The Daily Iowan- 09.24.18

Page 1

The Daily Iowan MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2018

INSIDE

35

THE INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF IOWA COMMUNITY SINCE 1868

After the Hawkeye Completion Grant program was awarded $30,000 by UISG this past spring, 61 students received grants in order to continue their education and boost retention rates. mastura-ibnat@uiowa.edu

The result of Iowa’s game against Wisconsin might not have been what Hawkeye fans wanted, but that didn’t stop Kinnick Stadium from being electric before and during the game. Under the lights for the second game in a row, Kinnick was buzzing with black and gold.

3

50¢

61 awarded Hawkeye Completion Grant BY MASTURA IBNAT

Kinnick sights on Saturday night

DAILY-IOWAN.COM

University of Iowa Student Government has awarded 61 grants to UI students after it allocated $30,000 to the Hawkeye Completion Grant Program in spring 2018 in an effort to help boost retention. The program, initiated by former UISG President Jacob Simpson, helps

students with $100 or more of overdue charges on their university bill. Overdue charges prevent students from registering for classes or receiving their degrees. Schmidt According to the state Board of Regents’ Annual Graduation & Retention Report for Fall 2017, the UI’s

retention rate for students returning for a second year was 86 percent, down one percentage point from the previous year. The UI’s retention rate is the second lowest among its 10 peer universities. Tristan Schmidt, the UISG director of academic affairs, took on a supporting role when Simpson introduced the program. He has now picked it up as a personal project.

The grant was primarily geared toward juniors and seniors with charges between $100 and $1,500 on their U-Bills. UI Director of Academic Support and Retention Mirra Anson said the average grant amount was $1,100. “We had $72,000 to award, so all the money goes to 61 students,” Anson said. SEE GRANT, 2

Oasis finds a home in Omaha Two UI alumni have added a second Oasis Falafel location, expanding its Middle Eastern cuisine to Omaha.

Team modifies Alternative Spring Break

The Hawkeye Service Team is modifying the Alternative Spring Break program for the spring 2019 semester with a required course for participating students to take on leadership and trip development.

3

Thomas A. Stewart/The Daily Iowan Thea Basili preps food on Sept. 21. Basili, who has worked at Oasis for more than a year, said, “This is the friendliest kitchen I have ever worked in.”

Iowa Harm Reduction Coalition to host summit

Experts in U.S. drug crisis and overdose will come to the UI from Sept. 24-28 for the third-annual Iowa Harm Reduction Coalition summit. UI medical student Sarah Ziegenhorn cofounded the coalition, which provides health services to drug users in the community.

UI Student Security expands

Now in its third year, UI Student Security has expanded from about five students into a force of roughly 100 students, with officials hoping to hire even more. Go to daily-iowan.com to see the full story.

8

BY CALEB MCCULLOUGH

caleb-mccullough@uiowa.edu Iowa City’s resident Middle Eastern café, Oasis Falafel, has expanded to Omaha. The Omaha location is operated by Council Bluffs natives and University of Iowa alumni Mike and Kellie Osler. After years of experience in the industry, Mike

Osler said, he wanted to return home and start his own restaurant. He started working at restaurants while at the UI. He had management positions at restaurants around the city, including Micky’s and Red’s Ale House, he said. He quickly discovered that his passion was in the restaurant business. “I started taking that work more seriously and found

Counseling Service champions new location The University Counseling Service’s second main location has gained traction among students since its opening in the fall of 2017.

jordan-prochnow@uiowa.edu

Paula Keeton, the director of clinical services. Of those numbers, Westlawn (West Campus) had 1,971 and the East Side 595. There were some people who were seen at both locations. The Counseling Service has had its main location in Westlawn for the last 20 years, Director Barry Schreier said. For the average undergraduate student, however, this seems far away. The East Side location housed the UI Quick Care center before the Counseling Service.

In order to help prevent farming-related injuries and fatalities, University of Iowa researchers have implemented a new project. Three agricultural centers — UI Great Plains Center for Agricultural Health, University of Minnesota Upper Midwest Center, and University of Nebraska Medical Center Central States Center — have established the Telling the Story Project, an outlet for individuals affected by agricultural accidents in order to improve safety and preventative measures. The project allows people who have been affected by farm accidents to share their stories so that others can be more aware of agricultural dangers. After working for the Iowa Fatality Assessment and Control Evaluation Program, which investigated work-related fatalities, Great Plains member Stephanie Leonard said she discovered that a large number of the injuries were agriculture-related. She and a colleague from the National Farm Medicine Center discussed how personal stories could be shared in order to spread awareness and hopefully lead to prevention.

SEE COUNSELING, 2

SEE FARM, 2

Nick Rohman/The Daily Iowan The front of the University Counseling Service in the University Capitol Center is seen on Sept. 28, 2017.

aadit-tambe@uiowa.edu Watch for campus and city news, weather, and Hawkeye sports coverage every day at 8:30 a.m. at daily-iowan.com.

New program seeks to prevent farm injuries

BY JORDAN PROCHNOW

BY AADIT TAMBE

Tune in for LIVE updates

SEE OASIS, 2

A new program, which has collaborators from agricultural centers across the Midwest, allows people who have suffered injuries in farm accidents to share their stories.

Hornibrook’s big day downs Hawkeyes

Wisconsin quarterback Alex Hornibrook isn’t known as a stat-sheet stuffer. When the Badgers beat the Hawkeyes on Sept. 22, Hornibrook was the epitome of a game manager who stepped up when his team needed it. His clutch play helped put Wisconsin in the Big Ten West’s driver’s seat.

out I had a knack for it,” he said. In 2015, the Oslers started studying business with the idea of opening a restaurant, he said. “We just kind of had a wild idea to open our own restaurant and kind of do our own thing,” he said. That idea came to fruition after a casual conversa-

The second main University Counseling Service location — the first such space on the East Side of campus — has become increasingly popular among students since its fall 2017 opening. Officials said more than one-fifth of the people the service saw last year were seen at the East Side location, which opened last year in the University Capitol Center. Last year, the service saw 2,627 people, said


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.