Friday, Sept. 11, 2015 | Volume 211 | Number 14 | 40 cents | iowastatedaily.com | An independent student newspaper serving Iowa State since 1890.
Students confused by tuition spike By Christie Smith @iowastatedaily.com A day after the Board of Regents approved a spring 2016 tuition increase for in-state students at Iowa State and the University of Northern Iowa, students on campus reacted with confusion.
The 3 percent increase will amount to $100 per in-state student next semester. As of now, the tuition increase is solely for the spring 2016 semester. This tuition hike came as a surprise to many ISU students on campus Thursday. Becca Kenealy, junior in family and consumer science
education and studies, had not heard of the tuition increase prior to speaking with the Iowa State Daily. “I don’t know why they did it,” Kenealy said. “It would really help to know what it’s going toward.” Jordan Guerdet, sophomore in kinesiology and health, and Lili
Zenobian, sophomore in communications, were concerned how the $100 increase would affect students’ budgets. “Students will have to take out more loans for school, and it’s an added expense that students don’t need,” Guerdet said. Edel Aron, senior in mathematics, was worried about ex-
isting money in the university’s budget. “I’m more concerned with how money is already being spent,” Aron said. “If there’s any unnecessary money in the budget that could be cut then we wouldn’t need the tuition increase.”
TUITION p12
9/11 generation still remembers Iowa State Daily
President Steven Leath speaks last year about the then-record ISU enrollment.
Leath shares goals By Shannon McCarty @iowastatedaily.com
By Sarah Muller @iowastatedaily.com
T
he ash settled years ago, however America feels the impact of Sept. 9, 2001, 14 years after the destruction caused by hijacked planes. During that Tuesday morning, aircraft crashed into the World Trade Center, the Pentagon and the last failed to reach the capitol. 2,996
people were killed, including plane passengers and victims inside the buildings. “It was probably the defining moment of the last decade,” said Neil Vezeau, junior in animal science.
9/11 p12
Iowa State Daily
Col. Craig Bargfrede speaks at the 9/11 memorial on campus in 2011. Following Bargfrede’s speech, attendees lit their candles and walked around Central Campus to commemorate the 10th year since the terrorist attacks that killed nearly 3,000, including people in the World Trade Center, Pentagon and on the planes that carried out the attacks. This year marks the 14th year since Sept. 11, 2001.
President Steven Leath put the spotlight on Iowa State’s growing enrollment in his address Thursday night and shared how the university plans on responding to the growth. It was announced Wednesday that Iowa State broke its enrollment record for the seventh straight year with 36,001 students. “Every single student here could be that one,” Leath said. Leath said the university cares about individual student success, which shows in the enrollment numbers. He also gave credit to recruiting, admissions, marketing and alumni for the growing number of students. “There’s a reason students are coming here,” Leath said. Almost 100,000 alumni live in Iowa, and Iowa State has educated more Iowans than any other institution. “Our alumni are just as forward-thinking, just as passionate, just as caring about this university as the new generation,” Leath said. Leath said the university provides areas of study which align and drive the economy, as well as have a proven track record of success. Iowa State was ranked 13th by
LEATH p4
Paul: ‘We’re all in’ for a long campaign In Daily-exclusive interview, GOP candidate talks Trump, education, Cy-Hawk game By Alex Hanson @iowastatedaily.com Despite disappointing polling numbers this summer, U.S. Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., the libertarian-minded presidential candidate, said organizing continues in all 50 states, and he’s “all in” for a campaign long past the highly watched early voting states. Paul’s comments came Thursday afternoon in a phone interview with the Iowa State Daily. He said frontrunner Donald Trump’s popularity is solely based on his “celebrity” status and completely dismissed polling showing him well behind the frontrunner. “I think there is some celebrity distortion in the polls, but still when you ask people in most of these polls, ‘Have you decided who you’re voting for?’ two-thirds of people say no,” Paul said. “Then they ask you to go ahead and pick, even though you’re [undecided]. It’s really kind of a poll of leaners, and it’s really influenced greatly by celebrity.”
Throughout the summer, Paul was considered a top-tier candidate and often polled in the double digits, but his support has fallen considerably after the entrance of Trump in the race. A CNN poll released Thursday showed Paul with support from 3 percent of likely Republican caucus goers, while Trump led the poll with 32 percent. Despite the Trump distraction, Paul said his campaign is focused on organizing efforts nationwide, including an upcoming campaign tour of college campuses. “We now have 300 college campuses that are organized around the country, we’re organized in all 50 states and we have 15 schools organized in Iowa,” Paul said. “We plan on working hard to register voters and get young people out.” Paul will participate in the Presidential Caucus Series at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the Sun Room of the Memorial Union. Paul also discussed several news items currently being debated in Congress, his policy proposals on education and his
Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons Presidential candidate Rand Paul will participate in the Presidential Caucus Series at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the Sun Room of the Memorial Union.
prediction for this weekend’s CyHawk game in Ames. Iran nuclear deal Just before the interview, Senate Democrats blocked a resolution brought forward by Republicans who disapprove of the agreement made with Iran that works to curb its nuclear capa-
bilities. Paul voted to end debate, which would allow the Senate to pass the disapproval resolution with a simple majority. “I ended up being a vote against the nuclear agreement because if they chose not to comply, or if they’re deceitful, there isn’t really sufficient leverage to
entice them or encourage them to comply,” Paul said. “Once the sanctions are released, I just don’t think there is going to be a whole lot of leverage to try to get them to comply, and they don’t have a history of being honest
PAUL p4
IOWA STATE DAILY
CAMPUS BRIEF
2
Weather FRIDAY
Mostly sunny and breezy
Digital Content
65 45
SPORTS
Weather provided by ISU Meteorology Club.
Cy-Hawk gameday coverage to come
Police Blotter The information in the log comes from the ISU and City of Ames police departments’ records.
All those accused of violating the law are innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.
Sept. 5
a.m.).
An officer investigated a property damage collision at Pammel Drive and Stange Road (reported at 10:26 a.m.). An officer investigated a property damage collision at 2200 block of Lincoln Way (reported at 6:48 p.m.). An officer investigated a property damage collision at Reiman Gardens Road (reported at 8:09 p.m.). Spencer Derifield, 20, of 144 2nd Avenue South, Unit 4 – Brookings, SD, was cited for underage possession of alcohol at Lot G3 (reported at 8:10 p.m.). Kalie Drahos, 20, of 121 Howard Avenue, Unit 100, Ames, was cited for underage possession of alcohol at Lot G3 (reported at 1:30 p.m.). An officer assisted an individual who was experiencing medical difficulties at Reiman Gardens Road (reported at 8:51 p.m.). Lauren Lee, 20, of 119 Stanton Avenue, Unit 408 – Ames, was cited for underage possession of alcohol. An individual reported being harassed at 4200 block of Maricopa Drive (reported at 9:47 p.m.).
Sept. 6 Harrison Daubitz, 19, of 7019 Kiowa Trance NE, Cedar Rapids, was cited for underage possession of alcohol at Beach Road and Lincoln Way (reported at 12:08 a.m.). Collin Baumhover, 25, of 1720 Timberlane Drive, Boone, was arrested and charged with operating while intoxicated at Highway 30 and State Avenue (reported at 1:23 a.m.). A 19 year old male was referred to DOT officials for a .02 civil violation at Center Drive and University Boulevard (reported at 1:42 a.m.). Cole Krynicki, 20, of 2300 Lincoln Way, Apartment 611, Ames, was arrested and charged with interference with official acts at 140 Lynn Avenue (reported at 2:26 a.m.). An individual reported the theft of a phone. It was later discovered no theft occurred at Hansen Ag Student Learning Center (reported at 3:03 p.m.).
Sept. 7 Officers responded to a fire alarm that was caused by a broken sprinkler head at Frederiksen Court (reported at 2:42 p.m.).
Our sports desk will be covering the Cy-Hawk game this weekend. Follow them on Twitter for live updates, and check the Iowa State Daily website for coverage.
An officer investigated a property damage collision at 13th Street and Stange Road (reported at 10:26 a.m.). An individual reported damage to a vehicle window at Lot 201N (reported at 4:14 p.m.). An individual reported someone had used a computer account without permission at Kildee Hall (reported at 4:31 p.m.). Nicholas Mignery, age 19, of 6217 Frederiksen Court, Ames, was arrested on warrants held by the Ames Police Department at Frederiksen Court (reported at 10:01 p.m.). Anna Broderick, 20, of 4237 Frederiksen Court, Ames, was arrested on warrants, charging them each with possession of a controlled substance at Frederiksen Court (reported at 11:41 p.m.). Mary Tong, 20, of 3438 Frederiksen Court, Ames, was arrested on warrants, charging them each with possession of a controlled substance at Frederiksen Court (reported at 11:41 p.m.).
Sept. 9 An officer investigated a property damage collision at Beach Road (reported at 7:36 a.m.). An individual reported the theft of a motor vehicle. The vehicle was later located several blocks away at 3900 block of Maricopa Drive (reported at 7:20 a.m.). An individual reported the theft of items from an unlocked vehicle at Lot 61B (reported at 10:17 a.m.). An officer initiated a drug related investigation at Armory (reported at 3:47 p.m.). An individual reported the theft of items from an unlocked vehicle at Lot 61B (reported at 9:38 p.m.). Fabian Burse, 20, of 222 11th Street, Ames, was arrested and charged with criminal trespass at Lied Recreation Center (reported at 10:15 p.m.). An individual reported the theft of a hat from the dining center at Oak-Elm Hall (reported at 10:53 p.m.).
VIDEO
Charlie Coffey/Iowa State Daily
A Victoria’s Secret pop-up shop was set up outside of the Memorial Union on Thursday. As part of the company’s PINK Campus Tour, which visits 13 college campuses, the bus sold unique ISU-themed clothing.
GOP candidates to tailgate game By Alex.Hanson @iowastatedaily.com If you are a fan of politics and sports, you are in luck for this weekend’s Cy-Hawk game in Ames. Four presidential candidates – Donald Trump, Rand Paul, Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio – have all RSVP’d to appear at a tailgating event being
There will be a public forum Friday to determine the best candidate for the Theilen Student Health Center. Shelley O’Connell, student health clinic director at the University of Northern Iowa, is one of two finalists for Iowa State’s Thielen Student Health Center director
Town Hall Meeting
Senator
Rand Paul Senator Rand Paul, MD, of Kentucky was elected to the U.S. Senate in 2010 and is an outspoken champion for fiscal responsibility and returning government to its limited, constitutional scope. His Senate committee assignments include the Committees on Foreign Relations; Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs; Health, Educa-tion, Labor, and Pensions; and Small Business and Entrepreneurship.
No tickets required
Friday, September 11, 2015 - 7:30 pm - Sun Room, Memorial Union This is part of the Presidential Caucus Series, which provides the university community with opportunities to question presidential candidates or their representative before the precinct caucuses.
■■ 1:00 p.m.: Marco Rubio ■■ 1:15 p.m.: Scott Walker ■■ 2:15 p.m.: Donald Trump
Iowa Lt. Gov. Kim Reynolds, U.S. Rep. Steve King and State Auditor Mary Mosiman are also planning to attend.
come to an open forum to voice their concerns on the subject. She has served as the director for the student health clinic at the University of Northern Iowa since 2008. Later, O’Connell worked with the UNI counseling center and recreation services.
position. She will be in the Gold Room of the Memorial Union today from 9 to 10 a.m. O’Connell was part of a question and answer session Thursday afternoon in the Memorial Union so students would have input in the chosen candidate and could
MU hosts diversity forum A public forum for one of the four finalists for vice president for diversity and inclusion, will take place tomorrow. William Lewis, will be in the Pioneer Room of the Memorial Union from 1:15 to 2:15 p.m. Lewis is a former vice president for diversity and inclusion at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. The other candidates are: -- Reginald Stewart,
Iowa State Daily Newsroom
Sponsored by: Students for Rand College Republicans ISU Democrats Student Government Committee on Lectures (funded by Student Government)
■■ Noon: Rand Paul
ISU asks for student input
Iowa State Daily Main Office 294-4120
An officer investigated a property damage collision at 13th Street and Stange Road (reported at 10:32
lican party and campaign releases from each candidate:
hosted by the Republican Party of Iowa, Boone and Story County Republicans and the Iowa State and Iowa College Republicans. The event is scheduled to take place from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in lot S-7, east of Jack Trice Stadium. Candidates will appear separately. Here is a tentative schedule, according to the Story County Repub-
chief diversity officer at the University of Nevada, Reno, came Sept. 7-8. -- Diane Ariza, associate vice president for academic affairs and chief diversity officer at Quinnipiac University in Hamden, Conn., will be here Sept. 21-22. -- Jesus Trevino, associate vice president for diversity and senior diversity officer at the University of South Dakota, Vermillion will come Sept. 24-25.
© Copyright 2015
Sept. 8
Friday, Sept. 11, 2015
Kyle Oppenhuizen Greater Des Moines Partnership
Publication board:
Publication: ISU students subscribe to the Iowa State Daily through activity fees paid to the Government of the Student Body.
Colton Kennelly Chairperson
Retail Advertising
Nicole Friesema Vice Chairperson Erin Wilgenbusch Greenlee School Chris Conetzkey The Des Moines Business Record
Ours is the last of the younger generations to remember the experience of Sept. 11, 2001. Find a video of students’ and faculty’s memories of the day on the website.
MULTIMEDIA
Discover music festival gallery The Maximum Ames Music Festival began Thursday night. Find a photo gallery of last night’s concerts on the Iowa State Daily app and website.
QUIZ
Take ‘this week in news’ recap quiz Didn’t pay attention to current events? Take a quiz on the Daily website to find out how much you paid attention this week.
SPORTS
Cyclone Hockey expects the best Cyclone Hockey is facing a loss of nine seniors but still expects to win a national championship. Find the story on the website.
Corrections A photo cutline in Thursday’s paper was incorrect. On page 1 cutline the photo was of Charlie Vestal. The photo is actually of Nate Logsdon performing with his band The Mumford’s at the 2012 Maximum Ames Music Festival. The Iowa State Daily welcomes comments and suggestions or complaints about errors that warrant correction. To submit a correction, please contact our editor at 515-2945688 or via email at editor@ iowastatedaily.com.
Iowa State Daily Publication Board
General information: The Iowa State Daily is an independent student newspaper established in 1890 and written, edited and sold by students.
294-2003
294-2403 Classified Advertising 294-4123
n
University officials defined diversity as [encompassing] acceptance and respect by fostering an environment of inclusion that moves beyond simple tolerance to recognizing the richness in individual identities of people. The director will handle issues such as a diverse community of people of all genders, ages, cultures, races, religions, sexual orientations, socioeconomic backgrounds.
ISU remembers Sept. 11, 2001
Angadbir “Singh” Sabherwal At-Large
Subscription costs: 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.
Fall & Spring sessions: 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 digitally. Opinions expressed in editorials belong to the Iowa State Daily Editorial Board. The Daily is published by the Iowa State Daily Publication Board, Room 108 Hamilton Hall, Ames, Iowa, 50011.
The Publication Board meets at 5 p.m. on the fourth Thursday of the month during the academic school year in Hamilton Hall. Postmaster: (USPS 796-870) Send address changes to: Iowa State Daily Room 108 Hamilton Hall Ames, Iowa 50011 PERIODICALS POSTAGE
Danielle Ferguson Editor in chief
Kyle Heim Editor of production
Logan Kahler Video editor
Sarah Muller Asst. news editor
Madison Ward Opinion Editor
Emily Barske Special sections editor
Makayla Tendall Editor of content
Charlie Coffey Visual editor
Max Dible Sports editor
Michaela Ramm Asst. news editor
Melissa Garrett Ames 247 editor
Noah Cary Digital editor
Maddy Arnold Editor of engagement
Katy Klopfenstien Photo Editor
Eric Wirth Asst. news editor
Alex Hanson Asst. news editor
Lauren Lee Niche editor
IOWA STATE DAILY
NEWS
Friday, Sept. 11, 2015
3
Students take on Global Food Challenge By Felipe Cabrera @iowastatedaily.com Two ISU students had the opportunity this summer to go on a globetrotting adventure with the Land O’Lakes fellowship called Emerging Leaders For Food Security. “It was a great honor,” said Olivia Reicks, senior in supply chain management. “They rolled out the red carpet for us … It was a very well-planned program.” Reicks and Trey Forsyth, junior in agricultural business, were two of 10 college students chosen from five universities for the Emerging Leaders For Food Security fellowship and to take on the Global Food Challenge, a program aimed at creating innovative new solutions to the problem of food security. The fellowship, which included an internship that took place over the summer, challenged them to cultivate an original idea on how to impact food security in developing nations around the world.
Courtesy of Emerging Leaders
Olivia Reicks, senior in supply chain management, was one of 10 college students chosen from five universities for the Emerging Leaders For Food Security fellowship and to take on the Global Food Challenge.
“Food security is one of the most complex and crucial issues people of our generation will face,” Forsyth said. Food security is about the amount of food in the world and the ability of people to access it. People are food secure when they have reliable access to food. The issue is timely because the world’s population will
grow from 7.3 billion people to 9.6 billion in 2050, according to Land O’Lakes Inc., a farmer owned co-op company with a vested interest in food security. Reicks’ and Forsyth’s fellowship with Land O’Lakes started last fall as they created and researched proposals. Reicks’ proposal involved helping farmers in
Malawi reduce transportation costs to allow them to bring in more income. Additionally, she focused on how to transform Malawi’s food supply chain of pigeon peas to take on the format of the more successful tobacco industry in the country. Reicks also looked at how to build more secure storage. “The answer to food
security is not just food,” Reicks said. “It’s also societal factors [such as] not having market access and not having proper storage technology.” Forsyth’s proposal was vastly different — his involved starting food processing co-ops and getting a grant to improve the registration process. Forsyth said co-ops are important because members can democratically vote on issues. The next phase was an 11-week internship in which participants spent one week in Washington D.C. and two weeks in Malawi in Africa. They worked with people in engineering, agriculture, business, marketing and their own mentors to make their ideas a reality. One of the challenges Reicks and Forsyth had to overcome was the lack of classroom and college experience, said Carly Cummings, program coordinator for the economics department. “In every school assignment, you have a rubric and know exactly what
you’re supposed to do to get there,” Reicks said. “Food security isn’t that way.” Forsyth said a challenge he faced was bringing down the scope of his broad ideas to a narrower vision. Another challenge he noted was the issue of feasibly tying them into Land O’Lake’s business model. “It’s not just saying, ‘Here’s what you can do,’ but laying out the plan of how you can do it was probably the biggest challenge that we faced,” Forsyth said. Forsyth said despite the challenges he faced he learned how to adapt to new issues, which helped him develop and improve his critical thinking skills. Reicks and Forsyth grew immensely in their critical thinking and communication skills, Cummings said. “Feeding the world is not the silver bullet that some people may think,” Cummings said. “By the end of the summer, they were able to dig deep and find smaller projects that will make a large economic effect on the world.”
Parks Library offers laptops for checkout By Alex Connor, @iowastatedaily.com A new program that will allow ISU staff and students to check out laptops at Parks Library is testing the waters this school year. The idea originated last spring from the Library Computation Advisory Committee (CAC), which consists of two staff and student members. “The library receives a portion of the student technology fees (CAC funds) each semester,” said Greg Davis, assistant director of the library. “We have a committee (the Library CAC) that meets in the spring that develops ideas for the use of the CAC funds.” The CAC fund was able to provide Parks with 10 MacBook Airs and 10 Dell laptops running Windows. The laptops can be checked out from the Parks Library Circulation Service Desk, which is west of the main entrance. The library chose to provide both operating systems to students to be able to watch for trends within
Funding from the Computation Advisory Committee allowed Parks Library to get 10 MacBook Airs and 10 Dell laptops that can be checked out by students.
usage and preferences, Davis said. The laptops can be checked out whenever, but must be returned a half hour before the main desk in the library closes or a $50 fine will be given. “The computers are available on a first-come, first-served basis and must be returned to the Parks Library circulation desk prior to close on the day of checkout,” said Monica
Gillen, communications specialist at the library. The laptops may not be taken out of the library. The library lent out one Mac and two PCs in July, when the program went live, nine Macs and 13 PCs in August and 16 Macs and 10 PCs in September, Davis said. Students and staff with a valid ISU card are the only ones who are allowed to check out the library’s
laptops, and the laptops should be used for academic purposes only. The laptops are equipped with the same software as the workstations in the library — standard office applications. They have wireless Internet connections, so users have access to important Internet tools, such as Blackboard. Users will also receive a power cord and case.
“Last year, the university installed a wireless network upgrade in the library, and we now have a strong Wi-Fi signal throughout the library,” Davis said. “The mobility of the laptops leverages the Wi-Fi upgrade and allows students to take a computer in the library to the space they need it.” No feedback has been reported as to how the new program has impacted students.
Courtesy of iStock
“Usage so far has been light,” Davis said. “Right now we are monitoring the use of the checkout program. “We will bring information about laptop checkouts to our Library CAC committee when we meet again next spring and determine next steps.” For more information about the library’s laptop policies, visit the library’s website.
Week’s news in review By Alex Hanson @iowastatedaily.com Here is a quick rundown of the biggest stories in news this week you may have missed. Make sure to test your knowledge by taking the quiz on the website. NEWS: Kentucky clerk released from jail Kim Davis, a county clerk from Kentucky who was jailed for not issuing marriage licenses to samesex couples, was released Wednesday. Davis had argued her religious beliefs conflict with issuing the licenses, and refused to do so, even after the Supreme Court legalized same-sex marriage nationwide. Supporters of Davis gathered in Grayson, Ky., on Wednesday while she awaited release. GOP presidential candidates Mike Huckabee and Ted Cruz were in attendance and spoke at the event. Davis plans to return to work Friday or Monday, and a judge has ordered her to not interfere with deputy clerks issuing licenses. POLITICS: Hillary says sorry
In an interview with ABC News, Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton changed course and apologized for her use of a private email server while serving as Secretary of State. Clinton held her ground as late as Monday, saying in an interview with the Associated Press in Cedar Rapids that her use of the private server was allowed. “I’m sorry about that. I take responsibility and I am trying to be as transparent as I possibly can,” Clinton told ABC World News anchor David Muir in an interview Wednesday. SPORTS: Tyler Sash found dead Former Iowa Hawkeye and New York Giant’s football star Tyler Sash was found dead at his home in Oskaloosa on Tuesday. The Iowa State Medical Examiner’s office said Wednesday that more testing needs to be done, and that the cause of death is still under investigation. Sash played for the Hawkeyes while in college and was drafted by the Giants in the 2011 NFL draft. “Our thoughts and prayers are certainly with the Sash family,” Iowa foot-
Katy Klopfenstein/Iowa State Daily
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton apologized earlier this week for her use of a private email server while serving as Secretary of State.
ball coach Kirk Ferentz said Wednesday. “A very difficult ordeal to deal with right now.” STATE: Regents under criticism from UI students and staff The Board of Regents, which oversees the state’s three public universities, is under heavy criticism after its selection of J. Bruce Harreld to be the next president of the University of Iowa. Of the four final candi-
dates, Harreld’s only experience in education was a job as a lecturer at Harvard. Outside of education, he worked at IBM, Kraft Foods and most recently as a consultant for several private companies. Staff at UI ranked Harreld as the least qualified candidate for the position. The UI Faculty Senate and other student government groups voted that they have “no confidence” in
the Regents following their decision. The mostly symbolic vote will not have any impact on Harreld’s future. ISU: Another year of record enrollment Iowa State announced another year of record enrollment Wednesday. 36,001 students was the official count, according to a university release Wednesday. It marks the seventh straight year of record enrollment.
Courtesy of University of Iowa Athletics
Former Hawkeye Tyler Sash was found dead at his home Tuesday.
4
NEWS
Friday, Sept. 11, 2015
Sudoku
by the Mepham Group
LEVEL:
1 2 3 4
Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit, 1 to 9. For strategies on how to solve Sudoku, visit www.sudoku. org.uk
Crossword
UI gives Board of Regents vote of no confidence By Makayla Tendall and Josh Newell @iowastatedaily.com Bruce Rastetter, president of the Iowa Board of Regents, said he was disappointed in the University of Iowa Faculty Senate’s vote of no confidence for Bruce Harreld, incoming University of Iowa president. The University of Iowa’s faculty gathered for an emergency meeting Tuesday to discuss whether their feedback was considered for the search for the new UI president. They voted they had no confidence in the Board of Regents. UI faculty described the search process as flawed, disrespectful, devastating, a waste and a failure, according to a Daily Iowan article. The UI undergraduate and graduate student senators had similar meetings later Tuesday night that resulted in similar motions as the faculty, according to the Daily Iowan. Although the votes are entirely
ceremonial and carry no legislative weight, the Board of Regents was quick to respond. Rastetter said the regents spoke to stakeholders across the state and took into account their recommendations for the qualities required in the next UI president. “After listening to all stakeholder feedback as well as having frank conversations with each of the candidates, the Board unanimously thought Bruce Harreld’s experience in transitioning other large enterprises through change, and his vision for reinvesting in the core mission of teaching and research, would ultimately provide the leadership needed,” Rastetter said. After the regents narrowed the president search to four candidates, Harreld, a former IBM and Kraft General Foods executive, received only 1.8 percent approval from the university’s faculty and a 2.6 percent positive response from the entire university. The other three candidates each
LEATH p1
Across 1 Chiang Mai native 5 Dance moves 10 Cheerful 14 Mint, e.g. 15 Ira Gershwin contribution 16 Indiana neighbor 17 Palindromic fashion mag 18 More aloof 19 “Walking in Memphis” singer Cohn 20 Accommodating work hours 23 Large amount 24 “O Sole __” 25 Harper’s __ 28 Chewie’s shipmate 29 Béchamel base 31 Monopoly deed abbr. 32 Market research panel 36 Laundry cycle 37 Fairway boundary 38 Part of i.e. 39 Biblical prophet 40 “Yikes!” 41 Frito-Lay is its title sponsor 43 Mark of Zorro 44 Action on eBay 45 USN rank 46 Acquirer of more than 1,000 patents 48 It includes mayo 49 SUV part: Abbr.
52 Culinary combo 56 Roger Rabbit or Bugs Bunny 58 Heart of Paris? 59 Old Norse poetry collection 60 Bring in 61 Rockne of Notre Dame fame 62 Look slyly 63 Multitude 64 “Bullitt” director Peter 65 Company that manufactures the starts of 20-, 32-, 41and 52-Across
Down 1 Taking the wrong way? 2 Nametag greeting 3 “Over the Rainbow” composer 4 Wild mountain goat 5 Deli worker’s chore 6 Danish astronomer Brahe 7 Toledo’s lake 8 Mottled 9 Prepare for surgery 10 Lefty in Cooperstown 11 Small Asian pooch bred as a watchdog 12 Balloon filler 13 Medical nickname
Horoscopes
21 Big success 22 Lenient 26 Miller’s “__ From the Bridge” 27 Kidney-related 28 “Les Misérables” author 29 Derby prize 30 Ways of escape 32 Succumbed to stage fright 33 Wondered aloud? 34 Babylonian writing system 35 Senate majority leader since 2007 36 Weeps convulsively 39 Capital west of Haiphong 41 Hard to please 42 Grants permanent status to, as a professor 44 A.L. East team 47 Golf-friendly forecast 48 Like the accent in “entrée” 49 Wedding memento 50 Rear-__ 51 Found out 53 Chaplin’s last wife 54 Neither masc. nor fem. 55 Narcissist’s love 56 Darjeeling, e.g. 57 Scull propeller
by Linda Black
Today’s Birthday (09/11/15) Your focus highlights relationships this year, in partnerships, family and community. Group participation amplifies your reach, with more accomplished for less. Lead and inspire in the areas of your passions. Stay conservative financially and build savings. Do the numbers before committing. Give yourself to love without reserve. To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
Aries - 7
(March 21-April 19) Increase your assets for a month, with Venus in Scorpio. Travel is appealing under the Sagittarius Moon. Fantasies aren’t to be relied upon. Study theory, while taking practical actions. Build creative resources.
Taurus - 6
(April 20-May 20) Compromise comes easier. Rely on a supportive partner, and express your gratitude. Handle financial matters. Balance your checkbook. Avoid distractions, as you plot strategy. Take it slow and easy.
Gemini - 7
(May 21-June 20) There’s more work coming in for a month -- the kind you like. Let somebody else take care of you. Complete the backstage effort. Stash your earnings in a safe place.
Cancer - 8
(June 21-July 22) Work gets intense. Artistic efforts work out. Don’t gamble now, even on a sure thing. For four weeks with Venus in Scorpio, you’re lucky in love. Relinquish expectations and just play.
Leo - 6
(July 23-Aug. 22) Focus on beautifying your home. Things ease up. Plan your next move with your partner. Reality wins over fantasy. Celebrate with sensual pleasures like fresh flavors.
Virgo - 6
(Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You’ll love learning for this next phase. Dive into a sweet obsession. Energize your home base. Think outside the box. Send a postcard to the office.
Libra - 6
(Sept. 23-Oct. 22) It’s easier to make money for awhile. Don’t take it for granted. Gather it up. The upcoming days are excellent for studying. Just about anything is possible. Make plans that include passion.
Scorpio - 8
(Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You’re especially lucky (and attractive) with Venus in your sign. Stick to your budget. Spend your new income on practical domesticity. Meditate. Keep watching for the full picture.
Sagittarius - 8
(Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You won’t be wearing your heart on your sleeve quite as much. Communicate fears and expectations to be free of them. Keep a secret. This empowers you both. Get organized.
Capricorn - 6
(Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You’re popular, and that busy social life could cause a problem at home. You’re out in the public. Get extra efficient. Spend with care. Move boldly forward.
Aquarius - 6
(Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Career advances are quite possible over the next month, and social activities engage you. This phase is good for travel. Investigate a dream. You’re building something of value. A supposition gets challenged.
Pisces - 6
(Feb. 19-March 20) The upcoming days are especially good for setting goals that lead to beauty, love and joy. Study your direction. Plan for two days in the spotlight. Soak up the atmosphere. Keep it practical.
Forbes magazine as one of the top universities to work for. “I really value our staff,” Leath said. He said the staff and faculty are a potent part as to why students choose and stay at Iowa State. Leath said the recent approval by the Board of Regents for a $100 tuition increase for in-state students is to help make the student growth more manageable. “Access with affordability without quality is no bargain,” Leath said. Leath said the $100 increase per in-state student will total about $2.5 million more per year and will allow for some immediate concerns on growth to be resolved. “I assure students we’ll use it wisely,” Leath said. Leath said he wants the university to continue to try to lower student debt and raise scholarship funding through the Moving Students Forward program. The program has a five-year plan to raise $150 million in new student scholarship money. Leath said they have decided this year to raise the goal to $200 million. With the growing enrollment, Leath was hopeful Iowa State would receive more funding from
PAUL p1 in their dealings with international agreements.” Paul said he was not “positive” what would happen next in the Senate related to the agreement. Right now, anything Republicans bring up to disapprove of the deal needs 60 votes to pass, but Democrats have enough supporters of the deal to block any efforts to derail the deal. Planned Parenthood funding Paul has also been vocal in his support to block any federal funding for Planned Parenthood. While Republicans have long tried to take funding away from the organization, the newest effort comes after a series of videos showed employees discussing methods for harvesting fetal tissue and organs. “I think people aren’t quite understanding this,” Paul said. “Congress’ job is to have the power of purse and it is to decide what to spend the money on and to attach rules and restrictions on how the money is spent. I don’t think Congress has really done this much in the past few years.” Paul said he thinks how the Senate votes should be flipped around — requiring 60 votes to fund Planned Parenthood, instead of 60 votes to
had about a 90 percent approval rating. Rastetter said in a press release he was disappointed in what he believes is the UI faculty’s commitment to the past. “We are disappointed that some of those stakeholders have decided to embrace the status quo of the past over opportunities for the future and focus their efforts on resistance to change instead of working together to make the University of Iowa even greater,” Rastetter said. UI professor Kembrew McLeod has been an outspoken critic of Harreld’s hiring. In an opinion piece for Slate.com, the communications studies professor blasted the errors on Harreld’s résumé, as well as his poor performance at his first public forum Sept. 1. “They didn’t listen to campus community when deciding on the next president,” McLeod said. “It’s pretty clear they picked who they wanted to be president.”
the state. “We had a very, very challenging legislative session this year,” Leath said. Leath and others worked to try and implement performance-based funding this past summer, which would have provided Iowa State with more funds, but those efforts were unsuccessful. Funding did go up, but Leath said it didn’t increase by what the university had hoped for. Leath said plans for the next leg-
islative session include an increase in faculty and staff salaries and a request for $8.2 million in recurring money in addition to what the university already receives. “I think we have a strong, strong case here at Iowa State for that larger request,” Leath said. The increase in enrollment is also affecting the teacher-to-student ratio. “Our student-to-faculty ratio jumped more than 46 percent,” Leath said. That ratio went from 13-to-1 to 19-to-1. Leath said a more ideal goal would be 16-to-1. During, the past three years, there have been 365 faculty hired as well as 120 this year, but due to the growing enrollment the student-tofaculty ratio has not budged. With the high enrollment, Leath said the university needs more resources. Iowa State secured $40 million from the state as well as a $20 million gift to build a new student innovation center. Other new resources will include a more developed research park, a new 780-bed residence hall, an additional dining hall and a growing and improved Campustown. Also on the agenda is repurposing the former TV studio and communications building into more studio space for the College of Design and a four-story addition to Bessey Hall.
defund it. “It’s not really about women’s health [anymore]; we have community health centers that have been greatly expanded in recent years,” Paul said. “The only difference they have with Planned Parenthood is one, they don’t do abortions, and two, they have real doctors that can do everything Planned Parenthood does.” Once again, Senate Democrats are likely to block any measure to pull federal money from the organization, and President Obama is likely to veto any effort that passes Congress. “I think with taxpayer dollars we shouldn’t have them going to something that many find objectionable,” Paul said. Education policy Paul echoed what many of his Republican colleagues have said regarding the rising price of college, which is that government involvement in education and the student loan industry contributes to rising costs. “If you think through any [situation] where someone says they’ll give a free, say a free car, free college or a free house, it sounds good at first,” Paul said. “The problem is that someone has to pay for that. If I give you a free college education, [everyone else] will pay taxes to send you to college.”
Paul said he does not like the rising cost of college tuition, adding we need to get to the “root cause” of the problem. “Why is almost every sector of our economy having declining costs with competition?” Paul said. “You could make the argument that government is involved in a great way, subsidizing demand by giving an extraordinary amount of government assistance to those going to school. They subsidize the demand, but when you keep the supply constant, the supply-demand curve says costs will rise. Government is part of the problem in costs.” Cy-Hawk prediction Paul will be tailgating before Saturday’s annual Cy-Hawk football game, set for a 3:45 p.m. kickoff in Ames. He is set to appear at noon in lot S-7, east of Jack Trice Stadium. “I’m for Iowa and Iowa State,” Paul said. “I’m being a good politician. So when Iowa has the ball, I’m going to root for Iowa, but when Iowa State has the ball, I’m going to root for Iowa State. “Is that a good political answer?” Paul joked. Paul will also attend three Iowa events this weekend in Indianola, Marshalltown and Nevada.
Iowa State Daily
Iowa State’s student to faculty ratio jumped more than 46 percent, Leath said.
es tas MAKE
PART OF
your week
MONDAY: BEER AND WINGS $4 orders of wings (boneless or traditional) $3 Blue Moon pints $3.50 Lagunitas Seasonal pints
BURGER WEDNESDAY: $3.50 Burger Wednesday 3 to 10 $3 Captain Drinks ALL TOP SHELF ON SALE
TOP SHELF WEDNESDAY: $2 Wells $3 7&7 Drinks $3.50 Jameson Drinks $3.50 Kinky Drinks
MUG CLUB THURSDAY
$4 Coors light and Bud light $4 Well 32oz mugs (vodka, gin, rum, gin & Whiskey drinks) $5 Blue Moon mugs
Campustowns sports bar since 2003. Catch all NFL, MLB, and Cyclone games here.
Friday, Sept. 11, 2015
5
Iowa State Daily
Junior linebacker Jordan Harris celebrates after winning the Cy-Hawk Series at Kinnick Stadium in Iowa City on Sept. 13, 2014. The football team is testing different defensive schemes to find the right strategy for Iowa.
DEFENDING THE TROPHY
Iowa State keeping defensive changes under wraps By Ryan Young @iowastatedaily.com @RyanYoung44 on Twitter Last season was hard for linebacker Jordan Harris. After transferring to Iowa State from Copiah-Lincoln Community College in Mississippi, where he was named to the National Junior College Athletic Association’s second-team AllAmerica team, Harris was forced to redshirt his initial season at Iowa State. Now a year later, Harris is back on the gridiron, and he’s loving every minute of it. “I was smiling a lot,” Harris said. “I was happy to finally be on
the field.” Harris started at linebacker for the Cyclones last week in their 31-7 win against Northern Iowa. The Clarksdale, Miss., native finished the game with nine tackles, tied for the most on the team. His success on the field last weekend impressed redshirt sophomore safety Kamari Cotton-Moya, who had nothing but praise after playing with Harris for the first time. “Jordan Harris is good, one of the best players on our defense,” Cotton-Moya said. “He helped out the front line and helped out the linebackers and even helped out the secondary more than we could [have] even imagined. I’ll be looking forward
for him to be playing more and more.” Both Harris and CottonMoya aided the ISU defense in limiting Northern Iowa to just 126 rushing yards and 176 passing yards last week. But more importantly, they did so in a new three-man front. The Cyclones started the game in a 3-4 formation, with three linemen and four linebackers — something the coaches said throughout the summer they would like to incorporate more. While Iowa State essentially shut down the Panthers offensively with the new formation, redshirt junior linebacker Jarnor
TROPHY p8
DIBLE OVERTIME
Success in Cy-Hawk pushes Cyclones to brink of ‘adulthood’ “Little Brother is growing up.” ISU athletic director Jamie Pollard uttered these words with a smile while standing on the second floor of his monument to ISU football — the Sukup South End Zone Club — only days before the 2015 season began. Little Brother, the term co-opted by some Hawkeye fans lent a pejorative connotation by its most commonly applied inflections, has become a clichéd insult. An insult hurled obnoxiously between drunken patrons inside Iowa City,
By Max.Dible @iowastatedaily.com @MJ_Dible on Twitter Des Moines and even Ames bars and littered throughout combative tweets and Facebook posts of the Hawkeye football faithful, who also favor referencing
the Cy-Hawk matchup as “Iowa State’s Super Bowl.” In the week leading up to the annual showdown on the gridiron between Iowa State and Iowa, the negative characterization of the Cyclones as a collective unit gets even more play. Now personally, I love my little brothers. But in this rivalry there is no love lost, and at least one Cyclone is taking exception. “It makes me laugh, literally, because how does the little brother beat the big brother three out of four times?” asked running back Tyler Brown. “We should get more respect
in our state, but respect is earned, so we’re going to go out and earn it.” But haven’t the Cyclones earned it already? Long past are the days of perennial Hawkeye dominance on the football field. From 1983-97, Iowa won 15 consecutive matchups against its in-state rival, but since then the series has belonged to the Cyclones. “I was a part of that era. I came in on the tail end of it, but I was a part of it,” said ISU coach Paul Rhoads, who served as an assistant with the Cyclones beginning in the mid-’90s. “[Then-coach Dan Mc-
Carney] made this game a priority to this football program and this athletic department when he got here. “That 1998 victory changed the course of not only the series but I believe the fortunes of this program to an extent.” That change has persisted. As Brown — the redshirt sophomore who will take his first handoff in the Cy-Hawk series Saturday — stated clearly, the Cyclones have won three of the last four contests between the teams. And since the win in 1998, Iowa State has cap-
tured 10-of-17 games in the series. “That was a time in the state where you drove across the state, [and] the tire covers were Hawkeye tire covers. The bumper stickers were Hawkeye bumper stickers. The backboards were Hawkeye backboards,” Rhoads said. “And that’s what we were battling, not only on the field, but that’s what we were battling in the recruiting as well. “You were talking about the kids that we were recruiting had never seen
GROWING p8
DELICIOUSNESS THAT’S SURE TO SCORE EARN
3¢
E R OFF GALLO
N
Hamburger, hot dog buns 8 ct. or brat buns
P
2.99
6 ct. bakery fresh white or wheat
10/$10 save 3¢ per gallon with each item purchased
Our special recipe bratwurst or Italian sausage
10.00 select varieties 3.75 oz.
3800 west lincoln way 292-5543
downtown 500 main 233-9855
Ground chuck sliders
select varieties 1.875 lb., 12 ct.
EARN
2¢
E R OFF GALLO
P
640 lincoln way 232-1961
• three convenient locations
west location
save 2¢ per gallon with each item purchased
N
open 24 hours a day • 7 days a week
lincoln center
6
GRIDIRON
Friday, Sept. 11, 2015
GOOD COP vs. BAD COP
AROUND THE BIG 12 KANSAS STATE AT TEXAS SAN ANTONIO
UTEP AT TEXAS TECH
WHEN: 11 a.m. WHERE: Alamodome, San Antonio, Texas WATCH: Fox Sports 1 LAST WEEK • Kansas State shut out South Dakota 34-0 last week, marking the team’s fourth straight win against USD. • Texas San Antonio fell to Arizona 42-32 in its season opener. • The Wildcats are coming off four straight seasons with eight or more wins and five straight bowl births.
WHEN: 2 p.m. WHERE: Jones AT&T Stadium, Lubbock, Texas WATCH: Fox LAST WEEK • Texas Tech beat Sam Houston State 5945 in its 1,000th game in school history. • UTEP fell in its season opener 48-13 to Arkansas. • Texas Tech finished last season with a 4-8 record. The Wildcats’ two conference wins came against Kansas and Iowa State.
LIBERTY AT WEST VIRGINIA
STEPHEN F AUSTIN AT No. 3 TCU
WHEN: 6:30 p.m. WHERE: Milan Puskar Stadium, Morgantown, W.V. LAST WEEK • West Virginia shut out Georgia Southern 44-0. • Liberty topped Delaware State 32-13 in its season-opener. • West Virginia finished last season with a 7-6 overall record, picking up five wins in the Big 12.
WHEN: 2:30 p.m. WHERE: Amon G. Carter Stadium, Fort Worth, Texas WATCH: Fox Sports 1 LAST WEEK • TCU won a close 23-17 battle with Minnesota on the road. • TCU dropped one spot in the national polls, falling behind Alabama. • Stephen F Austin lost its season opener 34-28 to Northern Arizona.
No. 19 OKLAHOMA AT No. 23 TENNESSEE
MEMPHIS AT KANSAS
WHEN: 5 p.m. WHERE: Neyland Stadium, Knoxville, Tenn. WATCH: ESPN LAST WEEK • Oklahoma had a commanding win last week over Akron, topping the Zips 41-3. • Tennessee defeated Bowling Green 59-30 last week in its season opener, which sets up this weekend’s game as one of the better week-two matchups.
WHEN: 6 p.m. WHERE: Memorial Stadium, Lawrence, Kan. WATCH: ESPN 3 LAST WEEK • Kansas fell 41-38 against South Dakota State last week. • With less than 10 seconds to play, the Jayhawks fumbled a snap they were planning to spike to set up a potential game-tying field goal.
CENTRAL ARKANSAS AT OKLAHOMA STATE
WHEN: 6:30 p.m. WHERE: Boone Pickens Stadium, Stillwater, Okla. WATCH: FSN QUICK HITS • Oklahoma State topped Central Michigan 24-13 on the road last week. • Central Arkansas fell to Samford last 4516, dropping its home opener.
LAMAR AT NO. 4 BAYLOR
WHEN: 6:30 p.m. WHERE: McLane Stadium, Waco, Texas WATCH: FSN QUICK HITS • Baylor dominated SMU last week 56-21. • Lamar dominated Bacone College [Oklahoma] 66-3. *Rice at Texas: 6:30 p.m.
Boxing at Iowa State Class starting on Monday Sept. 14th at 6:00 p.m. at State Gym. rkout o w r u ing yo Just br es to start! cloth
From The Class You Can Go On To...
• Participate in club intramurals. • Become an assistant trainer. • Compete in the Golde Gloves. • Try out for our collegiate team. Classes are Monday, Tuesday and Thursday 6:00 - 7:00 p.m. at State Gym The cost is $70 which includes the class, club dues and hand wraps. For more information: Call 515-432-5768 E-mail okmeyer@iastate.edu
By Kevin.Horner @iowastatedaily.com
By Chris.Wolff @iowastatedaily.com
It was nearly one year ago when ISU kicker Cole Netten split the uprights at Kinnick Stadium to give the Cyclones the lead and the eventual win — propelling Iowa State to its third CyHawk trophy in four seasons. Both teams enter the game 1-0 as Iowa defeated Illinois State 31-14 Saturday just before Iowa State went on to take down Northern Iowa 31-7 that night. Both sides present valid cases as to why they’ll win, but it’s the accrued momentum and additional experience of the Cyclones that should trump what the Hawkeyes bring to the table. Iowa State is coming off a disappointing 2-10 season. Naturally, expectations were low entering the 2015 season, but for the ISU football players, motivation is high. Considering the opening five matchups for the Cyclones — Northern Iowa, Iowa, Toledo, Kansas and Texas Tech — a 5-0 start is a real possibility. Given the enhanced motivation, Iowa State isn’t likely to take the opportunity for granted any time soon. 2014 also marked the first time either school has won the Cy-Hawk series in consecutive years. As much motivation as the Hawkeyes have for revenge, the motivation of the Cyclones to outdo Iowa as a school for the third year in a row will match it. Although the Hawkeyes employ a run-heavy offense, junior quarterback C.J. Beathard will still have to play a large role if the Hawks hope to have a chance. But Beathard has yet to make an appearance in a Cy-Hawk matchup, leaving him, in terms of experience, ill-prepared compared to ISU quarterback Sam Richardson. Regardless, history can attest to the fact that this contest, most likely, will be close. Three out of the last four games were decided by just a field goal, and the fourth? Just six points. Netten, despite his struggles against Northern Iowa, 1 for 3 on field goal attempts, displayed his ability to execute in the clutch last season in Iowa City. Look for Netten to be under the spotlight again in the waning seconds of this year’s Cy-Hawk matchup. Prediction: Iowa State 24, Iowa 21
Cyclone and Hawkeye fans have spent much of this week trash talking and forming arguments about why their team is better, but recent history of the Cy-Hawk matchup shows it’s virtually a tossup. Three of the last four games have been won by a field goal, and the other was won by a whopping six points. The road team has won the last three matchups. Iowa owns the all-time series record 40-22, but that’s counting a dominating stretch of 15 straight wins. In recent years, the Cy-Hawk showdown has proved highly competitive. Last season’s game was claimed by the Cyclones, courtesy of Cole Netten’s foot, and an untimely Iowa timeout. Given the closeness of the last four outings, that may be the scenario yet again. Netten, however, had a shaky season opener, hitting on only one of his three attempts. The ISU offense also struggled at times against Northern Iowa. The Cyclones started on the right side of the 50-yard line four times in the first half and only produced 10 points. They figured it out in the second half, but what happens when the Cyclones face a Big 10 defense instead of an FCS defense? Opportunities to start in enemy territory can’t be squandered. The same question can be asked of how the Cyclones’ defensive unit will fair against an Iowa offense that is superior to UNI’s. The ISU defense shut down a UNI offense that had lost former running back and Cyclone killer David Johnson to the NFL. That likely won’t be the case against Iowa quarterback C.J. Beathard. Iowa didn’t play a perfect game in week one either, but like the Cyclones, they looked solid. When the two teams meet up Saturday afternoon in Ames, it’ll likely be another close game that could come down to whoever has the ball last. It’s a toss-up, but the road team has won the series the last three matchups, and it wouldn’t be surprising if Iowa finds a way to continue that streak. Prediction: Iowa 31, Iowa State 28
Join us for the
IowaIowa State vs Iowa State vs Iowa State vs Iowa Iowa Join us for the
Join us for the
Tailgate Tailgate Tailgate - 6pm SeptSept 11th 11 3pm3pm - 6pm th @ Jack Trice Stadium th 11 Sept 3pm 6pm Sept 3pm --6pm @ Trice Stadium Sept 11 3pmJack -Enter 6pm to win prizes @Jack Stadium @ JackTrice Trice Stadium Including a dinner with the Cyclones! th
to win prizes @ Jack TriceEnter Stadium Including a dinner with the Cyclones!
Enter to win prizes
food, Enter to winFree prizes
OFFICIAL SPONSOR OF IOWA STATE ™ ATHLETICS
Including a dinner with the Cyclones!
& Freeentertainment food, Free food, entertainment tailgate games Located atentertainment the two striped tents & &Including tailgate closestgames to Jack Trice Stadium a dinner with the Cylones!
OFFICIAL SPONSOR OF IOWA STATE™ ATHLETICS
Including with the Cyclones! Free Food,a dinner Entertainment, & Tailgate Games
Free food,tailgate games entertainment &
ISUCAMPUSTOWN.COM 200 Stanton Avenue, Suite #101 515.598.9000
Where students love living.
®
AMERICANCAMPUS.COM
O F F ICIA L SP O N SO R O F IO W A STA TE ™ A THL ETICS Prizes are subject to change. While supplies last. See office for details. ISUCAMPUSTOWN.COM Where students love living. 200 Stanton Avenue, Suite #101 ®
515.598.9000
AMERICANCAMPUS.COM
Prizes are subject to change. While supplies last. See office for details.
ISUCAMPUSTOWN.COM 200 Stanton Avenue, Suite #101
Where students love living.
®
GRIDIRON
Friday, Sept. 11, 2015
GAME INFO WHEN: 3:45 p.m. WHERE: Jack Trice Stadium WATCH: Fox LISTEN: KASI 1430* & KCCQ 105.1* *Available in the Ames area only
IOWA HAWKEYES
IOWA STATE CYCLONES
1-0, 0-0 Big 12
STADIUM INFO: • All gates will open 90 minutes before kickoff. • Student must enter through the East Gate. • Re-entry to the stadium will be allowed up until the start of the 4th quarter. Tickets must be scanned upon exit and re-entry.
1-0, 0-0 Big 10
OPPONENT INFO Iowa Hawkeyes (1-0, 0-0 Big 10) LOCATION: Iowa City, Iowa CONFERENCE: Big 10 HEAD COACH: Kirk Ferentz | 17th season at Iowa QUICK HITS: • Iowa leads the all-time series against Iowa State 40-22. • Iowa State has won 10 of the last 17 games in the series, including three of the last four. • Iowa State captured last year’s Cy-Hawk contest against the Hawkeyes 20-17 in Iowa City on a game-winning field goal.
THE PICK Max Dible, sports editor (1-0)
Luke Manderfeld, assistant sports editor (1-0)
Iowa State vs Iowa
Iowa 24, Iowa State 21 As a former Hawkeye and current Cyclone, this game has been contributing to my chronic heartburn for a couple of decades now. A fan for most of my life, I’ve engaged previously in the social media trash talking that makes this rivalry so delicious. Now, as a majestically neutral reporter with a mountain of integrity that would tower over whatever landfill now serves as the highest point in Iowa, I find myself removed from the animosity of it all. Clear eyes, full heart, can’t lose — primarily because I have no rooting interest. You can’t lose if you don’t play. OK, I’ll stop quoting iconic TV shows. On Saturday, Iowa State and Iowa will play, however, and as the paradigm demands, there MUST be a winner and a loser. My tendency is to lean toward the Cyclones. Winners of three of the last four and playing inside the new Jack Trice Stadium, circumstances appear to align in favor of the cardinal and gold. But that’s the thing about this rivalry. None of that matters. The last three Cy-Hawk matchups have gone to the road team. The betting-line underdog wins so frequently because in reality, there is no underdog. Nor is there a favorite. Throw the records along with which team won the recruiting battle in the state over the last few years off the rooftop of Friley and watch them shatter in their brittle irrelevance. This game will come down to one thing: who wins in the trenches. Both defenses are solid, but Iowa’s offensive line is more equipped to deal with what the Cyclones bring on defense than vice versa. To me, it’s that simple. Now, Beathard could chuck four interceptions and turn the whole damn shindig on its head, but I don’t see it going down like that. If Iowa State had a few more game-ready offensive linemen, I’d pick the Clones. But they don’t. And that will be the difference. Iowa 24, Iowa State 17 The final scoreline in Iowa State’s season-opening 31-7 rout of Northern Iowa on Saturday night may have ISU fans excited. But I’m not fooled. The Cyclones’ first half was inconsistent at best. Falling behind 7-0 early, Iowa State squeaked out a 10-7 lead by halftime, entering the locker room with a litany of concerns. The running game exploded on the first drive of the game, with redshirt sophomore Tyler Brown going 34 yards on the first rush from scrimmage. Following the opening drive, the ground game was barren, and Brown didn’t log another carry until the second half. The defense that impressed late in the game didn’t get going until the middle of the second quarter. It’s not that Iowa State isn’t talented enough, my concerns stem from the inconsistencies. On the other side, Iowa romped Illinois State in its season opener. But unlike Iowa State, Iowa dominated throughout the game. This one will be close, like all rivalries, but Iowa will sneak one out in Ames.
Ryan Young, assistant sports editor (0-1)
Iowa 31, Iowa State 27 Look, I get it. Iowa State won tits first season-opener in three years — pretty handily too. And sure, the culture around this year’s team is different than I’ve ever seen before. But I still have plenty of questions. While Iowa State impressed on both sides of the ball, it did so inconsistently. The run game came in patches, the defense couldn’t seem to stop UNI quarterback Aaron Bailey from running the ball and the offensive line struggled to protect quarterback Sam Richardson — let alone provide the run game consistent assistance. And sure, the Hawkeyes have their own problems, too. But in their opening bout with Illinois State, the Hawkeyes had 431 total yards of offense, exactly double that of Illinois State. The run game impressed, and quarterback C.J. Beathard averaged a hearty 8.8 yards per pass (and ran for two touchdowns). The Hawkeyes simply didn’t have an issue — at any point in the game — taking care of business. So while it’ll be close for a while, because nearly all rivalry games are, Iowa is just the better team. There is no doubt about it. (And come on, did you really expect me to pick this one differently?)
Beau Berkley, Former Daily sports editor
Iowa State 31, Iowa 24 I’ve returned to bring the sports desk back to mediocrity! Unfortunately, I have a wordcount. Now I don’t know much about much these days, but I do know what to expect from this game. Paul Rhoads and Kirk Ferentz will exchange pre-game pleasantries, surrounded by photographers snapping away as Kirk feverishly chews his gum and Paul tries out a new joke. Iowa will then go up early in the game, per usual, only to fall in the fleeting seconds. Then some in the Iowa fan base will take to their keyboards using their outdated and misguided rhetoric to tweet, blog and write columns about the “little brother” and “Iowa State’s Super Bowl”. However, last I knew 36,001 was a bit bigger than 32,150 and if we’re talking about Super Bowls, then Iowa somewhat resembles the Buffalo Bills of the early 1990s.
Get 5% off for every 7 points scored by the Cyclones! Offer good on regular priced purchases of ISU clothing and gifts.
Save up to 25% *Excludes sale items & Under Armour®
• Iowa won the last meeting in Ames two years ago 27-21. • Iowa finished last season with a 7-6 record, earning a trip to the TaxSlayer Bowl. • Iowa defeated FCS No. 2 Illinois State 31-14 last week. • Quarterback C.J. Beathard threw for 211 yards and had one passing touchdown against Illinois State. • Beathard also ran for 26 yards and two touchdowns. • Defensive end Drew Ott had two sacks last week and forced one fumble.
BY THE NUMBERS IOWA STATE AGAINST IOWA
5-5 - Cyclones’ record
against Iowa the last 10 years
6-11 - Cyclones’ record
in Ames since Cy-Hawk football was renewed in 1977
530-295 - The Hawkeyes
have outscored the Cyclones in Ames 530-295 since 1981
31.18 - Average points per
game for Iowa since 1981, 17.35 for Iowa State
Matchup to watch
The 2015 chapter of the Cy-Hawk rivalry will boil down to one match up: the offensive line of Iowa State and the defensive line of Iowa. The ISU O-line must create more room for its three young running backs to operate than it did against Northern Iowa, and at the same time protect quarterback Sam Richardson, who was sacked four times by the Panthers. A balanced attack will be required to keep a stout Iowa defense honest. The Cyclones committed to the run game going
against UNI, rushing the ball 32 times. But for all their efforts, they produced only 77 yards on the ground. The level of inefficiency that accompanies a 2.4 yards-per-carry average heaps far too much pressure on the ISU passing game, which for the second consecutive week must contend with a talented secondary more equipped than most to bottle up the ISU corps of wide receivers — at least long enough for UI defensive end Drew Ott and company to close in on Richardson.
7
8
GRIDIRON
Friday, Sept. 11, 2015
Cyclones’ three-headed rushing attack can improve in rivalry against Hawkeyes By Luke Manderfeld @iowastatedaily.com, @Luke_Manderfeld Redshirt sophomore Tyler Brown entered Iowa State’s football season opener with more experience than any other running back on the roster, boasting a whopping 24 carries in his entire collegiate career. Doubted throughout the preseason along with the rest of the running attack, Brown remained confident he could prove the skeptics wrong. “I always play better with a chip on my shoulder, and this is something to prove,” Brown said at ISU football’s media day. “That’s the best feeling you can have, when you prove someone else wrong and prove yourself right.” That chip on his shoulder fueled Brown’s first carry of the 2015 season. Brown took the ball and spotted a hole through the left side of the line. He split it with force and found open field. He ran until Northern Iowa defensive back Jordan Webb caught up to him 34 yards later, making it the longest rush of Brown’s career. Brown’s 24 carries, while limited experience to be sure, still aided his explosive first carry against UNI and the rest of his touches throughout the game. “I felt more prepared than [the other running backs] did because those snaps helped me see how the game is in real life, and that was pretty helpful from the beginning,” Brown said.
TROPHY p5 Jones said the team isn’t yet satisfied with its performance. “Assignment-wise, I don’t think we did as well as we thought we did,” Jones said. “We got the win but assignment football, it wasn’t there, and we know that. I don’t think we surprised ourselves at all. If anything, I think the win kind of took away what we should have [done] with execution things.” The Cyclones didn’t abandon their traditional 4-3 formation of four defensive linemen and three linebackers. The four-man front made an appearance in the game at times, but ultimately it was the three-
GROWING p5 Iowa State beat Iowa. They couldn’t recall a victory.” While not as lopsided as it once was, Iowa still routinely out-recruits Iowa State, both inside of Iowa and in general terms. The Hawkeyes have also consistently won more regular-season games than the Cyclones throughout the Rhoads era and for several years previous. Despite a smaller ven-
Jenna Reeves/Iowa State Daily
Tyler Brown has his photo taken at football media day. Brown is the most experienced running back on the ISU football team with only 24 carries last season.
The running backs behind him on the depth chart, redshirt freshman Mike Warren and true freshman Joshua Thomas, entered the game against UNI with zero carries between them. Although the Cyclones finished off the seasonopening win against the Panthers with a score of 31-7, the running game was one of the units that showed a lot of room to improve and didn’t match Iowa State’s elite passing game as well as it could have. “I’d like to run the ball better,” said offensive coordinator Mark Mangino. “I thought we ran it well but not good enough for my liking.” The team combined for 77 yards on the ground on 32 attempts, an aver-
age 2.4 yards per carry. Not including quarterback Sam Richardson’s four sacks, the team averaged 3.04 yards per rushing attempt. Brown didn’t help the numbers much after his first rush of the game, registering zero rushing attempts until the third quarter. Mangino said that was because Brown was banged up after the first offensive series, leaving him in an arm sleeve until he was ready to re-enter the contest. In the interim, Warren and Thomas traded off attempts. Warren saw more carries in earlier downs but not many, averaging 3.2 yards on six rushes. “There was no question ... we would have liked to get [Warren] more reps,” Mangino said. “I’m not worried about him. The thing he
has going for him is he has ‘want to.’ He wants to get better, he’s always working at his game. He’s going to help us.” Thomas saw the majority of his carries in shortyardage and goal-line situations. His 5-foot-11, 224-pound frame paid dividends for the Cyclones in those scenarios and assisted in scoring the first and only touchdown on the ground Saturday night, punching the ball in from a yard out. “The touchdown [Thomas] scored, we cut a guy loose, and he was ready to tackle him, and [Thomas] ran right through him,” Mangino said. “That’s an encouraging sign, and I’m pretty excited about him.” Mangino said the team plans to use Thomas in a similar role against Iowa.
“He’s the biggest back we have,” Mangino said. “When we need tough yardage, we’ll give it to the big guy.” Iowa State plans to use the three running backs against the Hawkeyes this weekend, but Brown will get the bulk of the carries early after his strong performance against the Panthers. As it usually does, Iowa’s boasts a stout defensive front, led this season by defensive end Drew Ott, who tied for sixth in the Big
10 in sacks last season. “I think it’s a typical Iowa defense,” Mangino said. “They don’t beat themselves. They don’t make a lot of mistakes. They’re a smart defensive football team.” Brown has his own game plan to get the running attack going — jump on the Hawkeyes before they jump on him. “I need to get going early,” Brown said. “Hit them in the mouth early and keep going.”
man front that worked the best last Saturday. With Iowa looming on the schedule, ISU coach Paul Rhoads said the defense is going to need to shake things up a bit. “You’re not going to survive in a three-man front against that type of offense,” Rhoads said. “You’ll see both varieties on Saturday, and three-man stuff you’ll see meshed up as we deem necessary.” The Hawkeyes rushed for 210 yards in their season-opening 31-14 win against Illinois State last weekend. LeShun Daniels totaled 123 yards on 26 carries, while Jordan Canzeri added 28 yards and a touchdown on his five carries. Quarterback C.J.
Beathard had a big day too. He completed 15 of 24 passes for 211 yards through the air and picked up 26 yards on the ground, rushing for two touchdowns. “It’s a different style of football,” Rhoads said. “You’re going to see two tight ends, you’re going to see two backs. You’re going to see downhill football. You’re going to see power football.” So it sounds like the Cyclones will be returning to their traditional fourman front for the Cy-Hawk game in an effort to curtail the Iowa offense. Or will they? When news broke earlier in the week about Iowa State’s plan to switch between defensive fronts,
social media and message boards blew up. Many fans seemed skeptical, even wondering if the Cyclones were attempting to deceive their in-state rival. And when asked if the Cyclones were planning to show some of the 4-3 set this weekend, defensive coordinator Wally Burnham had a very short response. “You want me to give you my game plan?” he asked. “Next.” So with no real answer given by Burnham or any other coaches, fans will have to wait until kickoff to see how the ISU defense lines up. That means, though, that Iowa State will most likely have to work on both formations this week in
practice, something it has been doing since the start of fall camp. Cotton-Moya admits that it was hard at first to have to work with both schemes during fall camp. After a while, though, he said it got a lot easier. “It was kind of confusing at first,” Cotton-Moya said. “With the coaches’ help, they led me in the right way and led the whole defense in the right way and put us in the right position to be able to play fast.” Fans can expect to see both defensive setups this weekend, and Harris isn’t concerned with switching between both formations. He likes them both. “I’m kind of half and half,” Harris said. “I think
both of them set up for the linebackers and the safeties. The safety gets more freedom in the 3-4, but I like the 4-3 too.” And in reality, Harris and the rest of the defense aren’t as focused on how they’re lined up. Their main goal is just to keep the Hawkeyes’ powerful offense at bay. And keep the coveted Cy-Hawk trophy in Ames for another year. “We just keep trying to win, keep trying to keep the trophy here at home,” Cotton-Moya said. “Both teams are good. We know we’re good and we know they are a great team as well. We’re just trying to keep winning and doing what’s right to win.”
ue, less recruiting prowess and less overall success, Rhoads has held his own at 3-3 in the series during his tenure at the helm. And isn’t that what this rivalry is actually about? The head-to-head aspect? In that regard, over the last four seasons, the Cyclones haven’t stood second to the black and gold. They haven’t been the Little Brother. Iowa State’s enrollment exceeds the enroll-
ment in Iowa City by nearly 4,000 students. Pollard explained more than 100,000 Iowa State alumni are living inside Iowa’s borders and only about 86,000 former Hawkeyes. Pollard also said that of the 99 counties in the state, the majority of high school students in roughly 80 of them now indicate their affinity for Iowa State as a scholastic option above Iowa and Northern Iowa. Throw on top of that
three wins in the last four meetings between the football teams, and the pejorative language spouted by some Hawkeye supporters appears to have gone the way of phrases like “Talk to the hand!” and “Oh no he didn’t!” They’re out of date. And when you say them, you sound weird and old. Then dismayed, disgusted people slowly back away from you, eyes wide and hands raised, to avoid ridi-
cule by association. Iowa’s nickname is the Hawkeye State, but sound the weather sirens because all signs over the past half decade point to this being Cyclone country — and I’m not just talking about Ames. If the Hawkeyes can’t figure out a way to correct their recent struggles against the Cyclones at 3:45 p.m. Saturday inside Jack Trice Stadium, Little Brother will officially assume the
mantle of top dog in Iowa. And Brown, excited to step onto the field and contribute for the first time in this rivalry, couldn’t be happier about that. “That’s what we’re hoping for,” Brown said. One more win, and the Cyclones graduate to some new, more accurate and worthier moniker yet to be popularized and circulated. One more win, and Little Brother will be all grown up.
10% off any service when you bring in this ad! expires 12/31/2015
Eastman Auto Care Complete Auto and Light Truck Repair 515-232-8809 305 6th Street Ames, IA eastmanautocare.com
· Two Touchless Laser Automatics · Seven Self Serve Bays · One Large Vehicle Bay · Self Serve Pet Wash
204 Clark Ave, Downtown Ames www.wildwatercarwash.com 119846_eastmanauto_2x5.indd 1
Will rushing need to be better to beat Iowa? The ISU rushing attack averaged 3.04 yards per carry, not including sacks, during the team’s season-opening victory against Northern Iowa on Saturday night. ISU offensive coordinator Mark Magino was impressed with redshirt sophomore Tyler Brown’s play but added, “We’ll need those other guys to play too and help out carry the load.” Magino was asked if he thinks the ground game would need to improve to beat the Hawkeyes on Saturday. He doesn’t necessarily think so. “Whatever it takes to the win the game,” Mangino said. “We’re not picky, we’ll [take] either. Maybe a little bit of both.” The passing game did impress on the victory, averaging 11.1 yards per completion and scoring two touchdowns. If the running game doesn’t improve, the passing attack could carry the offense. “I don’t know,” Mangino said. “What if we pass for 400 to 500 yards?”
9/3/15 6:46 PM
n
e u
e g
e s e b . d a ? f s -
w l d
e t y t e
t n e y
g o n e e
IOWA STATE DAILY
OPINION
Friday, Sept. 11, 2015
9 EDITORIAL
Cut U of I some slack; it’s had a rough year
Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons
Kim Davis’ decision to refuse to issue marriage licenses to gay couples is a slap in the face to the Supreme Court’s decision and the separation between church and state, Columnist Heckle argues. Davis was not in jail for her religious beliefs; she refused to perform her job and broke the law.
Kim Davis’ actions criminal By Michael.Heckle @iowastatedaily.com
T
he recent legal action against Rowan County Clerk Kim Davis has generated three reactions from the public. One group believes Davis’ decision to refuse issuing marriage licenses to multiple gay couples was an act of divinely-inspired religious martyrdom. Others, including the Supreme Court, believe this religious privilege to discriminate is immoral and illegal. The final group believes this doesn’t matter when looking at the bigger picture. It’s understandable to believe that one clerk in Kentucky wouldn’t have an impact, but the butterfly effect of this decision to not allow discrimination on the basis of religious beliefs will impact the country. Davis argues that based on her religious belief her decision to refuse marriage licenses to gay couples in her county is her legal right. Davis’ lawyer, Mat Staver, appealed her arrest, saying that his client would be willing to issue licenses if her name and title were absent from the forms. Furthermore, thousands of supporters, including presidential candidates Ted Cruz and Mike Huckabee have come to her defense. What supporters don’t realize is that Davis was not in jail because of her religious beliefs. She was being held in contempt of court after refusing to do her job and breaking the law. Even right-wing heart throb Don-
ald Trump readily admitted that samesex marriage is the “law of the land.” Yet his opponents in the Republican Party seem to struggle with the idea of legal consequences when it comes to using a public office to support bigoted, theocratic beliefs. Huckabee even made plans to visit Davis in jail. This is a truly disturbing thought. Huckabee is now supporting someone who, after being ordered multiple times by federal court, refused to obey the law and used a public office to discriminate against gay couples. The lack of respect for the doctrine of the separation of church and state has no business coming from a presidential hopeful. “What we end up having is the first example of the criminalization of Christians for believing in the traditional definition of marriage,” Huckabee said in a public statement last Friday. Davis’ job was to certify marriages, which, by constitutional definition, shall have no laws regarding religion. Davis went on to refuse multiple couples, who per the Supreme Court , have the right to wed, on the basis of her religious prejudice. When confronted, she continued to disobey orders from state and federal courts until she was arrested. Davis claims to be a beholder of family values and the guardian of traditional marriage. This is rarely said of a three-time divorcee. When it comes to gay marriage, other biblical scorns like divorce take a back seat. Davis has also had children out of wedlock and is remarried to her second husband. Yet she claimed in
a written statement that issuing these gay marriage licenses would go in the face of “God’s definition of marriage.” Not only are supporters of Davis ignoring the law and the actual cause of her arrest, they are also either ignorant or disingenuous about the kinds of “family values” possessed by Kim Davis. On the relevance of this issue, what we are seeing now is the first step to end religiously-inspired discrimination in public offices. The entire issue of gay marriage shows the environment of religious privilege in the U.S. The fact that the United States spent so long denying people equal rights on the basis of one religion’s belief exposes the cracks in the doctrine of separating church from state. We are now seeing the first legal action against this blending of theocracy and democracy at a state level. Davis is not being punished for practicing her religious beliefs. She can be a homophobic all she wants as long as it’s in private and not funded by taxpayers’ dollars. This is not “Christian persecution” or “gay privilege.” Persecution would be systematic discrimination toward a group of people, much like how Christianity acted toward homosexuals for the majority of its existence. The Supreme Court has given a group of people who are no different than anyone else equal rights in the face of extreme prejudice. Kim Davis’ immoral attempts to deny gay marriages flies in the face of the Supreme Court’s decision and the separation between church and state.
We now live in a divorce society By Courtney.Carstens @iowastatedaily.com
The idea of divorce becoming an easy escape from marriage is quickly changing the fundamental ideals of some of the world’s largest icons. With powerful figures such as Pope Francis allowing annulments, divorce services are becoming easier and cheaper for the public. An annulment is a statement that says a marriage never happened. Divorce is becoming too much of a commodity in today’s society, with things like “divorce selfies” and the pope changing the fundamentals of the oldest church in the world. They are quickly making
the idea of marriage and healthy relationships a mockery to the common person. Divorced couples take selfies, featuring divorce papers, that “commemorate” their split. Something that is supposed to be a devastating and heartbreaking situation is being described by reporters such as Caitlin Dewey of the Washington Post as happy and full of life. Divorce parties have also become a trend. These parties glamorize the split from a spouse, the person you said you would spend your whole life with. I remember my grandmother constantly telling me stories about when she was young, and how it was stressed at that time if they chose to get married, they had to stick with it unless there were dire con-
sequences of staying together. Not only was it a norm, but I strongly believe that the society we had back then really did value trying to work out difficult situations opposed to running away from them. Our society has allowed its people to run away from their problems. Delia Gallagher, senior editor for “Inside the Vatican” magazine, and Daniel Burke, religion editor for CNN, said Pope Francis, the leader of the Roman Catholic Church, has begun to radically change the way Catholics may receive an annulment. Many in the church consider the old way of filing for an annulment long, tedious and quite costly, but isn’t that the point? The purpose for having the process being troublesome
is to prevent the amount of impulse annulments stemming from marital spats. The purpose of marriage isn’t what it used to be. The leader of one of the most influential establishments in the world is essentially going against a huge fundamental ideal of the church he runs, which is to preserve the sanctity of marriage. The act of divorcing should be seen as a sad, and maybe even a depressing act. But it isn’t with current trends like divorce selfies and influential figures like Pope Francis changing the idea of how easy it should be to get out of a marriage. Our culture has made healthy relationships seem like a distant reality and presented us with a divorce society.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
No pity for students who are drowning in debt By Gary Youngberg, Ames resident Dear Mr. Snyder, I read, with great interest, your op-ed titled “Why free tuition is a necessity” and am simply dumbfounded you chose to use the word “free.” Your solutions to give “free” tuition to students are not even close to free and to use that word is misleading and disingenuous. Why should students not pay in order to become more highly educated? The cost of higher education is typically recouped with higher-paying
jobs but let’s face it, not everyone who receives a four-year degree gets a job within their field of study or, for that matter, a job at all. This is the way of the world. Would you extend the scope of “free” tuition to include a guarantee of a job upon graduation? If so, how would you pay for it? Further reductions in military spending? Re-shifting of funds from the prison system leading to early paroles and more crime? That is, quite simply, the law of unintended consequences. I would have rather you proposed a thorough review of the entire budget with a win-
nowing out of wasteful programs that President Obama promised but failed to do. There is no free lunch, Stephen. I feel sorry for those who are saddled with excessive debt after college, but make no mistake, those individuals knew what they were getting into by attending college. Their student loans spelled out exactly what the terms and requirements were for both parties and to cry about it after the fact is immature. If I bought a house that was too big for my budget because I thought I’d be making more
money down the road and it doesn’t happen, I would have no one to blame but myself when the bank forecloses on my property. In closing, you are correct in stating there is nothing formative or glamorous about living in debt. It is clear to me, however, that the majority of those in that situation arrived there primarily from their own poor decisions such as attending college without sufficient funds while at the same time drinking three to four nights a week while surfing the web on their iPhones and eating out way too much.
The University of Iowa has had a rough year. We’re not sure, but it might have started when Cole Netten kicked a game-winning field goal against the Hawkeyes last year, winning the CyHawk football game 20-17. Their confidence was shaken even more when Georges Niang then blew a stick-it-to-’em kiss at the Iowa fans as the Cyclones rolled to a basketball victory. Not long after, the University of Iowa lost its president. Then they weren’t happy with the new one. And finally, the Iowa Legislature lowered its allowance for the year. We get it; it’s been rough for the Hawkeyes. So maybe the Board of Regents is cutting them some slack by not raising their tuition rates next semester and asking the Legislature for an extra $4.5 million to funnel to Iowa. Because maybe the Board thought they couldn’t handle the year without it. Of course they knew we could, because we told them we could. We, referring to students of Iowa State, as well as student at the University of Northern Iowa, told campus leaders we would be OK with a slight tuition increase this spring semester provided that the money somehow went toward alleviating the pressures that our 36,001 record-enrolled students have wrought. So when the Board of Regents announced tuition numbers Wednesday, we weren’t surprised to see the spring 2016 undergraduate resident rate increase by $100 for Iowa State and Northern Iowa. Iowa students won’t see a tuition increase because at Wednesday’s board meeting, the Iowa Student Government president, on behalf of the student body, called for a tuition freeze for Iowa students, saying: “That extra $100 could mean a month’s worth of groceries, a quarter of a month’s rent or money for textbook rentals, a cost that’s consistently increasing.” We have groceries to buy. We have rent to pay. Textbooks are just as expensive for us. But maybe we should cut Iowa students some slack. They’ve had a bit of a bumpy road this year. For one, their president left them, and they aren’t too big of a fan of the new head Hawkeye, Bruce Harreld, a businessman the Board of Regents selected last week to be the university’s 21st president. The Iowa Faculty Senate then issued a vote of no confidence in the Board of Regents. The Iowa undergraduate and graduate student governments followed suit later that night. What’s more is that prior to the presidential search the board this summer hoped the Iowa Legislature twice suggested budgets that would funnel money away from UI. You could imagine the Hawkeyes weren’t too keen on that idea. Then regents unanimously approved giving Iowa an extra $4.5 million in increased appropriations in its new legislative request, which sends a mixed message. The students are saying the university can afford not to raise tuition, which would have given the university an additional $1.2 to $1.4 million. But the university says it needs four times more than an increase in tuition would have granted it. It’s in such a rut it had to hire a businessman to claw its way out, or so says the Board of Regents. Such a rut that it could almost make us feel bad when we run over its football team Saturday. Almost.
Editorial Board
Danielle Ferguson, editor-in-chief Madison Ward, opinion editor Maddy Arnold, managing editor of engagement Opinions expressed in columns and letters are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Daily or organizations with which the author(s) are associated.
Feedback policy:
The Daily encourages discussion but does not guarantee its publication. We reserve the right to edit or reject any letter or online feedback. Send your letters to letters@iowastatedaily.com. Letters must include the name(s), phone number(s), majors and/or group affiliation(s) and year in school of the author(s). Phone numbers and addresses will not be published. Online feedback may be used if first name and last name, major and year in school are included in the post. Feedback posted online is eligible for print in the Iowa State Daily.
IOWA STATE DAILY
SPORTS
10
Friday, Sept. 11, 2015
CY-HAWK SERIES INFO
Iowa State Daily
Redshirt senior quarterback Sam Richardson surveys the field during the Cy-Hawk game against Iowa on Sept. 13, 2014. The Cyclones defeated the Hawkeyes 20-17, and they have a chance to make it four wins against Iowa in five years at 3:45 p.m. Saturday at Jack Trice Stadium.
The Cy-Hawk series was developed in 200405 pitting Iowa State against Iowa athletics. Academics weren’t added as a contributor until 2011. Each sport is worth two points with the exception of football, three points, and academics, one point. The 2014-15 season marked the first time either school claimed back-to-back titles, when Iowa State won its second consecutive Cy-Hawk title by a score of 15-11. Prior to that, the Cyclones and the Hawkeyes alternated victories. Here’s a look at how this weekend’s Cy-Hawk games will contribute to the 2015-16 series: Soccer — 6:30 p.m. in Iowa City: 2 points Volleyball — 8 p.m. in Iowa City, 2 points Football — 3:45 p.m. in Ames, 3 points
One game, the same as another By Max.Dible @iowastatedaily.com
The annual Cy-Hawk showdown between Iowa State and Iowa is just another game — at least the way ISU coach Paul Rhoads approaches it. The coach acknowledges that the matchup between his Cyclones and the visiting Hawkeyes, set for 3:45 p.m. Saturday inside Jack Trice Stadium, has a magnitude of meaning for players and fans alike. However, Rhoads takes exception to the notion that he or any other member of his program places more importance on beating Iowa than the other 11 challengers they stare down every season. “That’s the furthest from the truth,” Rhoads asserted. “The
UNI game was the most important game on the schedule last week because it was the game we were playing. The Iowa game is the most important game this week because its the game we’re playing. Toledo will be next week, and that’s not coach speak. “You’ve got to win games. And if you’re not focused on the game you’re playing and able to move on … then you’re not going to be successful as a program.” Iowa State’s goals extend beyond in-state bragging rights. The Cyclones have the opportunity to capitalize on a softer opening half of their schedule, which includes three home games — Northern Iowa, Iowa and Kansas — and two road tests against Toledo and Texas Tech. Iowa is arguably the toughest opponent in that stretch. For the Cyclones to find success for the fourth time in five seasons
against the Hawkeyes, their offense will have to be more efficient than it was against UNI. Iowa State’s defense and the special teams unit’s record night returning punts helped the Cyclones start four first-half drives inside the UNI 50-yard line. Those four drives, however, produced only 10 points. The lack of production was due in part to a Quenton Bundrage fumble, as well as inaccuracy on the part of kicker Cole Netten — who was the hero in the Cy-Hawk matchup last season, making a late-game field goal to seal the 20-17 victory — but who missed two kicks last Saturday against the Panthers. “Our offense, in my eyes, was kind of a good news, bad news story,” said ISU offensive coordinator Mark Mangino. “The good news is our kids were able to overcome adversity and make plays
in key situations. The bad news is we created that adversity for ourselves, so we had to overcome our own mistakes. But everything is fixable.” The offensive line also had its struggles against UNI, allowing four sacks and contributing to a rushing attack that fell well short of 100 yards gained. The Iowa defense will present an even bigger challenge against the run, but right tackle Brock Dagel said that some of the noise around the Hawkeyes’ defensive line is just hype that can be overcome. “Out on the outside, sure [Iowa’s defensive line] is good. Their two interior guys [Jaleel Johnson and Nathan Bazata], they’re good guys, but they’re not Carl Davis and they’re not Louis Trinca-Pasat [former Hawkeye players],” Dagel said. “There’s a lot of old guys on our offensive
line, and we know what we’re going to get from them.” Dagel added that he expects a jump in offensive line play from the team’s initial outing, especially with the expected return of starting right guard Daniel Burton from a knee injury that sidelined him in the first game. “We were a little all over the place,” Dagel explained. “We had our ups and downs in really all areas of play, but I think it was a factor of the first game thing. Maybe some jitters here and there.” Dagel said he believes the Cyclones will be able to stow those jitters Saturday, even despite what the Cy-Hawk showdown means throughout the state. After all, as far as Iowa State is concerned, the Hawkeyes are just another opponent, and Saturday is just another game — for the most part.
ISU volleyball opens Cy-Hawk series against improved Iowa By Garrett.Kroeger @iowastatedaily.com It’s that time of year again — Cy-Hawk volleyball time. The Cyclones, who traveled more than 1,000 miles last weekend to compete in Virginia, have a much less taxing schedule this weekend as they head to Iowa City to play in the Comfort Suite Challenge hosted by the Hawkeyes. “It is Iowa,” said outside hitter Natalie Vondrak. “We got to beat them.” Iowa State is coming off a weekend in which they went 2-1 at the Fairfield Inn and Suites Cavalier Classic in Charlottesville, Va. During the tournament, the Cyclones saw an increase in offensive production, which if they can sustain will come in handy
against the Hawkeyes. “Our passing was a lot more crisp, and just our overall offensive ability was improved,” said ISU head coach Christy Johnson-Lynch. Last year at Hilton Coliseum, the Cyclones defeated the Hawkeyes in straight sets to claim victory in the Cy-Hawk rivalry game. This time around, though, the Cyclones will be not have the luxury of homecourt advantage. However, Iowa State is currently 4-0 under Johnson-Lynch while playing Iowa at Carver Hawkeye Arena. And although the Cyclones swept the Hawkeyes last year, this season’s version of the in-state rivalry might last more than three sets. “They are a better team this year com-
pared to past Iowa teams,” said senior libero Caitlin Nolan. Nolan went on to note that Iowa has a strong slide attack, which is one of the hardest attacks in volleyball that a team can execute. In simple terms, a slide attack is when the setter and the attacker make a late read on the blocker and then attempt to fake the defense out by changing the direction of the attack at the last moment. Iowa State also needs to focus on winning instead of playing not to lose like it did against Virginia last weekend. The Hawkeyes are not the only team the Cyclones will face this weekend. Iowa State will also take on No. 25 Texas A&M as well as the Milwaukee Panthers, the preseason favorites to capture the Horizon League.
The Aggies are one of the top hitting teams in the nation, ranking No. 34 in the country with a .269 hitting percentage. “[Texas A&M] has great outsider hitters that just make plays,” Johnson-Lynch said. Not only will the hitting percentage be a factor in the Texas A&M match, but Iowa State’s ability to combat the slide attack will be an area to watch in all three matches during the two-day Comfort Suite Challenge. “Our main focus this week is playing against the slide attack,” Vondrak said. “And just being very sound defensively.” Iowa State will kick off the challenge facing Texas A&M at 1:30 p.m. Friday at Carver Hawkeye Arena. The Cyclones will then play the Hawkeyes at 8 p.m. Friday, and the Panthers at 4 p.m. Saturday.
Cyclones prepare for in-state rival Hawkeyes, home opener By Trey.Alesslo @iowastatedaily.com
The ISU women’s soccer team has a big weekend ahead of it. The Cyclones square off Friday night against the Hawkeyes in the Cy-Hawk rivalry in Iowa City. Iowa State opens its home schedule Sunday against North Dakota State. But the Cyclones are focused on taking the labels off the games, setting their sights instead on simply winning the weekend. The matchup with Iowa is just another game for Iowa State. “Each game means more as you’re going toward the end of the season. And it just helps build confidence for us as we are going into the Big 12,” said ISU head coach Tony Minatta. “We want to win every game, so there’s no real added motivation. The motivation for us is to play the best we can possibly play every game. I don’t feel we’ve done that as a
team yet.” Until last year, when Iowa State beat Iowa for the first time since 2005 due to some late heroics by Alyssa Williamson, Minatta said it wasn’t really a rivalry. “Getting a win last year [against Iowa] was the proverbial monkey off the back because I think going into those games knowing that you had lost every year kind of started weighing on the team,” Minatta said. “Now it’s done. We can focus more on the soccer piece instead of the emotional side of it.” To win the Cyclones believe they must start strong and maintain that level of play throughout the whole 90 minutes. “Obviously we came off a tough loss this past weekend, but we’re really just looking to get another win,” said junior captain Madi Ott. “The rivalry is what it is, but we’re just focused on playing our best game and getting better, improving on the things we need to.” The game against North Dakota State in Ames will also pro-
vide an opportunity for Iowa State to pursue its stated goals. “We just want to get another win on the boards, and doing that at home is a great feeling,” Ott said. Although the Cyclones’ mindset is that their first home game is just another game, they want to show up in front of their fans and set the mark for teams coming to the Cyclones Sports Complex. “[The first home game] is big because you actually get to play in front of your home fans and show that we appreciate all the support they have given us, even on the road,” Minatta said. “That helps build confidence and establish a standard for when the Big 12 teams come in. We want to be really tough to play at home. We want to win every game on our home field.” The team’s focus remains on the task at hand — winning and improving every game. “The ultimate goal is to get both wins,” Ott said. “We want to come out strong, start the game
FirstName LastName/Iowa State Daily
Then-sophomore forward Koree Willer runs the ball down the field during the Cy-Hawk game against Iowa on Sept. 5, 2014, which the Cyclones won 2-1. The team looks to repeat the victory in Iowa City at 8 p.m. Friday.
strong, finish the game strong, play a total of 90 minutes, work hard for each other, clean up the things that we’re still working on and continue to get better.”
Iowa State will take on Iowa in the Cy-Hawk series at 6:30 p.m. Friday in Iowa City and North Dakota State at 1:00 p.m. Sunday in Ames.
Basics of Budgeting:
$ INCOME > EXPENSE $ Why? It’s your money, you should have control over where it goes. We all have goals, budgeting allows you to plan for your goals and start saving money to achieve those goals. Creating a budget will help you understand your spending habits and what’s important to you. It provides you the opportunity to make changes to your spending habits.
5 1
Simple Steps
Write down where you THINK you spend your money.
2
Track where you ACTUALLY spend your money - every penny
3
Compare where you THINK you spend your money and where you ACTUALLY spent your money
vs
You have to earn your money before you spend it.
4
Create your budget – plan where you want your money to go
5
Track your spending, Adjust your budget if necessary. Repeat.
Start Saving
TODAY
A change can do you good – find a place in your budget to cut back on one small expense, an expense under $10, this week.
X
Instead of buying that Grande Mocha or downloading those new songs today, take that $3 and save it – put it aside in a safe location like in a shoebox, under your mattress, in a drawer.
Online Budget Resources o www.mint.com o www.levelmoney.com o www.loaneducation.iastate.edu
NoFearFinance.com (515) 294-0677
Do that once a week for a month. After a month you’ve got $12 saved. The next month save $5 a week, now you’ve got $32, the third month save $7 a week, now you’ve got $60.
12 32 60 Continue on this trend and slowly you’ll accumulate a small savings that you can use for an interest payment on a student loan, or to help offset the cost of books next semester….all without a large impact your everyday life
12
CLASSIFIEDS
Friday, Sept. 11, 2015
9/11 p1 Vezeau was sat down by his teacher with the rest of his 2nd grade class and told that there was an attack. “I certainly didn’t understand the consequence or the magnitude of that at the time,” Vezeau said. When returning home from school, he admitted that the attacks dominated most of the media showing footage, photos and interviews in a desperate attempt to understand the event. “This was something unusual,” Vezeau said. “We did know something important, something big had happened.” As time passed, Vezeau became fascinated with the politics surrounding events throughout history, including the acts of terrorism that happened in 2001. “Emotionally, [Sept. 11] was very unifying,” Vezeau said. Vezeau had a friend in his class who lost a family member in the attacks on the towers. During the one year anniversary, his friend made a presentation to their class and began to cry. “That was eye opening,” Vezeau said. “We didn’t have that real-world connection at the time. It was something that was on TV… It just wasn’t real, if you will.” Kyle Janssen, junior in business management and
TUITION p1 Though many students seemed confused by the news, some felt it was necessary to support record growth at Iowa State this year. Shaun Vanweelden, senior in software engineering, and Kelsey Hrubes, sophomore in computer science, agreed the tuition increase made sense considering Iowa State’s record enrollment. “There’s a lot of growth that needs to happen at Iowa State to support all these new students,” Vanweelden said. “So I’m actually pretty OK with [the increase].” Vanweelden said he
Katy Klopfenstein/Iowa State Daily
Neil Vezeau, junior in animal science, remembers learning about the 9/11 attacks when he was in 2nd grade and not understanding what happened.
president of Student Veterans of America, remembers leaving his middle school geography class and heading into study hall when the first tower was struck. “It didn’t trigger a response right away because I wasn’t fully aware what was going to happen,” Janssen said. However, he became more informed when he joined the military and participating in four years of active military, he recognizes
the importance. “A majority of … the military, a lot of people sacrifice from the Midwest as far as having family members that are in the military,” Janssen said. “I think they knew something was going to happen.” He admits the difference between generations that were present when history is made compared to younger citizens who see it as a piece of America’s past. Janssen says, it is affecting
them enough to encourage them to fight for our country. “They are definitely understanding it enough that they are going at war or continuously in war in the
Middle East, and the reason for that all stemmed from 9/11,” Janssen said. While he agrees that it did unify us the following decade, Janssen admits there has been tension
amongst citizens again, regarding race and beliefs. “9/11 brought everyone together, and now it seems like people want to separate everyone again,” Janssen said.
was aware of the increase, but Hrubes had not heard about it yet. “When you mentioned that there’d be an increase, I was thinking thousands of dollars,” Hrubes said. “But $100? I can breathe easy.” Hrubes said the $100 would not have a huge impact on her budget. “I make $100 impulse purchases sometimes so it’s not that big of a deal,” Hrubes said. Hrubes and Vanweelden said that they could see students’ money being spent in the ongoing projects around campus, and they expected the increased funds to further benefit everyone at Iowa State.
“Even if it’s not helping me, I understand that there’s a lot more people here than just myself and my major,” Vanweelden said. “I think everyone needs a little support.” The Board of Regents approved an increase for both ISU and UNI students but exempted the University of Iowa at their student government leaders’ request. Dan Breitbarth, Student Government president, was in favor of the tuition increase for ISU students. “We’re proud to be the number one school in the state of Iowa not only in total enrollment but also in in-state enrollment as
well,” Breitbarth said. “With that comes particular challenges that are positive challenges.” Breitbarth said he recommended a “minimal increase” for ISU students now to prevent a large hike in upcoming years. “There are some resources that the university needs at the current moment that we don’t have,” Breitbarth said. “Those resources could become available with financial backing.” Breitbarth said the Thielen Health Center and on-campus dining services were just two examples of areas that could use additional resources. “I do serve on the Uni-
versity Budget Advisory Committee, and I have input on financial matters,” Breitbarth said. “I can make sure [the money is] designated to the correct accounts and that that it’s going toward benefitting the students.” Breitbarth said he consulted the 50 student government delegates and 25 student leaders from the College of Business as to the soundness of the financial details before reaching the decision to advocate for the tuition increase. Each of the student representatives supported his decision, he said. “I was pretty comfortable and confident with the decision that I made,”
Breitbarth said. “In fact, it’s not even the decision that I made — it’s the decision the students made; it’s what they supported.” Breitbarth said he hasn’t heard any feedback since the Board of Regents approved the increase, but he always welcomes comments and concerns from the students. “I’m confident that I can alleviate their concerns,” Breitbarth said. For students concerned about the future of their finances at Iowa, Breitbarth said the Student Loan Education Office, located in 0680 Beardshear Hall, is available to help with financial aid questions and planning.
515.294.4123
Iowa State Daily
Flags line the sidewalks around Central Campus for the 9/11 memorial Sept. 11, 2011. This year marks the 14th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks that targeted the World Trade Center in New York City and the Pentagon in Washington using airplanes. Another attack was planned, but the efforts of passengers on board thwarted it.
www.iowastatedaily.com/classifieds
IOWA STATE DAILY BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Jackson Cleaning Service Call us at 231-3649
•Residential Cleaning •Getting Your Home Ready For the Market
•Windows •Deep Cleaning
• RENTALS: • Sorority& Fraternity
Guaranteed Your Rental Deposit Back!
References • Insured & Bonded • 27 Years Experience • Gift Cards Available
The Recommends ALL ITS READERS Closely examine any offer of a job opportunity or service that sounds too good to be true; chances are it is. Before investing any money, please contact the
Des Moines Better Business Bureau at 515-243-8137
YOUR PLACE?
Put an ad in our Classifieds & GET RESULTS! Call 294-4123 Today! or iowastatedaily.com
classified@iowastatedaily.com
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
Do you enjoy flirting and have a positive body image? Flexible scheduling, great pay, perfect for college students. Dangerous Curves downtown Ames is hiring. 515-233-5445
in their home (24-hr site) & in the community to lead self-directed lives. Help make a difference & join our passionate team! For more information or to apply, visit our Employment page at www.LSIowa.org EOE
required. Plus snow removal, mowing, other chores. 515-292-4262
Seeking administrative assistant needed to organize mail, This is a part time role that could eventually lead into a full time position.Such as answering phones, faxing, filing. This role is ideal for someone who has worked an office in manufacturing field. We are looking for someone with a solid work history. If you are familiar with Visual Shop please mention that in your reply. Hoffmanland44@ gmail.com
Want Rewarding Employment that will help you with your future career? LSI's Services for People with Disabilities daily program has the following job opportunities available: - Direct Support Professionals - Site Team Leader - Overnight Monitors We have part-time & full-time positions available for all shifts. These positions will provide support & assistance to individuals with chronic mental illness or developmental disabilities
SUBLEASE
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
NEED TO
HELP WANTED Help Wanted- Office/ Clerical PT Clerical Person needed from MondayFriday, $600.00 weekly. Computer skills are a must. Need to be detail oriented, possess good customer service skills, some cash & items handling skills,Must be able to do Lil errand. Apply Email: johntoadd@ outlook.com
HELP WANTED Part Time horse barn help, 2 horses. Experience
HELP WANTED AUTOMOTIVE DETAILER WE ARE CURRENTLY SEEKING A PART-TIME AUTOMOTIVE DETAILER. MAIN TASKS INCLUDE WASHING AND CLEANING VEHICLES, APPLYING INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR SEALANTS, POWER POLISHING. FLEXIBLE HOURS, GOOD DRIVING RECORD AND PRE-EMPLOYMENT DRUG TEST REQUIRED. , CONTACT RON FRANDSEN AT rdf@wilsonofames. com, JOSH HOLZ AT joshholz@wilsonofames.com OR DANNY WILSON AT dannyw@wilsonofames. com OR STOP IN FOR AN APPLICATION.
FOR SALE For Sale one of a kind 1997 Gas Club Cart wrapped for an ISU fan! Priced $ 4,500.00. Call Dale 402-690-1143
Welcome Scott Bohner, DO Family Medicine
Accepting New Patients
Dr. Bohner completed his Doctorate of Osteopathic Medicine from Des Moines University. He then completed a Family Medicine Residency at Broadlawns Medical Center in Des Moines. Dr. Bohner practiced medicine for seven years in northeast Iowa. Dr. Bohner joined the McFarland Clinic Family Medicine West office in July. Services he will provide include: • Preventative medicine including: - Well exams - Sports physicals - Immunizations • Women’s health • Pediatrics • DOT certified medical exams • Treatment of acute and chronic illnesses • Sports Medicine
OVER 200 BIKES IN STOCK AND READY TO RIDE!!! • Service • Savings • Selection
To schedule an appointment call (515) 663-4892
McFarland Clinic PC www.mcfarlandclinic.com
126 South 3rd • 232-3669 • www.bikeworldiowa.com