Northern Iowan t h e u n i v e r s i t y o f n o r t h e r n i o wa’s s t u d e n t - p r o d u c e d n e w s p a p e r s i n c e 1 8 9 2
MARCH 1, 2013
I
FRIDAY
VOLUME 109, ISSUE 39
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
CEDAR FALLS, IOWA
I
NORTHERN-IOWAN.ORG
STUDENT GOVERNMENT
NISG election results announced
Presidential runoff election will be held next week LINH TA
News Editor
MEN’S BASKETBALL
Poor play causes Panthers to fall to Salukis
Cold shooting and other slip-ups were the culprit in UNI’s 63-57 loss to SIU Wednesday night. The Panthers will earn either the No. 3 or No. 4 seed in the MVC tournament. < See PAGE 8
ENTERTAINMENT
HuB to feature good dose of Midwestern music medicine
Har-di-Har, The River Monks and This Is Daybreak will perform in Cedar Falls, bringing homegrown music to the Cedar Valley. < See PAGE 6
Wednesday night’s Northern Iowa Student Government election results brought closure to some candidates, but not all. After two weeks of campaigning, NISG presidential, vice presidential and senatorial candidates convened at the Maucker Union Coffeehouse alongside their constituents to hear the winners of the presidential and senate seats. However, none of the presidential candidates received at least 50 percent of students’ votes, resulting in a runoff election between the tickets of KaLeigh White & Alicia Jessip and Tom Madsen & Blake Findley. The runoff election will begin on March 5 at 8 a.m. and will end on March 6 at 8 a.m. White said that she and Jessip plan on speaking with more students and spreading word of their platform. “I’m excited to finish up the campaign over the next week,” White said. “We’re just going to keep doing what we’re doing. … Let people
BRANDON BAKER/Northern Iowan
NISG presidential candidates congratulate and hug each other after the election results on Feb. 27 in the Maucker Union Coffeehouse. From left: Katie Grassi, Blake Findley, KaLeigh White, Tom Madsen and David Pope
know what we stand for, spread the word and get the vote out.” Madsen said that he and Findley also plan to speak with more students. “We’re going to work really hard to try and get some votes. …. I guess we have a couple campaign things we’ll
NISG Presidential Election Results
A total of 1,746 votes were cast. A runoff election will be held next week.
have to work on, but we’ll let you guys know as soon as know what those dates are going to be.” David Pope and Katie Grassi will not be in the runoff election, but they are both proud of the work they accomplished during their campaign.
“I know last year’s election, not a single ticket had the (lesbian, gay bisexual and transgender) center or LGBT rights explicitly listed in their platform,” Pope said. “… I think we really brought those issues that we feel passionate < See ELECTION, page 3
FACILITIES
Plans for LGBT and military student centers at UNI continue to move forward
OPINION
Should we shelve Black History month? Columnist Monnier takes a look at Black History Month activities at UNI and nationwide, and the state of racism and discrimination today. < See PAGE 4
KaLeigh and Alicia
Tom and Blake
47.7% - 832 votes
33.8% 591 votes
INDEX I SPY AT UNI......................3 OPINION............................4 CAMPUS LIFE....................6 SPORTS.............................8 CLASSIFIEDS...................10 GAMES............................11
David and Katie
17.8% 310 votes
said Lisa Kratz, director of Staff Writer Maucker Union. Facilities Planning has Students, faculty and been coordinating the overadministrators at the all planning process, while University of Northern Iowa Maucker Union staff, the have combined their efforts to Maucker Union Advisory continue progress for a les- Board and the advisors for bian, gay, bisexual and trans- the LGBT and Military and gender center and establish- Veterans Student Services ing a military and veteran groups are involved with prostudent center. viding specific ideas through“The process of gathering out the process. ideas and input is going well. They are currently meetThere have been lots of great ing with architects to develop ideas put forward, and every- potential floor plans, and once one has been very support- there is agreement between ive throughout the process,” KIRSTEN TJOSSEM
< See CENTERS, page 2
NEWS
PAGE 2
CENTERS
continued from page 1
KARI BRAUMANN/Northern Iowan
The Purple Pen Room currently serves as the office for LGBT student organizations at UNI. It is located in the basement of Maucker Union.
Seniors & First-Year Students: TC Completed NSSE—Have YOU?
the groups on these plans, they will determine the scope and timeline of each project. Both centers are scheduled to be located in or near the Student Involvement Center. David Pope, junior political communication major, was one of the individuals involved in creating the LGBT Center Exploratory Committee this year. “By LGBT activists speaking up and using our voices, we’ve made something that was barely on the radar this time last year into one of the main issues at UNI,” he said. The committee has been working to decide what the center will look like, as well as how to fund and implement it. The ultimate goal of the center is to fulfill all the needs of LGBT stu-
NORTHERN-IOWAN.ORG | FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 2013
dents and the educational opportunities for the rest of campus. “The center is necessary,” Pope said. “It will help LGBT students access the resources they need to be happy and healthy at UNI and educate the wider campus about LGBT issues, stories and experiences.” Julia Heuer, who was recently appointed as the Military and Veterans Student Services coordinator strives to advocate for military students on campus, as well as educate faculty and staff about the military culture. Several initiatives were developed before her arrival on campus, and she continues to ensure their success. One of those is the scholarship Boots to Books, which eliminates some of the costs that students incur while going to school. An official open house was also held for the Veterans
Center Feb. 18, and faculty, staff and students attended to show their support. “I think (the center) is an important and necessary addition to campus. There are many unique needs that military and veterans students have. The center will provide a place where they can access resources from both on and off campus,” Heuer said. Heuer hopes to employ some Veterans Affairs workstudy positions in the office to assist with research and outreach. “There has been some great progress in the last year with the hiring of the new Military and Veterans Student Services coordinator, and the creation of these centers is a next step in ensuring that we are providing the best services possible for all of our students,” Kratz said.
Watch your UNI e-mail for an invitation to complete the
National Survey of Student Engagement (NSSE) Complete the survey and you’ll be entered into a drawing for one of 22 prizes—including an iPad! You’ll be helping UNI learn more about UNI students AND you could win a prize! http://www.uni.edu/assessment/nssedrawing.shtml
3/31/13
3/31/13
3/31/13
NEWS
NORTHERN-IOWAN.ORG | FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 2013
NORTHERN IOWAN L011 Maucker Union Cedar Falls, IA 50614 www.northern-iowan.org 319.273.2157
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BRANDON POLL
EXTENDED WEATHER FORECAST
FRIDAY HIGH: 28 LOW: 12 MOSTLY CLOUDY
SATURDAY HIGH: 25 LOW: 7 MOSTLY SUNNY
PAGE 3
DATA FROM NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE
SUNDAY HIGH: 27 LOW: 16 MOSTLY SUNNY
MONDAY HIGH: 32 LOW: 22 SNOW
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I SPY AT UNI
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Off-Campus Circulation
ERIN KEISER/Northern Iowan
Do you know where this picture was taken? If so, post your answer on the Northern Iowan Facebook page. The winner’s name and the picture’s location will be featured in the next edition of the Northern Iowan. The Feb. 26 picture, guessed by Sarah Pearce, senior physics and chemistry double major, was a sculpture called “Dichotomy” by Philip Ogle located in the Rod Library.
ELECTION
continued from page 1
about to the table and made sure people talked about them.” Through campaigning, Grassi said she learned more about herself and the impact a person can have on others and vice versa. She also said she learned how to deal with everything life brings. “Life goes, and you just have to go with it. It’s been a learning experience,” Grassi said. “It’s been a little rough,” Pope said, regarding the campaign experience. “Katie obviously had a loss in the family, which was bad timing for all of this, but all in all, I think we met a lot of people, we learned a lot about ourselves and about leadership and we spoke our truth and I think that we can be proud of that.” Pope and Grassi are unsure of whether they want to endorse another ticket right now, but they may support a ticket that cares about same issues on their platform.
NISG senate candidates Stef McGraw and Tyler Moran both won back their seats. For the future, McGraw said she hopes NISG looks further into the contingency fund, since it is being used more by student organizations. “… I think we’ll have to look seriously at how funds are being allocated, so I see that as being one of our biggest things to tackle next year,” McGraw said. Moran is happy that most of the senators from the previous year were elected once again, and he said that “(it’s) always great to have an older senate, so that’s what I’m most excited about.” Current student body president Jordan Bancroft-Smithe had words of advice for the candidates in the runoff election. “Do something. (White and I) got a lot of criticism because we weren’t necessarily prepared for a runoff, and we were fortunate that nobody else was either,”
EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS Editorial Assistants at the Northern Iowan are a team of volunteers who assist the Copy Editor in reviewing content.
The Northern Iowan is published semiweekly on Tuesday and Friday during the academic year; weekly on Friday during the summer session, except for holidays and examination periods, by the University of Northern Iowa, L011 Maucker Union, Cedar Falls, IA 50614-0166 under the auspices of the Board of Student Publications. Advertising errors that are the fault of the Northern Iowan will be corrected at no cost to the advertiser only if the Northern Iowan office is notified within seven days of the original publication. Publisher reserves the right to refuse any advertisement at any time. The Northern Iowan is funded in part with student activity fees. A copy of the Northern Iowan grievance procedure is available at the Northern Iowan office, located at L011 Maucker Union. All material is copyright © 2013 by the Northern Iowan and may not be used without permission.
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BRANDON BAKER/Northern Iowan
NISG vice presidential candidates Alicia Jessip and Blake Findley speak with each other after the NISG election results announcement on Feb. 27.
Bancroft-Smithe said. Corey Cooling served as the NISG election commissioner this year. He said the process of counting the ballots was simple. Cooling said the votes are tabulated on MyUNIverse and printed off in a PDF that he and the election committee can read off. Cooling said that it should be even easier to manage the runoff election, since almost all the senate seats have been filled and there are now only two tickets for president and vice president. “Basically everything is the exact same.” Students may go to MyUNIverse and look under “Life at UNI” to vote for the presidential runoff election. Graduate students may also vote in the runoff between graduate college senateorial candidates Ellie Hail and Michelle Czarnecki, who both received seven votes. White said UNI students should vote for her and Jessip in the runoff because of their future plans. “I think that the experience that we offer (and) the vision that we have for the future really will push students’ ideas forward better (and) make sure that their UNI is the UNI they always wanted it to be,” White said. Madsen said that he believes that he and Findley are the best candidates for the job. “I feel like Blake and I have great experience, but we’re also very passionate about the students,” Madsen said. “I think we have a great platform. It’s a platform of change, but at the same time it’s all responsible goals that can be accomplished.” “It’s an experience of a lifetime,” Bancroft-Smithe said. “If you win, I hope you appreciate it.”
The Northern Iowan strives for complete accuracy and corrects its errors immediately. If you believe the NI has printed a factual error, please call our office at 319.273.2157 or email us at northern-iowan@uni.edu immediately.
CAMPUS EVENTS
Do you want to have an event listed here? Email us at northern-iowan@uni.edu with information about the event to have it featured.
FRIDAY
ANNUAL HUMAN RIGHTS CONFERENCE Old Central Ballroom, Commons 8 a.m.-1 p.m. Randall Kennedy will present “Race Relations and the Law in the Obama Era” as the keynote speaker of the Annual Conference on Human Rights. Registration begins at 7:30 a.m. with the keynote address beginning at 8:20 a.m. BLACK STUDENT UNION TOAST FOR CHANGE BANQUET Slife Ballroom, Commons 6-11:59 p.m. The Black Student Union will host the Toast for Change banquet and celebrate the past and future accomplishments of AfricanAmericans as well as the work of UNI’s Black Student Union. A dance follows the banquet.
SATURDAY
INTERPRETERS THEATRE: CLOGGING THE SYSTEM Room 40, Lang Hall 7:30 p.m. SOUNDS OF IOWA Great Hall, GBPAC 7:30 p.m. Celebrate the first glimmers of spring with a sweeping narrative concert featuring Cedar Valley’s young musicians and Cedar Falls resident Bill Witt’s prairie photography.
MONDAY
DOCUMENTARY MEMORY, PLACE AND IDENTITY: SONS OF JACOB SYNAGOGUE Room 109A, CME 12-1 p.m.
KARI BRAUMANN OPINION EDITOR BRAUMANK@UNI.EDU
MARCH 1, 2013
Technology matters now and in the future GARRETT TROTTER trotterg@ uni.edu
Within the past week, many marvels of science, engineering and technology appeared everywhere from forums to mainstream news websites, but most people will never hear about them. Volkswagen announced an experimental car that gets 261 miles per gallon; an eye implant that gives some blind people sight was cleared by the FDA; Fujifilm created a printable sheet that turns body heat into electricity; a pilot is flying a plane from Sydney, Australia, to London using only used plastic as fuel; and a high-tech billboard is producing drinkable water out of the air in Lima, Peru. From making our transportation cleaner to providing people with drinkable water, technology matters. Electronics especially have never before become so deeply interwoven into our existence. When “electronics” is said, a cell phone or computer comes to mind, instead of a microwave, refrigerator or light bulb. This is because our very existence in 2013 is plugged into the Internet, and it seems more a part of us than a device we use. More quickly than ever before, advancements are being made, and discoveries unlocking many possibilities are nearly commonplace now. Besides facilitating revolutions like the Arab Spring, some technologically developing nations are being able to overstep conventional industrialization and move directly into the modern age. This means talking to people on the other side of the planet with a phone call or ordering a necessary tool from thousands of miles away with a click of the mouse. Using Open Source, Creative Commons and other free-to-use/free-to-modify formats alongside the Internet, modern design and development culture is creating a new postmodern paradigm of what it means to create, engineer and produce. While some see modern American culture as the epitome of uncreative an “Jersey Shore” or “Honey Boo-Boo” reality, globally, innovation and creativity are at an all-time high, and the United States isn’t that far behind. Technology matters because our planet has never had this many humans on it before. Global population surpassed 7 billion in 2012, with forecast trends showing we will reach 9 billion around 2050. Supplying clean food, clean water, medical care, shelter, communication, transportation and jobs is all the responsibility of technology being currently implemented, developing, dreamt up or not even conceived of yet. In history, you have the revolutions of agriculture, metallurgy, architecture and transportation. In our modern day, the one that shall outstrip them all in the quickest time is our revolution in digital technology. Apply it to anything and you can automate the simplest to the most complex tasks by making them “smart.” President Obama’s mentioning of < See TECHNOLOGY, page 5
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VOLUME 109, ISSUE 39
Shelve Black History Month? BETH MONNIER
monnierb@ uni.edu
Black History Month has been celebrated every year since 1976 and was created as “an annual celebration of achievements by black Americans and a time for recognizing the central role of African-Americans in U.S. history” (History Channel 2013). Stories of prominent historical figures in the United States such as Frederick Douglass, Booker T. Washington, W.E.B. DuBois, Rosa Parks, Sojourner Truth and Martin Luther King Jr. are retold and reexamined every year during this month with gusto. On the University of Northern Iowa campus, the Black Student Union (BSU) annually creates a flurry of activity for Black History Month. This year, BSU hosted events and speakers like The Tunnel of Oppression and Teju the Storyteller to commemorate black history. The yearly reminiscing and celebrating inevitably dredge up thoughts of the United States’
MCT CAMPUS
dark past. In my daily routine at UNI and perhaps in yours, I rarely hear racially-charged comments. In fact, I have never seen racial discrimination on campus. Rather, I am constantly reminded by posters and policies that UNI is trying to increase diversity and inclusiveness on campus.
As March rolls in, Black History Month will be shelved until next February. So I ask: should the United States blow the dust off of Black History Month next winter? Or can Black History Month be thrown out as an antiquated < See BLACK HISTORY, page 5
That’s just, like, your opinion, man JOE ENABNIT
Guest Columnist
There is a long-standing and deepening problem with American democracy. Whether it is caused by sensationalist news media, poor education or shortening attention spans, people in the United States are extraordinarily uninformed. Thanks to the First Amendment, citizens of this great nation have the right to any opinion they could possibly imagine, and imagine they do. Not only do we often have uninformed opinions, but we are mad as hell about our bad opinions. How many times do you hear the phrase “Don’t outsource American jobs!” in daily conversation from people who have no idea about the benefits of comparative advantage? Or have you heard it said that the United States spends far too much money on aid in foreign countries, despite the fact that less than 1 percent of our national budget of trillions of dollars is used for “foreign aid”? Without a doubt, you’ve heard someone claim in the last several weeks that the federal government is coming to take away his or her firearms, though no one in Congress or the executive branch has promoted any legislation resembling a total ban on guns (or on any guns, for that matter). Surely reasoned arguments can be made to support any of these sentiments, but how many of the
people flocking to Blaine’s Farm and Fleet to buy up all of the ammunition (before Obama kicks in their doors) do you suppose have read the research, legal opinions and other pertinent information about gun control? The conclusions themselves might be ok, but they are not based on evidence and reason.
“
Good opinions are earned – you have to read a few books and seek out the latest news if you want to have an informed opinion about a subject.
”
“But everyone is entitled to an opinion!” This is a true statement. However, while you can believe whatever you choose to believe without a legal penalty, the facts of the world are not a matter of belief. Everyone is entitled to an opinion, but no one is entitled to a good one. Good opinions are earned – you have to read a few books and seek out the latest news if you want to have an informed opinion about a subject. You have to learn the facts,
which are objective, to form a truly rational viewpoint, which is subjective. If you skip the objective facts and form an opinion purely on the basis of emotions and hearsay, your opinion is probably crap. If you only voted for a presidential candidate because your parents voted the same way, or because you liked his wife’s hair, your vote hurt our democracy. Even if the conclusion you reach happens to be correct, you still have a bad opinion, because it is not based on reason and evidence; therefore, you could just as easily believe something totally wrong. Michael Kinsley referred to this phenomenon as the “intellectual free lunch.” The phrase “there is no such thing as a free lunch” in economics refers to the fact that everything has some sort of cost, which has to be paid by someone, even if on the surface it seems free. Like lunches, our opinions have costs. It is easy to form an opinion, yet when we form strong, bad opinions, we hurt ourselves by building a wall between our minds and the real world. When we vote based on our bad opinions, we hurt our nation by causing bad policies. When we fear the government taking our guns and vote with that fear, we make it impossible to pass any sort of sensible legislation involving gun < See OPINIONS, page 5
NORTHERN-IOWAN.ORG | FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 2013
BLACK HISTORY
continued from page 4
vestige of former prejudices? Though I have witnessed very little racial discrimination on campus, it would be naïve to assert that my experience is the universal experience at UNI or in the United States. When I lived in another part of the United States, racial prejudices created a thick layer of tension between neighbors and communities. A handful of parents voiced concerns about their children being sent to the “wrong” school due to diversity initiatives that had led to redistricting. In one particular exchange, I was told by a friendly, middleaged woman not to interact with her neighbors because the neighbors were “not the right kind of people.”
TECHNOLOGY
continued from page 4
three-dimensional printing in his 2013 State of the Union address only emphasizes how quickly new technologies are gaining ground. With in-ground petroleum products declining, the energy that drives our digital revolution will also rely on developing technologies. Advancements into biofuel, solar, wind, hydroelectric, geothermal, nuclear fission/fusion and notions we have yet to conceive of will be the backbone our modern world. Human demand for resources will only increase the more developed cultures and nations we have on the planet, increasing an already ravished thirst for resources. Technology is crucial because the balance of resources directly impacts how peaceful diplomatic relationships sustain themselves. Technology matters because while here at UNI or anywhere studying science or technology, what you find from your research might one day prevent a series of events that leads
Racism still infects our society. This malady will not be cured by downplaying the United States’ sordid history. This malady is being eased by groups like BSU and will be eased by the continuation of Black History Month. Every February, the downtrodden have an opportunity to find strength in the success stories retold and the un-oppressed have an opportunity to uplift the oppressed. In this way, Black History Month is for all members of society—all genders, ethnicities, religions, and sexual orientations. Until discrimination is thrown down and unable to rise, Black History Month has a place in our society.
opinion
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EDITORIAL CARTOON
MCT CAMPUS
Beth Monnier is a junior in
economics and English from Tripoli, Iowa.
to a local skirmish or a large military conflict. Technology matters because it saves lives. Medicine will face new challenges with drug-resistant “superbugs,” mutating forms of influenza and the ongoing fight against cancer and HIV/ AIDS. The interconnectivity of our world means deadly, contagious diseases can pass from nation to nation with increasing speed. So when you don’t hear about the developments that science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) are doing or unveiling right now, people become disillusioned, thinking how little the STEM field has brought us in recent years. By showing the advancements just announced in the past week and telling of the desperate need for technological development in the future, I hope to galvanize your support for the technology fields. It’s needed, it’s developing and this needs to continue, now more than ever. Garrett Trotter is a freshman in physics from Ankeny, Iowa.
1.877.811.7526 www.ppheartland.org 2520 Melrose Dr., Suite L | Cedar Falls
OPINIONS
continued from page 4
control. When we believe that foreigners are stealing all of our jobs and vote for politicians who would restrict free trade, we create a climate of xenophobia and we hurt our own standard of living by making goods more expensive. When we continue to readily form bad opinions without trying to learn the facts, we make it harder and harder for the facts to be important, which forces us to live in a fantasy land where everyone’s opinion is equally wrong, but still equally valued.
How can we resist this antiintellectual trend? There are several ways: We can make a conscious effort to research our own opinions so that we can have good discussions amongst ourselves and our friends. We can learn to refrain from forming a strong opinion on a subject when we don’t know the facts, and to recognize our own bad opinions that may already have taken hold. We can learn to embrace the chance to change our minds when we learn facts that contradict our own views, and to have open-minded arguments with people with whom we disagree.
We can learn to feel good about knowing the truth, rather than about our opinions – instead of feeling like a good person for being against gun control, we can learn to feel good for knowing the facts and being rational in our analysis. Lastly, and most importantly, we can keep in mind at all times the fact that not all opinions are equal – some are uninformed, some are wrong some are just plain silly – and that we make the world a better place when we argue against bad opinions with reason and facts.
campuslife
caitie peterson campus life editor petercap@uni.edu
march 1, 2013
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northern-iowan.org
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volume 109, issue 39
ENTERTAINMENT
HuB to host night of Midwestern music KIRSTEN TJOSSEM Staff Writer
HuB goers will get an earful from Midwest musicians on Thursday, Mar. 7. The show will begin with a stripped-down acoustic set by local band Har-di-Har at 8:30 p.m., followed by performances from This is Daybreak and The River Monks. Har-di-Har will then take the stage again to wrap up the night with a dance set at 11 p.m. “There is going to be so much good music,” said Andrew Thoreen of Har-diHar. “This show will feature fantastic Des Moines, Cedar Falls and Minneapolis bands that students who like indie music cannot afford to miss.”
Cedar Falls natives Andrew and Julie Thoreen make-up Har-di-Har, and the two have been working nonstop since the release of their second extended play album, “Feudal Kind,” back in December. “We’ve been stupid busy. For the past five weeks we have been touring regionally, playing shows Thursday through Sunday,” said Andrew Thoreen. The band is also preparing for an upcoming tour to the southeast and later to the northeast, as well as stops at the Mission Creek Festival and Midwest Music Fest in the spring. Following the opening set
Courtesy Photo
< See HuB, page 7
Julie and Andrew Thoreen perform at the HuB. The Thoreens make up the band Har-di-Har and will be performing their music at the HuB on Thursday, Mar. 7 along with several other Midwestern bands.
Pin Happy! Amanda Merritt
1 pin
Pinterest Column Ever wonder how people make those cute tutus? Well, now you have the opportunity to create one yourself! With some time
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Step 5: Step 6:
Create a slip knot and tighten it.
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Begin cutting strips towards folded end of tulle.
Continue knotting the tulle around elastic (make sure the knots are close together for the best results).
Then cut fold (now there are two pieces). Repeat
Safety pin two elastic ends together.
Step 4:
Step 8:
KIRB K CHEC OSSEM KIRSTEN TJ t Writer en
Entertainm
J’s: Top notch location, quantity, price… and ranch As a resident of Gold Falls Villa Apartments and a lover of hot beefs and breakfast for dinner, J’s Homestyle is incredibly too convenient sometimes. Ordering a BLT and cheese curds, walking the two minutes to pick it up and then devouring it on my couch while watching reruns of “Queer Eye for the Straight Guy” has been my night more than once this past month. The “om nom nom” worthy hot beef is the reason Janice Power opened the restaurant three and a half years ago. “Before I even decided I wanted to do a restaurant, I went all over town trying to find a good hot beef and couldn’t find one,” she said. “And I thought, it’s so easy to do this.” Power grew up in a family of nine, never eating anything but homemade food. The desire for homemade food has carried throughout her life and she has implemented it in her restaurant, from the allday breakfast to the bread and baked goods. Power also loves people, and it’s apparent within sec-
onds of walking in the door. “I like the people. Love the people. I love serving them good food. Reasonable food,” said Power. University of Northern Iowa student Krystle Doeden has been an employee at J’s for two years. The familiar faces of customers were one of the reasons deciding whether or not to stay in Cedar Falls after graduating this May was so difficult. “It gets in a good crowd, from families to UNI students to older couples,” said Doeden, a family services major. Serving up a lot of food for not a lot of money is something Power feels strongly about. “I just don’t like ripping people off. I want them to be full when they leave. I told them many times, if you’re not full, I’m gonna set you back down again and feed you more,” she said. Large quantities at reasonable prices are a college student’s dream. For those who live on campus and don’t have a car, J’s is just a short walk < See J’S, page 7
northern-iowan.org | friday, march 1, 2013
J’S
continued from page 6
away. If for some sick and twisted reason you’re not yet convinced that making a visit to J’s is necessary, consider the salad dressing of our generation: ranch.
We’re not talking the subpar, almost vomit-inducing Hidden Valley. J’s has that restaurant ranch that I am as tempted to drink straight as I am the ginger dressing at Sakura.
COLBY CAMPBELL/Northern Iowan
CHECK IT: J’S HOMESTYLE COOKING -1724 W 31st St. -open 5:30 a.m. – 8:30 p.m. daily -jshomecooking.com
continued from page 6
by Har-di-Har will be This is Daybreak out of Minneapolis. The band recently released an album titled “Influence/ Coincidence.” This will be their first visit to Iowa. The River Monks from Des Moines will follow. These folks are the people behind the theme music to Iowa Public Radio’s River to River and Talk of Iowa programs. The show at the HuB will be their first stop on the national tour
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ADDY AWARDS
Marketing students win 15 awards KIRSTEN TJOSSEM Staff Writer
J’s Homestyle Cooking, a restaurant in Cedar Falls.
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campuslife
they’re launching. The show will begin at 8:30 p.m. with doors opening at 8 p.m. The cost is $5 for those 21 and older and $7 for those 18-20. “College is all about experiencing new culture,” said Thoreen. “This show offers an opportunity for students at (the University of Northern Iowa) to hear bands that are truly doing new, intriguing and relevant things for the music scene in Iowa, as well as nationwide.”
University of Northern Iowa students took home 15 awards at the ADDY Awards last Thursday, Feb. 21. The mission of the ADDYs is to recognize and reward creativity in the art of advertising. “It was awesome to be recognized in front of the best advertising professionals in the Cedar Valley. Since such a limited number of entries win, I am so grateful to say that I have won an ADDY,” said Jordan McNamara, senior marketing: advertising student, who won silver for the entry of his personal website. McNamara got involved with the ADDYs through AAF-UNI, UNI’s chapter of the American Advertising Federation. AAF-UNI sponsored entries were able to snag five of the 15 student awards. McNamara currently serves as the president of the campus organization. “I had heard of AAF Cedar Valley in the past and always thought about getting involved but never did. Once I heard that they were forming a student chapter I immediately got involved because AAF is well known within the advertising community,”
he said. The majority of the winning AAF-UNI pieces were developed for the National Student Advertising Competition as a part of Professor Matthew Wilson’s advertising campaign development class. “The unique thing about the class is that, due to the rules, Professor Wilson cannot give us any advice and it must be entirely student created. I would say it is the single most important and educational class I have taken my entire time at UNI. So much so that despite the fact that I cannot receive credit for the class I show up every day for it again this year to participate in the competition,” said McNamara. Wilson was a creative director at Mudd Advertising for three years before coming to UNI and getting involved with AAF. He felt that AAF would be a great organization to get started on campus and convinced two students to show up for the first meeting in the fall of 2011. By the end of that first year, the organization had 24 members. Since then, they’ve grown to more than 50 members. “AAF is great for our students because advertising is a team sport. It involves busi-
ness analysts, researchers, designers, copywriters, media experts, programmers, video editors and marketers. Yet so often in higher education students get clustered into majors where they have little opportunity to work closely with students in other programs,” said Wilson. Though student involvement with the ADDYs has been low in the past, this year had a record number of more than 70 student entries. Winners will now go on to districts. “There’s nothing better for students than to have their work projected on a screen in front of 250-300 local advertising professionals,” said Wilson. “It’s great exposure. It’s an invaluable networking opportunity.” Wilson welcomes those passionate about advertising to join the organization. “Whether you are a creative, a marketer or an interactive technologist, you’ll get some excellent realworld experience working on supercool projects,” he said. “Anyone who is passionate about ideas and advertising is welcome to join us.”
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BRAD EILERS SPORTS EDITOR EILERSB@UNI.EDU
MARCH 1, 2013
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PAGE 8
VOLUME 109, ISSUE 39
MEN’S BASKETBALL
Poor play dooms Panthers in 63-57 loss to Salukis BRAD EILERS
Sports Editor
If you didn’t know the records of the two teams playing in Wednesday night’s men’s basketball game in Carbondale, Ill., it would have been easy to think the Southern Illinois University Salukis were competing for a Missouri Valley Conference title while the University of Northern Iowa Panthers were at the bottom of the conference standings. In reality, the Panthers (17-13, 10-7 MVC) were the team still competing for the top spot in the MVC, while the Salukis sat in last place. However, SIU handled UNI from start to finish, taking a 63-57 victory and ending the Panthers’ chances at a first- or second-place finish in the MVC with just one conference game remaining. UNI committed 16 turnovers, shot just 37.7 percent from the floor and 25 percent from 3-point range and allowed nine SIU offensive rebounds. The Salukis (13-16, 5-12 MVC), who never trailed in the game, jumped out to an early 7-0 lead as the Panthers failed to score in the opening three minutes of play. UNI eventually tied the game at 14. However SIU ended the first half on a 25-10 run to take a 39-24 lead into the locker room.
The Panthers played better in the second half, closing the gap to just five points with just under three minutes to play, but the 15-point halftime deficit was too much to overcome as UNI fell 63-57. The UNI offense struggled without starting senior guard Anthony James, who suffered a deep thigh bruise in the second half of last Saturday’s loss to the University of Denver. James leads the Panthers in scoring, averaging 12.4 points per game. Redshirt freshman guard Matt Bohannon started in place of James and went 0-for-7 with no points. Senior guard Marc Sonnen led the Panthers in scoring with 18 points. Sonnen was joined in double digits by Jake Koch (12 points) and Deon Mitchell (10 points). Sophomore forward Seth Tuttle finished with eight points and nine rebounds. The Salukis were led by senior guards Desmar Jackson and Jeff Early, who scored 18 points and 14 points, respectively. The Panthers return to action Saturday night at 7 p.m. when they host the Illinois State University Redbirds (17-13, 8-9 MVC) for Senior Night. With a win, UNI will secure the No. 3 seed in the MVC Tournament. With a loss, the Panthers will take the No. 4 seed.
KEEP UP WITH PANTHER ATHLETICS
ERIC CLAUSEN/Northern Iowan
Follow Sports Editor Brad Eilers on Twitter at @NISportsLive for updates on UNI athletics, live-tweeting of games and other sports news.
UNI senior guard Anthony James (52) was held out of Wednesday night’s game against Southern Illinois due to a deep thigh bruise. James leads the Panthers in scoring at 12.4 points per game. The Panthers lost to the Salukis 63-57, ending their chances at a first-place finish in the MVC.
SOFTBALL
Panthers sit at 5-10 after UCA Tournament BRAD EILERS
Sports Editor
ERIC CLAUSEN/Northern Iowan Archives
UNI senior catcher Sam Reimer (15) homered and drove in four runs against Grambling State last Friday as part of the UCA Tournament.
Last weekend, the University of Northern Iowa softball team took part in the University of Central Arkansas Tournament. The Panthers won their opening and closing games in tournament play, going 2-3 and falling to 5-10 overall this season. UNI was outscored 33-27 in the five games. UNI faced off against Grambling State University in their first game of the tournament Friday afternoon and came away with an easy 13-4 victory. The Panther offense collected 14 hits, including six extra-base hits, two of which were home runs. UNI scored seven runs in the first three innings of play before adding six more runs in the fourth inning. Freshman Abbie VanVleet picked up the win for the Panthers, pitching 3.2 innings while allowing four hits and two earned runs. Following the victory over GSU, the Panthers took on the host school, the Central Arkansas Bears. UNI got on the scoreboard early, putting up one run in the top of the first inning off a Caitlin Wnek home run. The Bears answered with three runs of their own in the bottom of the third inning and held a 3-1 lead until the seventh inning when the Panthers tied the game on a Julia Hunter sacrifice fly and a Wnek RBI single. UNI was able to force extra innings against UCA but gave up the game-winning run in the bottom of the
eighth inning on an error. Junior pitcher Jamie Fisher took the loss, allowing seven hits and three earned runs over 7.1 innings. Saturday morning, the Panthers squared off against Ball State University. Fisher was able to silence Ball State for two innings before an offensive outbreak by the Cardinals. BSU scored six runs over the next three innings to force Fisher from the game. The Cardinals continued to pile on, with three more runs over the final two innings, topping the Panthers 9-3. Saturday afternoon UNI faced UCA in a rematch. However, the result was the same as the Bears cruised to an easy 16-2 victory over the Panthers. UCA scored 13 runs in the first inning and UNI was never able to recover. The Panthers recorded just four hits in the blowout loss. UNI faced the University of Arkansas-Pine Bluff in their final game of the tournament Sunday morning. Fisher and the Panthers dominated from start to finish, limiting the Lions to just one hit throughout the course of the game. UNI was held scoreless through the first three innings of play but wound up scoring six runs over the final four innings to take an easy 6-0 victory. The Panthers return to action Friday at 12:30 p.m. as part of the Woo Pig Tournament hosted by the University of Arkansas. UNI will play five games over the course of three days.
NORTHERN-IOWAN.ORG | FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 2013
sports
PAGE 9
ACADEMICS
NCAA sees bumps in road, but schools pay for damage BILL DWYRE
Los Angeles Times
Come to find out, the creators of the dreaded “lack of institutional control” have been throwing stones from inside their own glass house. The NCAA, short for the National Collegiate Athletic Association, is now in the kind of damage-control mode that it so often, and so smugly, puts its member institutions. Recent revelations about the NCAA’s enforcement procedures have been so damning that its executive committee took the unusual step Saturday of publicly announcing its president would continue to be its president. His name is Mark Emmert and his executive committee said it was “unanimously confirming its confidence in Mark’s leadership.” If Emmert were a baseball manager, such a vote of confidence would mean he’d be fired by the end of the week. But the NCAA is its own world, an impenetrable planet in an unreachable orbit. Had the Soviet Union been as powerful, and as well-financed, it never would have come apart. Longtime NCAA watchers, especially cynical ones, will view this announcement as business as usual. The translation would read: ok, we got caught screwing up, but we are still too big to really care and we will form a new committee and seven subcommittees while we wait for this to go away. The executive committee rationalized adeptly in
its statement: “The road to transformational change is often bumpy and occasionally controversial.” The bumps and controversy have been well-documented. Among them is the possibility the NCAA went beyond its jurisdiction in penalizing Penn State; it had malice aforethought in the case of UCLA basketball player Shabazz Muhammad; and it paid the attorney of the booster being investigated in the University of Miami case to leak information to the NCAA. Donna Shalala, Miami’s president, is doing a gutsy and dangerous thing by taking on the NCAA before judgment and penalties have been handed down. She has already selfimposed penalties. “We have suffered enough,” Shalala said. The only other gauntletthrowing of recent memory was the University of Southern California’s Mike Garrett, who sniffed at the NCAA’s investigation of Reggie Bush by telling a group of boosters the NCAA was “just jealous because they aren’t Trojans.” That was similarly gutsy, but also more arrogant than sensible. The NCAA plowed under USC football. The Trojans, after losing ranking and bowl privileges, are still facing two more football seasons of competing under scholarship shortfalls. UCLA took a smaller hit when the NCAA dawdled away three games of Muhammad’s basketball eligibility. Bruins Athletic Director Dan Guerrero, who walked the painstak-
ing investigation path step by step with NCAA officials over many months, says now, “You started to wonder how many stones you need to turn over.” Muhammad was suddenly OK after the Los Angeles Times ran a story about the boyfriend of the lead investigator in the case, who was overheard on an airplane saying there was no question Muhammad was guilty and would be declared ineligible. At USC, it is fair to assume degrees of anger toward the NCAA. The best guess is that President Max Nikias and Athletic Director Pat Haden aren’t having cocktail parties for NCAA enforcement staffers. Haden says he was “surprised” by the recent revelations about the NCAA’s handling of the Miami case but added, carefully, “All we ask of our governing body is to be treated with fairness and integrity.” Guerrero and Haden probably have little choice but to continue to snap to attention and salute for the NCAA. Same as their peers. It’s the system, like it or not. Guerrero says the public
outcry over what has happened on Emmert’s watch has left a tone of “Rome is burning.” But he is also part of a task force of Division I athletic directors, looking for fixes. He says, right now, the NCAA is listening. Shalala is taking the stance that, because the investigation of Miami wrongdoing was done by investigators who were engaged in wrongdoing of their own, the case should be over. Our legal system probably would conclude the same. In that vein, if it were a less-than-ethical NCAA enforcement staff ruling on USC’s ethics, should there not be some thought to restoring football scholarships? Even though UCLA’s basketball record might be a few games better had Muhammad played earlier, and even though that might enhance a better NCAA tournament seeding, Guerrero realistically sees no potential for payback. “What’s done is done,” he said, apparently not wanting to cast a stone.
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Brandon Poll Managing Editor pollb@uni.edu
MARCH 1, 2013
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VOLUME 109, ISSUE 39
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4 bedroom house in Cedar Falls. 1.5 bath, short drive to campus. 1,800 square feet & full basement, washer/dryer. Spacious bedrooms, living room, eat in kitchen. Garage, off street parking. Call Emily, 563-340-1797 Email emmyann419@gmail.com Renovated 3 bedroom. Next to UNI. Available June 1ST. Call 712- 358- 0592 1, 2, 3, 4 bedroom units 10 minutes north of Cedar Falls. Security gated complex. Some utilities/ cable paid. $400 - 800/MO. www. hildebrandrentals.com. 319- 352- 5555
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Renovated 4 bedroom apartment for rent. June 2013. On Olive Street, next to UNI. Call 712- 358- 0592. 2 and 3 bedroom apartments. Clean, spacious, close to campus. Utilities and cable paid. Off-street parking and laundry. Available May 16TH. 290- 8151. 1 bedroom apartments. Large, clean, close to campus. Utilities and cable paid. Off-street parking and laundry. Available May 16TH. 266- 1245. 1 and 2 bedrooms. Pool & laundry facilities, garages, walk to UNI, free cable, cat friendly. Taking deposits for 2013-2014. Call now to schedule a tour, 319- 2775231. Gold Falls Villa, 1824 University Drive, Cedar Falls. goldfallsvilla.com. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments for rent near UNI. Available May or June 2013. Call 712- 358- 0592. Large 3 bedroom newer ranch style home. Half mile to campus. Many new updates, bath and kitchen, central air, lots of parking. $950/MO. 319- 846- 2995 Available July 1ST. 4 bedroom duplex. $960/MO. Appliances included. 319- 236- 8930 or 319- 290- 5114.
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northern-iowan.org | friday, march 1, 2013
HOROSCOPES By Nancy Black Tribune Media Services (MCT)
Today’s Birthday (03/01/13). Domestic life benefits with Jupiter in Gemini (until June 25), as friends and family fill your home. Summer adventures keep it playful. You get farther with a solid team and a plan. Learn, study and share your knowledge. To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. Aries (March 21-April 19) -Today is a 9 -- Let your partner do the talking. To avoid problems, play the game exactly by the book. Then watch the magic. Prayer and meditation are powerful tools. Get talked into an outing later. Taurus (April 20-May 20) -- Today is a 9 -- Get ready to choose ... more requests are coming in. Research the fine print. Let others help over the next two days and an extra push pays off. Imagine success. Gemini (May 21-June 20) -- Today is an 8 -- Power flows to you; dig into a big job. Visualize your perfect life. You’re entering a very busy phase. Read the rules first, and then act. You’re generating positive buzz. Cancer (June 21-July 22) -Today is a 7 -- Upgrade your technology. Water the garden, and romance will blossom. There still could be difficulties. Note details. You can make huge transformations. Let your sweetheart set the schedule. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Today is an 8 -- Allow yourself to be persuaded to a new point of view. Family and home issues take the forefront. Follow a strong recommendation. Make an interesting discovery about love. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Today is a 9 -- Provide well for your family. Determination produces results. You’re exceptionally intelligent; gather information and put it to lucrative use. Believe you can prosper. There’s water involved. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) -- Today is a 9 -- You’re very persuasive now. Get practical with your studies for a brilliant insight. Go
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flowers. Use the grapevine to find the connections you need. Do what you promised, and collect the reward. Pay back a debt. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) -Today is a 9 -- You’re entering a service phase. Consider career advancement today and tomorrow. Turn objections into agreement by using gentle persuasion and finesse. Provide leadership. Tell a story with a happy ending. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) -- Today is an 8 -- Visualize immense success (no small stuff). Make lists of what you really want. Invest in your career with time and/ or money. Do something nice for someone who’s confined. Pamper yourself.
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