JAZZ PUPPETS
IOWA STATE DAILY
GOOSE ON THE LOOSE
Members of the theater department work with the Jazz Ensemble to produce “Rhapsody in Plastic,” a performance involving puppets. PAGE 7
With breeding season upon us, the campus geese have become very territorial. Check out one student’s run-in with a goose online! ONLINE
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THURSDAY 4.19.18 No.142 Vol 217
45°
24°
El Centro
Iowa State provides a safe space for Latinx students and staff
JACKIE NORMAN/ IOWA STATE DAILY Students and faculty gather in Martin Hall for the opening of the new space El Centro on April 16. Founder and graduate student Samuel Morales-Gonzalez decided to provide a place where people who identify as Latinx can gather in a safe space.
El Centro’s revival was not only a celebration of the reopening of an affinity space for Latinx students, but a discussion about how students and members of the Iowa State community vision El Centro continuing to grow and evolve moving forward.
El Centro has existed in one form or another on Iowa State’s campus since 1992, when it began as the Hispanic American Resource Center (HARC), located in Beardshear. HARC was eventually moved to Student Services, but continued to serve its purpose of giving Latinx student organizations a meeting place, providing Latinx students a place to socialize, and assisting Latinx students in finding student groups and resources on campus that would benefit them. Eventually being named El Centro, the space was moved to Helser Hall, before moving to it’s current location of Martin Hall. Over time, its purpose evolved into a meeting space for Latinx student groups, but as groups outgrew the space, El Centro was converted into storage. Presently, these student groups have been provided new storage space, and El Centro is returning as an affinity space, or an identity based space where students who share a cultural background can make friends and foster new relationships. Samuel Morales-Gonzalez, a graduate student studying in student affairs, graduate hall director, and leader of the El Centro, shared his goal for the space moving forward after he graduates during a speech given at the revival event on April 16. “This is only the beginning. This is for the students, by the students,” Morales-Gonzalez said. “I’m really hoping to have someone step up and continue this legacy.” Liz Mendez-Shannon, diversity and inclusion project director in Hispanic/Latinx Affairs at Iowa State, and early supporter of the El Centro revival spoke about the
early goals of El Centro. “The goal is for [El Centro] to be student led and student run, to organize the space so that other student organizations can meet there to utilize the new space as a way to have a community, and to feel more welcomed and have the space to organize,” Mendez-Shannon said. Vice President of Diversity and Inclusion, Reginald Stewart, spoke to the importance of a space like El Centro to campus climate. “Climate is driven by student engagement and this is a very real manifestation of that,” Stewart said. “I think it’s quite joyous to be perfectly honest.” Spanish professor and department chair of world languages and cultures, Chad Gasta, spoke to the importance of having a physical space for Latinx students at Iowa State. “In a lot of ways, a physical space gives an opportunity to connect people and in this case it’s not just students and faculty or staff, but perhaps the community in the long term,” Gasta said. Gasta spoke to the importance a physical space brings to visibility and outreach for Latinx students on campus. He said it allows him and his department to be able to inform students who have a cultural or lingual connection to the space. Gasta said it allows students opportunities to connect and collaborate with other students or student organizations they may not have otherwise become aware of. At the reopening of El Centro, attendees were given forms to fill out, allowing them to give input on how they believe El Centro can continue to evolve as a space for Latinx students. The form asked participants what they feel should be present in the space, how the space should be used, and what they would like to see changed about
EL CENTRO
PG8
BY MIKE.BROWN @iowastatedaily.com
1992-El Centro was founded as the Hispanic American Resource Center. -Multicultural Student Affairs moved to Student Services -HARC is renamed El Centro and moved to Helser Hall 2001-North end of Helser Hall is demolished
2004-El Centro is completed and moved to Martin Hall. Used as a meeting space for Latinx student groups. Latinx student groups outgrew the space and El Centro converted into storage.
April 16, 2017-El Centro Revival
02
NEWS
Iowa State Daily Thursday, April 19, 2018
Ask Adonijah
CELEBRATING THE BEGINNING OF IOWA STATE BY IOWA STATE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY SPECIAL COLLECTIONS AND UNIVERSITY ARCHIVES STAFF
Editor’s note: “Ask Adonijah” is a contributed piece from the Iowa State University Library Special Collections and University Archives. The piece is named after Adonijah Welch, who was Iowa State’s first president, and seeks to answer community members’ questions about the history of Iowa State. Have a question? Let us know by emailing askadonijah@iowastatedaily.com.
Dear Adonijah: Who was Iowa State’s first female Ph.D. graduate? With spring commencement fast approaching, this first question seems very appropriate. Madison asks, “Who was the first female to receive a Ph.D. from Iowa State?” If one has lived in Ames for any length of time then the name Ada Hayden should be familiar, due to the large recreation area on the north edge of town that bears her name. Ada Hayden was the first female to earn a doctorate from Iowa State, and only the fourth student overall, having received her advanced degree in botany exactly 100 years ago this year. Born in rural Ames, she came to Iowa State for her undergraduate education and then earned a master’s degree in botany from Washington University in St. Louis. She returned to her hometown to continue her studies and became an instructor of botany at Iowa State. Dr. Hayden was named Assistant Professor in 1920 and spent a long career teaching botany and researching Iowa’s native plants. During her career, she added thousands of plant specimens to the campus herbarium. She was particularly interested in Iowa’s prairie ecology and was an important figure in early prairie preservation efforts in the state. Dr. Hayden did not receive much public recognition for her work during her lifetime and, for reasons we can now only speculate on, she was never promoted beyond Assistant Professor during her long career at this school. As her contributions became more widely known and respected, so, too, did the posthumous honors. She was named to the Iowa Women’s Hall of Fame; the state named one of the last remaining native prairie areas in Iowa after her, the Hayden Prairie State Preserve in Howard County; and the campus herbarium was named in her honor. Has there always been Greek housing for students? Darin asks, “Has there always been Greek housing for students at Iowa State?” The first fraternity, Delta Tau Delta, was established on campus in 1875, followed shortly after by Pi Beta Phi sorority two years later. I never really had a concern with social fraternities when I was President, but many of the students did. In the early years, the vast majority of students who were non-members referred to fraternities and sororities as “secret societies.” None of these organizations had an actual house in those days, so the students would borrow classrooms in the evenings to hold their meetings. The animosity between society and anti-society students grew to the point that, in 1888, a
COURTESY OF IOWA STATE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY SPECIAL COLLECTIONS AND UNIVERSITY ARCHIVES STAFF Adonijah Welch was Iowa State’s first president. “Ask Adonijah” was created to answer community members’ questions about the history of Iowa State.
fraternity banquet was inundated with cyanogen gas and the students had to flee the building! It was not a good situation. President Beardshear actually banned social fraternities and sororities shortly after he arrived in 1891. This had the desired effect of calming the internal strife between the students. Social societies would not be allowed back onto campus until 1904, largely due to a significant housing shortage caused by the fire that burned the Main Building to the ground. For the past century, fraternities and sororities have played a significant role in the lives of many Iowa State students.
Where is U.S. Foreign Policy Headed?
Stephen Walt
Stephen Walt is Belfer Professor of International Affairs at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government and a former academic dean.
Thursday, April 19, 2018 - 7 pm Great Hall, Memorial Union Sponsored by: Phi Beta Kappa, Political Science, Committee on Lectures (funded by Student Government)
Thursday, April 19, 2018 Iowa State Daily
NEWS 03 CAMPUS
Wallace Hall residents express concerns about grad student living BY RYAN.PATTEE @iowastatedaily.com
JORDAN MAURICE/ IOWA STATE DAILY Wallace Hall, a current undergrad living space, will be opening its doors to graduate students in the fall.
As graduate students plan to move into Wallace Hall, current undergrad students have expressed concern about the future of the residence hall.
On April 1, the Daily reported that Wallace Hall would once again be opening its doors to graduate students. Wallace Hall was home to graduate students in 2005, but went back to housing undergraduates when enrollment increased. Thirteen years later, the residence hall and its 300 single rooms will once again be open to graduate students. While this change is definite, residents currently living at Wallace Hall have expressed concerns about this change and possible future of the residence hall when the change comes into effect. According to Lilah Mares, president of Wallace and Wilson Hall council, current students were not told of these changes until only a week before Director of Residence Pete Englin came to meet them. “We didn’t hear about it until after registration had opened up when people recontracted around February and March,” Mares said. “It threw a lot of us off.” According to many of the hall council members, the decision to have graduate students housed in Wallace seemed to come out of nowhere. Genevieve Robinson, the treasurer on the council, talked
about the confusion when Englin came to talk to current residents. “Pete talked about how housing for graduates were in high demand, but when we asked about the details, statistics were not provided,” Robinson said. “It almost seemed like a whimsical decision, but [he] claimed that a building just for grads was in high demand.” Robinson also said that she changed her living arrangement as a result of this decision. “I can’t afford a single normally and I wanted to stay in Towers as well as on my floor, and this ended up being the only way for me to do that,” Robinson said. The students are not against graduate students having a place to live but are frustrated with the lack of communication between the Department of Residence and current students living at Wallace. “It makes sense going to the way it is, I suppose it would have been nice if we had more of a say in it, but really the decision is coming from a lot of higher ups,” said Bryan Friestad, a member on the council. Maeve McGuire also agreed with Friestad talking about how if the Department of Residence had been more transparent, they would not be as upset with the decision. “If they had sent out [a] clear email and been honest with us, I would be more comfortable,” McGuire said. “It seemed like after we re-contracted in AccessPlus, it changed, got an email from Pete and
then we were scrambling for re-contracting again.” One significant issue that came to the residents’ attention was the concern over what might happen to the culture of Wallace when graduate students come in. Another concern is in relation to Towers’ international and low-income students. With Wallace and Wilson receiving renovations as well as the addition of super singles, the price of living at Wallace has gone up and hall council members have also expressed concern about this. “We are extremely disappointed,” McGuire said. “How are our low-income freshmen supposed to live here with the super singles coming into Wilson? How can they afford it now that prices are raising?” While incoming freshman will not be living in Wallace as of next year, concern stems from the age gap between undergraduate and graduate students. Student are unsure how grad students will interact with a younger community advisor if they live in Wallace, as a community advisor’s role is to be an older student for incoming freshman to connect with on their floor. “I feel like the main concern is the community,” McGuire said. “I feel like we have a strong pride because we’re stuck out here with each other, but changing with students (without) incentive to get involved makes us worry that it will be gone.”
COMMUNITY
ISU competes in national recycling challenge BY PAIGE.ANSON @iowastatedaily.com
This month, Iowa State is taking on a national recycling challenge that takes environmental stewardship to a new, personal level.
With personal care products, to be exact. Until the end of ‘Earth Month’, Iowa State is competing with 49 other colleges to recycle the most ‘#empties’ or personal care products. The competition is hosted by cosmetics company Garnier, digital nonprofit organization DoSomething.org and TerraCycle, a company that recycles usually unrecyclable products for free, according to their website. Items that are being collected for the competition include personal care products that cannot be, or are not, usually recycled, like shampoo bottle caps and toothpaste, lip gloss and mascara tubes. Other personal care containers can also be recycled in the competition, however, all containers must
be cleaned out, said Lia Gomez, the sustainability director of Student Government and co-president of the campus sustainability organization The Green Umbrella. At the end of the month, the college that sent in the most ‘#empties’ to TerraCycle will receive a $2,000 scholarship and and a green garden, furnished by Garnier and TerraCycle, according to the competition’s website. Along with giving campus communities the opportunity to help keep trash out of landfills and help their school win a national competition, students that take pictures of themselves recycling their empties with the hashtag #ISURRR will enter themselves for a chance to win a care package furnished by Garnier and The Green Umbrella, Gomez said. “[Garnier] sent us some of their new shampoo and conditioner products, those would be a part of
the prizes. Along with that, The Green Umbrella will include some of our swag that will be incorporated at the campus Earth Day celebration,” Gomez said. The Earth Day celebration, “Love Your Mother,” will be held Thursday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the Great Hall of the Memroial Union. and The Green Umbrella will be giving out gifts and ‘swag’ at the event, according to Gomez. Bins to drop off used beauty product containers have been posted around campus. Some can be found on the first floor of the Memorial Union in the East and West Student Office spaces across from Panda Express and by the women’s bathroom, as well as in the General Services Building, next to Forker Building, and across from Agronomy Hall,
RECYCLING
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04
CAMPUS BRIEF
13 U.S. citizen 14 “Come __ the sea, / Maiden with me”: Thomas Moore 15 Area 16 Porky’s jacket and tie? 18 Hunter’s trophy 19 Source of many dialogues 20 Big name in FOR RELEASE NOVEMBER 15, 2013 game shows 22 FDR Los power Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle program Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis 23 Longing 24 Circle ACROSS 27 Prohibition at the 1 “__ Ivorygoes!” soap factory? 5 __ Runway model? 32 ghanouj: 8 Brewery eggplant dish shipments 35 Theoretical 13 U.S. citizenbriefly foreigners, 14 “Come By Jerry Edelstein 11/15/13 36 Declaim__ the sea, /et Maiden 37 Twist al. 3 Duke of Thursday’s Puzzle Solved with me”: 39 Compact Cornwall’s wife, Thomas Moore containers? in Shakespeare 15 Area 41 It rarely happens 4 Back then, back 16 Porky’s at homejacket when and tie? mo. 42 Equinox 5 Delight 18 “__ Hunter’s trophy 43 you be my 6 Fish with no 19 Source of many neighbor?”: Mr. pelvic fin dialogues Rogers 7 Seismograph 20 Big name in 44 Pre-law classroom readings game shows exercise? 8 __ belt 22 1993 FDR power 48 Disney 9 Legislative decision program acquisition 10 Season, in a way 23 Longing 49 More, in Morelia 11 Height meas. 24 Circle 52 Spice 12 Day song word 27 Daredevil ProhibitionKnievel at the 55 15 Baby bug Ivory soap 56 “Awake in factory? the 17 Rent 32 __ ghanouj: Dark” author 21 Little League eggplanttodish 58 Waiting buy starters? 35 Theoretical tickets, say 25 “Oh, when will foreigners, briefly 60 Bad place to be they __ learn?”: (c)2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 11/15/13 By Jerry Edelstein 11/15/13 36 Declaim shipwrecked? Seeger lyric 37 Allows Twist et al. 50 “Stormy 38 Halogens, e.g. Puzzle 63 3 November Duke of 26 Thursday’s Solved 39 Compact 39 Lysol target Weather” 64 Sermon topic Cornwall’s wife, honorees containers? 40 Samoan port composer 65 Making waves, in Shakespeare 27 Maritime 41 Itperhaps rarely happens 42 Most hackneyed 51 Salisbury __ 4 “Gone Back then, 28 Withback the at home 45 Hosts 52 Sharp turns 66 Excites when feature Wind” 42 Geometry Equinox mo. 46 Poetic preposition 53 Memo start 67 5 “Aladdin” Delight parrot 29 43 “__ you be my 47 Dorothy Hamill 54 Blueprint shortening 6 “... Fish with no 30 with __-foot neighbor?”: maneuver 57 Decision 68 Go down Mr. pelvic fin pole!” Rogers 49 Soccer star clouder 7 For Seismograph 31 fear that 44 Pre-law classroom readings Lionel who won 59 Great Lakes st. DOWN 32 Bartlett cousin exercise? 8 Musical __ belt range the Ballon d’Or 61 Through 1 __ hour 33 48 Disney“__, 9 Jessica Legislative each of the last 62 Place to 2 1993 Rousseau’s 34 ofdecision “Total acquisition in a way or On Education” 10 Season, four years retire Recall” (2012) 49 More, in Morelia 11 Height meas. 52 Spice 12 Day song word 55 Daredevil Knievel 15 Baby bug 56 “Awake in the 17 Rent Dark” author 21 Little League 58 Waiting to buy starters? tickets, say 25 “Oh, when will 60 Bad place to be they __ learn?”: (c)2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 11/15/13 shipwrecked? Seeger lyric 50 “Stormy 38 Halogens, e.g. 63 Allows 26 November Weather” 39 Lysol target 64 Sermon topic honorees composer 40 Samoan port 65 Making waves, 27 Maritime 51 Salisbury __ 42 Most hackneyed perhaps 28 “Gone With the 52 Sharp turns 45 Hosts 66 Excites Wind” feature 46 Poetic preposition 53 Memo start 67 Geometry 29 “Aladdin” parrot 54 Blueprint 47 Dorothy Hamill shortening 30 “... with __-foot 57 Decision maneuver 68 Go down pole!” clouder 49 Soccer star 31 For fear that 59 Great Lakes st. Lionel who won DOWN 32 Bartlett cousin 61 Through the Ballon d’Or 1 __ hour 33 Musical range 62 Place to each of the last 2 Rousseau’s “__, 34 Jessica of “Total or On Education” retire four years Recall” (2012)
Iowa State Daily Thursday, April 19, 2018
CROSSWORD
FEATURE PHOTO
TAYLOR HAGIE/ IOWA STATE DAILY
IOWA STATE UNIVERSITY POLICE DEPARTMENT RAISES AWARENESS FOR DENIM DAY Officer Natasha Greene, with the Iowa State University Police, hands out free t-shirts in Parks Library on Wednesday in awareness of denim day. Denim day is in honor of an 18-year-old girl in Italy who was raped by her driving instructor. This was brought all the way to the Italian Supreme Court, and the case was overturned because her jeans were “too tight” to be taken off by another person. On April 25, people are encouraged to wear denim in honor of this event.
SUDOKU BY THE MEPHAM GROUP
POLICE BLOTTER
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
4.17.18 Max Kiley, 19, of 325 Ash Ave – Ames, IA, was cited and released for possession of a controlled substance, possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of alcohol underage. An individual reported the theft of a bicycle at Linden Hall (reported at 2:44 p.m.). An officer checked on the welfare of an individual at 3910 Maricopa Dr (reported at 2:32 p.m.).
IOWA STATE DAILY BUSINESS DIRECTORY Jackson Cleaning Service •Residential Cleaning •Getting Your Home Ready For the Market
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CORRECTIONS
The Iowa State Daily welcomes comments and suggestions or complaints about errors that warrant correction. To submit a correction, please contact our editor at 515-294-5688 or via email at editor@iowastatedaily.com.
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OPINION
Thursday, April 19, 2018 Iowa State Daily
05
COLUMN
Satire: Wintersteen in a frenzy Realizes salary expires like Dining Dollars
PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY MIRANDA CANTRELL/IOWA STATE DAILY
BY DAVIS.PATTON @iowastatedaily.com Editor’s note: This is a satirical opinion piece. The quotes from Wendy Wintersteen are completely fictional, as is the situation this story is based upon.
Iowa State University President Wendy Wintersteen is in a small panic after realizing her salary expires every spring semester along with students’ Dining Dollars.
While recently rereading her contract of employment as President of Iowa State University, Wintersteen noticed a small clause she had overlooked. The clause, entitled “Employee Income Expirations,” is virtually the exact same as the Dining Dollars Expirations policy on ISU Dining’s website, but instead of Dining Dollars it references Wintersteen’s pay. Here is the clause, in its entirety:
“Employee Income Expirations: At the end of summer, unused income rolls over for use during fall. At the end of fall, unused income rolls over for use during spring. At the end of the spring semester, on the Monday following commencement, all unused income expires. You are encouraged to use your income as unused income will not be reduced or refunded.” After noticing this clause at the start of April, Wintersteen said she has been doing her best to get the most out of her income before it expires. “I had a decent amount of money held away in an emergency fund and for retirement, but now I am splurging those funds on anything and everything to make sure I get to use it,” said
Wintersteen. Wintersteen has purchased some things she has always wanted, such as her own Cy mascot outfit and a neon drum set. She seriously considered purchasing her own personal airplane but decided against it, simply saying “too soon.” Sophomore Iowa State student Angelica Riordan said she can relate to Wintersteen’s realization. “We’ve all been there! I realized I had $150 Dining Dollars three days before they expired my freshman year.” Riordan successfully spent all $150 on dozens of Pop-Tarts and 2-liters of Mountain Dew. Reflecting on the realization, Wintersteen says she is at peace. “I am honored that every year of my time as President, I will get to have the true Iowa State experience: desperately spending my funds in the final weeks before they expire. I can’t think of a better way to relate to students!”
EDITORIAL
Can we be surprised Facebook used our data? In the past few weeks, public and government scrutiny has rained down on Facebook. The reason? The data of almost 87 million Facebook users made its way to Cambridge Analytica, which had ties to the Trump campaign in the 2016 election, according to the New York Times. It seems, though, that the American people are being a bit naive.
We didn’t bat an eye when Facebook introduced ads that nearly read our minds about what products and services interest us. Our jaws didn’t drop when Facebook could recognize the faces of people we wanted to tag in photos without us having to type in their names. But suddenly when our data ends up in the hands of those trying to destroy our democratic process, we get concerned? So why the concern now? The ISD
Editorial Board feels the concern comes because we believed in Facebook. We believed its mission to “give people the power to build community and bring the world closer together.” But we failed to see the signs pointing to Facebook’s motivation to earn profit rather than protect its users before this controversy. If you think about the trust we bestow in technology companies like Facebook and Google, it doesn’t really make sense. We enjoy that the platforms are free and the efficiency they provide us, but we do so at the costs of providing our data and risking our privacy. We have to be better than that as consumers. There is a reason that the U.S. Postal Service or phone services aren’t free. There is a reason public libraries are funded by public dollars.
It costs money to protect the privacy of communication and obtaining information. We aren’t saying that platforms like Facebook and Google should be government-controlled, public entities. But we are saying that there are vastly different motives for companies than public agencies, and we have to start treating them that way. In a previous editorial, we wrote that we needed to demand answers for the unknowns surrounding the use of our data. We have to stop automatically believing companies when they tell us they have no intentions of misusing our data. We ought to approach sharing our data with a more skeptical point of view and demand that these companies be even more transparent about what they do with our data.
Editorial Board
Emily Barske, editor-in-chief Isaac Sinclair, opinion editor Adam Willman, community member Sue Ravenscroft, community member Muhammad Mohsin Raza, community member Opinions expressed in columns and letters are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Daily or organizations with which the author(s) are associated.
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The Daily encourages discussion but does not guarantee its publication. We reserve the right to edit or reject any letter or online feedback. Send your letters to letters@iowastatedaily.com. Letters must include the name(s), phone number(s), majors and/or group affiliation(s) and year in school of the author(s). Phone numbers and addresses will not be published. Online feedback may be used if first name and last name, major and year in school are included in the post. Feedback posted online is eligible for print in the Iowa State Daily.
06
SPORTS
Iowa State Daily Thursday, April 19, 2018
GYMNASTICS
The Summer Olympics The ultimate goal for men’s gymnastics
Editor’s Note: This is part three of a four-part series on the disappearance of men’s gymnastics in the United States.
COURTESY PHOTO BY MARK SELDERS Penn State head coach Randy Jepson (middle) is congratulated while being interviewed on Big Ten Network. The Nittany Lions won the 2015 Big Ten Championship.
BY BRIAN.MOZEY @iowastatedaily.com Seventeen days.
Most college athletes have a dream to make it professionally. Whether that’s a football player thinking about the NFL or a basketball player thinking about the NBA or WNBA, there’s always the opportunity and pursuit. For gymnastics, there’s no such thing except for 17 days every four years. The Summer Olympics. That’s where the fame and the glory becomes a reality. You get the chance to step in front of millions of viewers and represent the United States, but for only 17 days. The NFL, NBA, WNBA, MLB and NHL all have seasons and those seasons come and go every year, not every four years. The majority of male gymnasts start at the age of 4 or 5 years old. After 13 or 14 years of 20 to 30 hours of practice each week, there’s the possibility of receiving a college scholarship. Then, the gymnast works hard during their college career translating into successful junior and senior years that lead the gymnast to the qualification of the U.S. Senior National Team. It’s not just a job, it’s an honor to represent the United States. Then, the gymnast prepares for hours and hours each day and each week to prepare them for the Summer Olympics. After all of that, these gymnasts get 17 days to shine. “Every male and female gymnast is fighting for that shot to represent their country,” said Penn State coach Randy Jepson. The ability to compete on the U.S. Senior National Team is an honor and privilege. Out of the 421 gymnasts in college, only 12 make it onto the U.S. Senior National Team. And looking beyond college, there are thousands of high school students that are competing for those 12 spots as well. The likelihood of making the Olympic team is very small, but that small chance is what drives these men to work on Friday nights and Saturdays as well as the entire week for that dream. “It’s a small chance, but that’s been the dream since participating in my first summer camp,” said Ames gymnast Ben Eyles on making the national team. “That dream is always in the back of my head no matter what I’m doing in the gym.” Eyles planned like most gymnasts in college. He’s planning the time he has until the next Olympic Games. For example, if a gymnast was to graduate from college this year, in 2018, he would have two years before the next game.
COURTESY PHOTO BY CRAIG HOUTZ Penn State’s Sam Zakutney is congratulated by head coach Randy Jepson on his floor exercise routine against Ohio State.
In Eyles’ case, he intends to graduate in 2022 with his bachelor’s degree. He plans to stay an extra year to finish up school and possibly work on a masters. Depending on his Minnesota career, he would try out for the U.S. Senior National Team and work hard for the opportunity to compete in the 2024 Olympic Games. That’s a goal for Eyles, so he’s crossed out 2020 Tokyo and replaced it with 2024 Paris in his notebook. His main goal is to make the U.S. Senior National Team, which could lead to the possibility of representing the U.S. in the 2024 Paris Olympics. Even though the Olympic Games is one of the biggest competitions in the world, Jepson said it’s not the only world competition. During the off years of the Olympics like 2018, 2019 and 2021, the U.S. Senior National Team of male gymnasts compete in the World Championships. “The Olympics is the most popular world competition and most people look forward to the next four years to see the next round of talent,” Eyles said. “It’s hard, especially for gymnasts, to stay in shape for another four years to come back again. Usually for gymnastics, you get one year to shine on the world stage.” The ability to keep this dream alive for every male gymnast in the U.S., there needs to be a new direction or a new philosophy since the number of male gymnasts is dropping year by year.
Gymnasts on the U.S. Men’s Gymnastics Senior National Team
»» »» »» »» »» »»
Donothan Bailey Allan Bower Marvin Kimble Sean Melton Sam Mikulak Akash Modi
»» »» »» »» »» »»
Yul Moldauer Alex Naddour Eddie Penev Donnell Whittenburg Shane Wiskus Alec Yoder
Last five Olympic results for U.S. Men’s Gymnastics Senior National Team
»» 2016 - Fifth place »» 2012 - Fifth place »» 2008 - Third place
»» 2004 - Second place »» 2000 - Fifth place
LIFESTYLE
Thursday, April 19, 2018 Iowa State Daily ENTERTAINMENT
07
‘Rhapsody in Plastic’
ISU Jazz Ensemble to perform with the theater department BY FINN.HOOGENSEN @iowastatedaily.com A show on April 19 will combine puppetry and jazz music for a unique storytelling performance. The show, which is titled “Rhapsody in Plastic,” will take place in the Martha-Ellen Tye Recital Hall at 7:30 p.m. It is free and open to the public.
PHOTO COURTESY OF AMANDA PETEFISH-SCHRAG Members of the theater department will perform with the Jazz Ensemble at the Martha-Ellen Tye Recital Hall at 7:30 p.m.
“Rhapsody in Plastic” will be a collaborative effort from the ISU Jazz Ensemble with members of the theater department. The show will consist of four short-form stories, each told through jazz music and puppets. Michael Giles, director of the ISU Jazz Ensemble, composed each musical number to be performed. Amanda Petefish-Schrag, assistant professor of theater, personally designed the puppets that will be used throughout the performances. Petefish-Schrag was approached by Giles to produce this show. She was compelled to join because of her interest in the ways that different mediums can be combined for storytelling purposes. “This isn’t something we have done at ISU before,” said Petefish-Schrag. “This is very much an experiment.” For each of the four stories performed, the ISU Jazz Ensemble will be on stage while the puppeteers perform front and center. “We’re really trying to marry the two things together, so [we will show] how these puppets really reflect that jazz feel,” said Petefish-Schrag. Petefish-Schrag said neither the jazz nor the puppet elements are supposed to have more importance over one another. “Hopefully because of the jazz music, you experience the puppet work differently, and because of the puppet work, you experience the jazz differently as well,” said Petefish-Schrag. In each story, the puppets’ actions will generally reflect the jazz music being played, but according to Petefish-Schrag, there will be moments throughout the performance when the jazz musicians make alterations to the music based on the movements of the puppets. She metaphorically described the structure of the performances as a conversation, as opposed to a pre-planned speech. “We know what the topic is, and we know the key points that we’re going to hit. But there
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is also this element that we’re responding to what’s happening in the room at the moment,” said Petefish-Schrag. Though each of the short performances will tell a different story, they are all loosely connected by a theme. “A lot of the stories we are trying to tell are about characters who are discovering things for the first time or starting to look at another character in a different way or discovering new things about themselves,” said Petefish-Schrag. Examples of the different puppet characters will be animals, humans, butterflies, dogs and birds. Petefish-Schrag said a lot of these characters will look colorful and act playful. She said she drew inspiration from Giles’ compositions when designing the puppets. “There’s this inherent sense of playfulness in the work that [the ISU Jazz Ensemble] is doing that I think is really helpful in helping us as puppeteers really find the sense of play in what we’re doing,” said Petefish-Schrag. The show’s overall title, “Rhapsody in Plastic,” is a play on George Gershwin’s jazz classic “Rhapsody in Blue.” The title also stems from the fact that all the puppets are designed using recycled plastic. “I think that puppetry, like any good art, is trying to reframe the way we look at the world. And in this case, maybe reframe the way we look at what we throw away,” said Petefish-Schrag. She tried to stay away from making her puppets look too realistic. Instead, she wanted to only include what is essential to the character. For example, she tried to keep the essential characteristics of a child’s movement, or the essential characteristics of a dog’s appearance. “Puppetry is really equal parts engineering and aesthetics. I can create a puppet that is really beautiful, but if it doesn’t move the way I need it to move, or if it is too heavy, it can’t tell the story it needs to tell. And vice versa, I can create a puppet that moves really well, but if there’s nothing about it that draws the audience’s eye in, then it’s ineffective. It’s part of what makes puppetry challenging but part of what makes it an exciting medium,” said Petefish-Schrag.
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Iowa State Daily Thursday, April 19, 2018 EL CENTRO
JACKIE NORMAN/ IOWA STATE DAILY El Centro is located in Martin Hall. This provides accessibility to Latinx students who stay in the residence halls for holidays as well as week days.
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the space moving forward. Students, faculty, and staff who attended discussed things such as visibility and a larger space as things they would like to see develop from El Centro in the future. Vanessa Espinoza, a graduate student in the student affairs program, spoke about the importance of representation through a space like El Centro. “It’s important to be represented, and find that space where you are able to be with your community,” Espinoza said. Espinoza said that a potential change she would like to see made to El Centro in the future would be a name change. “I would like for El Centro to be named something else, something that honors our community,” Espinoza said “Perhaps somebody that has contributed a lot that is from the Latinx community, for example Cesar Chavez or Dolores Huerta, there are definitely a lot of Latinx folks that have changed the United States and done some pretty amazing things, and I would like them to be honored in our center.” Senior in animal science, Patricia Mendez, believes that El Centro has a strong starting point, but wants to see a larger space for El Centro going forward, allowing larger number of students to gather in the space. Elizabeth Martinez-Podolsky, a multicultural liaison officer in the college of agriculture and life sciences, spoke about her hopes for El Centro moving forward. “Our student’s need a place to know that it’s theirs to go study, congregate, or eat together or just connect with a peer. It needs to feel accessible,” Martinez-Podolsky said. The issue of accessibility of El Centro due to its location in Martin Hall was also discussed
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by Mendez, due to the fact that residence halls have limited accessibility. Mendez also spoke about possible benefits that can come from moving El Centro moving out of a residence hall going forward. “[Moving] would allow for students to even gather on weekdays and holidays because I know a lot of our international students that are Latino, they can’t really go back home during breaks so it’s another space where they can just get together and do something during the holidays so they’re not alone,” Mendez said. Hugo Meza, a senior in industrial engineering, wants to see more visibility and promotion of El Centro on campus, so more students can become aware of the space and start utilizing it. Araceli Lopez, a junior in political science, spoke about inclusivity of all Latinx cultures with El Centro and how she wants Latinx culture to be represented in El Centro going forward. “I don’t want [people] to think just Mexico or just Mexicans. I want them to think about all Latinos, and to make sure that when you advertise it’s not specific to just Mexican culture and Mexican traditions, but all our Latin communities and brothers and sisters and all their traditions and cultures,” Lopez said. Maricela Real, a junior in kinesiology and health and co-president of Latinx Student Initiatives (LSI), wants the space’s purpose to be made clear to students so they can know what resources are available to them. Options for the kinds of services that El Centro could offer going forward that Real spoke about included a meeting place for student organization, a study space for Latinx students, and a social space for Latinx students. Lopez also spoke about El Centro’s revival and new beginning and what it meant for her. “It’s a start, and it’s a really hopeful start,” Lopez said.
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Gomez said. “The competition is open to anybody and everybody, including faculty,” Gomez said. All prizes and free gifts aside, Gomez said that Iowa State’s participation in the competition is significant because it can inspire more people to start thinking and acting sustainably. “I don’t think [recycling] is at the point yet where it is a national movement...But the fact that we are having that conversation and these competitions means we are getting the ball rolling,” Gomez said. Other sustainability advocates on campus agree the competition is a good way to inspire sustainable action and thought within the community, and they look forward to the competition’s results at the end of the month. One recycling advocate in particular also thinks that her residence hall is doing well with the challenge. “It is super exciting. [Barton Hall has] had a bin implemented for about a week and the bottom is covered. Which is pretty cool considering it’s a lot of caps and tubes,” said Aviana Pingel, a sophomore in global resource systems and environmental science.
Pinger is co-president of The GreenHouse Group, a student organization that promotes recycling in the residency halls. She is hopeful that any recycling that starts during the competition will carry on around on campus even after the competition is over. “[The competition] is raising awareness about things that can be recycled and things you can do to be more sustainable...I think a major [benefit] of this is that it’s not limited to this competition. You can always send things back to [TerraCycle],” Pingel said. Some items outside of the competition that can be recycled through TerraCycle include bath and shower accessories, cleaning supplies and accessories, coffee capsules, dental hygiene products, drink pouches, ear plugs and granola bar wrappers, according to the TerraCycle website. These items can be sent in by individuals for free to TerraCycle by creating an account on their website and printing off a label, according to their website.