What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a puny hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values across the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was ripping off out of the race because of death threats, individual health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning total time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the comeback of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search rock-hard finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was primarily filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited boys who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility investigate for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual onslaught survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the attack happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual brunt and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a puny hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values via the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was pulling down out of the race because of death threats, individual health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning total time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the comeback of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search stiff finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was primarily filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited fellows who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility probe for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual brunt survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the brunt happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual onslaught and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a petite hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values via the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was pulling down out of the race because of death threats, individual health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning utter time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the comeback of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search hard finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was originally filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited boys who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility examine for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual onslaught survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the onslaught happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual onslaught and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a puny hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values across the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was ripping off out of the race because of death threats, private health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning utter time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the come back of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search stiff finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was originally filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited fellows who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility investigate for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual onslaught survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the brunt happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual onslaught and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a petite hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values via the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was ripping off out of the race because of death threats, individual health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning utter time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the comeback of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search rigid finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was originally filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited dudes who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility probe for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual brunt survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the attack happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual onslaught and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a petite hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values via the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was ripping off out of the race because of death threats, private health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning total time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the come back of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search rock hard finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was originally filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited dudes who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility examine for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual attack survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the attack happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual brunt and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a puny hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values across the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was ripping off out of the race because of death threats, individual health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning utter time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the comeback of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search rock hard finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was originally filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited boys who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility probe for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual brunt survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the attack happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual onslaught and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a puny hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values via the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was ripping off out of the race because of death threats, private health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning utter time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the comeback of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search hard finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was primarily filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited boys who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility examine for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual onslaught survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the brunt happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual brunt and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a puny hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values across the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was ripping off out of the race because of death threats, individual health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning total time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the comeback of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search stiff finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was originally filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited boys who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility examine for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual onslaught survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the brunt happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual brunt and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a puny hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values via the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was pulling down out of the race because of death threats, individual health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning total time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the come back of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search stiff finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was originally filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited fellows who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility probe for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual brunt survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the brunt happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual onslaught and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a puny hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values via the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was ripping off out of the race because of death threats, private health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning total time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the comeback of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search rock-hard finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was originally filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited studs who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility examine for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual attack survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the attack happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual brunt and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a petite hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values via the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was pulling down out of the race because of death threats, private health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning utter time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the come back of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search rock-hard finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was primarily filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited fellows who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility examine for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual attack survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the attack happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual onslaught and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a petite hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values via the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was pulling down out of the race because of death threats, individual health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning utter time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the comeback of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search stiff finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was primarily filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited guys who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility probe for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual onslaught survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the onslaught happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual onslaught and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a puny hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values across the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was pulling down out of the race because of death threats, private health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning utter time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the comeback of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search rock hard finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was primarily filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited boys who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility explore for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual attack survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the brunt happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual attack and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a puny hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values across the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was ripping off out of the race because of death threats, individual health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning utter time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the comeback of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search hard finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was primarily filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited boys who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility examine for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual brunt survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the attack happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual attack and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a petite hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values across the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was pulling down out of the race because of death threats, individual health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning utter time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the come back of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search rock-hard finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was primarily filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited dudes who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility investigate for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual attack survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the onslaught happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual brunt and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a puny hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values via the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was pulling down out of the race because of death threats, private health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning total time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the come back of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search rock-hard finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was primarily filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited studs who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility investigate for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual attack survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the attack happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual onslaught and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a petite hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values via the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was ripping off out of the race because of death threats, individual health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning total time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the come back of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search rigid finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was originally filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited fellows who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility investigate for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual onslaught survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the brunt happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual attack and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a puny hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values via the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was pulling down out of the race because of death threats, private health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning utter time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the come back of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search stiff finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was originally filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited studs who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility probe for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual onslaught survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the onslaught happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual attack and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a puny hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values via the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was pulling down out of the race because of death threats, private health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning utter time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the come back of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search stiff finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was originally filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited fellows who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility explore for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual onslaught survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the attack happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual brunt and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a petite hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values via the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was pulling down out of the race because of death threats, individual health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning total time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the come back of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search rock-hard finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was primarily filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited dudes who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility explore for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual attack survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the onslaught happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual attack and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a petite hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values via the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was ripping off out of the race because of death threats, individual health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning total time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the comeback of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search rock-hard finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was originally filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited guys who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility explore for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual attack survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the attack happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual onslaught and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a petite hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values via the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was ripping off out of the race because of death threats, individual health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning utter time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the come back of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search rigid finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was primarily filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited guys who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility examine for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual brunt survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the onslaught happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual attack and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a petite hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values across the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was ripping off out of the race because of death threats, private health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning total time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the comeback of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search stiff finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was originally filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited guys who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility explore for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual brunt survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the attack happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual brunt and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a petite hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values via the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was ripping off out of the race because of death threats, private health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning utter time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the come back of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search rock hard finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was primarily filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited fellows who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility explore for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual onslaught survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the attack happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual brunt and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a petite hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values across the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was pulling down out of the race because of death threats, individual health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning total time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the come back of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search rock-hard finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was originally filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited studs who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility explore for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual brunt survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the onslaught happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual attack and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a petite hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values across the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was ripping off out of the race because of death threats, private health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning total time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the comeback of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search rock-hard finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was primarily filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited fellows who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility probe for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual attack survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the onslaught happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual attack and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a puny hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values via the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was ripping off out of the race because of death threats, individual health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning utter time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the comeback of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search rock hard finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was primarily filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited boys who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility probe for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual attack survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the attack happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual attack and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a puny hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values via the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was pulling down out of the race because of death threats, individual health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning total time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the comeback of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search hard finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was originally filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited fellows who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility examine for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual attack survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the onslaught happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual brunt and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a puny hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values across the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was ripping off out of the race because of death threats, individual health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning total time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the come back of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search stiff finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was primarily filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited studs who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility examine for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual attack survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the attack happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual onslaught and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a petite hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values via the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was ripping off out of the race because of death threats, private health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning utter time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the come back of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search rock-hard finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was primarily filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited dudes who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility investigate for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual brunt survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the onslaught happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual onslaught and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a puny hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values via the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was ripping off out of the race because of death threats, private health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning utter time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the comeback of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search rigid finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was originally filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited guys who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility investigate for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual attack survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the onslaught happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual attack and violence.”

What happened in June, Welcome Back

What happened in June

June two – PrISUm unveils Solar Utility Vehicle

The car, named Penumbra, is an intersection inbetween solar racing vehicles and mainstream SUVs, with stereo system and all. It resembles a puny hatchback, and passengers will be able to listen to music, check Facebook and use Google Maps. The team will race in Australia in the fall.

June three – Third annual Republican Roast & Rail

Senator Joni Ernst’s third annual Roast and Rail was a slice from rural Iowa, with high-profile Republican speakers there to feast grassroots politics. This year’s guest list included Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Vice President Mike Pence. Veteran support and Christianity were interspersed with Republican values via the afternoon, which was also the very first day of the summer to hit above ninety degrees.

June three – Weaver dropped from congressional race

Kim Weaver, a democratic candidate and the only opponent who was set to run against current Rep. Steve King, announced she was pulling down out of the race because of death threats, individual health risks keeping her health insurance, and therefore keeping her current job which provides it, as higher priority to campaigning total time.

June seven – Regents approve tuition increase

Tuition will increase an extra $216 dollars for each student at Iowa State University, on top of an increase for the 2017-18 year that was approved in December 2016. The “two and two” system, which suggested a two percent increase every two years accompanied by a two percent increase in state appropriations, failed when the state actually cut funding to the universities.

June eleven – Ames hosts Memorial Cup Race weekend

Ames was the 2nd weekend in the series, moving from Iowa City to Ames to Des Moines. The Ames Grand Prix was the come back of the race to Ames and took place on Main Street and at the ISU Research Park.

June twelve – Forums on next ISU president

From “politically savvy” to valuing research, open dialogue and transparency, members of the Iowa State and Ames community gathered to provide input to the search stiff finding candidates for Iowa State’s next president. Enrollment, inclusiveness, accessibility and commitment to the campus culture were all points discussed at the forums.

June thirteen – ISU airplane bruised by Leath sold

ISU considered using a broker and a bid process to sell the plane, but determined to sell the Cirrus SR22 aircraft for $450,000 to Midwest Aviation Equipment, LLC directly. The plane was appraised in February at $667,712 by a NAAA Senior Certified Aircraft Appraiser, according to documents, which listed the market value at $432,000 in February.

June fifteen – ISU loses case against NORML

Iowa State lost its 2nd federal appeal on Tuesday in a free speech lawsuit against the ISU NORML chapter. In a 2-1 decision, it was reaffirmed that the Very first Amendment right of ISU NORML had been violated. It also confirmed the administrators involved (former Iowa State President Steven Leath, former Senior Vice Presidents Warren Madden and Thomas Hill and ISU Trademark Program Manager Leesha Zimmerman) can be individually sued.

The case was primarily filed in two thousand fourteen by ISU chapter presidents of NORML Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh. NORML is the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws. In 2012, the ISU NORML chapter submitted a t-shirt design to ISU Trademark which depicted Iowa State’s mascot, Cy the Cardinal, as the “O” in NORML. The design also included a marijuana leaf above the acronym in a sentence on the back of the T-shirt reading “Freedom is NORML at ISU.”

June nineteen – International agricultural scholars visit

The visiting scholars were agriculture professionals in their home countries. During their day at Iowa State, the visiting scholars learned about Iowa State’s programs, agriculture and economics and visited the horticulture farm to see research. They also visited fellows who were establishing a tilapia fish farm in the middle of Central Iowa. Iowa State had done a feasibility probe for the farm in its initial stages.

June twenty two – Lawsuit claims greek community targeted sexual onslaught survivor

A lawsuit claiming Iowa State University officials failed to stop members of the college’s Greek community from harassing and alienating a sorority member after she reported being sexually assaulted at a fraternity house in January 2015. The Des Moines Register stated the lawsuit said the student contacted the Director of Greek Affairs Billy Boulden who said the retaliation would be addressed but ultimately abandon responding to her emails.

The survivor claims the retaliatory behavior was particularly aggressive because other Greek members blamed her for getting the fraternity where the attack happened — a “well-known ‘party house'” — shut down, according to the suit. The fraternity and alleged assailant are not named in the suit, but names the university and the Iowa Board of Regents as defendants, alleges that officials’ inaction “fosters a pervasive culture of muffle within the Greek community regarding issues of sexual onslaught and violence.”

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