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12.03.2019 Vol. 220 No. 065

TUESDAY

CAITLIN YAMADA/ IOWA STATE DAILY GPSS Vice President James Klimavicz speaks during their meeting Tuesday in the Sun Room of the Memorial Union.

GPSS postpones constitution, bylaw discussion BY JACOB.SMITH @iowastatedaily.com At its last meeting of the semester, the Graduate and Professional Student Senate (GPSS) postponed bills to ratify a new constitution and adopt a new set of by-laws. The Senate began by accepting the Committee for Constitutional Revision’s final report. “ The sudden resignation of the GPSS Professional Advancement Grants (PAG) Chair on September 25th, 2019, five days before the regularly scheduled GPSS meeting, resulted in emergency meetings [...] to determine the best way to proceed in this situation in compliance with current GPSS law,” as stated in the document. The final report laid out the committee’s motivation for expediting the constitutional and by-law revision as well as the main focuses. “A focus was placed on ensuring a fair nominations and election process,” as stated in the document. “However, the two committees instead found the constitution and By-Laws to be shockingly devoid of any information on special election procedures or methods of filling vacancies.”

GPSS

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Horticulture Club begins seasonal selling of poinsettias BY AMBER.FRIEDRICHSEN @iowastatedaily.com

POINSETTIAS

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BY FAITH.VENENGA @iowastatedaily.com Performing since childhood, Iowa State student EllieMae Millenkamp, senior in agricultural business, had never been so nervous when she took the stage of NBC’s singing competition show “The Voice.” The first time Millenkamp tried to audition for “The Voice,” she didn’t make it because of too many competitors filling the slots. It wasn’t the end for her, though, because in October of 2018, Millenkamp received an invite for a private audition to participate in season 17 of “The Voice.” In February of 2019, she flew to Denver with three to four songs prepared to sing for the private audition. Her private audition earned her an interview, which lasted between 30

PHOTO COURTESY OF NBC EllieMae Millenkamp, senior in agricultural business and former contestant on season 17 of “The Voice.” Millenkamp was coached by Blake Shelton during her two rounds on the show.

minutes to an hour and where production asked questions about her life story. In June she flew to Los Angeles, where she would begin the audition process. Having been inspired by Kacey Musgraves, Millenkamp performed her song “Merry Go Round” for 15 million people watching her alongside her parents. On “The Voice,” four coaches recruit a team of musicians from blind auditions, in which they do not see the contestant while they perform. When a judge wants a contestant on their team, they hit a button, turning their chair around for them to see the contestant. While Millenkamp was singing, she knew the four coaches had their teams fi lling up, so she was nervous about anyone turning around for her.

With her luck, Blake Shelton was the one coach who turned around for her performance. “I didn’t think he was going to turn while I was singing,” Millenkamp said. “I got super emotional because this was real life and started tearing up while singing and started crying after I was done.” After Shelton became Millenkamp’s coach, she met up with him to prepare for the next part of her journey. Meeting around 10 times on and off camera, Shelton gave Millenkamp feedback and helped her prepare for her next performance. “A l l o f t h e c o a c h e s a re re a l l y nice and have nice things to say,” Millenkamp said. “For example, they liked my tone. Blake pushed me out

THE VOICE

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DESIGN BY MARIA ALBERS

Iowa State’s Horticulture Club is hosting a seasonal poinsettia sale during the first week back from fall break. The club will have varieties of the festive flower for sale on campus Wednesday through Saturday. The poinsettia is a flower commonly associated with the holidays. According to the University of Illinois Extension, the plant is the most popular Christmas decoration — not just in America, but in countries all over the world. Cassie Rosane is a junior studying horticulture, and said she has an emphasis in greenhouse production. Rosane is the promotions committee chair of the Horticulture Club where she is responsible for advertising the sale across social media. She has been involved with the sale in the past. Rosane said there are six diff erent poinsettias available: red, white, red glitter, burgundy, pink and gold rush. The red

EllieMae’s time on ‘The Voice’


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CAMPUS BRIEF

Iowa State Daily Tuesday, December 03, 2019

CALENDAR

FEATURE PHOTO

12.3.19 Retirement reception: Ellen Fairchild, Room 2622 Lagomarcino Hall at1 p.m. Ellen Fairchild,

discuss writing strategies about her childhood in the Rockies. Dr. Iversen will also host a craft talk at 2:10pm in Ross 212. As part of the Pearl Hogrefe Visiting Writers Series, she will talk about research, art, ethics, and aesthetics in creative non-fiction.

Wood-Burned Ornaments, Workspace at the Iowa State Memorial Union at 2 p.m. Need a

Canadian Brass, Stephens Auditorium at 7:30 p.m. With an international reputation as one of the

teaching professor in the School of Education, is retiring. A short program will begin at 2:15 p.m.

last minute gift? Starting with a wood slice, stamp a design on and trace it with a wood burner, or freehand your own idea.

Retirement reception: Donald Beermann, Kildee Hall atrium at 3:30 p.m. Donald Beermann, professor and department chair of animal science, is retiring from the university on Jan. 6, 2020. A program will begin at 4 p.m.

Workshop, Building an inclusive and learner-centered syllabus, 2030 Morrill Hall or view on your own via Zoom at 4:10 p.m. This conversation will be a starting place for thinking through how to implement inclusive pedagogy and learner-centered practices into your syllabus. We will discuss strategies for producing a learner-centered syllabus; as well as, the importance of establishing clear expectations and goals, and building rapport and community in your class.

Build Your Own Willow Wreath, Reiman Gardens at 6 p.m. Crisscross willow branches to

make a base for a holiday wreath with the expert guidance of local artists Pam Dennis & Ryk Weiss.

Lecture: Growing Up in the Nuclear Shadow of the Rocky Flats, Sun Room, Memorial Union at 7 p.m. Dr. Kristen Iversen’s lecture will

most popular brass ensembles today, Canadian Brass, whose engaging stage presence and rapport with audiences has truly earned the distinction of the world’s most famous brass group.Their concerts show the full range from trademark Baroque and Dixieland tunes to new compositions and arrangements created especially for them.

Concert: Toys for Tots benefit, Martha-Ellen Tye Recital Hall, Music Hall at 7:30 p.m. The ISU student chapter of the Sigma Alpha Iota international music fraternity will present a benefit concert for the Toys for Tots program. The concert features ISU students and faculty. Donations are welcome.

CAITLIN YAMADA/ IOWA STATE DAILY Food and dances The United Arab Emirates (UAE) hosted an event on Monday to celebrate the UAE’s 48th national day. There was a presentation that discussed the history of the UAE.

12.4.19

Horticulture Club: Poinsettia sale, Ground floor rotunda, Curtiss Hall at 10 a.m. Horticulture

IOWA STATE DAILY BUSINESS DIRECTORY

club members will sell poinsettias of various colors Dec. 4-7 at a different campus location daily.

Grandma Mojo’s Moonshine Revival Comedy Troupe, The M-Shop, Memorial Union 9 p.m. This group is great for those who love the

Jackson Cleaning Service

improv comedy humor of their fellow college students and can’t get enough of location, occupation, means of death.

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NEWS

Tuesday, December 03, 2019 Iowa State Daily

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Open option students find ‘home’ BY LYDIA.SAMUELSON @iowastatedaily.com Every year, Iowa State welcomes students of all majors, from anthropology to engineering, and among them are open option students. Rebecca Kurkiewicz is a freshman at Iowa State and is an open option student within the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. “I’ve enjoyed my experience as an open option student because it gave me a chance to explore different interests of mine,” Kurkiewicz said. “The [open option] program helped me learn more about myself and areas I’d be interested in studying.” Autumn Cartagena is an academic adviser at Iowa State for Liberal Arts and Sciences. Cartagena is also the director of the Helping Open Option Students Manage Exploration (HOME) learning community. “Have you ever been in a new place with new people and automatically felt at home with them?” Cartagena said. “Even if you’d never met them before or been there, you’re just like, ‘oh, this totally feels right.’ Being open option is pursuing that feeling in an academic home.” Cartagena said students in the open option program explore their interests and strengths while they examine possible majors and careers. Open option students take a strength assessment from Gallop and an O*NET interest profiler, which allows students to get an idea of how their personalities and talents might fit into different occupations. “The only pieces that are required for [students] are doing LAS 101 and meeting with their academic adviser for registration,” Cartagena said. “However, what is recommended is that they meet with their adviser within the first two weeks of classes to know

COURTESY OF AUTUMN CARTAGENA Members of the Helping Open Option Students Manage Exploration (HOME) learning community at Iowa State. The HOME learning community helps open option students decide on a major.

how things are going, to meet with their adviser if their schedule needs any changes, of course, and then we do a wellness campaign. We invite students to come in to make sure everything’s going okay as they transition to Iowa State.” Part of an open option student’s transition to the university comes through the learning community HOME. Cartagena said the learning community

takes their theme of “home” all the way. Open option students arriving at orientation received a HOME keychain shaped like a house, and they refer to the peer mentors of the community as neighbors. Kennedy Varisco, junior in English, is a previous mentor for the HOME learning community. Peer mentors are there to provide students with guidance for their academic and personal lives.

“A lot of my students struggled with time management,” Varisco said. “They were having a really difficult time figuring out how they were supposed to do all of their homework, study, do well in school and do everything else that any human being needs to do.” While there are resources for open option students to navigate the process of finding the right major, they may face struggles with deciding a major while simultaneously balancing school life. Cartagena said open option students can graduate at roughly the same rate as students with declared majors, as long as the open option students declare a major before they’ve earned more than 45 credits. Varisco said most of her students had an idea for their major as soon as a few weeks into their first school semester. “They were just kind of scared to make that final decision,” Varisco said. “That’s very daunting for a lot of individuals because they feel like once they make it, they’re stuck in it. [...] All of them, though, found classes for the next semester that they were excited about taking. That was an important part — that they were just excited and interested in what they were doing.” Cartagena and Varisco said the process of finding a major is different for every student, and some students even decide on a career they want and then work backwards to find a major that correlates with the career. “The reality is, we are all functionally open option all the time,” Cartagena said. “I define open option as needing to make a decision with some good information and some even better support. We’re all needing to make decisions all the time. [...] Open option students are just making an academic decision based on what they might want to study and get a degree in.”

Impeachment trial could conflict with campaigns

Lecture to focus on Cincinnati professor’s upbringing near a secret weapons facility

BY ANNA.OLSON @iowastatedaily.com

BY LOGAN.METZGER @iowastatedaily.com

With the Democratic presidential primaries and the impeachment inquiry into President Donald Trump ongoing simultaneously, a potential timetable conflict is being set up. The steps of this impeachment inquiry includes hearings in several committees in the House of Representatives, and House committees will then evaluate if there is enough sufficient evidence to proceed with the process of impeachment. Following that, the full House of Representatives would vote on the president’s impeachment. Being impeached by the House of Representatives means the U.S. Senate would hold a trial of the president. Time commitment in a trial could potentially be lengthy. Then-President Bill Clinton’s 1999 impeachment trial ran from Jan. 7 to Feb. 12. Many of the current Democratic presidential candidates are U.S. senators and would therefore make the decision on whether the president is guilty. Michael Bennet, Cory Booker, Kamala Harris, Amy Klobuchar, Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren all hold Senate seats. These candidates could potentially have to hit pause on their campaigns if an impeachment trial takes place in the Senate. Sharon Yang, Iowa press secretary for Kamala Harris, said Harris will be at a potential impeachment trial. “Senator Harris will absolutely fulfill her constitutional responsibility to be present during impeachment hearings and serve as a key voice holding the Trump Administration accountable on behalf of Californians and the American people,” Yang said. “In the meantime, she will continue to be all-in on

Multiple groups on campus came together to sponsor one speaker for this week’s lecture. Kristen Iversen, professor of creative writing at the University of Cincinnati, will be presenting the lecture “Full Body Burden: Growing Up in the Nuclear Shadow of Rocky Flats.” She will be speaking at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Sun Room of the Memorial Union. Her lecture will discuss writing strategies and her childhood in the Rockies. Iversen will also host a craft talk at 2:10 p.m. in Ross 212. As part of the Pearl Hogrefe Visiting Writers Series, she will talk about research, art, ethics and aesthetics in creative nonfiction. Iversen grew up near the Rocky Flats nuclear weaponry facility in Arvada, Colorado, and received a Ph.D. in English from the University of Denver. She is head of the Ph.D. program in literary nonfiction at the University of Cincinnati. During the summers, she serves on the faculty of the MFA low-residency program at the University of New Orleans, held in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, and in Edinburgh, Scotland. Iversen is a fellow at the Taft Humanities Center and serves as literary nonfiction editor of The Cincinnati Review. Iversen is the author of three books, including the award-winning “Full Body Burden.” Her book describes how she grew up

COURTESY OF GAGE SKIDMORE Donald Trump speaking at CPAC 2011 in Washington, D.C.

Iowa and continue discussing her record of fighting for justice for all Americans and her plans as President to fight for economic justice, environmental justice, and health care justice, among others.” A Warren spokesman referred the Daily to previous comments the senator made on a possible impeachment trial. Speaking with reporters on Nov. 1, Elizabeth Warren said “I’ll be there” of a potential impeachment trial. “This is a constitutional responsibility,” Warren said. “I swore an oath to uphold the Constitution of the United States of America, and so did everyone who is in the United States Congress.” Spokespersons for the other senators in the presidential race did not respond to emails requesting information on how the candidates that hold Senate seats will be affected if the impeachment proceeds. For the president to be found guilty in an impeachment trial, two-thirds of the body must vote guilty. Given current partisan standings in the Senate, that would require all of the Democratic senators to vote guilty in addition to at least 20 of the 53 Republican senators.

in a small Colorado town close to Rocky Flats, a secret nuclear weapons plant once designated “the most contaminated site in America.” “‘Full Body Burden’ is the story of a childhood and adolescence in the shadow of the Cold War, in a landscape at once startlingly beautiful and —unknown to those who lived there — tainted with invisible yet deadly particles of plutonium,” according to the book synopsis. “It’s also a book about the destructive power of secrets — both family and government. Her father’s hidden liquor bottles, the strange cancers in children in the neighborhood, the truth about what was made at Rocky Flats — best not to inquire too deeply into any of it. But as Iversen grew older, she began to ask questions and discovered some disturbing realities.” The book is based on extensive interviews, FBI and EPA documents and class-action testimony. This taut, beautifully written book is both captivating and unnerving, according to the book synopsis. “Full Body Burden” has won multiple awards since being published, including the 2013 Colorado Book Award, the Reading the West Book Award in Nonfiction, Mother Jones Best Book of 2012, Kirkus Reviews Best Book of 2012 and Atlantic Monthly Best Book about Justice. The lecture is co-sponsored by MFA Program in creative writing and environment, the department of English, the Pearl Hogrefe Fund, Humanities Iowa and Committee on Lectures.


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NEWS

Iowa State Daily Tuesday, December 03, 2019

CELT enhances teaching GRANT TETMEYER/ IOWA STATE DAILY Beardshear is home to many resources for students and administration. Iowa State is currently looking for a new vice president for research.

Search launches for new vice president for research BY QUINN.VANDENBERG @iowastatedaily.com Iowa State has begun the search for a new vice president for research following Sarah Nusser’s announcement that she will be completing her five-year term in the position. A search committee of 18 members from departments across Iowa State’s colleges was created to facilitate the search. Dan Grooms, Dr. Stephen G. Juelsgaard Dean of Veterinary Medicine, and Shauna Hallmark, director for the Institute of Transportation, are co-chairs of the committee. Following an initial committee meeting, an advertisement for the position was created to inform potential candidates of Iowa State’s research department and job requirements. Requirements for the position listed in the advertisement included eligibility for appointment at the rank of tenured professor; commensurate leadership and experience; a commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion; and excellent communication skills. “Diversity is the right thing to do,” Hallmark said. “Studies have shown that the more diverse team you have, the more productive you are, so we want someone who understands diversity.” A professional search firm, listed on the job posting as Buffin/Baker, has also been hired to help in the search for candidates. Grooms said the committee is searching for someone who has a background of successfully conducting research and securing funding and grants, specifically with research teams across disciplines. The committee wants someone who has a background in research but doesn’t necessarily have to come from academia. “Ultimately, they’re going to oversee all research that goes on here within the university,” Grooms said. “They’re going to set the strategies for both maintaining as well as increasing the amount of research and the amount of funding that comes here.” The Office of the Vice President for Research website lists that $469,082,592 worth of gifts, grants and contracts were received in the 2019 fiscal year. Hallmark said it is also important for the vice president for research to be able to effectively communicate with a client, industry representatives or faculty members. “They’re the ones that go talk to a client or maybe a donor,” Hallmark said. “They need to be personable to get people to work together and keep things moving.” Grooms said he hopes to have a group of applicants from diverse disciplines, genders, locations and ethnicities established by January 2020. “We’ll have two rounds of interviews,” Grooms said. “The first round where we’ll look at maybe 10 or 12 people, and then out of that group we’ll pick three to five folks to bring to campus.” Once the final candidates arrive on campus, there

RESEARCH

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Group focuses on education experience at Iowa State BY LOGAN.METZGER @iowastatedaily.com Almost every faculty member on campus interacts with the Center for Excellence in Learning and Teaching, though the common student may not know much about it. The Iowa State Center for Excellence in Learning and Teaching (CELT) was established in 1993. Over the ensuing 25 years, the center has evolved in multiple ways, including a name change, an expansion of staff and, as a result, an increase in reach across campus. “Skilled and dedicated educators who are committed to providing their students the best possible learning opportunities are a cornerstone of Iowa State University,” according to the CELT website. “CELT offers a variety of online and face-to-face resources for faculty, staff and graduate students who wish to practice effective teaching strategies and enhance student learning.” CELT provides resources for instructors, faculty, staff, graduate students and postdocs interested in teaching. It offers face-to-face one-off workshops, longer-term teaching and learning circles on selected topics and facilitation of teaching and learning communities. It also has a set of online resources that support CELT’s mission and current initiatives available on its website. CELT’s online resources are organized to help an instructor sequentially work through

IOWA STATE DAILY Engineering-LAS for Online Learning, along with Student Disability Services and the Center for Excellence in Learning and Teaching, hosted workshops to teach design for the disabled.

the teaching process and include a broad overview of effective educational practices grounded in educational theory to provide context for teaching in higher education, a comparison of different teaching formats, steps to take in preparing to teach a course and assessment and evaluation suggestions of both teaching and student learning. The teaching section is divided into seven areas: Creating an Inclusive Classroom, Teaching Format, Preparing To Teach, Document Your Teaching, Assessment and Evaluation, Effective Teaching Practices and Facilitating Learning with Technology. “Our programs are designed to support those teaching across the arc of their professional careers,” said Sara Marcketti, director of CELT and a professor in apparel, merchandising and design. “To achieve this, some programs are designed to assist new instructors, including term and tenure-track faculty members, to establish their teaching program and focus on effectiveness.” Other programs through CELT assist instructors in designing or refining a course

to implement a different teaching approach, while other programs help faculty transform scholarly teaching into scholarship of teaching and learning (SoTL) research projects. “Through all of our work, we collaborate with on-campus resources, including college instructional support units and other centrally-supported units such as the Dean of Students Office, Multicultural Student Affairs Office and the Academic Success Center,” Marcketti said. “We work to leverage existing resources and help faculty make these important connections across campus.” The CELT staff are located in 3024 Morrill Hall and are able to consult with instructors on any teaching-related topic, such as those centered on inclusivity, best practices in online and hybrid teaching, course development and innovative teaching methods. “Our vision is to position Iowa State University at the forefront of learning and teaching among land-grant universities,” according to the CELT website.

Two moderate candidates drop out BY JAKE.WEBSTER @iowastatedaily.com Moderate Democratic presidential candidates have headed for the exits in recent days. Retired Navy Admiral and former Rep. Joe Sestak announced his exit from the Democratic primary in a statement released late Sunday. “I want to thank you for the honor of running for President of the United States of America,” Sestak said in a statement. “It has been an endeavor filled with immeasurable wisdom, passions, humor and insights to, and from, the people of America.” S estak was f ol lowed by Montana Gov. Steve Bullock early Monday. “ Today, I am suspending my campaign to become the Democratic Party’s nominee for president,” Bullock said in a press release. “While there were many obstacles we could not have anticipated when entering this race, it has become clear that in this moment, I won’t be able to break through to the top tier of this still-crowded field of candidates.” Bullock had last qualified for the debate stage in the two-night Democratic presidential debates

GRANT TETMEYER/ IOWA STATE DAILY Montana governor and then-Democratic presidential candidate Steve Bullock addresses supporters at Cafe Diem on May 28.

in July, sponsored by CNN. Sestak never qualified for any of the presidential debates. In the November Selzer Iowa poll conducted for the Des Moines Register, CNN and Mediacom, Sestak and Bullock were the first or second choices of zero percent of likely Iowa Democratic caucusgoers. Other moderate Democrats have persisted in their quest for the Democratic nomination, despite low polling numbers. Former Rep. John Delaney, another moderate Democrat

seeking the party’s presidential nomination, issued a press release claiming he “endures” in the presidential race “while other moderates drop out.” Delaney has not been on the debate stage since July and polled at zero percent among likely Iowa Democratic caucusgoers. Delaney’s campaign included a statement in the release from a former Register opinion columnist who endorsed him, Chuck Offenburger. “I’ve watched John Delaney slowly and steadily build his

campaign and his positions from conversations with tens of thousands of Iowans in all 99 counties over the past two years,” Offenburger said in the release. “The result of campaigning that way? John has the most solid, well-thought platform in the field. You need to read and consider it, if you haven’t already. His pragmatic, moderate positions are what will win for Democrats in 2020.” Delaney’s poll numbers have steadily dropped from a high of 1.7 percent support among likely Iowa Democratic caucusgoers in the RealClearPolitics polling average in July to its current zero percent support, where he has languished since October. Delaney’s quixotic campaign is not the only example of low-polling moderates still in the race. Former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, another moderate Democrat, entered the presidential race on Nov. 24. He has since spent more than $30 million on his campaign, according to ad-buy tracker Advertising Analytics, while languishing in the low-single digits in the RealClearPolitics national polling average and likely Iowa Democratic caucusgoers’ polling average.


OPINION

Tuesday, December 03, 2019 Iowa State Daily

05

GUEST COLUMN

Calendar of women is a masterpiece BY STEVE CORBIN steven.b.corbin@gmail.com While my pencil or crayon drawing expressions can best be described as stick-figure-art — if that — I marvel at artists whose creations speak to my soul and touch my stream of consciousness. I’m struck with awe and wonder while studying Gary Kelley’s limited edition 19th Amendment centennial commemorative calendar for 2020. The 100-year anniversary of the ratification of the 19th Amendment (women’s right to vote) will be commemorated throughout America in 2020. Veridian Credit Union viewed this as a monumental achievement that merits attention, education and promotion. Veridian Credit Union commissioned Kelley, elected to the Society of Illustrators Hall of Fame in 2007, to create 12 illustrations for the 2020 calendar without restrictions. The calendar, titled Hard Won, depicts Iowa natives who made a lasting mark on society. January: Elizabeth Catlett (19152012; Iowa City), a granddaughter of slaves and a University of Iowa graduate who studied under the iconic artist Grant Wood, became the first African

COURTESY OF STEVE CORBIN Guest columnist Steve Corbin describes the women featured in Gary Kelley’s limited edition 19th Amendment centennial commemorative calendar for 2020.

American woman to earn a Master of Fine arts degree in the United States. February: Edna Griffin (19092000; Des Moines), referred to as the “Rosa Parks of Iowa,” took her stand at Katz Drug Store (Des Moines) seven years before Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on an Alabama bus; Griffin’s action brought civil rights to Iowa. March: Arabella “Belle” Mansfield (1846-1911; Mount Pleasant) is an Iowa Wesleyan graduate who challenged women not being permitted to take the bar exam and in 1869 became the first female lawyer in America; Iowa became the first state to admit women to the practice of law. April: Sioux City born twin sisters

Esther “Eppie” and Pauline “Popo” Friedman (1918-2002 and 19182013, respectively) — Morningside College graduates — became progressive national advice columnists “Ask Ann Landers” and “Dear Abby.” May: Sister Corita Kent (19181986; Fort Dodge) was a pop art icon who used her art to spread messages of love, peace and equality and alert the public to various humanitarian crises. June: Willie Stevenson Glanton (1922-2017; Des Moines) became the first woman to be named assistant Polk County attorney. She was Iowa’s first African American female legislator and civil rights and women rights attorney with U.S. Small Business Administration.

July: Doreen Wilber (1930-2008; Jefferson), became the first Iowa woman to bring home a gold medal (archery; 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, Germany). August: Jessie Field Shambaugh (1881-1971; Shenandoah) created after-school programs in 1901 for young people in Page County for which she became known as the “Mother of 4-H Clubs.” September: The seven brothers from McGregor (1852-1918) who formed the Ringling Brothers were, as Kelley noted, “ahead of the curve when it came to equal rights ... female performers’ salary was comparable to and sometimes exceeded their male counterparts.”

October: Jean Adeline Morgan Wanatee (1910-1996; Tama) became the first woman to be elected to the Meskwaki tribal council, Smithsonian Institute language specialist and first American Indian inducted into the Iowa Women’s Hall of Fame. November: Carrie Chapman Catt (1859-1947; Charles City) graduated from Iowa State University (the only female in her class), was active in the Suffrage Movement and founded the League of Women Voters in 1920. December: Donna Belle Mullenger (aka, Donna Reed; 1921-1986; Denison), received a Best Supporting Actress Oscar for her appearance in “Here to Eternity” and starred in the television series “The Donna Reed Show.” Gary Kelley’s inspirational and educational 2020 calendar is a masterpiece. Kelley’s history-rich creations appear to be of a humanities professor disguised as a robust and sophisticated illustrator. Extensive biographies of historic Iowans, written by Emmy award winning Cydney Kelley, are included in the calendar. The limited edition calendar can be obtained free — while available — at any of Veridian Credit Union’s 27 Iowa office locations.

GUEST COLUMN

Ukraine can achieve the future it wants BY ALAN LIPP alandlipp@gmail.com Ihor Kolomoisky, the bank-owning oligarch behind Zelensky, recently indicated that he believes the West to have finally cornered Ukraine into choosing Russia. Either, Kolomoisky is trying to wake the West up to its previous failures to protect and integrate the Western-looking nation or Kolomoisky has given into Russian bribes to be the final Ukrainian oligarch in Russia’s endgame strategy in Ukraine. Kolomoisky’s comments should be seen as a final warning to the West and Ukraine not to let Putin subjugate the former Eastern Bloc and exploit it as a pawn in order to force the disintegration of the European Union. Since independence from the Soviet Union, Ukraine has been jumping through hoops for a piece of the free-market, self-determination dream. On the international stage, the 1994 Budapest Memorandum and Ukraine’s 2003 participation in the war in Iraq should have been enough for EU and NATO membership. However, Putin was running defense in Europe and in Ukraine. In Ukraine, it appears that many in the government were using Western-looking ambitions to line their own pockets while setting the stage for the

Yanukovych betrayal. It appears that the second president of Ukraine, Leonid Kuchma, was only setting Ukraine up for a quasi-state apparatus that served to set the stage for Ukraine’s perceived failure by the West. Ukraine’s nuclear stockpile, which had already been largely disarmed by Moscow and Kuchma, took Ukraine into Iraq, which was a rabbit-hole that Putin sent the West down by providing Dick Cheney with false intelligence. The fourth president of Ukraine, Petro Poroshenko, would later legalize and pardon many of the embezzlements of Yanukovych. Ukraine has a chance to let that corruption take its course or to help Zelensky ‘break the wheel’. As the last straw forcing Ukraine’s abandonment of Western-looking ambitions, Kolomoisky points to the Trump-Poroshenko bribery organized by Dmytro Firtash in Vienna (Giuliani, Lutsenko and Poroshenko were all meeting with the exiled oligarch central to the 2016 U.S. election interference by Russia). The bribery was brilliantly designed to force America to ‘throw Ukraine under the bus’ as America’s old guard tries to remove Putin’s most valuable puppet, Donald Trump. Ukrainians have to ask why the impeachment is underreported on in Ukraine. Maybe, it’s because Poroshenko sold UMH Media Group to Kurchenko.

COURTESY OF WIKIMEDIA COMMONS President Donald Trump meets with Ukrainian President Volodomyr Zelensky.

Perhaps, Kolomoisky is Ukraine’s Volodomir Zhirinovsky (Putin’s ‘fake-opposition’ who functions as a far-right mouthpiece and sets rhetorical foundations for the realpolitik, soft-aggression of Russian active measures, that is, international subversion by hybrid warfare). Or, perhaps Kolomoisky is spouting far-right rhetoric to cast suspicion on the Kuchma-Poroshenko alliance that set the stage for the Yanukovych embezzlement and Russia’s subsequent aggression. Ukraine should help the West read in between the lines that Kolomoisky may be drawing.

The U.S. impeachment is the time for Ukraine to speak up about past Western failures and how Ukraine has been manipulated as a quasi-state run by pro-Russian politicians and oligarchs. Ukraine, by compelling Zelensky to speak up, can help America oust Putin’s most valuable puppet, Trump. Ukraine can save the West and achieve the future that it wants. The West has failed Ukraine before, but betting on the West side this time is still a better gamble than Putin’s Russia whose aggression should be less forgivable than the West’s failure.

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Editorial Board

Annelise Wells, editor-in-chief Melanie De Anda, opinion editor Seth Pierce, student

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.

The Daily encourages discussion but does not guarantee its publication. We reserve the right to edit or reject any letter or online feedback. Send your letters to letters@iowastatedaily.com. Letters must include the name(s), phone number(s), majors and/or group affiliation(s) and year in school of the author(s). Phone numbers and addresses will not be published. Online feedback may be used if first name and last name, major and year in school are included in the post. Feedback posted online is eligible for print in the Iowa State Daily.


06

SPORTS

Iowa State Daily Tuesday, December 03, 2019

COLUMN

Work to be done for Cyclones Kansas State defeat puts a damper on weird season BY NOAH.ROHLFING @iowastatedaily.com I’ll be honest — there’s not a ton of “look on the bright side” moments for Iowa State from the Saturday night debac le in Manhattan, Kansas. It was a rivalry game the Cyclones had won last year in dramatic fashion, and they seemed primed to start a winning streak as another sign of program progress with a shot at a possible Alamo Bowl return on the line. Instead, the Cyc lones were rough — sloppy on offense, unable to capitalize on mistakes from Kansas State and worn down by the Wildcats’ rush attack. This isn’t something we’ve gotten used to seeing from Matt Campbell’s crew and certainly not in the past two seasons in which the Cyclones have won games by playing in the margins and not making mistakes. Kansas State wasn’t nearly mistake-free, either. The Wildcats had two quick third quarter turnovers from Skylar Thompson and missed

GARRETT HEYD/ IOWA STATE DAILY Coach Matt Campbell during warmups before Iowa State’s game against Texas on Nov. 16 in Jack Trice Stadium. The Cyclones defeated the Longhorns 23-21.

multiple opportunities to create turnovers on the defensive side of the ball. But what the Wildcats did do was bounce back from their mistakes. It ’s weird to point that out because it’s been what Iowa State has done with success all year long — rebounding from mistakes and deficits to make games close or pull out victories. It happened against Baylor, against Oklahoma and against Oklahoma State.

The Cyclones went down double digits and came back to either take the lead or tie each of these games, and they did it against Kansas State too — trailing 14-0 midway through the second quarter before taking a 17-14 lead in the third quarter. But then, the Cyclones gave way to a wave of Kansas State run plays and highlighted what a strange, strange year it’s been covering this football team. Nothing about this

team makes a lick of sense — I have the feeling Campbell knows it, and it ’s obviously frustrating him. In the postgame press conference, he seemed pretty upset about the way his team got pushed around. “The team that had the ability to be the most physical for the longest was going to win the game,” Campbell said. “And they certainly were.” I don’t blame him.

So after a disaster of a football game, what is there for the Cyclones to look forward to? After all, this was supposed to be the season in which the Cyclones made a push for the Big 12 Championship with no clear No. 2 in the conference hierarchy to Oklahoma. Well, that No. 2 is now Baylor — and the Cyclones are in a four-way tie for third in a weak year for the league. However, any time Iowa State is going to a bowl game is historically a good season. The Cyclones are headed to a bowl for the thirdstraight season (hello, Liberty and Texas Bowls), something only done one other time in the school’s history — the final three years of the Earle Bruce era in the mid-tolate ‘70s. Iowa State is in a nearly unparalleled era of success. So no, this is definitely not a big sign for concern. I doubt the bowl game performance will be so scattered, and Iowa State has been a record-breaking offense this season, so overreacting to one dud would be silly. But when you put in the Cyclones’ under-par performance against Kansas with the loss to the ‘Cats, it wouldn’t be surprising if the end to this season left a bit of a sour taste in the mouths of some Iowa State fans.

Cyclones make NCAA Tournament Iowa State gets bid despite untimely losses BY JOHN.MILLER @iowastatedaily.com The Iowa State Cyclones volleyball team is returning to the NCAA Tournament. The Cyclones’ tournament hopes were supposedly weary after three straight losses to end the regular season to Texas Tech, Kansas and No. 4 Texas. In the game against Kansas, the Cyclones won the first two sets and went on to lose the next three. Iowa State will travel to Minneapolis, where it will take on Creighton in the first round on Friday at 4:30 p.m. Match time is still to be announced. “Waiting was really an emotional roller-coaster,” said the Cyclones’ lone senior Josie Herbst. “They went halfway through the bracket and I started to get worried because I thought I played my last game. Then we saw Minnesota, and I knew that was going to be our chance because they are closest to us.” The NCAA volleyball tournament doesn’t follow the natural seeding process of the NCAA basketball tournament. Each team cannot travel more than 400 miles for the first round. Therefore, Minneapolis was the last logical location for the Cyclones. That limitation can either help or hinder teams’ odds at making the tournament based on who the automatic qualifiers are. Iowa State was able to squeak its way in thanks to the approximate 215-mile difference from

Minneapolis. W hile Iowa State was worried about making the tournament, the selection show put up a graphic of the last four in and Iowa State wasn’t on it. This means that the committee thought of Iowa State more highly than some may have thought. “The wait was horrible,” said coach Christy Johnson-Lynch. “That was probably one of the most anxious waits I’ve ever had except for maybe my first year.” The Cyclones finished the regular season with a record of 17-11, and 8-8 in Big 12 play. Their resume is highlighted by a fourthplace finish in the Big 12. The fourth place team has made the NCAA Tournament in six out of the last seven years. Iowa State also holds wins against in-state rivals Northern Iowa and Iowa. The Panthers made the tournament and will play Missouri in the first round. This is the 14th al l-time NCAA Tournament appearance for Iowa State. Thirteen of them have come under JohnsonLynch. Last year broke a 12-year streak dating back to 2006 of consecutive appearances for the team. “Coming off of last year and not making it was pretty tough for us,” said sophomore outside hitter Brooke Andersen. “We were not completely sure about this year so to see our name up there was pretty cool and I am so excited to have that chance to start over.” The winner of the Iowa State-Creighton game will face either No. 7 Minnesota or Fairfield in the next round. Iowa State’s youth is a concern for the team heading into the NCAA Tournament, as some of the team’s key contributors

CAITLIN YAMADA/ IOWA STATE DAILY Iowa State Volleyball faced Penn State on Sept. 6. Penn State won 3-0.

have yet to play in an NCAA Tournament environment. One of those contributors is top hitter Eleanor Holthaus. The sophomore has missed the past couple games after she sustained an ankle injury in practice prior to the Kansas game. She leads the Iowa State offense with 3.24 kills per set, while also hitting .255. “Making it gives us a great opportunity to put things behind us, especially after those tough losses and lineup changes,” JohnsonLynch said. “It will be a defensive battle and will probably be like playing one of the best teams in the Big 12.” The Cyclones have faced the Blue Jays three times within the past year. The last time the two faced was during a preseason exhibition in August, where the Cyclones won three sets to two. During the regular season last year,

Creighton won three sets to one. Creighton went on to a 24-5 record this year, along with a 17-1 in the Big East Conference. Their only loss was to Villanova, who they swept earlier in the season. The Blue Jays also defeated UNI, and boast key ranked wins over No. 12 Marquette and No. 14 Kentucky. Meanwhile, Iowa State has battled injuries for much of the year but has still managed to show flashes of potential against ranked opponents and grind out key wins. Creighton’s RPI ranking is 20th and Iowa State’s is 46th. The Blue Jays were ranked 10th in the latest AVCA Coaches Poll on Nov. 24. In the NCAA Tournament, anything can happen. “There’s way more to fight for in the tournament,” Andersen said. “It will be a different mindset going into the tournament.”


LIFESTYLE

Tuesday, December 03, 2019 Iowa State Daily

07

Gender-neutral trend stands out Inclusive clothing starts new conversations BY HANNAH.SCOTT @iowastatedaily.com Every year, trends come and go, and 2019 was no diff erent. From the comeback of ’80s and ’90s style to the popularity of animal prints and barrettes, there is no question this year brought new twists to the world of fashion. One trend that popped up has brought a little more controversy and questions among generations. That trend is gender-neutral fashion. It seems that in the world of fashion, brands are beginning to try and reinvent themselves as well as become more inclusive for all types of people. For a long time, fashion was quite cut and dry. There was one standard of beauty or way to dress that was popularized and seemed to be accepted by society. Today, more people are open to the idea of individuals using clothing to differentiate themselves from others. This can be seen first and foremost in many of the gender-neutral clothing companies popping u p e ve r y w h e re — f rom i n d i e brands like Nicopanda, Telfar and TooGood to well-known companies such as Gucci, Zara, Burberry and Calvin Klein — coming out with their own ungendered

collections. Rita Mookerjee, a lecturer in the department of women’s and gender studies, offered insight to the more complicated ideals of gender-neutral being “trendy.” “I think historically what I’ve seen people call gender-neutral fashion is usually just something ver y simple,” Mookerjee said. “Often, it’s just a femme person wearing something gender-neutral. I think with designers and stores, they need to get a little more creative with the possibilities. So many of the non-binary and gender non-conforming individuals I know, they have so many more diverse ideas and expressions.” A frustration many have with the idea of a gender-neutral trend is that oftentimes the individuals that are shown in this fashion are still within the standards of “traditional beauty” by society. “I think we have to remind ourselves that clothing intrinsically has no gender,” Mookerjee said. “I think we also have to think about culture, time and place as well as accepting all different kinds of people.” With the growth of fashion and times changing, individuals are more willing to experiment with their looks and try more out-ofthe-box styles. However, it can still seem daunting to dress out of society’s norms, even if it’s just a little bit. For those wanting to experiment with adding more traditionally masculine or feminine pieces to their wardrobe, there are a few simple ways to do so. “I think one of the best ways is to learn how to blend true statements and mixing more formal and

COURTESY BLAZE BEST Former Iowa State student Blaze Best created a line for The Fashion Show in 2019 titled “blond” and was “meant to explore the future of gender-neutral style.” Senior Rylie Smith also worked on this project.

informal pieces,” Mookerjee said. “I also think [Do It Yourself ] can

help a lot; taking a piece of clothing and really making it your own

can really help you decide what kind of statement you are going to make by just having a simple tool like scissors.” Switching up your style can be a scary idea for some; however, it is important to remember that clothing is simply another way of allowing others to see a more true expression of yourself. Often what people have to say can sometimes say more about them than you. “I think really where a lot of judgement comes from is simply i n s e c u r i t y, ” M o o k e r j e e s a i d . “People can’t believe that others would feel so open and comfortable to dress how they want.” Throwing together a more gender-neutral outfi t for some could simply mean playing with outerwear or using different colors, textures or patterns. To take a more intense approach, one could rock a suit or heels. Trends can give individuals power over their own style, but it’s important to remember trends can have roots in issues some may not understand. “I think the idea of trendiness can sometimes throw out the idea that a person struggling with gender issues is a person,” Mookerjee said. With more and more brands coming out everyday, individuals have more choice than ever before to express themselves. However, perhaps it is good to stop focusing so much on the idea of trends and instead simply focus on what makes you feel confident, strong and powerful. By giving less power to trends, we give more power to the individual, which is what fashion is all about.

Instagram to begin testing ‘like’ removal App will replace ‘like’ count with terms to remove social pressure BY SIERRA.HOEGER @iowastatedaily.com In a test to hopefully boost the self-esteem and overall mental health of users, Instagram will begin to remove the “like” function from posts. W hile nothing is solidified yet, select users will begin to see a lack of numbers in relation to their posts. Rather than viewing specific numbers, terms that coincide with numbers will be shown instead. For example, if Beyonce receives four million likes on a photo, the photo will

instead read that “millions of others including people you follow” have liked her photo. Several countries including Canada and Australia have already seen the effects of Instagram’s recent update. Head of Instagram Adam Mosseri said in an interview with Wired that he hopes to remove the pressure from the app. By removing likes, it removes societal pressures to have “enough” likes. “I think what Instagram is trying to do is it ’s trying to solve different problems with the platform that it didn’t intend but have happened anyway,” said Kelly Kane, graduate student in psyc h o l o g y. “And one of those being that people make a lot of social comparisons on Instagram.” S i n c e I n s t a g r a m’s launch, the social media platform h a s seen an increase in influencers, or individuals who receive a multitude of likes

with the hope of influencing others with their social media status. Influencers may be representing a brand or way of life and are well-known for being a person with a certain identity. Brands also play into the influencer game, hoping to gain new followers through the likes of a celebrity endorsing their product. This is especially popular during the holidays when brands are trying to sell certain products just in time for Christmas. “I think in the short-term, I do believe that some infl uencers are going to be hurt by this decision,” Kane said. Kane said she believes it’ll be more difficult for influencers to prove their prominence on the app to potential advertisers or brands who want to do business with them with the removal of likes. Through the change, Kane said she hopes to see more positivity on posts. “I also hope that we’re going to see more positive commenting and positive conversation on people’s posts,” Kane said. “Instagram, like all social media platforms, it has a lot of problems of people being very negative; it’s very easy to say negative things to someone who isn’t in the same room as you, which is part of the reason that social media is a real phenomenon. People are meaner in social media than they are in person.”

“By removing likes, it removes societal pressures to have “enough” likes.” - Adam Mosseri Users will be able to view likes from their personal accounts, so they’re technically not completely gone. Facebook, which owns Instagram, tried testing out a similar method with posts in September, but there wasn’t as much feedback or publicity as compared to Instagram. If there’s a positive reaction to Instagram’s newest update, potentially more social media platforms will also implement factors that create a more positive environment. “We will make decisions that will hurt the business if they help people’s well-being and health,” Mosseri said in the Wired interview.


08 THE VOICE

Iowa State Daily Tuesday, December 03, 2019 PG1

of my comfort zone and he was the first person to do that.” Millenkamp did not make it past her second round of “The Voice,” but is thankful for her experience, which gave her confidence and helped her find herself. She made two best friends out of the show, both of whom are still moving forward with the season. “Networking and friendships were the best thing that came out of it,” Millenkamp said. Millenkamp was surprised by how the production team on “The Voice” is always working and running around to make sure things get done. Millenkamp said her experience on “ The Voice” is one she will always remember, and with her newly found confidence, it will help take her to the places she dreams to go. Planning to finish her senior year as an agriculture business major, Millenkamp wishes to pursue music after school ends. She would like to move to a town full of music like Nashville so she can get her opportunities to share her passion for music. She also writes her own songs and would love nothing more than to continue doing what she loves after college is over. From an Idaho small town, she

POINSETTIAS

SCREENSHOT FROM YOUTUBE EllieMae Millenkamp performs “Merry Go ‘Round” by Kacey Musgraves for her audition on “The Voice.” Blake Shelton turned his chair during her performance.

grew up on her family’s dairy farm. Millenkamp’s musical career first started when she was younger and her mom would bribe her with a toy in order for her to sing with the church. As she grew older, she continued singing for the church and eventually sang for her Christian high school.

PG1

and white varieties are available in six-and-a-half or 10-inch sizes. The red glitter, burgundy, pink and gold rush come in the six-and-a-half-inch size only. Ten-inch red and white poinsettias will be sold for $35. Each variety of poinsettias that are six-and-a-half inches will be sold for $15. The six-and-a-half-inch plants are grown in the greenhouses attached to Horticulture Hall on Iowa State’s campus. The sale orders the large red and white poinsettias because Rosane said there is not enough time or space to grow them with the smaller ones. The poinsettias are grown and maintained by horticulture students. Amanda Vanscoy, a senior studying horticulture, helped facilitate the sale and was in charge of growing the flowers with the help of other members of Horticulture Club. “[Vanscoy] is the committee chair for the poinsettia sale,” Rosane said. “People from the Horticulture Club [...] will come help her water or pinch poinsettias or whatever she needs.” At Horticulture Club’s last meeting before the sale, Vanscoy discussed how customers would be informed about caring for their plant. Each poinsettia is sold with a note of instructions to follow to keep the flowers as healthy as they are in the greenhouse. The poinsettias developed their color in the greenhouse in the weeks before the sale. Rosane said it is the leaves of the plant that bear the red or white color associated with poinsettias, not the flower itself. Rosane said poinsettias also develop their color in the dark. Even though the fall and winter months have limited daylight, the greenhouse lights are shut off and black tarps are put up to shield the flowers from light

RESEARCH

Millenkamp is still connected with their faith, as she is involved with the Salt Company on campus and attends the Collegiate Presbyterian Church where she leads the worship on Sunday. When Millenkamp first started at Iowa S tate, countr y music became her genre to listen and sing along to. Her music inspirations

PG4

will be at least one open forum for the public to attend, Hallmark said. Grooms said since both undergraduate and graduate students are involved in research at Iowa State, they should have an opportunity to meet with final candidates for the position. After the pros and cons of each applicant have been analyzed, a recommendation will be made to the provost marshall, who will make the final decision in the hiring process. Grooms said the next search committee meeting is not scheduled but will be in December or soon after the

are country singers Marren Morris, Kacey Musgraves, Chris Stapleton, Miranda Carlisle and Brothers Ozborne. Millenkamp’s music career didn’t start and end with “The Voice” because she already had her own career in Ames, having her own band with two others, electric guitarist Andseren Coates and

GPSS

IOWA STATE DAILY Horticulture Club’s poinsettias come in a variety of colors, including red, white, red glitter and burgundy.

in the afternoon. The location of the sale is different every day. On Wednesday it will be in the Rotunda on the first floor of Curtiss Hall. The Thursday sale will be on the ground floor of Beardshear Hall. Friday’s sale will take place outside of the bookstore in the Memorial Union. The final day of the sale, Saturday, will be at the main corridor of Reiman Gardens. After the sale of poinsettias, the club analyzes the results. Sometimes they run out of poinsettias, and other times they have some plants left. “We have extras, and it varies what we do with them,” Rosane said. “We usually go to a vote about what we are going to do. Sometimes we donate them, or sometimes we try to sell them again. It just depends on how many we have left over.” The profits from the sale go back into Horticulture Club to fund activities such as trips, horticulture competitions and miscellaneous costs acquired with meetings. new year to prepare for assessing candidates. The goal is to look at the first pool of candidates by Feb. 1, then bring final candidates in by March. “The goal is to have somebody selected and here by this summer,” Grooms said. “Hopefully by July 1.” Hallmark said she wants students to feel engaged in the process and to get to know the potential candidates, and Grooms said he encourages students and faculty to provide input for what the committee should be searching for in candidates by emailing anyone on the committee. “I think it also says to the candidate that Iowa State’s a very engaged community when students get involved and demonstrate that they’re interested,” Hallmark said.

PG1

Senate bill F19-10 was titled “Adoption of the GPSS By-Laws Recommended by the Committee for Constitutional Revision,” which the Senate reviewed after accepting the report. When Vice President James Klimavicz called for discussion on the bill, no senators spoke about the bill. With no one discussing, the Senate moved to vote on the bill, which needed a two-thirds majority vote to pass. The bill passed by a vote of 50-1-7. Senate bill F19-11 was titled “ R a t i fi c a t i o n o f t h e G P S S Constitution Recommended by the Committee for Constitutional Revision,” which rewrote a large portion of the GPSS constitution. Including changes to executive terms, attendance policies and impeachment and recall procedures, Klimavicz opened the Senate to debate on the bill. Initially, no senator spoke to debate on the bill. “Did anyone read the constitution?” Klimavicz said. A few senators raised their hands to denote they had read the proposed constitution. “ O k ay, s o t h e c om m i t t e e members,” Klimavicz said. “The committee members and maybe like two other people.” Klimavicz continued asking for debate on the bill and President Eleanor Field said that there were some pretty big changes that impacted the senators directly. Senators then began to speak about issues they noticed, such

drummer Sophia Steenhoek. The three of them have played music at their church and at various gigs around Iowa, including bars, coffee shops, weddings, music festivals and private events. Last year, Millenkamp performed with her band at Homecoming. This summer the band has booked fairs in Iowa and Idaho. as the fact that the charges of impeachment are brought to the Rules Committee, which the vice president is the head of. This could cause an issue if there is a movement to impeach the vice president. Senator Collin O’Leary then motioned to postpone the vote until the January meeting of the GPSS to allow senators time to read and ask questions about the constitution they may have. The Senate voted to postpone the vote on ratifying the proposed constitution until January. Klimavicz then said that this puts the Senate in a weird position since they had already voted to adopt the new by-laws, which was part of the process of reforming the rules of the GPSS. Klimavicz proposed that the Senate “reconsider” the vote on the bill adopting the by-laws. Senator O’Leary motioned to “reconsider” the vote on the bill, which required a two-thirds vote to pass. Senators raised their placards to vote in favor to “reconsider” all at once and then moved to postpone the vote until January. Senate bill F19-12 was titled “Fall 2019 Graduate and Professional Student Senate (GPSS) Regular Allocations,” which approved 22 of the 25 requests to allocate funds to graduate and professional student organizations. The bill passed with a vote of 55-0-4. The bills, report and proposed constitution and by-laws can be found on the GPSS website, as well as minutes of past GPSS meetings with additional information.


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