A2 Campus crime report
A7 Northwest connections
A12 High stakes
UPD aims to decrease liquor violations and sexual assaults following annual report.
How a Northwest alumnus came to campus through one person and how he returned.
Northwest football looks to keep its postseason hopes alive against Fort Hays.
NORTHWEST MISSOURIAN THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF MARYVILLE, MISSOURI
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November 7, 2019 @TheMissourian
VOL. 108, NO. 12
SAC to host Blackbear concert this weekend
NORTHWEST FOOTBALL
FEATURE PHOTO
MADELINE MAPES News Reporter | @MadelineDMapes
GABI BROOKS | NW MISSOURIAN
Senior defensive end Mike Ehlke retrieves a fumble Nov. 2 at Bearcat Stadium against Northeastern State and scores an 18-yard touchdown, the first of his collegiate career. The Bearcat’s 79-0 win was good for the widest margin of victory in program history. READ MORE ON A12
Jock’s Nitch store to close
KENDRICK CALFEE Community News Editor | @KoalaCalfee
S
pecial notice signage replaces Northwest T-shirts and Spoofhound hoodies in the glass storefront windows of Jock’s Nitch Sporting Goods in Maryville. The former Bearcat and Spoofhound gear hub Jock’s Nitch announced Nov. 4 that it will be quitting business in Maryville and will hold a liquidation sale for overstocked sporting goods as the business prepares to leave town. The official date of closure is set for Nov. 11. The sale will come along with special hours Nov. 7-10 where the entire inventory will be marked at 25% to 80% off retail value. Phil Minton, president and CEO of Jock’s Nitch said the company made the decision to terminate the Maryville store in October. He said the store has not been making money for the company in a little more than five years. “While our expenses in property tax, insurance and building cost was going up, our sales remained steady, and even staggered and weren’t rising to meet the needs of the company,” Minton said. Jock’s Nitch opened as a company in 1979 in Pittsburg, Kansas and has five locations in that state. The company specializes in outfitting local universities in the towns they reside with apparel and merchandise. Jock’s Nitch came to Maryville in 2006
GABI BROOKS | NW MISSOURIAN
After being a part of the Maryville community for 13 years, Jock’s Nitch Sporting Goods announced Nov. 4 that it is set to close Nov. 11 due to lack of business.
when Northwest football was proving itself as a force to be dealt with in the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association. Minton said 2009, a year the Bearcats won the national championship, was the best year for sales. “When they (Northwest football) won another championship in 2013, we only got one eighth of
the sales we made in 2009,” Minton said. In relation to the closure announcement, Jock’s Nitch has reached out to Northwest Director of Athletics Andy Peterson with an interest to keep a small team store in Maryville.
SEE NITCH | A4
AR-15 lower receiver raffle winner named RACHEL ADAMSON Editor-in-Chief | @rachadamsonn
In a red “Make America Great Again” baseball cap sat 69 names scribbled onto small blue pieces of paper. At the end of the of the College Republicans meeting, one of those names would be the new owner of an AR-15 80% lower receiver. In an effort to heighten publicity, Northwest College Republicans began selling raffle tickets for an AR-15 80% lower receiver Sept. 30. Tickets sold for $10 apiece, or at a discounted price of $5 if purchased while attending a College Republicans meeting. The organization raised $500 from the efforts. “Sup up my fellow Republicans, let’s get rid of this gun,” someone at the College Republicans meeting Nov. 4 in Valk 50 said minutes before the meeting began. College Republicans President
GABI BROOKS | NW MISSOURIAN
College Republican members applaud the AR-15 80% lower receiver raffle winner sophomore Peyton Jones at the Nov. 4 meeting in Valk Center.
junior Jasper Logan led the raffle efforts. He’s the one who reached out to Facebook friends looking for an AR-15 donation. He’s the one who dug through campus pol-
icy, finding no restrictions against raffling off an AR-15 80% lower receiver, and he’s the one who drew the raffle winner. “When I ran to be the presi-
dent last year, I said I wanted to make our organization known on campus,” Logan said. “Make it known that we’re active and doing stuff. I think this really accomplished that.” Peyton Jones, a transfer student from Missouri Western, is in his first semester at Northwest and immediately joined College Republicans. He normally attends the regularly scheduled College Republicans meetings but missed for the first time Nov. 4, when his name was drawn as the new owner of an AR-15 80% lower receiver. Jones had purchased two of the 69 raffle tickets sold. “I was getting ready to start a flag football game,” Jones said. “I looked at my phone, and Jasper sent me a text and said that I won.”
SEE RAFFLE | A4
After the release of his fourth album, “Anonymous,” rapper Blackbear will be coming to campus Nov. 9. The doors to Bearcat Arena will open at 7 p.m. The concert is scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m. The concert will last until about 11 p.m. Tickets that students purchase in advance are $10 or $15 the day of the concert and public tickets are $20 when purchased in advance and $25 on the day of the concert. Matthew Musto is a singer and producer who goes by the stage name Blackbear. According to the Northwest calendar description, he is best known for co-writing Justin Bieber’s “Boyfriend,” which was No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 2012. Blackbear also has credits that include working with Pharrell Williams, Nick Jonas, Childish Gambino and Linkin Park. Blackbear went from a songwriter to a rapper and R&B singer. He has five studio albums, one of which is half of the electronic hip-hop and R&B influenced duo Mansionz with singer-songwriter Mike Posner. His latest hit, “Hot Girl Bummer” which reached No. 91 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100, was released on his latest studio album, “Anonymous,” in April. The album reached No. 36 on the Billboard 200. OBB will open for Blackbear. OBB is a pop trio of three brothers from Atlanta, Georgia. The brothers, Zach Oswald, Jacob Oswald and Nich Oswald had their 2017 single, “Mona Lisa,” appear in a national Google Chrome campaign ad and in an episode of “Dude Perfect.” OBB recently released their third single, “Foolish.” The student feedback they have received indicates many students are excited to see someone like Blackbear on campus. The selection process for the entertainment was based off of student surveys conducted by SAC. Many students wanted to see popular and expensive artists, several of which were out of SAC’s budget. After some consideration, Blackbear was chosen because of his growing prominence on college campuses and because he was in the price range that SAC could afford. OBB was selected to set the mood for Blackbear’s performance. Apodaca said that SAC spoke with OBB’s team and was able to get them to open for Blackbear. “We are both really excited,”Apodaca said. Student Activities Council Co-Directors of Concert Programming junior Aleka Apodaca and junior Bri Bales said SAC gathers the funds to put on a concert such as this one through a fee within Northwest students’ tuition that helps SAC pay for activities. According to the Bursar Office on campus, this is known as the Designated Fee. This fee is split into different sections to cover various expenses across campus. Apodaca said ticket sales help put back some of the money used for the concert. Bales said that these sales give SAC some money in case they decide to host other activities in the future.
SEE CONCERT | A4
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