September 2019 Print Issue

Page 1

When RHS Speaks, We

ECHO

Rolla High School - 900 Bulldog Run - Rolla, Missouri 65401- Volume 71 - Issue 2 September 27, 2019 - www.rhsecho.com @rhsechonews

Westside Marketplace coud be hurting local businesses

10th annual Celebration of Nations tomorrow Tomorrow, the town of Rolla will come together to celebrate the diversity in this town with the Celebration of Nations. It started ten years ago, and has remained a tradition ever since. This year, on the 28th of September, thousands of people of nearly every nationality will gather to share and explore each other’s cultures through family-friendly activities and delicious food. This event is guided by the principles of acceptance and education of different cultures, which is exemplified by the Celebration of Nations theme, with the hope that the same principles will be applied after the event. “One Campus. One Community. One World. I think that’s a really good way to look at how we should approach our lives,” Richie Myers, chairperson to the Celebration of Nations, said. It is also an opportunity that many student groups use to try to dispel the myths and misconceptions surrounding their culture and ways of life. They aim to educate people about how their way of life is often very different from what is portrayed in the media. “We want them to know that Iranian people are peaceful people that are kind, that are hospitable and actually the things going on in the media are more political things rather than being involved with people of both countries,” Alireza Pourhassan, president of the Iranian Student Association, said. The day will start at 11:00 a.m. with a parade that starts at Missouri S&T and goes to the festival, located near the Rolla Band Shell in which many countries and cultures are represented. “[Last year,] it was interesting to see all the different clothes and continued on page 7

Drum Majors Morgan Korich, Rachel Phelps, and Stephanie Kim look out on the field before the band’s halftime performance. Photo by Rhyse Holder

Band places in finals at first competition Eden Potter signals the beginning of the Rolla High School marching band’s show, “The Ascent,” with her opening notes. A hush falls over the crowd as a smooth melody emerges from the lone trumpet player on the field. Her notes are a sign of the beginning of the performance as heads perk up to see the football field transformed into the base of a mountain. The band is preparing to begin their journey climbing a mountain for their performance at the first competition of their 2019 season. The band placed second in their division for the preliminary competition Saturday and eighth

overall in finals. Potter shares the considerable amount of preparation that into the band’s first competition of the season at the Screamin’ Eagles marching band festival in Sullivan on September 28th. “Behind the scenes, we put in a lot of work. We had band camp for two weeks this summer and the minimum amount of hours we put in each day was six,” Potter said. Now, they demonstrate their dedication by practicing every morning at 7 a.m. before school. This year’s show, however, is worth the work according to Potter. “My favorite part about continued on page 8

With the recent openings of popular stores like Menards and T.J. Maxx, there have been more “Now Hiring” signs in town. A possible explanation is as follows. Because of the higher wages and better business at the Westside Marketplace, many good fast-food employees quit their jobs to work at stores like Menards or T.J. Maxx. This creates a loss of employees at fast food restaurants, which is why they are looking for more employees. Jeremy Haberman, the business education teacher here at RHS, can offer further insight to this matter. “By the basics of supply and demand, when you lower the supply, the demand goes up - that being labor as the supply. A lot of those jobs [at the Westside Marketplace] are in that ten to twelve dollar per hour range, which I would imagine hurts employers that hires unskilled labor, which is basically all restaurants,” says Haberman. It is not the fact that businesses are unable to find employees, but that they are unable to find competent employees. Don Luna is a math teacher here at RHS, but during the summer, he runs a snow cone business and runs a firework tent. He knows what it’s like to find employees. “The new stores are still looking for workers too. I think it’s a lack of motivation to work. I try to get students to help me, in the summertime, work at the firework tent and things like that. It’s so hard to find people to do it, because they don’t want to work,” Luna says, “The ones who will want to work will want to be paid for their time and go to those continued on page 6

Artist of the Month

Athletes of the Month

Liz Philips plays the piccolo with the Rolla marching band. Read more about her love for music in the story on page 6. Photo courtesy of Liz Philips

Junior Lane Mabe enters the field as central defender for the Rolla High School varsity soccer team. Read more about Mabe on page 5. Photo by Rhyse Holder

Learn what sparked Sophomore Asia Ellingsworth’s passion for tennis on page 7. Phtoto courtesy of Asia Ellingsworth

DEA database reveals Phelps County among worst in nation for opioids For the first time, the Drug Enforcement Agency’s database tracking prescription opioid pills across the nation has been made public, revealing Phelps County to be among the worst in the nation for pain pill distribution per capita. The database unveiled by the Washington Post tracked purchases and shipments of each individual pill of oxycodone and hydrocodone in the United States from 2006 to 2012. These records provide an unprecedented look into the prescription pain pills that fueled an opioid epidemic resulting in nearly 100,000 deaths during the seven years it tracked*. For Phelps County, this data sheds light on a dark matter. Of the 76 billion pills distributed across the United States, 26,062,525 made their way to Phelps County- enough for 84.4 pills per person

per year. Phelps County’s proportion of pills is not only higher than each surrounding county, but ties as the 101st highest out of 3,242 counties in the country with the 5th highest volume of pills in Missouri. Rolla Chief of Police Sean Fagan has seen the effects of opioids in Phelps County first hand. The DEA revelations are only a glimpse into local law enforcement’s fight against opioids. “We are trying our best to battle with it, but it’s a battle. It’s an uphill battle,” Fagan said. Chief Fagan and his officers encounter the opioid crisis at its most deadly. Legal prescription opioids such as oxycodone and hydrocodone are often stepping stones to the highly addictive, illegal narcotic heroin. This is where law enforcement are most able to intervene

within the opioid crisis, but not easily. “Up until about three years ago we were having a tremendous problem with opiods and the way we found out about it was because of all the overdoses we were having,” Fagan said. “A lot of people were dying.” The Phelps County Police Department has managed to assuage these deaths after each officer began carrying Narcan, a drug capable of treating an overdose, three years ago. Chief Fagan shares that while this measure has decreased opioid related deaths in Phelps County, opioids are still pervasive and harmful to the community. “I honestly don’t know why it’s so bad here. I came from St. Louis County and this is ten times worse than where I came from and I can’t tell you why,” Fagan said. continued on page 5

Proportions of opoids per county in Missouri as reported by The Washington Post


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