WEEK OF TUESDAY, MAY 30, 2017 • DAILYBAROMETER.COM • VOL. CXIX, NO. 31
Move.
Weighing
Decisions
Corvallis Multicultural Literacy Center faces relocation uncertainty as OSU plans to build student housing on current land
PAGE 3
NEWS: Corvallis stabbing puts five in hospital 4
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SPORTS: OSU baseball selected as first seed 10
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NEWS: Dam Jam headline switches 13
IN THIS ISSUE
Are you passionate about the Fire Service? Looking for a way to help pay for school? Philomath Fire & Rescue is accepting applications for Resident Volunteers. More info at philomath-fire.squarespace.com/employment/
Community Calendar TUESDAY, MAY 30 Fractured Communities and Unconventional Energy Development in the Trump Era You can see a presentation by Tony Ladd, a professor of sociology at Loyola University. With the advent of a new administration, what does the future hold for communities, energy development and environmental justice? Professor Ladd will explore the implications of the recent election on energy and environmental agendas, identify key events and offer insights into what these shifts could mean for the future.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 31 Waste Watchers Meeting
You can join a group of students who work on creative ways to encourage others to reduce their waste. This team plans events and marketing campaigns at their weekly meetings, but attendance is not required every week. Community and snacks will be provided. This event takes place from 6:30-8 p.m. in the Student Experience Center, room 112.
FRIDAY, JUNE 2
AARON TRASK | ORANGE MEDIA NETWORK
First baseman KJ Harrison attempts to pick off a University of Southern California player at Goss Stadium. Oregon State University was selected as the number-one seed out of 64 teams in the national tournament.
COVER STORY: Corvallis Multicultural Literacy Center faces relocation page NEWS: Corvallis stabbing puts five victims in hospital page NEWS: OSU works to reduce high-risk alcohol use page
Board of Trustees Meeting
OSU students are welcomed to attend “A Conversation With Aminè,” presented by The Lonnie B. Harris Black Cultural Center and the College of Liberal Arts at the Stirek Auditorium in Austin Hall at 2 p.m. Join Dam Jam 2017 headliner and rising hiphop star Aminé in a conversation about music, life and creativity, led by OSU’s Director of Popular Music Bob Santelli. Tickets for this event are free but sold out, but there is a waitlist in place.
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SPORTS: OSU baseball selected as number one seed page
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NEWS: UHDS to offer residence halls to view solar eclipse page
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The OSU Board of Trustees will meet on Friday, June 2, from 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Horizon Room of the Memorial Union. The Board will consider the university’s fiscal year 2018 operating and capital budgets, a liquidity management policy, shortterm financing authorization, the 2018 and 2019 board calendars, election of a board chair and presidential assessment policy.
Hip-Hop Conversation
3
NEWS: Second annual Food Fair hosts several local vendors page
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COVER: Corvallis Multicultural Literacy Center faces a relocation, however, uncertainty still remains around method or location of the transition. Photo illustration by Zbigniew Sikora.
2 • DAILYBAROMETER.COM • WEEK OF TUESDAY, MAY 30, 2017
COVER STORY MIRANDA GRACE CROWELL | ORANGE MEDIA NETWORK
The Corvallis Multicultural Literacy Center resides in its current location at the Sunflower House on the Oregon State University campus. Once the CMLC’s lease expires in March 2018, OSU plans to use the lot to build housing for upper-division students.
Pint Night
Wednesday, May 31
7 p.m., 9 p.m. & 11 p.m. Featured brew from:
Hop Valley Brewing
Keep the logo pint after first purchase 1501 NW Monroe • Corvallis 541-758-4452 • Clodfelterspub.com
While supplies last. Prices may vary.
Honors College Thesis Poster Fair Explore the diversity of Honors College research, engaging with Honors graduates from Art to Zoology.
Friday, June 2nd 11:30-1:30 LINC Floors 1-3
Corvallis Multicultural Literacy Center faces move
Accommodations for disabilities may be made by contacting LeeAnn Baker 541-737-6430 Leeann.baker@oregonstate.edu
OSU plans to build student housing at CMLC location By Tyler Rippon, Practicum Contributor As Oregon State University comes forward with a land development plan, the future of a Corvallis nonprofit organization is uncertain. The Corvallis Multicultural Literacy Center, located at 128 SW Ninth St., has been providing a space for culture and learning to the community for 11 years — while leasing the property from OSU for a dollar per year. Once the CMLC’s current lease expires in March 2018, OSU plans to use the lot as housing for upper-division students. According to Steve Clark, OSU’s vice president for university relations and marketing, the university has been receiving encouragement from the Corvallis community and the city of Corvallis to build more housing on campus. In response, OSU has been conducting research on what housing would be the most beneficial to the community. “The most recent student housing-needs analysis shows that Oregon State presently is adequately meeting the residential housing needs for first-year students and will be able to do so for the foreseeable future,” Clark said in an email. “But the market analysis also identified there is growing demand for on-campus housing for sophomores, transfer and upper division students, as well as graduate students and students with families.” The Corvallis City Council approved the location for student housing as part of the university’s campus master plan 12 years ago, according to Clark. “We consider this new housing complex will be a very special living community that will
invigorate the east side of the OSU campus and be a strong and complementary asset to the nearby Corvallis neighborhoods,” Clark said via email. The university has been holding meetings and communicating with CMLC staff, according to Clark, and has also offered to lease the former Asian and Pacific Cultural Center on Jackson Street at the same dollar-per-year rate. “Over the past year, CMLC leaders have stressed they would prefer a center location that is similar to operating within a building that is like a home and not an office building,” Clark said in an email. “We offered the former cultural center because we feel it meets the location attributes that benefit the CMLC and is in close proximity to the OSU campus and student services. The building is well-maintained and is an accessible facility to transit, parking and community services and neighborhoods.” According to Dee Curwen, center coordinator for the CMLC, when compared to the center’s current space of over 3,000 square feet, the 1,100-square-foot Jackson Street location would place some new restrictions on the center. “It would have to be a restructuring of the activities and that kind of thing in order to be able to accommodate (the smaller space),” Curwen said. The current building is ideal for what the center does and the CMLC has no intention of moving at this time, according to Curwen. “The location, the structure of the building,
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the fact that there’s a kitchen, the fact that there’s a space for children, all of those things worked to allow us to grow to be what we hope is a good resource to the community,” Curwen said. The CMLC was envisioned as a “living room for learning,” according to Curwen. It provides spaces for people of different cultures to have conversations and practice languages together. The center also offers free services to help community members learn about citizenship. “We do citizenship tutoring, and that has grown immensely,” Curwen said. “We’ve gotten 34 people from the beginning to the end of the citizenship process. We work with volunteers, we don’t give legal advice or do any work they need a lawyer for, but we can explain the process, we can help people review the forms and then prepare for the interview.” According to Emerald Berry-Cabiao, a volunteer at the CMLC, the center brings people of different backgrounds together. “It’s a place of unity and adding to the diversification of Corvallis and the Corvallis community,” Berry-Cabiao said. “It takes people who are from different cultures and don’t speak English as their first language, and it’s connecting them and forging relationships.” Valori George is a frequent visitor at the center and was involved in forming a group called “Save the CMLC.” The group’s objective is to convince OSU and the Corvallis City Council to allow the center to stay where it is.
See CMLC, Page 7
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WEEK OF TUESDAY, MAY 30, 2017 • DAILYBAROMETER.COM • 3
NEWS
LOGAN HOWELL | ORANGE MEDIA NETWORK
Nolan Butuso, one of the stabbing victims, recounts his experience with the incident to Corvallis Police Officer Lyssa Richmond the evening after the stabbing. The home in which the incident occurred has been released to the victims, but due to smoke damage and large amounts of blood, the residence is unlivable.
Corvallis stabbing puts five victims in hospital
OSU and community help injured, provide resources for those affected, raise funds for medical bills By Tiffani Smith, News Contributor Officers from the Corvallis Police Department responded to a reported stabbing at roughly 5:54 a.m. on the 400 block of 27th Street this past Monday, May 22. During the incident, five individuals were injured and transported to Good Samaritan Hospital for injury treatment. Of the five injured, one victim, Jesus Valencia, was life flighted to Legacy Emanuel Medical Center in Portland. All of the victims were in stable conditions following the incident, according to Nolan Butuso, one of the victims. However, while in the hospital, Valencia underwent two surgeries. The first surgery was for four lacerations across his head and two lacerations on his back. The second surgery was on Valencia’s eye, which was badly injured during the incident. “I don’t know whether or not he was cut in the eye, but the way he described it to me, he took a really hard elbow in the eye and it caused it to swell up immensely,” Butuso said. “We haven’t gotten any more information on this, but we’re worried that he might lose the eye.” 4 • DAILYBAROMETER.COM • WEEK OF TUESDAY, MAY 30, 2017
All five victims, Butuso, Valencia, Evan Burns, Dan Rinkevich and Cat Lisman, have been released from the hospital and are now in recovery from the incident. The victims’ home has also been released to them, but according to Butuso, the amount of smoke damage and blood within the residence makes it unlivable. Annie Todd, a neighbor of the victims, recounted her experience of the incident in a Facebook post on Tuesday, May 23. According to Todd, she and her boyfriend, Matthew Goodlett, woke to an explosion that came from next door. The couple ran outside looking for the cause of the explosion as Todd immediately called 9-1-1. Goodlett used a fire extinguisher to put out the fire as Todd ran inside the neighbors’ residence through an already-open door. Upon entering,Todd locked eyes with the attacker as he was stabbing Jesus. She proceeded to scream at the attacker to stop. “I think that initially I was really shocked because I ran in to wake people up because of a fire,” Todd said. “My
hands were shaking.” When the attacker’s attention seemed to switch focus to her, Todd promptly retreated back to her home, remaining on the phone with the 9-1-1 operator. Looking out her window, Todd witnessed a man flee from the scene down 27th Street. She then proceeded back to the neighbors’ residence to aid the injured victims. “I informed the operator that the fire truck had arrived and they began handing out gauze like candy,” Todd said in the Facebook post. “I remember having to ask for more and more.” Although the incident happened near Oregon State University, a formal announcement was not sent out to OSU students. According to Steve Clark, the OSU vice president of university relations and marketing, the suspect was apprehended immediately after leaving the house in which the incident occurred, by a law enforcement officer that was in
See Stabbing, Page 12
NEWS
40%
of OSU students that drink fall into the “high-risk” category, according to Student Health Services.
KALEB REYES | ORANGE MEDIA NETWORK
A detailed list of alcohol safety-related resources is available on the OSU Student Health Services website under the Prevention tab.
OSU works to reduce high-risk alcohol use University provides resources, education to help students stay safe By Geoffrey Wildish, News Contributor
Imagine you are an Oregon State University student sitting between two people in a classroom. Look to your left, then to your right. Statistically, at least one of you has engaged in high-risk alcohol use within the past two weeks. Of students who consume alcohol at OSU, 40 percent have, according to a 2014 survey by the American College Health Association. Because of the presence of these kinds of drinking behaviors in OSU students, OSU actively works toward educating students about safe drinking habits and supporting the students who choose not to drink, according to John Ruyak, an alcohol, drug and recovery specialist with OSU Student Health Services. “We want to help students succeed at OSU, so we work to create supportive environments. I am also focused on supporting students who abstain from substance use, especially those who are in recovery from a substance use disorder,” Ruyak said. “Often, these students find it difficult to feel supported on a traditional college campus. Oregon State University does a great job at providing this support.” According to the SHS Survey Data website, there is a large population of OSU students who drink. However, 29.9 percent of students surveyed chose not to drink or had not drunk in the last 30 days. OSU works toward ensuring students do not feel pressured to drink or engage in unsafe behaviors, according to Ruyak. Out of the 70.1 percent of students who do consume alcohol, 40 percent of these students are drinking in a “high-risk” manner, according to the SHS Survey Data website. “High-risk is defined as five or more drinks in a single setting over the past two weeks,” the SHS Survey Data website stated. According to Ruyak, throughout the nation, universities and colleges have been working towards reducing high-risk alcohol use. In addition to SHS, the OSU Office of Student
Life works toward educating students on safe drinking behaviors, according to Jonathan Stoll, the interim assistant dean of student life and director of corvallis community relations. “From a community standpoint when talking about high-risk drinking or binge drinking, that puts them (students) in danger,” Stoll said. “You want people to be safe.” According to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) website, binge drinking is the act of consuming alcohol to the point at which one’s blood alcohol concentration (BAC) levels reach 0.08 grams of alcohol per deciliter (g/dL) of blood. For men, this most often occurs after five drinks within a period of two hours, and for women four drinks in the same period of time. Binge drinking can lead to car crashes, violence, the spread of sexually-transmitted diseases, unplanned pregnancies and more, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) website. At OSU 40.3 percent of students who drank alcohol in the past 12 months did something they later regretted, 21.9 percent had unprotected sex and 18.6 percent physically injured themselves, according to the SHS Survey Data website. “Continuing to drink despite clear signs of significant impairments can result in a potentially deadly type of overdose called alcohol poisoning,” stated on the NIAAA website. “Alcohol poisoning occurs when there is so much alcohol in the bloodstream that areas of the brain controlling basic life-support functions.” If any of the signs of alcohol poisoning are present in an individual you should call 911, according to the NIAAA. “Rapid binge drinking is especially dangerous because the victim can drink a fatal dose before losing consciousness,” the NIAAA website stated. “It is dangerous to assume that an unconscious person will be fine by sleeping it off.”
One way OSU has educated students about the dangers of binge drinking is through the program “AlcoholEDU.” “AlcoholEDU is an interactive course that focuses on the impact alcohol has on your wellness, academic success and personal development. AlcoholEdu empowers students to make well-informed decisions about alcohol,” the OSU AlcoholEDU website said. “This program is not a lecture or a ‘just say no’ program, but rather a program that gives you the information you need to be safe and make informed choices with alcohol.” According to fourth year student Jacob Rauvola, he believes the university should increase campus awareness related to alcohol consumption. “I think OSU does a good job of having resources available for people that want to learn about the dangers of binge drinking. One thing I think they could improve on is letting students know about the resources available,” Rauvola said. “If I hadn’t been apart of Greek life I feel I wouldn’t
know about it.” Another resource available to students at OSU is “E-checkup to Go,” according to Ruyak. “(E-checkup to Go is) a free online and anonymous resource available to all students who want to get personalized feedback on their alcohol use,” Ruyak said. “Over 2,400 OSU students have participated in campus workshops that go into greater depths from the education provided by AlcoholEDU.” There are also numerous resources available 24/7 on the OSU SHS website under the Prevention tab. “We are all members of the Corvallis community, and I think it is important to be good neighbors because we all live here,” Stoll said. “I think often times I would suspect, people are buy in large good neighbors. But when you involved alcohol that changes the dynamic. They are more prone to speak and yell loudly outside, and disrupt the community.”
Life-threatening symptoms of alcohol poisoning • Inability to wake up If any of these • Vomiting signs are present • Slow breathing (fewer than in an individual, eight breaths per minute) you should call • Irregular breathing (10 seconds 9-1-1 or more between breaths) • Seizures • Hypothermia (low body temperature), bluish skin color, paleness Information courtesy of the Center for Disease Control and Prevention WEEK OF TUESDAY, MAY 30, 2017 • DAILYBAROMETER.COM • 5
NEWS
AARON TRASK | ORANGE MEDIA NETWORK
From left to right, student worker at the Career Development Center Brett Sonflieth and internship and employment developer Bruce Petersen show how students can come in for help on their resumes and learn about options after college. The Career Development Center is located in the basement of the Kerr Administration Building.
OSU offers academic support services to aid in post-graduation preparation
Career Development Center, Academic Success Center provide students resources By Joshua Hathaway, Practicum Contributor Oregon State University has a graduation rate of 62 percent, which is above the national average of 42 percent, according to the U.S. Department of Education website’s College Scorecard. OSU offers its students a wide variety of accessible on-campus support systems to prepare them for the road ahead. Ranging from academic support to career preparation, there are a number of options available to students at no cost. One resource is the Career Development Center, which is available to students Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., and is located in the basement of the Kerr Administration Building in room B008. According to the Creative Communications Coordinator for the Career Development Center Jenna Riccolo, the department is full of passionate employees who want to help students succeed. “We are here to help you create a meaningful path to a career,” Riccolo said. According to their website, the Career Development Center offers a number of events including Career Fairs, seminars, Speed Mock Interviews, meetings with potential employers and online seminars for students who can’t make it to the center’s on-campus events. According to Employer Relations and Events
Coordinator for the Career Development “Everyone can benefit from learning how to Center Wendy Allison, the department works learn, from engaging with supportive peers to connect students with future employers. and from practicing skills that transfer to work “We have lots of different events throughout and community life. Students can do all this in the year, not just the big Career Fair. So it’s a welcoming environment, knowing there is finding what is right for the students and what a team of people at the ASC who are excited is right for those employers, and then figuring to help them succeed,” Coffey said in an email. out a way to make that The ASC works to prowork,” Allison said. vide students with proHowever, on-camgrams including one-onpus support is not one Academic Coaching, We help students figure only limited to the in which students build out how to navigate Career Development a supportive relationCe n t e r. Ac c o r d i n g ship with a peer coach these and succeed in to their website, the in order to achieve acatheir academic, personal Ac a d e m i c S u c c e s s demic success. According and professional goals. Center’s mission is to to their website, the ASC create opportunities also guides students Marjorie Coffey for students to learn towards 19 different Coordinator of how to learn throughacademic resources that out their academic are available to them on Academic Support careers. The Academic campus. The resources Initiatives Success Center curinclude academic advisrently operates ing, computer labs, the out of Waldo Hall room 102 and is open OSU Library, supplemental instruction, Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. tutoring and others. According to Marjorie Coffey, coordinator Among the many resources available at OSU of academic support initiatives within the is the Mathematics Learning Center, which ASC, all students can benefit from these is a beneficial resource for anyone seeking supports during college. clarification about a particular concept within
6 • DAILYBAROMETER.COM • WEEK OF TUESDAY, MAY 30, 2017
the field of mathematics. There is no need to set an appointment in advance, as the MLC operates by holding drop-in tutoring hours Monday through Thursday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Fridays. The MLC can be found on the first floor of Kidder Hall in room 108. Another resource on campus is the Writing Center, located in room 123 of Waldo Hall. According to their website, the Writing Center provides three different programs for students: the Undergrad Writing Studio, the Graduate Writing Center and the Online Writing Lab. During their hours of operation, Monday through Friday 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., students are encouraged to stop by and get help for as long as they need. To learn more about the resources available for students at OSU, individuals can visit both the Career Development Center and Academic Success Center’s websites. According to Coffey, there are complicated courses and systems on campus that can be difficult to navigate. “We help students figure out how to navigate these and succeed in their academic, personal and professional goals,” Coffey said in an email.
COVER STORY
CMLC
Continued from page 3 According to George, the group was formed in the beginning of March 2017 by Corvallis community members who came from different backgrounds but were united by a love for the CMLC. “Most of us are activists in all different directions,” George said. “Some people work with immigrant rights, some people work anti-war, environmental, racial justice. It’s kind of all over the spectrum of activism, but that’s kind of what brought us all together, because all of us had used the center for lots of years.” One of the reasons the CMLC should stay is that it helps set Corvallis apart as a uniquely welcoming city, according to George. “When Iranian students, before they arrive in Corvallis, they already know about this place because other Iranian students already here have told them about it,” George said. According to George, the group members had worked together before, organizing events and fundraisers at the center. “Most of us already had experience at the center like that and then when we found out it was in danger, we just naturally came together and have been working together ever since,” George said. OSU has offered different potential courses of action to the CMLC which have yet to be finalized, according to Clark. “In discussions this past year, OSU staff have shared a number of options with the CMLC,” Clark said in an email. “These included how the building might be purchased and moved to another location by the CMLC.”
MIRANDA GRACE CROWELL | ORANGE MEDIA NETWORK
(TOP) Dee Curwin, the center coordinator for the Corvallis Multicultural Literacy Center, talks to a community member about the CMLC. (BOTTOM) One of the rooms in the CMLC, the music room, houses instruments from around the world.
According to Curwen, if the CMLC plans to purchase and move the building in 2018, funds need to be ready and presented to OSU by this September. For more information on the future of the building as options are considered, go to the CMLC Facebook page. center does, according to Curwen. “The location, the structure of the building, the fact that there’s a kitchen, the fact that there’s a space for children, all of those things worked to allow us to grow to be what we hope is a good resource to the community,” Curwen said. The CMLC was envisioned as a ‘living room for learning’, according to Curwen. It provides spaces for people of different cultures to have conversations and practice languages together. The center also offers free services to help community members learn about citizenship. “We do citizenship tutoring, and that has grown immensely,” Curwen said. “We’ve gotten 34 people from the beginning to the end of the citizenship process. We work with volunteers, we don’t give legal advice or do any work they need a lawyer for, but we can explain the process, we can help people review the forms and then prepare for the interview.” According to Emerald Berry-Cabiao, a volunteer at the CMLC, the center brings people of different backgrounds together. “It’s a place of unity and adding to the diversification of Corvallis and the Corvallis community,” Berry-Cabiao said. “It takes people who are from different cultures and don’t speak English as their first language, and it’s connecting them and forging relationships.” Valori George is a frequent visitor at the center and was involved in forming a group called “Save the CMLC.” The group’s objective is to convince OSU and the Corvallis city council to allow the center to stay where it is. According to George, the group was formed in the beginning of March 2017 out of Corvallis community members who came from different backgrounds but all had the CMLC in common. “Most of us are activists in all different directions,” George said. “Some people work with immigrant rights, some people work anti-war, environmental, racial justice, it’s kind of all over the spectrum of activism. But that’s kind of what brought us all together, because all of us had used the center for lots of years.” One of the reasons the CMLC should stay is that it helps set Corvallis apart as a uniquely welcoming city, according to George. “When Iranian students, before they arrive in Corvallis, they already know about this place because other Iranian students already here have told them about it,” George said. According to George, the group members had worked together before, organizing events and fundraisers at the center. “Most of us already had experience at the center like that, and then when we found out it was endangered we just naturally came together and have been working together ever since,” George said. OSU has offered different potential courses of action to the CMLC which have yet to be finalized, according to Clark. “In discussions this past year, OSU staff have shared a number of options with the CMLC,” Clark said in an email. “These included how the building might be purchased and moved to another location by the CMLC.” The CMLC’s current lease with OSU ends in March 2018. According to Curwen, if the CMLC plans to purchase and move the building, funds need to be ready and presented to OSU by this September. For more information on the future of the building as options are considered, go to the CMLC Facebook page.
WEEK OF TUESDAY, MAY 30, 2017 • DAILYBAROMETER.COM • 7
NEWS
KALEB REYES | ORANGE MEDIA N
(LEFT) Corvallis community member Robyn Jones holds the food she received from booths set up at the fo (ABOVE) Tamara Wilson (left) and Michelle Singer-Nielsen (right) manage the Portland Roasting Coffee bo second annual Food Fair allowed students and community members to sample and take food from several v
The OSU Socratic Club at Oregon State University presents an event free and open to the public
Was Jesus the Son of God?
Gilfillan Auditorium Tuesday, May 30, 7 pm Speakers: Dr. Michael Gurney Professor of Theology and Philosophy, Multnomah University Dr. Richard Carrier Professor of Ancient History & Philosophy Visit us at groups.oregonstate.edu/socratic/ Please use the contact form to request special accommodations. Watch our previous events at youtube.com/user/orstsocraticclub
8 • DAILYBAROMETER.COM • WEEK OF TUESDAY, MAY 30, 2017
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NETWORK
ood fair. ooth. The vendors.
Second annual Food Fair hosts local vendors Students, community members able to take home boxes of snacks, beverages By Kaleb Reyes, News Contributor Dozens of businesses get publicity, Oregon State University staff scout out new food from vendors, messages of diversity are spread, students stuff bags and boxes full of free food and food industry staff enjoy being able to give back to the students. The Memorial Union’s second annual MU Food Fair is an event that benefits vendors, students and the university. Companies that supply foods and beverages to different places on campus bring their products to the event. This year’s Food Fair took place Wednesday, May 24. According to Robyn Jones, the Memorial Union retail food service director, the MU Food Fair serves purposes for both the managers and the students. “We host the Food Fair for two reasons: one, to give students the opportunity to try products that we sell, and for the managers to see new products and gauge interest from the students to see if we want to bring in these new items,” Jones said. According to Michelle Alaspa, sales associate for The Core Group, a broker that supplies many different brands to OSU, the fair begins with the vendors setting up their food. Initially, the fair is opened only to the managers of retail food services so they can come test different foods and decide whether or not it is a product that they want to purchase to sell at OSU. Next, the event opens to students, according
to Alaspa. Students can come and stock up on all the free food they want. At this year’s MU Food Fair, students came through the line of vendors with cardboard boxes and filled them to the brim with all the free food they could get their hands on. Along with food, there were also a variety of drinks available, including coffee, fruit juices and energy drinks. According to Alaspa, the vendors love this event as much as the students and staff do. Alaspa loves the MU Food Fair because she gets to see people who are happy to eat their food and when they are happy eating their food, it makes her happy too. “We look at this day as a day to give back,” Alaspa said. “We in the food industry are generally invisible, so this is a way for us to get out there and give back.” For some vendors, this event is about more than just free food, publicity and giving back. For Michelle Singler-Nielson and Tamara Wilson at Portland Roasting Coffee, the supplier of coffee blends for OSU’s coffee shops, there was a message to spread. According to the flyers Singler-Nielson and Wilson were handing out, the company is changing the face of coffee by highlighting the diversity of their customers with their new campaign #everyonedrinkscoffee. “Coffee is for everyone, and anyone is welcome at Portland Roasting Coffee,” Wilson said.
According to Jones, there are lots of different people that come together to make this event a reality, and she really enjoys how everyone works together to make this event happen and loves being able to give back to the students. “We work with our distributors, vendors and food service reps who bring samples for the students and take time to come to Corvallis and talk to the students, and then my managers put their time and energy into working with the reps
and making this event successful,” Jones said. “Of course it’s always fun to give stuff away and I love doing that for the students.” For those who did not make it to the event, it may not be a full year before there is another food fair. According to Jones, there is a possibility that the event may be held in the fall of next schoolyear instead of spring. For more information on the MU Food Fair and other future events, visit the MU’s webpage.
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WEEK OF TUESDAY, MAY 30, 2017 • DAILYBAROMETER.COM • 9
SPORTS
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JACQUIE GAMELGAARD | ORANGE MEDIA NETWORK
Benny the Beaver accompanies baseball players Trevor Larnach, Mitchell Verburg, Jack Anderson and Grant Gambrell (left to right) as they wait to learn who their opponents will be in the upcoming NCAA tournament. The watch party took place at the Club Level of Reser Stadium Monday morning.
The road to Omaha goes through Corvallis Goss Stadium to host regional round of NCAA tournament By Brian Rathbone, News/Sports Chief For the Oregon State University baseball team, Memorial Day could not have been more different in 2017 compared to last year. Three hundred sixty-five days ago, there was a melancholy vibe as the 2016 Beavers watched in an empty room as they got passed over by the selection committee for the NCAA tournament. This year, they saw their names called as the No. 1 overall seed in the Club Level of a Reser Stadium full of Beaver fans. “Not making the tournament last year was frustrating and disappointing,” sophomore right-hander Drew Rasmussen said. “All of the returners wanted to guarantee that missing the tournament wasn’t going to happen again.
At practice, in the weight room and in the classroom we just pushed a little bit more and a little bit harder to ensure that we wouldn’t have the same feeling again.” “It was a much better feeling for our guys walking away,” head coach Pat Casey said. “I feel for those guys last year who didn’t get in and probably should have. I know how that feels.” OSU has not advanced past the regional round since they last went to the College World Series in 2013. It will be up to Holy Cross, Nebraska or Yale to knock off the Beavers, who ran roughshod through the regular season, including going 26-1 at Goss Stadium.
10 • DAILYBAROMETER.COM • WEEK OF TUESDAY, MAY 30, 2017
“I’m very happy that we are hosting,” Casey said. “It really didn’t matter who they brought in, because we knew we were going to get good clubs.” Nebraska, Yale and Holy Cross may indeed be good teams. But OSU turned into the Orange and Black Machine en route to the best regular season in program history, according to Casey. “I can’t tell that I’ve ever thought someone should be 49-4,” Casey said. “We get that, we are aware of that, it’s impressive, but it means nothing from here on forward. We just need to prepare for our next opponent.” OSU lost their sixth game of the season,
then went on to reel off 23 consecutive wins— a school record. The team won their final 16 games of the regular season, finishing with a 0.925 winning percentage—yet another school record. The Beavers walked off six times, five during Pac-12, and have been the consensus No. 1 team since March 27. Luke Heimlich would post a 0.81 earned run average in 111 1/3 innings pitched, Jake Thompson went a perfect 12-0 while flirting with a sub-1.0 ERA last in the season. Nick Madrigal batted .377 on the year, and seven different OSU batters finished with over 25
See Omaha, Page 11
SPORTS
Omaha
Continued from page 10 RBIs on the year. “This team hates losing a lot,” sophomore shortstop Cadyn Grenier said. “It doesn’t matter what the situation is, if we lose we are like, ‘This sucks, let’s not let this happen again.’” “Everyone brought their lunch box with them, and we are ready to come to work,” Rasmussen said. “There was a blue-collar mentality when it came to working up to this point, and I don’t expect that to change.” Should the Beavers win three games in their regional, they will eclipse the school record of 52 wins in a season—a mark set by the 2013 team that played four games in Omaha, Neb. in the College World Series. “We’ve accomplished something very special in the regular season,” Casey said. “We got to quit talking about that and start worrying about what
we need to do next game.” It’s not the first time that OSU has earned the No. 1 seed. In 2014, despite being seeded, the Michael Conforto and Ben Wetzler-led Beavers could not advance past the regional round. “Everything’s different,” Casey said. “I never go back and say ‘Hey, we were the No. 1 seed, and we did this and didn’t do that,’ because everything’s different. We went to Virginia (in 2007) and weren’t supposed to do anything, and we went on to win the National Championship.” “What the ‘14 team did has no bearing on we need to do here,” Casey said. Having been left out of the tournament last season, key players such as Madrigal and Grenier will get their first taste of postseason play. Madrigal was named one of the three hitters to watch in the tournament during the selection show. It’s been a historic year, and Casey wants his team to enjoy the moment, but before closing down the festivities, Casey had one final message to his team and fans in attendance: “We need to be ready to kick someone’s ass.”
JACQUIE GAMELGAARD | ORANGE MEDIA NETWORK
(TOP) The 2017 OSU baseball team attempts to regain national champion status as they did in both 2006 and 2007. (BOTTOM) A fan celebrates the Beavers being selected as the number one seed in the NCAA tournament. OSU will host Holy Cross, Yale and Nebraska in the regional round.
WEEK OF TUESDAY, MAY 30, 2017 • DAILYBAROMETER.COM • 11
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REC SPORTS GRADUATEs Nicole Brandtjen Brook Butler Samantha Hopman Chris Navarrete Allison Smith Daniel Trinh Brian Weisbart Austin Green Laura Noble Josiah Merkel Taylor Hellman Daniel Soohoo Jackson Stout Kellan Ganje Kari TenBroeck Ali Jorgensen Ashlee Casebeer Brandon Poundstone Elysha Lang Franki Cable Hillary Fishler
Kylie McElheran Lexi Amatisto Maren Vick Nicole Hurley Paul Erlebach Sara Truax Saul Solorio Christopher Hathaway Sasha Kochinski Amir Nowrouz Hailey Brucker Jalen Ladd Tiana Iwamiya Justin Tran Kenny Warren Nolan Friesen Shanna Smothers Cody Pronozuk Andrew Schellhaas Anna Meidow Annette Vo-Tran
Brandon Macy Bri Bauer Carlie Stickler Caitlyn Buswell Cole Scherer Cyrus Mooney Dalena Tran Daniel Wallace Elysha Lang Ian Hultquist Jared Priestly Kathryn Johnson Kelsey Huntington Lindsay Coutts Madison Cronin Meaghan Connelly Parker Folliard Shazeya Galligan Tessa Edwards Kelly Curr Taylor Stichter
Kiara Sadler David Stys Kevin Hoffheins Mariah Dawson Amber Swindall Alyssa Lillybridge Mundher Al-Musalhi Miles Curry Matt Clark Cole Morgan Jordan Lewis Tyler Russell Kai White Will Young Emily Lawrence Rylee Glassman Hunter Quon Maya Patton Mary Hare Brittni Cooper Alyssa Liljequist
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LOGAN HOWELL | ORANGE MEDIA NETWORK
The stabbing suspect, Benjamin Leland Bucknell, was found and apprehended near Chintimini Senior Center shorty after the incident occurred.
Stabbing
“There’s not a lot of money that he, himself, can donate, but through doing a fundraiser, we can produce that.” Continued from page 4 Beyond funding the victims of the incident, resources are also available to any individuals the neighborhood at the time. “(The university) felt that there was not an who feel affected by the incident. “I would say for anyone who is concerned ongoing threat to the Oregon State community to prompt a timely warning,” Clark said. “At for not only themselves, but friends or faculty the time, because the suspect was in custody, members of the OSU community, to be aware the next attention was to help in any way pos- of the services provided by Counseling and sible to ensure the safety of the individuals Psychological Services CAPS, to take advanthat were injured and ascertain whether any tage of those, to utilize those and not delay of those individuals were students to assist and to remember that while this is a very the police and the injured individuals to com- unfortunate tragic incident, to remain aware municate with their parents if possible and it of your circumstances, but also to understand that we do not believe that there is was just a very dynamic situation.” reason to fear that such an incident will occur Ac c o rd i n g t o again,” Clark said. Clark, the university The suspect, after did not have much fleeing from the resinformation in idence on foot, was regards to the inciI informed the operator found in front of the dent and because it that the fire truck had Chintimini Senior was a criminal matCenter where he arrived and they began ter, followed the was detained by lead of CPD. handing out gauze like CPD. The suspect “When matters candy. was later identisuch as these occur, fied as 22-year-old we’re very mindful Annie Todd Benjamin Leland and our primary Bucknell. According goal is to first and Neighbor of stabbing to Clark, Bucknell is foremost provide a victims a former OSU stusafe campus for our dent and attendstudents, faculty, ed the university during the spring 2014, staff and guests,” Clark said. The evening of the incident, Samantha winter/spring 2015 and fall 2016 terms as Marie Traeger, the sister of Butuso, set up a a pre-forestry student. Since the incident, Bucknell has been arrestGoFundMe account to help raise funds to pay for the victims’ medical expenses. As ed and charged with six counts of attempted of Monday, May 29 at noon, the account murder, three counts of assault in the first degree, two counts of assault in the second had raised $10,127. To help with raising funds, The Dam, a local degree, resisting arrest, criminal mischief in bar, set up an event from 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. the second degree, two counts of arson in on Saturday, May 27. The Dam encouraged the first degree, one count of burglary in the a $5 donation at the door and 10 percent first degree and four counts of unlawful use of all proceeds from the night went directly of a weapon. Bucknell was called before Circuit Court to the GoFundMe. “The owner, Ben Metzger he really is trying Judge Locke A. Williams for an arraignment to build a tight community. He just wants to on Tuesday, May 23 at 1:30 p.m. Bucknell’s be able to help the community the best he original bail amount was set for $525,000. At can and the second that he heard that (the the arraignment, the state asked for a total bail incident) happened, he wanted to be able amount of $3 million, but Williams increased to help in some way,” Awni Atlas, a bartender the original bail to $1.1 million, and set a new and event coordinator at The Dam, said. court date for June 6 at 8:30 a.m.
NEWS
NUTR 447 Students take over COURTESY OF OSUPC
The Dam Jam stage will be directly in front of the Memorial Union building. Merchandise and food will be sold on the North side of the quad.
Dam Jam headliner switches Health concerns cause Dam Jam performer Skizzy Mars to be replaced with Marc E. Bassy
Wednesday – Friday , May 31st – June 2nd Here is just a sampling of what will be offered Wednesday: Jamaica Me Hungry Friday: Panasia Café Jamaican Jerk Shrimp Skewers, Cuban Pork Sandwich and Caribbean Spice Roasted Chicken
Thursday: Let’s Taco ‘bout it
Fish Taco’s, Turkey Mole, and Bacon Cheeseburger Tacos
California Sushi Burrito, Honey Sriracha Chicken Bowl, Korean Beef Bowl and Mochi
Lunch served from 10:30 am – 3:00 pm Gluten Free, Vegetarian and Vegan items available
Pangea Cafe is located in the Memorial Union | Hours: 7:30 a.m.–3 p.m.
By The Baro Staff Marc E. Bassy will be replacing headliner Skizzy Mars for this year’s June Dam Jam lineup. On the EventBrite ticket website, in the fine print under the comment section, there was a post explaining the switch. “Due to health concerns, Skizzy Mars is unable to perform at Dam Jam 2017. We wish him well and hope he gets better soon! Please welcome Marc E. Bassy to the Dam Jam lineup,” the website said. Students had already been confused about the Dam Jam lineup when the headliners on the winter ballot were not selected as the final choice. Some students had not heard about the recent switch until asked about it. Austin Sanders, a third-year student and biology major, had an emphatic opinion on the situation. He was shocked to learn about it. “I was really stoked for Skizzy Mars,” Sanders said. “I’m more annoyed at the fact that things
keep changing with a lineup that wasn’t chosen off of the ballots.” Though Sanders’ enthusiasm was high for a Skizzy Mars headliner, he understands the change to Bassy. “I know his name and have heard a few of his songs, but I won’t be able to sing along to every song,” Sanders said. According to Sanders, he is still excited to see all three headliners perform and will be attending the event and he wishes Skizzy Mars the best in his recovery. Logan Schieno is a fourth-year new media communications major. Schieno thinks that it’s a ‘good contrast,’ in that the selected artists will be giving the concert more variety, reaching a wider range of listeners. “I’m happier with Bassy. He has happy vibes and I find myself playing more of his music on my radio show than Skizzy Mars,” Schieno said.
Dam Jam, June 3rd Gates open at 6 p.m.
$10
per student ticket
$30
per non-student ticket
Tickets can be purchased in the Student Experience Center lobby.
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NEWS
LUCAS RAAB | ORANGE MEDIA NETWORK
An aerial view of Weatherford Hall and the surrounding area. A summer event, OSU150 Space Grant Festival: A Total Eclipse Experience, will celebrate the total solar eclipse occurring above Corvallis on Aug. 21, 2017. A solar eclipse occurs when the Moon passes between the Earth and the Sun, obscuring the star from view.
UHDS to offer residence hall rooms for eclipse festival attendees Thousands will visit OSU for the once-in-a-lifetime event By Erin Dose, News Contributor
The sun hovers over Oregon State University. Students tan, do homework and play sports in the heat. They enjoy the change in weather, with the months of rain and clouds behind them. Soon, they will have a new reason to look up. There will be a total solar eclipse over Corvallis on Aug. 21, 2017. The OSU150 Space Grant Festival: A Total Eclipse Experience, running from Aug. 19 to Aug. 21, will celebrate the rare astronomical event. The festival is part of a string of events celebrating the 150th anniversary of the university. The event will feature multiple family-friendly educational activities, a concert and a viewing party during the eclipse itself. University Housing and Dining
Services will offer rooms to event attendees. Students on campus during the event can expect OSU to be busier than usual, according to Jill Peters, the eclipse event manager. “My best guess is that we’ll have 3,0005,000 people attend the OSU150 Space Grant Festival, but it could easily be more,” Peters said in an email. UHDS will be offering lodging for visitors in Tebeau Hall, the International Living Learning Center and Wilson Hall, according to Dawn Snyder, the assistant director of operations for UHDS. “If Wilson fills, we will then open up Callahan, McNary and finally Finley,” Snyder said in an email.
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According to Snyder, OSU opened residence halls in response to the amount of hopeful festival attendees. “We thought offering a lodging and dining package would allow more people to attend the OSU150 Space Grant festival and enjoy all that OSU has to offer that weekend,” Snyder said in an email. UHDS will continue to maintain the usual residence hall policies, according to Snyder. “We will have staff available 24 hours per day, as we do for all of our guests staying on campus during the summer. We will also have some additional event/security staffing,” Snyder said in an email. “Additionally, guests may not possess or consume any alcohol in the halls during the festival.” Anyone on campus should also be aware of the risks associated with viewing the eclipse, according to Randall Milstein, an OSU astronomer and instructor in the College of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences. “Do not risk eye damage and blindness by using anything to view the eclipse other than ISO (International Standard Organization) approved eclipse glasses,” Milstein said in an email. All the activities are free, except for the concert, which will cost attendees $15, according to Peters. According to Milstein, the eclipse is a rare event. “This is the first total solar eclipse to target the continental United States since 1979, the first to run from the North American Pacific coast to Atlantic coast since 1918 and the first
total solar eclipse since 1776, with its path of totality completely within the continental United States,” Milstein said in an email. “It may become the most widely-shared natural event in American history.” According to Peters, the event will showcase OSU’s role as the lead institution for the Oregon NASA Space Grant Consortium. “This event requires a huge collaboration of faculty, staff and students from across the university. The festival program reflects that diversity,” Peters said in an email. “We have exhibits, talks and activities.” OSU will also play a role in the Learning from the Edge of Space project, a space grant program to livestream the solar eclipse, according to Milstein. More than a thousand students will be launching balloons across the country. According to M ils tein, over 2 0 s p a c e g r a n t p ro g r a m s w i l l h ave balloon teams participating. Event attendees will be able to view some of these balloons from campus, as the Alaska team will be launching their balloons from the Peavy Fields, according to Peters. “(Oregon will be) the first to capture the event by launching a balloon from an OSU research vessel off the West Coast, followed by several other teams launching throughout the state,” Milstein said in an email. According to Peters, the eclipse may be a once-in-a-lifetime event. “People who have seen a total eclipse before describe it as a deeply moving, awe-inspiring event that they will never forget,” Peters said in an email.
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Cancer: June 22 — July 22 Don’t let negative people affect you. You could have friends or family members who are dumping a lot of heavy energy on you, and you need to shake it off. The moon says you can still be happy if you don’t let people drain you.
You could discover that someone has a huge crush on you. Venus is increasing the lust vibes in your life. If you’re single, you’ll have fun flirting with lots of new people. If you’re in a relationship, you and your honey will have more fun than usual.
Twitter: @DailyBaro and @omn_sports
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Tuesday, May 30 — Sunday, June 6, 2017 Aries: March 21 — April 19
Leo: July 23 — Aug. 22
You could find yourself attracted to someone who has been a casual friend or acquaintance in the past. The moon is enhancing those lusty vibes. Don’t make any major commitments until you have spent lots of quality time with this person.
Taurus: April 20 — May 20
Don’t stay stuck in your current way of looking at things. Uranus is urging you to be inventive. If you and your honey keep a traditional routine, shake things up a little. If you’re single, do something else that changes your routine.
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Virgo: Aug. 23 — Sept. 22
Don’t be pressured by authority figures or people who have a louder, more dominant personality. The moon says stand up for yourself. You’ll feel great if you express what you really want and you set terms in all of your relationships.
Gemini: May 21 — June 21
The sun is increasing your confidence for a few weeks. You’ll want to expand your horizons. Dare to dream big. If there is something you want to accomplish in life or love, find ways that you can reach your goals.
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Libra: Sept. 23 — Oct. 23
Although Venus is opposite your sign, you can
still experience progress in your personal life. If you and your honey have had problems, this is a great time to figure out what’s going on. If you’re single, you’ll sort through what you really want out of life and love.
focus on improving your physical health. If you and your honey have been eating unhealthy foods, try to change that. If you’re single, it will be easier to start a new health regimen.
Aquarius: Jan. 20 — Feb. 18
Scorpio: Oct. 24 — Nov. 2
You’re a powerful Water sign, and you don’t like it when other people try to criticize or control you. The moon is reminding you to remain true to yourself. You might have an unusual way of handling your relationships, but if it works for you, stick to it.
You and your sweetheart could be disagreeing about something. Maybe you have different ideas about whether you want to have kids or whether you want to live in a certain place. Jupiter says seek a counselor if you need one.
Sagittarius: Nov. 22 — Dec. 21
Pisces: Feb. 19 — March 20
You could be dealing with somebody who has intense feelings for you, but maybe you don’t feel the same way about this person. Venus is putting lust in the air. You might need to find a careful way of dealing with this powerful situation.
Spacey Neptune is helping you to see the hidden issues that other people ignore. Maybe you will help a friend figure out what’s really going on in his or her relationship. Exercise your natural abilities to counsel and to figure things out.
Capricorn: Dec. 22 — Jan.19 Mars is moving opposite your sign, so you need to
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fleet 58 Eden dweller 60 Rope source 64 Aretha’s genre 65 “The Maltese Falcon” actor 68 Voice below soprano 69 Defib specialists 70 Disney mermaid 71 Burns or Byron 72 Pair of performers 73 CFO’s monetary report, and a hint to this puzzle’s four longest answers
Down
1 Bandstand boosters 2 Small water bird 3 Nebraska neighbor 4 Bottom-of-the-barrel stuff 5 Ukr. or Lith., once 6 Touch the edge of 7 “Oye Como Va” group 8 “__-Tac-Dough”: TV game show 9 Walking obediently, as a dog 10 32 pieces and a game board 11 Havana “Hi!” 12 Force out 13 Chief exec 18 Ancient Romans 23 FedEx assignment: Abbr.
25 Capital of Samoa 27 Ordered (around) 28 Provide with gear 29 Singer Ronstadt 30 Thumb twiddler 32 More in need of a rubdown 33 Kama __: Hindu love guide 34 Tiered cookies 35 Societal expectations 40 Reacts to being ravenous 42 Like better 43 Big name in razors 46 “No, No” Broadway gal 49 Since Jan. 1, on pay stubs 50 Jumped 54 Now, in Nogales 55 Rush job letters 56 Caramel candy brand 57 Volume-off button 59 Flak jacket, e.g. 61 Whistle-blowing Brockovich 62 Talking TV palomino 63 __-mell: disorderly 66 Outback avian 67 Once around the track
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16 • DAILYBAROMETER.COM • WEEK OF TUESDAY, MAY 30, 2017