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Ames Voice

Mid-Iowa Community News

Ames Voice

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Beardshear Hall at Iowa State University on July 8, 2025.

Regents approves new majors, hears strategic initiatives

by Kyle Werner, Reporter
Published September 22, 2025
The Iowa Board of Regents heard updates from Iowa State University on Thursday, including the introduction of two new majors, implementation of initiatives for university efficiency and university appropriations for the upcoming 2027 fiscal year.
Ames voters will be asked to approve a $10.5 million bond issue to build a new fire station to replace the station on Welch Avenue in November.

$10.5 million Ames fire station bond issue on November ballot

by Bill Monroe, Reporter
Published September 17, 2025
Ames residents will vote in November on spending up to $10.5 million to build a new fire station for the city’s west side. The city wants to replace Fire Station No. 2 with a bigger station on land at 601 State Ave. that Iowa State University will let the city use for free. The Ames City Council voted to place the matter on the November ballot during a special meeting on Tuesday.
Parks Library is shown on Tuesday, Sept. 9.

Celebrating 100 years of the ISU campus library

by Kyle Werner, Reporter
Published September 16, 2025
Iowa State University’s Parks Library was “the finest piece of architecture in the state,” said Raymond A. Pearson, the university’s president, when the cornerstone of the library was laid in October 1923. Today, the library is much larger than its original 176 by 130 foot, or 35,000 square feet, blueprint. It’s now 325,488 square feet and home to more than 2 million books. A centennial celebration event will take place on Wednesday, Sept. 24,
The student section cheers on the Cyclones during their 2025 win over Iowa at Jack Trice Stadium. This fall's enrollment numbers show it was another year of overall growth, aided by a large class of new students and strong retainment from last year's new students.

ISU fall enrollment grows by nearly 700 students

by Anthony Capps, Editor
Published September 15, 2025
Iowa State University has recorded its largest fall enrollment in five years and its third year of consecutive growth. Enrollment numbers for this fall semester, announced Thursday, increased by 673 students from last fall for a total of 31,105, about a 2.2% rise.
Ames Community School District office located on 24th Street.

School board begins its school year with facility updates

by Kyle Werner, Reporter
Published September 10, 2025
Monday’s school board meeting was full of announcements about facility updates to launch the fall season of play and sports. The Ames High School track has been completed and includes marks of an unwanted guest: hoof prints from a wandering deer. They were found after the track’s curing stage had been completed.
This year, ISU PD issued a total of 39 citations, five more than 2023 — when the game was last in Ames.

Game-day blotter: 5 more citations than the last time Cy-Hawk football was in Ames

by Amber Mohmand, News Editor
Published September 9, 2025
The Iowa-Iowa State football game is the most anticipated game across the state — fueling a decades-long rivalry between the two universities. It’s hosted in Ames every other year, which brings a wave of excited fans across the state who are ready to watch and celebrate the Cy-Hawk game. This year, many Cyclones fans celebrated the team’s 16-13 victory over the Hawks on Saturday.
Chloride lime is added as a softening agent to treat minerals like calcium and magnesium that contribute water hardness.

Ames residents don’t need to worry about their water as concerns arise in central Iowa

by Kyle Werner, Reporter
Published September 3, 2025
As concerns of water quality in central Iowa rise, Ames residents do not need to worry about the safety of their great-tasting water supply. High levels of nitrate were found in the water supply that comes from the Des Moines and Racoon rivers this summer. Ames was not included in communities affected by the ban, but questions regarding water safety in the city have been raised.
Austin Frerick, author Barons: Money, Power, and the Corruption of America's Food Industry, speaks to a group at the University of Iowa Law School in February 2025.

Lecture: Author traces the rise of food titans

by Anthony Capps, Reporter
Published August 27, 2025
As an adult, Frerick spent five years researching the nation’s food industry, culminating in his book, “Barons: Money, Power and the Corruption of America's Food Industry,” which traces the rise of seven titans of the food industry and the cost of sustaining the system. Frerick will speak at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Ames Public Library.