room to top with ice cream or whipped cream. Purchase a frozen apple pie (such as Marie Callender’s), and bake as instructed, but don’t add the brown sugar topping. Once cooked, scoop it into oven-safe jars. Don’t worry about keeping it intact, as it will become more of a crumble pie. Add the topping and bake for another 10 minutes. Bring any toppings with you that you’d like.

Contact the author at chealy16@wou.edu

Photo by: Caity Healy