Mount Hood

The Motown Throwdown

By: Burke De Boer
Sports Editor

In the far-out year of 1975, a motley pack of punks set upon the Old PE Building to beat one another bloody. Hundreds of Western students, then called the Oregon College of Education students, came together to dig on the wild fist dishing and watch Tim Hundley reign supreme.

This was the TKB Smoker: an annual boxing tournament, hosted in May or June of each year. A trip to the archives at Hamersly Library unpacked the details of this event that has long since disappeared from the campus.

The host of these spring season rumbles was a fraternity, of sorts. They called themselves TKB and were neither affiliated with a national Greek organization nor sanctioned as a club by the university.

In the 1962 intramural football tournament, their team was billed as Theta Kappa Beta. In the days of short haircuts and picket fences, there was still an attempt to be respectable.

But by the 1970s, after a decade of political protests and the advent of heavy metal, the era of renegades was upon the nation. When the campus newspaper covered the Smoker in 1971, they proudly went by the name they were truly known as: Tappa Kegga Beer.

Tappa Kegga membership consisted primarily of players on the Wolves football team. Players such as the 1972 offensive captain and running back, Doug Trice. Trice’s 5,416-career all-purpose yards is a school record nobody’s come close to touching. And Terry Watkins, the defensive line captain.

And Tim Hundley, who played at safety and linebacker as an All-American.

In addition to playing intercollegiate ball, TKB would organize a team for the intramural football tournament every year. In all the archived intramural coverage, TKB’s teams never lost.

The gridiron gang did not fare as well in the boxing ring though. The set up, advertised to entice any and all challengers, was that a TKB member would be matched up in weight class with any non-member. Hundley, Trice, Watkins: you, too, have a chance to flatten their noses.

Every year, Tappa Kegga brawlers wound up on the losing side of the overall head-to-head records. In 1973, they won five of the 12 fights, which was a pretty good year.

They could scrap together a few wins and Tim Hundley would lead the charge. He boasted five wins in a six-year span, as he transitioned from a football player and began his coaching career as a graduate program assistant.

One of Hundley’s most reliable defensive teammates was a player named Jack Flitcraft. From 1969 to 1973, Flitcraft was a Wolves icon. In his time, he set the school record for interceptions in a career. His record still stands at 21. For perspective, the career interceptions leader among the currently active roster is redshirt senior linebacker Tyler Johnson, who has four.

Flitcraft also played baseball, leading the team in runs, hits and RBIs. He was known as an all-around athlete, affectionately called “Flit.” He was not a member of Tappa Kegga Beer.

In June of 1971, Hundley drew Flit. Hundley had 10 pounds on his teammate, and was considered the favorite.

The bout opened as expected, with Hundley landing heavy hits. But Flit was more formidable than expected. A quicker, fleet-footed fighter, Flitcraft showed the speed that would lead to his school interceptions record.

When the final bell rang, it was Flit’s glove that was raised. By decision, the upset was complete.

Mike Haglund, a campus reporter who was in attendance, described the aftermath; “Tim just smiled and gave his congrats to Jack and they left the ring together.”

Tim Hundley fought for six years through annual matches with only one loss. And Jack Flitcraft would go down as the man who delivered it.

By the end of the ‘70s, the event had grown to being, by the account of the 1978 newspapers, “the most popular campus activity of the year.”

And, by this time, a new Tappa Kegga brother had risen from his ranks to lead his fraternity of fighters; Lee Reed, who in ‘78 was called “The Muhammad Ali of TKB,” strung together his own streak of smashing victories.

Gill Boardman, a campus newspaper staff writer, covered the ‘77 Smoker by saying, “The highlight of the evening had to be whether Lee Reed would put his opponent down in the first or second round.”

Then, in 1979, it all came crashing down. Or, at least, the boxing ring did. Before a crowd of 900, the floor of the ring collapsed.
It was repaired, and the bouts continued. Mark Smith, as a spokesman from the fraternity, later explained that they didn’t have the time to check the safety of the ring.

But in the 1980 intramural football tournament, no TKB team competed.
No mention of Tappa Kegga was found in the Reagan era papers. With no clue as to how it happened, the club disappeared. Perhaps the spirit of the ‘70s simply kept them bound to that happenin’ decade.

So who exactly was the best TKB boxer? As they were fraternity brothers, Hundley and Reed never duked it out. But if they had, the overlap would have landed right when one was a graduate student and the other fresh out of high school.

Hundley may have been one tough dude during his tenure as a pugilist, but something worth noting is Reed’s accomplishments after the fall of the Smokers. The Wolves Taekwondo club competed in Portland in 1980 and 1981, and Reed took the Northwest heavyweight black belt championship both times.

Taekwondo and boxing are, admittedly, different beasts, but it’s no wonder that Reed was so accomplished in the ring. For as long as his time lasted, at least, then he was off to prove his mettle in other arenas.

The ‘70s ended, so did the Smokers. And so did Tappa Kegga Beer.

Contact the author at journalsports@wou.edu

Artist spotlight: Patty MeLT

By: Ashton Newton
Entertainment Editor

For many students, music is a great hobby. Writing, playing and even listening to music is beneficial and rewarding. Western student Patrick Jaursch, sophomore psychology major, takes that one step further by pursuing music as a passion.

“My music is very freeing. For me, I write music to get away from the stresses of life. Music is a way for me to relieve and get things off my head while I express myself through a creative outlet which allows me to make something that I can enjoy doing and other people can enjoy hearing,” said Jaursch.

Jaursch goes by the name Patty MeLT for all his music, a name he carefully chose.

“I chose Patty MeLT as a name because I love music so much that I wanted to take the whole ‘rapper’ stereotype out of its box,” said Jaursch. “I’m Patty MeLT because it clicks in your head and makes you say ‘isn’t that a sandwich, that’s kind of weird.’ I just wanted to evoke an emotion that’s off-putting.”

Jaursch is actively writing and recording new music. In 2016, he released a 10-track album called “TIMBERLINE: A Comprehensive Journey” that featured rap, some folk and a skit. A new single, “T I D E S,” was released on April 10 and marks a shift in Patty MeLT’s music.

“I’m moving onto bigger and better things, making music that actually comes from my heart. I’m doing things because it’s what other people do, I’m on my own path now.”

Patty MeLT’s next big project, which doesn’t have a release date yet, comes straight from the ideas that he begins to work with in “T I D E S.”

He says the album “is about saving the world. It’s a story, an audiobook. It’s not actually an album, I can say that much. While there’s music in it, more than anything I want to convey a message, so I’m trying to tell a story. I wrote a book and I’m having somebody, who if people listen to my music they’ll know who they are very well, narrate the album.”

When he’s not making music, Jaursch enjoys hanging out with friends, writing poetry and doing anything creative.

“I just like to be creative, I’m a very creative person. I’ll just draw, I’ll make music— anything that entertains me.”

Western has helped Jaursch follow his passions of music with their music program and services on campus.

“Western does a great job of being sure that students have access to resources. For example, our music program has studios on campus and drum labs that are both useful, and students who are music majors and minors have access to them. Western has been great at accompanying me with a studio that I can work with,” said Jaursch.

To anyone else wanting to follow their passions in music or any other field, Jaursch made sure to point out that it’s important to do what’ll make you happy.

“Follow your dreams, follow your passions. Do what makes you happy in life more than anything,” expressed Jaursch.

Patty MeLT’s music is available for streaming right now on Bandcamp and Soundcloud.

Contact the author at journalentertainment@wou.edu

Harper Lee’s posthumous masterpiece

By: Darien Campo
Literary Critic

It’s barely been a year, and readers around the world are still mourning the tragic loss of literary-giant Harper Lee. In only two books, Lee opened the hearts and minds of generations to a world of honesty and raw humanity. Harper Lee’s writing truly changed the face of the modern novel – and even in death, she’s about to do it again.

Last week, Lee’s estate announced they were releasing her third, unpublished, never-before-seen novel, “Go See The Watchmen.”

“She considered it her magnum opus,” Lee’s counsel told Time magazine. “All she ever wanted was for people to read this book.”

“Go See the Watchmen,” a 251 page rave review of Zack Snyder’s 2009 film “Watchmen” has been met with adoration from critics around the globe.

“Beautiful,” said James Wood, professor of the practice of literary criticism at Harvard University. “Absolutely gorgeous. The prose in ‘Go See The Watchmen’ is leading today’s literary slop by miles. No other author even stands a chance in the shadow of the late and great Harper Lee.”

Lee, after seeing “Watchmen” in theatres in 2009, was reportedly transfixed by the film. She praised Larry Fong’s cinematography as a “wonderful feast for the eyes – truly every frame a vast feat for the world of film!” She applauded David Hayter and Alex Tse’s bravery in taking the “substandard plot” of the source comic, by Alan Moore and David Gibbons, and “weaving it into something fantastic.”

“Even in her last days, all she would ever talk about is that movie,” her caretaker said in an interview with the New Yorker. “‘Annie,’ she would call out to me, ‘Annie, people have to see ‘The Watchmen,’ it could change the world.’ She even woke me once, in the middle of the night, screaming. She said that she had a nightmare that she was remembered in death for her previous book, the bird one, instead of what she considered to be her greatest work, ‘Go See The Watchmen.’”

“I told her there was no ‘The,’ it’s just ‘Watchmen,’ but, you know how they get at that age,” she continued.

Though most of the 251-page book is nothing but consistent praise of the 2009 action film, Harper Lee did have one criticism to offer.

“Of the many regrets of my life, my greatest will be that I did not get to see more of Rorschach. It is a dangerous opportunity wasted to have underused such a beautiful character, and Mr. Snyder should be ashamed of himself. Or perhaps he could make a Rorschach solo film sometime in the near future. Before I pass away would be nice,” wrote Harper Lee in “Go See The Watchmen.”

When asked for comment, director Zack Snyder replied, “Harper who?”

Contact the author at dcampo13@wou.edu

Softball sees success in Portland

By: Burke De Boer
Sports Editor

A trip to Portland saw Wolves softball win three of four games against Concordia to continue their climb up the conference ladder.
After an additional double header in Hillsboro, Western Oregon extended their win streak to the current longest in the GNAC.

The pair of doubleheaders opened on April 13, with a slow start for the Wolves as they lost the first matchup, 1-3. The lowest scoring match of the entire series saw Western take the lead immediately but fail to close the game.

The first run came in the first inning, after sophomore Ryanne Huffman advanced to a scoring position by stealing second base.
First-year student Chandler Bishop batted Huffman in to take the lead.

The Wolves led for five innings. Sophomore pitcher Haley Fabian had four strikeouts over this span, giving up only one walk and one hit.

All three of Concordia’s runs came in the sixth inning, on a back-to-back RBI double and home run.

The Wolves’ offense had plenty of opportunity to open scoring themselves, as eight hits in the game and led to six runners left stranded.

The second of the two Thursday games was more explosive offensively as the Wolves powered their way to a 6-4 victory.

Senior Destiny Kuehl had two hits for four RBIs. Seniors Kelsie Gardner and Ashlee Lynch each had three hits. Gardner had three runs from her hits.

The game was tied 1-1 after the first, when Emma Alfonso hit a single in the second to bat in junior Zoe Clark. Kuehl singled later in the inning to bat in both Alfonso and Gardner.

The Wolves picked up a pair of wins on the second day of competition, where they won the first game 6-1 and the second 10-1.

Kuehl opened scoring in the first game with a three-run home run in the third inning and went on to bat in Gardner in the fifth.

Clark hit a home run of her own in the sixth, also scoring sophomore Courtney Lau Hee.

Bishop served as pitcher, throwing twelve groundouts allowing only one run off of six hits.

“It felt great to get the full seven innings and get the win,” said Bishop. “I am not a strikeout pitcher and rely on my defense greatly, so it’s such a great feeling when I know they have my back before I even pitch the ball. My catcher, Mercedes [Green] also called a great game and I trusted her completely. It also helps when our offense was putting up runs to take a little pressure off of me.”

Kuehl picked up two more home runs in the landslide second victory.

Fabian pitched her eighth complete game of the year, allowing only five hits to improve to an 8-7 record.

After the weekend, on April 17, softball won both sides of a double header against Simon Fraser on neutral ground in Hillsboro. The Wolves found themselves trailing 0-7 in the second game after four innings but had a monster rally over the last three frames to pull off a 9-8 win. Senior Hailee Watilo had two runs, while Zoe Clark, senior Ku’ulei Siolo and first-year student Ashley Doyle each had two RBIs.

With the wins, the Wolves advance to a 8-8 conference record. Since the start of April, softball has improved from the bottom of the conference to being ranked fifth.

Contact the author at journalsports@wou.edu

One day for one Earth

By: Jade Rayner
News Editor

The 47th annual Earth Day will be observed on April 22, 2017. Earth Day was founded in 1970 by Wisconsin Senator Gaylord Nelson; the idea to dedicate a day to focus on the environment was triggered by a massive oil spill in Santa Barbara, California in 1969, according to earthday.org.

The creation of the Environmental Protection Agency, the Clean Air, Clean Water and Endangered Species Acts all resulted from the many rallies and protests that occurred on Earth Day 1970.

As explained on the EPA’s website, their mission is to protect human health and the environment. In order to accomplish their broad goal, the EPA works with Congress by writing regulations for any environmental laws they create. They will also assist states in making sure they meet national environmental standards when needed.

This year, there are many ways that people can be active in the environment on April 22 if they choose to.

A common Earth Day activity is planting trees. “Planting trees is one of the simplest and most effective ways of tackling climate change caused by greenhouse gas. As trees grow they absorb carbon dioxide (CO2), a major greenhouse gas in the atmosphere. When communities plant trees they can help to reduce the impacts of climate change in their local area and around the world,” states www.worldvision.com.

The Luckiamute Watershed Council is hosting a free event to plant trees and shrubs at the Luckiamute State Natural Area in Albany alongside the Central Lions Club of Independence and Boy Scout Troupe #38.

By planting native vegetation, the LWC is hoping to restore the natural area’s wetlands, which is explained in further detail on their website, http://www.luckiamutelwc.org/earthday.

The Oregon Gardens in Silverton will be hosting special activities, along with free admission from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Earth Day; however, parking for the event will be $5.

Locally, the Monmouth Public Library will be doing free Earth Day themed crafts from 2-3 p.m.

In addition to these events, many cities around the country will be holding a March for Science.

“What began as a Reddit conversation has grown into a movement of scientists and science lovers standing up for evidenced-based policy making and inclusivity in the science community,” states www.scientificamerican.com.

Corvallis will be holding its March for Science from 1-3 p.m. at the Benton County Courthouse on April 22. More details can be found on the event’s facebook page.

For those looking for more ideas on how to help the environment, information can be found on www.earthday.org.

Contact the author at journalnews@wou.edu