Mount Hood

ASWOU Representative Assembly strives for inclusivity

Zoë Strickland | Editor-in-Chief

Once per month, the ASWOU Representative Assembly meets to discuss and collaborate on ways to improve inclusivity on campus. The most recent meeting took place on March 1.

The board, which consists of a representatives from a myriad of different areas on campus Abby’s House, MECHa and MSU, amongst others was founded in 2015, with current ASWOU president Jessica Freeman as founder of the legislation.

“When I was writing legislation to create ARA, our goal was to create a board where ASWOU could work with clubs and organizations on a more personal level,” said Freeman. “We wanted every club and organization to be heard equally, regardless of their size.”

The primary concern of the most recent meeting was Diversity Week, which is scheduled to take place the week of May 14.

According to Ailyn Angel, Student Multicultural Board Chair for ARA and Director of Multicultural Advocacy for ASWOU, events for the week will consist of “a movie screening, a talent show, and different panels.” She added that, “As of right now, things aren’t set in stone, but we are working on finalizing an outline of the week soon.”

Also on the ARA agenda was further discussion of building more multicultural spaces on campus for clubs: “This space would be similar to how MSU has their own space, but for clubs like MEChA, Unidos, and BSU,” said Angel. “In attempts to achieve these goals, clubs are drafting letters to the administration describing what they want this space to entail. We are also outreaching for participants for diversity week to have panels, safe zones, and performances.”

Though the assembly is comprised of different organizations on campus, the meetings are open to all students. However, Angel noted that, “they must have permission for speaking privileges … and do not have voting rights. Despite this, I encourage students to come and give their input on these conversations, especially if you are interested in putting on an event for diversity week or being a part of ASWOU next year or being a club representative.”

Contact the author at journaleditor@wou.edu

Wolves’s season comes to an end

Morgan Swaim | Staff writer

With the West Regional being hosted in Monmouth, the Wolves earned the chance to play the first three tournament games at home on their attempt to capture a national championship.
In the opening round of the national tournament, the team played a familiar opponent. In November 2017 they were able to squeak out a 70-69 win against the Point Loma Sea Lions. Though the March 9 game does show a close score, it was completely different from the narrow win earlier in the season. The Wolves started the game not being able to miss, jumping out to an early 22-point lead in the first 10 minutes of the game. Senior forward Vince Boumann scored 12 of his 15 points in the first half, as the Sea Lions gave very little resistance in the paint early on. The hot start settled down after Point Loma was able to regain their composure and stop forcing turnovers, as they cut the Wolves lead to 11 heading into the first half.
Point Loma was able to slowly chip away, but the Wolves’s lead that was established in the first half was too large of a deficit in the 73-66 victory.
On March 10, GNAC foe St. Martin’s earned the chance to play the Wolves for the fourth time this season.
At the start, this game was unlike most that either team had played this season. Both teams were unable to get easy opportunities on offense. The Wolves shot 1-15 from the three-point line in the first half, with the Saints just making one of their eight attempts. With the lead at just 21-19, both teams wanted to speed the pace up. The Wolves were able to shift the momentum in the second half, as they quickly set the tone extending a lead to as high as 23 as time was winding down. After struggling in the first half, everything came together in the final 20 minutes as they defeated St. Martin’s for the fourth time this season to advance.

The last game that would be hosted in Monmouth was played the night of March 12 against the Cal Baptist Lancers. This marked the final home game the senior classmen would play, and gave the Wolves a chance to move on to the Elite Eight in South Dakota.
The Wolves found themselves facing a 10-point difference with just 3:36 remaining in the second half. With their season on the line, the team made an inspiring run to cut the Lancer lead to just two with 22 seconds remaining.
Senior guard Demetrius Trammell was able to provide a much needed spark in the final minutes. With three shots from behind the arc in the final two minutes, Trammell was able to shift the tide of the game completely.
The scoreboard read 78-76, with just 22 seconds left as the Wolves crawled their way back with a chance to win the game. After catching his man off guard with a spin move towards the basket, Senior Tanner Omlid’s shot in traffic was just a little bit too strong, bouncing off the back rim.
Time ran out on the Wolves’s effort and the Lancers were able to secure a 80-76 win as they moved on to the Elite Eight. “We dug out and gave ourselves a chance but we missed some easy opportunities,” said Head Coach Jim Shaw in the post-game press conference. “Give them credit, they played better than us. We turned them over and did a fantastic job in a game of this magnitude in taking care of the ball, but we just didn’t do enough good things to be successful tonight.”
This loss brought the team’s record breaking season to an end, finishing with a 31-2 overall record.

Contact the author at mswaim16@wou.edu

Photo by: Amber Holland

Writing to fight domestic violence

Sam Dunaway | News Editor

Western student Jamare Davis picked up a pen and notepad in the summer of 2017 and began writing, expressing his thoughts and feelings on an issue that he’d witnessed firsthand and one that he believed all people should be aware of: domestic violence.

According to the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence, one in three women and one in four men will experience physical abuse by an intimate partner in their lifetime. Davis, a senior criminal justice major, recognized this issue and sought out ways to make it more visible.

“If it was more publicized, I feel like people would be more aware of it,” Davis explained. He commented that, all too often, people are afraid to talk about it.

Davis has been an advocate at Sable House, a domestic and sexual violence resource center, since August 2017. There, he helps answer phones and organize donations. Additionally, he worked as an intern at Abby’s House, the Center for Equity and Gender Justice at Western.

When training for his advocate position, Davis struggled with the issue of domestic violence.

“How can people do this?” he remarked. To process his thoughts, Davis started writing poetry that addressed interpersonal violence.

It was Davis’s poem, “A Piece of Her,” that sparked the conversation to hold an event that brings the topic of domestic violence to light and allows individuals to creatively express their feelings, as Davis had done with his writing. With the help of Aislinn Addington, director of Abby’s House, a working group was formed that consisted of several individuals that felt passionate about this topic and wanted to contribute.

The “Hear Me Now” event was held on March 5 in the Willamette Room. Contributions included poetry, painting, mixed media and a dance performance. The gallery was open for students to view all day, and performances in the evening were open to whoever wanted to share their work.

When first writing his poem, Davis didn’t think he would be reading it for an audience months later. But he was just one of the many performers that evening.

“I didn’t think that I was going to be involved in it,” Davis said. “I’m still in awe.”

“Hear Me Now” gave students and community members the opportunity to express themselves and address the issue of domestic violence in an artistic manner. Davis’s poem and the numerous other works of art displayed at the event helped to spread awareness and visibility of this topic and inspire positive change against domestic violence.

Contact the author at journalnews@wou.edu

Photo by: Paul F. Davis

The West of Us debuts at Western

Zoë Strickland | Editor-in-Chief

On March 8, members of the community piled into Smith Hall for a 30-minute recital put on by the campus’s renamed and rebranded a cappella group, The West of Us.

The West of Us is comprised of members from the groups that were known as Suspended and 15 Miles West. Though the two groups joined together at the start of this academic year, March 8 was their first recital on Western soil. Last term they were busy preparing for the International Championship of Collegiate A Cappella — “if you’ve seen ‘Pitch Perfect’, that was the competition,” noted Chloe Miller, a first-year in the group, during the event.

For their performance, The West of Us sang a total of six songs.

“What we sang at the concert is 100 percent of our repertoire; we’re working on building it back up,” commented Brianna Williford, a history major who finished her degree during fall term.

The group began the night with their renditions of “Forget You” by Cee Lo Green and “And So It Goes” by Billy Joel, followed by two songs that were part of Suspended and 15 Miles West’s individual setlists.

After introducing themselves to the audience, the women went on to perform their “Destiny’s Child Melody,” an arrangement which was part of their set last year as well. Following the women, the men took the stage to perform their “Disney Melody,” which is a mashup of songs from “Mulan,” “Hercules,” “Moana” and “Frozen.”

The members regrouped to perform a mashup that included songs by Kanye West, Estelle and Daft Punk. They ended the night by performing “Bet on It” from “High School Musical.”

The group is led by Eli Schenk and Brianna Williford, who have been involved in Western a cappella for six and four years, respectively. Schenk is in charge of most of the musical arrangements, while Williford handles group organization and personnel.

The groups had considered joining forces for the past couple years, and finally did so because the timing felt right.

“Through ASWOU, we’re one club. We’re ‘A Cappella club’ so we’ve been working together, we’ve done all of our retreats together, we usually sing mixed group songs,” explained Williford. “Mixed group songs are more dynamic, you have more range, more ideas that are all going to be different. We were already doing so much together, and this year we reached a point where it made sense.”

As next term begins, The West of Us will be gearing up to learn more songs for their spring concert, which is tentatively scheduled to take place in the amphitheater at Main Street Park.

As part of their preparation for the event, the group is adding more songs to their repertoire.

“I’m arranging a medley of [“The Greatest Showman”] for us to sing next term,” commented Cole Aldred, a junior communications major and three-year member of the group.

Contact the author at journaleditor@wou.edu

 

Western students participate in the National School Walkout

Sam Dunaway | News Editor

At 10 a.m. on the morning of March 14, nearly 250 Western students, staff and administrators left classrooms, evacuated offices and gathered in front of the Werner University Center. There, students of all backgrounds, races, genders and political beliefs joined schools across the nation in participating in the National School Walkout, a nationwide movement to end gun violence.

The walkout, according to ABC news, was one of over 3,000 scheduled events around the U.S. The purpose of the event, stated by the National School Walkout campaign was to “demand Congress pass legislation to keep us safe from gun violence at our schools, on our streets and in our homes and places of worship.”

Each individual involved in the National School Walkout had their own reason for participating. For sophomore early childhood education major Ellie Oven, that reason was acknowledging the lives lost to gun violence.

“I walked out to honor the students that have lost their lives to school shootings, and to remember those teachers and administrators who lost their lives trying to protect those students,” said Oven.

For others, like junior humanities major Bridget Reaume, it was about being part of the larger movement.

“It’s really easy to feel like we don’t have a part in the bigger movement … Especially not being home in Portland where I can feel a lot more of the movement happening, it feels really nice to feel as though I have a hand in the change,” said Reaume. “To see other people coming together and wanting to make the same movement and have the same goals that I have, it really feels we have a chance at changing things.”

Western’s branch of the event, organized by senior gerontology major Lila Gardner and senior interdisciplinary studies major Alyssa Chiampi, gained support early on from University President Rex Fuller. Fuller sent an email to all faculty and staff on March 6 notifying them that this event was being planned and encouraging staff to support participating students.

Fuller expressed, “I believe this action is consistent with Western’s values and our strategic plan which states that our community will strive toward a ‘caring, safe environment for the cultivation of peace, civility and social justice; connections extending beyond the classroom, across campus and into our local and global communities.’”

Gardner and Chiampi felt overwhelmed by the amount of support from faculty and administrators, as well as the number of individuals that participated in the walkout on Western’s campus.

“Getting involved in a young age is really difficult when you’re in an area that doesn’t support your activism,” Gardner explained. Her goal was to get people more involved in voicing their opinions, stand in solidarity with hundreds of students around the nation and work toward positive change.

When asked what she hopes students take away from the walkout, Chiampi replied: “I really hope they take away that belief that they can do really anything they want to.” Gardner added that she hopes students “believe in their voices, their beliefs and their passions, and … always fight as passionately as (they) can for it. Even if two, four, five people show up or 250 people show up. Fight for it.”

 

Contact the author at journalnews@wou.edu

Guns in schools

Lake Larsen | Digital Media Manager

Never in my life did I think I would have to worry about being shot while at school. But my senior year of high school, a student came into my school with a firearm and, right after lunch, proceeded to shoot themself in class.

While this was a suicide and not an attempt on other lives, just the thought that someone at my own school came in with a loaded firearm frightened me. I always believed my school was safe, yet now my high school is on a list where someone has lost their life due to guns being within school walls.

In the wake of the Parkland shooting, an idea has been circulating that hopes to put an end to gun deaths in schools: the arming of teachers with firearms. At first, the ever present yelp of “good guys with guns stop bad guys with guns” seems to fit, but does this actually work? Does a teacher with a gun stop a school shooter? I’d like to call into question this good over evil mentality and the impact that giving teachers firearms would really have.

The first step in arming teachers would be to select which teachers you want to carry firearms and to train them. For argument’s sake, let’s say there are a number of volunteer teachers ready and willing to carry firearms. If you want a teacher to react in an emergency situation like a police officer, train them like one. However, the basic idea of training already brings a dilemma: a teacher’s time.

Being a teacher, you have to put genuine time and effort into each lesson you teach. Planning lessons, grading homework and tests and even just responding to emails takes a lot of time. So, on top of all the work teachers are already asked to do, they then have to train for an active shooter situation so they can effectively try to extinguish a threat.

If you skip over the potential cost to schools needing to supply this training to teachers — which is already a huge thing to overlook — you have to ask: would this time spent training be paid? If it is, that means teachers would be more inclined to carry, as it is a more fiscally responsible choice. In many school districts across the country, classrooms are severely underfunded and staff grossly underpaid. That means if a teacher either wants to make enough money to afford living or have extra money to fund their classroom with basic necessities, they have to moonlight as a pseudo-police officer.

However, what if training is volunteer based so the time is unpaid? That means you’re only drawing from teachers who have enough time to adopt a sort of second job. This job being one that takes away time from an educator trying to impact a students life for the better and instead devotes it to trying to be a hero during a mass shooting. Already, the idea of arming teachers means asking underfunded schools to divert funds away from educating our youth to instead supply firearm training to underpaid teachers. It is either this or making teachers pay for their own training. Or, even worse, just treating a school like the wild west and letting untrained teachers run around freely with guns. None of the options seem too great.

The next issue faced would be the selection of a firearm. If a teacher chooses some variant of a rifle or shotgun, that means it would need to be stored in a locked desk or safe — if you want the weapon to be stored safely, that is. In the event of an emergency, the teacher would have to go to the gun safe, unlock it, load the gun, then locate and stop the threat, resulting in precious time lost.

However, I believe the most likely firearm for a teacher to wield would be a semi-automatic handgun, due to their compactness making them easy to conceal. But just because the gun is hidden, doesn’t mean it’s safe. Having a gun on you at all times means at any point in time you could accidentally discharge the weapon — something that has already happened in a school this year.

Last, the main point in teachers carrying guns is to protect the students in the event of a shooting. During an active shooter situation, the armed teacher would be expected to react in a way to stop the threat.

In the high stress environment of an active shooter situation, the teacher would need to remain calm, find the shooter and take them out. Expecting them to stop the shooter would mean the armed teacher would need to abandon their class full of students, potentially putting them in danger. A simple misidentification of someone as a threat means the teacher could kill an innocent person. But if the teacher were to stay in their classroom, then that means the shooter is free to continue causing harm.

The general notion of having any faculty member on a school campus carrying a weapon is not only dangerous, but fiscally irresponsible. I do believe there are teachers out there capable of stopping a threat, but this comes at much too high of a cost.

At face value, you might think a good guy with a gun stops a bad guy with a gun, but this is just flat out wrong. A police officer with excellent training stops a bad guy with a gun. If you want school campuses to be safe, maybe it’s time to consider gun control that doesn’t force firearms into the hands of teachers.

Contact the author at llarsen13@mail.wou.edu

Photo by: aadl.org

Vikings sank, while Clan swarms Western

Simson Garcia | Sports Editor

GNAC conference softball play is officially underway. The season took a few turns to start on March 10-11. The four-game conference trek for the Wolves began in Western Washington where Western dealt a sweep with scores of 6-3 and 4-3, and continued on up to Simon Fraser, where they folded two games with scores of 2-1 and 5-3.
The first doubleheader featured two of Western’s premier pitchers throwing complete games.
With only two earned runs given up, junior Haley Fabian struck out five at the helm of the first game. Although the offense of both teams provided a batting battle throughout.
At nil-nil in the third inning, Western finally scored two off first-year right fielder Tyler Creach’s triple, that struck deep into right center. Senior outfielder Zoe Clark’s solo home run soon found its way into the stands but the Vikings also found home through base stealing and an error that cut the score to 3-2. But Fabian and the Wolves’s defense around her fended off the relentless hitting of the Viks that helped move Fabian’s pitching record to 4-3 on the season.

I think our defense is very good at communicating for the most part,” said Fabian. “It helps my pitching when my teammates behind me are talking to me. Infield and outfield are really good about having my back and fighting for the out. When I see them fighting so hard for the out, that makes me work so much harder and makes me want to fight for them.”
Senior Lizzet Dominguez completed the second campaign by striking out three and moved her record to 5-1 while also giving up only two runs.
The game took two swings, however, in the fifth and sixth innings. Off a Wolves wild pitch, the Vikings scored a run from third base to go up 3-2. But the Wolves got the deciding 2-run homer from junior catcher Nicole Miller to sweep the series.
Fabian and Dominguez again pitched back-to-back complete games in the second doubleheader against the Clan. Dominguez kept the Clan at bay for most of game one but it didn’t go far in keeping Simon Fraser from getting two runs — just enough to put down the Wolves. SFU loaded the bases in the fifth, and scored two to grab the series lead at 1-0.
The momentum looked like it would shift in the rematch as a pair of first-year Wolf players ignited home plate. First-year catcher Mariah Deleon swung away in the first to run-bat-in Creach. The two meshed again in the third inning off of Deleon’s homer to gain further momentum.
That quickly changed in the fourth as SFU loaded the bases again and scored three to go up 4-3, later made 5-3, to decide the series at 2-0. Now at 12-9, Western debuts on its home field this weekend on March 17-18 in another back-to-back doubleheader.

The team is very excited about playing at home this weekend. We are excited to have the advantage this weekend. If we get the opportunity to play at home, we don’t want to take it for granted. We want to give these games our all,” said Fabian.

First arriving to the diamond for two games will be St. Martin’s with opening pitches set for 12 and 2 p.m. Central Washington will appear in the second doubleheader with the same time frame.

Contact the author at journalsports@wou.edu

Photo by: wouwolves.com