Sept. 25, 2019

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EVERGREEN THE DAILY

T H E S T U D E N T VO I C E O F WA S H I N G TO N S TAT E U N I V E R S I T Y S I N C E 1 8 9 5 .

WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 25, 2019

VOL. 126 NO. 28

Program hosts fair for undeclared students

HSING-HAN CHEN | THE DAILY EVERGREEN

Stacey Smith-Colon, assistant director of academic advising for the Carson College of Business, answers questions from students at the Major Exploration Advising program’s fourth annual Meet Your Major Fair on Tuesday afternoon in the CUB Junior Ballroom.

STUDENT LIFE

Student to attend four-day young scholars summit Forbes Under 30 selects only 1,000 from pool of applicants By Khadijah Butler Evergreen reporter

WSU student Nam Nguyen was one of the five percent chosen by Forbes for its young scholars summit. The Forbes Under 30 selects 1,000 scholars to attend a fourday summit with over 10,000 attendees, including investors, entrepreneurs and speakers like Serena Williams and Kevin Durant. Nguyen said when he first submitted his application for the Forbes Under 30 scholars, he did not immediately hear back like the rest of his peers. He assumed he was not chosen until a few weeks ago when he got his acceptance email. He said he was born and raised in Vietnam before his family immigrated to Kent, Washington when he was 17. He is the first person in his family to graduate from high school and continue to college. Nguyen is interning at NASA, preparing for Forbes Under 30 Scholar Summit, working as a course facilitator for WSU’s Honors College and mentoring for various groups like the Office of Undergraduate Research.

Nguyen’s resume and experience are extensive. He has presented a Tedx Talk on his experiences and ideologies he learned abroad, worked on research projects in various countries and is a part of the Harold Frank Engineering Entrepreneurship Institute. He has also completed 13 study abroad programs. Christine Oakley, WSU director of global learning, said over 750 WSU students study abroad through the Global Learning Program. Nguyen is the first student in WSU history to study abroad on all seven continents. All the programs he completed contributed greatly to his success and overall view of the world, she said. “He is an extremely incredible and talented young man,” Oakley said. She said all students can study on every continent like Nguyen. The Global Learning program has over 500 programs. Depending on a student’s major, they can have their courses pre-approved so they can be applied to their requirements, Oakley said. Nguyen said he made sure to immerse himself in the cultures of his host countries, from volunteering at a food bank in Italy See Nguyen Page 10

NICOLE LIU | THE DAILY EVERGREEN

WSU student Nam Nguyen says the experience he gained from studying abroad and researching would have been impossible without the support he received.

News | 3

Life | 4

Mint | 5

Experts talk opioid use

Rollys celebrates one year

SATIRE: Rappers battle

news@dailyevergreen.com

Public health officials spoke about the magnitude and causes of opioid addiction Tuesday.

Local ice cream shop introduces new but secret flavors for its first birthday party.

Lil Jiffy and Real Realness spit some ‘not very real’ bars in the Walmart parking lot, and it’s sad.

(509) 335-2465

News | Page 3

Life | Page 4

Mint | Page 5

In this issue: News tip? Contact news editor Daisy Zavala


PAGE 2 | WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 25, 2019

Community Calendar Wednesday 9/24 WSU society hosts jazz forum. Beginning at 7:30 p.m., the WSU Jazz Society is presenting its first Jazz Forum for the 2019-2020 academic year. There will be performances from new WSU faculty members and student jazz combos. This event is free and open to the public, and located at the Kimbrough Music Building in room 101.

Saturday 9/28 D o g s s t ru t t h e i r s t u f f a t P u l l m a n p a r k . Star ting at 1 p.m ., the eleventh annual Mutt Strutt will begin . Competitions for dogs will take place, including peanut butter spoons , musical chairs , bobbing for hot dogs and a costume contest. Vendors , games , contests and demonstrations will also be available. Proceeds from this event will go to the Pooch Park at Pullman . The entr y fee is $20 per dog, and those interested in attending can register online or at the event. It is located at Reaney Park in Pullman . To submit, email events to meditor@dailyevergreen.com. Preference will be given to events that are free and open to the public or are hosted by an RSO, and must include time, date and place.

DAILYEVERGREEN.COM

PAGE TWO

Daily Police Log Monday Ag e n cy A ss i st a n ce SE Bishop Boulevard, 5:17 a.m. Officers responded to assist with a disorderly male.

Pa r k i n g P ro b l e m NE Colorado Street, 11:53 a.m. Report of a car blocking a fire hydrant. Officer responded.

Pa r k i n g P ro b l e m NE C Street, 1:37 p.m. S u s p i c i o u s P e r s o n /C i rc u m st a n ce Officer responded to the report of a SE Bishop Blvd & SE Summit Ct, 5:54 a.m. parking problem. Report of a male walking in traffic. Officers responded. Subject was Pa r k i n g P ro b l e m taken to Pullman Regional Hospital in NE California Street, 3:05 p.m. protective custody. Officer responded to the report of a parking problem. Pa r k i n g P ro b l e m NE Cove Way, 7:32 a.m. S t ray A n i m a l s Officer responded to the report of a SE Derby St & SE Dilke St, 3:41 p.m. vehicle parked with the left wheels Report of two stray dogs. Officer against the curb. Infraction issued. responded. Dogs were unable to be located. R u n away J u ve n i l e SW Crestview Street, 8:06 a.m. Fo u n d P e r s o n s Report of a runaway juvenile. Officer NE Reaney Way, 4:06 p.m. responded. Juvenile was later located. Officers responded to the report of a found child. Child was returned to its Ag e n cy A ss i st a n ce parents. SE Bishop Boulevard, 9:15 a.m. Officers responded to help with a Civil Calls disorderly male. NW True Street, 4:18 p.m. Officer responded and contacted the Co d e Vi o l a t i o n s reporting party in regards to damage NE Duncan Lane, 10:38 a.m. in her apartment. Officer responded to the report of code violations. A n i m a l N o i s e Co m p l a i n t W Main Street, 8:37 p.m. D i s o rd e r l y Co n d u c t Report of a dog barking. Officer SE Bishop Boulevard, 11:34 a.m. responded and issued an infraction. Report of a disorderly male. Officers responded. Tuesday Co d e Vi o l a t i o n s SE Jackson Street, 11:40 a.m. Officer responded to the report of code violations.

A n i m a l N o i s e Co m p l a i n t SW Golden Hills Drive, 4:25 a.m. Officer responded to the report of a dog barking.

In the Stars | Horoscopes Today’s Birthday —— Share and network to grow this year. Tend your home and garden faithfully for flowering results. Your domestic creativity produces beautiful results this winter, before adapting to professional changes. Resolve miscommunications next summer, before a lovely career highlight develops. Infuse heart into your message. Aries (March 21 - April 19) —½— R e s t r i c t i o n s m ay g e t i m p o s e d . C h a r m someone out of an a rg u m e n t . S t ay p a t i e n t w i t h a s ke p t i c . R e s o l ve u rg e n t m a t t e r s , a n d t h e n re l a x w h e n d o n e . Taurus (April 20 - May 20) —— Make a necessary change at home. Bring fantasies back to earth. Don’t make assumptions or step on anyone’s sensitivities. Provide a practical, short-term upgrade. Gemini (May 21 - June 20) —— Diplomacy with a communications breakdown saves time, heartache and money. Keep your opinions private, and help others find a compromise. Listen, and address concerns directly. Cancer (June 21 - July 22) —½— B r i n g h o m e yo u r d a i l y b re a d . M a i n t a i n co n s e r vat i ve s p e n d i n g . Th e b e st t h i n g s i n l i fe a re f re e ; e n j oy t h e m f re e l y. S i m p l e t r i c k s c a n c u t wa ste.

Leo (July 23 - Aug. 22) —½— Focus your attention wider than personal concerns. Consider others who may have different needs. Accommodate the needs of the youngest participant. Take charge. Virgo (Aug. 23 - Sept. 22) —½— Slow to consider what’s ahead. Avoid travel or noise, and find a peaceful spot to review your route. Check reservations and reserves. Recharge batteries. Libra (Sept. 23 - Oct. 22) —½— Charm your way to a short-term team solution. Don’t give up if one method doesn’t work. Listen to suggestions, and consider immediate needs first. Scorpio (Oct. 23 - Nov. 21) —— A professional challenge requires attention. Work with the highest quality materials you can afford. Temporary fixes buy you some time. Find solutions that conserve resources.

Sagittarius (Nov. 22 - Dec. 21) —— Go explore, even if you don’t go far. Discover new flavors in your own neighborhood. Local diversions satisfy. You can get what you need. Capricorn (Dec. 22 - Jan. 19) —½— Wait until stressful moments have passed before having financial discussions. Support your partner with pressing matters, and then review the numbers for ways to save. Aquarius (Jan. 20 - Feb. 18) —— Have p at i en ce w i t h you r p a r t n er. Con si d e r con se q u en ces b e fore sp e a k i n g h a r sh l y. Re sol ve a d i sa g ree m e n t ove r p r i or i t i es b e fore a d va n ci n g . G e t fa r t h er by wor k i n g tog e t h er. Pisces (Feb. 19 - March 20) —— Ta ke ca re of sh or t - te r m p hysi ca l n e ed s. Avoi d ove r i n d u l gi n g i n tox i n s or j u n k food . N u r t u re you r h ea l t h w i t h h om e re m ed i es, a n d g e t su p p or t w h en req u i red. Rest . TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICE

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News

The Daily Evergreen @DailyEvergreen WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 25, 2019 | PAGE 3

Health experts address opioid crisis in America In 2017, 68 percent of overdose deaths were opioid related By Cameron Sheppard Evergreen reporter

The Foley Institute hosted public health experts to speak on the magnitude and underlying causes of opioid abuse and drug addiction in the U.S. on Tuesday. Dr. Bob Lutz, health officer Spokane Regional Health District, said that 70,237 people died of an overdose in 2017. Of those, 67 percent were opioidrelated. These numbers also appear on the Center for Disease Control website and the National Institute on Drug Abuse site. In the same year, according to the Center for Disease Control, 191 million opioid prescriptions were written in the U.S., which is about 59 prescriptions per 100 people, he said. John Roll, vice dean for research at the Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine, said despite the increasing rates of use and abuse of opioids, the epidemic is less about the drugs themselves

Environments force people to choose an out

Bob Lutz Health officer and more about social environments that encourage drug use. The opioid crisis really started to pick up following recessions in the 2000s as economic opportunities diminished across the nation, Lutz said. Drug addiction disproportionately affects the poor and populations of color. Roll said impoverished environments encourage people to use powerful reinforcers like drugs as a way of escaping their situation or feeling better about it.

NICOLE LIU | THE DAILY EVERGREEN

John Roll, Professor and Vice Dean for Research at WSU’s Elson S.Floyd College of Medicine in Spokane, left, and Bob Lutz, Health Officer for the Spokane Regional Health District, answer questions after their combined presentation on drug addiction on Tuesday at noon in the Foley Talk room at Bryan Hall. “People don’t just wake up and decide they want to be addicted,” Lutz said. “Environments force people to choose an out.” He said for many people in difficult family, social and economic situations, drugs are that escape. “Our environments are a significant contributor as to why

we choose certain substances,” Lutz said. Both Lutz and Roll said that the way society dealt with addiction in the past is flawed and ineffective. Lutz said he suggests providing treatment rather than incarceration to those suffering from

addiction, giving peer support to recovering addicts from individuals who have experienced addiction and recording better data to help understand addiction. “Unfortunately, there is a big gap between those who need and those who actually receive treatment,” Lutz said.

Public health is what we do as a society collectively to assure the conditions in which people can be healthy, he said. Roll said drug abuse should be viewed by the public as less of a moral problem for the user and more of a problem with the morals of society.

Pullman to experience intense weather this week

RYAN PUGH | DAILY EVERGREEN FILE

National Weather Services said wind gusts could be up to 40 miles per hour and last until around 6 or 7 p.m. each night.

Black ice could be a safety hazard as temperatures are expected to be 20 degrees below normal By Andrea Gonzalez Evergreen reporter

Pullman will experience winds with gusts up to 40 miles per hour this week, according to the U.S. National Weather Service website. Jeff Cote, meteorologist for

the National Weather Service in Spokane, said the wind gusts will last until sunset, typically around 6 or 7 p.m. The wind will affect areas in Eastern Washington and the Columbia Basin. Pullman Police Cmdr. Chris Tennant said citizens should take

precautions and look around for any objects that can get caught in the wind. The wind gusts will not be strong enough to blow the shingles off the roof of a house, he said. However, people may want to close the windows since there could be a high amount of dust being blown. Tennant said any objects outside the home that people

do not want to be blown away, such as plants, umbrellas and barbecue grills, should be put inside. People also may want to cover gardens, fruit trees and delicate plants, he said. “It’s a lot better to put objects inside the home than having broken items afterwards,” Tennant said. The wind is not alarming from a safety point. There have been

worse on the Palouse that have been classified as hurricaneforce, he said. The reported winds this week are not hurricane-force gusts but can still be dangerous, he said. There have not been any recent injuries from this of which he is aware. The wind will pick up later in the afternoon, around the time that people get out of class or work, Tennant said. Cote said later this week on Friday night and into the weekend the temperature will drop lower than normal. The temperature Saturday will be 20 degrees below normal, he said. It is reported to be around 46-47 degrees Fahrenheit in the Spokane area. There will be overnight lows in the 30s and potentially temperatures near freezing Monday and Sunday morning, Cote said. Tennant said the cold weather in September is a week or two earlier than normal but not out of character for Pullman. The cold weather may cause black ice on the roadways, he said. Pullman is made up of hills and there could be a safety hazard if people do not anticipate black ice. Black ice can cause cars to start sliding and there is not any stopping power so people can get the car out of control, he said. It can be difficult to see black ice on the roads, Tennant said. Residents help avoid accidents by slowing down ahead of time in case there is any black ice on the road.


Life Editor Zach Goff life@dailyevergreen.com PAGE 4 | WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 25, 2019

Life

The Daily Evergreen @DailyEvergreen DAILYEVERGREEN.COM

SYDENEY BROWN | THE DAILY EVERGREEN

Ames Fowler says he wanted his own washing station, but has yet to finish that project. Fowler says his biggest challenge is time to finish it all.

Local farmers prepare for winter As Eat Local Month wraps up, small-town agriculture prevails on Idaho frontier By Sydnet Brown Evergreen reporter

Full-breasted chickens cluck and lambs graze on the drying autumnal grass. The sky darkens with the oncoming night and thick clouds hover overhead. The Fowler family explains how they plan on transitioning their small farm to be able to thrive during the colder months. Ames Fowler, a WSU student seeking his PhD in civil engineering, moved from Seattle back to his parents’ farm. His parents Helen and Nathan Fowler used to tend it themselves, but Ames wanted more experience in agriculture. He plans on focusing his degree on electric hydrology but said he can’t consider this a full-time career just yet. “This is just a learning hobby for right now,” Ames Fowler said. As part of Eat Local Month, Rural Roots partnered with the University of Idaho Extension and Buy Local Moscow to host a farm tour of Hands and Hearts LLC on Tuesday evening. The Fowler family runs a 5.5-acre farm, which includes their house. Their vegetation haul

SYDENEY BROWN | THE DAILY EVERGREEN

Hands and Hearts is surrounded by the rolling hills of the Palouse. The farm tour took place in between drizzling rain, and as the hour progressed, the wind picked up and the clouds only darkened as they filled with moisture.

dried brush into the lambs’ pen. The fluffy mammals bounded over to eat, their human-like voices carrying into the humid air. Lambs This is just don’t stay at Hands and Hearts LLC for long, Ames said, because it’s difa learning ficult to upkeep in the winter and hobby for wetter months. right now. “Their story is pretty short,” Ames Fowler said. He looked at a Ames Fowler straggling lamb and pointed to its tour guide dry brush dinner. “Come on, I know includes five major components: you want it,” he said to the lamb. chickens for both eggs and meat, The farm has remained low-tech, vegetables, flowers and lambs. Ames Fowler said. They use old Ames Fowler tossed in a pile of skis from when the family lived in

Colorado to hold up some of their vegetable structures, and a commercial-grade refrigerator to keep some of the produce in a nearby garagelike barn. They still plant seeds using rusty hoes and bed rakes for seeding and garden taming. Hands and Hearts grows and sells vegetables at the Tuesday Community Market in Moscow, the Moscow Farmer’s Market and the Pullman Farmer’s Market. They will transition from tomatoes to cucumbers as autumn takes hold. They also grow apples and bulbous indigo plums but aren’t quite ready to sell

those. Greens — spinach, kale, arugula — line some of the irrigation ditches and the front of the Fowler family house. The tour wraps up and Ames Fowler, in his loose-fitting dirtpatched button-down, offers himself for questions about the farm. His wife Delaney stands beside him, and the two watch quietly as the 20-or-so attendees filter out of the isolated dirt road on which the Fowler family farms.

See Farm on page 12 for more photos


Mint

Mint Editor Maggie Quinlan mint@dailyevergreen.com DAILYEVERGREEN.COM

A R T S & C U LT U R E

The Daily Evergreen @DailyEvergreen WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 25, 2019 | PAGE 5

MINDY MALONE | THE DAILY EVERGREEN

Meg Tolley, a master’s student planning to become a music teacher, plays Cameleon by Eric Summut on the marimba.

Student carries family music tradition By Mindy Malone Evergreen reporter

M

usic has been the beating heart of Meg Tolley’s life since she was young. Meg Tolley, a master’s student at WSU, will perform tomorrow with the WSU Symphony Orchestra. Post-

graduation life lies not too far in front, and her journey has been long in the making. Her mother, Susan Tolley, was an elementary school music teacher who specialized in percussion instruments and performed in her off-time. “I grew up with it. [My mom] would take me to rehearsals with her,”

Meg said. “I haven’t really known any interest in piano than percussion. Susan Tolley said she thinks Meg other life.” stayed away from percussion in South Carolina because everyone knew Susan Tolley, and Meg did not want a comparison to be made between them. That changed when her famMeg Tolley ily packed and moved to Bainbridge master’s student Island, Washington when Meg was Growing up in Charleston, South See Student Page 11 Carolina, Meg expressed more

Musician from South Carolina grew up with percussion, found love for it in high school through band assignment

I haven’t really known any other life.

SATIRE

Local rappers battle it out at Walmart parking lot By Joel Kemegue Evergreen columnist

P

ullman’s two biggest hip-hop acts clashed this past weekend in a rap battle for the ages. Pullman’s two biggest hiphop acts clashed last weekend in a rap battle for the ages. The two rappers, Lil Jiffy and Real Realness, brought their years-long rivalry to a head Saturday in the Walmart parking lot, letting the crowd of

shoppers decide, once and for all, who Pullman’s premier rap artist was. “I was so confused,” confused shopper J.B. Fuddle said. “Then I watched it and I realized I probably don’t want to understand.”

I thought they were gonna fight.

Beef began over Real Realness’s first mixtape, dubbed ‘not very real’

Mac Anchese Student

Supposedly the two rappers arrived at the entrance around noon, each with a small entourage of three or four people, then hurled insults at each other about their rapping prowess, romantic skills and possible NATALIE BLAKE | DAILY EVERGREEN ILLUSTRATION

See Rappers Page 11

Real Realness said he was spitting “straight fire,” but onlookers said it was more “hot trash.”


Mint Editor Maggie quinlan mint@dailyevergreen.com

Mint

The Daily Evergreen @DailyEvergreen DAILYEVERGREEN.COM PAGE 7

A R T S & C U LT U R E

PAGE 6 | WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 11, 2019

‘Toy Story 4’ will make you cry your eyes out Sequels raise suspicion but fan-favorite children’s movie has it all with actors, writing, emotionality

better than all the others. When our lord and savior Keanu Reeves plays a character called Duke Kaboom, you know it’s going to be good.

announced they were going to make a fourth “Toy Story,” I was By Roos Helgesen skeptical. The last three films in Evergreen the franchise were all great and columnist fulfilling, and it’s hard to do that. - WHAT: ‘Toy Story 4’ showing It’s hard to make a good trilogy, and almost impossible to - WHEN: 6-9 p.m. Friday and make four good movies. 4-5 p.m. Sunday. Look at “Indiana Jones” or the - WHERE: CUB theater air warning: You are going Jason Bourne movies. The first to cry, no “ifs,” “ands” or three movies were masterpieces. - COST: Free “buts” about it. When you think they’re done — Let me say right off the bat, nope. Here is another one that Director Josh Cooley outdoes “Toy Story 4” was an amazing makes me lose faith in humanity. himself on his big screen debut. movie. And yet, here it is a beautiful He manages to keep all the old characters while focusing and When producers first fourth movie which is arguably

GET OUT & GO

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introducing more new characters to add to the “Toy Story” lineup. They are all amazing and beautifully voice acted. “Toy Story 4” follows Forky, voiced by Tony Hale, who a spork with googly eyes attached to them made by Bonnie, played by Emily Hahn, at her kindergarten orientation. Forky instantly becomes important to her as he helps her cope with going into a new environment. Forky, on the other hand, is not so enthused about being brought to life and does not understand what is happening. So, he tries to escape. The rest of the film follows

Forky and Woody, played by Tom Hanks, as they once again try to get home to their childen. This movie is amazing, and I would highly recommend bringing a box of tissues, because, oh boy, you’re going to need them. “Toy Story 4” will be showing in the CUE auditorium at 6 and 9 p.m. on Friday and Saturday, and 4 and 5 p.m. on Sunday.

Roos Helgesen is a freshman international business major from Anchorage, Alaska. He can be contacted at 335-1140 or by mint@dailyevergreen.com.

Music Group | Continued from Page 6 said. “Theatrically, he can engage with the audience.” The group exclusively played at the farmers market but now does performances at housewarming parties, weddings, banquets and other private events, Bruce said. “We can chameleon really well,” Bacon said. “We can find a way to fit any situation.” The band plays songs that will capture their audience’s attention because they have a very limited window with people who are walking by quickly at the

market, Bacon said. “We’re truly best in our natural habitat of acoustic and close to the audience,” Bacon said. The band practices the Friday nights before the farmers market, but they try to avoid refining their pieces too much, Meador said. “We still want to have that jam element,” Meador said. “The less confident we feel, the more likely we’re able to improvise and make something really special.” The band plays songs ranging from

the likes of “The Final Countdown” by Europe all the way to Disney’s “The Little Mermaid” soundtrack, Bruce said. “The biggest thing that makes us unique is that we’re kind of a meme band,” Meador said. Members of Traffyk Jam tailor their covers to whoever is closest while they are performing. For instance, if someone in a Metallica shirt walks by, they change their style or start playing one of their classic songs, Bacon said. “[We take] songs that people know, keeping the element that makes it that

song, and then just completely destroy everything else about it,” Bacon said. The musicians can take their usual melodies and turn them into something suitable for their current performance, even an Oktoberfest party when they had never played polka music before. “We turned Lady Gaga and Katy Perry and these stupid pop hits, put an ‘oompa’ behind it and made it into a polka jam,” Bacon said. Traffyk Jam can be seen playing at the Moscow Farmers Market most Saturdays during the summer and fall.

EMMA LEDBETTER | THE DAILY EVERGREEN

“Musically, we can communicate with [our tap dancer] through his tap board. Theatrically, he can engage with the audience,” percussionist Brantley Bacon said.

Local music group combines odd instruments By Emma Ledbetter Evergreen reporter

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oscow band Traffyk Jam started as one man’s idea to make money at the Moscow Farmers Market. “We threw ‘Traffyk Jam’ out there because of the scene of musicians sitting out in the street and playing music,”

strange, not-thought-about grouping of instruments,” Bruce said.

We still want to have that jam element. The less confident

said Moscow resident Connor Bruce, the we feel, the more likely we’re able to improvise and musician who started the group. Bruce began playing at the market make something really special. in May 2017 and soon after brought in guitarist Bobby Meador Bobby Meador on guitar and Brantley Bacon on percussion. Tap dancer Tim “Musically, we can communicate with The band members play covers using Malm made their market ensemble com- eight-string guitars, melodicas and other [Malm] through his tap board,” Bacon plete when he joined in late June 2017. unusual instruments. Malm accompaSee Music Group Page 5 “Collectively our appeal is the nies the group, and his tap music serves

MUSIC

Symphony to hold first concert of year tomorrow Orchestra will feature tuba solo, conducted by graduate student, music professor pair By Maddy Bean Evergreen reporter

The WSU Symphony Orchestra will perform several favorite orchestral pieces including a tuba concerto performed by master’s student Duncan Titus on Thursday. Titus, who is in the second year of getting his Master of Arts in music performance, will be playing his first solo of this scale, he said. “It’s all been kind of me and the piano,” Titus said. “This is the first time I’ve gotten to play with such a large group which is really scary, but really exciting.” Titus has been training for this piece since February. He got the piece last year when he was co-winner for WSU’s Concerto/Aria Competition. “It’s been a long time preparing for it,” he said. The orchestra will also perform Jean Sibelius’s “Finlandia,” said orchestra violinist Ashleigh Nealer, graduate student studying violin performance. She said she is excited for the audience to experience this song. “It’s just a really cool piece,” Nealer said. “And there’s a lot of history behind it.” This is her first year playing with

The politics of addiction

as a sort of percussion instrument, Bruce said.

Tap dancer performs for visual element while eight-string guitars, melodicas play at farmer’s market, weddings

WSU’s Symphony Orchestra, she said. To close out, the orchestra will play a piece by Arturo Marquez called “Danzon No. 2,” a dance-like piece with a Latin bass, Titus said. “It’s really fun,” Titus said. “Anyone who comes will really enjoy that one.” “Finlandia” will be conducted by graduate student Angelia Gomez, and WSU School of Music’s Danh

GET OUT & GO - WHAT: WSU Symphony Orchestra Concert - WHEN: 7:30 - 9:30 p.m. tomorrow - WHERE: Bryan Hall Theater

Pham will be the orchestra’s conductor. The concert will be from 7:309:30 p.m. on Thursday at Bryan Hall Theatre. There will be a livestream for anyone who cannot make it to the concert. Though Titus has his own solo to focus on, he said he is excited to hear the rest of the orchestra play together at the performance, especially since it’s their first one of YANG CHEN | DAILY EVERGREEN FILE the year. “I think it’s going to be a great The group will play classical favorites including “Flight of the Bumblebee,” “Finlandia” concert,” he said. and “Danzon No. 2.” They will feature a marimba and tuba.

KZUU Weekly Top Ten 1. “Stop Selling Her Drugs” by Bakar 2. “British Bombs” by Declan McKenna 3. “Golden Girl” by The Tazers 4. “Big Racks” by Bree Runway 5. “MOO” by Cashmere Cat 6. “What You Heard” by Sonder 7. “Giving Up” by Emarosa 8. “Vice City” by Big Piig 9. “Jerry Whiner” by Indigo waves 10. “Dig Up Her Bones” by The Misfits Song selections are made by KZUU management and reflect what they think is especially awesome and listenable at the time. Questions about KZUU or their song selections can be directed to sovann.robinson@wsu.edu

Thursday September 26 | 4:30 p.m. Foley Speaker’s Room | 308 Bryan Hall In 2017, substance abuse disorders affected 19.7 million Americans. Social scientists are still attempting to determine whether genetic predisposition or environmental influences are more likely to influence addictive behavior, and the best array of policy responses to addiction. Join our panel of experts who will discuss the issues involved. www.foley.wsu.edu


PAGE 8 | WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 25, 2019

Region

The Daily Evergreen @DailyEvergreen DAILYEVERGREEN.COM

Small plane touches down on closed airport taxiway

ALEX PETTIT ESTELL | DAILY EVERGREEN FILE

”There (was) no emergency that we’re aware of,” Executive Director Tony Bean said, regarding the plane landing at the closed Moscow-Pullman Regional Airport.

Pilot lands at Moscow-Pullman Regional Airport amidst runway lengthening project By Elaine Williams Lewiston Tribune

No one was hurt Monday when a small plane landed on a taxiway at the Pullman-Moscow Regional Airport that is temporarily closed to air traffic while crews finish reconstructing the facility’s only runway. The pilot was flying a general

aviation plane, perhaps from Spokane, and didn’t have any passengers, said Executive Director Tony Bean. The aircraft landed in Pullman even though the airport has markings that show the runway is closed and has published the closure in notices all pilots are supposed to check before they fly, he said.

The pilot may have announced he was landing on a radio system, but those communications aren’t being monitored by firefighting and operations employees during the runway outage. “There (was) no emergency that we’re aware of,” Bean said. Construction crews were working in the vicinity of where the pilot touched down on a taxiway that is roughly 60 feet wide, about the same width as some runways that type of plane uses.

“It’s not acceptable,” he said. “It puts the contractors, the pilot and others in jeopardy. ... The contractors aren’t watching the sky. They are focused on their job.” The plane will likely remain parked at the Pullman airport until the runway is reopened for general aviation Oct. 4, a week before commercial passenger flights resume. The incident has been reported to the Federal Aviation Administration.

The runway closed Sept. 8 so that workers could complete parts of a $154 million project that can only be done when planes aren’t arriving and departing. The upgrade includes lengthening the runway from 6,730 feet to 7,100 feet and adding an instrument landing system. Together, those improvements are anticipated to allow planes to land in conditions that would have previously forced them to divert to other airports.

Moscow building found to have asbestos, extensive roof damage Employees vacate location, further repairs needed on property purchased last year By Garrett Cabeza Moscow-Pullman Daily News

Roof damage and asbestos have caused city employees to vacate the Moscow Water Department Building likely until next year. After the city purchased the building for $422,214 last year, city staff worked to arrange contractors for numerous improvements, including structural repairs, new roof installation, carpet replacement and heating, ventilation and air conditioning repairs -- all of which were anticipated prior to the city purchasing the property, Moscow Community Development Director Bill Belknap told the Moscow Public Works/Finance Committee on Monday. During the initial phase of demolition of the building’s lower roof areas in July, it was discovered the damage was more extensive than anticipated, and one of the perimeter beams dropped unexpectedly, he said. The dropped beam required the installation of temporary cribbing to support the beams until repairs could be made. The contractor also discovered the roof insulation contained asbestos. Belknap said the roof is a unique structural design that creates a largely free-standing structure without the need for internal support. “It also makes it somewhat of a unique structure to repair,” he said. Because of the repairs and anticipated construction noise, city officials decided to relocate employees to other city work offices, including City Hall, the Paul Mann Building, the Water Production Building next door to the structure under construction and the space it leases across Third Street from City Hall.

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The building will be covered in a shield to serve as a temporary roof until further construction continues next spring or summer. Belknap said the city’s structural engineer indicated the building remains structurally stable and does not present a risk to the public. Belknap said the original structural and roof repair costs were expected to cost about $54,000 and the newfound damage and electrical work is expected to add minimal construction cost increases. He did not have finalized costs Monday. Part of the unexpected roof damage included rotting in the southwest corner of the roof. During the roof removal,

Belknap said the contractor discovered a fair amount of electrical work installed on top of the roof decking to serve several of the ceiling light fixtures. The circuits have since been removed, but the conduits and electrical work found on the roof will need to be rerouted to serve the ceiling light fixtures. Crews completed asbestos abatement and removal of the rest of the roof earlier this month and a temporary plastic sheeting was used to cover the structure, Belknap said. During recent rain events,

water entered the building and the beams have continued to settle and flex slightly over the past month or so. Once the wood damage to the roof decking and beams is inspected, a contractor will cover the building with an ice and water shield to serve as a temporary roofing surface to help keep water out of the building during the winter. Once the protection is in place, a contractor will start to repair the damaged beams and roof decking in the corner. Because it is late in the year,

Belknap said he expects the city will need to wait until next spring or summer to complete the new roof insulation and membrane installation. As a result, employees will likely not be able to reoccupy the building until that time. Structural repairs will take several weeks to complete, Belknap said, and then the cribbing supports can be removed. “It’s not entirely surprising,” said Committeeman Jim Boland. “We knew there was something there. It’s just a little more extensive than originally anticipated.”


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LIFE

WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 25, 2019 | PAGE 9

Local ice cream shop thriving after flooding R o l lys ice cream parlor plans to release t wo n ew f l avo r s i n O c t o be r By Anna Young Evergreen reporter

On her first visit to Rollys ice cream parlor in downtown Pullman, 11-year-old Claire McEwen knew what she wanted right away. Cookie Monster, she said, is her nickname, so she had to get it when she saw the flavor on the menu. “I love Oreos,” she said, “but sometimes I can be a little monster.” She and her mother Deidrea Power-McEwen came into the parlor about a half-hour after it opened at noon Tuesday. It was their first time visiting. Power-McEwen said they had considered coming to Rollys for a while, and now seemed like a good time. “[It’s a] little treat in the middle of the day between two doctor’s appointments,” PowerMcEwen said. Power-McEwen tucked her pink spoon between rolls of Island Paradise ice cream topped with fruit and whipped cream. Rollys co-owner Crystal Gayles said she recommends Island Paradise to people who like fruity flavors. It’s her personal favorite. And Crystal Gayles has tried more than the average sweet treat flavors. Since all Rollys ice cream starts from the same base, it is possible to invent some unique flavors. Bleu cheese, cranberry and candied pecans, to be specific. “I am weird, and I liked [the flavor],” Crystal Gayles said with a laugh. “Maybe other people might, I don’t know.”

She said if a food or drink item is closed, Rollys can turn it into ice cream. No liquor, she said, and no open packages. But if a customer brings in something like a closed bag of Hot Cheetos or Red Bull, they can roll it into ice cream. She and her husband, coowner Adrian Gayles, got the idea for Rollys after watching ice cream videos on YouTube. The rolling technique, she said, originated in Thailand and uses a cold metal surface called an ice pan. Crystal Gayles demonstrated the process — with the standard Cookie Monster ingredients, not Hot Cheetos. She chopped up the tuxedo creme-filled cookies and chocolate chip cookies on the ice pan, set to negative 7 degrees Fahrenheit, then poured the cream base over it. She mashed and smoothed the mixture into a flat rectangle before rolling it into tubes and topping it all with whipped cream. After getting the business idea, practicing the technique and ordering the ice pan, Crystal Gayles and her husband started looking for locations in 2016. Finding a place was one thing; timing was another. “What really pushed us to open was when Baskin-Robbins ended up closing,” she said. The interior of the parlor features a painted mural of Candyland and cartoon characters racing to a sugary castle. Arcade machines beep and whirr under the classic rock humming over the speakers. Looking at the colorful decor, it’s hard to imagine the flood that coursed through the building April 9. On the first day of flooding, Crystal Gayles said, the water rose

RACHEL SUN | THE DAILY EVERGREEN

Freshly made bowl of cookie monster ice cream rolls sits on a table on tuesday at Rollys. The technique orignated in Thialand, Rollys Owner Crystal Gayles said. up waist-high. By the next day, an inch and a half of mud-coated the floor, and several appliances suffered water damage. She created a GoFundMe campaign to replace damaged appliances, including the interior parts of the ice pan. Thanks to 23 donors with contributions between $5 and $795, the Rollys owners exceeded their $1,500 goal and reopened less than two months later, May 31 — just in time for summer. “We certainly get a diverse customer base,” Crystal Gayles said. “More college students during the year, and […] more families and kids in the summertime.”

Crystal Gayles said she and her husband are thinking about opening a Rollys branch in Lewiston, Idaho. However, she estimated another six months until those plans can start gaining traction. “It’s just a matter of really getting this [location] back up and going up to full speed,” she said. Rollys sets a high bar for full-speed. The business opened Oct. 18, 2018 — one day after ESPN College GameDay arrived in Pullman for WSU’s football game against the University of Oregon. That also means the business’ oneyear anniversary is coming up, accompanied by a Birthday

Bash and two secret new flavors making their way onto the menu. The College GameDay rush gave Crystal Gayles and her husband the feedback they needed, both good and bad. She said the biggest complaint is that the ice cream can be pricey, but it comes down to maintaining quality and paying employees while still turning a profit. Besides, Crystal Gayles said the handcrafted technique sets Rollys apart from other ice cream parlors. “We could get it to the creamy consistency without having to roll it and serve it that way,” she said, “but that’s no fun.”

Students' council hosts Party in the Park C lubs come toge t h e r t o s h a r e foods from dif ferent cultures By Madysen McLain Evergreen reporter

Party in the Park will showcase a variety of dishes and entertainment from different cultures for students, families and locals. The event was created by the International Students’ Council (ISC) to celebrate diverse cultures. “We want to promote other cultures and the diversity of people,” said Adrian Figo Prayitno, International Students’ council marketing and public relations officer. “That’s the beauty America holds.” A local DJ will help keep the party going. Or if you would rather jump in a different way there will also be a bouncy castle. Different clubs in the International Students’ Council will also table and sell food. “You can taste actual food from their own culture,” Ximeng Li, International Students’ Council president, said. Some of the clubs involved are the Japanese Student Association, the Middle Eastern Student Association and the Association for Bangladeshi Students and Scholars, Prayitno said. About 12 clubs of the 20 total clubs under the council have signed up for the event so far, Li said. ISC is a part of ASWSU and it provides the participating clubs with funding, so all the profits go back to the clubs rather than the council, Prayitno said. The event is free to attend, but clubs will accept cash or Venmo to purchase tickets to pay for food at the event, he said. Around 200 people came to the event in previous years, and they expect around the same attendance this year, Li said. Those interested in volunteering for the event can contact the ISC at aswsu.isc@wsu.edu. Volunteers will receive one ticket to redeem for food, Li said. “We want people to embrace differences in cultures,” Prayitno said. “They can also experience food and games that usually is connected to each culture.” EUGENE LEE | DAILY EVERGREEN FILE The Party in the Park is from 12-5 p.m. on “We want to promote other cultures and the diversity of people,” Adrian Figo Prayitno said Sept. 18. Sunday at Reaney Park.


PAGE 10 | WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 25, 2019

DAILYEVERGREEN.COM

NEWS

Committee discusses need for more housing

CAROLYNN CLAREY | THE DAILY EVERGREEN

Councilmembers Nathan Weller and Eileen Macoll question Bryan Points on how a student residential zone would be created. Points responded that it would not be an official zone but rather a residential area that was more desirable for students on Tuesday evening at Pullman City Hall. homes a year, which is close to double what the town has been doing, Points said. To make the plan successful the community needs to establish a Palouse housing leadership team, he said. Rick Lytel, CEO of Klar Scientific, also made a presentation on how his business has grown in Pullman. Klar Scientific produces spectroscopic microscopes that are used to identify materials, he said. The microscopes work by shining light on a substance and then collecting information about the light that comes off the substance. Klar Scientific launched in

2016 in Pullman and has grown since then, just recently making its first profit, said Lytel. Their business plan starts with an identification service where clients send in a sample and they identify it and send it back, he said. The company stayed in Pullman to keep it under local control as opposed to a Silicon Valley investor, Lytel said. “For now, we’ve got a nice little start up around the corner and I’m very pleased to be working with it,” he said. “I owe Pullman a real debt here... you are part of the community and the community has been very good to us.” Bridget Clark, Girl Scout

Nguyen has taken those experiences and applied them to joining exploration excursions courses. Environmental science to his research for the McNair Program o n in Antarctica. courses in Australia Scholars He also and business examining learned a classes in Brazil and Korea allowed little German while studying in Germany, he said, so he could communicate with his host family more efficiently. Despite his travels, Nguyen said he stayed grounded in his to view w h a t studies and used the surroundings h i m of his host country to apply the the world with a different influences students to choose knowledge he learned in his perspective, he said. certain continents for abroad

programs, he said. This month, Nguyen said he was also chosen as a NASA Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate intern to work with knowledge and information management.

City officials advised to double number of houses added per year By Benjamin White Evergreen reporter

The City of Pullman may need to add several thousand housing units in the coming years to keep up with increasing housing demands, a representative from a consulting firm told the city council on Tuesday. Thomas P. Miller & Associates was hired to research housing needs in Whitman and Latah counties and propose a plan. “Economic development

and housing are intertwined, you cannot look at one of those issues without looking at the other,” he said. In researching, the company looked at other cities that had similar situations and saw what they have done about housing needs, he said. A problem the Palouse faces is being off the radar for developers, Points said. Many developers that could work here are instead working in other areas. He said to fulfill the demand for current residents and new residents over the next ten years, the city must add 3,200 total units, which should be single-family homes. That would be about 270

Nguyen | Continued from Page 1

troop leader, brought six scouts to talk about a safety project. Girl Scout troop 3210 asked the city council to make school zones safer for bikers and pedestrians. Stopping speeding on Southeast Harvest Drive and Southeast Crestview is a priority for the Girl Scouts because many young students walk along those roads on their way to school. There is a need in this community for more walker and biker signs in a clear view of drivers to protect pedestrians, they said. These kinds of signs are needed all around the town, but the city has to start somewhere.

another student from Texas, he said. They will design a method to catalog and organize publications to share with researchers. Nguyen said the experience he gained during his time abroad and researching would not have been possible without support from not just his family, but also mentors, advisers, friends, scholarship donors and resources at WSU. He was Nguyen will return to Antarctica selected to collaborate with a in December to continue his chief knowledge officer along with McNairs research project.


PAGE 11 | WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 25, 2019

DAILYEVERGREEN.COM

MINT

Student | Continued from Page 5 too. “I feel blessed that we had She returned to WSU in After high school, Meg decid- this really close relationship,” fall 2018 to begin her master’s ed to attend WSU and pursue Susan Tolley said. “I loved get- program. Her adviser, former WSU music professor and composShe is the most focused and er David Jarvis, taught her as dedicated musician I know. I’m an undergraduate and said he enjoyed watching her grow looking forward to her graduating. in her craft and that she has Susan Tolley Meg’s mother discipline. Jarvis laughed sharing a career in music and music ting to share her talent.” education — the same as her After graduating in 2014, a memory of Meg. In 2012, mom. Susan Tolley said Meg Meg spent time teaching music she performed “Flight of the would come home for winter in Seattle area schools. She Bumblebee” from classical artist or spring break while Susan made friends with other musi- Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov. Tolley’s classes were still in ses- cians in the area, and in their “We did a special arrangesion, and she would play for her free time, they would rehearse ment for percussion ensemble mother’s elementary students. and perform concerts together. so she could play that piece,”

15. She called the band director of her new high school and introduced herself. She said she was a piano player, but she was interested in joining the band. “I think I really just needed something to latch on to,” Meg said. “Something I was familiar with because at the time I was unfamiliar with everything else.” The band director assigned her to the percussion group, specifically the marimba. Meg had grown up watching her mom play the marimba. She began taking lessons and it slowly became her instrument

Jarvis said. “She did it so well.” Meg plans to return to the Seattle area after she graduates in the spring and pick up where she left off. “She is the most focused and dedicated musician I know,” Susan Tolley said. “I value her as a friend and as an educator — I’m looking forward to her graduating and coming back to her teaching job again.” Meg will perform tomorrow Sept. 26 in the season premiere concert of the WSU Symphony Orchestra. The event will be held in Bryan Hall Theatre from 7:30-9:30 p.m.

Rappers | Continued from Page 11 and the rappers finally engaged each other in verbal combat, until the manager came out and broke it up. The battle itself lasted four minutes.

The feud between the two rappers supposedly began in 2017, when Realness released his mixtape The “Real” Real Realness. Reportedly, Lil Jiffy trashed the mixtape on Snapchat, calling it “not very I was spitting straight fire, man. real” which he named his diss Lil Jiffy was getting slaughtered track, released a week after. and they took pity on him. Since then the two artists Arty “Real Realness” Fischel have released diss track after rapper diss track on each other, until I’m invigorated by the crazy “They were just afraid,” Realness challenged Lil Jiffy turnout,” Lil Jiffy, born Skippy to a rap battle in the Walmart Realness, born Arty Fischel, Extracrunch, said. “Eventually parking lot. None of the staff said, “I was spitting straight fire, man. Lil Jiffy was getting you have to get serious and were informed. slaughtered and they took pity where else do you handle “We can talk all day,” Lil on him.” things besides the Walmart Jiffy said. “But the audience When asked if any of said parking lot?” knows who really won.

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bars were hot, Fuddle said the bars were, “hot trash” on both sides. “This battle was what the fans have been waiting for and

relations had with the other’s mother. “I thought they were gonna fight,” WSU student and fightenthusiast Mac Anchese said. “That’s the only reason I stayed. I wanted to see someone get curb-stomped.” Anchese said that both rappers looked nervous in front of the ten or so people who actually stayed to watch, and that neither seemed like they wanted to rap. Anchese described it as, “disappointing,” “anemic” and “completely worthless.” After nearly two hours of insults and goading the other to start, a beat was dropped

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They know.” None of the sources gave a definitive answer as to who was the better rapper, instead citing “whoever wasn’t there” as the real winner. No rematch has been scheduled yet but Lil Jiffy will be performing his track “Not Very Real” outside the Cougar Country parking lot whenever it opens permanently. “Hopefully not soon,” Fuddle said.

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LIFE

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Farms | Continued from Page 4

SYDNEY BROWN | THE DAILY EVERGREEN

LUKE HUDSON | THE DAILY EVERGREEN

Ames Fowler wears dark rainboots as he shows the precision seeding Chickens stand inside an enclosure and are let out into during the day. At night, the chickens stay tool, which he uses for some potatoes and other root vegetables to inside a coop to keep warm. ensure t h ey p u t t h e s e e d s i n t h e exa c t r i g h t s p o t .

SYDNEY BROWN | THE DAILY EVERGREEN

LUKE HUDSON | THE DAILY EVERGREEN

Flowers grow next to the vegetables patches on the farm. Ames Fowler gestures at the field where an electrowire enclosure holds chickens during the day.

The politics of addiction

SYDNEY BROWN | THE DAILY EVERGREEN

Hands and Hearts is surrounded by the rolling hills of the Palouse.

Thursday September 26 | 4:30 p.m. Foley Speaker’s Room | 308 Bryan Hall In 2017, substance abuse disorders affected 19.7 million Americans. Social scientists are still attempting to determine whether genetic predisposition or environmental influences are more likely to influence addictive behavior, and the best array of policy responses to addiction. Join our panel of experts who will discuss the issues involved. www.foley.wsu.edu

SYDNEY BROWN | THE DAILY EVERGREEN

The Fowlers also grow flowers on the Hands and Hearts farm.


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