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An independent student newspaper serving Iowa State since 1890
FRIDAY
10.04.2019 Vol. 220 No. 029
Theatre informs on climate change BY LYDIA.WEDE @iowastatedaily.com Approximately 73 percent of Americans believe Earth is currently in the midst of climate change, yet 28 percent say they never hear any discussion regarding the issue, according to a joint study conducted by the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication and the George Mason University Center for Climate Change Communication. Vivian Cook, a graduate student in sustainable agriculture and community regional planning programs, and the director of “Climate Change Theatre Action: Lighting the Way,” discussed what the importance of acting on climate change is to her. “We are facing a crisis right now and communities have to come together to act on it,” Cook said. Cook said the climate change discussion inspired her to become involved with the production. “I think it’s really important that we find avenues to talk about it, to tell the stories of climate change and what it means for all of our communities right now and how we can
act accordingly,” Cook said. Climate Change Theatre Action (CCTA) is about promoting conversation about climate change to students, faculty and the community. The free exhibition is comprised of 18 individual performance pieces all centering around the common theme of climate change. Fifteen of those pieces are plays with 14 different international authors and one author from the Ames community. Each scene is about five minutes long and explores climate change from a different angle. “It’s very interesting,” said Samuel ElliottRude, an actor in CCTA. “Some of these have a contemporary style, others are more rhythmic and musical. Some are very ensemble-based and others are more focused on movement. That’s been a really cool different thing for me on this one.” The acts also feature a unique blend of viewpoints, characters and settings meant to showcase how climate change is an issue affecting all life on Earth. “They’re all connected thematically, of course, but they’re also all really different,”
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DESIGN BY MARIA ALBERS Climate Change Theatre Action performs with the purpose of informing communities about the effects of climate change and how others can be more environmentally friendly.
CALS students travel the world Latinx film tells story of Mariel boatlift BY AMBER.FRIEDRICHSEN @iowastatedaily.com
The College of Agriculture and Life Sciences Study Abroad Fair informed students on possible study abroad programs Thursday. Exclusively for students of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, the fair shed light on destinations and travel options for studying abroad. Students attended the fair at the Farm Bureau Pavilion to learn about the 16 upcoming spring and summer 2020 study abroad trips, as well as other options they have for studying abroad. There are a lot of opportunities for students when deciding what trip to take. Shelley Taylor, assistant director for the agriculture and life sciences administration, said that students have choices to meet many different interests and preferences. “The most exciting thing about study abroad is if a student can imagine it, they can do it,” Taylor said.
“The number of options are almost unlimited. We have programs for students that are ten days long, we have programs for students that are a year long and we have everything in between.” Dori Kralj, a junior in animal science, has already been on two study abroad trips. Her freshman year she traveled to the U.K. and her sophomore year to Thailand and Japan. “You get hands-on experience with just seeing the agriculture as well as working with industry professionals,” Kralj said. “You gain a lot more friends and it helps you broaden your networking, especially with seniors.” Kralj said she was able to connect with upperclassmen who were also students in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences while she was studying abroad. She emphasized the impression the people she traveled with left on her and her education. “You never really think about how somebody is going
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WE ACCEPT
4 locations in Ames and Story City
BY LOGAN.METZGER @iowastatedaily.com After the Cuban Revolution in 1950, Cubans were forced to live under communist rule and many lost property, but even more lost rights. One of the ways they sought to escape this life was through the Mariel boatlift. As part of Latinx Heritage Month, Parks Library is presenting four films that pertain to Latinx experience in the United States. The third film, “Voices from Mariel,” was shown on Thursday to a room of 10 people. The film followed José Garcia, an associate professor of Hispanic literature and Latin American studies at
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Florida Southern College, as he traveled around Cuba in search of those who stayed behind after the Mariel boatlift in 1980 and talked with those who left for America. The Mariel boatlift was a mass emigration of Cubans who traveled from Cuba’s Mariel Harbor to the United States between April 15 and Oct. 31, 1980. In the end, over 125,000 Marielitos emigrated from Cuba to Florida through the boatlift. The term “Marielito” is used to refer to these refugees in both Spanish and English. Several attempts by Cubans to seek asylum at the embassies of South
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