10.3.11

10
In an effort to revamp his cam- paign before the crucial Iowa caucus in early 2012, Republican presiden- tial candidate Newt Gingrich un- veiled his new “21st Century Contract with America” last week. The plan involves several efforts his camp claims will get America back to work. However, many have called into question whether or not this is a viable plan or simply a last- ditch effort for a campaign that has al- ready been crippled by falling polling numbers and a mass exit of campaign staff earlier in the year. “We are going to talk about jobs a lot, which is appealing to college students,” said Gingrich’s Iowa cam- paign manager Mike Kraul. “We are mapping out a plan that is going to greatly expand jobs.” Having a post-doctoral degree in history, Gingrich is well-known for drawing upon the past to reiterate his plans for the future. His focus on science and technology in relation to innovators at Iowa State also is an as- set that Gingrich is hoping will garner larger support in Iowa. The idea for his “21st Century Contract with America” is essentially The ISU volleyball team pushed No. 8 Texas to five sets Sunday, but ultimately lost a 3-2 decision (16-25, 25-14, 20-25, 25-21, 8-15). After dropping the first set of the match, the No. 16 Cyclones (12-3, 3-1 Big 12) put on a compelling per- formance in the second set, with a 25-14 win to tie the match at 1-1. “We just looked scared in the first game, I felt like we looked rattled,” said ISU coach Christy Johnson-Lynch. “I think we got blocked early and then our hitters got scared and tenta- tive and decided to back off. “They did a good job of bounc- ing back in game two, it could have gone the other way eas- ily and I thought they responded pretty well.” The match see-sawed again with Texas (9-4, 2-1 Big 12) tak- ing the third set 25-20, and the Cyclones responding in the fourth with a 25-21 win. The third set is where Johnson-Lynch said the match could have turned in the Cyclones’ fa- vor after Texas started sloppy, The ISU Rodeo Club doesn’t com- pete with the same amount of stu- dents week in and week out as the rest of the Great Plains Region does, but that doesn’t stop it from hosting its own National Intercollegiate Rodeo Association-sponsored rodeo. For the 49th straight year, the Cyclone Stampede took place at the ISU animal science farm in south- west Ames on Friday and Saturday. Only three ISU students competed over the weekend. “We had a great turnout this year, we were able to sell a lot of tickets for the event and had a great turn- out for all three rounds,” said Megan Waechter, Rodeo Club fundraising executive officer. “Even with the foot- ball game on Saturday, we were able to draw a great crowd for the finals.” The Cyclone Stampede is a three- round rodeo that consists of two pre- Volume 207 | Number 30 | 40 cents | An independent student newspaper serving Iowa State since 1890. | www.iowastatedaily.com @iowastatedaily facebook.com/ iowastatedaily MON OCT. 3, 2011 I NSIDE: News ........................................... 7 Sports ......................................... 4 Opinion ......................................... 3 Business ..................................... 6 Classifieds ................................. 8 Games ....................................... 9 O PINION: COLUMNISTS DEBATE POLITICAL TERM LIMITS page 3 N EWS : HEALTH CENTER TO PROVIDE FLU SHOTS page 8 C ONFERENCE : State senator presents to Democrats Local businesses feature pink promotions BUSINESS.p6 >> Rodeo Photo: Kelsey Kremer/Iowa State Daily Caleb Strecker of Dickinson State University attempts to rope a calf in the tie-down calf-roping competition during the 49th Annual Cyclone Stampede Rodeo on Friday in Ames. The goal of tie-down roping is to catch the calf and tie three of its legs together in as little time as possible. 49th annual rodeo provides thrills By Mark.Schafer @iowastatedaily.com Photo: Kelsey Kremer/Iowa State Daily Caleb Miles of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln rides in the saddle bronc- riding competition during the 49th Annual Cyclone Stampede Rodeo on Friday in Ames. Big 12 Election 2012 Photo: Jordan Maurice/Iowa State Daily Quarterback Steele Jantz walks along the sideline after the 37-14 Cyclone loss to Texas. Jantz threw one interception and was 28-of-51 passing for 251 yards. He threw one touchdown pass, an 18-yard reception to Chris Young. Cyclones fall to rival Texas Mistakes, turnovers plague football team No. 8 Longhorns down Iowa State By Jake.Calhoun @iowastatedaily.com By Zach.Gourley @iowastatedaily.com FOOTBALL.p4 >> VOLLEYBALL.p5 >> Gingrich looks to revamp campaign By David.Bartholomew @iowastatedaily.com RODEO.p10 >> By the time the play clock struck zero, the good feelings from weeks past had gone away and the euphoria that had resulted from three come- back victories had quickly evaporated. The ISU football team opened conference play with a 37-14 loss to now-No. 11 Texas, which took a 34-0 lead at halftime in front of a crowd of 56,390 at Jack Trice Stadium the second-largest in ISU history — on Saturday night. “Anything that could go wrong went wrong for us to- day,” said junior linebacker Jake Johnson- Lynch Straube Iowa state Sen. Matt McCoy spoke at the first College and Young Democrats Conference on Sunday. McCoy, who represents District 31, said the Democrats’ priority should be on getting a Democrat elected to the open Marion seat. Gov. Terry Branstad appointed Sen. Swati Dandekar to an executive position on the Iowa Utilities Board. Because of the appointment, she has to vacate her Senate seat. If a Republican wins, Democrats will lose their control of the Iowa Senate. McCoy said students need to be focused on three issues this legislative term. “The first,” McCoy said, “is edu- cation reform.” McCoy said the Iowa director of the Department of Education, Jason Glass, has suggested Iowa withdraw from No Child Left Behind. Glass’ plan, according to McCoy, would also make it easier to fire Iowa teachers. The second issue to focus on is Branstad wants to cut commer- cial property taxes, McCoy said. He said the third issue is job training and unemployment. McCoy said former Iowa first lady Christie Vilsack’s campaign is going well. McCoy said the best thing a student could do to support Vilsack’s campaign is to get on the ISU campus and hand out fliers. As for the three regents institu- tions, McCoy said outside of the conference, students and faculty need to make sure they are keeping a close eye on the Iowa Board of Regents. McCoy said the Board of Regents has worked so well in the past because of its independence from the governor’s office. McCoy said hopefully students won’t be told to leave the Legislature this year, because it’s these kinds of actions that create double-digit raises in tuition. By Paige Godden, Daily Staff Writer Cyclone Stampede NEWT .p10 >> online Catch the action: View a photo gallery from this weekend’s Cyclone Stampede at iowastatedaily.com online Get more online: Go to our website to see photos from Newt Gingrich’s speech. iowastatedaily.com

description

A PDF version of the day's Daily.

Transcript of 10.3.11

Page 1: 10.3.11

In an effort to revamp his cam-paign before the crucial Iowa caucus in early 2012, Republican presiden-tial candidate Newt Gingrich un-veiled his new “21st Century Contract with America” last week.

The plan involves several efforts his camp claims will get America back to work. However, many have called into question whether or not this is a viable plan or simply a last-ditch effort for a campaign that has al-ready been crippled by falling polling numbers and a mass exit of campaign staff earlier in the year.

“We are going to talk about jobs a lot, which is appealing to college students,” said Gingrich’s Iowa cam-paign manager Mike Kraul. “We are mapping out a plan that is going to greatly expand jobs.”

Having a post-doctoral degree in history, Gingrich is well-known for drawing upon the past to reiterate his plans for the future. His focus on science and technology in relation to innovators at Iowa State also is an as-set that Gingrich is hoping will garner larger support in Iowa.

The idea for his “21st Century Contract with America” is essentially

The ISU volleyball team pushed No. 8 Texas to five sets Sunday, but ultimately lost a 3-2 decision (16-25, 25-14, 20-25, 25-21, 8-15).

After dropping the first set of the match, the No. 16 Cyclones (12-3, 3-1 Big 12) put on a compelling per-formance in the second set, with a 25-14 win to tie the match at 1-1.

“We just looked scared in the first game, I felt like we looked rattled,” said ISU coach Christy Johnson-Lynch. “I think we got blocked early and then our hitters got scared and tenta-tive and decided to back off.

“They did a good job of bounc-

ing back in game two, it could have gone the other way eas-ily and I thought they responded pretty well.”

The match see-sawed again with Texas (9-4, 2-1 Big 12) tak-ing the third set 25-20, and the Cyclones responding in the fourth with a 25-21 win.

The third set is where Johnson-Lynch said the match could have turned in the Cyclones’ fa-vor after Texas started sloppy,

The ISU Rodeo Club doesn’t com-pete with the same amount of stu-dents week in and week out as the rest of the Great Plains Region does, but that doesn’t stop it from hosting its own National Intercollegiate Rodeo Association-sponsored rodeo.

For the 49th straight year, the Cyclone Stampede took place at the ISU animal science farm in south-west Ames on Friday and Saturday. Only three ISU students competed over the weekend.

“We had a great turnout this year, we were able to sell a lot of tickets

for the event and had a great turn-out for all three rounds,” said Megan Waechter, Rodeo Club fundraising executive officer. “Even with the foot-ball game on Saturday, we were able to draw a great crowd for the finals.”

The Cyclone Stampede is a three-round rodeo that consists of two pre-

1

Volume 207 | Number30 | 40 cents | An independentstudentnewspaper serving Iowa State since 1890. | www.iowastatedaily.com

@iowastatedaily

facebook.com/iowastatedaily

MON OCT. 3, 2011

InsIde:News ........................................... 7

Sports ......................................... 4Opinion ......................................... 3

Business ..................................... 6Classifieds ................................. 8Games ....................................... 9

OpInIOn:

COLUMNISTS DEBATE POLITICAL TERM LIMITS

page3

news:

HEALTH CENTER TO PROVIDE FLU SHOTS

page8

COnferenCe:

StatesenatorpresentstoDemocrats

Local businesses feature pink promotions

BUSINESS.p6>>

Rodeo

Photo: Kelsey Kremer/Iowa State DailyCaleb Strecker of Dickinson State University attempts to rope a calf in the tie-down calf-roping competition during the 49th Annual Cyclone Stampede Rodeo on Friday in Ames. The goal of tie-down roping is to catch the calf and tie three of its legs together in as little time as possible.

49th annual rodeo provides [email protected]

Photo: Kelsey Kremer/Iowa State DailyCaleb Miles of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln rides in the saddle bronc-riding competition during the 49th Annual Cyclone Stampede Rodeo on Friday in Ames.

Big12 Election2012

Photo: Jordan Maurice/Iowa State DailyQuarterback Steele Jantz walks along the sideline after the 37-14 Cyclone loss to Texas. Jantz threw one interception and was 28-of-51 passing for 251 yards. He threw one touchdown pass, an 18-yard reception to Chris Young.

Cyclones fall to rival TexasMistakes, turnovers plague football team

No. 8 Longhorns down Iowa State

[email protected]

[email protected]

FOOTBALL.p4>> VOLLEYBALL.p5>>

Gingrich looks to revamp [email protected]

RODEO.p10>>

By the time the play clock struck zero, the good feelings from weeks past had gone away and the euphoria that had resulted from three come-back victories had quickly evaporated.

The ISU football team opened conference play with a 37-14 loss to now-No. 11 Texas, which took a 34-0 lead at halftime in front of a crowd of 56,390 at Jack Trice Stadium — the second-largest in ISU history — on Saturday night.

“Anything that could go wrong went wrong for us to-day,” said junior linebacker Jake

Johnson-Lynch

Straube

Iowa state Sen. Matt McCoy spoke at the first College and Young Democrats Conference on Sunday.McCoy, who represents District 31, said the Democrats’ priority should be on getting a Democrat elected to the open Marion seat.Gov. Terry Branstad appointed Sen. Swati Dandekar to an executive position on the Iowa Utilities Board. Because of the appointment, she has to vacate her Senate seat.If a Republican wins, Democrats will lose their control of the Iowa Senate.McCoy said students need to be focused on three issues this legislative term.“The first,” McCoy said, “is edu-cation reform.”McCoy said the Iowa director of the Department of Education, Jason Glass, has suggested Iowa withdraw from No Child Left Behind. Glass’ plan, according to McCoy, would also make it easier to fire Iowa teachers.The second issue to focus on is Branstad wants to cut commer-cial property taxes, McCoy said.He said the third issue is job training and unemployment.McCoy said former Iowa first lady Christie Vilsack’s campaign is going well. McCoy said the best thing a student could do to support Vilsack’s campaign is to get on the ISU campus and hand out fliers.As for the three regents institu-tions, McCoy said outside of the conference, students and faculty need to make sure they are keeping a close eye on the Iowa Board of Regents.McCoy said the Board of Regents has worked so well in the past because of its independence from the governor’s office.McCoy said hopefully students won’t be told to leave the Legislature this year, because it’s these kinds of actions that create double-digit raises in tuition.

By Paige Godden, Daily Staff Writer

CycloneStampede

NEWT.p10>>

online

Catchtheaction:View a photo gallery from this weekend’s Cyclone Stampede atiowastatedaily.com

online

Getmoreonline:Go to our website to see photos from Newt Gingrich’s speech.iowastatedaily.com

Page 2: 10.3.11

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PAGE 2 | Iowa State Daily | Monday, October 3, 2011

Weather | Provided by ISU Meteorology Club

Lots of sunshine with a high in the upper 70s.

Another nice and sunny day with highs reaching the 80s.

Sunny and warm weather continues through the middle of the week.

42|78MON

51|81TUE

52|79WED

1938:Unseasonably hot weather brought the temperature all the way up to 97 degrees at Onawa, tying the all-time Iowa October record.

funfact

Celebrity NewsNotes and events.

Gene Simmons marries longtime girlfriend Shannon TweedKISS bassist Gene Simmons has married his longtime girlfriend, his publicist said.Simmons, who also is the star of the reality show “Gene Simmons Family Jewels,” has dated Shannon Tweed for 28 years.The pair got hitched in Beverly Hills, Calif., said the publicist, Dawn Miller.

CNN Wire Staff

Police Blotter: Ames, ISU Police Departments

The information in the log comes from the ISU and City of Ames police departments’ records. All those accused of violating the law are innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

Sept. 9Eric Schreck, 20, of Carroll, Iowa, was cited for underage possession of alcohol in Lot B5 (reported at 9:30 a.m.).Alexis Pena, 20, of Des Moines, was cited for underage pos-session of alcohol in Lot S4 (reported at 9:30 a.m.).Kellie Montour, 19, and Brianna Matthias, 19, both of Central City, Iowa, were cited for underage possession of alcohol in Lot S4 (reported at 9:42 a.m.).Kristin Polchow, 19, and Allison Falenschek, 19, both of 7434 Frederiksen Court, were cited for underage posses-sion of alcohol at Jack Trice Stadium (reported at 9:47 a.m.).

Makyla Steddom, 20, of Marshalltown, Iowa, was cited for underage possession of alcohol (reported at 9:54 a.m.)Dylan Stypula, 19, 140 Lynn Ave., was arrested and charged with public intoxication in Lot B6; he was transported to the Story County Justice Center (reported at 10 a.m.).Cameron Hagen, 20, of Northfield, Minn., was cited for underage possession of alcohol in Lot 85E (reported at 10:04 a.m.).Kristi Rogers, 19, of Norwalk, Iowa, and Tessa Ridout, 19, of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, were cited for underage possession of alcohol in Lot G2 (reported at 10:13 a.m.).Kyle Autschbach, 18, of Iowa

City, Iowa, and Ryan Fritz, 18, of Spring Grove, Ill., were cited for underage possession of alcohol in Lot D5 (reported at 10:27 a.m.).Collin Crowley, 19, 215 Stanton Ave. unit 503, was arrested and charged with public intoxica-tion, interference with official acts and underage possession of alcohol. Jeremy Baughman, 19, of Burnsville, Minn., was arrested and charged with public in-toxication in Lot B5. Both were transported to the Story County Justice Center (reported at 10:30 a.m.).Sara Hebl, 19, of Oxford, Iowa, was cited for underage pos-session of alcohol in Lot B5 (reported at 10:40 a.m.).

Ryan Hanrahan, Jens Pedersen and David Sappenfield, all seniors, enjoy the Wesley Foundation Student Center’s free midnight breakfast Saturday at Collegiate United Methodist Church.

BREAKFAST BASH: Enjoying free food

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AMES AAdams Cory M, 3329 Southdale.........................2011140567Akbar Steah Naqvi Abba, 4830 Mortensen Rd....2011194775 Akdeniz Neslihan, 4400 Westbrook Dr Apt.......2011100970 Aleynik Boris, 800 Pinon Dr Apt 112..................2011075071 Alpha Kappa Psi Bus Frat, 644 Squaw Creek Dr.2011103909 Ames Heating And Cooling, 1503 Florida.......2011156754 Ames Middle School, 321 State Ave................2011136521 Ames Oral Surgeons, 1212 Duff Ave...............2011093444 Anderson Dave, 108 Orange St........................2011075889 Anderson Maceo, 213 S Sheldon Ave................2011189442 Arndorfer Brent R, 1308 Walton Apt 203..........2011082705Arthur Charles S, 2108 Greeley St...................2011148838 BBaek Young M, 1121 Delaware Ave Wood........2011101011 Bal Upinder S, 1228 Lincoln Way....................2011162420 Ball Megan, 3718 Trip St.................................2011094072 Bare Lloyd E, 3519 Tripp St..........................2011079656 Bekkali Mukhtar Askaruli, 4329 Lincoln Swing St.2011126097 Beneke Jacob L, 123 N Maple St.....................2011155376 Big Table Books, 330 Main St.........................2011095893 Boehm Bethany, 4336 Fredrickson Ct...............2011111359 Bogenrief Phylllis, 2506 Tyler Ave......................2011224760 Bogenschultz Eva, 2950 Cypress Cir................2011222352 Bolt Wayne, 4302 Harrison Cir...........................2011080450 Brant Zachary A, 4335 Maricopa Dr Apt 9........2011116200 Brom Dirk, 3320 Foxley Dr..............................2011226404 Broussard Jo A, 703 Wilder Blvd......................2011108851 Brown Casey J, 913 Duff Ave..........................2011120256 Brown Lucious, 2901 Wessex Dr Apt 130.........2011132496 Bruemmer Andrew J, 1501 Jackson Dr.............2011222353 Bruene Barbara J, 2122 Greeley St..................2011164269 Bruene Roger, 2122 Greeley St.......................2011164267 Buchanan Craig P, 1823 Burnett Ave.................2011077960 Buchanan Irene H, 1823 Burnett Ave................2011077960 Buchanan John A, 1823 Burnett Ave................2011077960 Buchanan Scott I, 1823 Burnett Ave.................2011077961 Buck Elliot, 121 Beach Ave............................2011222683 Burks Laurie, 216 S Riverside Dr......................2011136760 Burnett Rebecca, 112 North Riverside Dr..........2011132744 Butch’s Amoco, 100 E Lincoln Way..................2011095673CCampbell James, 105 Kellogg......................2011147288 Campbell Patricia, 105 Kellogg.....................2011147288 Cantu Petra M, 2862 Lincoln Way Apt A..........2011147785 Carano Richard P, 5521 Hickery Hills..............2011184473 Carlyle David, 2309 Buchanan Dr..................2011144166 Carter Erin M, 3204 Lettie St.......................2011222028 Chao Chiayung, 1300 Coconino Rd Apt 2........2011075930 Charles S Arthur, 2108 Greeley St.................2011148838 Clatt Charles, 1003 E Lincoln Way................2011092995 Clay Alisha L, 807 Grand.............................2011081103 Coil Larry L, 1028 Top O Hollow Rd................2011113902 Conlan Suzanne, 1418 Clark Ave..................2011129739 Conoco Quick Ds, Po Box 229......................2011119395 Continental Western Group, 2310 230th St.....2011142667 Cory David B, 1210 Northwestern Ave..............2011129741 Cox Aaron, 2721 Hampton St.........................2011101172 Craft Alyssa, 530 Welch Ave............................2011111363 Curtis Lindy B, 1314 Idaho Ave.......................2011075222 DDairy Queen, 3300 Grand Ave........................2011144946 David Beatrice H, 2410 State Ave...................2011185915 David Herta, 2410 State Ave.........................2011185915 Day Benjamin L, 120 Mcdonald Dr..................2011113939 Dolan B, 3109 Turnberry Ct............................2011217127 Don Sons Body Shop, 1003 E Lincoln Way.....2011092995 EEdward, 1300 Coconino Rd............................2011024784 Elias Carolyn D, 305 S Russell Ave.....................2011224847 Ellsworth Ed S, 130 Bourne St.......................2011162523 Emmerson Charles Edward, 920 Burnett Ave...2011148175 Engel Kristin, 437 Hayward Ave.....................2011132811 Engineering Animation Inc, 2321 N Loop Dr......2011111853 FFine Elizabeth A, 2304 Fillmore Ave.................2011101283 Fischer Nicholas E, 4717 Mortensen Rd Apt 310..2011132874 Forrest Wesley A, 206 Rockwell Ave.................2011118673 Fox Jake N, 415 Grandwood Dr Apt 10..............2011105865 GGamroth Claudia, 3321 Frederiksen Ct...........2011134623 Gaunt Richard C, 3423 Clinton Ct..................2011156560 Ginder Derek, 1700 Amherst Dr......................2011101334 Gourley Gregg E, 1113 Maxwell Ave................2011114105 HHalverson Ashley, 4510 Twain Cir Apt 302.......2011136716 Hamilton Food Fuel,..........................................2011143682 Hannes Kade J, 251 S Franklin Ave.................2011114154 Hansen Ryan, 320 Hillcrest Ave........................2011083947 Harden Cynthia, 312 Dotson Dr......................2011190946 Hastings Charles..............................................2011142208 Hastings Elizabeth Anne,..................................2011142208 Hattori Ted, 511 S 4th St Apt 213..................2011101405 Haverkamp Property, 1400 Coconino Rd...........2011114174 Hay Jessica, 123 Sheldon St.............................2011104631 Heitzman Scott, 4009 Aplin Rd........................2011114187 Hoffer Robert H, 619 10th St..........................2011134636 Holl Garrett, 921 Delaware Ave........................2011120432 Holst Deanna, 4380 Grand Ave........................2011112193 Holzmer Josh E, 207 S 5th St Apt 1.....................2011131401 Hong Keunyoung, 72 Linden.............................2011101468 Houser Sally A, 920 Burnett Ave......................2011148175 Hu Shih Yung, 1300 Coconino Rd Apt 2.............2011075930 IIdeal Beverage Truck & Bodies, 214 E 16th St...2011092966 Idler Christopher, 491 Mortenson Rd Apt 3......2011075396 Internation Action, 499 S Capitol St..................2011084358 JJohnson Clifton B, 327 S Maple.......................2011152794 Johnson Della N, 2862 Lincoln Way Apt A.......2011147785 Johnson Lorraine N, 203 W Date Ct...............2011083466 Jorgensen Cindy, 1519 Linden Dr....................2011150778 Jorgensen Jeff, 1519 Linden Dr.....................2011150778 Josephson Robert D, 1210 Northwestern Ave..2011129741 KKalra Mohanish Chand, 2548 Helser Carpenter.2011024785

Kapke Nathan, 3232 Ellis St.............................2011114309 Kawamoto Yasushisa, 1125 Frederiksen Ct......2011075937 Keith Pat M, 107 East Hall Isu...........................2011079724 Kelso Lenore V, 720 Kellogg...........................2011016308 Ki Seo H, 7427 Frederiksen Ct........................2011101543 Kim Byeongsam, 2912 Charlotte Ct...................2011114346 Knapp William P Sr, 2121 Barr Dr...................2011118475 Knowles Mary J, 413 Faulkner Ct....................2011077836 Koong Daniel, 119 Stanton Ave Apt 706..........2011132890 Kramer Travis, 3130 Turnberry Dr Apt...............2011222682 Kruse Klint, 3918 Quebec St...........................2011146749 Kuikenova Dinara Anuarbekov, 4329 Lincoln Swing St.2011126097 LLarsen Isabel, 2802 Torrey Pines Cir............2011016345 Larsen Richard J, 2802 Torrey Pines Cir............2011016345 Lauen Christelle Enega, 219 S Sherman........2011152719 Lestari Nining, 153 N Hyland Ave Apt 8............2011024787 Lewis Vicki, Po Box 1429...............................2011076650 Lincoln Robert D, 2903 Eisenhower Ave............2011076305 Low Chee Yian, Friley 5548 Niles Fost..............2011024788 Lueth Trezina A, 168 University Village...............2011121674 Lukasik Brandon M, 1525 Little Bluestem..........2011114437 Lundeen Peter Mr, 328 South Russell...............2011078234 MMa Chiah J, 4130 Lincoln Swing.......................2011132787 Ma Chiah Jye, Friley 5548 Niles Fost................2011024788 Macaluso Filippo, 2707 Bristol Dr......................2011101648 Marin Juan, 802 Dickinson Ave Apt....................2011114453 Martin Benjamin, 4536 Twain Cir Apt 2..............2011131418 Matters Mary J, 3412 Taft................................2011135290 Matters Robert L, 3412 Taft.............................2011135291 Mcdermott David, 5615 W Lincoln Way..............2011114478 Mcguire Melissa A, 4404 Ls 9..........................2011129837 Mcmillan Devan, 800 Pinon Dr Apt 210..........2011101697 Menke Barton A, 3132 Briarhaven Rd Apt 238....2011082896 Menke Bryson A, 3132 Briarhaven Rd Apt 238.....2011082896 Merced Samuel, 1108 S 4th St Apt 26...............2011136720 Merchant Joseph, 1111 Duff Ave.....................2011131544 Methodieff Methody, 3002 Heathrow Dr Apt 1....2011132816 Mick Lindsey E, 4701 Steinbeck St Apt 11..........2011082602 Miller Gregory, 2505 Hoover.............................2011194176 Mitchell Ryan, 116 Welch Ave Apt 203...............2011143569 Moore Steve, 4460 246th St.............................2011163298 Morris Alison L, 1317 Illinois Ave......................2011112744 Munyakazi Francois, 111 University Vlg............2011124508 NNa Youngsun, 135 Dotson Dr..............................2011189262 Naas Amuel, 1100 Adams St 102....................2011226219 Naas Walter W Estate, 1100 Adams St..............2011226219 Nakagawa Haruko, 3014 Valley View Rd............2011135661 Nakagawa Norio, 3014 Valley View Rd.............2011135661 Nam Myeonghyeon, 2311 Aspen Rd...................2011134666 Nash Tyler, 7131 Frederiksen Ct.....................2011119896 National Animal Disease Center, 2300 Dayton Ave.2011118780 Neimeyer Jessau, Nathan Forsythe 225 Crystal St.2011114574 Nelson Andy, 2713 Bristol Dr.........................2011083839 Nicholson Jacob, 614 Billy Sunday Rd...............2011095686 Nippon Life, Po Box 3010...............................2011217607 OOlson Fay E Estate Of, 419 22nd St................2011140708 Olson Melanie, 4036 Fletcher Blvd....................2011152739 Overton Andrew J, 219 S Sherman Apt 5.......2011224732 PParson Gray, 119 Stanton Ave.........................2011104656 People’s Bar & Grill, 2430 Lincoln Way..............2011114639 Pepper Thomas Aaron, 3404 Coy Apt 8.............2011024789 Perez Roman Isidoro, 15 Lincoln Dr................2011138467 Perkovich Sean L, 2306 Ferndale Ave...............2011131299 Pierce Michael, 3500 Grand Ave Apt 1.............2011120323 Pingel Bradley Craig, 219 Ash Ave..................2011152748 Platt Kenneth B, 307 N Franklin Ave...................2011151408 Pohl Avis, 2116 Country Club Blvd...................2011134682 Ponce Lopez Rosendo, 2905 Se 5th St...............2011222410 QQuam Grant J, 122 North Dakota Ave..............2011147362 RRamaswamy Rohini, 3902 Arkansas Dr............2011131307 Rankin Randy F, Po Box 545............................2011105833 Reilly Doris L, 1501 Grand Ave..........................2011016473 Richmond Center, 600 5th St............................2011076924 Rivera Arturo, 525 6th St................................2011101894 SSaldana Juan Carlos Alvarez, 1006 South Ave..2011138473 Sayre Lyndsay, 3029 Sw Meadow Ridge............2011163387 Schilberg Michelle M, 2822 Stange Rd..............2011143729 Schubert John, 2408 Knapp St......................2011132204 Sciba Jr High Band Festival, 200 Stanton St.......2011149368 Scibilia Nick J, 2513 Hunt St........................2011114798 Setiawan Stanley, 258 Hyland.........................2011132786 Setiawan Stephen, 244 N Hyland Ave.............2011143725 Simmons Julie, Po Box 185.............................2011114822 Sjobakken James, Po Box 1217.......................2011152452 Skrdla Willis H, 2136 S Duff Ave...................2011094138 Smith Ana, 403 Jeffrey Ln.............................2011149346 Smith Toran, 403 Jeffrey Ln.............................2011149346 Sobek Zach J, 4700 Mortensen Rd................2011082541 Song Sung Jin, 2135 Prairie Vw....................2011075737 Spencer Camille A, 1304 Delafield Pl Nw..........2011084211 Springer Adam, 1005 Pinon Dr Apt 2..............2011224554 Su Jiachun, 2225 Frederiksen Ct.......................2011102026 Sun Hongyu, 815 24th St Apt 3.....................2011102029 Sundberg David, 2822 Oakland St....................2011093168 TTaylor Jeff W, 55850 170th St...........................2011148530 Thoen Kim A, 1018 Vermont Ct........................2011083438 Thoen Tyler C, 1018 Vermont Ct.......................2011083438 Thunder Bunnies, 415 S Wilmoth Ave.............2011114905 Tim Stahly Est, 2003 Greenbriar Cir...................2011114909 Tinker Jeff, 644 Pammel Ct...............................2011077974 Turner Jessica, 1103 28th St..........................2011193479 UUnited Way Story County, 315 Clark Ave............2011097265 VVanpelt Kathryn A Jt, 205 E Oneil Dr...............2011077810 Vanpelt Kenneth A Jt, 205 E Oneil Dr..............2011077810 Vanpelt Megan M Jt, 205 E Oneil Dr..............2011077810 Varley Courtney A, 1305 Coconino..................2011110628

WWagner Judith W, 1316 S Duff......................2011214521 Wagner Ryan, 519 Welch Ave Apt 2...............2011222678 Walker Lindsey, 4912 Mortensen Rd...............2011135560 Wang Yanfang, University Village Apt 167f.............2011132909 Warrington Douglas E, 417 6th St..................2011076623 Watson Jacob M, 212 Dotson Dr.........................2011139717 Wei Hu, 3406 Orion Dr......................................2011126010 Weidman Claire, 4915 Todd Dr Apt 6...............2011075816 Wells Clay M, 217 Ash Ave...............................2011102126 Whitham Larry, 2123 Ashmore Dr.......................2011093009 Willson Jeffrey S, 530 Forest Glen.....................2011214553 Wilson Rachel A, 2820 Thompson Dr..................2011135410 Wood Matthew, 301 Opal Cir........................2011135783 Wrabek Brittney, 4820 Mortensen...................2011132913 Wright Jeanne Sorenson, 1511 Illinois Ave......2011162002 YYarrington Scott R, 218 9th St......................2011118605 Yue Chengyan, 3506 Lincoln Way....................2011146161 ZZhang Bo, 2616 Stange Rd Apt 206...............2011102186 Zhang Wensheng, 2604 Stange Rd Apt 1........2011111658 Zhou Enmin, 2630 Vet Med Bldg Isu..............2011118253 Zmolek Thomas, 311 Pearson Ave................2011121160 Zunkel Gary, 1287 Westwood Pl.....................2011084219

CAMBRIDGE Baker Clark A, 33537 570th Ave....................2011222230 Smith Rocky L, 802 Race St...........................2011149597

COLLINS Huggins Peggy S, 111 2 Nd St........................2011116929 Milligan Alice L, Rr 1......................................2011214459Rickman Marlin K, 69043 340th.....................2011147766

COLO Isleb Timothy, 69551 Lincoln Hwy....................2011142775 Mitchell Keri, 202 2nd St................................2011131425 Walsh Margaret M, Rr 1 127.........................2011164948

GILBERT Larsen Jens C, 17103 Us Hyway 69.................2011214703 Pro Ag Dist, Po Box 85.....................................2011136633 Sellers T, Po Box 284.......................................2011217125 Shen Sheldon, 313 1/2 Matthews Dr...............2011153392

HUXLEY Bignar Diana Estate Of, 507 East 1st...............2011184764 Brungardt Lee Joseph, 210 E 1st St................2011142422 Butterfield Deb, 52579 290th St......................2011138114 Butterfield Michael, 52579 290th St..............2011138114 Egeland Alma L, 908 N Us Hwy 69 Apt 238...2011225985 Egeland Mildred A, 404 Central Ave.................2011225986 Mercy City Family Credit Union, 52579 290th St.2011138114 Mino Russ, 507 E 1st St Lot 52....................2011114520 Mission Health Services, Po Box 66.................2011218991

KELLEYIowa Acres Inc, 27087 Timber Rd..................2011152570

MAXWELL Chilton Douglas P, 590 Rock Island Ave..........2011119773 Fowler Steven Rebecca, 320 Baldwin St..........2011149521 Mohler Joan, 66194 310th St.......................2011142669

MC CALLSBURG Twedt Dorothy, 64339 110th St....................2011108779 Walters Karah, 14345 340th St.......................2011138131

NEVADA Bishop Michael L, 5 North Ave.........................2011155975 Bochmann Brent, 1029 G Ave.........................2011118314 Buckman Dennis, 1603 10th St.....................2011119046 Goecke Todd, Rr 2 Box 97..............................2011147366 Gress Teresa K, 728 D Ave...............................2011131667 Kelley Larry, 521 7th St Apt 4...........................2011147388 Kruse Charles, 1429 2nd St.............................2011139320 Logsdon Fredric, 1311 10th St.......................2011103812 Logsdon Judith, 1311 10th St.........................2011103812 Mcgreevey Gerald J, 412 I Ave.......................2011164040 Newsome Lamar E, 65479 Us Hwy 30.......2011133260 Page Antonia, 324 Lake View Ct.................2011094493 Pfs Investments Cust, 728 D Ave....................2011131667 Shireman Harold J, 1818 6th St......................2011118992 Smith Lyle D, 25453 670th Ave.......................2011023544

ROLAND Schultz Nicholas, 201 N Cottonwood St..........2011075697

SLATER Hantsbarger Sara B, 101 1st.........................2011101388 Letsch David, 101 1st Ave................................2011133145 Mccasland Megan Elizabeth, 51166 320th St..2011152727 Woodbury Financial Svcs Inc, 701 Linn St.......2011135599

STORY CITY Anderson Robyn K, 14855 Us Hwy 69.............2011078284 Baer Lewis A, 824 Hillcrest Ave........................2011155446 Drees Darla S, 342 Pennsylvania Ave............2011118377 Frederick Robert, 3980 Poplar Grove Ave.........2011123259 Henryson Albert S, 840 Lafayette Ave..............2011080253 Henryson Hilda J, 840 Lafayette Ave................2011080253 Knutson Amos L, 812 Cedar St.....................2011214658 Knutson Beulah, 812 Cedar St.........................2011105768 Markham Charles J, 120 1st St.......................2011222936 Moore Dennis, 3931 Tollman Ave......................2011077185 Nelson Rex P, 14090 George Washington.......2011114575 Nordin Julie R, 3915 Christytown Rd................2011101780 Purdue David E, 513 Park..............................2011148899 Sawyer Patricia L, 1116 Johnson Cir..............2011075612 Smith Ernest W, 735 Timberland Dr..................2011148156 Smith Evelyn L, 735 Timberland Dr.................2011148156 Stone Larry C, 847 Elm Ave...........................2011142387 Tjernagel Martin, 321 Y Ave..........................2011153394Voga Mary E Estate, Po Box 70......................2011226361

ZEARING Hendrix Tom, 508 Harkness Ln........................2011084144 Mcgoire Mark, 2512 Artesia Blvd....................2011103140 Womeldorff Sheri M, Po Box 302..................2011194025

CorrectionIn the original version of this column, Regent Bruce Rastetter was identified as the owner of a

biofuel company. However, Rastetter does not own any ethanol or biofuel plants, rather he acts as founder and CEO of Hawkeye Energy Holdings, an ethanol company that produces 450 million gal-lons of ethanol per year.

The Daily regrets the error.

Page 3: 10.3.11

Opinion3Iowa State Daily

Monday, October 3, 2011Editor: Michael Belding

[email protected] iowastatedaily.com/opiniononline

Christie run could spur challenge

Editorial

Editor in Chief: Jake [email protected]

Phone: (515) 294.5688

Politics

Is it time for term limits?Limiting terms may be necessary to preserve working Constitution

Editorial BoardJake Lovett, editor in chief

Michael Belding, opinion editor Rick Hanton, assistant opinion editor

Jacob Witte, daily columnistRJ Green, daily columnist

Ryan Peterson, daily columnistClaire Vriezen, daily columnist

Feedback policy:The Daily encourages discussion but does not

guarantee its publication. We reserve the right to edit or reject any letter

or online feedback.Send your letters to letters@iowastatedaily.

com. Letters must include the name(s), phone number(s), majors and/or group affiliation(s)

and year in school of the author(s). Phone numbers and addresses will not be published.

Online feedback may be used if first name and last name, major and year in school are

included in the post. Feedback posted online is eligible for print in the Iowa State Daily.

Photos courtesy of ThinkstockThe 22nd Amendment — which limits a president to two four-year terms — was added to the Constitution after Franklin Roosevelt was elected for a third and fourth term. Columnists Belding and Witte debate the necessity of congressional term limits today.

Column battle

Jacob Witte

Michael Beldingvs.

Politics in America today do not comport with the vision of the writers of our Declaration of Independence and Constitution and the fighters of our Revolutionary War. Political careerism

was never part of our constitutional tradition. While our political system allows for unlimited elections to the House of Representatives, Senate and presidency, ideally office-holding would rotate more freely than it does.

That is the ideal with which the Founders constructed their repub-lic. That ideal comports with political thought as ancient as Aristotle.

In supposing that American citizens would remain tuned in to current events, they supposed that some of those citizens would gain office. Instead, careerism has proliferated as we have removed restric-tions on voting rights based on property, gender and age. And while the people should have the opportunity to re-elect effective politicians, they should not do so at the expense of new bodies with new, beneficial ideas. Change should be slow and not disturb our foundations, but it should come around eventually.

There are 435 members of the United States House of Representatives. Fifteen of those were elected before 1980. Thirty-five of those members were elected from 1980 to 1990. One hundred nine Representatives were elected in the 1990s. More than one-third of our current representatives have been in office for more than a decade. That’s with elections every two years. From a practical standpoint, we cannot avoid having politicians who hold office for many years without interruption.

And with media outlets increasingly cen-tralized, there’s not much room for individual citizens to participate individually in politics. Large blocs of voters vote whichever way Bill O’Reilly or Chris Matthews or Rachel Maddow instruct them. Aside from our wholesale will-ingness to check out of political awareness and freethinking, most of us are unable to devote the time we need to carefully consider who is the best candidate for office and which way we should vote on ballot initiatives. In a world of wage labor and salaries, time is money, and we just don’t have enough spare time to be conscious of our political surroundings. Most American households support their middle-

class standards of living with two incomes; leisure time exists only for the wealthier parts of society.

Consider now a more intellectual argument: Holding office for long periods of time is inconsistent with the very idea of a republic. A republic is a government that exists for the benefit of the common spaces between citizens, not for whichever party currently holds office. Party affiliations and factional alignments should be incidental labels of convenience, not determinants of what the legislative ses-sion’s political action will be.

Republicans (as in the GOP) are supposed to govern in the interest of everyone in the United States, not their base of socially conserva-tive, wealthy, Christian voters. Democrats also are supposed to govern in everyone’s shared interest, not merely their base of poor, working-class, minorities or well-educated professionals.

The leading principle in a republic is that everyone will have a chance not only to cast a vote, but to hold office and take a turn at the helm of the ship of state. Aristotle wrote in his study of The Politics that the state’s purpose is “for the sake of a good life.” The object toward which government action and policy should be directed, he wrote in the same work, is “the salvation of the community.”

He then went on to define citizenship. In the ancient Greek world, women, children and slaves were not citizens. It is only in the wake of the Enlightenment and the French Revolution of 1789 that citizenship has been bestowed upon individuals as a reward simply for their exis-tence. In contrast to today’s practice, where citizenship is bestowed, not earned, citizenship in Aristotle’s Greece had to be worked for.

A citizen is one who “shares in the administration of justice, and in offices.” To the extent that we participate in politics, we are citizens. We earn that distinction only by participation.

We should adjust our Constitution to the norms of life in 2011 and consider term limits on offices. Incumbents are increasingly en-trenched and resistant to electoral challenges. In the face of those prac-tical conditions, constitutional changes are necessary whether we like it or not.

A great debate in contemporary American political discourse concerns term limits and whether members of the House of Representatives or the Senate need to have them. Many propo-

nents of term limits claim that “career” politicians spend their lives in Congress and become corrupt and are almost immovable from office. Incumbents win a huge percentage of the time, and sometimes being a challenger is an exercise in futility.

I, however, feel that term limits go against the founding principles of the republic and against the intentions of the founders themselves. I believe that no electable office should have term limits, from your local city council member to the president of the United States. For this, there are several reasons that will be explained hence.

First off, term limits for the presidency were never a part of the Constitution. Limits were added with the 22nd Amendment after Franklin Roosevelt broke with tradition and was elected for a third and fourth term. In writing the Federalist No. 69, Alexander Hamilton claimed that the “... magistrate [President] is to be elected for four years; and is to be re-eligible as often as the people of the United States shall think him worthy of their confidence.”

Even in writing the Federalist Papers, Hamilton and the founders felt that the presidency ought not to have term limits. Just because a president does not have term limits does not make the office king-like; the mere fact that we are able to vote every four years makes our executive nothing like a monarch. And if the founders did not intend term limits for the presidency, the most powerful position in the government, certainly senators and representa-tives would have a similar fate.

Turning now to Congress, there are many members of both houses that have served for very long periods of time; decades even in some cases. And although many of these politicians earn a title of “career politicians,” there is a difference between those who become corrupt and rich off of lobbyists and those who spend their entire political careers serving the public in an honest and earnest way; the latter of which should be commended, not scorned. The true artful politician uses positions in government in order to “climb the ladder” of political action so that they may experience action in the fullest way possible. Are we to cut this ascent short simply because we can?

The main reason why I do not believe there should be term limits is because it is our responsibility to vote politicians in and out of office. After all the spectacle that is the campaign, which includes commer-cials, debates, etc., it is our job as the electorate to choose a politician based on their substance.

If we were all as informed and knowledgeable about candidates as we should be, then term limits should not be a problem; if a politician is not serving their constituents, then it is time to go; if new politicians are up-and-coming and we feel they should have a chance to serve, then there should be nothing stopping us from voting out the incum-bent. There should not be arbitrary term limits set in place to punish those politicians who are still honestly serving their constituency, no matter how long they have served.

Piggy-backing off this notion is the realm of campaign finance, something that needs to be seriously overhauled in this country. Of course, as mentioned above, if the electorate was completely informed about the political process and their candidates for office, then all the money in the world could be thrown at an election and it would not be able to cloud the election.

However, we do not live in a world like that. We have to make do with what we have, and right now we have a system that lets multi-na-tional corporations and large-scale unions alike contribute unlimited amounts of money to campaigns, making the political system merely one that supports moneyed interests — not the interests of the public good.

So in the end, it is really up to the voting electorate — us — to give term limits to politicians. We hardly need to have a constitutional amendment stipulating that every senator and representative can only serve for “x” amount of terms. I believe the founders left it out of the Constitution for a reason; that reason being that it is our responsibil-ity — and a lofty one at that — to see when a politician has had their due time in office and to pass the authority on to the next.

Michael Belding is a senior in history and political science from Story City, Iowa.

Jacob Witte is a senior in political science from Callender, Iowa.

Legislative limits sit in stark contrast of Founding Fathers’ viewpoints

If you don’t know who Chris Christie is, you’re not alone. The source of the current governor of New Jersey’s fame mainly comes from Republican Party members who continue urging him to run for presi-dent. Should he do so, he would join a chaotic, freewheeling field of GOP primary candidates that already has seen 10 declared candidates.

The efforts of the Republican op-eratives are somewhat reminiscent of the way Iowa’s current governor, Terry Branstad, came to office after a 12-year hiatus. The movement, which led to his entry into the GOP primary for governor, diverted support from candidates such at former Iowa Speaker of the House Christopher Rants and state Rep. Rod Roberts.

The same kind of effort to draft Chris Christie into running for president seems to be underway. But most of that discussion seems to be focused on persuading him to run for president. Granted, running for president is a necessary preliminary to being president, but it seems to us that little of the discussion deals with whether he possesses any qualities that would make a good president.

Christie has, in fact, refused to run for president. In response to in-numerable and repeated queries, he has said he is not and will not run for president. He often points to his lack of qualifications for the job. His ser-vice as U.S. Attorney for the District of New Jersey and in his first term as governor of New Jersey have certain-ly been inspiring to many members of his party, but maybe they should listen when he says he’s unqualified.

Sometimes people don’t want to do jobs they’d be good at. Sometimes they’re mistaken about the true limits of their abilities and underestimate themselves. But experience is impor-tant; holding a variety of offices for a long time demonstrates a versatil-ity necessary for the man who is to preside over the world’s most power-ful country. One of President Barack Obama’s most-cited “faults” is his lack of experience.

Maybe he ought to run anyway. Holding office for only a few years does not necessarily mean the candi-date will botch the new office he wins. Abraham Lincoln had no executive ex-perience before he became president.

Maybe a Christie run is what the Republican Party needs right now. GOP candidate Herman Cain said a week ago that Christie is too liberal for Republicans, based on his previ-ous actions toward immigration, assault weapons and global warming. Even if Christie is indeed wrong on those issues, having a candidate who challenges the others into explaining their beliefs, who challenges them into really evaluating the quality of their ideas, would do us all a great deal of good.

Page 4: 10.3.11

Sports4 Iowa State Daily

Monday, October 3, 2011Editor: Jeremiah Davis

[email protected] | 515.294.2003isdsportsiowastatedaily.com/sportsonline

Online:

CYCLONE HOCKEY TEAM SPLITS WEEKEND SERIES

iowastatedaily.com

Football

SpOrtS JargOn:

Cut blockSPORT:

FootballDEFINITION:

A cut block happens when the offensive player — a lineman, receiver or running back — stops an opponent by going directly for their legs.

USE:Bart Scott was stopped from sacking Joe Flacco by a cut block.

nCaa:

Iowa’s backup quarterback arrested in bar incidentIOWA CITY, Iowa — The backup quarterback for the Iowa Hawkeyes faces charges after an incident outside an Iowa City bar.A criminal complaint filed against 20-year-old A.J. Derby in Johnson County District Court said authorities were called to the bar late Saturday after a man punched out the window of a bus as he was exiting it. The filing said Derby admitted to damaging the window and took a breath test, which measured his blood-alcohol level at .120.The complaint, cited by the Iowa City Press-Citizen, charges Derby with criminal mischief and public intoxication.The Hawkeyes did not play Saturday. Derby, a red-shirt freshman from Iowa City, has appeared in two games this season.An athletics spokesman told The Associated Press that appropri-ate discipline will be taken in keeping with university policy.

The Associated Press

nFl:

Bears’ Hester sets record with 11th TD returnCHICAGO — Devin Hester of the Chicago Bears has set an NFL record with his 11th career punt return for a touchdown, running one back 69 yards against the Carolina Panthers on Sunday.Tied with Eric Metcalf coming in, Hester took over the record early in the second quarter when he took a line drive by Jason Baker back for a touchdown.Hester broke a tackle and turned up the left side, performing three somersaults after crossing the goal line for a 24-10 lead.

The Associated Press

SpOrt:

AP top 25 rankings1. LSU (40) 5-02. Alabama (12) 5-03. Oklahoma (7) 4-04. Wisconsin 5-05. Boise State (1) 4-06. Oklahoma State 4-07. Stanford 4-08. Clemson 5-09. Oregon 3-110. Arkansas 4-111. Texas 4-012. Michigan 5-013. Georgia Tech 5-014. Nebraska 4-115. Auburn 4-116. West Virginia 4-117. Florida 4-118. South Carolina 4-119. Illinois 5-020. Kansas State 4-021. Virginia Tech 4-122. Arizona State 4-123. Florida State 2-224. Texas A&M 2-225. Baylor 3-1

DON’T MESS WITH TEXAS

Men’s golf

The ISU men’s golf team travels to South Carolina with a lot of momentum after freshman golfer Scott Fernandez won an individual title last week.

The team also will go in with some experience from assistant coach Patrick Datz.

“I grew up in the area,” Datz said. “Last time I was at the golf course was about nine years ago.”

The Rees Jones Invitational is played at Daufuskie Island, setting the course apart from other tournaments that the Cyclones will play in.

“The golf course in itself is unique,” Datz said. “It’s on an island and you can only get there by ferry. There’s a lot of holes that’s right on the marsh.”

The unique setting isn’t going to distract Fernandez from continuing his great play. In his last four rounds of golf, he has finished at par or under.

“I’m going to look at each tourna-ment the same way,” he said. “I do gain

more confidence, but I’m going to learn about the course and stick to it.”

With the obstacles players will see on the course, the short game was some-thing to work on in practice.

“I’ve worked a lot with the coaches on my chipping,” Fernandez said. “My put-ting has also improved. It’s going to be a key factor in winning this tournament.”

Coach Andrew Tank expanded on how tough this golf course could be and the best way his players can attack it.

“This golf course is tree line and carved out of trees and marsh,” Tank said. “It will be demanding, so these guys will have to focus on where to finish in-stead of focusing on trees and hazards out there.”

Tank likes what he saw in the last event. All the players improved their game from the first to the second tour-nament and his focus is to continue to help them in pressure situations.

“We are going to reinforce things we worked on last week,” Tank said. “Those things really seemed to help at the tour-nament. We will also work on our pre-

shot routine.”Like the previous events, the same

five players will be participating in this upcoming tournament. Along with Fernandez, senior golfer Nate McCoy,

sophomores Zach Steffen and Duncan Croudis and freshman Sam Daley will be representing the Cyclones.

The first two rounds will be played on Monday, with the final round Tuesday.

Knott. “You can’t have that, espe-cially against a team like the Texas Longhorns.”

The Cyclones (3-1, 0-1 Big 12) turned the ball over three times and committed eight penalties for 90 yards in their bout with the Longhorns (4-0, 1-0).

“When you lose, you talk about the mistakes you made; when you win, you talk about the mistakes that you forced,” said Texas coach Mack Brown. “Tonight we forced the turnovers, and if you force a lot of turnovers and take care of the football like we did tonight, you’re going to win a lot of football games.”

Iowa State, which began the game 116th in the nation in turnover margin, worsened it to -8 after two fumbles and

an interception, all of which took place in the tense moments of the first quarter.

“I haven’t really figured that out,” said ISU quarterback Steele Jantz of the early turnovers. “Maybe it’s just be-cause we need to make it a bigger point of emphasis to come out stronger. Not so much just playing hard, but not about making mistakes early and just being more aware of that.”

The tables turned one year after Iowa State upset then-No. 22 Texas 28-21 in Austin — a game that continued to resonate with the Longhorns.

“You never want to use words like ‘revenge,’ but we all have memories [of last year],” said UT safety Blake Gideon, who picked off Jantz while Iowa State was driving in UT territory and returned it into the ISU red zone.

“We know how they came in and re-ally dominated us from start to finish last year. We wanted to make sure we prepared the right way this year, and we came out and started a fest.”

Motivation aside, the Longhorns and Cyclones did not show any clear dispari-ties on the stat sheet. The Longhorns outgained the Cyclones by only 20 yards in total offensive production while the Cyclones registered more first downs and had only a minute and a half less in possession time.

“We could’ve played extremely bet-ter,” said running back James White, who scored a team-high fourth rushing touchdown of the season in the fourth quarter. “We know we can compete with anybody in the Big 12 Conference, but we’re pretty disappointed.”

Texas capitalized on the Cyclones’ mistakes, scoring 27 of its 34 first-half points off of three ISU turnovers in the first quarter.

Leonard Johnson’s personal foul call on fourth down gave the Longhorns a new set of downs and led to the Longhorns’ eventual score, and a blocked ISU punt was returned 34 yards for a touchdown.

“It really doesn’t matter if it is red zone, when you get possessions you have to do something with [them],” said ISU coach Paul Rhoads after the game. “When you are facing a team as good as Texas, you cannot turn the ball over.

“It was one of the major keys to vic-tory in a game like this is to win the turn-over margin. We were not even close to doing that.”

>>FOOTBALL.p1

Iowa State travels to South Carolina with confidence

Photo: John Andrus/Iowa State DailyScott Fernandez, coming off his individual title last week at the VCU Shootout, will travel with the men’s golf to South Carolina for the Rees Jones Invitational this week.

By Brian.Spaen @iowastatedaily.com

Mistakes plague Cyclones in loss

Photo: Jordan Maurice/Iowa State DailyTight end Kurt Hammerschmidt drops a pass as Texas cornerback Adrian Phillips wraps him up during Iowa State’s 37-14 loss to the Longhorns on Saturday at Jack Trice Stadium.

For three games, the Cyclones started games slow, turned the ball over and had to come back to win. For three games, quarter-back Steele Jantz made a name for himself by coming through for Iowa State (3-1, 0-1 Big 12).

In the fourth game, it finally caught up with them.

“You can’t play like we did to start this game, again unfortu-nately, and win against the 17th-ranked team in the country,” said ISU coach Paul Rhoads. “We will continue to work and find an-swers to some of the foolish things that are taking place, which in-clude turnovers.”

Iowa State lost to now-No. 11 Texas 37-14 a year after the Cyclones traveled to Austin, Texas, and shocked the Longhorns with a 28-21 victory. In that game, Iowa State forced four Texas turn-overs, while committing only one.

This year, ISU gave the ball away three times — twice on fum-bles from Josh Lenz and James White, once on a Steele Jantz in-terception — and had a blocked punt returned for a touchdown.

After the game, Jantz put much of the weight on his shoul-ders for the mistakes.

“I feel like most of [the mis-takes] was me with the turnovers and not making some of the right calls,” he said. “We’ve just got to im-prove the mental part of the game.”

Three instances in the game point directly to Jantz’s men-tioning of the “mental part of the game.” First, a personal foul call by ISU cornerback Leonard Johnson — who would later be carted off following a helmet-to-helmet hit — when the senior was flagged for unnecessary roughness, a penalty that kept Texas on the field after the Cyclones had stopped the Longhorns on third down.

Second, wide receiver Darius Reynolds was flagged for a hold-ing call that brought back a touch-down run by White, and third,

wide receiver Darius Darks was flagged for offensive pass interfer-ence before catching a touchdown pass from Jantz.

“Really, we just kept shooting ourselves in the foot this game,” Reynolds said. “It’s just something we’ve got to eliminate, the turn-overs and the penalties, then we’ll be fine after that.”

The offensive miscues put pressure on the defense early in the game. In the three Texas drives following ISU turnovers — each of which garnered points — the Longhorns’ average starting field position was the ISU 25-yard line.

ISU linebacker Jake Knott said he thought the defense played well considering the circumstanc-es, but that once again mistakes al-lowed Texas opportunities — ones it cashed in on effectively.

“I thought overall we did pretty well,” Knott said. “We can’t make stupid, mental errors. That’s basi-cally what happened today, and Texas really capitalized on it and got the best of us.”

The Cyclones must look ahead to correct those mistakes if they want success moving forward.

“To address [turnovers], you do more ball security drills and we will get started on that quickly [on Sunday] to prepare for a trip to Waco against a very good Baylor football team,” Rhoads said.

Jantz echoed his coach, say-ing that correcting mistakes starts with getting together as an offense and going over what went wrong and how to correct it.

White, who ran for a team-high 71 yards and one touchdown on 11 carries, said he also knows that if the Cyclones are going to win games going forward, the mis-takes must go away.

“Coach [Rhoads] has been tell-ing us all season long that we can’t keep making mistakes over and over and expect to win against good teams,” White said. “We face adversity and it’s something we have to work past, but we can’t keep making the same mistakes every game.”

By Jeremiah. Davis @iowastatedaily.com

1 2 3 4 final

Texas 13 21 0 3 37

Iowa State 0 0 0 14 14

Page 5: 10.3.11

No. 16 Iowa State took No. 8 Texas the distance Sunday before losing 15-8 in the fifth and final set (16-25, 25-14, 20-25, 25-21, 8-15). Junior Jamie Straube was a big reason the Cyclones lasted that long.

Straube finished the match with 17 kills in 30 attempts while committing one error. She finished with 18.5 total points and hit .533 for the match.

“She’s learning how to take over matches,” said coach Christy Johnson-Lynch. “It felt like at the end of game four and five, you could see her block take over matches and offensively just get kills. She’s starting to emerge as that kind of player for us.”

Straube’s kill total was the second-highest of the season, having recorded 19 against North Dakota State on Sept. 10.

Straube started off slowly, but gained momen-tum as the match progressed. She recorded two kills in the first set, three in both the second and third sets before exploding with six in the fourth set.

While it wasn’t enough to win, her teammates

were impressed by her performance.“She was huge,” said senior outside hitter Carly

Jenson. “She was on all night and they couldn’t stop her.”

Jenson had an impressive performance in her own right against the Longhorns (9-4, 2-1 Big 12). She finished with 14 kills on 45 attempts. Jenson finished the match with seven errors.

Texas used its size to give Iowa State (12-3, 3-1 Big 12) problems at the net. Outside of Straube’s .533, no other Cyclone with at least 20 attempts hit better than .156.

“They kind of reach around a lot,” Straube said. “Going up as a hitter, you can’t just hit straight down or else they’ll block you. You’re not as strong when you reach outside your body line, so I would try to judge which way they are leaning.”

DON’T MESS WITH TEXASVolleyball

The first two tournaments of the year have been met with mixed results for the ISU women’s golf team.

The Cyclones hope to find success as they start the Windy City Collegiate Classic — where the team finished second last year — led by strong play by Prima Thammaraks.

“We have had a strong tournament, but we need to continue improving to keep our scores where we want them,” said assistant coach Pina Gentile. “It is the second- and third-round scores, that is where we need to focus on getting better, lower scores.”

The team finished fourth in its first tournament of the year, the Dale McNamara Invitational in Tulsa, Okla., with strong play by freshman Chonlada Chayanun, who led the team with a sev-enth-place finish overall.

In the next tournament, it was Chayanun who once again led the team, but this time her three-round score was only good enough for a tie for 14th.

In the two previous tournaments, the second- and third-round scores were where the team struggled a bit and where the

team wants to improve.After the first round at the McGuire Invitational in

Albuquerque, N.M., the Cyclones were in a tie for fifth. After the next two rounds, the team fell to seventh, where it finished the tournament.

“We didn’t hit the ball as well as we wanted, and because of that we weren’t able to do that well,” Thammaraks said. “Practice should help make our game more successful.”

This week’s tournament will be the second time that Iowa State will compete against one of its strong Big 12 Conference foes.

Oklahoma State, which won the season-opening tournament, will be at the tournament this week as well. Other Big 12 schools scheduled to attend the tournament are Texas and Texas Tech, which Iowa State will see for the first time.

“As far as competition goes, we’ve seen most of the schools be-fore and that could play into our advantage knowing what schools are strong,” Gentile said. “So this week should be a strong test for our team.”

Three of the teams that Iowa State competed against last week will be in attendance this weekend. Texas Christian and Northwestern both were at the previous tournament and finished ahead of the Cyclones in the final standings. New Mexico was also at the tournament but finished one spot below Iowa State in the final standings.

“I hope that some of the success will follow us into this year,” Gentile said. “This week brings confidence to the team, so that is something that I think our team needs.”

The women’s golf team will be in action from the Windy City Collegiate Classic on Monday and Tuesday.

Women’s golf

giving away five points on service errors.“They were waiting for us to take over and

we never did,” Johnson-Lynch said. “They would give us an easy ball and we’d mis-time the target or miss the set or we’d make a bad attack decision and get blocked.”

The Longhorns got out to a quick 3-0 lead in the fifth set and never looked back, with a 15-8 win to end the match.

“It really comes down to the team that ex-ecutes the best and Texas made some really good shots,” said middle blocker Jamie Straube. “They were hitting cross-court almost the whole game and then there at the end they started hit-

ting more line on us. We kind of got timid and balls that usually go down for us weren’t going down.”

Straube led the Cyclone attack with 17 kills while hitting at a .533 clip against a lanky Texas front line that registered 11 blocks in the match.

“We expected a tough block. They’re a really

athletic team, and we need to work on hitting high against teams like that,” said outside hitter Carly Jenson.

“We had a lot of errors, and if we would have cut down on those, it would have been a differ-ent story.”

The Cyclones will be back in action this Wednesday at Kansas State at 7 p.m.

>>VOLLEYBALL.p1

Iowa State travels to South Carolina with confidence

Photo: John Andrus/Iowa State DailyScott Fernandez, coming off his individual title last week at the VCU Shootout, will travel with the men’s golf to South Carolina for the Rees Jones Invitational this week.

Photo courtesy of ISU AthleticsPunpaka Phuntumabamrung and the ISU women’s golf team will take on a Windy City Collegiate Classic field that includes three other Big 12 Conference teams.

Cyclones hope to find success at Windy City Classic

By Mark.Schafer @iowastatedaily.com

Iowa State will focus on improving second-round, third-round scores

Straube shows strides despite loss

Photo: John Andrus/Iowa State DailyJamie Straube scores a point in the second set against Texas on Sunday. Straube recorded 17 kills in 30 attempts in the Cyclones’ five-set loss.

By David.Merrill @iowastatedaily.com

1 2 3 4 5 final

Texas 25 14 25 21 15 3

Iowa State 16 25 20 25 8 2

wide receiver Darius Darks was flagged for offensive pass interfer-ence before catching a touchdown pass from Jantz.

“Really, we just kept shooting ourselves in the foot this game,” Reynolds said. “It’s just something we’ve got to eliminate, the turn-overs and the penalties, then we’ll be fine after that.”

The offensive miscues put pressure on the defense early in the game. In the three Texas drives following ISU turnovers — each of which garnered points — the Longhorns’ average starting field position was the ISU 25-yard line.

ISU linebacker Jake Knott said he thought the defense played well considering the circumstanc-es, but that once again mistakes al-lowed Texas opportunities — ones it cashed in on effectively.

“I thought overall we did pretty well,” Knott said. “We can’t make stupid, mental errors. That’s basi-cally what happened today, and Texas really capitalized on it and got the best of us.”

The Cyclones must look ahead to correct those mistakes if they want success moving forward.

“To address [turnovers], you do more ball security drills and we will get started on that quickly [on Sunday] to prepare for a trip to Waco against a very good Baylor football team,” Rhoads said.

Jantz echoed his coach, say-ing that correcting mistakes starts with getting together as an offense and going over what went wrong and how to correct it.

White, who ran for a team-high 71 yards and one touchdown on 11 carries, said he also knows that if the Cyclones are going to win games going forward, the mis-takes must go away.

“Coach [Rhoads] has been tell-ing us all season long that we can’t keep making mistakes over and over and expect to win against good teams,” White said. “We face adversity and it’s something we have to work past, but we can’t keep making the same mistakes every game.”

1 2 3 4 final

Texas 13 21 0 3 37

Iowa State 0 0 0 14 14

Want more?iowastatedaily.com

Photo: John Andrus/Iowa State DailyHannah Willms, Tenisha Matlock and Kelsey Petersen go up for the block in the third set against No. 8 Texas on Sunday at Hilton Coliseum. The No. 16 Cyclones lost the match 3-2.

Page 6: 10.3.11

Business6 Iowa State Daily

Monday, October 3, 2011Editor: Sarah Binder

[email protected] iowastatedaily.com/businessonline

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line of “Fight Like a Girl” apparel, and this year the brand is expanding for those who would rather “Fight Like a Lady.” The shirts and caps are a part-nership with Ladies Home Journal magazine, and 30 percent of pro-ceeds will be donated to one of three breast cancer organizations, selected by the customer. Sigler also will have a promotional night for the products on Oct. 13.

Ames firefightersOctober serves as National

Fire Safety Month, in addition to Breast Cancer Awareness Month, so Ames’ firefighters are suit-ing up. Firefighters will be wear-ing pink T-shirts that read “Ames Firefighters care enough to wear

pink,” and selling them at the sta-tion on the corner of 13th Street and Burnett Avenue. Proceeds will be donated to the National Breast Cancer Foundation.

The AsylumLast year, the Asylum gave away

nearly 500 free pink ribbon tattoos to raise awareness. This year, the price is increasing to $30, but that’s still a steep discount from regular prices.

The SalonThe Salon in Ames is offering $5

pink hair extensions, with $2 from each going to breast cancer research. They also will give 20 percent off haircuts to survivors of breast cancer survivors or people currently battling it.

Caribou CoffeeCaribou Coffee is bringing back

Amy’s Blend products, named after the Caribou Roastmaster who lost a battle with breast cancer in 1995. Amy’s Tea Latte will be the featured drink for October, and other coffee and tea products will be available,

with 10 percent of each purchase go-ing to Susan G. Komen for the Cure.

Serenity Aveda Lifestyle and Spa Serenity Aveda Lifestyle and Spa

will sell a hand moisturizer specifical-ly developed for breast cancer aware-ness. Each sale of the pink-topped bottles will donate $5 to research.

Daily staff

Black Market Pizza is known for its atmosphere and uniquely delicious pizza combinations. But last year the restaurant was

recognized throughout the community for a different reason, when it was threat-ened with closing.

After closing the Ankeny location and thanks to publicity, word of mouth and community

Breast Cancer Awareness Month

Local eatery

Pink

Black Market Pizza remains openBy [email protected]

support, Black Market Pizza is still going strong.

“We didn’t have the money to market ourselves at the beginning, and we certainly didn’t have the experience,” said co-owner Greg Harvey. “Today our restaurant has vastly improved. We’ve learned how to run a more effi-cient business and have adapt-ed over time.”

Harvey said that closing the Ankeny location helped save the Ames site by drawing more attention to it.

Black Market Pizza was featured on an episode of “Man v. Food” last year, and Harvey said the show played a major role in the business’ recovery.

“I knew our popularity would grow; it was bound to happen. ‘Man v. Food’ was just the perfect catalyst we need-ed,” Harvey said.

Along with the public-ity from the show, loyal cus-tomers from the community bought pizzas regularly to help save the restaurant.

Jared Koweil, resident of Waterloo, Iowa, has dined at Black Market Pizza many times and said he loves the res-taurant’s unique flavors and pizza combinations.

“You can’t find service or pizza like this anywhere else. I really don’t think I could find anything on the menu that I wouldn’t enjoy eating,” he said.

“We were so grateful to see the support from the commu-nity,” Harvey said. “The local support and coverage from the show was just what the doc-tor ordered. Word of mouth takes a long time to spread; these things definitely helped us out.”

The restaurant has recent-ly added new features like an “underground” menu, break-fast pizza, chalkboard walls and a Kool-Aid beverage bar.

“I love what I do, and my reputation will always come before money,” Harvey said. “I’m not in this business for the money; I do it for the passion and being able to share my fa-vorite thing with people.”

Tech:

‘Cloud’ raises concerns about privacyFacebook and Google’s privacy issues are well-known.But they’re nothing compared with those surrounding Silk, Amazon’s in-house Internet browser for its newly announced tablet computer, said Chester Wisniewski, a senior security adviser at British computer se-curity firm Sophos.“All of your web-surfing habits will transit Amazon’s cloud,” he wrote on Sophos’ Naked Security blog. “If you think that Google AdWords and Facebook are watching you, this service is guaranteed to have a record of everything you do on the Web.”Amazon, best known for its online marketplace and the Kindle e-reader, unveiled a touch-screen tablet computer Wednesday called the Kindle Fire. It garnered lots of chatter in tech circles. What’s been less discussed is the new cloud-based Web browser that’s loaded onto Amazon’s tablets.The Amazon Silk browser ap-pears to work unlike anything on the market today. Silk filters everything through Amazon’s own cloud-computing servers.Privacy advocates said there may be other consequences.“What this means is that Amazon will capture and control every Web transaction performed by Fire users,” Chris Espinosa, one of the first Apple employees, wrote on his personal blog.

CNN wire staff

Breast Cancer Awareness Month brings a barrage of pink promotions each year. Go ahead; show your support for ladies you love with these local offerings.

Around Ames:See which local businesses are raising awareness this month atiowastatedaily.com

online

Photo: David Derong/Iowa State DailyCaribou Coffee is selling a special “Amy’s Blend” during October.

Online:

COLLEGE OF BUSINESS TO HOST CONFERENCE

iowastatedaily.com

Photo: Nicole Wiegand/Iowa State DailySigler on Main carries an exclusive line of “Fight Like a Girl” apparel and accessories designed to raise breast cancer awareness. A portion of the sales from the line go to benefit breast cancer research and programs that promote awareness. Although October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month, Sigler on Main carries the products year-round.

promotions

Page 7: 10.3.11

Sponsored by: Msgr. James A. Supple Lecture Series, Catholic Student Community, Des

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In the midst of the Great Depression and between two world wars, Dorothy Day cofounded the “Catholic Worker”. Grounded in belief in the dignity of every person, nonviolence, voluntary poverty, prayer, and hospitality for the homeless, hungry and forsaken, the paper quickly developed into a national movement. Both the radical and religious, Catholic workers embraced pacifism during World War II and Vietnam, were active in the Civil Rights movement, and stood in support of farmworkers and laborers. Martha Hennessy, Dorothy Day’s granddaughter, will discuss the relevance of the Catholic Worker movement today and share her experiences of living the Catholic Worker life.

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Inside

Health Residence halls

Iowa State’s sense of community became espe-cially apparent when a fire sprinkler mishap caused Birch-Welch-Roberts Hall residents to experience a fire alarm complete with property damage.

It was caused not by fire, however, but a malfunc-tion in the hall’s sprinkler system.

Joel Hochstein, resi-dence hall coordinator and hall director for BWR, ex-plained the issue.

“From my understand-ing, students were throw-ing a football in the hall-way,” Hochstein said. “The football hit the sprinkler head, which set off the fire alarm and started the dis-charge of water.”

The incident occurred on the third floor of Roberts Hall, and before leaving the building, students on the third floor began put-ting towels in front of their doors to prevent the spread of the water.

“I also noticed that [when the fire department assessed the situation], they had these rubber strips that they put in front of the doors to prevent

Sprinkler malfunction causes property damage

By Cole.Komma @iowastatedaily.com

Coughs and sniffles are becoming as common as the changing leaves. Brace your-selves, flu season is coming.

With runny noses and hoarse coughs in large lecture classes, it might be tempting to stay in your dorm, content with waiting out the yearly flu. However, there are simple measures students can take to ward off any unwanted virus.

“The best [preventative steps] are the simplest: eating a balanced diet with mostly fruits and vegetables, sleeping at least eight hours nightly on a consistent basis, and exercis-ing three to five times weekly for at least 30 minutes per

episode. I would also include minimal to no alcohol use as contributing to overall good health,” said Dr. Scott Meyer of Thielen Student Health Center.

Unfortunately, there is no miracle food or vitamin that will help prevent the common flu.

“Despite all the advertising, there is no specific vitamin, food, herbal remedy or other treatment that has solid evi-dence for being immune-en-hancing relative to the preven-tion of viral upper respiratory illnesses,” Meyer said.

However, Thielen is offer-ing a flu shot clinic for ISU stu-dents to get their flu shots.

“Getting the flu shot is one of the best ways to protect

yourself and those around you,” said Michelle Hendricks, director of Thielen Student Health Center. “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that everyone 6 months and older should get the yearly vaccine, and their recommendation es-pecially holds true in the uni-versity environment.”

Students should bring their red ISU Card, and the clinic provides the option for either the $20 flu shot or the $25 FluMist. If students’ insur-ance is on hand at the health center, their insurance com-pany could cover part or all of the shot. Thielen will take the amount that insurance covers off of the amount billed to a student’s UBill.

This semester, members of the ISU Associated General Contractors Student Chapter have assisted in the construction of a new handicapped-accessible ramp at the Youth & Shelter Services of Eastern Story County main office.

AGC is a group for construction engi-neering majors.

“One of [the] main focuses is commu-nity service,” said Andy Hodge, junior in construction engineering and community service representative for AGC.

The office, located in Nevada, contact-ed AGC last semester and requested that the community service-based group assist in the construction process.

Story County farmer Nancy Couser, who won a $2,500 donation from

America’s Farmers Grow Communities, has made the project possible.

The program is sponsored by Monsanto and is currently active in 39 states attempting to help farmers give back to their communities.

Paul Spooner, public relations repre-sentative for the program, said they’re try-ing to create a “voice for the farmer.”

Through the donation from Couser and the labor of AGC, Youth & Shelter Services is working to meet requirements of the Americans with Disabilities Act. The shelter will also be gaining reaccreditation from the Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities.

The shelter in Nevada serves many communities in the area, including Collins, Colo, Maxwell, McCallsburg, Nevada and Zearing. They help to provide families with multiple services, such as

after-school programs, adoption services, runaway and homeless services, foster care and counseling services, among others.

Now, with the updated and various oth-er renovations that AGC and Couser have made possible, YSS will be able to serve even more people near the community.

The project also has provided mem-bers of AGC with hands-on job experience.

“With all of our construction projects we do, it’s great for students to come out and get more experience not on an actual job site,” Hodge said.

The group enjoyed gaining the experi-ence, although members are not getting paid.

They are “just donating time,” Hodge said, but they also are making YSS capable of meeting requirements and assisting more people in need.

Student organization assists in building Youth, Shelter Services handicap rampBy Carly.McKinney @iowastatedaily.com

Community service

Health center offers flu clinic for students

the water from going into the rooms,” Hochstein said. “Then their priority became locating and shutting off the water to the sprinkler system.”

The majority of the dam-age, however, did not occur on the third floor but the second floor.

“That is due to the fact that [students] on the third floor saw things ... and picked things up off the floor before they left,” Hochstein said. “Whereas folks on the second floor really had no idea what was going on.”

Students waited outside for an hour after the incident oc-curred before they were told it was safe to enter the building.

“Once [my roommate and I] got back into the room, we saw water pouring out of the light fixture and coming down the walls,” said Ben Swenson, junior in construction engi-neering and a resident of the second floor of Welch Hall.

“We tried to get the elec-tronics out of the way first, then used garbage cans to catch the water,” he said.

Swenson also comment-ed on how helpful the BWR community was during the downpour.

“There were a lot of people from the rooms around me that had damage themselves that came over to help me,” he said.

Swenson later went on to

say that he went around after the water problem to find the owners of the three to four gar-bage cans that were left in his room.

Josh Vosatka, junior in in-dustrial engineering and one of the three presidents of second floor Welch and Swenson’s roommate, also commented on how helpful the BWR com-munity was at reacting to the situation.

“There were a lot of people that came around and offered help,” Vosatka said. “[Whether it was] garbage cans or moving things out of the room, taking inventory and offering to let us stay in their room for a night ... the BWR community really came together.”

Vosatka and Swenson’s ceiling began to peel and slightly bow in some areas due to the water damage.

Hochstein walked around the building after the water had been shut off. He said he saw “the teamwork and gen-eral caring nature of students who didn’t even live in the house.”

“I think that’s one of the best things about living on campus, more specifically BWR, are those close-knit relationships that you form whether you realize it or not,” he said. “It takes a significant event like this for people to realize the true meaning of community.”

Dorm residents come together after mishap

By Lea.Petersen @iowastatedaily.com

File photo: Kelsey Kremer/Iowa State DailyPerry Martens, sophomore in construction engineering, gets a flu shot Friday in the Union Drive Community Center. Thielen Students Health Center is offering immunizations to students.

Editor: Kaleb Warnock | [email protected] | 515.294.2003 Monday, October 3, 2011 | Iowa State Daily | NEWS | 7

Page 8: 10.3.11

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It’s free to post your classifieds online.

Employing more than 200 students over the course of a year, the Iowa State Daily is an independent, student-run, non-profit organization. The Daily is owned and operated by students for the students, faculty, staff and alumni that make up the ISU community.

First established in 1890, the Daily has been instrumental in providing the ISU community with the area’s most comprehensive source of news, sports and entertainment, as well as state and national news.

The Daily is published Monday through Friday in accordance with the university’s academic calendar by the Iowa State Daily Publication Board and is funded in part by the Government of the Student Body. Our MissionThe Iowa State Daily is a student-run news organization that empowers students to inform, educate and engage their community by producing innovative media and building positive relationships while protecting the integrity of our profession and

meeting the challenges of an ever-changing industry.

RESPONSIBILITY INCLUDES:

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8 | NEWS | Iowa State Daily | Monday, October 3, 2011 Editor: Kaleb Warnock | [email protected] | 515.294.2003

Education

By Erika NiedowskiThe Associated Press

PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island — When Rhode Island became the thirteenth state to allow cheaper in-state tuition for illegal immigrants at public colleges, supporters heralded the move as one that would give students the kind of ad-vanced education they need to succeed in the work force.

But students who are not here legally may still face a ma-jor obstacle even with the ben-efit of a college degree: Many have no immediate pathway to

legal status and, under federal immigration law, employers cannot legally hire them.

“I know of students who have graduated magna cum laude and top honors in their colleges, but right now they’re working minimum wage in restaurants,” said Antonio Albizures-Lopez, 20, who came to the U.S. from Guatemala when he was 1.

Albizures-Lopez, who is pursuing legal residency, says the best solution is passage of federal legislation, known as the DREAM Act, which pro-vides a pathway to legal resi-

dency for college students.The Rhode Island Board

of Governors for Higher Education, which oversees the state’s three public higher education institutions, unani-mously approved in-state tuition for illegal immigrants last week, effective in the fall of 2012. The General Assembly had failed repeatedly to take action on legislation that’s in-troduced year after year.

Eleven states — California, Connecticut, Illinois, Kansas, Maryland, Nebraska, New Mexico, New York, Texas, Utah, and Washington — have laws allowing the children of illegal immigrants to receive in-state rates if they meet cer-tain requirements, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Oklahoma allows in-state tuition for the

Illegal students face obstacleschildren of illegal immi-grants under a state Board of Regents policy.

Gov. Lincoln Chafee, in urging the Board of Governors to adopt the change, said it would allow more Rhode Islanders to at-tend college, build a stron-ger work force and boost an economy that is among the nation’s most troubled.

Research varies on how much resident tuition rates for illegal immigrants increase enrollment. A 2010 paper co-authored by Aimee Chinn, an econo-mist at the University of Houston, did not find a big increase overall for 18- to 24-year-olds in studies, although it did find that Mexican men in their 20s attended at higher rates.

Politics

File photo: Jae C. Hong/The Associated PressNew Jersey Gov. Chris Christie speaks during the Perspectives on Leadership Forum at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, Calif., last Tuesday.

GOP candidate could upend raceBy Kasie HuntThe Associated Press

MANCHESTER, N.H. — New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie’s entry into the 2012 presidential race could dra-matically reshape what has be-come a two-man race between Mitt Romney and Rick Perry. But Christie, who’s under pres-sure from party elders to run, hasn’t faced national scrutiny — and he could join other early favorites who burned out fast.

The budget-cutting Christie is the latest heart-throb of Republicans who have been looking for a more excit-ing candidate than Romney. The former Massachusetts governor ran in 2008 and has long been considered the one to beat in the GOP, which has a history of nominating candi-dates who lost once before.

Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels, a favorite of fiscal con-servatives, decided not to run. So did Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour, long a part of the GOP establishment.

Perry, the Texas governor,

jumped in to much fanfare only to sweat under the scru-tiny his first national cam-paign brought. Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann ral-lied restive conservatives long enough to win a key test vote in Iowa but just as quickly re-ceded to the background.

Christie said in January he wasn’t “arrogant enough” to run for president in 2012. He is reconsidering after encour-agement from GOP luminaries like Henry Kissinger, Nancy Reagan and Barbara Bush.

If he runs, Christie prob-ably would be able to raise mil-lions for a campaign, though his rivals have a huge head start.

With about 100 days before the caucuses in Iowa, he’d face the tough task of setting up state campaign organizations swiftly, though he already has a team of advisers with na-tional campaign experience. He could appeal to the donors and voters who like Romney’s business background but are looking for a more charismatic candidate.

Page 9: 10.3.11

LibraDaily Horoscope : by Nancy Black

Today’s Birthday 10/03/11. You’re a true leader (even if you don’t think so). Take one step at a time, with relationships, romance and even finances. Like a good wine, you’re getting better with age, but beware of letting resignation make you bitter. Acceptance and a sense of humor keep you mellow and fine.To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.

Aries March 21-April 19Today is an 8 -- Your ideas flow with ease. Take notes (with pictures). Make a list with the obvious steps to realize the most tantalizing dreams first. Take the first step.

Taurus April 20-May 20Today is a 7 -- Conditions for long-distance travel improve. Check your lists twice. Be sure that your tires are properly inflated, and the oil level’s fine ... then, green light, go!

Gemini May 21-June 21Today is a 7 -- Staying busy may be the best way to stay out of trouble today. Take a deep breath and think before making important decisions. Don’t use big words. Keep it simple.

Cancer June 22-July 22Today is a 6 -- You’re entering a negotiation phase. Work behind the scenes when needed, and beware of sudden changes. Choose your partners wisely for different roles.

Leo July 23-Aug. 22 Today is an 8 -- Don’t let this busy Monday get on your nerves, or your health could suffer. Get plenty of rest. Take breaks from the screen and stretch regularly. Take one task at a time.

Virgo Aug. 23-Sept. 22Today is an 8 -- Let a loved one set the schedule. You enjoy the company of dear family and friends. A coming change is for the better, so go along with it, and encourage them as well.

Libra Sept. 23-Oct. 22 Today is a 7 -- Now’s the best time to make changes at home. Keep a positive attitude, and play it like a game that you mean to win but don’t mind losing. Then go ahead and win.

Scorpio Oct. 23-Nov. 21 -- Today is a 9 -- Great language skills accelerate getting your message across. Continue to study the subject you’re teaching.

Focus on your favorite angle, and learn as much as you can.

Sagittarius Nov. 22-Dec. 21 Today is a 9 -- Making money requires imagination today. Others want to study what you’re up to. Share the knowledge, and use collaboration and group thinking for real innovation.

Capricorn Dec. 22-Jan. 19 Today is a 7 -- Some concepts won’t work, but try them anyway. Failure refines the process, adding velocity for future success. A startling revelation provokes change. Go out and play later.

Aquarius Jan. 20-Feb. 18Today is an 8 -- Keep existing promises first, and consider before committing to new ones. Clarify your schedule and direction with friends. A change in their plans could affect yours.

Pisces Feb. 19-March 20 Today is an 8 -- Destruction is part of the creative process. Inhibit any more bizarre suggestions. Strange demands could be made. New and intriguing educational opportunities develop.

Word of the Day:hobgoblin HAHB-gahb-linnoun

1: a mischievous goblin

2: a source of fear, perplexity, or harassment

Example:Max was convinced that hobgoblins had taken over his computer, which was why it was flashing garbled error messages.

I thought Facebook was a distraction, now Friends is on for an hour every night!?

•••To the girls who felt bad for me when I fell down in front of Outlaws and paid my cover for me, thanks!

•••If you don’t want guys to treat you like apiece of

meat then don’t dress like one... just sayin’•••

Do economists solve utility maximizing and MRS equations while grocery shopping? Just Sayin;

•••To the boy in the big black Duramax who drag raced me down North Dakota Tuesday night... I think I’m in love.

•••Nothing like wrecking your bike in a dress in front of

the mu to make you rethink no panty Fridays...•••

Curtiss doesn’t need a facelift... [insert any other building made intirely of red brick here] does. Just Sayin’

•••I sometimes get nervous when I walk into a mens

restroom and don’t see any urinals. just sayin’•••

Roses are red violets are blue, I sure wish I could cuddle with you.

•••Submit your just sayin’ to

iowastatedaily.com/games/justsayin

Monday, October 3, 2011 | Iowa State Daily | Games | 9

Trivia

The cost of a first-class postage stamp during the American Bicentennial was thirteen cents — one for each of the original colonies.

Artificial color additives are prohibited by law, so many farmers add marigold petals to their chicken feed as a natural color enhancer to give their egg yolks that sunny, yellow hue.

The first bumper stickers appeared prior to World War II and usually promoted political candidates. At that time, they weren’t adhesive-backed; they were affixed to the car bumper with wire.

In the 16th century, gin was referred to as “mother’s ruin” because people thought it could induce abortions.

Random Facts:

Complete the grid soeach row, column and3-by-3 box (in boldborders) containsevery digit, 1 to 9. Forstrategies on how tosolve Sudoku, visitwww.sudoku.org.uk

SOLUTION TOSATURDAY’S PUZZLE

Level: 1 23 4

© 2011 The Mepham Group. Distributed byTribune Media Services. All rights reserved.

10/3/11

1. Who shared a room and a bed with Eli Wallach while filming The Good, the Bad and the Ugly?

2. Who piloted the first airplane to suffer a passenger fatality, in 1908?

3. What NFL team did Mike Ditka end his playing career with?

4. What magician’s coffin was a Mr. Dillingham carrying when he said to Florenz Ziegfeld: “Ziggie, I bet you $100 he ain’t in here?

5. What treatment for cavities was first recommended by a 10th-century physician named Rhazes?

6. What term for elephant means “think skin” in Greek?

7. Who adorned his last piano with 350 pounds of rhinestones?

ANSWER: Clint Eastwood

ANSWER: Orville Wright

ANSWER: The Dallas Cowboys

ANSWER: Harry Houdini’s

ANSWER: Fillings

ANSWER: LiberaceCrossword

Across1 What ice cream does in the sun6 Mythical weeper11 With it14 “Terrific!”15 Play-of-color gems16 Bambi’s aunt17 “Get a grip!”19 Albums kept in jewel boxes, briefly20 Dogpatch dad21 Eat like a bird23 Anti-alcohol types25 Greenish-blue hue28 Room for Renée29 Stubbed extremity30 Internet company32 Bear’s advice33 Screen partner35 Folded Mexican snacks37 Crafts technique for

an old-fashioned look42 More than fumed43 Trifled (with)45 Green eggs and ham lover __-am48 Scrape, to a tot51 __ culpa52 Pizza’s outer edge54 Scissors sound55 With competence56 Cardinal’s headgear58 Film idol Greta60 Connector that completes the phrase made from the starts of the three longest across answers61 Get the front of one’s bike off the ground66 Bro67 Muse for Browning68 Super Bowl hoverer

69 Opposite of NNW70 Spread widely71 Big name in foil

Down1 Brit. sports cars2 West ender?3 When presidential elections occur4 Noshes in Nuevo Laredo5 Passenger pickup point6 Reply to “Is it soup?”7 Wall St. headline8 Clumsy sort9 Radar screen spot10 Colorado’s __ Park11 Badger at the comedy club12 Ultimate goal13 Muted, as colors18 With 62-Down, at a satisfactory level

22 Othello’s lieutenant23 Sot’s woe, briefly24 Military prep org.26 Did something about, as an informant’s tip27 Bread unit30 Ten: Pref.31 Former telecom firm34 Overly ornate36 Aware of38 CIA Cold War counterpart39 Some summer births, astrologically40 Like some gestures or logic41 Cad44 Week segment45 Collage materials46 Convention sites47 Work clumsily (through)49 “I’m so not impressed” event50 Exotic sushi fish53 Carton sealers55 “Does this ring __?”57 Legal wrong59 McEntire of country62 See 18-Down63 Put away at dinnertime64 Texter’s “Here’s what I think”65 Clean air org.

Yesterdays Solution

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liminary rounds and a final champi-onship round, which hosts the riders with the best scores from the previ-ous rounds.

None of Iowa State’s students made it to the championship round, but the other Iowa school, Iowa Central Community College, made some noise in the Cyclone Stampede.

Last year was a big year for Iowa Central as it was able to send a rider to the season-ending College National Finals Rodeo, which is held every year in Casper, Wyo. That rider is Tim O’Connell, and his event is bareback bronc riding.

O’Connell’s route to a return trip to Casper took a bumpy ride over the weekend, as his first ride didn’t impress. As he climbed on top of his horse inside the chute, he grabbed the leather handle that he is allowed to hold onto with one hand during the round.

His coaches and other assorted helpers that were gathered around the chute asked if he was ready, and O’Connell nodded his head.

The gate to the chute swung open; O’Connell was expecting a rough ride with a powerful first buck. Instead, the horse turned its head and ad-mired the crowd on the cloudless blue Saturday afternoon.

Around the chute, the coaches and other competitors yelled, trying to get the horse to move.

Instead of a powerful first buck, the horse shifted its feet just enough to start the eight second time limit. More yells rose, even from the stands, but the horse didn’t move.

Four seconds after shifting its feet, the horse finally bucked out of the chute. O’Connell held on, for the remaining time and recorded the un-impressive score of 45 out of a pos-sible 100.

O’Connell was granted a re-ride because his horse was deemed to be unresponsive.

On his second ride, the new horse was less shy and bucked O’Connell around, but O’Connell held on to re-cord a first-round best of 73 to take

the lead.“I had a two solid runs, there were

a few times when I thought I was go-ing to get bucked, but I was able to stay on top of it,” O’Connell said after the rodeo. “I am really just happy I was able to get a re-ride after my first horse.”

In the championship round, O’Connell once again held on and recorded another solid score, which was enough to give him the first win of the 2011-12 rodeo season.

“Tim had a very good weekend, winning bareback bronc,” said Terry Coleman, assistant coach for Iowa Central. “He has his goals to make it back to Casper, and this weekend shows he is well on his way to getting there.”

One of the unique parts of college rodeo is the team roping event. What makes this event unique is that many of the teams are hybrids of two differ-ent teams.

Iowa Central was a part of the

championship rides for the event of team roping as well. Will George, who was partnered with South Dakota State’s Troy Donnelly, recorded the fastest average time for the rodeo to win the buckle.

“We had another strong week,” Coleman said. “With 12 students making it to the short go, and our kids were able to walk away with some [championship] buckles, which brings confidence.”

�� Dickinson�College’s�Ashley�Schaper�won�the�breakaway�buckle�after�earning�her�spot�to�the�finals�from�the�Saturday�morning�slack.�Also�from�Dickinson,�Bobbi�Grann�won�the�buckle�in�the�goat-tying�event�with�an�average�of�seven�seconds.

�� Tel�Schaack,�who�attends�Black�Hills�State�University,�won�the�buckle�in�tie-down�roping,�which�was�Black�Hills’�only�victory�in�the�Cyclone�Stampede.

�� Hastings�College�Richard�Coats�was�lightning�fast�in�the�steer�wrestling,�winning�the�buckle�with�an�average�of�9.6�seconds�in�his�runs.

�� South�Dakota�State�gained�a�second�championship�buckle�with�Bryan�Boyle,�who�won�the�saddle�bronc�event.

�� Mackenzie�Cole,�who�attends�the�University�of�Wisconsin�River�Falls,�took�home�the�championship�buckle�in�barrel�racing.

�� Nebraska�College�of�Technical�Agriculture’s�Zeke�Mora�walked�away�with�a�pair�of�73-point�rides�to�earn�him�the�championship�buckle�in�the�bull-riding�event.

Other highlights

10��|��NEWS��|��Iowa�State�Daily��|�Monday,�October�3,�2011 Editor:�Kaleb�Warnock��|��[email protected]��|��515.294.2003

>>RODEO.p1

Photo:�Kelsey�Kremer/Iowa�State�DailyTyler Grussing of South Dakota State University tries to take down a steer in the steer-wrestling portion of the 49th Annual Cyclone Stampede Rodeo on Friday in Ames.

a four-part plan that includes a set of 10 key legislative propos-als highlighted by an immedi-ate repeal of President Barack Obama’s Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, which has been a hot-button issue for the GOP ever since its passing in March 2010.

Other points in the plan include balancing the federal budget and tax cuts for small businesses in the hopes that it will spur job growth. This idea was repeated in Gingrich’s speech Friday at Iowa State in which he used the example of medical technology.

“We don’t want politicians deciding how to allocate re-sources,” Gingrich said. “If scientists slow down the rate of Alzheimer’s and can offset it by five years, you save between $8 to $10 trillion ... and I guar-antee in Washington, D.C. this will be seen as Newt’s fantasy.”

Building on this, Gingrich proposed three steps to ac-celerate brain science. The first part involved cutting the capital gains tax to zero percent. The second was a completely fundamental change of the Food and Drug Administration, which he claimed was hindering the delivery of crucial new drugs and other medical technol-ogy from hitting the market. Finally, he wanted to start a brand new brain science proj-ect that would accelerate the study and cure of diseases like Alzheimer’s.

“The way I would pay for it is to issue Alzheimer’s savings bonds,” Gingrich said. “If we get a five-year postponement, the first slice of the money goes to pay off those bonds.

“You save human suffering, families from health problems, and you save trillions of dollars ... Places like Iowa are exactly

where we should be having this conversation because a lot of the future will be invent-ed at places like Iowa State University.”

The next part of Gingrich’s plan included a list of executive orders that he hoped to sign immediately upon assuming the residency. In his speech, he stated that more than 10 would be signed, but lacked specifics. The third part, according to his campaign website, stated, “A training program for the transition teams and the ap-pointees who will lead the shift back to constitutional, limited government.” This, too, lacked specifics, but this part of the

plan seems to cater to the tea party base of the Republican Party, which has advocated for smaller government since Obama took office.

Finally, the fourth part of Gingrich’s plan involved devel-oping a system for citizen in-volvement in government that would lead to change and sus-tainability in the next 10 years. Gingrich said this means putting change back into the hands of Americans.

“If we shrink the Washington bureaucracy, citi-zens have to get bigger,” said Gingrich. “This is a real funda-mental change.”

“Gingrich is an ideas man,

and we need new ideas that are outside the box,” said attendee Rick Gustafson, of Ogden.

Since his days as speaker of the House in the 1990s during the Clinton administration, many Republicans have touted Gingrich’s ability to come up with new ideas for the party in order to adjust to the current political and economic climate of the country.

“I think the overall idea of cutting through the bureau-cracy and engaging people in new ideas and government being able to let that happen resonates the most with me,” Gustafson said. “And that is why I like Mr. Gingrich.”

>>NEWT.p1

Photo:�Emily�Harmon/Iowa�State�Daily�Kaitlyn Van Dame, senior in political science, and Caytlin Hentzel, junior in event management, sign in Austin Hester and Ben Steele, both juniors, to hear Newt Gingrich speak Friday.

Photo:�Emily�Harmon/Iowa�State�Daily��Will Jones asks Newt Gingrich a question concerning immigration. Gingrich, 2012 presidential candidate, spoke at Iowa State on Friday in the Campanile Room of the Memorial Union.

Photo:�Emily�Harmon/Iowa�State�Daily�Newt Gingrich, 2012 presidential candidate, gives a presentation at Iowa State on Friday, emphasizing Iowa State’s reputation for science and technology.