Tuesday, April 30, 2013 | Volume 106, Issue 29 | the-standard.org
Briefs
U.S. Sen. Claire McCaskill to visit Springfield May 1
U.S. Sen. Claire McCaskill, DMo., will make a stop in Springfield on Wednesday, May 1, to “discuss her efforts to collect feedback from Missourians as she begins her work as the head of two Senate panels aimed at protecting consumers, cracking down on scams and guarding taxpayer dollars from waste, fraud and abuse,” according to a press release. McCaskill will hold a press conference at The Library Center (Room B) at 12:45 p.m. McCaskill is leading the Senate Subcommittee on Consumer Protection.
SGF Planning and Zoning Commission to hear proposed street name change
The Springfield Planning and Zoning Commission will hear a proposed street name change by Missouri State University at their meeting on May 2 at 6:30 p.m. The proposed name change would change the name of Monroe Street between National and Kimbrough Avenues to Bear Boulevard. According to the Zoning and Subdivision report, the staff recommends approval and found that approval of this street name change is expected to more appropriately identify the main entrance to the Missouri State University campus.
Calendar Tuesday, April 30
BFA in Studio Art Senior Exhibitions, 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Brick City 102
All COB Photo, 1:45-2 p.m., Glass Hall Outside
Steph Anderson/THE STANDARD
U.S. Sen. Roy Blunt spoke at Missouri State’s 14th annual agricultural forum on Friday, April 26. Blunt is the ranking Republican on the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies. He has spoken at every MSU agricultural forum but the first.
N
By Trevor Mitchell The Standard
orth America could be energy independent in eight years if it stopped buying things from “people who don’t like us,” U.S. Sen. Roy Blunt told an audience on Friday, April 26. Blunt’s comments at Missouri State University’s 14th annual agriculture forum ranged from agricultural policy to political discussion, and several times cast blame on the presidency for issues facing both agricultural workers and the nation. Blunt is the ranking Republican on the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration and Related Agencies, and has spoken at the forum every year but its first. In addition to his claim of energy independence, Blunt said that the United States has a “natural gas
be comparable to the post-World War II economy, or even the Industrial Revolution, according to Blunt. Blunt also said he supported the genetic modifiRoy Blunt was elected to the United States cation of crops, and cited two court cases in which Senate in 2010, where he serves as one of genetically modified crops were regulated by law, two senators for the state of Missouri. but eventually declared deregulated without any From 1996 to 2008, he was elected seven health issues being found. times to the U.S. House of Representatives. Blunt said he would be against any law requirBlunt is an alumnus of Southwest Baptist ing labeling of genetically modified food, stating University in Bolivar, Mo., where he served as that if food wasn’t labeled as organic, it was likely president for four years. He earned a master’s safe to assume that it had been modified in some degree at MSU. way. Source: www.blunt.senate.gov Blunt was followed by Dan Cassidy, chief administrative officer of the Missouri Farm Bureau advantage” for at least the next 20 years, due to the Federation and affiliated companies. Cassidy delivlarge amount of recoverable natural gas we have ered a shorter, more structured talk about crucial compared to other countries. The opportunities posed by this advantage could u See FORUM page 12
About Roy Blunt
Fraternity, sorority reestablish at MSU
Student Activities Council Meeting, 4-5 p.m., PSU 313
Workshop for Critical Inquiry: Chimeras of Political Identity and the Problem of the People in Revolutionary France, 4-6 p.m., Meyer Library 101
Wednesday, May 1
BFA in Studio Art Senior Exhibitions, 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Brick City 102
Academic Advisor Forum on “Getting a Head Start in a Graduate Program,” 11:45-12:45, PSU 315
Sigma Pi offers $10,000 in scholarships to members
Thursday, May 2
BFA in Studio Art Senior Exhibitions, 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Brick City 102
Study Away 101 Information Session, 1:30-2:30 p.m., PSU 315 B
By Amber Duran The Standard
Students for a Sustainable Future General Meeting, 4:30-5:30 p.m., Temple Hall 105 Missouri State — West Plains 50 Year Celebration and Picnic, 6-8 p.m., West Plains, Mo.
COB Spring Awards Dinner, 6:308:30 p.m., University Plaza Hotel
Friday, May 3
BFA in Studio Art Senior Exhibitions, 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Brick City 102 Blackboard Open Lab, 1:30-5 p.m., Meyer Library 205
Student Learning Lounge: Let’s Talk Blackboard, 1:30-5 p.m., Meyer Library 205
BFA in Studio Art Senior Exhibition Receptions, 6-10 p.m., Brick City 102
Saturday, May 4
BFA in Studio Art Senior Exhibitions, 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Brick City 102
Student Affiliates of the American Chemical Society Picnic, 11 a.m.3 p.m., Phelps Grove Park
Monday, May 6
BFA in Studio Art Senior Exhibitions, 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Brick City 102 All Faculty Recognition Reception, 3:30-5 p.m., PSU Ballroom
Asian American Pacific Islander Organization Meeting, 6:30-7:30
Photo Illustration by Madeline Carter/THE STANDARD
Claire Quinn, a sophomore elementary education major, and Susan James, a freshman communication sciences and disorders major, demonstrate the cinnamon challenge.
Warning: Do not attempt at home Cinnamon challenge and other popular challenges could cause choking, vomiting, lung damage By Nicolette Martin The Standard
Recent popular challenges attempted by teens and adults alike, which are often done for fun, can cause potential health problems, including hospitalization, for participants. “Why would you want to do this?” a woman asks in the YouTube video, “Elders React to Challenges.” The question comes after a boy says he is going to try the salt and ice challenge, which he says the result is frostbite and “a ton of people have had to go to the hospital.” Challenges such as the cinnamon challenge, the salt and ice
challenge, the gallon challenge, the condom challenge and many others have become common among those of our generation in an attempt to prove that their bodies are able to endure things that shouldn’t be endured. Check out these five popular challenges and the reasons you shouldn’t attempt them.
1. The cinnamon challenge
What is it? The cinnamon challenge invites participants to take one tablespoon of cinnamon and attempt to swallow it within 60 seconds without any water. What makes it so hard? According to http://www.cinna-
monchallenge.com, a website that showcases the attempts (and mostly failures) of people trying to beat the cinnamon challenge, people think it is easy to do, yet it is practically impossible, because your body cannot produce enough saliva to make it easy to swallow. Why shouldn’t you do it? The cinnamon challenge, according to WebMD, can have many negative after-effects. These include coughing out a huge puff of cinnamon-colored powder, vomiting from the strong flavor, coughing fits resulting from breathing in the powder and in rare cases, being hospitalized after inhaling powder into the lungs. The blowing out of cinnamon can cause what is known as “dragon breath,” which can be very painful. u See CHALLENGE page 2
A fraternity and sorority whose charters were revoked have returned to Missouri State this year. The Alpha Rho chapter of Sigma Pi and Sigma Sigma Sigma, or Tri Sigma, have reinstitutionalized on campus this academic year. Alan Dobson, province archon of southern Missouri who oversees Sigma Pi fraternities at different universities in southern Missouri, said that Alpha Rho’s charter was revoked in 2008 as a result of the chapter breaking university and fraternity rules. He did not elaborate on the reason for the revocation, but said that they are excited to start fresh. The process to recharter began in December 2011, and Alpha Rho was officially welcomed back to campus during the fall of 2012. The Alpha Rho alumni presented scholarship awards to six men from the Alpha Rho colony, accumulating to $10,000. The six recipients for this year were Dalton Reeves, junior psychology major; Zachary Mouser, sophomore kinesiology major; David Michaelis, freshman u See GREEK page 13