THURSDAY
May 19, 2011 | Volume 206 | Number 151 | 40 cents | An independent student newspaper serving Iowa State since 1890. iowastatedaily.com
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Curtains for the Fourth Amendment? OPINION.p6 >>
May 21: Judgment day?
NEWS.p4 >>
Captain Jack Jack is back See 247.p10 >>
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Farmers Drive Iowa NASCAR PRO SERIES EAST/ WEST May 19th 3-7pm Car and driver, #85 Tanner Whitten will be here signing autographs
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Daily Snapshot
Celebrity News Notes and events.
Lisa Edelstein exiting ‘House’ Fans of the relationship between Dr. Gregory House and Lisa Cuddy on Fox’s popular series “House” will be in mourning. Lisa Edelstein, a.k.a. “Cuddy,” announced on Tuesday that she will not be returning for the show’s eighth season. The actress released a statement (confirmed by the show’s producer Greg Yaitanes) to Deadline saying, “After much consideration, I am moving onward with a combination of disappointment at leaving behind a character I have loved playing for seven years and excitement of the new opportunities in acting and producing that lie ahead.”
Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm before 1 p.m. Showers and thunderstorms likely, mainly before 1pm.
This day in 1892: weeks of wet weather took the Floyd funt! Several River in Sioux City to bank full, then heavy rain on c fa May 17th into the early morning of the 18th led to one of the worst flash floods in Sioux City history.
Calendar
Johnny Depp and Queen Elizabeth are cousins?
Find out what’s going on, and share your event with the rest of campus on our website, at iowastatedaily.com.
THURSDAY
MILITARY: Smoke comes to Ames Donita Eickhoh, program assistant at the National Veterinary Services Laboratory, feeds Smoke the donkey an apple while he visits Tuesday at the National Veterinary Services Laboratories in eat Ames. Smoke was adopted by the U.S. Marines. Photo: Kendra Plathe/Iowa State Daily
TV Schedule Get the rest online, at iowastatedaily.com/tv
Morgenstern Piano Trio When: 7:30 p.m. What: German-based trio will perform. Where: Tye Recital Hall, Music Hall
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
Dance Social When: 7:30 p.m. What: Free dance social hosted by ISU Ballroom Dance Club. Where: Gallery Room, Memorial Union
Plant sale When: 8 a.m.-12 p.m. What: Ames Garden Club will hold a fundraiser selling plants. Where: Reiman Gardens
Correction In the caption on the cover of Tuesday’s Daily, Monty Brown was incorrectly identified as Monty Smith. The Daily regrets the error.
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
American Idol 7 p.m. FOX Wipeout 7 p.m. ABC The Real World: Las Vagas 7 p.m. MTV Repo Games 7 p.m. Spike Swamp People 7 p.m. History NCAA Classics: Wisconsin vs. Ohio State 7 p.m. ESPNClassic The Matrix 7 p.m. AMC
Shark Tank 7 p.m. ABC Kitchen Nightmares 7 p.m. FOX Flashpoint 7 p.m. CBS Supernatural 7p.m. KCWI Friday Night Lights 7 p.m. NBC Major League Baseball: Cardinals vs. Royals 7 p.m. FSMW American Pickers 7 p.m. History
Meet the Parents 7 p.m. KFPX Spiderman 3 7 p.m. ABC Confessions of a Shopaholic 6 p.m. TBS Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest 4:30 p.m. USA Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End 7:30 p.m. USA Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire 6:30 p.m. ABC Family
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Johnny Depp might be upset about being left off the royal wedding guest list now that it’s been revealed that he and Queen Elizabeth are reportedly distant cousins. According to the Daily Mail, the “Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides” star and the British monarch both share the same bloodline. One branch of Depp’s ancestors are descended from 15th-century aristocrats Sir William Gascoigne and his wife Margaret Percy. Margaret was the daughter of the third Earl of Northumberland. Queen Elizabeth is Edward III’s great-granddaughter, 17 times removed, and Depp’s cousin, 20 times removed.
Sandra Bullock’s adopted school reaches milestone A New Orleans high school that Sandra Bullock “adopted” back in 2007 is celebrating a major achievement. In a history-making moment on Tuesday, every student in Warren Easton Charter High School’s 220-member senior class graduated, according to a statement from Bullock’s rep. Even better than the 100 percent graduation rate? Those seniors have been offered a total of $4,625,100 in scholarship money from 15 different schools.
Summer sessions:
— CNN wire staff
Wednesday of the month during the academic school year in Hamilton Hall.
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Editor: K. Klingseis, J. Ferrell | news iowastatedaily.com | 515.294.2003
Thursday, May 19, 2011 | Iowa State Daily | NEWS | 3
Unemployment
Back to the nest? Experts skeptical Many college graduates have found themselves back in a familiar place: their parents’ house. A recent report by the consulting and research firm Twentysomething Inc. found that 85 percent of students who graduated in 2010 have moved back in with their parents. While the report has caught the attention of both Time Magazine and The Huffington Post, Iowa State professor of economics Peter Orazem is skeptical of its findings. “I think it’s bogus,” Orazem said “In this day and age, I think there are a lot of facts that are just thrown out there.” David Swenson, associate scientist in the Department of Economics, also questioned
the report’s validity. “I don’t know if the 85 percent figure that the survey offers is accurate,” Swenson said. “People have a number and they’re running with it.” Orazem and Swenson said that college graduates moving back in with their parents was nothing new. Swenson further said that if the number of students moving back in with their parents did increase, the high rate of unemployment is likely to blame. According to Bureau of Labor Statistics, the current U.S. unemployment rate is at nine percent. Swenson said that this percentage is about double what it should normally be. He also explained that the unemployment rate differs for people
UNEMPLOYMENT.p4 >>
15 %
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12 % Unemployment Rate
By Katherine.Klingseis iowastatedaily.com
2010 2011?
9% 1980
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Decades
College graduates are struggling to gain employment after leaving school, resulting in several grads moving in with their partents. Graphic: Dani Harris/Iowa State Daily
Corrections
Students design landscapes for inmates By Katie.Miner iowastatedaily.com People don’t typically associate therapeutic gardens and amphitheaters with women’s correctional facilities. But landscape architecture students recently incorporated features like these into designs for such facilities. In a seminar led by landscape architecture lecturer Julie Stevens, seminar students proposed new landscapes designs for the
Iowa Correctional Institution for Women in Mitchellville. Late last fall, the Iowa Department of Corrections approached the President’s Office at Iowa State about collaborating on for new designs for the institution. When the idea was presented to the landscape architecture department, a seminar class to be taught by Stevens was developed for the spring. She chose to call it “A Landscape Within: Plants and Prison.” “The lead architects of STV Architects in
DAILY STATE
MITCHELLVILLE.p4 >>
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know about landscape perception and environmental psychology to a prison setting was the real trick to this project,” said Stevens. The project involved several important steps that helped students create their designs for the facility. “Each of the nine students started by reading first-hand accounts of women’s lives in prison, so women who had written autobiographies
ORIENTATION 2011 GUIDE
ADVENTU OUR RE EY OS O
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New York City came in for a meeting, and they were really sort of looking for a planting plan, which is a common misperception about what we do in landscape architecture. That’s a really important piece of this: a lot of people were [mis] educated on what kinds of things landscape architects do. We do a lot more than just planning where trees and shrubs go. This project presented a lot of opportunities to deal with more of the psychological issues that are involved with the landscape . . . Applying some of the principles we
4 | NEWS | Iowa State Daily | Thursday, May 19, 2011
Editor: K. Klingseis, J. Ferrell | news iowastatedaily.com | 515.294.2003
Armageddon
Is this the end? Clergymen doubt it By Ben.Theobald iowastatedaily.com Californian-based Christian broadcaster Harold Camping has predicted that the end of the world is nigh. Camping and his followers believe that a period of divine judgment called the Rapture will commence on May 21. They say that by October 21 of this year, the Earth will have been completely destroyed. Before the earth is destroyed, they expect Jesus Christ to make a physical return to Earth and gather his Christian followers so he can take them to heaven. “Some people have an idea that all Christians will be taken away to heaven in an instant and various other things will happen on Earth,” said Alex Tuckness, associate professor of political science and faculty advisor for Salt Company, a Christian student organization. There have been many predictions for the Rapture. Camping previously made a prediction that the Rapture would occur in 1994. “I don’t think it’s any more likely to happen on those
Father Jack, associate pastor, talks about the rapture day on Wednesday at St. Thomas Acquinas. Photo: Taylor McCalla/Iowa State Daily
dates than any other dates,” Tuckness said. “I stick to this idea of Jesus coming back. I don’t have a strong opinion on the details how it’s going to happen.” Whether the Rapture occurs or not, the speculation about it could affect beliefs. “If the Rapture does not happen, the believers will have a spectrum of reactions,” said
Hector Avalos, professor of philosophy and religious studies and adviser to the Atheist and Agnostic Society. “Some will be disappointed and label the promoters as false prophets. “Others will simply extend the date of the rapture into the future.” Avalos said, “If the Rapture does happen, then it certainly will affect beliefs of those left behind. But that is also like asking whether beliefs about Martians would be affected if Martians landed on the White House lawn.” The Rapture has been
interpreted in different ways by many groups. “I consider the concept of Rapture to be a particular understanding of some Christian groups,” said Father Jack McClure, associate pastor of Saint Thomas Aquinas Church. “I believe that they have based this on their interpretation of the Bible. Their interpretation of the Bible is not the same interpretation that the Roman Catholic Church uses.” The Catholic Church does believe that there will be a day that Jesus Christ will return to Earth.
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>>UNEMPLOYMENT.p3 with differemt amounts of education. “The unemployment rate is very high for people who don’t have a high school degree and then it’s a little bit lower for people who have some college and a little bit lower for people who have college degrees and much lower for people who have professional degrees,” Swenson said. “So, the probability of being unemployed is very, very much tied to your educational level.” Swenson said that although college graduates can secure jobs, the jobs they take may not be the ones they truly desire. “First of all, many [college graduates] will find work, but they’re not going to find work necessarily where they want to or exactly what they want to, at first,” Swenson said. “Many also may not be using their degrees.” College graduates must also battle against recently laid-off, experienced workers, Swenson said. He explained that many of these laid-off
>>MITCHELLVILLE.p3 about their time behind bars — whether they’re still behind bars or not — and they started to understand what it’s like to be a woman who’s imprisoned,” Stevens said. This step was helpful to many of the students, including third-year landscape architecture student Alicia Adams. “Before we met with staff, we each read a book written by an offender that gave background knowledge and helped people see the situation better,” said Adams. After students read the first-hand accounts of female offenders to better understand who they would be designing for, Stevens had the students focus on the psychological aspect of landscape design. “They each chose an area of research, so each of them has a different focus area, and they sort of became subject matter experts. One student was studying abnormal and environmental psychology, one student studied surveillance — what it’s like to be watched all the time . . . so everyone had
workers accept lower paying, less prestigious jobs despite their experience. “College graduates would normally take entry-level jobs, but we have a big group of people that have been unemployed for a long time,” Swenson said. “They’re willing to take entrylevel pay to get back into the workforce.” Orazem explained that young people are also more likely to quit their jobs in order to try to secure different jobs. “You’re more likely to, in essence, job shop,” Orazem said. “The young have always had higher unemployment than older people.” Until the economy improves, many recent college graduates may have to find financial solace in their parents’ house. Orazem explained that there is a light at the end of the tunnel. “The thing with this recession is that it was slow and steady decline,” Orazem said. “Now it’s a slow-and-steady move out of the recession, but at least things are moving in the right direction.” a different focus,” Stevens said. Once the students had finished researching their chosen areas, they began applying the ideas they had learned to create design concepts as a team. “I put them into teams of three based on their expertise, and then they collaborated on a design piece — the whole time sort of advocating from what they understood about the subject they studied,” Stevens said. “A lot of what we did was based around our opportunities to go to the prison. So we visited the site and toured. We held a design charrette — a condensed, design idea-generating workshop . . . Architects and engineers that are working at the site and staff from the prison all join[ed] students at the prison for about half a day.”
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Thursday, May 19, 2011 | Iowa State Daily | NEWS | 5
Presidential candidates Newt Gingrich will be speaking 2 p.m. Thursday at Olde Main Brewery. In the next few months, many presidential candidates will be sweeping through Ames. Here is a list of a few notable Republicans who are in the presidential race and two that are not.
Who is in:
Who is out:
Ron Paul announced his nomination for presidency May 13. According to his website, Paul believes in low taxes, free markets and “a return to sound monetary policies.” Paul is also a supporter anti-abortion, as well as being against the deployment of more troops to the Iraq. According to his website, Paul believes America’s military should be “securing our borders.”
Ending months of speculation, business mogul Donald Trump announced Monday that he would not be running for president in 2012. This announcement came after Trump encouraged speculation about President Obama’s American citizenshp. Due to this speculation, Obama allowed Hawaiian officials to release his long-form birth certificate to the public.
Ron Paul
Newt Gingrich meets with crowd members during his visit Monday in Des Moines. Gingrich will be in Ames on Thursday afternoon speaking at Olde Main Brewery. Photo: Jordan Maurice/Iowa State Daily
POLITICS: Gingrich to visit Ames After announcing his candidancy on May 11, 2011, Newt Gingrich started off his presidential campaign with a 17-city tour across Iowa, including a stop in Ames. From 1995 to 1999, Gingrich was the speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives. According to his website, Gingrich has a pro-
growth strategy to “balance the budget, pay down the debt, and create jobs.” His website also states that Gingrich plans to “protect life and religious liberty.”
Daily staff
Donald Trump
Paul
Trump
Mike Huckabee
Mitt Romney On April 11, 2011, Mitt Romney announced the formation of his exploratory presidential committee via video. Romney was a leading candidate early in the 2008 presidential race. His 2012 presidential bid is off to another strong start. In his video, Romney unveiled his presidential slogan, “Believe in America.”
Romney
After having a strong campaign in the 2008 presidential race, Mike Huckabee was believed to be a frontrunner in the 2012 presidential race. However, Huckabee announced Sunday that he would not run for president. On the final segment of his Fox News show, Huckabee said, “All the factors say go, but my heart says no.”
Huckabee
Community planning
Grad program gets high national ranking By Ted.Sics iowastatedaily.com A clearinghouse for urban planning information has ranked Iowa State’s community and regional planning graduate program the 13th-best in the nation. The Community and Regional Planning department is part of the College of Design. Professor Douglas Johnston, chairman of the department, says the program “trains students to engage in long-term planning and forecasting activities for communities in the state and region.”
He said students also receive education on “land use and economicdevelopment planning.” Johnston said alumni enjoy a high employment rate. By the time they receive their degrees they are prepared for a wide spectrum of careers. “Most . . . work for cities and states, Johnson said. “Others [work] for banks and other industries that engage in provision services like telecommunications.” Planetizen does not fully disclose the criteria by which they judge graduate programs. However, Johnston said he suspects the factors consid-
13
Iowa State’s rank among 83 programs ered by the organization include the cost of tuition, enrollment numbers and student-faculty ratios: The program at Iowa State stands out among others, because over half
the students receive financial support from the school. After their graduation, the department helps students find positions in both teaching and research. Since ISU does not offer a Ph.D. in Community and Regional Planning, most students do not go on to become academics. Rather than focusing only on research, they do coursework that replicates conditions that they will encounter in their careers. Students may “engage with different communities through studio coursework” and consult on dif-
ferent projects to gain real-world experience. “[A] number of our students have internships [in Ames],” Johnston said. “In addition, we are engaged in statewide planning initiatives and regional initiatives as well.” The department also conducts research on behalf of a number of different entities, including state and federal governments. Students may seek dual-degrees, pairing community and regional planning with architecture, public administration, agriculture or transportation.
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Thursday, May 19, 2011 Editor: Michael Belding opinion iowastatedaily.com Iowa State Daily
Editorial
Don’t make religion taboo in the classroom John Orme, an English and history teacher in Canada, is under review because he asked his students to analyze the lyrics to the song “Dear God” by the British band XTC. Kelsey Griffiths, a 12-year-old student, construed the song to mean that God didn’t exist and the Bible was false. Orme asked Kelsey to further the reasoning behind this conclusion. She wrote, “But there’s no real reason why you believe in God. It’s just a faith thing. I couldn’t think of anything about why. I just do.” Rather than turn in her assignment, she became frustrated and brought it home to show her mother, Amanda. Her mother, a Roman Catholic, proceeded
Editorial Board
Jake Lovett, editor in chief Gabriel Stoffa, graduate student Michael Belding, opinion editor RJ Green, columnist
to go to the principal to try to ensure religion would stay out of school. “This would be appropriate for a university tutorial, not grade six,” Amanda Griffith’s said. The knee-jerk taking of offense by parents is nothing new to U.S. schools. But it’s still unnecessary. Future parents, ask yourself if you would allow someone to teach your child anything that involves saying the word “God.” Ask yourself if you see the differences between education and preaching. Religion is a part of history that cannot be ignored. Forcing a particular belief on youths in school is bad, but letting students examine a philosophical question is helpful. If nothing else, it will prepare them for
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the kind of critical thinking they’ll have to do later in their academic careers. Students today are being shielded from certain topics because some people believe the topics to be over their heads — unsuitable for impressionable minds. Current and future parents, ask yourself if you would have benefited from the kind of education Orme tried to give his students. Is the answer yes? If so, you should give teachers like him more lattitude in the classroom and less grief.
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.
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Civil liberties
What ever happened to the Fourth Amendment?
A
llow me to share an excerpt from the majority opinion in the case of Barnes v. State of Indiana: “... a right to resist an unlawful police entry into a home is against public policy and is incompatible with modern Fourth Amendment jurisprudence.” That May 12 ruling by the Indiana Supreme Court should be reverberating in your mind, as it portends a spree of idiocy by those in high places. What this ruling means is that police can enter your home without a search warrant and arrest you. In the incident that provoked this legal battle, police responded to a call about a domestic dispute. Police arrived at Barnes’ home and asked if they could enter. Barnes said no, but the police entered anyway. Once they were inside, Barnes shoved an officer against the wall. He was then tased
By Gabriel.Stoffa iowastatedaily.com
and arrested, according to police reports. Granted, you shouldn’t go around shoving police officers. But by the same token, they shouldn’t enter your home without permission. In the U.S. Supreme Court ruling Miller v. United States, it was held that someone “could not lawfully be arrested in his home by officers breaking in without first giving him notice of their authority and purpose.” Barnes wasn’t given that notice. Some have argued that, in a domestic dispute, it’s an officer’s perogative to enter a home. This is an interesting argument, but one that has little bearing on Barnes’ situation because no domestic violence charges were filed. In light of this fact, the case should have been tossed. The decision emboldened Newton County Sheriff Don Hartman Sr. to say say that random
house searches are now possible. He added that he felt people would accept random searches if it means capturing a criminal. This is simply ridiculous. No matter what policymakers say, giving arrest-hungry police the freedom to invade your privacy is lunacy. Imagine police sauntering in and searching your home because there was a carjacking prevented in the area, and the jacker was seen running though your neighborhood. Personally, I am not OK with that idea. Privacy? You don’t need no stinkin’ privacy. The government knows what is best for you. You have nothing to fear if you are following the law. Of course no one will judge you for things they find. Your government should make the decision for you. Now close your eyes and just let
COURT.p7 >>
Illustration: Rebekka Brown/Iowa State Daily
Editor: Michael Belding | opinion iowastatedaily.com
Thursday, May 19, 2011 | Iowa State Daily | OPINION | 7
Summer
Be smart — don’t let summer derail your routine
By Claire.Vriezen iowastatedaily.com
D
uring the school year, I am a creature of habit and routine. I wake up at seven in the morning, go to class by eight, and spend the next several hours doing the daily dance of classes, homework, and extracurriculars. With everything planned out at a specific time during the week, I tend to be a decently productive student. I do well in classes. Come summer, however, things tend to change. Good habits — such as waking up in a timely fashion and having a structured day — are hard to form and easy to break. After a semester of training myself to wake up at seven (and finding that once I had a bit of practice at training my body, it wasn’t all that bad), it’s only taken me a few days to break that habit. I’ll probably keep sleeping late until I start taking a few summer classes that I have to get up early for. As much as students love a break from school, without some semblance of structure, they’ll find their summer sllipping by before they know it. It may have been reasonable to let this happen in those carefree high school days. College students, however, can’t afford to be so sanguine. We are called to spend our summers working, taking more classes, interning, or traveling. Soon, a day will come when we have completed our higher education. Few of the jobs we’ll be able to get after that come with the
Leah Rodewald, sophomore in pre-diet and exercise, plays with Gabrielle, a black labrador and german shepherd mix, Tuesday, Nov. 9, 2010 on Central Campus. File photo: Karuna Ang/Iowa State Daily
promise of an annual three-month break. I’m not saying summer must be all work and no play — just that college students have to budget their time carefully. Though I’ve only been on break for a week, I’ve already let my morning
>>COURT.p6 it happen. Frightening imagery, I know, but that is the path that the Barnes decision could take us down. Thankfully, this is probably not an idea that will be applied nationwide. But given the recent rash of idiotic rulings and the inability of Americans to realize when they need to stand up and give a damn, I still fear for the future. I have read George Orwell’s “1984.” It is a beautiful warning against allowing the government too much control over our lives. With the direction of many of the moronic advocacy groups throwing money around to oust judges, and the increasing support for a “political party” whose leaders don’t even know what is written in the Constitution, I see Big Brother crossing over from the realm of fiction to the real world. It seems life is attempting to imitate art — a dangerous undertaking much of the time — and due to that, citizens will
routine falter. While I don’t expect to maintain a strict wake-up time, I have never been a fan of sleeping at all hours. After you’ve made it through the grueling gauntlet of classes and finals, it’s tempting
to give yourself a little time off to relax. But taking too much can breed bad habits. While de-stressing is important, it can completely derail the lovely routine you established during the semester. Getting too lax can make it hard to accomplish those more “adult” summer activities, such as working, taking a few extra credits or interning. Those who yield to the temptation of summer backsliding may be in for a rude awakening when classes start again. It’s tempting to do all you can to forget what a normal school day is like in college, but this will only result is selling yourself short in the present and the future. Those who lack a daily routine — be it based on your learning, working or simply reading a book every week — can end up wasting their summer. So even if you aren’t set up to do anything in particular this summer, do all you can to keep yourself busy. Read. Exercise. Take up a hobby. Even if you don’t have an internship or a summer class, do yourself a favor and try and wake up at the same time each day. Don’t stay up until all hours. It doesn’t hurt set a schedule and follow it, either. Good time management habits shouldn’t be broken just because school is out.
Don’t give a FLYING BUFFALO where you eat?
Opposing unconstitutional entry into your home is now unlawful. Photo courtesy: Wikimedia Commons
suffer. This ruling in Indiana isn’t the stone that starts an avalanche, but it is one of many recent breaches. Court rulings, elected officials trying to be kings, hatemongers attacking innocent folks because their misguided religion tells them to, or intolerable tossers trying to keep “traditional” values have set similar stones tumbling. These developments portend a landslide that could
cover this country, inciting the kind of civil unrest we haven’t seen for decades. It is a sad thing when you see a strong and shining beacon of hope crumbling. America is that crumbling beacon, and unless the citizens of this country begin to notice their surroundings, the end just might be nigh.
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Top 5 Playlist: Rapture Day Tunes
1. “It’s the End of the World As We Know It” by R.E.M. 2. “4 Minutes to Save the World” by Madonna 3. “In Case of Rapture” by As Tall As Lions 4. “Time is Running Out” by Muse 5. “The Final Countdown” by Europe
Page 10 Iowa State Daily May 19, 2011 Editor: Julie Ferrell ames247 iowastatedaily.com
Presented by Ames247.com
Movies
Treasured ‘Pirates’ premieres
ng nd i n e s e k Op ee ning W ar E
Late Thursday Midnight Show Times Ames Movies 12 12:01, 12:02, 12:03 a.m. Des Moines Carmike Southridge 12 12:01, 12:02, 12:03, 12:04, 12:05, 12:06, 12:07 a.m. Des Moines Carmike Cobblestone 9 12:01, 12:02, 12:04, 12:05, 12:06, 12:07 a.m. Des Moines Carmike Wynnsong 16 12:01, 12:02, 12:03, 12:04, 12:05, 12:06, 12:07, 12:10 a.m. Jordan Creek Century 20 12:01, 12:10 a.m.
Curse of the Black Pearl $46,630,690
At World’s End $114,732,820
Dead Man’s Chest $135,634,554
On Stranger Tides (expected) $102,300,000 Statistics courtesy of Box Office Mojo
By Scott.MacDonald Ames247 Writer Four years have passed since the release of “At World’s End,” the third installment of the “Pirates of the Caribbean” series. Being by far the most expensive film ever produced and raking in almost a billion dollars, the movie also seemed to be the end of the wildly successful trilogy. However, within a year, the production of a fourth film was announced. Tonight, “Pirates of the
Carribean 4: On Stranger Tides” will hit theaters. Despite having had a lower budget and having generated less buzz than its predecessors, the movie — adapted from the 1987 Tim Powers novel of the same title — is still expected to be a hit. It will be shown on a record 402 IMAX screens worldwide, according to the Hollywood Reporter. Cinemark Movies 12 in Ames will hold three midnight showings tonight, at 12:01 a.m., 12:02 a.m. and 12:03 a.m., respectively. The theater will continue to show the film on three screens regularly in the following weeks, in both 3-D and 2-D. Movies 12 has traditionally enjoyed a strong rate of participation for midnight showings. The recent releases of “At
World’s End,” the ”Twilight” series, and the sixth and seventh Harry Potter films all drew tremendous audiences, with fans lining up for hours beforehand dressed as their favorite characters. The theater hopes the “On Stranger Tides” will attract a similar turnout. But the film might be headed for rough waters with diehard Pirates fans. Two of the main characters from the previous films, Will and Elizabeth, will not be returning, as their actors, Orlando Bloom and Keira Knightley, chose not to reprise their roles in the previous film. The only returning principal characters, according to IMDb, are Johnny Depp as Captain Jack
Sparrow and Geoffrey Rush as Captain Hector Barbarossa. The movie introduces historical characters, such as the infamous pirate Blackbeard and European monarchs from the time in which the film is set, as well as a new love interest for Sparrow, played by Penelope Cruz. If Disney can effectively incorporate these new characters into the tried-and-true “Pirates” formula, it will surely please the hordes of young fans at Movies 12 tonight, waiting to get their fix of action on the high seas.
Editor: Julie Ferrell | ames247 iowastatedaily.com
Theater
Thursday, May 19, 2011 | Iowa State Daily | 247 | 11
Music
Stephens releases German-award winners to play Tye 2011 schedule By Cristobal.Matibag Ames247 Writer
By Julia.Ferrell Ames247 Writer On Tuesday, Iowa State Center announced this season’s line-up for the C. Y. Stephens performing arts series. The list of shows includes musicals and plays like Disney’s “Beauty and the Beast” and “Doubt”, as well as the St. Petersburg State Orchestra and the Dayton Contemporary Dance troupe. On Saturday, October 29, the stage version of the Disney musical “Beauty and the Beast” will be performed. The show tells the classic Disney story of Belle, a young woman trapped in an enchanted castle inhabited by a beast. The musical includes all the songs from the movie, as well as seven additional songs written for the stage. The show ran on Broadway from 1994 to 2007, making it Broadway’s eighth-longest running production. The Dayton Contemporary Dance Company will perform on Tuesday, November 15. The troupe performs a mixture of ballet, modern dance, hip-hop and jazz. On Friday, February 17, “Doubt: A Parable” will perform. The story focuses on a nun who suspects the father at her school is taking advantage of the children. The play by John Patrick Shanley was made into a movie in 2008, starring Meryl Streep, Amy Adams and Phillip Seymour Hoffman. The St. Petersburg State Orchestra will perform a concert on Saturday, March 3. This is the orchestra’s first trans-continental tour of the United States. Pianist Alexandre Pirojenko will accompany the orchestra for Chopin’s “Piano Concerto No. 2 in F minor.”
Stephens Schedule The Hot Club of San Francisco Friday, September 16 at 7 and 9:30 p.m. The Miles Davis Experience: 1949-1959 Sunday, October 9 at 7:30 p.m. “Blast!” Friday, October 14 at 7:30 p.m. Irish Chamber Orchestra Wednesday, October 26 at 7:30 p.m. Disney’s “Beauty and the Beast” Saturday, October 29 at 3 and 8 p.m. “Macbeth” Tuesday, November 1 at 7:30 p.m. Dayton Contemporary Dance Company Tuesday, November 15 at 7:30 p.m. Lorie Line and Her Fab Five Sunday, November 20 at 3 p.m. Mercy Me’s Christmas Show Thursday, December 1 at 7:30 p.m. Osmond Family Holiday Celebration Thursday, December 15 at 7:30 p.m. Monty Python’s “Spamalot” Saturday, January 14 at 7:30 p.m. “Young Frankenstein” Sunday, January 22 at 7:30 p.m. Moscow Festival Ballet’s “Sleeping Beauty” Sunday, January 29 at 3 p.m. “Doubt” Friday, February 17 at 7:30 p.m. “My Fair Lady” Thursday, February 23 at 7 p.m. The Magic School Bus: Climate Challenge Friday, March 2 at 7 p.m. St. Petersburg State Orchestra Saturday, March 3 at 7:30 p.m. Danu Monday, March 5 at 7:30 p.m. The Fab Four: The Ultimate Tribute Friday, March 23 at 7:30 p.m. Chanticleer Tuesday, May 1 at 7:30 p.m.
The Morgenstern Piano Trio will deliver the final performance of the Ames Town & Gown Chamber Music Association’s 2010-2011 concert series Thursday. The trio is composed of pianist Catherine Klipfel, violinist Stephen Hempel and cellist Emanuel Wehse. The group will perform three compositions: the Haydn “Trio in E-flat Major”, the Smetana “Trio in G Minor” and Leonard Bernstein’s “Piano Trio.” The trio’s members have won increasing acclaim since they first began playing together in 2005.Their highest accolade came in 2009, when they won the Kalichstein-Laredo-Robinson International Trio Award. All trios that win the award receive
Pianist Catherine Klipfel and violinist Stephen Hempel and cellist Emanuel Wehse form the Morgenstern Piano Trio. Photo courtesy of Paula Forrest
TOWN AND GOWN.p16 >>
Cyclone martial arts
Program
Summer Judo: 5pm
kedge Zawack zawack@iastate.edu
hapkido: 6pm Celene Oglesbee oglesbee@iastate.edu
start
Monday May 16th @202 E. Forker Wednesday
taekwondo: 7pm Laura funk funkster@iastate.edu
Every:
instructor
Thursday
master yongchin pak for more information 294.5966 | ycpak@iastate.edu
Beginners welcome
Thursday, May 19, 2011 | Iowa State Daily | CLASSIFIEDS | 12
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RELICS from 100 Iowa print shops at auction May 28, 10am, Deep River, Iowa. Old tools, presses, type cases, wood type, saws, motors. Dunham (641) 569-3597. (INCN) Social Security Disability Claim Denied? We specialize in appeals and hearings. FREE CONSULTATION. Benefit Team Services, Inc. Toll Free 1-888-836-4052. (INCN)
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Help Wanted Patriot Hospitality is looking for a Marketing Associate for its 3 hotels in Ames. Accountable for driving the marketing, PR and sales efforts directed by mgmt. Please email resumes to hr@patriothospitality.com or visit 2600 E 13th St, Ames, IA to fill out an application. PROFITABLE IOWA BUSINESSES For Sale By Owners. Many types, sizes, locations, terms, $25K$15M. Other states available. Affiliated Business Consultants: 1-800-617-4204; www.BizSale.com (INCN) WANTED! Host Families: Share cultures, develop extended family. NO fees. Area Representatives: Mentor foreign teens, aide in placements, earn extra income. Pat: 1-800-3827439; pblundy@iserv.NET (INCN)
Thursday, May 19, 2011 | Iowa State Daily | CLASSIFIEDS | 13
Adoption ADOPTION: Loving couple wishes to adopt. Stay at home Mom, devoted Dad. Financial security and happy home. Fees paid. Please call 1-888-617-4514 or email: adoptbaby2011@ yahoo.com. (INCN)
25TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION SALE
SHOWCASE OF HOMES May 19-20-21 Above photo is New Majestic Manor on display!
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How to Avoid 7 Costly Mistakes if Hurt at Work Each year thousands of Iowans are hurt at work, but many fail to learn the Injured Workers Bill of Rights which includes: 1. Payment of Mileage at $.50 per mile 2. Money for Permanent Disability 3. 2nd Medical Opinion in Admitted Claims. A New Book reveals the other rights, 5 Things to Know Before Signing Forms or Hiring an Attorney and much more. While the book sells for $19.99 it is being offered at no cost because since 1997 Iowa Work Injury Attorney Corey Walker has seen the consequences of client’s costly mistakes. If you or a loved one have been hurt at work and do not have an attorney claim your copy (while supplies last) Call Now (800)-707-2552, ext. 311 (24 Hour Recording) or go to www.IowaWorkInjury.com.
Bunk beds, custom made, all wood, lifetime guarantee. Made by local craftsman 1 bed at a time. 1-800-BUNKBED. www.1800bunkbed.com SAWMILLS - Band/Chainsaw - SPRING SALE - Cut lumber any dimension, anytime. MAKE MONEY and SAVE MONEY In stock ready to ship. Starting at $995.00. www.NorwoodSawmills.com/300N 1-800-5781363Ext.300N (INCN) Small plastics company for sale. Operate full or parttime. Move to your area. 563.872.4671.
For Rent 315 Hayward Ave. 4 bed 1 bath, washer/dryer, utilities paid by tenants, $1450/mo
3 Bedroom Apts 3BR near Jack Trice. Heat, wather, cable internet included. $900. 232.4765 or 460.6660.
For Rent
2 or 3 BR $655-690 •FREE
Cable/HSI •Pets Welcome Available Now or August 515-268-5485
IN CAMPUSTOWN opening in August, 3 bedroom apt at 2519 Chamberlain. Call or text (712) 249-2613
Rooms for Rent Available Aug. Private rooms. Shared kitchens & baths. Across from Howe Hall. Includes utilities and internet. $325$430/mo.515.292.7609 www.cyclonerent.com
• Provide daily tactical support for Production Partners providing management input and physical assistance in all tasks for the care, handling and transportation of growing swine. • Maintain accurate records, monitor health/administer treatments, oversee sorting, and monitor environmental & protocol compliance.
Qualifications:
• AAS degree with at least 1 year school or work related swine exp. • Ability to work in a barn with exposure to dust, noise and odors.
1BR with most utilities included. On CyRide. Www.rentshriver.com 232.7465.
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Campustown Living Real Estate Service Group
Westward FREE Cable/Internet On-site Laundry Near West HyVee $50000/mo + Electric & Gas
Next to campus. Includes utilities. $210/mo. 292-1842.
Houses for Rent August 1st, 3BR house near campus on Story St. $720/month. 292-1842
Sublease Room available for summer sublease, $240/mo! Near east Hy-Vee, with blue CyRide outside. Large private room in 4bd/2bath apt. Free assigned parking, washer/drier, dishwasher, oven, fridge, and more. Call 641-430-8468 or e-mail kennedy@iastate.edu
For Rent
Lincoln Park Spacious 1 Bedroom Near West HyVee FREE Cable/Internet $50000/mo + Electric
Stop in to find out about our new properties
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268.5485 or 290.8462
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Email: info@resgi.com
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w 515 .fp m 292 of -5 am 0 es 20 .c om
1 Bedroom Apts
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of Campustown •Garage Available
w
The Maschhoffs, a leader in pork production, is seeking a full time Wean-to-Market Field Advisor to oversee the Central, Iowa region.
•Heart
w
PORK PRODUCTION FIELD ADVISOR
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Efficiencies Efficiency basement apt. next to campus. $340/mo 294.1842.
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EOE
2 Bedroom Apts 2BR in West Ames. Near Ontaio/N.Dakota, garages, pay only electric. $650 www.rentshriver.com 232.4765 or 460.6660.
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Games
Thursday, May 19, 2011 Iowa State Daily | Page 14
just sayin
what?
38 Page (through) 39 Pretentiously showy 41 Arafat of the PLO 42 Pledge 43 From the top 48 Cuthbert of “24” 49 Knitting project 51 Black flies, notably 52 Major artery 53 Deli pockets 54 Like May through August, in a way 55 Right __ 56 Caustic solution 60 Ahmadinejad’s land 62 “__ safe and warm if ...”: “California Dreamin’” lyric 63 Winter Palace resident 66 Old California fort 67 Charlemagne’s realm: Abbr.
Submit your just sayin’ to iowastatedaily.net/games
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Across 1 Frequently change positions 7 Jury member 11 Patty Hearst’s kidnappers: Abbr. 14 Frosted pastry 15 “The Raven” opener 16 Faddish ‘90s disc 17 1958 Robert Mitchum drama 19 GM had one in Nov. 2010 20 Low digits 21 Buddhist sect 22 Roofing support 24 __ au vin 26 Dorm room snack 28 Musical with the song “Midway Chase” 31 Like many eBay items 32 Disco, for one 33 Photographer Adams 36 Self-titled 1969 jazz album 40 ‘70s-’80s Haitian president, familiarly
44 Film lioness 45 Sports 46 Sup 47 Clothes line? 50 Prepare for online publication 52 Early spring shout 57 Beat the house 58 Offshore eyesore, to some 59 Email forwarder’s intro 61 Idiot 64 Certain artery: Abbr. 65 Bath fixtures, and a hint to the starts of 17-, 26-, 40- and 52-Across 68 Profs’ aides 69 __-kiri 70 Speedy Gonzales cry 71 Intractable beast 72 Ex-Yankee Pettitte 73 Empty __ Down 1 Rocker Joan
2 Cinco y tres 3 Chesapeake Bay delicacies 4 “MMMBop” band 5 Meteor tail? 6 Chief exec 7 Dirty fare 8 Ambient music pioneer 9 Hallmark.com offerings 10 Orangutan 11 Norwegian Elkhound, for one 12 “J to tha L-O!” artist 13 Ancient market 18 __ room 23 Brother of Raúl 25 Campus hangout 27 Beauts 28 Nixon confidant Rebozo 29 Sea damaged by Soviet irrigation projects 30 Letters below DEF 34 Jerk 35 Author LeShan 37 Prepare to ambush
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I wish my parent’s would cheer “ONE MORE YEAR” for me. I don’t want to graduate yet. ••• I may look ridiculous as I sit on my couch in my pajamas wearing my graduation cap but it really seems to help me push through these final moments of senioritis. ••• Warm weather, there appears to be correlation between girls in short shorts and guys with aviators. just sayin. ••• ... bye-bye ISU! ... 5 years and I’m out! ...I’ll be happy to have this last Just Sayin’ come up in the Daily! ... ;) ••• Student evaluations are our way of getting back at professors that have put them through hell all semester ••• .ladies, if you’re not going to hide your legs i’m not going to hide my staring ••• I’m ugly, and I’m proud ••• Things go LOCO when I FIESTA ••• Forever alone
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Thursday, May 19, 2011 Iowa State Daily | Page 15
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16 | 247 | Iowa State Daily | Thursday, May 19, 2011
Editor: Julie Ferrell | ames247 iowastatedaily.com
Arts and crafts
Classes made for summer By Vincent.Geerts iowastatedaily.com
The Workspace in the Memorial Union is a multimedia art studio open to all members of the community, students and non-students alike. In addition to open space hours for individuals to work on their own projects, the Workspace offers a great number and variety of classes during the summer. Classes in photography, fiber-crafts, jewelry and many more are available. Beginning June 14 at 7 p.m., Anastasia Whited will teach Black and White Photography, a class covering all aspects of photography, from camera use and exposure to darkroom usage for the beginner. Cost is $73 for ISU students and $83 to the public. Be sure to bring your own 35mm SLR camera to the first class. On June 28 and July 5 from 7 to 9 p.m., Sarah Dougherty will show students how to turn old t-shirts and scraps of fabric into new bracelets and handbags in her class Up-cycled Accessories. Students should bring in about five t-shirts to work with, and all other materials are provided. Cost is $18
>>TOWN AND GOWN.p11 a $30,000 endowment, consisting of the pooled contributions of twenty chamber music presenters in America. Participating presenters include Carnegie Hall and the La Jolla Chamber Music Society. They also have the honor of performing at all 20 of these venues within a two-year period. Paula Forrest, Town & Gown artistic director, is looking forward to the trio’s performance for several reasons. She said the trio format had an intrinsic appeal for fans of chamber music. “I think it’s just a very beautiful combination of instruments,” said Forrest. “The violin is the higher instrument, the cello is the lower instrument, and the piano just rounds it out with this very full
Brandon Huth, freshman in chemical engineering, and Meagan Dallas, junior in architecture, clean the dust off of their pottery before they begin the glazing process, February 17, 2009 at the Workspace in the Memorial Union. File photo: Logan Gaedke/Iowa State Daily
for ISU students and $28 for the public. For only a one-day commitment, learn to make chain maille jewelry on Saturday June 18 from 1 to 4 p.m. Gail Ferlazzo teaches students to make a necklace, bracelet, and earrings with a simple chain maille weave in the class Chain Maille: Red Shaggy Loops. Students may bring magnifying glasses to see details easier and aide in weaving. For the full class schedule, see their website. Class sizes are limited, so register early to ensure your
place in the class. You can register for a class in one of three ways: 1. Mail a registration form with payment to the Workspace. 2. Call 294.0970 and use a credit card or CyCash over the phone during open hours. 3. Stop by the Workspace and register with cash, check, credit card or CyCash. Summer Hours: Mondays - Thursdays: 3 10 p.m. Saturdays & Sundays: 1 - 4 p.m.
Town & Gown Chamber Concert When: Thursday at 7:30 p.m. What: Town & Gown presents the Morgenstern Piano Trio. The cost is free sound.” She also looked forward to hearing compositions written centuries apart performed together. “We’re hearing music of the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries,” Forrest said, noting that the Haydn piece dates from the 18th century, the Smetana from the 19th and the Bernstein from the 20th. Forrest hopes that all concertgoers, student and nonstudent alike, will recognize the extraordinary bargain
for students with a valid ID, $25 for nonstudents. Where: Martha-Ellen Tye Recital Hall they’ll be getting. “They’re hearing some of the best musicians of the world in our series,” Forrest said. “Anywhere else in the country, the tickets would be more than $25.” But she’s certain it’s the music — rather than the price they paid to hear it — that attendees will appreciate most. “The winners of this competition are always very, very outstanding. And I’m sure this one will be also,” Forrest said.
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