THURSDAY, SEPT. 20, 2012
SPORTS 1 1 Front
‘Sky’s the limit’ for Ejiro Okoro
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AMES MUSIC TO THE MAX MAMF explores ambitious local music scene as it prepares for second year of preformance performances
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Bill Nye the Science Guy educates Iowa State By Elizabeth.Polsdorfer Daily staff writer A generation of engineers and scientists will pay homage to a television hero, Bill Nye, by attending the lecture, “You Can Change the World,” on Friday. Known for his popular ‘90s educational program, Bill Nye the Science Guy is credited with educating a generation on various topics in science. During its run, “Bill Nye the Science Guy” won 19 Emmy Awards and educated audiences on a variety of scientific topics over the course of five seasons and 100 episodes. It also won the Carl Sagan Candle in the Dark Award for the Development of Critical Thinking in 1998. Despite his association with education, Nye also helped develop a hydraulic pressure resonance suppressor at Boeing that is still used in the Boeing 747 airplane. Nye graduated with a degree in mechanical engineering from Cornell University where he was taught by Carl Sagan, a physicist known for his science education in astronomy. “You Can Change the World” is free to the public. The lecture will start at 7 p.m. at Stephens Auditorium. Doors will open at 6:15 p.m.
Inside: News ......................................... 2 Opinion ....................................... 8 Sports ......................................... 9 Ames24/7.................................... 4 Classifieds.................................10 Games.......................................11
By Dominic Spizzirri Ames247 writer On Thursday, Ames will become home once again, at least for four days, to the Maximum Ames Music Festival. The music festival was started by local band Mumford’s members Nate Logsdon and Chris Lyng last year and is run by the Maximum Ames Records company. This will be the second year of the festival, and it will be even more ambitious than its predecessor, Logsdon said. “This year we want to step up the game, so we brought in more ambitious headliners,” Logsdon said. “We have over 130 bands, and that’s throughout 20 venues in Ames.” But with every ambitious action, there is a beginning. The festival started as simply an idea last fall, inspired from other musical festivals in Iowa City and Des Moines. “We have a bunch of friends in other towns that did music festivals,” Logsdon said. “We thought we could do this too, so we decided we would. We had all been playing shows in Ames for five years, so we had contacts built up.” The members of Maximum Ames contacted local sponsors and bands, as well as friends and found themselves with a lot of support. The members had compiled a wish list of bands they wanted to headline as well and sent out invitations for those artists to play.
Maximum Ames Music Festival
File photo: Iowa State Daily
IPHONE 5 MAKES WAVES WITH DEBUT
Where: Ames When: Sept. 20 to 23 Cost: All festival pass $100, Saturday/Sunday pass $60, Jeff Mangum w/The Music Tapes and Poison Control Center $36 Advance, $38 DOS, Wanda Jackson $20 Advance, $22 DOS. Visit the website for tickets and a full band lineup: http://maximumames.com
The first year of Maximum Ames had 100 bands in multiple venues scattered across Ames and received major publicity. “For us it was really ambitious and we learned as we were going along,” Logsdon said. “We pulled it off and didn’t lose any money. In the process of doing it, we were learning how to do it.” The festival has a goal as well: to show Ames the talent of the Midwestern music scene, as well as collaborating with multiple corporations of Ames. “Our No. 1 value is collaboration and working together, and it’s our goal and dream to work with
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Government of the Student Body
Senators meet students By Charlie.Obrien @iowastatedaily.com
Connecting with their constituents is one of the biggest priorities for the Government of the Student Body throughout the year, and their annual Meet Your Senator Day is proof. GSB senators and cabinet members gathered outside of the Parks Library on Wednesday afternoon to talk to students about what they do. The senators asked their fellow students what they are concerned about and what they would like to see changed. “GSB senators really do want to meet with their constituents, and holding events like these is just another way that GSB senators are reaching out to the student body,” said Jake Swanson, College of
Agriculture senator and junior in global resource systems. During the meet and greet event, members of GSB put up a poster board along with posted notes. They encouraged students to write down what they liked about what GSB was doing, what they thought GSB should do better, or any concerns that the students had that the senators should look into. Some comments students made pertained to the cost of tuition, the need for more emergency call towers and the idea that professors are not concerned about students’ time. “We hope that students will come up to us and know that we
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Iowa State Center
Courtyard renewal project revealed By Rachel.Sinn @iowastatedaily.com
Photo: William Deaton/Iowa State Daily Jake Swanson, senator for the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences and junior in global resource systems, talks with Deepak Premkumar, senior in economics, about Government of the Student Body Wednesday in front of Parks Library.
The renovation of the Iowa State Center courtyard is meant to be a renewal as opposed to a new invention, said Joe Hibbard of Sasaki Associates of Watertown, Mass., on Wednesday, Sept. 19. The Iowa Board of Regents approved a $2.55 million project budget at a June 6 meeting to renovate the Iowa State Center courtyard. “We are three-quarters of the way completed [with the design process],” Hibbard said. Designs are for the walkways and courtyard spaces near Hilton Coliseum, Stephens Auditorium and
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Volume 208 | Number 23 | 40 cents | An independent student newspaper serving Iowa State since 1890. | A 2010-11 ACP Pacemaker Award winner
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