Volume 16 Issue 8 | Wes tern Oregon University | Friday, Nov. 20, 2015
ENTERTAINMENT
EDITORIAL
CAMPUS LIFE Art faculty shows off their skills Page 5
History, hip hop and “Hamilton”
Shia surprise Page 11
Page 6
1500 Mormon resignations over Handbook 1 LDS policy excludes children of same-sex marriage from baptism and blessing By Jenna Beresheim | News Editor
WOU offensive line in the trenches against Humboldt State University of Saturday Nov. 14
Photos by JAMAL SMITH
Heartbreak for the Wolves Humboldt State crushes Wolves’ post-season hopes in a 29-13 loss By Jamal Smith | Sports Editor Western Football dropped their last game of the season 29-13 to Humboldt State University (HSU) on Saturday, Nov. 14, 2015 at McArthur Field. The Wolves came into the game with the hopes of reaching the NCAA Division II Playoffs with a win against
HSU. The Wolves were ranked No. 10 in the region and Humboldt was ranked No. 3 prior to the game; the top eight teams in the region would qualify for the playoffs. The Wolves struck first on their second drive of the game when redshirt-sophomore Phillip Fenumiai (QB) connected with sophomore Maurice McSwain (WR) for a 71-yard strike, giving the Wolves an early 7-0 lead and sending the Western faithful into a jubilant frenzy. McSwain finished the game with a season-high 129 yards on five catches.
Nov. 5, 2015 saw the release of a new policy handbook from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints which recalled baptism and blessings as an opportunity for youth of same-sex couples. This policy, housed within Handbook 1, applied to children under 18 who are either “natural or adopted” by LGBT parents. To be exempt from this exclusion, the children must live in a new household with opposite-sex guardians or wait until they are 18 to denounce their original parents in favor of their religion. Children of same-sex parents would also be required to completely disavow same-sex marriage altogether in order to be baptized, confirmed, ordained, or even invited to perform in missionary services. “The church has long been on record as opposing same-sex marriages. While it respects the law of the land, and acknowledges the right of others to think and act differently, it does not perform or accept same-sex marriage within its membership,” stated Eric Hawkins, a church spokesperson to the Washington Post. Some of this opposition can be traced back to
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Misleading college rankings lead students in the wrong direction By Alvin Wilson | Staff Writer “Top 100 colleges in the U.S.! Click here to see where yours ranks!” Odds are, if you browse the internet or use any social media, you have seen a headline like this. But how much help do they really offer? Does the rank of your college really matter? Well, not really. An economics paper written by Stacy Dale and Alan Krueger suggests that the college you attend really doesn’t matter when determining how much money you will make after graduation. In their study, Dale and Krueger found that
students who graduated from extremely selective colleges didn’t make more money than students who were accepted to the same college but chose to attend a less selective one. What does this mean for you? It means that if you work hard and are intelligent enough to be accepted into an Ivy League school, you will likely be successful and make a lot of money regardless of where you graduate. The college you attend doesn’t dictate how much money you will make. Harvard is often at the top of the list when it comes to high-earning students. But does this mean that Harvard educates its students differently than a public university? Or does it simply mean the school is more selective, limiting its students to those who would have been successful regardless? Organizations that rank colleges in the U.S. use methods that determine how much money a student who graduates from that college is expected
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Ranking Oregon Public Universities from The Economist by alumni earnings above expectation Eastern Oregon University of Oregon
$3,001 $1,477
Western Oregon Oregon Institute of Technology
WOU.EDU/WESTERNJOURNAL
$519 $388 -$586
Portland State
Oregon State -$868 -$2,065 Southern Oregon http://www.economist.com/blogs/graphicdetail/2015/10/value-university Infographics by BEN BERGERSON