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JBU Engineering Seniors Soared High at AIAA DBF

Every year, senior engineering majors at John Brown University take a senior design class. The students are split into teams of four and each given a different project to complete during the fall and spring semesters. Senior mechanical engineering students Jonny Bontrager, Harry Hunnicutt, Megan Gruen and Caylee Ciesla were given the task of making an airplane.

“For me, I’m very interested in aircrafts and aviation so it was a first choice for me. I knew I would like to be on this, really all four years of my schooling here, so I tried to channel myself in to be on this project,” Gruen said.

Before even being able to build the plane, the student team had to plan out how they were going to accomplish all their tasks. While some of the senior design groups are commissioned to make something specific for different companies or help contribute to an ongoing project, the students assigned to the aircraft work on it in order to compete at a yearly competition. This year, the students had the goal of attending the American Institute for Aeronautics and Astronautics Design/Build/Fly competition.

“We decided early on that we were going to take the simplest design routes just to make it doable. In that we made a plane that was pretty easy to manufacture, and replicate and fix,” Bontragger said.

Over the past two semesters, Bontrager, Hunnicutt, Gruen and Ciesla have been working on not only building the aircraft, but also adhering to the guidelines given out by the AIAA DBF competition. Each team member was assigned an area to work on. Bontrager worked on the modeling and simulation, Hunnicutt focused on the electrical work needed on the plane, and Gruen and Ciesla oversaw the manufacturing and documentation. All this hard work paid off when, in the end, the students were able to earn an invitation to the international competition.

“This team worked hard to prepare a competitive proposal, which earned them an invitation to the competition. They identified high-priority tasks early on and set internal deadlines that promoted steady progress throughout the duration of the project. The team also built valuable relationships with technical consultants, and they displayed humility and gratefulness as they sought out and received feedback,” the team's faculty advisor Dr. Chaz Miller, said.

This year’s AIAA DBF competition took place in Tucson, Arizona, and lasted April 10 - 13. The competition had over 100 schools participating, with 13 different countries being represented. During the four days, each team had to go through tech inspections before proceeding onto the three flight missions. While the JBU team started off strong, being placed at 71 out of 110 teams with their report score, the team hit a few snags during their tech inspections and worked together to fix the plane and prepare it for the first mission.

Once the team passed the tech inspections, they were more than ready to have their plane in the air, weather permitting. As a part of preparing for the competition, the students worked with local radio-controlled plane experts who helped them practice flying their plane to ensure that it was ready for the competition. The first time the team saw their plane fly, the whole team felt relief.

“It was relief and excitement,” Bontrager said. “There hasn’t been a whole lot of flight success the last couple years so just having that early was nice.”

This success carried on during the competition and, after successfully completing the first flight mission, the JBU team was able to move on to the next step of the competition. Unfortunately, due to time constraints, they were unable to complete any more missions before the competition ended. The team ended up placing at 69 out of 110 teams. Not only were Bontrager, Hunnicutt, Gruen and Ciesla the first JBU students to compete in three years, but they also gave a tremendous showing at the competition, being from a smaller program compared to the other schools.

“I'm very proud of this group. They’ve laid the groundwork for JBU to be a perennial contender in this competition. I hope next year’s team will continue to build on the momentum,” Miller said. “I hope the students take pride in their work and how they've represented our university. I hope they take their learnings on teamwork, resiliency, and ingenuity into their professional careers and have impacts in their future roles like they’ve had for our team.”

As JBU engineering students continue to compete at the AIAA DBF competition and work on their senior design projects, this year’s seniors have some parting wisdom.

“You’ll thank yourself if you get into the competition. If you really put the work in, in the proposal, you’ll be incredibly thankful when you get to the competition and see all the fruits of your labor,” Gruen said.

Photo Courtesy of Jonny Bontrager

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Sports


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JBU's First Friday Fútbol Kicks Off Season

John Brown University’s beloved First Friday Fútbol tradition kicked off the school year, drawing hundreds of students and families to Alumni Field on Aug. 29.

The evening featured great performances by both JBU soccer teams. The women’s game began at 5:30 p.m., with the Golden Eagles defeating Avila University (Mo.) 11-0. The men’s game followed at 7:30 p.m., with JBU securing its first win of the 2025 season, defeating Hesston College (Kan.) 7-1.

For many players on the team, the night carried extra significance as it marked the start of their final season playing in front of the JBU community.

“I think it was a night full of emotions. As a senior on the team, it moved me to know it was my last First Friday Fútbol with the entire JBU community. Seeing everyone supporting us, cheering, showing their school colors and enjoying the game motivated me and filled me with joy,” said senior soccer team member, Steven Cisneros.

“The whole team is very motivated, and we hope to win this season,” Cisneros added.

First Friday Fútbol was also for many freshmen their first-semester activity and an introduction to campus traditions and school spirit.

“It was quite a new activity for me, very different from what I’m used to, but I really liked it,” said freshman Santiago Mondragón. “It was impressive to see people so passionate, and it was very fun to see everyone with their faces painted and even their whole bodies in JBU colors.”

The event drew its typical enthusiastic crowd, with students grabbing to-go boxes from the cafeteria before heading to the field to cheer on their Golden Eagles. The celebration also included free Kona Ice and kettle corn, adding an extra treat for attendees.

“I was surprised that they won so much, but the atmosphere was great. I loved it,” said freshman Hugo Ambrosio, who attended the whole game with friends.

First Friday Fútbol continues JBU’s tradition of bringing together students, faculty and families for an evening that celebrates both athletics and university spirit.

Photo Courtesy of David Camacho 

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Opinion


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How James Gunn's Superman Made Me Believe in Superheroes Again

When I first heard that yet another Superman reboot was in the works at DC Comics, I rolled my eyes and mentally added it to the growing pile of “nostalgia-bait movies I won’t be watching.” I’d never been a fan of the DC Universe, and most previous iterations of Superman had struck me as forgettable at best and cynical cash grabs at worst.

I only ended up in the theater at a friend’s request, fully expecting another recycled storyline about an alien savior protecting helpless humans. What I didn’t expect was to leave with tears in my eyes, a song stuck in my head, and a desperate need to unpack every single scene.

The film, starring David Corenswet, reintroduces Clark Kent as a young man navigating the tension between his calling as Superman and the darker realities of human corruption. The central conflict kicks off when Lex Luthor (Nicholas Hoult) kidnaps Kent’s beloved dog, Krypto. On paper, the setup sounds almost too simple. But under James Gunn’s direction, it becomes one of the most engaging and emotionally resonant superhero stories of the past decade.

I wasn’t the only one surprised. Since its July release, Superman has grossed $614.1 million worldwide, including $353.3 million domestically—surpassing Zack Snyder’s 2013 Man of Steel. It currently holds an 83% score on Rotten Tomatoes and a 7.2/10 on IMDb. To some, these may not seem like stellar ratings or profits, with some sources even boldly claiming in click-bait titles that it “bombed the box office,” it is still undeniable that Superman stands as one of DC's strongest projects in years, with both critics and audiences praising its emotional authenticity and refreshing approach to the superhero genre.

Much of that success can be traced back to Gunn’s creative vision. Known for his ability to balance humor, heart and music in films like Guardians of the Galaxy, Gunn brings the same sensibility here. His love for animals shines through in the inclusion of Krypto (and even a small but memorable squirrel cameo). His knack for curating music heightens the film’s most emotional beats—whether it’s Mr. Terrific’s training sequence set to “Five Years Time” or the ironic closing track “Punkrocker” that lingers long after the credits roll.

But what truly sets Superman apart from its superhero peers is its refreshing simplicity. Corenswet’s Clark Kent doesn’t save people because of a mystical destiny tied to Krypton. He saves them because it’s the right thing to do. Hoult’s Lex Luthor isn’t driven by a convoluted tragedy or a pseudo-philosophical motive; he’s driven by sheer hatred and jealousy. Good and evil are drawn clearly, not because the film lacks nuance, but because it understands the timeless power of that contrast.

And that, to me, is fascinating. In an era where superhero films often bury themselves under layers of lore, tragic backstories, and morally gray characters, Superman dares to be straightforward. It reminds us of what these stories were always meant to do: inspire hope, celebrate goodness and insist that evil can be confronted and overcome.

Superman isn’t remarkable because of its visual effects or high-budget fight scenes. It’s remarkable because, in a time marked by fear, division and cynicism, it dares to say that kindness matters. A hero who refuses to sacrifice even a single life for the sake of politics or power is the kind of hero worth believing in. A hero like Superman is a hero that I will gladly watch and support, continuing to hope that better days will come to us through good and kindness.

Photo Courtesy of Daniel Àlvasd

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Lifestyles


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Interviewing an Interviewer: Finding Deeper Meanings in the Questions

 

Interviews, while maybe not everyone’s favorite form of storytelling, are ideally about capturing and authentically representing truth. A few weeks ago, my friend Tyler Simpson, a senior film major at John Brown University, asked for help with a photography project. He needed a model to help him replicate photos for an assignment, doing his best to imitate the original with lighting and position. The entire process was fascinating to be a part of, getting to see how a slight turn of the wrist could alter the image and either succeed or fail to imitate the photographer’s goal. This led into a conversation about his thought process with interviews, how there’s a similarity in presenting the truth of what you have to work with, while also pursuing your end goal for the project. His insights inspired me to interview him. This is the conversation.

 

Q&A

Do you see similarities between directing a photography model and directing an interviewee?

I think there’s always a form of directing for anything where you’re trying to tell someone a story. It’s like what we’re doing right now, whether an article interview, a TV interview, anything like that, it’s like… building rapid relationships. Trying to build on this sense of trust.

 

What is a “rapid relationship”?

Any time you take a photo of someone or interview them, you are attempting to represent their story. And they have to be willing to trust you as the interviewer to represent their story well in order to be open with you. You may show up day-of for an interview, and you’ve never met these people before. All you have is a prompt and a direction you need to go. You might not even care that much about it, if it’s just something you’re hired to do, but you all the sudden have this responsibility to connect with that person in a way that makes you seem trustworthy. And from a Christian perspective, you want to truly be trustworthy, not just appear that way. You want to show up and be someone they can instantly trust and share their stories with.

 

How much direction do you usually give to your interviewees?

You definitely want to go in already knowing the answers you’re gonna get before you even ask. You go in knowing a lot about them, about their business, about their story, and they know nothing about you. And if you ask the wrong questions, that can be very prodding. It can offend people and make them feel like they’re being bated to say the wrong thing. I’ve worked on interviews where they’re almost giving the interviewee the words to say, which can be fine if it’s a more corporate story and not someone’s personal story. But when there’s this idea of feeding your interviewee a perfect line to vomit, I don’t think that’s authentic nonfiction work. It’s not their words anymore. It should be your goal to draw their story out.

 

What does the process of drawing their story out look like for you?

Before I sit down to interview someone, I get the story in mind, and I have questions that I’ve studied on—and I have all of this because of what I’ve already learned from them. So my goal when I sit down with the camera is not to ask a question and get an answer, but to start a conversation. And the only way you can have a conversation with somebody is whenever you trust them, when there’s this sense of relationship with this person. Some people can tell their story easily. Others, you may ask what they think of something, and they’ll just say, ‘Fine, good,’ and they just leave it at that. But everyone can talk, they can talk about their story if they’re in the right setting, if they feel like they can share it openly.

 

Are there factors you’ve noticed that can change that vulnerable setting for people?

The tension of a camera definitely changes that for people. You see a camera turned on and that will always change the outcome. People are aware that they’re being recorded, and they act differently. Not to say everyone acts up for the camera or that cameras always make people uncomfortable, but the knowing that it’s there changes something. I think the best way for capturing what you need in the most authentic story, and the best for what is Christlike, even, is to build a trusting relationship with the interviewee as quickly as possible, so they feel like they’re being appreciated for their story, and you can feel like you’re able to actually connect with them on a personal level. The interviewer can feel like it’s just a project, but if you can actually come in wanting to connect with the people you’re about to interview, that makes a huge difference.

 

What differences have you noticed in your interviews when you try to connect with people more intentionally?

It makes the difference between the shoots I’ve been to. When all I’m doing is capturing an ad for a company, that can be very cold. And a lot of times, interviews for those are less, ‘What’s your story?’ and more, ‘What does your product do?’ That's harder for people a lot of times because they have to sit down and think, ‘I need to make sure I say all the right things, because those are the core pieces of my company,’ and they have to formulate that into a sentence. All of a sudden they're trying to make what they say perfect. But if you just get someone to tell their own story, it makes a huge difference. If you can connect beforehand with them, it can feel a lot more like a conversation with just a camera to the side instead of a conversation with the camera. I've definitely been on shoots where the person's having a conversation with the camera, and it's never comfortable for anybody.

 

Does that same intentionality with your interviewee come out with how you use a camera?

A lot of time you see the subject looking slightly off, not directly at the camera, so you can sit there and talk to them, and the camera feels like it's a secondary thing. Generally, for an interview, that offset style is widely accepted. As a viewer—this is kind of switching topics a little bit—but as a viewer, you sit there and watch from the camera's perspective, and it feels like you're sitting in on this conversation. Not like they're talking to you, but you're sitting in on this conversation. Because usually, you don't want the subject to be talking directly to you. When it feels like they're having a conversation that you can listen to passively, I think it also increases how comfortable people are with it.

 

Do you usually use only one camera for your interviews?

Having a second camera lets you do things like capture wide angles to see whole-body actions. A closer camera gets more of their emotion from their face. So, for an edit for one of my projects, it's super wide where you can see all the way from the bottom of their feet to the top of the shop as they're sitting. But then on that second angle, we came in super low, shooting up with like a frame that's [gestures just below his shoulders] here and up. So it's this really tight, almost intimate frame where you're feeling like you're close to them. That's part of the reason you have two cameras, too, is just to get you close, because it's a lot more than just what they say. If the interview is going well, if you're really having a conversation, eventually their personality is going to come out, even if they're uncomfortable on camera.

 

How would you say your Christian faith influences how you go about trying to connect with your interviewees?

One thing I’ve thought lot about is, how am I living out the Great Commission as a filmmaker making stories that have nothing to do with the gospel? The more I think about it, the more I read Jesus' life and the New Testament, the more it feels like it’s all about the relationships we form. And that's every relationship we form, not just the ‘meaningful’ ones or the big ones. It's not just your coworkers; it's everyone you interact with. So if you treat somebody as just a means to an end, that's not Christlike. Now, there is a level of practicality where you only have so much time on a shoot. You still want to try to connect with them, but there's this weird barrier of professionalism. But especially if you're doing a documentary that you want them to be a subject in, I think it's incredibly important to make it feel like you value their time. You value their story. It’s as much a heart condition as it’s something you convey.”

 

How much influence do you, as the interviewer, have over how the interview goes?

I think that's less of a question of how much influence we do have and how much we should have. Because you have people who have a vision going into it that are going to pull out the lines and moments that fit their vision. And that’s why there’s a contract, to protect directors so they can do that. Because sometimes you see documentaries where the goal is to call out something that's being brushed under the rug, that's being done illegally. But that's a whole different scenario.

 

What does attempting to present the truth in your interview look like for you?

There's a whole conversation about, ‘What is documentary? What should documentary be? Is a narrative story just based on real events that tell your viewers what to think about something? Or is it just presenting the story that's there, and letting your viewers decide what that means?’ And one thing I’ve heard is, ‘Sometimes, people just want to be told what to think.’

 

Do you agree that people just want to be told what to think?

I've thought about that a lot. I think people do want to be told what to think. They don't want to think about the truth. But I don't believe in the slightest that that's how we ought to make documentaries. In film, you can manipulate emotions. That's just a fact. But if you're manipulating in such a way that you're presenting a story that tells a person how to feel about it, how to think about it, that's propaganda, not documentary.

 

How do you balance what message you’d like to communicate with what’s captured in your interviews?

It’s true that you bring your values into anything you watch, and it's hard because what's on my mind right now is a documentary about cars. It's not like there's a heavy value that would be pushed one way or another for this. On the flip side, one of the projects that the freshmen are editing right now is a documentary about life after Hurricane Ike in Galveston, Texas. There’s actual weight to that. And that's the type of thing that you can make manipulative and inauthentic, where your whole film is saying, ‘This is wrong.’ Or you can take the pieces of their story to say it the way they mean it. Not making these value statements like, ‘This shouldn't happen like this,’ but just presenting what is happening. Then the viewers can take it and do what they will with it.

 

How do you present the facts you find while trying to get your unique message across?

When you just present the facts, the viewers have to do something with the truth, and that shows you where your values are too. You hear about that hurricane and how the community is struggling to recover from it, and that can lead to a lot of thoughts and responses. But if you just turn it into an opportunity to say, ‘Look, they're in a bad situation,’ and that becomes the point of your documentary, then that becomes what your whole edit's about—even if that's not necessarily what your interviewees would say. I guess it's a matter of ‘Are you saying what your subject said, or are you saying what you want to say?’ And that's the heart of it. It's saying, ‘This is what this person thinks, in their words.’ That's the beauty of documentary. But when you start saying, ‘This is what I think, look at all the people that agree with me,’ that's a different thing entirely. So, to the best of your ability, you want to capture truth. You want to present this truth to people and let them think on it for themselves.

Photo courtesy of Ruby Winn

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