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An independent student newspaper serving Iowa State since 1890

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FRIDAY

03.06.2020 Vol. 220 No. 112

ISCORE 20th Anniversary

Universitysponsored travel suspended BY SAGE.SMITH @iowastatedaily.com

DESIGN BY BROOKLYN WILLIAMS

Celebrating 20 years

Conference highlights ethnicity BY LOGAN.METZGER @iowastatedaily.com

Iowa State will celebrate the 20th anniversary of its conference on race and ethnicity Friday. The Thomas L. Hill Iowa State Conference on Race and Ethnicit y (ISCORE) is an annual comprehensive forum on issues of race and ethnicity at Iowa State and beyond. The local conference is designed to model

the National Conference on Race and Ethnicity in Higher Education (NCORE). “We know racism, discrimination and bigotry exist and are causing hurt and harm on our campus and in society,” said President Wendy Wintersteen in a letter attac hed to the ISCORE program. “ISCORE is one important way we can raise awareness and understanding of these issues and work together to take action to create a more

welcoming and inclusive university and community.” ISCORE will take place from 8:15 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday in multiple rooms in the Memorial Union. This comprehensive forum on issues of race and ethnicity is free and open to the Iowa State community, including students, faculty and staff. “A b o u t 2 0 ye a r s a go t h e senior vice president for student affairs put together a team of staff, faculty and students

to go to NCORE and bring bac k information with the idea that we would put on a conference here for our community at Iowa State,” said Japannah Kellogg, director of the NCORE-ISCORE Project. “2000 was the first year of Iowa State’s Conference on Race and Ethnicity.” Kellogg said the reason the senior vice president for student

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Fritz-Schrader wins election BY JACOB.SMITH @iowastatedaily.com Morgan Fritz, sophomore in political science, and Jacob Schrader, junior in economics and political science, were elected as Student Government president and vice president Thursday evening. “We’d just like to thank everyone that got out and voted, it’s really important that student voices are heard and we’re really looking forward to representing all students,” Fritz said. Voting took place Tuesday and Wednesday after a little over a month of campaigning. “It’s going to be an exciting year and I can’t wait to get to work for all Cyclones,” Schrader said. The Fritz-Schrader campaign received 2,962 votes while the Greene-Hanyang campaign received 1,415 votes. Fall enrollment numbers totaled 33,391, meaning with 4,534 total votes about 15.1 percent of the student body voted for president and vice president. In comparison to last year, the percentage of the student body that voted is up by 0.2 percent, down 2.7 percent from the spring of 2018. Fritz and Schrader ran on a platform of

CAITLIN YAMADA/ IOWA STATE DAILY Morgan Fritz, sophomore in political science, and Jacob Schrader, junior in economics and political science, giving a speech after they are elected president and vice president.

addressing college affordability, campus climate and sustainability on campus. Lydia Greene, junior in political science, and Joshua Hanyang, senior in management information systems, were running against Fritz and Schrader. Additionally, students voted for representatives of their respective colleges and constituencies.

The College of Agriculture and Life Sciences elected Julie Anderson, junior in agriculture and society, and Hans Riensche, senior in agricultural business, as senators. The College of Design elected Joshua Stephens, freshman in pre-community and regional planning, as a senator. The College of Engineering elected Zachary Lewis, senior in electrical engineering, Leslie Lona, junior in biological system engineering and Abigail Schulte, sophomore in biological system engineering, as senators. The Graduate College elected Jacob Minock, graduate student in business administration, as a senator. Alexis Samano, graduate student in education, Chuck Wongus, graduate student in education, and Prajjwal Jamdagni, graduate student in computer science, all received two write-in votes and are tied for the remaining seat. The College of Human Sciences elected Emily Hovey, senior in event management, and Kimberly Zavoski, senior in hospitality management, as senators. A candidate had previously been in who was awarded 522 votes, but withdrew from the race,

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Iowa State decided Thursday to suspend all university-sponsored international travel for 30 days, effective immediately, according to a message from President Wendy Wintersteen. All students, faculty and staff currently out of the country on university-sponsored programs will be recalled if the country is listed as a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) level three warning. The countries currently at a level three warning are China, South Korea and Italy. Natalia Rios is a sophomore in political science, international studies and public relations. She arrived in Urbino, Italy, for her study abroad program on Jan. 23 and returned to the United States on Tuesday after the university recalled all students studying abroad in Italy. She is currently in quarantine for 14 days in an on-campus apartment, free of cost. The apartment is fully furnished and Rios said she had groceries to last for three or four days. Hot meals are left outside for her and she can walk out of the apartment to get the food once those who delivered it are gone. She also has to take her temperature twice a day and watch for any possible symptoms. “I’m feeling super healthy,” Rios said. “I was really germaphobe at the airport. I wore gloves and masks and everything. As soon as I got here I showered. [...] I don’t have any of the symptoms and I have to report my temperature twice a day. I’m fine, I’m good.” Rios said she couldn’t return to her home in Puerto Rico so she asked to stay on campus as the university offered on-campus housing. The university doesn’t want her to be in public like campus buildings and classes and if she goes out, she has to report who she was with and where she was, but they encourage her to not leave during the 14 days. The students studying abroad in Italy have been told they will receive the full 15 credits for the semester, the university is just working on the logistics of the academic continuation plan. Rios said they were kind of expecting the study abroad program to get cancelled as another university that had students in Italy had already cancelled it for them. “So we were kind of expecting it, it was just a matter of time for our program to get cancelled,” Rios said. “We were the last program to be cancelled. There were two other universities in Urbino.” Rios said she thinks Iowa State has been “super helpful” with the process compared to other universities. The university paid for the hotel where students stayed in Rome as they had to leave Urbino while waiting for their flights back to the U.S. The university has said they will reimburse each student up to $1,200 for flight costs.

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