Veishea weekend brings entertainment to Ames: EISHEA Musicians, magicians, comedy and more
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On Monday, the Boston bombings shook the nation and brought all eyes to the New England city. It brought the Boston Marathon, a tradition dating back 116 years, into the light of vulnerability. In Ames, 1,324 miles west of the attack, the gravity of the bombings were felt in full effect. With major events happening such as Veishea and Iowa State athletics, the question of security has become an increased topic of interest since the 2001 terrorist attacks of 9/11. Tom Hill, ISU vice president of Student Affairs, said when it comes to Veishea and security measures for the annual tradition, the celebration can be its “own animal.”
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File photo: Iowa State Daily A few ISU students wait in the rain for Live @ VEISHEA at the parking lot behind the Molecular Biology Building on April 15, 2012. Security might be increased at this year’s events in light of the bombings at Boston Marathon.
Reception
ISU to celebrate restoration of fountain Mural reflects ISU history of Fast facts on the reception food sciences ■■ Reception will be from 4 to 6 p.m. Friday in the
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Donations to be accepted on Saturday Diane Fru, senior in psychology, has organized an ISU Boston Marathon Philanthropy to be held on Saturday as part of the Veishea Village and 5K run. “To help out, we’re asking students and community members to stop by our table and make a small donation,” Fru said in an email. Fru explained that all proceeds will go toward One Fund Boston, an organization that was created to help those who were affected by the Boston bombings on Monday. The fundraiser will be located at the AirPad display on the Marston Lawn. The group will accept donations at the start and finish line of the 5K run that will begin at 8 a.m. Any other donations will be accepted at the AirPad booth. “All proceeds are being collected through AirPad’s account so individuals can make out checks to AirPad,” Fru said, also stating that they will, “...work with AirPad to send the donations collected in their account to One Fund Boston, Inc.” — Katelynn McCollough
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Photo: Kelby Wingert/Iowa State Daily The fountain, which is located in the courtyard of the Food Science building, has recently seen some improvements.
Tucked in the courtyard of the Food Sciences Building is a seven-panel mural and fountain, designed by Christian Peterson, that is unknown to many. “The History of Dairying” will be celebrated at a reception from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. on Friday in the Food Sciences courtyard. “We’ve been working on this the whole semester; it’s going to be fun,”
Food Sciences Courtyard. ■■ Students are encouraged to attend. Location: Food Sciences Building, Courtyard Material: Terra Cotta Size: 6.8 x 80 feet Date: 1934
said Ruth MacDonald, professor and department chair of food science and human nutrition. “We’re going to have some presentations about the history of the fountain and artwork; just some rededication of the space and a little celebration around that.”
The reception is open to the public and students are encouraged to attend. “Take pride in Iowa State University,” said Zenia Spear, senior in event management, who helped organize the event. “This is the first piece of artwork that Christian Peterson cre-
ated on Iowa State’s campus. It’s a great way for students to get involved and appreciate the artwork that’s on campus.” Lynette Pohlman, director of University Museums, referred to Peterson’s artwork as one of Iowa State’s greatest artistic treasures. “It really is one of the masterpieces,” Pohlman said. “It has national significance; you’re standing in the middle of a national historic landmark, but unless you have a reason for coming to this building, you’re not going to know it’s here.” Created in 1934, the fountain is the
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Army
ROTC to compete in Ranger Buddy Challenge Cadets to test skills in annual competition By Paul.Ehrsam @iowastatedaily.com ISU Army ROTC cadets are gearing up to compete in the annual Ranger Buddy Challenge this weekend. The Ranger Buddy competition is a rigorous training challenge that puts the knowledge and skills of what the cadets have been learning all year into a competition. “It culminates kind of everything you learned and is more of the tactical aspect of our training,” said Cadet Brandon Amerine, senior in management.
The University of Kansas will host the competition this weekend. According to the university’s website, last year Lawrence, Kan., welcomed more than 130 teams of cadets from 29 different schools across the country. This year, 125 teams will be competing in the challenge, and new to this year is the Ranger Buddy Challenge qualifier. The road march, which is the first event, acts as a qualifier to enter the rest of the competition and be a part of the 125 teams that complete in the rest of the challenge. The breakdown of 125 teams moving on after the road march: the first 90 male teams to finish the road march will move on along with the
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Photo courtesy of Amber Bruer Members of the ISU ROTC program competed at the Task Force Ranger Challenge Competition on Oct. 6, 2012, at Camp Dodge in Johnston, Iowa.
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International
President steven Leath invites YOU tO the
File photo: Iowa State Daily The International Food Fair hosted April 21, 2012, in the Memorial Union drew in big crowds. The Great Hall was brimming with people pushed shoulder to shoulder for the food.
Food Fair celebrates culture
FridaY, aP riL 19 | 1:30 P.M. sUn rOOM, MeMOriaL UniOn The university’s highest honors for its alumni and friends will be presented Order of the Knoll Corporation and Foundation Award The Meredith Corporation Foundation
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Order of the Knoll Faculty and Staff Award Neil E. Harl Order of the Knoll Cardinal and Gold Award Lora and Russ Talbot Order of the Knoll Campanile Award Robert H. Cox Honorary Alumni Award Gregory L. and Kathleen C. Geoffroy Melvin R. Weatherwax Distinguished Alumni Award Leola Adams David W. Raisbeck Nicholas L. Reding Esmail Zirakparvar
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For many years, Iowa State has held a food fair that celebrates cultures from all around the world, and this weekend the annual event will be held at the Memorial Union. From 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, April 20, 2013, in the Great Hall of the Memorial Union, Iowa State’s International Student Council will host an array of international student associations that will cook for attendees. “There are 16 countries that will be involved in the International Food Fair this year, and almost all of them are from different parts of the world,” said Michael Lyle, International Student Council’s coordinator for the Veishea International Food Fair. Each country is represented by a student association that was contacted at the beginning of the semester. “All of the associations had to sign a contract with International Student Council, and then we worked directly with ISU Dining and ISU Catering to help facilitate the organizations with their cooking,” Lyle said. The International Student Council started contacting companies earlier in the year to ask for donations to run the event. “A lot of our money comes from Government of the Student Body. We get about $4,000 from them, and then we contacted the Study Abroad Center and U.S. Bank to sponsor us as well. The rest
Represented countries ■■ Asian Pacific Awareness Coalition: Beef shots, sticky rice cake, Thai tea ■■ Chinese Students and Scholars Association: Minced pork congee with egg, bubble tea ■■ Bangladeshi Student Association: Chicken tandoori, zorda (rice), mango juice ■■ Egyptian Student Association: Kushry, lokmat el kady (dessert), dry apricot juice ■■ Indian Student Association: Chicken 65, onion pakora ■■ Indonesian Student Association: Grilled Java chicken, Indonesian coconut rice, choco-cheese banana ■■ Japanese Student Association: Japanese curry, salad maki sushi, greet tea ■■ Korean Student Association: Bossam
(pork), plum iced tea ■■ Association of Malaysian Students at ISU: Egg tarts, onde onde (coconut dessert), lime juice ■■ Nepal Student Association: Momo, mango lassi ■■ Pakistani Student Association: Chicken kadayi, gulab jamun (dessert), lassi ■■ Russian Speaking Association: Stuffed eggs, cherry roulette ■■ Sri Lankan Student Association: Fried rice, tropical twist ■■ Taiwanesse Student Association: Lou mei (chicken), soba (noodles), cranberry sparkle ■■ Thai Student Association: Drunken spaghetti, sweet sticky rice, Thai tea ■■ Vietnamese Student Association: Grilled pork and steamed rice, white bean pudding
of the funding comes from [the International Student Council] itself,” said Kanchana Hettiarachchi, president of the International Student Council. The money that is generated from events put on by the International Student Council all goes back to Iowa State’s international students. “[The International Student Council] is like an umbrella for all of the international student organizations on campus. We have certain activities that we do ourselves, as well as helping to facilitate any kind of activities that international student organizations have,” Lyle said. “Sixtyfive percent of the profits will go to student organizations for the events and miscellaneous things that we do throughout
the year, and 35 percent will go to international student scholarships.” All of the organizations worked with ISU Dining and Catering to discuss their recipes beforehand to make sure they were all up to standard. “All meat has to be cooked at a certain temperature for a certain time, so that was one of the concerns that we had during the preparation process for the event, but other than that, there weren’t really any qualifications that the organizations needed in order to be a part of the event,” Lyle said. The majority of the cooking will be done Sunday morning before the fair starts. Entrance into the fair will be priced at $3 per person, and most food items will range from $1 to $4.
Editor: Katelynn McCollough | news@iowastatedaily.com | 515.294.2003
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Police campaign
“We will beef up security in those areas where we can, but given the nature of the celebration, it’s hard to beef up security all the way around,” Hill said. “You have private parties and people who hold events that are not official Veishea events, but nonetheless attract people.” Hill said despite the wide variety of happenings that take place during the weekend of Veishea, security measures will be increased at the more popular events. The Boston bombing is not the first terrorist attack to happen at an athletic event. As a member of the United States Olympic track and field team in 1972, Hill witnessed firsthand the aftermath of the Munich Massacre.
See something, say something Community outreach officer Anthony Greiter said the ISU police’s campaign “See something, say something” will continue to play a major role during the Veishea weekend, especially after the Boston bombings. “What we’re encouraging people to do is be good bystandars, take responsibility or their community and the actions around them. So if they see something suspicious and it doesn’t seem right or somebody that needs help, say something.” - Anthony Greiter, ISU police
“In Munich, there were some choices,” Hill said. “We could call off the games and go home. But if you call off the games, the individuals who or-
>>MURAL.p1 first artwork created by Peterson, Iowa State’s former sculptor-in-residence. “So it’s very important to the campus; it’s also very important for our building,” MacDonald said. “Our department is now food science and human nutrition, but we had our start as the dairy industry department.” Peterson’s concept for the mural reflects the history of the Food Sciences building, formerly known as the Dairy Industry Building. “Long before I came here 30 years ago, this department used to make ice cream,” said Larry Johnson, director of the center of crops utilization research, “and they would sell the ice cream to the students and they would go out there and enjoy those murals out on
I’ve been here 30 years, and I pass by that artwork out there every day. I have always admired it; I believe that is one of the bestkept secrets...” Larry Johnson
the patio.” The mural, which MacDonald said is still enjoyed by students, consists seven panels with a fountain in the middle. “The north side of the panels are about family production of dairying as most students would have seen them in 1929,” Pohlman described. “On the south side, Peterson
first 20 coed teams and the first 15 female teams. The road march is essentially a 15k, or 9.3 miles, march and run in full gear. After the teams qualify for the competition, they have 25 other events waiting for them. These events put into play everything they’ve learned throughout their training. “It’s a whole plethora of different aspects you have to know and have to be able to do when you are under stress, tired, fatigued and completely
■■ When: Saturday ■■ Where: University of Kansas in Lawrence, Kan. ■■ 150 teams expected to participate ■■ 125 teams qualify ■■ 90 male teams ■■ 20 coed teams ■■ 15 female teams ■■ Awards are given to top 3 teams in each category
chestrated those events would have succeeded, in a big way.” Despite the conversations of canceling the games, the Olympics went on. With the ISU spring football game on Saturday, the security staff has entertained the idea of increasing surveillance at athletic events. Anthony Greiter, a community outreach officer for Iowa State police, said on a regular basis there are security measures taken into consideration for every athletic event. “We’re constantly managing large crowds [and] really any situation posing a threat to our community,” Greiter said. “We’re constantly analyzing data where we see large crowds, so there’s going to be different staffing.” Monitoring the bombings in Boston as well as examining post-
wanted to convey what it is that new students were going to learn if they came to study dairy here at Iowa State, and so it’s the commercialization and professionalization of the dairy industry projects.” The centerpiece of the artwork showcases three Jersey cows, which Pohlman explained is the most common breed used for dairy production, and an overseeing bull. “I’ve been here 30 years, and I pass by that artwork out there every day,” Johnson said. “I have always admired it; I believe that is one of the bestkept secrets on this campus.” Recent improvements to the fountain have included a new plumbing system; the pool is now a recirculating and filtered water source. “The filtration system will take out the debris that falls into it,” Pohlman said about
>>ROTC.p1
Competition info
Friday, April 19, 2013 | Iowa State Daily | NEWS | 3
9/11 statistics help campuses such as Iowa State’s to implement precautionary measures. Greiter said since 9/11, and more recently the Boston bombings, security, alertness and awareness has risen among the public. “In the post-9/11 mantra of New York, these are incidents that people are more aware of now,” Greiter said. “So I think people pay a little more attention now.” The Boston bombings have caught the eyes of many world-class event leaders across the nation, in terms of emotion as well as the physical aspects dealing with security. In a news release that was given on Tuesday, Drake Relays Director Brian Brown gave a statement concerning the idea of increased security at the event. The Drake Relays hosts athletes
the fountain’s $65,000 maintenance. “It will filter the water so that the material in the water, like calcification, won’t harm the artwork.” Besides the restoration of the fountain, MacDonald and Johnson agree there is still work to be done. “We’re hoping we can raise some funds to restore the beauty of the courtyard,” MacDonald said. “The landscaping has fallen into just maintenance at this point; it’s not particularly nice.” She explained that potential improvements include redoing some of the courtyard’s structures, tending overgrown trees and adding garden plants to the space. “I’d like to see tables out there where students can really enjoy that area,” Johnson said. “It’s an area that’s unknown but has great potential.”
drained mentally and physically,” said Cadet Bailey Hullett, senior in history. Compared to the nine-man ranger challenge the cadets do at the beginning of the year, this challenge is a little different. There is less room for error in the Ranger Buddy Challenge. “When it comes to being in a twoman team like this, you really have to be on top of your game as far as your skill set because if you mess up, that could really cost competition-wise,” Hullett said. In the past, ISU cadets have done fairly well at this competition, and
from the high school to professional levels each year. “If you start to map out all your protocols, you lose the very essence of the plan,” Brown said. “We’re good in terms of what we do. And one thing you should hear very strongly is we feel very secure with the plan we have in place.” Brown said each year there is an emergency safety plan that the security staff is aware of for each and every situation. Despite the tragedies that have taken place in the past, Hill said there is always something to take away from sobering events such as the Boston bombings. “We will learn from situations like the Boston Marathon, in regards on how to handle this,” Hill said. “We’ll look at these practices and make the necessary adjustments.”
Photo: Kelby Wingert/Iowa State Daily The centerpiece of the artwork showcases three Jersey cows, which is the most common breed used for dairy production.
it is expected that they will perform well again. “We train hard, and Iowa State is known for that. You know. We train hard; we work hard, and we’re smart and adaptive,” Hulett said. The cadets have been training for the Ranger Buddy Challenge since February. “I think we’ll do very well. We started training much, much earlier compared to last year,” said Megan Ripperger, a junior in dietetics. “We’ve been spending a lot more time in the classroom just working
on knowledge because that’s what the focus is this year, is the knowledge aspect. It’s going be very mentally challenging. It’s going to physically wipe you out, but it will mentally, too.” Lt. Col. Richard Smith, professor of military science, also believes the cadets going to the challenge this year will be successful. “We’ve got some pretty good teams this year; I think they will do pretty well,” Smith said. “This is kind of the culminating event of the year to show what they can do, and I think they will.”
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Government
Editorial:
Everyone stay safe this Veishea Veishea weekend is dangerous. Despite Iowa State’s best efforts to provide attractive, enticing activities for the “official Veishea” that will keep more than 31,000 students safe and out of trouble, Veishea still is largely a party. Although students can party any time of the year, Veishea always provides an excuse to take debauchery to a whole new level. On Monday we said in an editorial that “Rioting, dismantling light poles, lighting dumpsters on fire and pushing them down Lincoln Way are Veishea traditions almost as time-honored as cherry pies.” Although that statement was made in a tongue-in-cheek way (which, unfortunately, is difficult to convey in print), it caught some attention. It cannot be denied, however, that in recent years Veishea can be dangerous if party-goes and other celebrants let themselves go instead of remaining vigilant about their state of mind and exercising common sense. Naturally, the Ames and ISU police forces, together with the Story County sheriff’s office, probably will be on high alert this year as in years past. In all likelihood, squad cars and officers will circle Campustown and campus and patrol Lincoln Way and other hightraffic parts of town in an effort to keep motorists and pedestrians safe from themselves and from the elusive “other guy” whose identity is only found out when he crashes into us. In a similar effort to lower the raucous level to which some parties can rise, Campustown Property Management has instituted a special Veishea policy that will limit the number of guests residents may have in their buildings and require residents and guests to wear wristbands. Also, security guards will be posted at entrances and exits of most Campustown Property Management buildings. Those efforts at being proactive, however, can only go so far. Campustown Property Management can only monitor so much property, and the police can only be so many places. By and large, it’s up to individual people — students, their guests, Ames residents who happen to be around. Last year, a young man tragically fell to his death at a party during Veishea. That single, solitary death during Veishea is one too many. That incident was an accident. Other potential scenarios, however, such as a drunk driver passing over the center line of a street or not seeing a pedestrian, are preventable. Most people probably would say that if they must receive a phone call at two or three in the morning, they prefer that the call be made by an intoxicated person asking for a ride home rather than a police officer with tragic news. In fact, disregarding social norms of safety and decency for the sake of an attempt to drive home while still under the influence ranks as one of the more selfish things a person can do. Yes, people do it, and yes, they live — often. But what’s more important is that, by getting behind the wheel of a one- or two-ton piece of steel that will move exactly where you tell it to requires an ability to pilot that hunk of metal safely. By driving when we are not actually fit to drive, we put not only ourselves but other, innocent people at risk. If even one person gets hurt or dies in such a way this weekend, it will be one too many.
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GOP torn between old, new
“F
ocus groups described our party as ‘narrowminded,’ ‘out of touch’ and as ‘stuffy old men.’ The perception that we’re the party of the rich continues to grow,” said Reince Priebus, Republican National Committee chairman, on the GOP’s assessment after the last presidential election. In this election, the Republican Party saw seven swing states going to the Democrats and a declining votes among minorities. These results prompted the GOP to rethink its policies and strategies. The “Growth and Opportunity Project,” an assessment to talk about the need to reach minorities, young people and women. But it is mostly a superficial analysis, as the report talks about the “messaging” problem and recommends solutions along those lines. It doesn’t talk about specific Republican positions on social issues and their resonance with the public. There is still an “America is center-right” assumption. The Republican party seems to be working through the dilemma of keeping the traditional votes and appealing to groups with new positions on social issues. Resistance to change is quite evident as the GOP still clings to its unscientific positions on evolution and climate change. The rising star of the Republican Party, Marco Rubio, said on evolution, “I’m not a scientist, man. I can tell you what recorded history says; I can tell you what the Bible says; but I think that’s a dispute amongst theologians. Whether the Earth was created in seven days or seven actual eras, I’m not sure we’ll ever be able to answer that. It’s one of the great mysteries.” He also had something to say on climate change, “I understand people say there’s a significant, scientific consensus on that issue, but I’ve actually seen reasonable debate on that principle.” So, is it still a messaging problem, or is someone absolutely wrong on the facts? Rubio neatly steered away from the issues that required clear answers. Not that the mentioned issues are sole election issues, but these are ex-
By Varad.Diwate @iowastatedaily.com amples of bizarre positions which are supposed to convince people. Any sort of change in an organization needs to be convincing to everyone from the very bottom. In this case, the Republican Party has to assess the views of core conservatives. However, change, even an initiative for change, seems difficult when many conservatives want to hold onto their principles. A good place to start assessing party opinions and positions would be the prominent conservative platform: Conservative Political Action Conference. Conservative Political Action Conference 2013 was held last month and attended by the who’s who of the conservative movement. The Conservative Political Action Conference held onto its old guards by inviting Ann Coulter, Sarah Palin, Michelle Bachmann, Newt Gingrich and Rick Santorum, among others. Conservative Political Action Conference speakers and panels center around the usual talking points: need for smaller government, lower taxes, less regulation, role of faith and abortion. The Conservative Political Action Conference is mostly in the news for some controversial or incorrect claims in speeches used to rile up the audience. This 40th anniversary was not much different with Michele Bachmann’s claims about Benghazi and food stamps. The idea behind the conference could be summed up from Marco Rubio’s speech, “And there’s the fallacy of it. We don’t need a new idea. There is an idea: The idea is called America, and it still works.” Such a conviction in itself shuts down the possibility for a critical evaluation. An event at Conservative Political Action Conference 2013 was titled “Trump the Race Card: Are You Sick and Tired of Being Called a Racist and You Know You’re Not One?” This event was disrupted by someone who defended segregation. Interestingly, last year, two white nationalists were part of a panel discussion
Courtesy photo The Republican party saw seven swing states go to the Democrats in the 2012 election, as well as a decline in votes from minorities. While the party is often called out of touch, there have been some advances.
called “The failure of multiculturalism: How the pursuit of diversity is weakening American Identity.” These are anecdotal examples. Such extreme fringes might please some voters, but giving a voice to outright-racist groups is only going to cancel out any trace of a positive image for minorities. With resistance, there has been a willingness to budge on the immigration and same-sex marriage issues. The rapidly changing demographics haven’t left much room to totally reject immigration reform. Gallup polls over the years shows an increased support for same-sex marriage. The shift of public opinion on this issue has prompted more Republicans to
reconsider their stand. Even the Conservative Political Action Conference saw a well-attended gay supporter’s event and a nearly empty opponents event. The Chariot card in a Tarot deck shows a carriage being pulled in different directions by two horses. The result? It can’t go anywhere. The Republican Party seems to be in the same situation. It can’t go ahead while being pulled toward older ideas and taking a progressive stance.
Varad Diwate is a freshman in journalism and mass communication from Nashik, India.
Movies
Hollywood writers can do better S
aying in a deep voice, “I’m Batman,” is not enough. I’ve considered why I don’t watch too many new films and I found it’s simply because most movies I see follow the same formula, another bloody this or another bloody that. The problem with movies today is that there is a lack of creativity in the movies, leading to the movie being another bloody something. There are two distinct categories of problems Hollywood is currently experiencing. The first main problem is that they are simply running out of ideas. If you go online and see what movies are coming out soon you will see what I mean. For example, the first two movies that matched my query was “Jurassic Park” in 3D, as well as the new “G.I. Joe” movie. Both of these movies made my eyes roll; not because of how cheesy they might be, but because they have been done to death. How many “Jurassic Park” movies do we have now? These movies are not being made to explore some new realm, but to make a quick buck. The biggest example I can give you of this is George Lucas’ “Star Wars” franchise. Now say what you will about the movies, but it has been stretched so far that even fans are getting annoyed. I recently watched the “Star Wars Christmas Special,” and it made my eyes bleed. Even George Lucas has stated he was personally ashamed of it. The second type of problem Hollywood is facing is technology and how to use it. To be blunt, technology should not replace decent storytelling, plot, etc. Let us look at animation, for example. Recently, there has been a large number of animated movies coming to theaters. I am not saying these movies were bad, for example “Wreck-It Ralph” was pretty decent, but these movies run into the same issue of creativity I mentioned earlier. When I was watching “Wreck-It Ralph,” I essentially predicted the plot and character development. This, sadly, is not because I am psychic, but because it is simply too obvious. So many of these films follow the same pattern, plot and development is just another bloody something. General information: The Iowa State Daily is an independent student newspaper established in 1890 and written, edited, and sold by students
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Courtesy photo Hollywood is currently experiencing two distinct problems. First: Hollywood is running out of new ideas. Second: They are facing technology changes and figuring out how to use them.
By Bijan.Choobineh @iowastatedaily.com Here’s the key, neat animation is not a replacement for good writing. The second component of the technological problem in Hollywood today is special effects. I wouldn’t be a good critic if I didn’t address this train wreck. Just like animation, special effects cannot and should not ever be the sole replacement for good writing. It is meant to be the ketchup to your burger. The key movie example of this is “Avatar,” with the main director, ironically, being Michael Bay. Some people really liked “Avatar,” but I found it to be a mixture of several other classic movies with a replaced plot and narrative with flashy special effects. This movie may serve well as an evening of entertainment but it will certainly never go down as a classic, or even as a great movie. This problem with Chris Conetzkey The Des Moines Business Record Publication: ISU students subscribe to the Iowa State Daily through activity fees paid to the Government of the Student Body. Subscriptions are 40 cents per copy or $40, annually, for mailed subscriptions to ISU students, faculty and staff; subscriptions are
$62, annually, for the general public. The Iowa State Daily is published Monday through Friday during the nine-month academic year, except for university holidays, scheduled breaks and the finals week. Summer sessions: The Iowa State Daily is published as a semiweekly on Tuesdays and Thursdays, except during finals week.
creativity applies equally so, if not even more to Bay and his obsession for special effects. The obvious question that lies before us is what is our alternative. I would be lying to you if I said I expected every film to have a perfect narrative, plot and character development, but we have to at least try. Hollywood needs to find the right combination and balance of special effects and writing, while trying not to constantly reboot something. If you want an example of this balance, look no further than the “Dark Knight.” The “Dark Knight” had its fair share of special effects, no doubt, but it was obvious there was work done in the writing department and it certainly showed with the thought-provoking plot. We are not perfect, and neither is
Bijan Choobineh is a senior in political science from Ames, Iowa.
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Friday, April 19, 2013 Editor: Jake Calhoun sports@iowastatedaily.com | 515.294.2003
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5
Online:
Iowa State Daily
Football
New faces, ideas for spring New players, strategies showcased pre-season
IOWA STATE TO HOST TEXAS TECH iowastatedaily.com/sports
Online:
IOWA STATE TRAVELS TO CALIFORNIA iowastatedaily.com/sports
Athletics:
Upcoming schedule Friday ■■ M&W Track — Brian Clay Invitational (at Azusa, Calif.) ■■ W. Golf — Big 12 Championships (Rhodes, Iowa), until Sunday ■■ Tennis — at Kansas State (at Manhattan, Kan.), 1 p.m. ■■ Gymnastics — NCAA Championships (at Los Angeles) ■■ Softball — vs. Texas Tech, 4 p.m.
Saturday ■■ M&W Track — Beach Invitational (at Cerritos, Calif.) ■■ Volleyball — vs. North Dakota (at Minneapolis), 10:10 a.m. ■■ Volleyball — vs. Northern Iowa (at Minneapolis), 11:20 a.m. ■■ Softball — vs. Texas Tech, noon ■■ Football — Spring Game, 2 p.m. ■■ Volleyball — vs. Concordia (Neb.) (at Minneapolis), 3:50 p.m.
Sunday ■■ Softball — vs. Texas Tech, noon ■■ Tennis — at Kansas (at Lawrence, Kan.), noon
Sports Jargon:
Pistol offense SPORT: Football DEFINITION: An offensive formation that has the quarterback line up 4 yards behind the center with the running back lining up about 3 directly behind him. USE: Running the pistol offense is a good way to keep the defense from reading.
What: ISU football scrimmage Where: Jack Trice Stadium
By Alex.Halsted @iowastatedaily.com
When: 2 p.m. Saturday
When the ISU football team runs on the field at Jack Trice Stadium on Saturday, it will wrap up its four-week spring season. The scrimmage will also provide fans the first glimpse at the 2013 team to take the field next fall. Since the team’s loss in the Liberty Bowl last December, there have been numerous departures and additions along with some new strategies inside the team’s playbook. Some of that will be evident in the 2 p.m. scrimmage Saturday.
■■ Admission to the spring game is free, and parking for the general public is available on a first come, first serve basis in all A, B, C and D lots across from Jack Trice Stadium. ■■ Follow Iowa State Daily writers Alex Halsted (@AlexHalsted), Dean Berhow-Goll (@ DeanBG) and Dylan Montz (@ DylanMontz) for updates during the scrimmage.
Notes:
Look for pistol offense When Iowa State hired new offensive line coach Chris Klenakis in the off-season, it brought in a coach that heavily featured the “pistol” scheme as an offensive coordinator in his time at Nevada. More focus has been given to the offense, and it will be one key difference next season. “The majority of our plays are out of the pistol now, so that’s obviously one distinction you’ll see,” said quarterback Sam Richardson. “The pistol has helped us with our speed, maybe, and really just taking advantage of catching defenses off-guard.” With the pistol offense, Richardson will line up 4 yards behind the center instead of 7, and the running back will line up behind him rather than beside him. The formation is thought to make it harder for the defense to read. “What [fans are] going to see is a lot of downhill running, but that downhill running is going to set up play-action passes, it’s going to set up outside runs,” said running back Jeff Woody. “When you’re in pistol, there’s
no one set thing that the linebackers or safeties can key on, so it keeps everyone on their toes.”
A new set of linebackers With the loss of linebackers A.J. Klein and Jake Knott, who accounted for a combined 196 tackles in 2012, the defense will take on a different look next season. While linebacker Jeremiah George started in nine of the team’s 13 games last season, the team’s other two starting linebackers will be getting their first real action when the team opens the season against Northern Iowa in August. Juniors Jared Brackens and Jevohn Miller will join George in the middle of the defense. Beyond the starters, the team is even younger and more inexperienced. “The first three are improving, they’re getting better,” said defensive coordinator Wally Burnham. “Beyond that, it’s a struggle. You’ve got young kids that are seeing something new every day. I think our first three are playing pretty good at times for the most part and seem to be making plays.”
File photo: Huiling Wu/Iowa State Daily Jeremiah George attempts to tackle an Oklahoma player at the game on Nov. 3, 2012, at Jack Trice Stadium. George started in nine of the ISU team’s 13 games last season and is the only returning starting linebacker.
Who will take kicking duties? Last pre-season, Edwin Arceo came away with the kicking job by beating out then-freshman Cole Netten to earn the duties. The battle for next season is underway with Netten having used his redshirt and Arceo with a season of Division I play under his belt. Last season, Arceo went 12-of-18 on field goal, 37-of-40 on extra points and had 23 touchbacks on 63 kickoffs. When Arceo takes the field Saturday with Netten, he’ll do so in a tight race. “I would call it a dead-heat, I think that’s accurate,” said ISU coach Paul Rhoads. “I think both have had good days and I think they’ve had off days.” Rhoads said he didn’t anticipate breaking in a new holder this spring.
Key additions: ■■ Aaron Wimberly (RB) ■■ E.J. Bibbs (TE)
Key departures: ■■ ■■ ■■ ■■ ■■
Jake Knott (LB) A.J. Klein (LB) Josh Lenz (WR) Jeremy Reeves (DB) Jake McDonough (DL)
Replacing Brett Bueker from last season so far has been wide receiver Justin Coleman, and punter Kirby Van Der Kamp is also a candidate.
Gymnastics
Shealy to compete in championship By Maddy.Arnold @iowastatedaily.com For the second time in three years, junior Michelle Shealy will compete at the NCAA Championship meet. Shealy qualified as an individual all-around competitor after her performance at the NCAA Regionals in Alabama on April 6. She scored a season-high 39.050 and came in fifth in the all-around competition to qualify for the championship meet, which will be held in Los Angeles on Friday. “I am very excited and I worked really hard to get in the all-around position and to make it to nationals,” Shealy said. “Maybe try to make it to a few event finals, that’s my goal.” In 2011, Shealy qualified for the NCAA Championships as an individual all-around competitor.
She placed 13th with a score of 39.025. “Her being able to go back [to nationals] again is pretty awesome for herself and for the team. We’re all really happy and excited to see what she does at nationals,” said junior Henrietta Green. “Knowing that she can do it next year might help us push more for our whole team to do it.” This season, Shealy only competed as an all-around gymnast twice before regionals. She was a three-event gymnast in most meets this season and competed on the uneven bars, floor exercise and the balance beam. Shealy usually did not compete on vault, which is her weakest event and one she has been struggling to hit all season. “She used to be a very good vaulter and some habits kind of creeped into her vault — bad habits,” said coach Jay
Ronayne. “To be competitive as an all-arounder she needs two to three more tenths and that’s where it’s going to come from. Her other events, she’s kind of maxed out.” During the season, Shealy was the team’s best competitor on balance beam. She scored a season-high 9.875 in four separate meets this season and finished ranked No. 38 nationally in the event. Shealy also scored a career-high 9.900 on the uneven bars this season and was named the Big 12 Event Specialist of the Week after that routine. “She has potential to score 9.8 to 9.95 on most of the events,” Ronayne said. “I want her to stay focused on the process of actually doing the gymnastics and not the outcome. That’s where she is most successful when she’s focused on the actual process.”
File photo: Iowa State Daily Coach Jay Ronayne celebrates with Michelle Shealy after her 9.650 score on the bars in 2012 at Hilton Coliseum. Shealy qualified as an all-around individual this year.
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All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 as amended which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, family status or national origin, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.” This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertisement for real estate which is a violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination, call HUD toll free at 1-800-424-8590.
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Bath Fitter is expanding and we are looking for Marketing Reps in the Ames area! If you are a business major looking to gain some experience with a leading company in the industry, call Mike at 515-868-4988 today! Iowa State University 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 the construction of the Equine Learning Center located in the Southwest of Section 9, Township 83 North, Range 24 West, in Story County. Storm water will be discharged from one point source and will be discharged in an unnamed tributary of Worrell 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 received by the department.
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Friday, April 19, 2013 | Iowa State Daily | FUN & GAMES | 7
UNIONS
A special wedding edition of the newspaper that runs on the last Wednesday of every month. The section features unique wedding ideas, tips and trends. Submit your announcements to From rehearsals to receptions, and everything in-between, we’ve got your nuptial needs covered.
public_relations@iowastatedaily.com
Fun & Games
Crossword
Unplug, decompress and relax ...
Fun Facts Comic book publishing giants Marvel and DC can both churn out whizbang serialized adventures, but they disagree on one very important aspect of a super hero’s origin. Marvel sets all its characters in real cities (New York, Los Angeles, etc.). DC Comics, however, chooses to keep the fantasy alive with places like Batman’s Gotham City and Superman’s Metropolis. Henry Ford was a proponent of hiring the handicapped. In 1919, more than 20% of his workforce had some form of disability. Before Bob Ross became a TV painter, he spent 20 years in the U.S. Air Force and retired with the rank of master sergeant. In 1969, before he ever appeared on television or in films, Steve Martin won an Emmy as a writer for The Smothers Brothers Show. In 1955, the New York State Labor Department ruled that “there is nothing inherently repulsive about a Van Dyke beard.” The Salem Witch trials did not start in Salem, MA. They started in Salem Village, now known as Danvers. Abe Lincoln and Charles Darwin were born on the exact same day. While the abacus is commonly associated with the Far East, it was also used in ancient Greece and Rome.
Across 1 Their first parts are geog. indicators 5 Her last film was “Two-Faced Woman” 10 Newspaper page 14 Injure, in a way 15 __ dome 16 Denpasar’s island 17 __ mentality 18 *Celebrating the big five-oh, say 20 __-Locka, Florida 21 Sum, sometimes 22 Country across the sea from Eritrea 23 *Small museum piece 27 Oil-rich African country 29 City on the Rhone 30 “__ Theme”: “Doctor Zhivago” 32 Tram contents 33 Hog : sow :: rabbit : __ 35 Freak (out) 36 Court cry 37 What the answers to starred clues end in, in more ways than one
40 Pigeon-loving Muppet 42 Fjord cousin 43 __ Victor 44 Bargainer with GM 45 LeVar’s “Roots” role 47 Bender 51 Icky coating 53 *Dancer with many fans 55 Its young are called crias 57 Rock’s __ Lobos 58 Touch clumsily 59 *Profit factors 62 Siouan tribe 63 __ d’amore 64 Terse observation 65 W.S. winner in four of the last five years 66 Flex 67 Leafy recess 68 Pirate played by Laughton
4 5-Across’s home: Abbr. 5 Lose it 6 Member of a large kingdom 7 Clear 8 Spa specimen 9 Lacking siblings 10 President with a B.A. from Columbia 11 Shoulder-length hair styles 12 The “you” in the 1968 lyric “Gee I think you’re swell” 13 Imitated 19 Brain tests, briefly 21 “Put up your dukes, then!” 24 Break up 25 Statistician’s input 26 Common folk group 28 __ Perce tribe 31 Seaweed extract 34 Beige relative 36 Atheist activist Madalyn Murray 37 Dennis the Menace neighbor 38 German opener 39 Super Fro-Yo sellers 40 Eat at 41 Drop zone? 45 Dole’s running mate 46 Put forth without proof 48 City SE of Roma 49 Ate (at) 50 “__ Scissorhands” 52 Checked for the last time? 54 Like one who is 52-Down 56 Fast horse 59 Pen’s mate 60 Brief commitment 61 Crow’s croak 62 Pen filler Thursday’s solution
Down 1 Art movement 2 Elude 3 Code talkers’ tribe
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Sudoku by the Mepham Group
Horoscope by Linda C. Black Today’s Birthday (04.19.13) Take advantage of financial power for the first half of the year by saving despite temptation to spend new income. That energy moves to relationships, and you’ll discover a social whirl. Opportunities flourish with friends, relations and your community. Grow partnerships, and network with purposeful groups. To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
difficult. Friends provide a boost, but you must be willing to receive it. Cancer (June 21-July 22) Today is a 9 -- Wait a bit longer to make an important decision, or at least be sure you have all the right information. Let a partner make distant contacts for you.
Aries (March 21-April 19) Today is an 8 -- You’re about to discover something new and exciting. Find inspiration in the experience, and apply it to improve your relationships. Do good work and get paid well this month. Taurus (April 20-May 20) Today is a 7 -- You’re making a great impression. You’re in your element this month, with the sun in your sign. When stuck, get inspired by travel or exploration. Getting lost can begin a wonderful relationship.
Thursday’s Solution
LEVEL: 1 2 3 4 Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit, 1 to 9. For strategies on how to solve Sudoku, visit www.sudoku.org.uk
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today is a 7 -- Finishing old projects brings in extra cash for your family. False assumptions could test you. For the next month travel beckons, but don’t go yet. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Today is an 8 -- Take inventory of your assets over the next month. Work interferes with travel plans. New evidence threatens complacency. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Today is an 8 -- A home situation improves. You’ll find
Gemini (May 21-June 20) Today is an 8 -- Don’t give up on love, even when it seems
Print PDF
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) Today is a 9 -- Advance in your career. You’re very persuasive. Make a permanent decision. Long distance communication clarifies. You have more than expected.
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it easier to explain difficult concepts now, too. Stifle your rebellious tendencies and discover another treasure. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Today is an 8 -- Change occurs. Do what you promised. Your work suits you for the next month. This requires adaptation (a little glamour doesn’t hurt). Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Today is an 8 -- Use creativity at work. Your quick thinking improves traffic flow. Gather info. Not everyone agrees ... listen to feedback and acknowledge participation. Reconnect with an old friend. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Today is an 8 -- Cultivate compassion for yourself. Choose who you are newly, and inspire with your vision. Optimism increases. For four weeks, invest in your home. Don’t dip into savings. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) Today is a 9 -- Love is the name of today’s game. Imagine and dream. Enjoy the spotlight. Take care of business first. Practical discussions mark the next few weeks.
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2 | VEISHEA | Iowa State Daily | Friday, April 19, 2013
Add the Ames Police and ISU Police non-emergency numbers to your phone. As an active bystander, call them if you see something that could be harmful to fellow students on campus or in the community!
ISU Police: 515-294-4428 Ames Police: 515-239-5133 Check out Let’s be Frank on Facebook for more safety tips.
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Friday, April 19, 2013 | Iowa State Daily | VEISHEA | 3
EISHEA Table of contents
Photo courtesy of Easton Corbin
4..............ARay 5..............Clayton Anderson 6..............Andrew Allen 7...............Kris Allen 8..............Jana Kramer 10............Easton Corbin 10............B.o.B 11............Grouplove 12............The Maine 14............Parade map 16............Veishea Village Map 18............Jukebox the Ghost 19............Saints of Valory 20............Blessed Feathers 22............Harvard Sailing Group 23............Johnathan Burns 24............Nate Staniforth 27............Matt Baker 29............Calendar of events
Photo courtesy of B.o.B
4 | VEISHEA | Iowa State Daily | Friday, April 19, 2013
Country
A RAY @ VEISHEA Photo courtesy of A Ray
By Sam.Abrahms @iowastatedaily.com Lead vocalist for A Ray, Ashley Ray, was raised outside Lawrence, Kan., where music was always playing on the farm she grew up on. Even though no one in her family played any instruments, music still meant the world to her. “My parents have always been the biggest music fans,” Ray said. “Music was always playing in our house. Literally, and I do mean literally, 24 hours a day. ... I don’t think I could have escaped it if I wanted to.” Ray’s mother works as a UPS driver and her father, who passed away in the fall of 2006 according to the biography on her Myspace page, worked as a construction worker. Her parents instilled in her a “strong Heartland work ethic,” and gave her such musical influences as: Bob Seger, Fleetwood Mac, Keith Whitley, James Taylor and Reba McEntire. However, according to her biog-
raphy, it was a Patty Loveless album, “When Fallen Angels Fly” that inspired Ray to want to be a country music singer. According to her MySpace page, she began writing songs by the age of 10 and learned to play the guitar when her elementary school sent home a notice advertising guitar lessons. For a while, Ray was so shy she would only sing while facing the wall. However, she was determined to overcome this fear and worked to do so by playing in talent shows, singing in choir and “sat in with bands made up of men twice her age,” according to her MySpace page. After high school, Ray ventured out and started a life of her own. Immediately after high school graduation, she left everything behind and moved to Nashville, enrolling in Belmont University intending to earn a business degree and help ease the transition. However, according to her MySpace page, she never intended to use it as a backup. She was only en-
rolled to meet people. Since then, she’s shared the stage with numerous country superstars including Dierks Bentley and Miranda Lambert, as word of her raw, non-apologetic singing spread across the country. She also has done a “40-city jaunt with Eric Church, firing up audiences with a voice as unexpected as spiked sweet tea,” according to MySpace. Her voice conveys strength and the will to succeed in an industry dominated by pop-heavy acts. You can also certainly expect to hear her sing about her flaws, struggles and living a country lifestyle. Yep, that means a whole lot of cussing and drinking. Her music is real and unfiltered, something everyone can relate to. She hopes to create a fun, live atmosphere during her performance at Iowa State, as well. “We’ll have done our job if we leave ‘em tappin’ their feet, spilling their beer and wantin’ more,” she said. The singer will perform on Friday as part of the Live @ Veishea lineup.
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Friday, April 19, 2013 | Iowa State Daily | VEISHEA | 5
Country
CLAYTON
ANDERSON @ VEISHEA Photo courtesy of Clayton Anderson
DELLA VITI
By Frances.Myers @iowastatedaily.com Hailing from Bedford, Ind., Clayton Anderson is not the most well-known name in country music. However, he’s doing whatever it takes to get up the ladder. Anderson will be performing at Live @ Veishea on Friday, among the likes of country acts as Easton Corbin and Jana Kramer. According to his biography on Facebook, in the past three years, Anderson has worked to make a name for himself by opening for such performers as Jason Aldean, Eric Church and twice for Kenny Chesney. He also opened up for Jimmy Buffett. Instead of taking the traditional route of “entering Nashville’s starmaking factory,” according to his biography on Facebook, Anderson has taken a more old-fashioned approach by “playing backrooms, side stages, and honky-tonks from Michigan to Florida, each time gaining a few
more fans and better foothold on areas that aren’t traditional country strongholds.” Anderson is all about doing things independently. With no record label, he released his debut, album to iTunes August 2, 2011. The album, “Torn Jeans & Tailgates” featured songs suitable for long summer days driving back roads with the windows rolled down. With songs such as the aptly named, “Summer Sun,” “Beer on a Boat on a Saturday” and “Take it From a Country Boy,” Anderson gives off a down-to-earth vibe generally expected from a good ol’ boy. According to his biography, “he was the only independent artist in the top 100 and it speaks volumes about how his fans have craved his first album ... Produced at the same studio that brought previously unknown, Jerrod Niemann, into the spotlight last year. The album includes songs written by some of Nashville’s biggest songwriters, including last year’s songwriter of the year – and #1 hit-
maker – Dallas Davidson.” According to his biography on Facebook, Anderson’s musical influences includes an eclectic group of well-known and talented greats: John Mellencamp, Garth Brooks, Kenny Chesney, Tim McGraw, Conway Twitty, Elvis, KISS, Barenaked Ladies, Alabama, Johnny Cash, Traveling Wilburys, John Fogerty, Sawyer Brown, Willie Nelson, Toby Keith, The Beach Boys, Roy Orbison, Tom Petty and David Lee Murphy. Anderson shouldn’t have much of a problem connecting with students when he performs at Iowa State. With his laid-back style and charm, he is sure to win the hearts of many Friday night. According to an article in the Indiana Daily Student newspaper, Anderson is quoted as saying, “My niche is the Midwestern charm,” said the boy from Bedford. “I’m Clayton Anderson from small-town Southern Indiana, and I sing country music.”
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6 | VEISHEA | Iowa State Daily | Friday, April 19, 2013
Pop
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Photo courtesy of Andrew Allen
Good times never seemed so good. Have a sweet VEISHEA.
By Maggie.McGinity @iowastatedaily.com Canadian musician Andrew Allen describes himself as a “beachy pop, acoustic singer-songwriter.” Allen has had three top-10 hits in his native Canada, and his single “Loving You Tonight,” which reached No. 6 on the Canadian charts and stayed there for 22 weeks, crossed over into the United States. “When I released the song ‘Loving You Tonight,’ I felt really strongly that it was a really timely song ... that it was fun and it was very authentic. ... I really hoped that people would connect to it,” Allen said. Allen’s musical success was not instantaneous. Early on, he built up a grassroots following by playing all over Canada in an unusual kind of venue. “My first album was called ‘The Living Room Sessions,’ and the concept of it was just to play in living rooms,” Allen said. “But then, I took it really literally and started to perform
across the country in people’s living rooms.” Allen got the idea for this tour by accident when he jokingly told fans visiting his hometown of Vernon, British Columbia, that he could play in their living room. They took him seriously and made the concert happen. “They charged 10 bucks a head and invited 40 of their friends over, and I flew out to Toronto and performed in their living room.” Allen’s popularity on the tour and since is largely due to his upbeat music and message. “I just find sometimes that there’s too many negative things going on in the world as it is. So, I don’t really need to contribute to it with my music,” Allen explained. “I’d rather lift people up.” The beachy sound of Allen’s music is a result of growing up in Vernon, British Columbia, Canada, a warm town in a desert chain with many lakes and water activities. “It’s definitely a very similar vibe
to an island, and I think that’s where some of the music has come from. It’s just so relaxed and chill that it’s easy to create fun, feel-good music.” Allen has been touring off and on since 2008 and loves performing live. “One of my favorite shows that I ever played was at Golden Gate Park in San Francisco,” Allen said. “It was with Matt Nathanson and One Republic ... and it was like 20,000 people there. It was one of the highlights of my career.” Allen knows that not every ISU student has heard of him and his music and had this to say to students who are on the fence about seeing him perform during Live @ Veishea on Friday. “The whole experience of a live show is so much fun, and I promise that I won’t suck. I’ll come out there, and I’ll tell a few fun stories before the songs and stuff. The songs are really upbeat; I think it just puts people in a good mood and a good vibe. I’d hate for people to miss it just because they didn’t know the name. So, I promise it’ll be a lot of fun.”
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Friday, April 19, 2013 | Iowa State Daily | VEISHEA | 7
Pop
KRIS ALLEN
@ VEISHEA
By CJ.Eilers @iowastatedaily.com Kris Allen started his music career playing in local bars in Arkansas, working as a shoe salesmen to pay the rent. He did not know at that time that those small gigs would pave his way to becoming the performer he is today. “I went from being scared to perform in front of an audience to being a decent performer,” Allen, age 27, said. “Those gigs absolutely helped.” The season eight winner of “American Idol” will be at the Live @ Veishea stage on Friday, marking the first time Allen has been in Iowa since he opened for Keith Urban at the Iowa State Fair in 2010. Allen’s Idol coronation song, “No Boundaries,” as well as his version of “Heartless” would both chart within the Top 20 of the Billboard Top 100. Allen is currently out on his “Out Alive” tour, supporting his album,
Photo courtesy of Kris Allen
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>>KRIS ALLEN.p7 “Thank You Camellia.” Allen was involved in a head-on collision in January involving himself, his wife and his dog. Although he has a cast on his arm and is unable to play the guitar, Allen chose to not cancel the upcoming tour. “I could have canceled the tour, and the fans would have understood,” Allen said. “I just couldn’t do that to them, and I really did want to get back out on the road.” Despite the injury, the optimistic singer says he has been enjoying life on the road and promoting “Thank You Camellia.” “My last record has been the most rewarding part of my career so far,” Allen said. “I have a lot of pride in it. I was involved in writing, production, everything.” As for plans after the tour, there are several things that
have been on the Arkansas native’s mind. “First and foremost, get my hand healed,” Allen said. “It hinders me from writing and recording music.” Allen and his wife are also expecting their first child later this year, which he says he will “need a lot of concentration for” with him being a first-time father. However, Allen hints at future music and collaboration, “but it’s nothing I can talk about yet,” he said. In addition to music from “Thank You Camellia,” Allen will be taking cover requests over Twitter. Fans may tweet requests using the hashtag #outalivetour, and Allen will choose one. Whether it’s a tune that Allen performed during “American Idol,” or an old favorite, the band will learn the song the day before the show and perform it.
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By Frances.Myers @iowastatedaily.com Michigan native and country singer Jana Kramer is no stranger to the bright lights. Before country, she played the character Alex Dupre, described in her biography as a “firecracker actress” on CW’s “One Tree Hill.” Kramer made her acting debut in 2002 in a low-budget, independent horror film, “Dead/ Undead.” The next year she appeared in “All My Children,” which is credited as her television debut. She would later go on to appear in “CSI: Crime Scene Investigation,” “Private Practice,” “Grey’s Anatomy,” and had a recurring role on the television series “Friday Night Lights” before landing a regular role in “One Tree Hill.” In 2010, Kramer burst into country with her hit single “Why Ya Wanna.” According to the article “Whiskey Girl” by Jon Freeman in Country
Weekly Magazine, “Why Ya Wanna” broke the Mediabase record for most adds by a solo female artist. In the article, Kramer said it’s not an easy battle being a female in country music, but it’s exciting to be a part of it. She was quoted in the article as saying, “It’s definitely tough. When you look at the charts, it’s definitely more male-driven. The last record was six years ago by Taylor Swift, the ‘Tim McGraw’ song. That’s sad for a female that nothing has broken since then. So, the fact that we did is fantastic. Things are kind of changing, and there’s a new wave.” Since releasing “Why Ya Wanna,” Kramer has been busy touring with Brad Paisley’s 2012 tour, preparing for Blake Shelton’s “Ten Times Crazier” tour with Easton Corbin — who also is performing at Veishea — and has recently enjoyed some time in
the spotlight with her engagement to fellow country star Brantley Gilbert. Kramer and Gilbert dated for approximately eight months before making their relationship public. In their time together, the couple has been sharing a house that Kramer owns and got engaged on January 20, also Gilbert’s birthday. Gilbert popped the question, according to Country Weekly, by “renting out Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium as a surprise.” Kramer said Gilbert decided to surprise her there because the couple said if it were not for country music, the two never would have met. Kramer currently has a single out called “Whiskey” and recently won an award for Top New Female Artist and was nominated for Top New Artist, both of which were for the Academy of Country Music Awards. She will be performing Friday at Live @ Veishea.
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Country
Hip-hop
EASTON
CORBIN
@ VEISHEA
B.o.B @ VEISHEA
Photo courtesy of Easton Corbin
By Frances.Myers @iowastatedaily.com With his thick Southern drawl and casual demeanor, it’s pretty easy to find the country boy in Easton Corbin. And with the traditional country sound resonating through each of his songs, it’s pretty easy to see why so many are calling the newcomer the “next George Strait.” When asked about his thoughts about being compared to “The King of Country,” Corbin was modest in his answer. “I think it’s a huge honor to be compared to George. He’s definitely a hero of mine, and he’s an icon in country music,” Corbin said. “I’m very, very proud to be compared to that. I do what I do and keep it real simple. “ Corbin is well known for such hits as “Lovin’ You is Fun,” “Roll With It” and “I Can’t Love You Back.” His first hit, “A Little More Country Than That,” he said, best describes the life he lives and the type of person he is and strives to be. Corbin took home three awards at the 2010 American
Country Awards including: New/Breakthrough Artist of the Year; Single by New/ Breakthrough Artist with “A Little More Country Than That” and Music Video by New/Breakthrough Artist with “A Little More Country Than That.” Hailing from Gilchrist County, Fla., Corbin learned to love country music through his grandparents. “I’ve just always loved country music. I was raised around my grandparents a lot, and they really nurtured that love of country music with their influences,” Corbin said. “I remember growing up on Hee Haw and Grand Ole Opry … I was really nurtured to love that type of country music. I just love it.” Corbin recently released a third album called “All Over the Road.” This album includes his current single of the same name as well as another single called “Lovin’ You is Fun.” Corbin attended college at the University of Florida’s College of Agricultural and Life Sciences, where he earned a degree in agribusiness. He was also a member
of the Future Farmers of America growing up. Corbin believes that his experiences will help him to connect with the crowd at Veishea. “Being a part of [the Future Farmers of America] and in the agriculture school, I’m sure there’s a lot of kids that connect to me and you know, the same life I grew up. I know for sure I can hopefully connect to that crowd,” Corbin said. “It’s always a great opportunity to play for a college crowd or other people that grew up like me.” Corbin said his current plans include going out on the road with Blake Shelton on his Ten Times Crazier 2013 Tour. His future plans include writing more songs and hopefully getting fans more material to enjoy. “Hopefully, we’ll be out there getting another record here soon and get a chance to promote that one,” Corbin said. Corbin will be headlining Live @ Veishea on Friday. The lineup on Friday also includes the artists Jana Kramer, Clayton Anderson, Kris Allen, Andrew Allen and A Ray.
Photo courtesy of B.o.B
By Frances.Myers @iowastatedaily.com Once the kid who hung out in the back of the classroom so as to not to be bullied by classmates, Bobby Ray Simmons, better known to his fans as B.o.B, is now a well-known hip-hop recording artist. B.o.B is an international superstar who has been nominated for Grammy awards six times. He will be performing at Iowa State during Live @ Veishea on Saturday. B.o.B is well-known for such hits as “Airplanes” featuring Hayley Williams, “Nothin’ on You” with Bruno Mars and “Magic” with Rivers Cuomo. The 24-year-old artist was born in Winston-Salem, N.C., and hails from Decatur, Ga. He played the trumpet in elementary school and on into high school. According to an article in HipHopDX, it was in sixth grade that B.o.B decided he wanted to pursue a career in music. His father, a pastor, originally disapproved of his son’s choice to pursue music. That is, until he realized that
music was a creative outlet for Bobby Ray. It was when he was 14 years old that B.o.B met his co-manager and mentor, B. Rich, and sold his first beat to recording artist Citti for a song titled, “I’m the Cookie Man.” According to an article on TJ’s DJs website, B.o.B. thought this was his big break and acted on that. According to the article, B.o.B is quoted as saying, “I went and blew all of my money on fast stuff like a chain and ballin’. Soon, I was broke again, but I learned two important things from it [all]; make sure I save my money and that I was hooked on music.” In an interview with Idolator, an independent site for pop music fans, B.o.B was asked about a verse in “Airplanes,” which mentions wanting to stop rap politics, which plague the music industry. B.o.B was quoted as saying, “Rap politics is not being able to work with another artist because somebody is mad in between them. Or, somebody just doesn’t want that. Basically, it’s just when
something is a part of an agenda, and usually, it’s all political. It could be something as simple as signing an autograph for somebody’s daughter who has a high position or something. Let’s say if you didn’t sign that autograph … you pissed somebody off. It’s all political. People’s egos get in the way of what it’s really about.” It was in 2007 that B.o.B began to receive major recognition. His underground single, “Haterz Everywhere” peaked at No. 5 on the U.S. Billboard Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles. In 2010, he released a mix tape that received critical acclaim. It featured other artists, including J. Cole, Asher Roth, Playboy Tre, Charles Hamilton and Bruno Mars. According to his biography, “In just six years, B.o.B has gone from earning stripes to having stripes by means of a national Adidas endorsement campaign, along with being recognized by every award show from the American Music Awards and Grammy’s, to the BET Awards and NAACP Image Awards.”
Friday, April 19, 2013 | Iowa State Daily | VEISHEA | 11
Indie rock
GROUPLOVE
@
VEISHEA By Maggie.McGinity @iowastatedaily.com
Grouplove, an indie rock outfit based out of Los Angeles, will perform immediately before headliner B.o.B. at the Live @ Veishea concert Saturday. Grouplove released their first album, “Never Trust a Happy Song,” through
Canvasback/Atlantic Records in September 2011. Three singles from this album saw success. Their first single, “Colours,” peaked at No. 12 on USA TODAY’s alternative chart and was featured in many sportsrelated video games. Their second single, “Tongue Tied,” reached No. 42 on the U.S.
GE
LE L CO
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Photo courtesy of Grouplove
charts, peaked at No. 1 on the Billboard Alternative Songs chart and sold more than one million singles in the U.S. Their third single, “Itchin’ on a Photograph,” went to top 10 at Modern Rock radio. “Tongue Tied” came into the mainstream’s eye when
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>>GROUPLOVE.p11 it was featured on an iPod Touch commercial. This attention won Grouplove live performance appearances on Conan, Late Night and Jimmy Kimmel Live. Grouplove has been touring since their formation in 2010. That same year, they toured with Florence and the Machine. In 2012, they headlined their own tour and opened for No Doubt in a few concerts during November 2012, according to Grouplove’s official website. According to Grouplove’s biography on the band’s official Facebook page, they began with an extraordinary meeting one year before its official formation. Hannah Hooper, singer and keyboardist, met Christian Zucconi, singer and guitarist, one night on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. The two instantly connected. So much so that Hooper, who
had been invited to an art residency in Greece on the island of Crete, invited Zucconi to come to Greece with her. “We had only known one another for a few days but are both so inspired and alive when we are together that going to Greece seemed like a magical and natural thing to do,” Zucconi is quoted as saying on the group’s Facebook page. On Crete, Hooper and Zucconi met the musicians who would become the rest of Grouplove: Sean Gadd, a London-bred songwriter and bassist, Andrew Wessen, a professional surfer and musician from Los Angeles and Wessen’s childhood friend, Ryan Rabin, drummer and producer. After the summer residency ended, the group pooled their funds and brought Hooper, Zucconi and Gadd to Los Angeles to record with Wessen and Rabin in Rabin’s
studio. “We all understood how rare it is for five strangers to feel as close as family and create passionate music together. We couldn’t just return to Brooklyn and let the music we all made fade into a memory of that summer we had in Greece,” Zucconi shared on Grouplove’s Facebook page. Hooper’s artwork, which originally brought Grouplove together through her residency in Greece, now serves the band in a different way. Hooper draws and paints all of the group’s album and single covers, images on promotional materials and images used in the band’s website. Grouplove recorded their self-titled EP in 2010 and have been sharing their music with the world ever since. They site life as their main musical influence and say on their Facebook page that they are “bonded together by an undeniably creative kinship.”
Rock
THE
MAINE
@
VEISHEA By Maggie.McGinity @iowastatedaily.com American rock band The Maine’s sound is “an ever-evolving thing,” said Pat Kirch, The Maine’s drummer, who co-founded the band with bassist Garrett Nickelsen in November
Photo courtesy of The Maine
2006. “With every album that we’ve put out, I think we’ve gone in different directions,” Kirch said. “I think it’s just been a natural progression, but the aim is just to be a rock band.”
THE MAINE.p13 >>
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>>THE MAINE.p12 The Maine found early success, becoming a part of Warner Bros Records in 2007. During this time, it released two full-length albums, “Can’t Stop, Won’t Stop” (2008) and “Black and White” (2010). Despite their name on a major label, The Maine did not take its success for granted, nor did it become a sellout. Kirch said when The Maine and its record label had creative differences about the direction its third album (“Pioneer,” released in 2011) should go, The Maine recorded the album its own way in secret, then told the label that it could release the album as is or let The Maine go. “We fought really hard on our last album to get off of the label that we were on so that we could record the album that we wanted to put out as opposed to having to conform to what the record label wanted
to do,” Kirch said. “I think it’s just been a thing all throughout our career; we just haven’t stopped making sacrifices and working hard and doing whatever it takes to be able to continue to do this and to do it on our own terms.” Kirch said breaking from mainstream values and motivations is not a problem for The Maine. “You see just so many people ... just doing things to get a check ... for us. We just kind of have a stance where we’re gonna do what we wanna do and the things that make us happy, regardless of if that’s the thing that’s gonna make the most money,” Kirch said. The Maine is also taking new risks and trying new techniques in the studio. On their fourth album, due in June, they recorded live-to-tape. Kirch said the music will be untouched and unedited. “What I think is kind of wrong with what’s happening
with rock bands right now is that it’s all just being fixed and edited in the computer, and that takes away the energy and the spirit in the song,” Kirch stated. “So, we’re just trying to keep that in the music.” Outside of the studio, The Maine has been touring for the better part of the last four years, Kirch said. With all that stage time, the members have become experienced live performers but keep their focus on the audience. “I think seeing people’s reactions to the music is great, whether it’s good or bad,” Kirch said. Kirch hopes that ISU students will come to The Maine’s Live @ Veishea performance on Saturday “with open ears.” He shared some exciting news about the band’s plans for this concert. “I believe this show in Iowa will be the first time that we’ll perform a brand-new song,” Kirch said.
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Veishea Village offers entertainment across Iowa State Insect Zoo and Entomology Graduate Student Organization 2 Undergraduate Microbiology Club 3 Geology Club 4 Psychology Club 5 Dairy Science Club 6 Block and Bridle 7 Pre-Vet Club 8 Electrical and Computer Engineering Department 9 Culinary Science Club 10 Dairy Products Evaluation Club 11 College of Human Sciences 1
Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology Graduate Student Organization 13 Graduate Research in Evolutionary Biology and Ecology 14 ISU Gaffer’s Guild 15 Associated General Contractors of America 16 ISU Airsoft 17 Medieval Re-Creationist Club 18 College of Liberal Arts and Sciences 19 College of Engineering 20 ISU Habitat for Humanity 21 Hope 4 Africa @ ISU 12
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Rock
JUKEBOX
@ VEISHEA THE GHOST
Photo courtesy of Jukebox the Ghost
By Dominic.Spizzirri @iowastatedaily.com Jukebox the Ghost, the Brooklynbased, three-piece band, will play on Saturday for the first time in Ames. Touring extensively since 2006, Jukebox the Ghost has released three albums, appeared on television and toured as openers for acts like the Barenaked Ladies and Jack’s Mannequin, which they described as being a very rewarding experience. The band was first formed in 2003 through founding and current members Ben Thornewill, Tommy Siegel and Jesse Kristin, all of whom attended George Washington University. “We started a band like most college bands start — friends playing together,” Thornewill said. “It was always my dream. It didn’t start to become a theoretical reality until our senior years. We made a record; friends came to shows. [We] graduated and started touring.” The band has since then record-
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“Adulthood” was written before his grandfather’s death from lung cancer. The line, “In my lungs, I still feel young,” was painfully prophetic, and the overall message that “from adulthood, no one survives,” became all too real. “Dead” approaches a similar theme. The song begins with Siegel’s innocent, boyish croon over a ghostly drone and builds into a climax with post-rock ferocity entirely new to the band’s catalogue. “The biggest time off we get has been making a record, and we’re up to 700 shows as a band, which is an incredibly high number for just five, six years,” Thornewill said. According to their biography, “Jukebox the Ghost manages to contrast these darker themes with the same optimistic sound and a familiar sense of youthfulness that stays true to their core.” As for their current tours, they are having much success in support of their latest album and the amount of people attending their shows.
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Friday, April 19, 2013 | Iowa State Daily | VEISHEA | 19
Rock
SAINTS OF
VALORY
@ VEISHEA Photo courtesy of saintsofvalory.com
By CJ.Eilers @iowastatedaily.com On Saturday, Saints of Valory will hit the Live @ Veishea stage with acts such as B.O.B, The Maine and Grouplove. Before they hit the stage, though, here are some facts to know about this band. -Saints of Valory consists of: Gavin Jasper (lead vocals, bass), Stephen Buckle (keyboards, background vocals), Godfrey Thomas (guitar, background vocals) and Gerard Labou (drums, background vocals). -All four members come from different countries: Brazil (Jasper), Canada (Buckle), France (Labou) and the United States (Thomas). -Jasper and Thomas met as kids. Coincidentally, they were both sons of missionar-
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SAINTS.p20 >>
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20 | VEISHEA | Iowa State Daily | Friday, April 19, 2013
>>SAINTS.p19 ies. Jasper would later meet Buckle, whose parents are also missionaries. -Some of the favorite bands of Saints of Valory include artist such as The Killers, early U2, Coldplay, Sigur Ros, Kings Of Leon, Muse, and Phoenix. -Although the group started in Rio de Janeiro, they had been hoping to launch their career in the United Kingdom. -Before they became the Saints of Valory, the first name they went by was “Diana” after an Afghan hound that would show up in the studio the group practiced in. -Saints of Valory gained attention from a Florida record label, prompting the band to concentrate on the United States. -They moved to Austin, Texas, after attending South
By Southwest Music Festival in 2010. They later became a figure in the local music scene. -Saints of Valory played their first gig at a friend’s bar in Austin. The show was plagued with technical and power issues. -After playing in the Austin area for six months, the band was recognized in the Austin Chronicle’s 2011 Music Awards for several categories. -In 2011 alone, they played South By Southwest, CMJ Music Marathon and DeLuna Fest. -Their debut EP, “Bright Lights” was tracked in eight days. -The band scored a Top 50 hit on the AAA chart with their piece “Providence” from their EP. -In March 2012, the Saints of Valory were selected by Billboard as one of the top six unsigned bands
nationwide. -That same year, they were a finalist on Billboard’s Battle of the Bands. The winning band went on to perform at the 2012 Billboard Music Awards. -Saints of Valory opened for Mumford and Sons at Jazz Aspen Snowmass in 2012 on Labor Day. -Their sophomore EP “Kids” charted on the top 200 rock albums on iTunes. -The band is currently signed to Atlantic Records as of Nov. 29, 2012. -Their tour will bring them to several other colleges, including Shawnee State, Notre Dame and Fordham Universities. To learn more about Saints of Valory, check out their website at http:// saintsofvalory.com, their Facebook page (http://www. facebook.com/saintsofvalory), and Twitter (https://twitter.com/saintsofvalory).
Folk
BLESSED
FEATHERS
@ VEISHEA
Photo courtesy of Blessed Feathers
By Dominic.Spizzirri @iowastatedaily.com Blessed Feathers is a Wisconsin-based folk band who will be making their Ames debut, playing on Saturday. “We’re excited to go more into the state,” said band member Donivan Berube. Made up of members Jacquelyn Beaupre and Berube, Blessed Feathers started after Berube left his home, disassociating himself from being a Jehovah’s Witness at the age of 17 to work in a restaurant, where he met Beaupre. The two began working on Beaupre’s solo material, which in time evolved into Blessed Feathers. “Jacquelyn [Beaupre] and I didn’t know each other until a few years ago. ... I was a student
FEATHERS.p21 >>
Friday, April 19, 2013 | Iowa State Daily | VEISHEA | 21
>>FEATHERS.p20 playing guitar, and Jacquelyn was a student playing guitar. At first, I just asked to record her songs and add to the process of layering,” Berube said. According to their biography on Facebook, “Blessed Feathers arose from Beaupre’s solo material, which Berube produced while living on a farm in Farmington, Wis., in 2009. Originally, he was only interested in augmenting her songwriting, bolstering the organic, folk-inspired tracks with additional instrumentation and vocal harmonies. Slowly, the duo began constructing songs together, each bringing their own stylistic tendencies to the table.” Both members share the same cell phone and only access the internet through their local library. They still work in the same restaurant
where they first met and spend their time “cooking dinner for strangers,” as the band described. The band has played many shows through Wisconsin as well as other states through 2010 before deciding to record. The band will soon be on a month-long multi-country tour. “[The tour] will be for four weeks straight, and we will play pretty much the whole eastern half of the country as well as into Canada,” Berube said. The band released their first EP after recording their songs with a laptop and microphone in a bedroom in mid2012 called “Peaceful Beasts in an Ocean of Weeds.” According to their biography on Facebook, “The pair contributed numerous instruments to the album including banjo, flute, vibraphone and various percussion. But
ultimately, [producer Kevin McMahon] and the band focused on maintaining the earthy, homespun sound Blessed Feathers has cultivated over the past few years. The EP resonates with a woodsy vibe, easing the listener into an intimate, skillfully-crafted sonic space — aided in many ways by McMahon’s recording style.” The album featured many songs written in Wisconsin with many different instruments contributing to expand variety. “We recorded for maybe two years at that point before we went into a studio,” Berube said. “We recorded in our apartment for a year, the only way we knew how to do it.” When Blessed Feathers performs at Live @ Veishea, it will consist of Berube and Beaupre on stage performing some older songs and covers as well as brand-new songs.
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22 | VEISHEA | Iowa State Daily | Friday, April 19, 2013
Sketch comedy
Harvard Sailing Team to showcase act on Saturday By Cole.Komma @iowastatedaily.com In November of 2004, a group of nine actors stepped onto a stage in a NYC theatre with a goal of laughter. They call themselves the Harvard Sailing Team, and their sketch comedy will be showcased in Stephens Auditorium on Saturday at 9 p.m. From their first show, they continued to perfect their brand of comedy and within the last few years have become a YouTube sensation with over 40,000 subscribers. They started as just a group of friends sharing a major and wanting to be actors. “We went to Atlantic Acting School, a satellite school part of the Tisch School of the Arts at NYU,” said Jen Curran, member of the team. “We didn’t form until after graduating. Our teachers always stressed
Photo courtesy Anya Garrett/Flickr Harvard Sailing Team will perform their sketch comedy act during Veishea.
the importance of creating your own work as actors; … we sort of fell into sketch comedy because it was the cheapest. We needed the least amount of props or costumes, and we
were able to find some theaters in and around New York City that would give us time, and that’s how it all began.” Their roots are in theatre and live shows. Their increased popularity
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brings larger venues and audiences. “It’s totally different than performing for a 30-something New York City crowd,” Curran said. “A lot of the sketches we do are really big and loud and musical and physical, and they can fill up the space of a huge venue. It’s really fun to perform for these huge audiences ... because they’re just there to have a good time, and they’re laughing and ... super receptive. It’s also fun to do our online hits for them. It’s like a band being able to do their single.” Releasing YouTube videos has exposed the group to the world, and they receive feedback from friends all over. “This may sound cheesy, but it’s very heartwarming,” said Faryn Einhorn, another member. “We’ll get some fan mail that [make] our sketches ... far more meaningful than we ever [intended]. We’re just trying
to make ourselves laugh.” Einhorn continued with how their videos have impacted people. “Some of these videos bring friendships together, and we hear about it ... Some people like to share it with their family when they’re home from break. Everyone gathers around the computer and watches their favorite Internet videos.” At the end of the day, the Harvard Sailing Team is just a group of friends making each other laugh, and they like to spend some time reminiscing about their early years and looking ahead into the future. “We’ve worked really hard over the years for something that we really love, and we all care about each other,” Einhorn said. “And, when we set out to do this, none of us would have or could have imagined where we would go with it.”
23 | VEISHEA | Iowa State Daily | Friday, April 19, 2013
Talent
Contortionist Johnathan Burns to perform By Cole.Komma @iowastatedaily.com Johnathan Burns is a man of many talents. He performs magic, juggles, tells jokes, all while moving his body in unnatural ways. Burns, contortionist and comedian, will perform at 9 p.m. and midnight Saturday in the Great Hall. “It was sort of a progression,” Burns said. “As a kid, I would always put my leg over my head at the family reunion. And I would gross out girls in gym class by twisting my knee certain ways.” Burns said the contortions in his show are innate abilities, but his magic and comedy were developed over time. “When I was in middle
school I got into magic. I went to a local magic shop and started hanging out there,” Burns said. “That’s what really got me into performing.” Burns then began to perform at birthday parties and other special events. In college, Burns began to add contortion to his act and “that side of it took over the magic side of [the act],” Burns said. After college, he continued performing for college crowds. “They’re very enthusiastic. They’re up for anything,” Burns said. “A lot of times when people come to my show it might be the first time they saw a comedy show or a magician or something unique. So you usually get a great reaction from them.”
Performing is a skill that comes from practice; Burns said that to be a good performer, getting on stage is key. “I’ve come a long way since my little birthday party magic show,” Burns said. “And my first few shows at colleges were definitely a struggle. But just from doing it and really working hard at it, it has become something successful.” These struggles came from a lack of experience. “When I first started, I was still the age of the kids in the audience. So I could relate to them on that sense, but I just didn’t have enough experience,” Burns said. “To be a performer, you have to have a lot of stage time. You can think of the greatest
thing, and you may think it’s the funniest or most amazing thing ever,” Burns said. “But then when you put it up in front of people they may not respond to it at all. The audience gives you a lot of information about what’s good and what’s not.” Loving what you do, Burns said, is part of being a good performer. “I would say that you have to love it, you have to really love being on stage and really want to do it,” Burns said. “Sometimes there are people who are sort of forced into it, like, if their parents did it, and like, ‘Oh, you’re part of the family circus.’ You can kind of tell through their performance that they’re not totally into it.”
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Photo courtesy of Rochelle Nehring-Myers/Flickr Johnathan Burns performs magic, juggles and tells jokes, all while moving his body in unnatural ways. Burns, a comedian and contortionist, will perform at Veishea on Saturday night.
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24 | VEISHEA | Iowa State Daily | Friday, April 19, 2013
Magician
Local performer will challenge tradition
Nate Staniforth uses new ideas to make show unique By Cole.Komma @iowastatedaily.com A local magician will be attending this year’s Veishea events not as bystander, but as a performer. Nate Staniforth, Ames native and magician, will be performing in the Great Hall of the Memorial Union at 10 p.m. Saturday and at 1 a.m. Sunday. Staniforth’s passion for magic started at a young age. “For me, I was very young; I think I was 8 years old. I learned one magic trick. I learned to
make a quarter disappear,” Staniforth said. “And for the first 4,000 times I practiced it, it didn’t look amazing. But for some reason I decided that I wanted to learn to make it look good, and I tried performing it at recess.” The result of Staniforth’s performance could be heard throughout the playground as the magician’s friends screamed at the sight of his empty hand. “They were so terrified because they’d never seen anything like that happen. So the teachers came over to see what was going on and I made the coin disappear for them, and they also started screaming,” Staniforth said. These reactions were not the ones Staniforth had been expecting to receive, but he would con-
MAGIC.p25 >>
Photo courtesy of SAIatCalU/Flickr Local magician Nate Staniforth will perform in the Great Hall of the Memorial Union on Saturday night. He hopes to challenge the common Vegas-style magic shows popular today.
and VEISHEA two timeless traditions We Deliver
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>>MAGIC.p24 tinue to perform magic, and it soon became his passion in life. “I feel like everybody has something. Whether it’s poetry or sports or music … everybody has something that turns you on and reminds you that you are alive. And once you’ve found your thing, you just have to chase it,” Staniforth said. Staniforth describes that day as a day when he learned a secret. “But I didn’t know how to tell anybody,” Staniforth said. “There was something about that feeling of astonishment and mystery … and the only way I could share that with people is with magic tricks.” Born and raised in Ames, Staniforth was the only magician in town for a period of time, and he took the opportunity to perform whenever one arose. “I started doing as many
Friday, April 19, 2013 | Iowa State Daily | VEISHEA | 25
shows as I could,” Staniforth said. “That’s how you learn to be a performer. You can’t read about it, you can’t study it, you have to learn by doing.” For years, Staniforth performed on Iowa State’s campus and at various venues located around Ames, which helped him hone his performing skills. “It was more of a blessing than a curse. It was really hard to see magic shows in Ames because those acts just didn’t come through town,” Staniforth said. “So what that forced me to do was invent stuff on my own instead of copy other people that I saw.” For five months out of the year, Staniforth is at home developing his show. His inspiration does not come from other magicians, but rather, other arts. “The place you don’t look for new ideas is in the world of magic,” Staniforth said. “[I] watch a lot of movies, lis-
ten to a lot of speeches, look at artwork, look at poetry … sort of dive into the other arts and find what it is there that inspires you and try and let that guide the direction that the show is going instead of watching other magicians.” The product of this isolation is a magic performance which challenges the larger, popular Vegas-style shows of today. “Every time get on stage, I have to spend the first third of my show killing that [stereotype] and get them to experience what I want them to experience,” Staniforth said. As a child, Staniforth attended Veishea events every year. He is excited to have a performance in his hometown once again. “It’s amazing. I’m looking forward to it,” Staniforth said. “It’ll be the last show of my spring tour and I couldn’t ask for a better way to end it.”
26 | VEISHEA | Iowa State Daily | Friday, April 19, 2013
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Friday, April 19, 2013 | Iowa State Daily | VEISHEA | 27
Comedy
Photo courtesy of Matt Baker After performing and traveling around the world, juggler and comedian Matt Baker brings his talent to Ames for a performance at 11 p.m. Saturday and 2 a.m. Sunday of Veishea weekend.
Comic Baker juggles his talents for Veishea Hacky sacker, comedian and juggler comes to Ames By Cole.Komma @iowastatedaily.com From juggling to jokes, Matt Baker has serious chops. Through hard work and perseverance Baker has made a name for himself which has led him to traveling the world and appearing on TV shows such as “America’s Got Talent” and Tosh.O.” Matt Baker will bring his show to Iowa State at 11 p.m., Saturday, and 2 a.m. Sunday. Hailing from the West Coast, Baker’s stunt career began as a professional hacky sacker where he toured Europe with the first-ever American hacky sack team. “I went pro at 17. Pretty much what that means is I started competing in world foot bag championships,” Baker said. “I did pretty well and I got sponsored by Snickers candy bars and toured Europe for about six months doing demos.” According to his biography, Baker flies to more than 200 performances each year. At one point during the tour, Baker began to incorporate humor into his acts in order to keep the crowd interested. “In Europe, I would do a little show and I would have a translator, and I realized they just wanted funny stuff, “ Baker said. “Then when I came back [to the United States] I started integrating more unusual skills into my show
because there’s only so much the audience can take of hacky sack.” As a boy, Baker says he was always using humor as a way to gain attention from his family. Baker perfected his jokes doing open mics at various clubs. “When I was 18 or 19, I toured the [United States] in my van, doing clubs. I performed basically anywhere they would have me … the best way to develop a show is to do it as many times as possible,” Baker said. Baker’s show is so developed, in fact, that NBC’s hit show “America’s Got Talent” asked him to be on their 2010 season. According to the biography on his website, he was also voted “Seattle’s Funniest Prop Comic.” According to the biography, Baker is “a fivetime Guinness World Record holder ... He has made people laugh in [more than] 14 countries, had presidential candidates cracking up and has shared his humor with U.S. troops overseas.” “You’re hip, funny and well choreographed. You’re the total package,” said a previous “America’s Got Talent” judge, Piers Morgan, during the segment. After almost every show, someone will come up and talk to Baker about his career and Baker tends to offer the classic advice of following one’s dreams. “If I can inspire a few people do what they love to do in their life, then it’s worth it for me because this is what I love to do,” Baker said. “These students can make money doing whatever they want. There is not one pathway to get where you’re going.”
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28 | VEISHEA | Iowa State Daily | Friday, April 19, 2013
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Friday, April 19, 2013 | Iowa State Daily | VEISHEA | 29
EISHEA
FRIDAY Veishea Stage
When: 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Where: Central Campus
Hypnotist Brian Imbus When: 10 p.m. What: Brian Imbus entertains crowds with comedic hypnotism. Where: Great Hall, Memorial Union
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Where: South of Student Services building
Student Food Stands When: 12 to 5 p.m. Where: Central Campus
Stevie Starr, professional regurgitator When: 11:30 p.m. What: Starr has been featured on “Ripley’s Believe It or Not.” He can swallow a live goldfish and bring it back up alive. Where: Great Hall, Memorial Union
Taste of Veishea When: 5 p.m. to midnight, 5 p.m. to 3 a.m. What: Vendors will serve a variety of food. Where: Molecular Biology parking lot and Union Drive
Midnight pancake feed
Live @ Veishea
SATURDAY
When: 6 p.m. Friday to 2 a.m. Saturday What: Bands include Easton Corbin, Jana Kramer, Kris Allen, Andrew Allen, Clayton Anderson Band and A Ray. Where: Molecular Biology parking lot
When: 11:55 p.m. to 3 a.m. (or while supplies last) Friday and Saturday nights Where: Central Campus
Veishea 5k Run/Walk
When: 8 a.m. What: A 3.1 mile walk or run around campus before the start of the parade. Where: Campus
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Harambee Student Talent Show When: 6 p.m. What: The noncompetitive talent show will show the various talents of ISU students. Where: Great Hall, Memorial Union
Stars Over Veishea presents: “Fiddler on the Roof” When: Friday through Sunday What: “Fiddler on the Roof” is a story of a father looking for a husband for his daughters, who want to make their own choices. Where: Fisher Theater
Veishea Village When: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. What: ISU departments and student organizations will present displays. Where: Central Campus
When: 9 p.m. to 2:30 a.m. What: Club Veishea gives students the chance to experience a club atmosphere.
and be part of that change.
Veishea Main Street When: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. What: Displays show off community groups. Where: Central Campus
Veishea parade Club Veishea: Mash-up DJs The Hood Internet & Torpeedoh
Join our staff
When: 10:30 a.m. What: Bands, performances and floats travel on a route around campus. Where: ISU campus
Apply online at
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30 | VEISHEA | Iowa State Daily | Friday, April 19, 2013
Kid’s Corner
Campus Showcase: College of Design
When: Noon to 3 p.m. What: Activities for children including face painting, photos with Swanson, a magician and many more. Where: South Campanile Lawn
When: 8:30 to 11 a.m. What: Highlights the College of Design. Where: Central Campus
Veishea Stage
When: 11 a.m to 3 p.m. What: A food fair sponsored by the International Student Council. Where: Great Hall, Memorial Union
When: Noon to 5 p.m. Where: Central Campus
Taste of Veishea When: 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., 5 p.m. to 12 a.m. What: Vendors will serve a variety of food. Where: Molecular Biology parking lot and Union Drive
International Food Fair
Canoe races When: 1 to 4 p.m. What: Two teams of two to three people race in canoes. There are two divisions, depending on how many people are on a team. Where: Lake LaVerne
Hypnotist Brian Imbus When: 1 a.m. Where: Great Hall, Memorial Union
Jonathan Burns, Contortionist
Smoke Over Veishea BBQ contest When: 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. What: Barbecue and grilling competition. Where: Lot 27, West of Molecular Biology
When: 9 p.m. and midnight What: Jonathan Burns has performed on Late Show with David Letterman. Where: Great Hall, Memorial Union
Harvard Sailing Team - Improv/Sketch Comedy
What: A sketch comedy group performs. Where: Stephens Auditorium
Student Food Stands When: 8 p.m. to 5 p.m. Where: Central Campus
Nate Staniforth, magician When: 10 p.m. and 1 a.m. Sunday What: Nate Staniforth uses magic, comedy and audience participation to entertain. Where: Great Hall, Memorial Union
Bingo Live @ Veishea When: 6 p.m. to 2 a.m. What: B.o.B., Grouplove, The Maine, Jukebox the Ghost, Saints of Valory and Blessed Feathers will perform. Where: Molecular Biology parking Lot
Club Veishea - Country DJ When: 9 p.m. to 2:30 a.m. What: Club Veishea gives students the chance to experience a club atmosphere. Where: South of Student Services building
Matt Baker, Juggler/Stunt Show When: 11 p.m. and 2 a.m. Sunday What: Baker holds five world records. Where: Great Hall, Memorial Union
When: 9 p.m.
When: 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. What: Bingo is hosted by ISU Afterdark. Where: Sun Room, Memorial Union
3-Point Contest When: 3 p.m. Saturday Where: State Gym
Slam Dunk Contest When: 3 p.m. Saturday Where: State Gym
SUNDAY
Closing ceremony When: 2 to 3 p.m. What: ISU community members will be recognized. Where: Campanile Room, Memorial Union
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Friday, April 19, 2013 | Iowa State Daily | VEISHEA | 31
32 | VEISHEA | Iowa State Daily | Friday, April 19, 2013