@cwuobserver, cwuobserver.com
Vol. 117 NO. 6 October 20 - October 27, 2020
CWU welcomes transfer students with National Transfer Student Week events Jayce Kadoun Staff Reporter
National Transfer Student Week will be held Oct. 19-23 and will include a number of events aimed at assisting transfer students with their transition to CWU. The transfer center responsible for the event is a new department that focuses on reaching out to transfer students from other schools to help in a number of ways. Nathan Rawson, a student ambassador for the transfer center, said the department has started to gain traction since its beginning in March. He said they’ve been organizing events and getting the word out to students that they’re up and running. “Forty percent of our students at [CWU] right now are transfer students so that’s a huge part of our student population that are needing assistance and trying to figure out what resources they need. I like to describe ourselves as a guide service,” Rawson said. Rawson said they will be collaborating with other departments and hosting 18 different events during National Transfer Student Week. “One of the [events] is we’re taking over the weekly trivia with the [Recreation] Center and we’re doing a theme of transition. We’re kind of trying to get students engaged and make transfer students feel where they’re welcome,” Rawson said.
Hunters prepare for a new look, season and gameplan with old roads closing Gabriel Strasbaugh Staff Reporter
“We are here to serve transfer students at any stage of the game whether they’re preparing to transfer, getting admitted and starting classes or whether they’re continuing, and we know that our best experts are people who have already walked a mile in these shoes,” McConnell said.
October marks the beginning of hunting season, a tradition that many Washington state residents partake in each year with the hopes of a successful harvest to provide sustenance and stories for a lifetime. Part of forest management over the past few years, more and more logging roads in Okanogan County and national forest have been closed for reasons hunters debate. Gary Schwarz has been hunting in the Methow valley for over 15 years and questions why Washington state forestry would tear up back roads in the high hills. “The big bucks,” Schwarz said. “They can’t have people running up there and blasting a big [mule deer]. But all it does is create problems if somehow a fire sparks and guess what? The fire crews can’t do a single thing if the road’s undrivable.” Summer’s end saw the west coast surrounded in flames. According to Sciencemag.com, Oregon, Washington and California have burned some 3 million hectares, marking the west coast’s worst fire season in at least 70 years.
Continued on Page 4
Continued on Page 10
ELLENSBURG
Graphic by Bekah Blum
According to Rawson, the transfer center staff wants to meet up with transfer students before events to enter them as a group and make the students feel more comfortable. Transfer Center Director Megan McConnell said the main goal of National Transfer Student Week is to increase awareness of the important role transfer students play at CWU and to celebrate them.
Students continue to find ways to get out and explore Gabriel Strasbaugh Staff Reporter As the leaves begin to turn from green to its fall attire, more students are finding themselves strapping up their hiking boots in the pursuit of adventure. Outdoor Pursuits and Rentals (OPR) continues to provide students with the best equipment for their trips. From paddle boarding to hiking, students have multiple options to choose from to get out of the dorms outside for the day. Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, OPR offered guided trips throughout the Kittitas Valley. Along with tours, OPR works hand-in-hand with the Recreation Center allowing students to partake in many different amenities including a 50-foot climbing rock wall. Restrictions have been taken into account according to Bradley Gasawski the head of OPR.
In This Issue 1-3 4-5 6-7 8-9 10-11 12
News Scene News Opinion Sports Engagement
“We are required to follow the requirements put forth by not just the governor, but the university,” Gasawski said. “We were open for the summer and will continue to remain open and continue to follow the same best practices as the summer.” These practices are part of the university’s plan to ensure students remain safe and healthy. Part of these practices include a curbside pickup for equipment rented. Once finished there is also a procedure to return it in the same fashion. This will then allow for OPR employees to properly sanitize the equipment for another to use later. Reservations are an option for students to make sure they get exactly what they need. According to Gasawski, summer saw quite a lot of water rentals.
Continued on Page 11
Riel Hanson/The Observer
Outdoor Pursuits and Rentals is open for curbside pick-up via reservation for students.
Page 4
Page 6
Page 10
Getting in the spirits
Attorney General election
COVID-19 and homecoming
ELECTION ELECTION
2020 2020