TUESDAY, SEPT. 11, 2012
BUSINESS
SPORTS
ISU fights to match W. Illinois Find us online:
BioBus provides real-world experience
Study abroad
iowastatedaily.com @iowastatedaily facebook.com/ iowastatedaily
Online:
FIVE WAYS GAMES AFFECT PLAYERS iowastatedaily.com/news
LETTER: DAILY NEWS DELIVERS IN VARIETY iowastatedaily.com/opinion
Weather:
America became his new home
Photo courtesy of Rowan Milligan Bailey Finn, left, met Flinn Milligan while Milligan was a participant in a study abroad program at Iowa State. Milligan, a native of England, said: “We knew it was going to be difficult and unlike typical relationships.”
TUE.
Exchange student finds new life, love during time at ISU
WED.
By Myra.Kreiger-Coen @iowastatedaily.com
61|90 58|85 THURS.
50|64 Provided by ISU Meteorology Club
When he received the letter of acceptance to the ISU Study Abroad program, Flinn Milligan’s heart stopped. He clenched the piece of paper in
his hands as his thoughts suddenly tumbled around his head. “It was a proper dream, coming to America,” he said. “Everything I was expecting came from various films from the past 40 years. I was expecting a lot of different things, coming from England.” One of the things he had not expected to do while in America was meet his fiancee. Bailey Finn, recent graduate of Iowa State’s culinary science program, remembers their first conver-
sation, or rather, argument. “It was about cheese,” she laughed. “I was insisting that the best cheese in the world came from Wisconsin. Then he kept calling me a home economics major. Even though he came off a little bit of a jerk, it was in an enduring way. I kind of already liked him.” When they went out, Milligan repeatedly insisted on a certain type of outing.
ENGAGEMENT.p2 >>
Coffee
Health
Exercise groups try to break stereotypes
Vet Med: Hospital finds completion with ceremony By Frances Myers Daily staff writer
By Liz.Zabel @iowastatedaily.com
The official dedication ceremony of Iowa State’s Hixson-Lied Small Animal Hospital is scheduled for 4:30 p.m. Wednesday at the College of Veterinary Medicine. The dedication will mark the “completion of the two-phase renovation and expansion project of the Dr. W. Eugene and Linda Lloyd Veterinary Medical Center that began in 2006,” according to the ISU News Service. Lisa Nolan, dean of Vet Med, will provide the welcome and closing at the ceremony.
Clarification: In yesterday’s Iowa State Daily, the two photos on the front page were attributed to the Daily Iowan. For clarification, the photo of the Cy-Hawk trophy was taken by Adam Wesley of the Daily Iowan, and the photo of the players celebrating was taken Ian Servin, also of the Daily Iowan.
It was a proper dream, coming to America. Everything I was expecting came from various films from the past 40 years. I was expecting a lot of different things, coming from England.” Flinn Milligan
Gourmet coffee from The Roasterie is served all across Iowa State’s campus, and this year, O’Neill has debuted a coffee designed specifically for Iowa State called “1858,” named for the year the university was founded. “I have absolute total love of all
Early in the development of group fitness, classes such as “Jazzercise” and aerobics with Jane Fonda or Richard Simmons laid the foundation for a stereotype that exercise in a group setting is primarily for females. Group fitness classes at Iowa State, even without an overly charismatic instructor or a room full of leotard clad women, are seeing a trend of lower male participation. Why? Has the stereotype driven men away? Is there something about exercising in a group that men can’t appreciate like women do? Perhaps these classes just aren’t offering what men are looking for in a workout. Kara Herbert, fitness coordinator for recreation services, said Iowa State does see a lower percentage of men opposed to women because in general men tend to be more focused on working out solo. “Psychology professors [will] tell you women are more inclined to work out in groups, where men tend to be more inclined to work out on their own,” Herbert said. Nora Hudson, fitness coordinator for recreation services and head of the fitness and wellness program, said research has shown what motivates males is competition. Group fitness can better satisfy that need for
1858.p2 >>
FITNESS.p2 >>
Photo courtesy of The Roasterie ISU alumnus Danny O’Neill, fourth from left, created The Roasterie, a business that creates gourmet coffee sold on Iowa State’s campus. This year, O’Neill debuted a coffee designed specifically for Iowa State called “1858.”
ISU alumnus roasts up school-inspired brew
Inside:
By Katelynn.McCollough @iowastatedaily.com
News ......................................... 2 Opinion ....................................... 3 Sports ......................................... 4 Classifieds ................................. 6 Games ....................................... 7 Business ..................................... 8
Danny O’Neill has had a lot of what he would describe as “turning points” in his life. There was a time as an ISU student O’Neill was thinking about law school. Then there was the possibility of working with the CIA, followed
by some time in the corporate world, which ended with him as a self-described “corporate dropout.” Now he is known as the Bean Baron. O’Neill is the president and owner of The Roasterie, a specialty coffee-roasting company, which he started in 1993 from the basement of his home in Kansas City, Mo.
Volume 208 | Number 16 | 40 cents | An independent student newspaper serving Iowa State since 1890. | A 2010-11 ACP Pacemaker Award winner