Friday, Oct. 30, 2015 | Volume 211 | Number 47 | 40 cents | iowastatedaily.com | An independent student newspaper serving Iowa State since 1890.
103 YEARS OF STATEMENTS
Emily Blobaum/Iowa State Daily
This year marks the 103rd annual Homecoming celebration, and this year’s theme is “Making a STATEment.” Mass campaniling and Yell Like Hell are traditions. Established in 1963, Yell Like Hell started as a way for residence halls to get involved with Homecoming by coming up with a yell that would be judged on originality and charisma. Yell Like Hell is well-known around campus as a greek tradition, but it is not limited to the greek community. The Homecoming cochairwomen are contemplating a way to break down the barrier between greeks and non-greeks, but it might be a long process because some students have the idea that Homecoming festivities are restricted to greeks. Each sorority and fraternity is required to participate in Yell Like Hell and is assigned two cochair per chapter. Pairings consist of three or four different chapters, usually a large fraternity and sorority, and one or two smaller chapters.
Ames PD teaches Miranda rights Council By Audra.Kincart @iowastatedaily.com
How many of us can say we know what our Miranda rights are and when they apply? The second educational dialogue, put on in concordance with the Ames Police Department and the NAACP, took place Thursday evening AT the Ames City Hall. Cmdr. Geoff Huff led the conversation-style dialogue about knowing your rights. The discussion included Miranda rights and arrests. “I think Miranda rights be one of the most misunderstood court rulings,” Huff said. The educational dialogue began with a 10-question test about Miranda rights. The Miranda rights are named after a convicted rapist, Ernesto Miranda. Miranda was ar-
talks Ames issues
rested in Arizona in 1963 on three charges including rape, kidnapping and armed robbery. The police who arrested Miranda did not handle the situation as they should have, explained Huff, and Miranda’s case eventually went to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court ruled in Miranda v. Arizona that the confession Miranda gave was useless because of how the arrest was handled; however, there was still enough evidence against Miranda that he was found guilty of the charges. There are several misconceptions about Miranda rights. One such misconception is that officers don’t have to read the rights word-for-word, as long as they hit the main points of: • You have the right to remain silent. • Anything you say can and
MIRANDA RIGHTS p12
By Shannon.McCarty @iowastatedaily.com
Audra Kincart/Iowa State Daily
Cmdr. Geoff Huff of the Ames Police Department speaks to audience about Miranda rights, which are a list of rights that those who are arrested possess.
Scary stories haunt ISU students By Ellen.Bombela @iowastatedaily.com Things got pretty spooky Thursday night in Morrill Hall as students and Ames community members listened to ghost stories from Iowa State, the Ames area and the state of Iowa. The stories were shared by Amanda Hall, former University Museums employee and ghost story enthusiast. The event was hosted by University Museums. Hall started the evening by sharing stories from around Iowa. Some famous Charlie Coffey/Iowa State Daily haunted places in Iowa inAmanda Hill, former University Museums employee, tells ghost stories Thursday night in Morrill Hall. clude the Villisca Axe Murder Hill told stories from around the state and around campus, such as Mr. Big, a ghost in Friley Hall. House, where an entire fam-
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ily was slaughtered by an axeman; the city of Van Meter; the Farrar Schoolhouse; and Merle Hay Mall. Legend has it that the mall was built over a monastery, and there have been sightings of a crying nun holding a dead baby at night. Hall then went on to talk about different locations at Iowa State that are haunted. Some of the different locations include the Memorial Union, Fisher Theater, Stephens Auditorium and the Farm House. Hall, who is a former Farm House employee, recalled a ghost story that one of her fellow co-workers
GHOST STORIES p12
Ames City Council candidates answered questions on a variety of issues for the final time Thursday night before the big election day. Thursday night’s forum was the last before the Nov. 3 elections and was cohosted by the Ames Progressive Alliance and Ames Public Library. The sixth City Council forum included all five candidates: Tim Gartin, incumbent running unopposed for the 2nd Ward; Bronwyn Beatty-Hansen, who is running against Matthew Converse for the at-large seat; and Dan DeGeest, who is running against incumbent Chris Nelson for the 4th Ward. Questions were asked by representatives from the National Alliance on Mental Illness of Central Iowa, the Ames Bicycle Coalition, A Mid-Iowa Organizing Strategy Affordable Housing Team, Ames Community Solar Initiative, The Green Umbrella, Ames Adult Education & Literacy Program and the Ames Progressive Alliance. Kearra Chester and Anneke Mundel from the Ames Adult Education & Literacy Program asked if the candidates would be in favor of implementing programs to combat poverty such as a higher local minimum wage or the offering of microloans to those wanting to start a business.
CITY COUNCIL p4
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IOWA STATE DAILY
CAMPUS BRIEF
2
Weather FRIDAY
Mostly cloudy. Rain in the evening and overnight.
SATURDAY
Rain in the morning. Clouds clearing as the day goes on.
SUNDAY Sunny.
Weather provided by ISU Meteorology Club.
Friday has arrived 55
45 56 44 67 47
Police Blotter The information in the log comes from the ISU and City of Ames police departments’ records.
Oct. 27 An officer investigated a property damage collision at Lot 100 (reported at 12:28 p.m.).
All those accused of violating the law are innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.
An officer assisted an individual who was experiencing emotional difficulties at 1300 block of Walton Drive (reported at 2:32 p.m.).
Calendar All events courtesy of the ISU events calendar.
Oct. 30 Art and Antique Sale 10 a.m.-4 p.m., ISU Warehouse, 925 Airport Road Iowa State University’s Central Stores, ISU Surplus and University Museums announces an Art and Antique Sale is first come, first serve. The sale will feature more than 100 oil paintings and drawings and cartoons, figurines, pottery, sculptures, dinnerware, furniture, a Civil War-era sword, German cameras, books and more. Think ing Wrong, Doing Right: Design for Social Impact 12:10-1 p.m., 130 Design Ryan Clifford, assistant professor of graphic design, will talk about his interrelated professional practice, teaching and research interests in project-based interdisciplin-
Friday, Oct. 30, 2015
ary collaborative design for social change; applied design thinking and rapid ideation; creative community-based design. Part of the IDRO Friday Research Seminar Series. ISUAA Honors and Awards Ceremony 1:30 p.m., Benton Auditorium, Scheman Building The ISU Alumni Association will present some of the university’s highest honors to alumni and friends. Colleges also confer awards at this event. A dessert reception will follow. Retirement reception: Lola Van Wyk 2-4 p.m., Memorial Union Gallery Lola Van Wyk, assistant director of design services in facilities planning and management, is retiring. Short program starts at 2:30 p.m.
By Alex.Hanson @iowastatedaily.com
Here is a list of Homecoming events for Friday: 1:30 p.m.: Honors & Awards Ceremony, Scheman Building 1 to 8:30 p.m.: Homecoming Hub, ISU Alumni Center Get an 8-by-8-inch print of the renovated Jack Trice Stadium south end zone designed by ISU alumnus John Bosley, a campus map, a comprehensive weekend schedule of events, treats and other giveaways. 3 to 5 p.m.: College of Agriculture and Life Sciences Open House 3 to 5 p.m.: College of Human Sciences Open House. Stop by 118 MacKay Hall for tours 5 to 8:30 p.m.: Homecoming Celebration & Pep Rally, ISU Alumni Center Make sure to get a free Iowa State Daily football poster at the pep rally. There will be food trucks (yes, we’ll have candy, too), a cash bar, giveaways, games, merchandise for
NEWS
Haunted ISU story, photo gallery Tales about Iowa State’s haunted halls were told Thursday in Morrill Hall. Find a story and photo gallery of the spooktacular event online and on the ISU app. Iowa State Daily
The ISU marching band and Spirit Squad perform at the 2014 Homecoming pep rally Oct. 10, 2014 at the ISU Alumni Center. This year’s Homecoming celebration and pep rally will begin at 5:30 p.m. Friday.
sale, photo opportunities and more. Participate in the Student Alumni Leadership Council’s Homecoming silent auction in the Reiman Ballroom. Show your 2015 Homecoming button and get a free cookie. The pep rally is a can’t-miss ISU tradition featuring the marching band and spirit squad, coaches, student-athletes, the Yell Like Hell finals and Cardinal Court.
5:30 p.m.: Greek Alumni Reunion, ISU Alumni Center 8 p.m.: Norah Jones Concert, Stephens Auditorium 8 to 10 p.m.: ExCYtement in the Streets, greek community 10 p.m. to midnight: Pancake Feed, Central Campus Midnight: Mass Campaniling and Fireworks, Central Campus
Farmers pack up shop By Michaela.Ramm @iowastatedaily.com The last farmer’s market of the year will take place this weekend. On Saturday, Ames Main Street Farmer’s Market will take place. The event will take place on
the 300 and 400 blocks of Main Street from 9 a.m. to noon. The market will feature fresh produce and meat from Iowa. According to the market’s website, customers will have the opportunity to purchase seasonal fruits, vegetables, meats, cheeses, arts, crafts, flowers, plants and more. There will also
be live entertainment and cooking demonstrations. Main Street Farmer’s Market is hosted by the Ames Chamber of Commerce. Saturday’s event will also be co-hosted by Wheatsfield Cooperative, and the market will extend into the cooperatives parking lot on Northwestern Avenue.
How to stay safe Saturday By Shannon.McCarty @iowastatedaily.com Trick or treat, win or lose, Ames is about to be extra busy with Halloween and ISU’s Homecoming landing on the same weekend. The Ames Police Department is taking extra precautions to ensure safety. “Our Safe Neighborhoods Team will definitely be out and about,” said Sgt. Mark Watson.
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With a late kickoff at 6 p.m. Saturday for the ISU football game against Texas, a good amount of patrolling will take place at the game, Watson said. “I think the weather is going to be on our side,” Watson said. Saturday will bring a high temperature of about 56 and low around 42 with a 60 percent chance of rain early in the morning, according to the National Weather Service. Watson said the city
police officers will continue to have their regular patrol shifts, and there will possibly be extra officers to help with any parties that may get out of hand. Watson said the department often sees an influx of parties during Halloween weekend when people want to have costume parties, and more people go to bars. He said this often leads to a weekend with higher alcohol-related offenses. “Be safe and be smart,” Watson said.
SPORTS
Hockey to play Division II match Cyclone Hockey plays the American Collegiate Hockey Association Division II Augustana Vikings this weekend at the ISU/ Ames Ice Arena. Find more online.
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Take this week’s news quiz Test your knowledge of this week’s current events through the quiz on the Iowa State Daily website and app.
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Orchard to host pumpkin relay Center Grove Orchard will host its 3rd Pumpkin Relay on Saturday. Find out more about the event online and on the ISD app.
Corrections In Thursday’s print edition of the Iowa State Daily, the article Volleyball club surging into national spotlight misquoted Elizabeth Slaughter, saying she said losing the championship “sucked.” She did not use that word. The Daily regrets the error. To submit a correction, please contact our editor at 515-294-5688 or via email at editor@iowastatedaily.com.
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NEWS
Friday, Oct. 30, 2015
3
Trunk or treating event reaches Ames By Alex.Cory @iowastatedaily.com
The Eastwood of Ames parking lot was filled to the brim with superheroes, villains and other costumed characters for the Community Housing Initiatives’ annual Spooktacular Trunk or Treat event Thursday night. ISU students from the Leadership Studies Program helped with the event at the Eastwood of Ames apartment complex. The Leadership Studies Program can be taken as a minor at Iowa State, and focuses on developing students’ leadership skills. “It’s something really cool to see kids having a good time,” said Brennan Borgestad, sophomore in pre-business and student in the Leadership Studies Program. Instead of going door to door to trick or treat, the children at Eastwood of Ames got to “trunk or treat” by visiting different sponsors’ cars in the parking lot, which were filled with activities and treats. Sponsors included the Ames Fire Department and Ames Police. Community Housing Initiatives is a statewide non-profit affordable housing agency that works to provide affordable
housing to whoever needs it. Eastwood of Ames is one of these properties. Shara Bradley, Community Housing Initiatives resident services program manager, came up with the idea for the event. “The idea first came to me because Halloween is my favorite holiday,” Bradley said. Bradley said she encouraged sponsors for the program to bring healthy alternatives to traditional Halloween candy. Bradley said in low-income households, something called a “food desert” can form, where it is more expensive to eat healthy foods, so kids eat unhealthy. “A two-liter of pop and a bag of chips is a lot cheaper than 100 percent juice and some grapes,” Bradley said. Amber Manning-Ouellette, lecturer in the Leadership Studies Program, said students have been working with the kids at Eastwood of Ames before the event started as part of the CL PS 270 class. Students have been helping out with the Community Housing Initiatives’ children’s enrichment program by creating academic activities for the Eastwood kids. Students also went to businesses in the community to help gather money for the event. One of the activities students organized for the event was called Cy’s Apple Orchard,
Alex Cory/Iowa State Daily
Members of Kappa Alpha Theta participate in the Spooktacular Trunk or Treat event Thursday evening.
where kids had to pin a worm on an apple to win the fruit. “We’re trying to be creative and give
access to healthy alternatives other than chocolate bars and things like that,” Manning-Ouellette said.
ISU uses virtual reality to recruit By Felipe.Cabrera @iowastatedaily.com
Fahad Alsaggaf/Iowa State Daily
Vijay Kalivarapu, staff research scientist, tests the virtual reality gameday applicaton that shows potential recruits what an ISU football game is like at Jack Trice Stadium.
ISU recruiters are giving ISU football hopefuls a taste of game night at Jack Trice Stadium, albeit in the digital world. “Most college football programs go through a similar process,” said Vijay Kalivarapu, staff research scientist at the Virtual Reality Applications Center in Howe Hall. “They bring in recruits … and take them to an empty football stadium when games are not held. We wanted to do something a little bit different.” The world’s most advanced virtual reality room is housed in the center — the C6. It’s a 10-by-10-foot room where all four walls, the floor and ceiling are 4K high-resolution screens putting out more than 100 million pixels. Once people run an application and put on the virtual reality glasses,
they become fully immersed in a whole new world. “We used Unity [Game Engine] and we brought in some models,” Kalivarapu said. “We got the model for Jack Trice Stadium from the same people that designed the south end zone.” The gameday application was created to give student-athlete recruits a taste of what it’s like to be in Jack Trice Stadium during the game. The application is complete with cheerleaders, booming crowds, the ISU band preforming the “Gangnam Style” dance and the Cyclones rushing onto the field against the Hawkeyes. “[The gameday app] opened up some research challenges for us,” said James Oliver, university professor and director of the Virtual Reality Applications Center. “I’m always interested in finding ways to make it easy to use this complicated equipment.”
Oliver said what the team learned from working on the gameday app can open doors to other industries. Experimenting with a game engine and successfully running a virtual reality application can make the technology accessible to the video game industry. The C6 was also used for an architectural design review in the early stages of the south end zone’s development. The C6 allowed the team to be in a digital design of the stadium at a one-to-one scale. There, the team was able to see different models of seating layouts in real time. Currently, the team at the Virtual Reality Applications Center is working on a portable version of the gameday application using the Oculus Rift, a virtual reality head-mounted display. A portable version will allow recruiters to bring the gameday experience to recruits in their living rooms during off-season recruiting.
Week’s news recap By Alex.Hanson @iowastatedaily.com Here’s a recap of the week’s biggest stories. Read the recap below, then test your knowledge with Iowa State Daily online quiz. South Carolina officer fired after video An officer in South Carolina has been fired after an online video showed Deputy Ben Fields forcibly removing a student from a desk. The video shows him putting a student in a headlock, flipping her desk and dragging her out of the classroom. The unidentified student’s attorney said the student suffered neck and back injuries. An attorney for the officer said the officer was acting “professionally” and “performing his job duties within the legal threshold.” Paul Ryan chosen as new House Speaker U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., has been elected the 54th speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives.
Ryan’s election Thursday — ending several weeks of disagreement among conservatives — comes after the resignation of U.S. Rep. John Boehner, R-Ohio, earlier this month. Ryan was chosen with support from 236 house members. Iowa Republican Reps. Rod Blum, David Young and Steve King stuck with their party, all voting for Ryan. Dave Loebsack, the only Democrat in Iowa’s congressional delegation, voted for former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the Democratic caucus’ nominee. Baldwin to lead health center Erin Baldwin, currently chief operating officer of Mahaska Health Partnership in Oskaloosa, Iowa, will serve as the new director of the Thielen Student Health Center beginning January. Baldwin has a master’s degrees in healthcare administration and public health. New offensive coordinator ISU football coach Paul Rhoads announced Monday that Mark Mangino is out
Jenna Reeves/Iowa State Daily
Mark Mangino was replaced by Todd Sturdy as the ISU offensive coordinator Monday. as offensive coordinator. “Mark and I couldn’t get on the same page on a few important items,” Rhoads said. “We tried to talk that through again this morning in an effort to get us moving in a different direction. In the end, Mark was not interested in that. I wish that wasn’t the case.”
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Quarterback coach Todd Sturdy has taken over as offensive coordinator for the rest of the season. Royals take early lead in World Series The Kansas City Royals are halfway to a World Series title, after beating the New York Mets 7-1 Wednesday. Game three is scheduled for 7 p.m. Friday on FOX.
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CLASSIFIEDS
Friday, Oct. 30, 2015
CITY COUNCIL p1 “I believe if [the minimum wage] is increased, it will impact everyone positively,” DeGeest said. Nelson said looking at the minimum wage is something worthwhile and also finds the micro-loans idea to be interesting. “I don’t have an opinion on [the ideas] frankly,” Gartin said. Gartin said he is more concerned about his goal of getting people from the community involved in giving back to help those who are less fortunate. Beatty-Hansen said she would be interested in both ideas. “I think the city will pay for [poverty] no matter what we do,” Beatty-Hansen said. “If we have people who aren’t earning living wages, that then falls more on the social services.” Converse said he would have great interest in the idea of microloans. “If I could’ve had access to something like that I would’ve loved it,” Converse said. Jamet Colton from the Ames Progressive Alliance asked candidates about a current city code that does not allow more than three unrelated single individuals to live in the same single-family home in low-density neighborhoods. Colton asked if candidates would support state legislature’s efforts to repeal this law. “I think we would have to have a very deliberate conversation with neighborhood groups,” Nelson said. Gartin agreed, noting how the change could impact the community.
“I think we need to be a little bit cautious about rushing in to make change that so many people worked very hard to put in place,” Gartin said. “They were concerned about the impact and quality of life in their neighborhoods.” Beatty-Hansen said stability is an important thing in a neighborhood, which she thinks was the intended purpose of the specific code. She said taking a good look at possible repercussions of getting rid of the code would be a necessary step. “I support the code as it is in place,” Converse said. An audience member asked a question about the current state of the police force in the country. She said that, as a woman of color and a mother of a son of color, she was worried about his safety as well as her own when it came to police officers. Beatty-Hansen said that a good place to start would be to have police officers collect data based on race while they conduct traffic stops. “We need to know if we have issues in Ames. I hope we don’t,” Beatty-Hansen said. Converse agreed with Beatty-Hansen’s idea of collecting data and said having a respectful dialogue with everyone in the community is important. “I’ve never seen issues of race from my children,” DeGeest said. “I think this is an issue for us as adults that we need to work on.” DeGeest said having a conversation about body cameras on police officers is a conversation worth having. “The police department is very well trained,” Nelson said. “They really treat the
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community really well.” Nelson said if anyone has been mistreated by Ames Police, they should let city leaders know. Gartin said it is painful to see police officers abusing their power, and it is something to continue to watch for. He said Ames currently does not have an issue within the
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PUBLIC NOTICE OF STORM WATER DISCHARGE Building Energy Development, LLC. plans to submit a Notice of Intent to the Iowa Department of Natural Resources to be covered under the NPDES General Permit No. 2 Storm Water Discharge Associated with Industrial Activity for Construction Activities. The storm water discharge will be from construction of access roads for wind turbines and installation of underground interconnection lines located in Sections 9, 10 and 16, Township 83, Range 23 of Story County. Storm water will be discharged from 1 point source and will be discharged to the following streams: West Indian Creek Comments may be submitted to the Storm Water Discharge Coordinator, Iowa Department of Natural Resources, Environmental Protection Division, 502 E. 9th Street, Des Moines, IA 50319-0034. The public may review the Notice of Intent from 8:00am to 4:30pm, Monday through Friday, at the above address after it has been recieved by the department.
PUBLIC NOTICE OF STORM WATER DISCHARGE Building Energy Development, LLC. plans to submit a Notice of Intent to the Iowa Department of Natural Resources to be covered under the NPDES General Permit No. 2 Storm Water Discharge Associated with Industrial Activity for Construction Activities. The storm water discharge will be from construction of access roads for wind turbines and installation of underground interconnection lines located in Sections 5, Township 83, Range 22 of Story County. Storm water will be discharged from 1 point source and will be discharged to the following streams: East Indian Creek Comments may be submitted to the Storm Water Discharge Coordinator, Iowa Department of Natural Resources, Environmental Protection Division, 502 E. 9th Street, Des Moines, IA 50319-0034. The public may review the Notice of Intent from 8:00am to 4:30pm, Monday through Friday, at the above address after it has been recieved by the department.
PUBLIC NOTICE OF STORM WATER DISCHARGE Building Energy Development, LLC. plans to submit a Notice of Intent to the Iowa Department of Natural Resources to be covered under the NPDES General Permit No. 2 Storm Water Discharge Associated with Industrial Activity for Construction Activities The storm water discharge will be from construction of access roads for wind turbines and installation of underground interconnection lines located in Section 25, Township 83, Range 25 of Boone County. Storm water will be discharged from 1 point source and will be discharged to the following streams: Walnut Creek. Comments may be submitted to the Storm Water Discharge Coordinator, Iowa Department of Natural Resources, Environmental Protection Division, 502 E. 9th Street, Des Moines, IA 50319-0034. The public may review the Notice of Intent from 8:00am to 4:30pm, Monday through Friday, at the above address after it has been recieved by the department.
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Friday, Oct. 30, 2015
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Iowa State Daily
Redshirt sophomore linebacker Luke Knott chases down a Kansas player Nov. 8, 2014. Knott had three separate hip injuries that have kept him off of the field. So far this season, however, he’s healthy and playing well.
RETURNING ONCE AGAIN Luke Knott battles through three hip injuries to contribute to ISU defense
By Luke.Manderfeld @iowastatedaily.com ISU linebacker Luke Knott can’t pinpoint a moment in time when his hip started to hurt. It just seemed to be the normal wear and tear from football drills. Little did Knott know, the small twinge of pain he consistently felt in ISU football’s 2013 fall camp would lead him to three hip injuries that spanned two years and almost cut his career short. It all started at the beginning of his redshirt freshman year. Knott was coming off his initial season on the sideline and showed promise to both start and make an impact as a highly sought-after defensive back out of Missouri. His brother, Jake Knott, paved the way for him, becoming an im-
pressive linebacker at Iowa State. During 2013 fall camp, Luke Knott started to feel a small pain in his hip. “I didn’t really think much of it at the time,” Knott said. “It was just soreness.” Knott tried to play through it. The twinge of pain turned excruciating before the second game of the season. To mask it, team doctors gave him a shot to lube the joint and make it more comfortable. It worked for a few weeks until the pain came back. The team sent him to multiple doctors to diagnose his chronic hip pain, and the news wasn’t good. Knott tore his hip labrum. He had to have season-ending surgery. Surgery wasn’t anything new to Knott. He went through mul-
tiple knee surgeries during his high school career. The doctors gave him a timetable to be ready by the next season. Knott felt ready to go. “I was like, ‘I’m going to get this thing fixed. Let’s go to rehab. Let’s rock and roll by fall camp and be ready,’” Knott said. The worst part wasn’t the pain after surgery. It wasn’t that he couldn’t practice on the field anymore. It was a bike. For the first eight weeks of Knott’s rehab, he spent two hours a day sitting on an exercise bike in the training room. At that point, his original enthusiasm was stymied. His goal was a distant light at the end of the tunnel, seemingly out of reach.
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DIBLE OVERTIME
Moral victories will no longer suffice as schedule eases up When is it acceptable to use facts as excuses? Scratch that. Better question: At what point is it no longer acceptable to do so? “In the fourth quarter, we had an opportunity to get an onside kick and pull this game within seven and put ourselves in position to compete to win the game,” said ISU coach Paul Rhoads after the Cyclones fell last Saturday to Baylor, 45-27. “And you do that on the road in conditions like this against the second-ranked team in the country. You’re pleased with the energy and the effort they gave, not pleased with the outcome.”
By Max.Dible @iowastatedaily.com @MJ_Dible on Twitter The rhetoric coming from the team has been centered around progress, and that’s fine, even if it does imply moral victory to a fan base that has celebrated
only seven wins in its team’s last 31 games. Concessions must be made. There are a number of new faces on both sides of the ball, and by any metric, the Cyclones’ recent schedule has been brutal. These are the facts, and apologies if you’ve heard them at least a dozen times over the past month or so: • Iowa State has played the top three offenses in the land the past three weeks. • The Cyclones played the No. 3 and No. 2 teams in the country in back-to-back games. • At 2-5, Iowa State’s five losses have come to
teams that are a combined 34-3 in 2015. Iowa State is no football juggernaut, so ISU fans who follow the team closely knew a midseason storm was brewing well before the opening kickoff against Northern Iowa in September. But progress in the abstract, or progress signified by moments in a game — taking a second-quarter lead against TCU, outplaying Baylor 27-10 in the final 38-plus minutes — loses its allure and credibility after awhile. Progress implies pending results, and those results
remain absent. “We’ve got to be able to sustain for a whole game and get a win,” said ISU athletic director Jamie Pollard on Monday on the Murph and Andy show on KXNO. No one expected Iowa State to put up much of a fight against TCU or Baylor, let alone win those games. Vegas had the Cyclones slotted as multiple-touchdown underdogs in both contests. And so it would be false to say that making TCU and Baylor sweat aren’t accomplishments; they absolutely are. The clearest positive is that ISU players appear as dissatisfied as Cyclone Na-
tion with progress that’s yet to bear any real fruit. “I didn’t walk out of that game last weekend with my tail between my legs, but I didn’t walk out of there with a smile,” said Levi Peters, ISU linebacker and captain. “I wasn’t happy. I want to win. I really, really want to win. “It’s nice to see progress every week, and that’s important too to keep guys’ confidence ... but it’s nothing like winning games. We need to win games.” The schedule lightens up substantially from this
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GRIDIRON
Friday, Oct. 30, 2015
GOOD COP vs. BAD COP
AROUND THE BIG 12 No. 14 OKLAHOMA (6-1, 3-1 BIG 12) AT KANSAS (0-7, 0-4 BIG 12)
No. 12 OKLAHOMA STATE (7-0, 4-0 BIG 12) AT TEXAS TECH (5-2, 2-3 BIG 12)
WHEN: 2:30 p.m. WHERE: Kivisto Field at Memorial Stadium, Lawrence, Kan. WATCH: Fox Sports 1 LAST WEEK • The Kansas Jayhawks are still searching for their first win of the season this week after falling 58-10 last Saturday to Oklahoma State. • Oklahoma cruised to its second straight win last week, beating Texas Tech 63-27.
WHEN: 2:30 p.m. WHERE: Jones AT&T Stadium Lubbock, Texas WATCH: ESPN LAST WEEK • Oklahoma State put up 583 yards of total offense last weekend against Kansas — 381 through the air and 202 on the ground. • Oklahoma outgained Texas Tech last weekend, 617 yards to 436.
Iowa State Daily
Iowa State’s defense gang-tackles a North Dakota State Univeristy player in 2014. A key focus to Saturday’s game against Texas will be tackling.
MATCHUP TO WATCH
The matchup to watch this weekend is the rush-heavy Texas backfield against Iowa State’s 3-4 defensive front. Texas’ offensive attack is a far cry from the air raid offenses that have plagued the Cyclones in recent weeks, allowing for 156 opposing points in three games — an average of 52 points surrendered by Iowa State per contest. The Longhorns have snapped the ball exactly 450 times this season, and 313 of those snaps — or 69.55 percent — have been rushing plays. That ratio has increased during the past two weeks, as Texas has rushed the ball 111 times and thrown only 28 passes on its way to racking up back-to-back victories for the first time all season, including a win on a neutral site against Oklahoma in the Red River Rivalry. Texas isn’t likely to change its philosophy when it strolls into Ames on Halloween night, and the Cyclones haven’t been particularly stout against the run this season. Iowa State has surrendered 187 yards rushing per game on its way to a 2-5 start. lawn ys displa
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Baylor amassed 276 yards on the ground last Saturday, which was a season high against the ISU defense. The 3-4 scheme the Cyclones switched to before the year began was intended to put more athletes on the field to deal with the influx of speed and athleticism that highlight the Big 12’s powerhouse offenses. But Texas has found some redemption in 2015 with a return to the ground-andpound philosophy. Gang tackling, something ISU coach Paul Rhoads said improved against Baylor, will be paramount with one more linebacker on the field and one less defensive lineman at the point of attack to help clog rushing lanes. Texas is a squad that runs by committee as well, as three players — including starting quarterback Jerrod Heard, who actually leads the team in rushing attempts and yards — have amassed at least 373 yards on the ground this season. Four different Longhorns have scored multiple rushing touchdowns. Despite the ISU defense allowing what appear to be enormous chunks
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of yardage and scoreboard production that would rival the output of some offensively-challenged basketball teams, the Cyclones have actually held every opposing offense under its points-per-game average this year, save for Texas Tech. Texas is averaging 24 points per outing, and, in the Rhoads era, Iowa State is 28-2 when holding opponents to 23 or fewer points. However, the Cyclones are 3-49 when allowing 24 points or more. An inevitable slowdown to Saturday’s game seems likely considering the Longhorns’ rushing proclivity and prowess, not to mention read-option quarterback Joel Lanning taking over the reins as the ISU signal caller. A lower scoring, less dynamic outing figures to favor the Cyclones. But, to keep Texas below its average point production, Iowa State will have to improve on the 4.8 yards-per-carry average its defense has allowed to opposing rushing attacks. If the ISU defense can achieve that, both recent and not-so-recent history points to the Cyclones being able to pull out this win.
By Chris.Wolff @iowastatedaily.com
By Mike.Randleman @iowastatedaily.com
ISU football fans can finally uncover their eyes this week. They had to look away from the beat downs everyone saw coming, courtesy of Big 12 powerhouses Texas Christian and Baylor, who worked over the Cyclones by a combined score of 90-48. But good news is on the horizon. The next offense on the ISU schedule is nowhere near as potent as the previous three. Texas will roll into town on a two-game winning streak after starting the season 1-4. But, in the last four games, Texas hasn’t scored more than 27 points. Meanwhile, Iowa State has made some changes in its offensive attack. Mark Mangino is out, and Todd Sturdy is in as offensive coordinator. Additionally, Sam Richardson will take a seat, and Joel Lanning will take the reins at quarterback. Lanning adds an extra wrinkle in the running game, which paired with breakout running back Mike Warren, should have ISU fans optimistic for the future. Oh, and Lanning can throw, too. He’s got the strongest arm on the team and has Allen Lazard and Quenton Bundrage to sling the ball around. It wouldn’t be fair to expect an MVP performance from Lanning, who had only attempted 12 passes the entire season before last weekend. But Lanning showed flashes of brilliance when he was called upon last week, completing 12-of-17 passes for 144 yards and three touchdowns. Under Lanning’s guidance, the Cyclones were almost able to make it a game after trailing by 35 points. If Lanning can perform at the same level he did in Waco, Texas, then the Cyclones might have something cooking. Especially if Sturdy can tweak the playbook in Lanning’s favor. The game plan should be simple. Let Warren run all over the field, with Joshua Thomas and Lanning complementing the ground game. Then open it up with the occasional Lanning deep ball. It won’t be an old-fashioned Texas shootout, but the Lanning and Sturdy-led offense still gets the best of the Texas Longhorns. Prediction: Iowa State 31, Texas 27
There may not be a team in college football that has covered the spectrum like the Texas Longhorns. In a 38-3 loss to Notre Dame on Sept. 5, Texas looked outmatched in just about every facet of the game. Fans were calling for head coach Charlie Strong’s head from the get-go, and the losses continued, albeit in closer manner against quality opponents: a onepoint loss at California and another defeat via a gamewinning kick by still-undefeated Oklahoma State. Texas was also manhandled by Texas Christian. Overall, it started the season at an almost unthinkable 1-4, considering the history of the program. Finding lightning in a bottle after its worst start since 1956, the Red River Rivalry invigorated Texas’ season with a win over Oklahoma, which was followed by a victory against Kansas State. Now, with a .500 record in sight, Texas is likely heading to Ames with added swagger and motivation to save what was once regarded as a lost season. This is coming against an ISU team that has surrendered 156 points to its last three opponents and has five days to steady the ship — Sturdy the ship? — after offensive coordinator Mark Mangino was replaced by Todd Sturdy, Iowa State’s passing coordinator and quarterbacks coach. Will Jack Trice Stadium be packed and rowdy on a Halloween Saturday night? Absolutely. Could Joel Lanning be the spark plug for what has been a middle-of-the-road offense up to this point? I don’t see why not. But he could also be fool’s gold, like so many backup ISU quarterbacks have been in the past. Instability behind the scenes for the Cyclones could be a distraction, or it could be a rallying point for a season on the brink. At this point in the season, for Iowa State almost any result is on the table for this prime-time matchup. Given Texas’ edge in talent, and the momentum it brings in, I have the Longhorns prevailing in a close matchup. But anything could happen on Halloween night. Prediction: Texas 27, Iowa State 21
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10:30am–1pm • Food on Campus • Central Campus 5pm–8pm • Pep Rally • Alumni Center
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S T N E V E ST TH OCTOBER 30 & 31
Connect with us for more ways to make a STATEment: www.isusalc.org/homecoming2015 ISUHomecoming Iowa State Homecoming
- Musical entertainment by Shy of a Dozen - Appearances by ISU Coaches & Athletic teams - Performances by ISU Marching Band & Spirit Squad - Merchandise for sale from University Book Store - Pumpkin Painting - Face Painting - Student organization food sales - ...and much more!
8pm–10pm • ExCYtement in the Streets & Lawn Displays • Greek Community 10pm–1am • $3 Pancakes • Central Campus 12 midnight • Fireworks & Mass Campaniling • Central Campus
SATURDAY 10/31
3–5:30pm • Cyclone Central Tailgate • Alumni Center 6pm • Homecoming Football Game v. Texas Longhorns • Jack Trice Stadium SPONSORED BY STUDENT ALUMNI LEADERSHIP COUNCIL
GRIDIRON
Friday, Oct. 30, 2015
THE MATCHUP
IOWA STATE CYCLONES
2-5, 1-3 Big 12
GAME INFO
OPPONENT INFO
WHEN: 6 p.m. WHERE: Jack Trice Stadium WATCH: FS1
TEXAS LONGHORNS (3-4, 2-2 Big 12) LOCATION: Austin, Texas CONFERENCE: Big 12 HEAD COACH: Charlie Strong | second season at Texas
STADIUM INFO: • All gates will open 90 minutes before kickoff. • Students must enter through the East Gate. • Re-entry to the stadium will be allowed until the start of the 4th quarter. Tickets must be scanned upon exit and re-entry.
QUICK HITS: • Texas leads the all-time series against Iowa State with an 11-1 record. • The Longhorns have won the last four matchups against the Cyclones. • Texas sneaked out with a 48-45 victory in Austin, Texas, last season. • The Longhorns went 6-7 overall last season, 5-4 Big 12
Emily Blobaum/Iowa State Daily
Josh Newell/Iowa State Daily
ISU defensive end Dale Pierson blocks a Kansas player Oct. 3. The Cyclones won, 38-13, giving them their second win of the season.
THE PICK Max Dible, sports editor (4-0, 0-1 vs line)
Luke Manderfeld, assistant sports editor (4-0, 1-0 vs line)
Ryan Young, assistant sports editor (1-3, 0-1 vs line)
Running back Tyler Brown runs through a gap in Iowa’s defense Sept. 12. The Cyclones look to keep their run game strong against Texas.
Iowa State 28, Texas 27 The ISU roster has spent this week taking the advice of David Bowie. Whether it was done by choice or out of necessity is a player-by-player distinction, but, either way, the Cyclones have undoubtedly “turned and faced the strange chacha-changes.” Whether those changes have been faced with aplomb remains to be seen. The difference between Bowie and the Cyclones is that the Cyclones want to be richer men, and this shake-up might be just want the team needs. Instability brought on by disagreement at the very top of the program — between coach Paul Rhoads and former offensive coordinator Mark Mangino, to be specific — is never a “good” thing. But if their competing views were so far apart that Rhoads had to fire the Orange Bowlwinning, former-head coach of Kansas, who vaulted the Jayhawks all the way to a No. 1 ranking less than a decade ago, the tension had Iowa State 31, Texas 24 Here you go, ISU fans, the Cyclones’ chance to grab one more win than last season’s team. And trust me, this one won’t be pretty. Texas is coming off a stellar defensive performance against Kansas State, only allowing nine points and less than 250 yards of total offense. That shouldn’t sound good to Iowa State, which is now seeing a change at quarterback and offensive coordinator. Now-starting quarterback Joel Lanning even Texas 28, Iowa State 27 Well it sure has been an interesting week, hasn’t it? Joel Lanning is now the team’s starting quarterback, and Mark Mangino is no longer the team’s offensive coordinator. While I’m not usually a fan of midseason changes like these, I think one of them will end up working out. After watching Sam Richardson struggle to find offensive success these past few weeks, the change at quarterback seemed almost necessary — especially after watching Lanning play against Baylor. While we still need to see how Lanning does in his first start this weekend, I think he has what it takes to truly revive this offense and have some success.
to be palpable enough to cause some disruption. In any context, removing tension is a positive development. The transition of Joel Lanning from backup quarterback to starter should also invigorate the team, just like his presence did when he led the Cyclones back to the brink of contention at Baylor last Saturday in two-and-a-half quarters of play, spearheading a 27-10 ISU run over the game’s final 38 minutes. The matchup is favorable as well. Texas is not the powerhouse it once was, even if the Longhorns have won two games in a row. They play slower, and the ISU offense has a better chance to compete when its opponent scores 20-something instead of 40-something, even if the fluctuations in point totals indicate a different style of game. Put simply, the Cyclones’ season is on the line. It’s Homecoming weekend, and they’re 2-5, desperate for a win. And Texas eked out a close one last year in Austin. So let’s toast to change. Give me the Cyclones in a close one, baby. admitted Monday he was a little nervous heading into his date with the Longhorns. There won’t be any time for nerves against a perennial football powerhouse, Joel. While Iowa State is undergoing change in the offense, I believe that it will bring a breath of fresh air to the team. Now that Todd Sturdy is calling the plays, and Lanning is primed for a successful first start, this will be a win for the Cyclones. Congratulations. It’ll be their eighth win in three seasons. Oof. But here’s the tough thing. The Cyclones now have a new offensive coordinator, and this move still has me on edge. While I don’t know all of the details surrounding Mangino’s departure, I do know that a coaching change of this magnitude halfway through the season is not usually a move that results in immediate success. Now, this isn’t to bash on the new offensive coordinator Todd Sturdy. He knows the offense well, and I’m sure he can do a good job in his new role. But how Sturdy and the team takes this big of a change is what I think may cause problems. It’ll be a close one Saturday, thanks to Lanning and a hopefully revived offense. But with all of the shuffling and changes happening this week, the Cyclones won’t be quite on the same page and will fall just short of a win.
Any closer and you’d be in class. APARTMENTS, TOWNHOMES & HOUSES AVAILABLE FURNISHED OPTIONS AVAILABLE AMENITIES FOR A FIT & HEALTHY LIFESTYLE INDIVIDUAL LIABILITY LEASES ROOMMATE MATCHING AVAILABLE OFFI C I AL S P ONS OR OF I O W A ST A T E ™ A T HL E T I C S
Roll out of bed and onto campus — you can’t get any closer than this!
TEXAS
3-4, 2-2 Big 12
LAST WEEK: • Texas beat Kansas State, 23-9. • Quarterback Jerrod Heard threw for 99 yards, completing 10-of-15 passes. Heard also ran the ball himself 15 times for 61 yards. • Quarterback Tyrone Swoops captured the brunt of the points for the Longhorns, scoring three touchdowns on the ground. He also added 50 rushing yards while averaging 7.1 yards per carry. • Safety Dylan Haines had an interception and two pass breakups. • Texas allowed 242 yards of total offense — 135 on the ground and 107 through the air.
BY THE NUMBERS
1 — The number of games Iowa State vs Texas
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during the last two seasons Iowa State has played without Sam Richardson as its starting quarterback. That one game was a 34-14 loss to Kansas last season, and he sat out due to injury.
4 — The Longhorns’
combined margin of victory against the Cyclones in the last two matchups, including a controversial 31-30 win at Jack Trice Stadium in 2013.
28 — The number of points the Cyclones have been outscored by in the first quarter. They’ve allowed 65 points while scoring 37 themselves.
2010 — The last and only time the Cyclones beat the Texas Longhorns. It was a 28-21 victory in Austin,
1,036 — The combined
total yardage in the game between Iowa State and Texas in 2014, when the Longhorns emerged victorious, 48-45.
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GRIDIRON
Friday, Oct. 30, 2015
Coaching staff overhaul Mangino departs from ISU football; Sturdy steps up, takes on role By Ryan.Young @iowastatedaily.com ISU coach Paul Rhoads made a decision Monday morning that nobody saw coming — Mark Mangino would no longer be the offensive coordinator. While making the announcement to the media, Rhoads said he and Mangino had several views they couldn’t agree on. He still has not hinted to whether Mangino walked away from the program or whether Rhoads let him go. But regardless, the season must continue. And with the veteran coordinator, who has been coaching in the Big 12 for the past several decades, no longer in command of the offense, someone had to fill his place. Enter Todd Sturdy. “It’s gone good [so far],” Sturdy said. “I’m pleased with where we’re at right now. Obviously it’s a lot of work. [I’ve] got to roll the sleeves up. I look forward to the opportunity.” In the past four seasons, Sturdy has worked as a wide receivers coach, quarterbacks coach and passing game coordinator for the Cyclones. But his recent move to offensive coordinator isn’t a new position for the Tipton, Iowa, native. Sturdy served as offensive coordinator at Washington State prior to his arrival at Iowa State in 2012. In 2011, Sturdy’s group ranked ninth nationally among FBS schools in passing offense.
KNOTT p5 “When we first started rehabbing it, you’re so far away from your ultimate goal,” Knott said. “If you’re not so mentally tough, it can really wear you down.” It wasn’t all bad for Knott, though. Mark Coberley, associate athletics director for sports medicine, gave Knott movies to watch while he was on the bike. Knott would mostly turn it to the cable channels and watch Batman movie marathons through his rigorous exercise hours. Knott eventually got off the bike after his designated eight weeks. When he did, he and the trainers went to work. He could be seen in the pool and on the field, trying to get his full range of motion back. It worked. Knott was ready for 2014 fall camp. It seemed like Knott’s recovery had gone well. In his redshirt sophomore season, he played in all 12 games and finished third on the team with 74 tackles. But around the sixth or seventh game of the season, the familiar feeling of pain
MORALE p5 point on. Iowa State plays five teams with a combined record of 22-13, including two , Texas and Kansas State, with losing records. Add to that the recent upheaval in Ames that started with Mark Mangino’s enigmatic departure as offensive coordinator and ended with Joel Lanning replacing Sam Richardson under center.
Before his move to Washington State, Sturdy led Eastern Washington to the Football Championship Subdivision quarterfinals in 2007 as its offensive coordinator, guiding an offense that set school records for touchdown passes with 36 and pass completions with 287. Even with the impromptu promotion, Sturdy said he feels comfortable with his new responsibilities. “I’ve called plays in so many games, and I feel very comfortable doing it,” Sturdy said. “So, I’m not saying I have all the right answers or do all the right things all the time like everybody else, but I’ve done it a lot, and I feel comfortable doing it.” And while the coaching transition may seem daunting to some, running back Mike Warren said that the transition has been relatively easy so far. “There’s a lot more energy, definitely, and everything has picked up a lot,” Warren said. “It’s just really fast paced when [Sturdy’s] out there.” But there is an added challenge to Sturdy’s new job. Redshirt sophomore Joel Lanning has taken over as the starting quarterback, replacing fifth-year senior Sam Richardson. The move brought new life to the offense, as Lanning threw for 144 yards and three touchdowns against the No. 2 Bears — something the Cyclones hope to see more of this week. “[Lanning’s] performance all year has been solid,” Rhoads said on Monday. “His performance in
the second half [against Baylor] especially was earning him the role and the opportunity to start this game.” On top of Lanning’s ability to throw the ball — he has thrown for 264 yards and four touchdowns in just 29 attempts this season — the Ankeny, Iowa, native brings something else to the table: a legitimate rushing threat under center. “I think if you just watch him run the football as a quarterback, I think that says it all,” Sturdy said. “He’s very competitive. That carries over to everything, every part of his game.” Lanning’s run game has helped out the offense as a whole too. Sturdy said that the packages so far with both Lanning and Richardson have opened up the offense and caused the defenses the team faces more problems. “I think the package we’ve been using has been really effective,” Sturdy said. “I think it has put a lot of pressure on the defense. Obviously, if the quarterback can run the ball, you’ve got some numbers in the run game. That way [the defense] have a hard time accounting for as far as fitting the run.” Warren has exploded in the backfield lately as well. He ran for 769 yards in the past five games, averaging 153.8 yards per contest. He was added to the list of Doak Walker candidates, an award given annually to the nation’s top running back and is the top freshman rusher in the FBS with 797 yards heading into Saturday’s game against Texas.
crept back into his hip. The tough-nosed Knott tried to push it to the back of his mind. “I just kept telling myself that it was general soreness because I didn’t want to have to go through it again,” Knott said. “I didn’t want to alert anybody that I’m going through it.” He finally caved near the end of the season and saw the team doctors. His hip had over-healed itself. The calcification to regrow his hip bone after Knott’s first surgery actually created a mess. There was a lump of bone and scar tissue. It doesn’t happen often. Knott said the doctors told him it happens to roughly one in 1,000 patients. “It was a freak thing,” Knott said. “And it just so happened to me.” Knott wound up back on the bike. Although he rode it for one hour per day this time, it still wasn’t the ideal situation. The bike was helping him get back to prime form, but it was also boosting his motivation. He returned for 2015 spring practice a new player, ready to jump in and im-
press the coaches. Knott felt he needed to prove that he could live up to the promise of his freshman self. He barely got the chance. About six or seven days in, he felt a different type of pain. It was still in his hip, but it was in the back
These developments have applied even more pressure on the Cyclones to transition from moral victors to actual victors, something they haven’t been since the third week of the season. “When you’re sitting at 2-5, and teams that you’ve lost to are 33-3, and now the change as far as that [goes], you look at wins all the way down the stretch [as] important,” Rhoads said. So what am I saying?
That winning matters? Very insightful, I know. The deeper points are that Iowa State left a win on the table in Toledo, they’ve gone away from a veteran quarterback in favor of a young, rough-and-tumble gunslinger who has yet to prove himself in the pocket, and Rhoads has tossed aside an offensive mind that transformed Kansas — that’s right, Kansas — into an Orange Bowl victor and briefly
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Iowa State Daily
Todd Sturdy, left, and Mark Mangino talk with redshirt senior quarterback Sam Richardson at a 2014 practice. Sturdy replaced Mangino this week as offensive coordinator.
Warren doesn’t see much change coming to the run game, but if Sturdy decides he wants to tweak something, Warren said he’ll listen. “We all like coach Sturdy,” Warren said. “He’s a good person. We try to give our best for him, just go out there and do what he says.” While neither Rhoads nor Sturdy would hint as to what changes were being made to the offense, they did say that some change is coming.
And even with Lanning who is preparing for his first start, Sturdy said he felt confident with this offense. “We’ve got a good offense, and we have to continue to get better doing the things we’re doing,” Sturdy said. “We’re doing a great job running the football. There’s obviously some areas that we would like to get better at, but you can’t put the wishbone in or whatever it’s going to be. That’s just not the case.”
rather than in the front or groin area. Knott expected the worse. This could be another labrum tear that could threaten his college football career. “How can something like this happen three times
in a row?” Knott thought. This time, the doctors struggled to find the reason for the pain. Rumors swirled that it could be a careerthreatening injury. It confused the doctors as much as it confused Knott. The team decided to forego surgery and instead rest the hip and see how it progressed. Knott just rested it and rehabbed it over the summer. It seems to have worked. So far, the pain hasn’t returned. “Now, I’m just going until I can’t go anymore,” Knott said. Now that Knott is pain free, he is delivering on the promise that he showed in his redshirt freshman year. While linebacker Levi Peters is seeing limited time on the field due to a rib injury, Knott has been playing more. He’s tallied 12 tackles in six games and one tackle for a loss. Through all the pain in his hips, Knott has found a brotherhood with Peters, his fellow linebacker. Both of them have dealt with adversity due to injuries. “I think of him as a
mentor for me,” Peters said. “I think of him as a brother to me. We’ve been in the same position ever since we’ve got here, and we’ve learned from each other. We’ve competed. If he starts, I’m right there. Go out there, and whoop some ass.” Although his numbers may not stand out among others on a stat sheet, the ISU coaching staff has certainly taken notice. “Luke Knott has [exceeded] my expectations,” said ISU coach Paul Rhoads. “I think he’s playing the best football that he’s played as an Iowa State Cyclone.” Knott knows how far he’s come to get this point and has no desire to go backward any longer. He’ll never forget where he was — riding a bike while watching Batman. Every time Knott walks back into the training room, he looks at the bike and remembers. That’s all he needs. “You do a lot of thinking when you ride a bike for two hours, man,” Knott said. “If definitely signifies a low point in my life. That gives me the motivation I need.”
the No. 1 team in the nation during the 2007-08 season. Rhoads said there wouldn’t be “drastic changes” to the offense but also talked about a “new direction” and “not being on the same page” with Mangino for weeks. A shift in offensive philosophy is coming, and, if it doesn’t work, the tsunami of change that may follow could make the last week in Ames seem like ripples.
If these moves fail then ISU fans, the media and even Pollard himself won’t accept any more talk about progress, any more references to strength of schedule or any more intimations about moral victories, even though that term has never been expressly used by an ISU coach or player. Pollard indicated as much Monday, speaking about Rhoads and the team in ways not heard to this
point in the season. “I’m confident,” Pollard said, “but in the end, and Paul knows it, talk is cheap, and we’ve got to do it. These next five weeks are really important to how this season ends, which will determine a lot about the future of our football program.” The die has been cast and excuses — factually based and legitimate or not — fall on deaf ears from here out.
Luke Knott and Mitchell Meyers Linebacker Luke Knott rooms with Mitchell Meyers, who is undergoing chemotherapy at his home in Austin, Texas. While Knott battled his recent round of hip injuries, Meyers was just finding out that he had cancer. “It’s all about perspective,” Knott said. “I’m dealing with a hip injury, and he’s dealing with cancer. He has it 1,000 times worse than I do.” Knott said it would be hard to tell that Meyers is fighting cancer just seeing his personality. And that is what keeps Knott fighting hard. “He’s kicking these things in the ass, the chemo treatments,” Knott said. “Cancer is keeping him from playing this game, and I have a hip injury that I think is keeping me away from the game. Like I said, it’s all about perspective.”
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IOWA STATE DAILY
OPINION
Friday, Oct. 30, 2015
9 EDITORIAL
Korrie Bysted/Iowa State Daily
Carly Fiorina speaks at the the Memorial Union. Fiorina, along with other GOP candidates, ignored women’s issues in Wednesday’s debate.
Courtesy of iStock
Going out can be especially fun during Halloween, giving people the opportunity to let go of stress from classes — but nobody should have to worry about being a victim of sexual assault. Instead of telling young adults what not to do when they go out, we should be teaching people what consent is so they don’t rape.
Survivors never to blame Victim blaming does nothing to help stop sexual assault By Danielle.Ferguson @iowastatedaily.com Trigger warning: This column uses language that may be sensitive to sexual assault survivors. When you picked out your Halloween costume, I bet you weren’t standing in the mirror thinking, “Hmm, this skirt is a little short. It might entice someone to rape me, so I probably shouldn’t wear it.” Or when you’re out drinking alcohol with friends, I’m guessing you’re not considering, “Oh, this shot might impair my judgment and cause me to make questionable decisions or take away my ability to consent to safe sex.” It doesn’t work like that. And it should never have to be a thought that crosses anybody’s mind. Halloween, Homecoming week and a Saturday football game will make for a bustling weekend in Ames. With it, the message from friends, colleagues, professors and family is to “stay safe.” It’s a noble suggestion to tell young people who are setting out to have a good time to “be safe.” We know what they mean. Be safe as in “Don’t drink too much,” “Don’t get arrested” and “Don’t drink and drive.” Stay safe as in “Use the bud-
dy system,” “Don’t set your drink down,” or “Don’t wear revealing clothing” all have the underlying, unspoken elephant in the room of “Don’t get sexually assaulted.” And that’s exactly how victim blaming in our culture works. The statistics don’t lie. Young people are among the most likely to be sexually assaulted. The recent release of the Association of American Universities campus climate survey on sexual assault also states that alcohol plays a part in a “significant percentage of the incidents.” Out of the students who reported witnessing a drunk person heading for a sexual encounter, 75.8 percent of them said they did nothing, according to the report. Additionally, two-thirds of that 75.8 percent said they didn’t intervene for a reason other than not knowing what to do. It is your responsibility, if you see something, to say something. However, when speaking of the survivor, as soon as someone brings up the question, “Where were his or her friends when this was happening? Why didn’t a friend step in?” it once again places the blame for the assault on that survivor and the survivor’s friends. I’m not saying don’t use safety precautions. Please be safe. Use the buddy system. But don’t rely on the buddy system as a complete safety cloak. I don’t think I can put it better than Michael Davis, assistant director of Student Assistance and Outreach, in a previous interview with the Daily. “Students are making their own judgment that people who go out
and drink want to have sex. The only natural consequence of going out and drinking is a hangover — not rape, not a sexual encounter. Nothing like that. Why do 20 percent fewer students intervene when alcohol is involved? In my opinion, it’s partially because we’re on a college campus where many college students think drinking equates sex.” Halloween weekend is a time for fun. A time for students to attempt to forget about the numerous stresses bombarding their daily lives. It isn’t a time for young men and women to have to worry about being sexually assaulted. Why are universities spending all of their time giving token after token of advice on how to avoid being raped when they could spend time educating people on what consent really is and how not to rape people. I could sit here and tell you to be careful this weekend — which, yes, please do be careful and have fun — but that is a contributing factor to the way we blame victims. Sexual assault does not discriminate according major, race, age, height, sexual orientation or gender identity. Those who sexually assault usually do so as a mechanism of power, and they also have the power to refrain from doing so. We have the power to never blame the survivor for the trauma they now have to live with. Why are we sitting here telling potential victims to use all of the methods they can to avoid being raped? This the real advice we should be giving people: Don’t rape somebody.
Don’t use gender to limit kids’ costumes By Haley.Brase @iowastatedaily.com Dressing up as a princess or a superhero for Halloween has a common factor: encouraging gender roles. Halloween is a time for trick-or-treating for children — and some enterprising teenagers — but a noticeable difference between an Elsa costume and a Batman costume is that one is “meant” for a girl and one for a boy. I work at a Hy-Vee in Ames, and, this past weekend, we had a day for trick-or-treating where children could trick-or-treat throughout the store. During that time, I saw many girl princesses and boy superheroes. There were a few children who were wearing costumes not meant for their gender. Children are taught gender roles from an early age. Girls wear glittery, fragile costumes, and boys wear strong, bold costumes. But it should not be frowned upon if a girl wants to be the Hulk or if a boy wants to be Cinderella. In addition to gender-specific costumes, there are also
costumes making fun of people dealing with gender roles on a day-to-day basis. They use the idea of Halloween to dress as whomever or whatever they want in a mocking way. For example, Caitlyn Jenner has been made into a costume with a negative connotation, making fun of her gender transition from male to female. To the transgender community, Jenner is seen as a normal human being, but, to people who are not transgender or advocates, they see the Jenner costume as a funny practical joke. Halloween costumes shouldn’t provide an opportunity to make fun of another human being who decided to be themselves. In Huffington Post, Mary Moss reported she let her daughter dress up as Darth Vader because her daughter didn’t have any desire to dress up as a princess. Moss figured that Halloween was a time for her daughter to dress as someone she may want to be some day or someone who aligned with her views of herself. Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender youth are not al-
ways sure of their identities, and Moss’s daughter realized she was not comfortable in her skin and used Halloween as a way to express that. In seventh grade, Moss’s daughter transitioned, becoming her son. It took courage to make that decision during the judgmental teenage years, but the judgment has continued with Halloween costumes. Like Moss’s son, Jenner faced her own bullies — the media. Halloween costumes are often portrayed as being designed specifically for a girl or boy. Girls will be wearing something frilly that is supposed to make them look girly, and boys will wear something that is supposed to make them look manly. According to Huffington Post, Jennifer Muhm, one of the creators of buddingSTEM, which is a line of sciencethemed clothing for girls, was looking through costume catalogs for an astronaut costume for her daughter but was unable to find one. Her daughter saw only boys wearing astronaut costumes, so she then decided not to be one. Muhm and Malorie Catchpole, a friend of Muhm’s and
another mother who had a related story with her daughters, started their own clothing company that appeals to girls using “typical” boys’ clothing. For example, the clothing patterns feature trucks, dinosaurs and planets on clothes for girls, clothes that would normally be considered “boy” clothes. According to Huffington Post, when they put their idea on Kickstarter, it raised more than $60,000. BuddingSTEM is not the only clothing line trying to end gender roles. Handsome in Pink is for everyone — children, women and men. The company believes colors do not belong to one gender, so its clothes are different colors not specified for a certain gender. Breaking gender roles, such as pink belonging to women, is something it is trying to change. Halloween costumes are not just for trick-or-treating. They are a way for children to express themselves or explore a life they do not normally live. If a girl wants to feel powerful, as she always should be able to, and wear a Hulk costume, she should. And the same goes for a boy who wants to feel beautiful dressed as Cinderella.
Republican candidates overlook women Republican candidates for president had their third debate Wednesday night. During the debate, the top 10 GOP front runners discussed their stances on a variety of issues while attacking one another, the Democrats and, most predominantly, the media. However, there was one subject in particular that was missing from the discourse — women’s issues. During the debate, only one candidate was asked directly about women’s issues by the moderators, and no other candidate brought it up on their own, showing a disconnect between the Republican candidates and issues concerning women. Sen. Ted Cruz, RTexas, was asked by a moderator what he would do to help equalize women’s pay, which is currently about 77 percent of what men make in the U.S. Cruz’s response was a generic one, lacking specifics about how to actually fix any of the issues women in America face on a daily basis. He said, “Well, we’ve gotta turn the economy around for people who are struggling,” before explaining that many members of his family were single, working moms. He attacked the Obama administration for the number of women who have entered poverty and for the wages women have lost in the past eight years. Cruz finished the answer by saying he is fighting for women and Hispanics — all without giving any real solutions. Although it was good of Cruz to address the issues single mothers face in this country, there are a whole host of other situations women experience in the United States that need to be dealt with. According to a Gallup Poll conducted in October 2014, issues like sexual harassment, available childcare and maternity leave are among the issues that carry the most weight for women. How can we vote for someone to run this country if he or she doesn’t have a plan to address these pertinent issues affecting half the population? Carly Fiorina then jumped in with negative comments about Hillary Clinton’s policies — along with the Obama administration’s — as far as equal pay for women. She explained that a conservative approach is the way to go because “[she knows] our values, our principles and our policies.” These answers are the problem with our country’s GOP candidates. The candidates gave specifics on how they would actually improve the pay gap in our country. Only two of the candidates even touched on the issue, and none of them outlined their plans for women if they became president. Women’s issues should not simply become a Carly Fiorina issue because she is the only serious candidate who is a woman on the Republican side. The American population is about 50 percent women, so all candidates need to be concerned about their standing in our country with women’s issues and have specific plans.
Editorial Board
Danielle Ferguson, editor-in-chief Madison Ward, opinion editor Maddy Arnold, managing editor of engagement Opinions expressed in columns and letters are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Daily or organizations with which the author(s) are associated.
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The Daily encourages discussion but does not guarantee its publication. We reserve the right to edit or reject any letter or online feedback. Send your letters to letters@iowastatedaily.com. Letters must include the name(s), phone number(s), majors and/or group affiliation(s) and year in school of the author(s). Phone numbers and addresses will not be published. Online feedback may be used if first name and last name, major and year in school are included in the post. Feedback posted online is eligible for print in the Iowa State Daily.
IOWA STATE DAILY
SPORTS
10
Friday, Oct. 30, 2015
STALLING THE RUN ISU defense focuses on limiting Texas’ rush offense, quarterback By Ryan.Young @iowastatedaily.com Texas defensive tackle Paul Boyette had some interesting things to say about the ISU football program. When he addressed reporters Monday, Boyette didn’t hold back anything. “We know Iowa State is not a very good football team,” Boyette said, according to the Austin AmericanStatesman. “I’m not taking anything away from them. But they can come out one week and put up numerous points, and the next they can be flat.” The Cyclones didn’t take too well to the comments. “That’s his opinion,” said defensive lineman Dale Pierson when asked about his thoughts on Boyette’s comments. “There are a lot of people out there that don’t think we are a good team or think we are a good team and we’ve had hiccups.” Iowa State (2-5, 1-3 Big 12) will host Texas (3-4, 2-2 Big 12) at 6 p.m. Saturday in the Cyclones’ annual homecoming game, where they will attempt to break a three-game losing streak. This week presents a new
challenge for Iowa State. For the past three weeks, Iowa State has been pitted against three of the nation’s top offenses that seem to have perfected the air raid style of play. But the Longhorns have a different style. Of their 450 offensive plays this season, 313 of them have been run plays. The Longhorns are averaging more than 237 yards per game in Big 12 play on the ground, the second-best mark in the league. They also boast the league’s best rush defense, allowing 179.3 yards per game. When the two teams play each other Saturday night, it will be a race to see which can first establish the run game. “If you [establish the run] in a way that you can complement your passing game ... I think that is where the upper hand is,” said ISU coach Paul Rhoads.“If you can’t run it effectively enough where you can just rely on it. “Or set up the things you want in the passing game and be efficient at it, you can run for 200-plus [yards] and not necessarily have the upper hand.” Redshirt freshman quarterback Jerrod Heard brings another dimension
Iowa State Daily Defensive end Dale Pierson pursues Texas Tech quarterback Patrick Mahomes on Nov. 22, 2014 at Jack Trice Stadium. The ISU defense’s game plan Saturday against Texas will be to limit Texas quarterback Jerrod Heard from dominating the ground game. Heard is averaging 69.9 rushing yards per game this season.
to the Longhorn run game. Heard is averaging 69.9 yards on the ground and is the team’s leading rusher. He ran for more than 100 yards against Oklahoma two weeks ago. Against California on Sept. 19, Heard ran for 163 yards and three touchdowns, a season best. And after watching Heard’s recent success on the ground, there is no doubt in Rhoads’ mind about what Heard will be looking to do against the Cyclones. “Heard is going to run it,” Rhoads said. “They’re
going to get him into space, and they’re going to try to get him a lead blocker.” As for Wally Burnham, ISU defensive coordinator, his plan to stop Heard is simple — get into the backfield. “That’s going to be a challenge, there’s no doubt about it,” Burnham said. “You can’t spy on him. Other people have spied on him, and heck, they can’t catch him. So why waste a guy? Just everybody go to him, and hit him up as fast as we can.”
Game Info Iowa State (2-5, 1-3 Big 12) vs. Texas (3-4, 2-2 Big 12) 6 p.m. | Jack Trice Stadium | Homecoming game TV: FS1 Jack Trice Stadium info: • All gates will open 90 minutes before game time. • Students must enter through the east gate. • Re-entry to the stadium will be allowed until the start of the 4th quarter. Ticket must be scanned upon exit and re-entry.
Volleyball attempts to rebound By Garrett.Kroeger @iowastatedaily.com
Dalton Gackle/Iowa State Daily
Junior Ciara Capezio bumps the volleyball against West Virginia on Oct. 21. Capezio is averaging 10 kills during Iowa State’s past three matches.
Earlier this season, the ISU volleyball team traveled to Norman, Okla., and had one of its best matches of the year against the Sooners. The match was highly competitive, as three out of the four sets were decided by three or fewer points. The Cyclones also had four players tally at least 10 kills. Morgan Kuhrt and Alexis Conaway led the way with 17 kills and collectively hit .259 percent against Oklahoma. “Each of the four games were very close, but that match was one of our best Big 12 matches this season,” said ISU coach Christy
Johnson-Lynch. Although the Cyclones had one of their best matches against Oklahoma, they are coming off one of their worst performances of the year against the Kansas Jayhawks on Wednesday at Hilton Coliseum. When Iowa State took on Kansas, its performance withered throughout the match. Iowa State won the first set against Kansas, 25-20, while hitting .370 percent. But after the first set, it all went downhill for the Cyclones. Their hitting percentage fell to as low as .125. Not only did Iowa State’s hitting percentage decrease throughout the match, but its serving and passing were also subpar.
“We are known for serving and passing,” said ISU libero Caitlin Nolan. “But [Kansas] put a lot of pressure on us in that area.” During the match against the Jayhawks, the Cyclones committed more than 30 errors, eventually losing the match 3-1. So after a poor performance, Iowa State will attempt to clean up what it is known to do best. “After this match [against Kansas], we are definitely going to focus on serving and passing,” Nolan said. In the Cyclones’ first match this season against the Sooners, they committed only 24 attacking errors on 180 total attacks, along with seven serving errors. Another way Iowa State can replicate its success against Okla-
homa from earlier this season is by spreading the attacking wealth. “[Kuhrt and Conaway] had stellar performances down in Oklahoma,” Johnson-Lynch said. “But this time around, [Oklahoma] may focus on them more, so we have to find a way to combat that.” The current hot hands for Iowa State are junior outside hitter Ciara Capezio and freshman Jess Schaben. They have averaged 10 kills and 12 kills, respectively, during the past three matches. “Every Big 12 game is going to be competitive,” Johnson-Lynch said. “So I don’t expect this match to be a cakewalk.” The Cyclones will take on the Sooners at 12 p.m. Saturday at Hilton Coliseum.
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Road begins to 2015 NCAA Championship ISU women’s cross-country team aims for fifth-straight Big 12 title By Kyle.Heim @iowastatedaily.com The time has arrived: The weather is starting to cool down, the crosscountry season is starting to heat up and the road to the NCAA Cross-Country Championship has begun. History will favor Iowa State at the Big 12 Championship on Saturday in Stillwater, Okla., as the team has won the past four conference championships. But inconsistencies have been unavoidable for the young Cyclones this season. The team finished runner-up at the Greater Louisville Classic on Oct. 3. Perez Rotich, Becky Straw and Erin Hooker led the Cyclones with fourth, 12th and 13th place finishes respectively. “I thought we did a nice job,� said ISU coach Andrea Grove-McDonough when
talking about her team’s performance in Louisville. “I thought our runners at four and five did their job. Our one through three did kind of what we thought they would do, and [Rotich] had a terrific day. A lot of positives came out of it. I would say nothing negative.� Grove-McDonough’s reaction was different after the team finished seventh at the Wisconsin adidas Invitational on Oct. 16, but she still displayed optimism. “Did it go perfect? Nope. Did we emerge as better team because of it? Yep. Did we show we could be warriors? Absolutely,� Grove-McDonough tweeted after the meet. At the beginning of the season, the Big 12 Championship had the making of a showdown between two of the top-10 teams in the country — Iowa State and West Virginia.
Kyle Heim/Iowa State Daily
The ISU women’s cross-country team celebrates its fourth-straight Big 12 Championship on Nov. 1, 2014 in Lawrence, Kan. The Cyclones will try to make it five consecutive Saturday in Stillwater, Okla.
Iowa State finished second at the 2014 NCAA Championship, and West Virginia placed ninth, leading to the two teams entering their 2015 campaigns ranked No. 1 and No. 9, respectively.
But injuries to key runners on both teams have led to Iowa State dropping to No. 11 in the current poll and West Virginia falling from the top 25. Oklahoma State has replaced West Virginia in
the poll and is ranked No. 23 entering Big 12s, adding a third team to the mix of favorites for this year’s Big 12 title. But the Cyclones have yet to compete in a meet that includes a top-25 ranked team.
Iowa State will have the upper hand in experience competing against elite competition Saturday after sending its runners to the Greater Louisville Classic and Wisconsin adidas Invitational, which, combined, featured more than 20 top-25 ranked teams. “Now that we’ve started, I think we know where we can finish and where we can place,� Hooker said. “We don’t know, but we have an idea.� Iowa State will rely on Hooker and Rotich, who finished ninth and 13th at last year’s conference championship, to lead the team to another conference championship in Stillwater on Saturday. And if the Cyclones claim a fifth straight Big 12 title Saturday, Iowa State will not only have to worry about accommodating for its growing enrollment. The school will also need to find space for the increasing number of trophies the women’s cross-country team continues to bring home.
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MIRANDA RIGHTS p1 will be used against you in the court of law. • You have the right to an attorney. • If you cannot afford an attorney, one will be appointed to you. • Do you understand these rights? “What’s the best practice?” Huff said. “Read it word-for-word.” Another misconception is that the rights have to be read when arrested, but two conditions must be met for Miranda rights to be a part of protocol. The first criterion is interrogation, which is fairly simple to define. Interrogation is when police ask incriminating questions. The second criterion is custody, which is defined as when a reasonable person
GHOST STORIES p1 experienced. The employee, who was notorious for being organized and keeping things in order, was looking after the Farm House museum during one of the university breaks. She set the table in the museum before leaving one night and came back the next morning to a very disorganized table. The same thing happened the next night, and she asked other employees if they had visited the house. They said no. The employee
ACACIA Grant Albansoder Jakob Croghan Nolan Dickson Benjamin Dirks Kevin Duhrkopf Mcdaniel Foley Jackson Griffith Michael Hoefer Tanner Jaeger Addison Kistler Richard Korneisel Boa-Lin Lai Wyatt Lauer Ryan Lohse Wicitra Mahotama William Mann Gabriel Mccoy Carter Reed Chase Russell Drew Sherman Devin Shields Carlton Stripe Joe Webb Ryan Zumbach ADELANTE Timothy Dee Gilbert Echales Minoru Fernando Adam Fisher Cory Roberts Logan Stiens Joshua Zabel ALPHA CHI OMEGA Emily Arvia Emma Axtell Sarah Bailey Allison Bluhm Allison Boyle Kate Brockschink Hailey Burkhardt Caitlyn Carradus Courtney Carradus Jesslyn Carroll Chloe Carson Madeline Cavanaugh Vanessa Cooper Jessa Dahlin Danielle Emmert Katherine Fjelstad Kelley Fliehler Cheyenne Graeve Katie Grassel Rebecca Guenther Kaylynn Hatting Hayley Henderson Rita Hull Alisha Humiston Allie Hutcheson Ashley Iannuzzelli Courtney Johnson Madeline Johnson Brittany Kellen Kayla Klahsen Kelsey Knutson Alicia Kramer Emily Kramer Taylor Kresge Kate Kruse Nicole Mackowski Hunter Martin Leann Meyer Kristin Molgaard Meredith Molhusen Haley Morris Erica Nelson Tiffany Nelson Jessica O’riley Laura Pederson Savannah Putnam Victoria Raile Erin Raney Megan Reiland Mallory Schultze Anne Seely Hailey Stepanek Emily Storm Sarah Tank Ashton Temple Brianne Tuttle Abbey Vitosh Margo Wilwerding ALPHA DELTA PI Brooke Almasi Morgan Arenholz Alexis Atkinson Sabrina Austin Angela Benjegerdes Abby Bergquist Dena Bielski Courtney Brendel Courtney Brockman Kathryn Bruce Jennifer Buehler Katherine Carpenter Megan Carpenter Carly Colville Carly Crist Sarah Curran Elizabeth Eager Madison Egli Jessica Ellias Marissa Ferguson Haley Fisher Kaesey Glaess Faith Goetz Isabel Gottlieb Mariah Griffith Rachel Hagg Allison Harris Heather Helgren Katherine Hyde Summer Illg Elizabeth Jensen Lauren Johnson Michelle Keane Jennifer Kersten Clara Kiepe Madeleine Kiepura Lauren Kimball Edan Lambert Jennie Larson Melissa Larson Elizabeth Lennartson Szumei Leow
believes they are no longer free to leave. This is complicated by the concept that every arrest is considered custody — but being in custody doesn’t necessarily mean an arrest. Huff described custody as asking someone to come to the station with him, and, before asking questions, he tells the person they can leave when they want, and Huff will give them a ride home. Huff said to a reasonable person, this would not be considered custody because the person being asked questions knows they can leave whenever. Yet another complication to defining Miranda through interrogation is when it comes to sobriety tests. The tests used in a sobriety test — checking eyes, saying the alphabet, walking
in a line — are considered non-testimonials. A non-testimonial is asking non-incriminating questions. It uses physical signs instead of asking how many drinks the subject has had. The majority of arrests in Ames don’t require the Miranda rights to be read. “75 percent of arrests don’t read Miranda,” Huff said. Barbara Woods, member of NAACP, said the event was put on to provide education to the public. “There’s lots of information in the media about what happens with police and citizens,” Woods said. “We really want our community to be educated on what they ought to know instead of making assumptions.” The third and final dialogue of the series will take place in February.
found no explanations for the occurrences. After Hall finished sharing her stories, she opened up the floor to any students who wanted to share their ghost encounters with the group to end the evening. “I thought the event was pretty interesting,” said Luis Camacho, sophomore in computer engineering. “It was cool to hear about Mr. Big, who haunts Friley, because I live in Friley.” Hall started collecting ghost stories not necessarily for the idea of ghost stories but rather the way the sto-
ries are composed. “I like the way you tell ghost stories. I like the way that people get excited about them,” Hall said. Hall enjoys hearing stories from anyone who is willing to tell them, but she said she isn’t interested in making up stories and telling them to other people. “The rules that I have created for myself are I need to hear a story from at least a couple people before I really take it into account,” Hall said. “I can’t just invent stories. There has to be something to go on.”
Ashley Manske Abigail Markland Mikayla Maves Elisa Mcafee Morgan Mccarthy Quinlan Moran Lindsay Ollenburg Megan Oswald Sivani Parsa Megan Peters Elizabeth Petran Erin Petty Grace Rapp Amy Raymond Tessa Rife Jessica Rogge Kaitlin Roller Catherine Rudolph Sara Schafer Zoe Scheve Nicole Schimerowski Megan Schnell Rebecca Schrodt Kelli Schulte Allison Sims Hannah Sitzmann Charlsea Soderstrum Rachel Thalhuber Monica Thornton Samantha Troe Alexandra Vaughan Ashley Vaughan Lauren Walker Rachel Welsh Anna Wilcox Jessica Wilson ALPHA GAMMA DELTA Sarah Altenhofen Hannah Bailey Jamie Baldwin Michelle Bauer Alexandra Bennett Hannah Beuse Alexis Boyle Lauren Carter Kaitlin Clevenger Danielle Cranston Christina Creel Nina Devilbiss Corinne Eischen Megan Elliott Danielle Fenn Erin Fetter Natalie Hanson Morgan Hassebroek Lauren Hayes Gianna Heelan Hailey Holland Annmarie Huet Karen Hutton Julianna Jespersen Kelly Kalsch Hillary Kletscher Nicole Knoepke Emily Koneval Katelynn Lahaye Josephine Lawrence Catherine Leafstedt Mackenzie Lewis Kari Ludvigson Rachel Lukowski Alyssa Maldonado Alexandra Marek Jessica Mcdonald Alexandria Mcginnis Alison Mclean Kendall Neuberger Sarah Ochs Megan Oliver Kiley Pawlak Jensyn Perrin Jessica Przybylski Paige Roane Cassandra Schneider Kelli Schram Janae Smith Samantha Snidarich Ashley Squires Sarah Striegel Amanda Szoke Danna Verastegui Katherine Walton Rosie Zbaracki Melissa Zenk Alexa Caldwell ALPHA GAMMA RHO Adam Baker Cody Belknap Dustin Belknap Andrew Benning Michael Burt Trey Forsyth Delmer Goettsch Luke Gosse Riley Harbaugh Mark Holloway Clayton Hora Andrew Hovden Russell Johnson Benjamin Kelly Matthew Kerns Logan Lafrenz Austin Lane Brett Lilienthal Ross Lilienthal Reed Mccormick Grant Mcmillan Scott Opperman Alec Paup Michael Poggemiller William Reever Sean Robinson Clayton Robison Jacob Showalter Tanner Stutsman Kellen Suntken Michael Theis Philip Trumm Patrick White Chancelor Wiese Shayne Wiese Thomas Yoder
ALPHA GAMMA LAMBDA Matthew Fuller Joseph Kostecki Eric Laures Neil Schadle Jared Thompson ALPHA OMICRON PI Carena Anderson Allyson Ballinger Brenna Barber Michelle Becker Miranda Briscuso Hallie Browne Kasey Derda Alyssa Deskin Rachel Dolehanty Rachel Dubbink Grace Elonen Jena Gilbertson Moriah Greenhill Natalie Holtz Kathleen Johnson Veronica Johnson Leah Kesselmayer Stephanie Kohles Anna Krug Amanda Little Meredith Markowitz Annika Mikkelson Allie Mormann Mckenna Powell Elena Schneiderhan Geena Staiert Sara Umphfleet Kaitlyn Whitmore Alexis Willoughby Brodie Wilson Yiyuan Zhang ALPHA PHI Dorthea Ballard Bailey Banger Jessica Bennett Josie Brownmiller Emma Bruen Jamie Chamberlain Emmy Cuvelier Ali Danhoff Kylee Funk Hailey Hearn Jessica Jensen Samantha Johnson Olivia Kutsch Sarah Mader Sarah Maikon Alex Marasco Anja Maslan Brianna Monroe Alexis Nicholson Carlyn Norton Rachel Rothmeyer Darby Sheehan Jessica Smith Sara Stevenson Michaela Sundermann Valerie Vander Linden Calie Wallace Alexa Weber Emily Wicks Diana Wohl Jenna Yates ALPHA SIGMA KAPPA Samiha Abdulrahim Renee Alexander Emily Baudler Christine Eckert Kayla Flyckt Kaitlyn Garon Erin Hallisey Alanna Hennen Nicole Jandick Kourtney Kostecki Renee Layoun Rebecca Lehman Makayla Natrop Sarah Pahlke Shannon Roth Autumn Rudlong Patrice Sorensen Elizabeth Wilson Baylie Wingerson ALPHA SIGMA PHI Ethan Ahern Mike Gallagher Maxwell Mcclelland Alexander Peterson Jeremy Stapleton Matt Tokarski ALPHA TAU OMEGA Andrew Cubit Matthew Dohse Brendan Johnson Jordan Littman Kyle Millburg Charles Scales Andrew Wilson Steven Zarling BETA SIGMA PSI Joshua Baedke Benjamin Colton Ian Gesell Michael Heger Daniel Jacobi Lucas Johnson Jacob Klemme Caleb Mueller Michael Nelson Alexander Sundholm Jonathon Thompson Peter Vonqualen Jordan White BETA THETA PI Josh Berg Joshua Cobler Dennis Creighton Bradley Deprez Jacob Duncan Peter Fonkert Austin Gotta
Jack Harper Nicholas Loughrey Joseph Mazzenga Matthew Messerli John Pacer Christopher Perez Niccolo Peterson Braiddey Ruzicka Karter Ruzicka Matthew Schiro Matthew Scott Kyle Uhlenhake Seth White Thomas Zeman CHI OMEGA Alexis Berg Mary Bethel Kelsey Burggraff Marcia Carlson Abbie Dewitte Erica Dunagan Mallory Earll Presley Earll Grace Fidler Madeline Foust Britt Gillis Jordyn Glienke Abigail Gonzalez Emily Guisinger Grace Hagen Kaylee Hahn Kelsey Halverson Katie Hamilton Brynn Hansen Eleanor Harkness Megan Hedges Katelyn Heiser Jiselle Henderkott Ivy Hogg Erin Hohman Katherine Horstmann Claire Hughes Darby Hulen Lauren Iverson Erica Johnson Kyle Jones Katie Kruse Madison Kurvers Kathryn Lang Sierra Leeds Mariah Long Tanna Mafnas Kassandra Manternach Miranda Mason Samantha Matt Madisyn Mccarville Catherine Mcclurg Anna Mcconnell Christina Meissner Kayla Mikuls Amber Monthei Kali Muller Ashley Oakes Emily Olson Erin Opat Paige Opheim Jalen Parrington Katelyn Probst Sydney Rarick Kaylie Reicks Taylor Richardson Kate Roth Allison Schatz Marissa Schmitt Megan Scholl Sanika Sherry Abby Shimon Natalie Smith Ashley Staton Erin Swansson Laura Thiesse Abigail Wagener Taylor Ward Cayla Witte Leah Zeller DELTA CHI Adam Cich Andrew Kitahara Andrew Larson Omar Longou DELTA DELTA DELTA Natalie Bennewitz Jenna Bloom Ida Borchardt Danielle Briggs Victoria Bruno Danielle Chirhart Natalie Colosimo Jenna Doerfler Sedona Dowd Samantha Duff Clara Eising Anna Farrington Maren French Caitrin Fretham Ana Goeser Carolyn Green Allie Harrington Makenzie Haskin Catherine Hennings Christina Holden Aliyah Hoskins Kaley Ihle Madeline Johnson Carli Kenyon Morgan Koithan Brittany Kramer Emily Krause Bailey Kuhl Sydney Larsen Alicia Latraille Hannah Leech Alexis Manassa Kylee Metzger Tayler Murray Bailey O’donnell Sydney Pick Olivia Prestrud Taylor Pulliam Jade Reno Caroline Schmidt Sydney Schmidt Shanon Smith
Anna Sposeto Kelsie Stopak Anne Sullivan Lisa Van, Emma Vansickle Alyssa Vuong Madison Walker Emily Walsh Hannah Walsh Nicole Wehling Desiree Witt Mckenna Wragge Paige Wragge Kelsea Young Kaitlin Zachar Bethany Zimmerman
Rachel Peterson Hanna Porterfield Natalie Prater Olivia Richardson Alexa Rittman Jamie Rix Megan Rupiper Allison Schultz Bryannah Slate Larissa Starkweather Emily Takle Kristina Vollmar Courtney Wiencek Allison Wisnieski Sophie Wittkamp Abigayle Zweifel
DELTA LAMBDA PHI Brandon Akamine Ryan Biggs Miles Brainard Christopher Krebill Parker Scott Alexander Young
FARMHOUSE James Bultman Nathaniel Byro Mitchell Carlson Michael Dischler Tyler Dix David Drendel Erik Dunteman Adam Fichter Austin Fichter Layton Flynn Evan Fritz Bradley Hagen Justin Hammen Austin Hilbrands Xin Huang Tate Klocke Justin Lagomarcino Grant Lehmann Colton Lindemann David Litchfield Christopher Mandt Grady Manker William Marshall Andrew Mcevoy Brett Meador Dylan Muckey Matthew Nelson Brett Nicholson Nicholas Olsen Michael Orness Carter Rau Brenton Rossman Austin Schladetzky Daniel Schnadt Nick Schrader Jacob Smidt Matthew Staley Luke Stratmoen Daniel Tarte Matthew Welter Adam Willman Nathan Witzel Tyler Young
DELTA PHI LAMBDA Mariah Johnson Hana Kim Xinyi Peng Mason Carnahan DELTA SIGMA PHI Braden Christensen Joseph Danielsen Matthew Faxvog Ryan Gallus Ha Jeong Jeffrey Robson Nicholas Stenglein DELTA SIGMA THETA Jasmine Stovall Kendra White DELTA TAU DELTA Corey Anderson Matthew Bannon Dominic Belfanti Kellen Bohn Eric Edwards Jacob Eull Joe Fairchild Pierce Fieldsend Andrew Foy Devon Grace Spencer Griffith Colton Hageman Jonathan Hankins Vincent Hartogh Zachary Johnson James Jones Adam Kohl David Leo Erik Nelson Michael Niehaus Clifford Nixon Nicholas Parisi Brett Peterson Connor Recker Reed Rognes Gavin Smith Nicolas Stumbo Ross Taets Kenneth Wade Matthew Winkleblack DELTA UPSILON Ryan Betters Tanner Bock Dustin Cary Nicholas Collison Robert Gates Joseph Gunkelman Matthew Gunkelman Nathan Halstead David Jahn Timothy Kise Richard Ludwig Mitchell Mcdonough Keaton Mohr Thomas Nettleton Tyler Olson Brandon Pabyanskus Bryson Painter Noah Salmonson Connor Stein Mikhail Suvorov DELTA ZETA Alex-Marie Ablan Alicia Blair Samantha Bortle Morgan Bowman Shelby Brandt Caroline Brosius Meredith Brown Michaela Byers Noelle Clark Paige Conrad Lauren Coughlin Kelsi Cypser Jenna Demarco Brittany Doll Amy Feldmann Lauren Ferezy Madison Ferguson Anna Hall Natalie Hallman Meghan Hulen Savannah Ingham Tessa James Lauren Jensen Kelsey Johnston Kalie Kapfer Megan Kenney Kiley Lorenz Margaret Madison Emilia Marinkovic Samantha Mccool Amelia Medici Andria Mendoza Mimi Nguyen Olivia Nielsen Claudia Nuci Alison Palmer
GAMMA PHI BETA Kelli Alore Hannah Bolen Micaela Boyce Cassidy Bringle Maria Brown Hannah Clingan Lauren Czarnetzki Heidi Darrington Lauren Davis Tara Dillinger Emilee Earlywine Paula Eisenbraun Claire Espeset Alexus Ferree Sabrina Fest Claire Fleming Emily Fleming Emily Forsyth Erika Gebard Jordan Gerdes Lauren Gilbert Megan Heideman Sophia Hetherington Shannon Iskowitz Taylor Jensen Jennifer Johnson Chloe Just Sarah Kelly Natalie Ketchen Raechel Kinney Claire Kirk Lauren Larsen Lindsay Laske Jamie Lauten Joelle Lisondra Jacqueline Lowe Janelle Madsen Natalie Malliet Grace Mclaughlin Madison Mead Emily Meyer Olivia Miller Madel Norling-Christensen Shannon Norris Maia Palma Isidora Passalacqua Jenna Pattee Rachel Pierce Katherine Rapp Carolyn Redshaw Alex Robinson Catie Robinson Chelsey Rouse Jenna Sandquist Erin Schilling Audra Schminke Emily Scott Emma Seaman Kathryn Seiler Taylor Shirbroun Holland Shodeen Malley Stevenson Abigail Stewart Stephanie Tigges Sydney Tobis Sydney Unruh Madisun Vangundy Taylor Vollstedt Hailey Walker Emily Walvoord Meredith Whitlock Bailey Whitsitt Madeline Wilhelm Madeline Wille
IRHA talks funds for PhilanthroFest By Kelsey.Palmros @iowastatedaily.com The Inter-Residence Hall Association hosted a meeting Thursday to discuss upcoming events that other organizations at Iowa State have requested the association to help fund. The issue of funding Philanthrofest was raised during the IRHA meeting. PhilanthroFest is an event where on-causes and organizations can promote themselves. The association continued to have concerns regarding how the funding potentially provided by IRHA would be dispersed, and amendments were made to the bill. The discussion for PhilanthroFest event funding by IRHA exceeded the allotted time, and 45 minutes were added to the discussion. Parliament members raised further questions regarding the fact that one of the basketball games is scheduled to take place at the same time the event would take place, as well
Natalie Williams Paige Yoder Katelyn Zenk GAMMA RHO LAMBDA April Anderson Chelsea Day Hannah Moffitt KAPPA ALPHA THETA Anna Badovinac Madeline Baker Marit Bakken Audrey Blum Brenna Bormann Leah Brooke Stephanie Burkhart Kelsey Callihan Sydney Cline Mikayla Cummings Tess Debartolo Allie Drifke Lauren Dunteman Katelyn Emig Callie Erwin Jacqueline Fusco Christel Gustafson Kayla Halvorson Anna Haugen Brooke Herren Rachel Hoskins Hailey Jensen Alexandra Johnson Michelle Johnson Jennifer Keats-Snow Jennifer Keys Michaela Llewellyn Kirsten Mancosky Kelly Mcconoughey Michaela Mcinerney Brenna Menning Jane Morrison Haley Newberry Julia Nguyen Danika Nolte Cecily Paldino Sarah Paulson Michele Ries Amy Rogers Leah Schmidt Margaret Severson Kelsey Sissel Anne Steenson Jamie Steffen Nina Streauslin Cassandra Thielen Katherine Tindall Melissa Veenstra Casey Wales Jessica Yeager Hannah Yokiel KAPPA DELTA Madison Arends Courtney Barbour Bethanie Blake Miranda Bowers Morgan Bridges Cally Caviness Casey Christ Rose Criscione Hannah Dehaan-Burch Zoe Dutchik Lauren Ernst Laura Fisher Brieana Fortner Sarah Frame Caitlin Gearhart Lauren Good Raeann Hanlon Katherine Herr Brittany Johnson Emilee Johnson Brianna Jones Alyssa Klahsen Abigail Kline Alison Knutson Sarah Koithan Brittani Koza Kelsey Kunkelmann Alivia Mccorkle Courtney Millard Jayne Passehl Tory Pfannkuch Alexandra Polk Sydney Reeves Emily Rocha Kelsey Rodgers Kara Sander Valerie Sanders Selia Schneider Kallyn Thomson Ella Voss Alicia Wallin Lauren Wedemeyer Paige Zardzin KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Emily Aller Haley Baas Hannah Bankson Michaela Berg Kaija Bergdale Katie Bergdale Lucy Besch Brittany Beyers Abby Biller Emma Blickensderfer Ellyse Bonnema Taylor Borde Molly Bridges Kailey Buckstead Allison Clem Chelsea Cooper Tiffany Daly wClare Desio Anna Douglas Sydney Elson Rachel Ericksen Kayla Finn Lauren Gimmestad Anderson Grant Camille Griffith Anne Gustafson
Ashlyn Hagen Kylie Hamerlinck Carter Hassel Abby Hean Alyssa Heimer Abbey Horsman Kelly Houghton Morgan Hulick Stephanie Jaycox Abby Johnson Mackenzie Jordan Kathryn Kaalberg Samantha Lawlor Lauren Meese Katherine Moors Haley Mosher Jaden Mueller Katherine Nawrocki Carly Nicodemus Emma Pagano Lauren-Emma Parrott Greer Potadle Nicole Pothen Hannah Rich Claire Rogers Brianna Salow Madison Sauer Katelyn Sim Jordan Simon Breana Van Beek Brittany Walker Megan Walsh Hannah Wiedemeier Laura Wood Taylor Young Kappa Sigma Matthew Beth Nathan Chapdelaine Brandon Hayek Nathan Lafferty Derrick Lockwood Peter Michalski Kieran Robuck Timothy Schweiger Michael Stevens Alex Venhorst Kurry Watson Tamunodienye Wilcox LAMBDA CHI ALPHA Cale Cunningham Andrew Hess Kevin Korniejczuk Ryan Luckinbill Nicholas Paulsmeyer Theodore Reinert Collin Still Ralph Tenuta LAMBDA THETA ALPHA Alma Marquez Berenice Real LAMBDA THETA NU Paige Dettma LAMBDA THETA PHI Juan Mendoza Moises Monrroy PHI BETA CHI Lindsay Allard Danielle Andrews Emily Barrett Katelyn Bell Sarah Cortez Jennifer Durbala Alyssa Henderson Krista Klocke Jacqueline Kroemer Hannah Lehne Courtney Leslie Laurel Meier Leah Miller Kendall Nathan Leah Palm Moriah Richardson Kelly Ridenour Morgan Schilling Nicole Schubert Sarah Southorn Megan Sweere Kristen Turnquist Anamarie Van Cura Kaitlin Wagner Alyssa Zaino Hannah Zimmer PHI DELTA THETA Charles Abate Kevin Boeckholt Conall Brannon Matthew Callahan Jacob Dehaai Caleb Floss Chris Ganrude Patrick Hepner Nicholas Hinkle Sam Illg Tyler Jordahl Colin Joy Nicholas Mccullough Thomas Mckenney Jackson Mores Patrick Morrison Keith Padgett James Park Matthew Schiltz Joseph Surdam Thomas Woodruff PHI GAMMA DELTA Lucas Brandt Michael Brandt Tyler Brick Wyatt Burns Max Bush Alexander Champagne Nolan Christensen Scott Cicciarelli Matthew Delanoit
as how the event would benefit residence hall students. Other concerns that parliament members raised at the meeting included the bill violating bylaws and clarity within the budget. The bill ultimately failed to pass, and IRHA will not fund PhilanthroFest. Guest speakers from the ISU student-run food pantry, Students Helping Our Peers, spoke about their organization in the hope that parliament residence hall representatives would then take the information that was provided back to their residence halls, so students would be able to learn about the organization. Students Helping Our Peers is an organization at Iowa State that will celebrate its five-year anniversary in February 2016 and is dedicated to helping students. The organization keeps student information anonymous while providing free canned food to people who need it. Friley Hall has al-
ready participated in a food drive, and Students Helping Our Peers hopes that in the future other residence halls will also donate food to the food pantry. The IRHA also passed two bills during the meeting. The Extra Life fundraising bill is a similar event to Dance Marathon, and the bill was passed with no discussion and a majority of the association approving it. The Jingle Jog bill was also passed. Questions regarding Jingle Jog’s route and about the race itself were the only issues raised. However, those issues were quickly resolved, with IRHA parliament members being directed to looking at a race map. The association will revisit Cyclone Cinema, a bill that proposes additional IRHA funding to help maintain the ability of hosting Cyclone Cinema in two viewing areas instead of just one on campus. This will occur in its next meeting.
Spring 2015 Dean’s List
Travis Dierickx Nicholas Dohrmann Dalton Frick Patrick Frick Eric Graika Zachary Hansen William Herzog David Moore Thomas Peetz Ben Peters Trenton Purdy Mitchell Riggs Matthew Scattergood Jacob Sowers Grant Stahulak Bryan Venegoni Nicholas Wetzeler PHI KAPPA PSI Eric Assmann Jordan Barker Austin Benson Evan Blackwell Brody Concannon Quinton Devries Samuel Fredman Adam Goldberg Nathaniel Kanellis Adam Keesling Noah Koch Eric Lathrop Kyle Lathrop David Mathis Ethan Moran Jacob Oswald Rick Smith Andrew Strand Nicholas Topping
PI KAPPA ALPHA Devin Benson Devon Bratz Zachary Deitrich Michael Detorre Michael Ducharme William Gallaher Tyler Hardy Connor Haugen Vincent Locascio Andrew Moeller Levi Moser Tyler Norgren Alec Pizano Gregory Power Creighton Pyles Brett Rickord Jacob Stanek Zachary Stanek Christian Weiland Cody Welding PI KAPPA PHI Austin Gould Konner Prien David Robins Ryan Smykowski SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Chase Barton Dillon Bauer Jeffrey Canterbury Christian Dahl Sean Gruggen Tyler Guck Joseph Haas Bryan Johnson Maxwell Johnson Kyle Kalivoda Brandon Knutson Kyle Kubiak Michael Larson Samuel Luick Cameron Peterson James Sincox Mitchell Skatter Brian Thielen Louis Vicchiollo Colter Williams Connor Young
Rachel Ramirez Breayona Reed Britney Williams SIGMA PHI EPSILON Michael Arnost John Bebel Zachariah Beek Michael Bell Brian Brcka Ryan Bush Joseph Carnaroli Theodore Choudek Justin Farmer Brendon Geils Spencer Gibson Colton Hoffmann Ryan Klas Alexander Lester Jacob Lewton James Mcconnell Joseph Miller Ira Mitchell Thanh Nguyen Luke O’connor William O’hora Jason Otto Neil Patel Tarin Phillips Dylan Roth Ryan Sanders Benjamin Shimota Robert Staub Chris Turner Ryan Youngdahl Zachary Ziesmer
Spring 2015 Dean’s List
PHI KAPPA THETA Davis Arbogast John Jordan Cole Knutson
PI BETA PHI Michelle Anderson Jordan Aust Kirsten Baartmans Anna Bednarko Emily Benda Grace Bogart Sarah Brangoccio Katie Carpenter Kathryn Cavanaugh Carlie Christianson Sarah Cleveland Erika Clyma Ashley Dodson Kirstin Dose Madison Dugan Sydney Edwards Ashley Fall Leah Fossum Rachel Francis Lisa Friesth Allison Frost Lily Gasway Erin Gibson Kristin Hansen Katherine Hanson Mackenzie Heisdorffer Zoetta Hildreth Sydney Hill Selina Hilts Carlie Howard Morgan Hueser Sydney Hustedt Alexandria Jahnke Francesca Johnson Megan Johnston Bridget Kalsch Margaret King Catherine Krezowski Abbie Latterell Shelby Lemmon Nicole Leskun Megan Lien Morgan Maharry Hannah Marsh Ashley Mies Mckenna Millies Mary Misak Rebecca Mixan Jordan Mosquera Audrey Muehlebach Amy Nelson Callah Nelson Mackensie Noble Kayla Olson Andrea Passe Alexis Patinos Regina Patterson Allison Pitz Miranda Pollitt Christina Prevette Shelby Rahn Kara Rex Kristine Roush Karah Shindelar Emily Smith Celeste Southall Morgan Stonewall Erica Swanson Krista Thompson Anne Tourte Kaitlyn Trampel Shelby Ullrich Lissandra Villa Rachel Walz Sarah Waste Lauren Weinert Veronica White
SIGMA CHI Michael Beaver Philip Kranovich David Lanciotti Braiden Loreno Stanley Rojina Matthew Smith Ryan Van Der Veen SIGMA KAPPA Anja Amundson Ellie Besso Lindsay Best Mikayla Boland Courtney Brownsworth Emily Condon Heather Crandall Elisa D’amico Ashley De Haan Brooke Dirks Katelyn Donovan Lucia Drill-Mellum Kelsey Duggan Shannon Ewing Olivia Finan Jennifer Fitzgerald Victoria Freeman Cayla Garcia Taylor Gibney Calli Hines Mickaela Hovenga Emilie Johnson Isabella Kane Rachel Kiener Cecilia Laland Madeline Laqua Cali Lines Allison Luety Cassidy Mace Kara Masteller Mackenzie Mehmen Hailee Miller Kennedi Norris Caitlyn Orley Hannah Ross Paige Ross Lauren Rosser Dana Schultz Danielle Sitzman Nicole Sorensen Katie Speer Sydney Stecker Sydney Struyk Kristen Thompson Samantha Thornton Danielle Verheye Sydney Wallace Lauren Wilcox Kelsey Wirth Bailey Zumer SIGMA LAMBDA BETA Derrick Anderson Kevin Quinteros SIGMA LAMBDA GAMMA Jocelyn Hernandez
SIGMA PI Tyler Cahill Colin Christoph Joseph Foss Payton Goodrich Grant Jensen Brenton Marcum Matthew Mcdonald Evan Miller Kyle Miller
TAU KAPPA EPSILON Kevin Anderson Jacob Bliss Riley Burke Zachary Carpenter Jacob Dean Nick Dugan Jack Fischer Logan Gushiken Mathew Haberkamp Michael Jagerson Austin Jaspers Connor Jennings Brandon Landowski James Legge John Maubach Riley Mccloskey Nicholas Meyers Christopher Noty Thomas Scallon Garrett Schieber Austin Schmidt Damon Schmidt William Smith Kevin Strohm Zachary Swailes Robert Sylvester David Thomson Steven Valentino THETA CHI Richard Bechtol Phillip Cook John Gagnon Zachary Galyon Brennan Goodman Nathan Kent Kaleb Mckone Thomas Payzant Noah Reddig Dustin Reed Zachary Stuart Jacob Wiemiller Alvin Wong THETA DELTA CHI Peter Ampe Forrest Beeler Grant Herrman Patrick Mork Jordan Sams Pierce Schultz Clayton Short THETA XI Alexander Edwards Christopher Fogerty Shuang Li Aaron Pederson Sean Rempe Elliot Rossow Bradley Sharapata Brandon Wachtel TRIANGLE Jacob Gentile Ryan Gunckel Cody Stultz