Monday
/NorthernIowan
October 24, 2016
@NorthernIowan
Volume 113, Issue 17
northerniowan.com
Opinion 3 Campus Life 4 Sports 6 Games 7 Classifieds 8
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
The Clothesline Project A line of colorful T-shirts arched across the entrance to a stairwell in the Maucker Union. Busy students hurrying to class walked by them, sometimes without giving them a cursory glance. But if they’d stopped to read them, they would have seen that the rainbow of T-shirts contained powerful messages. “It’s not consent if you make me afraid to say no,” read a message on a yellow T-shirt. Another told a story of familial abuse. “My Mom divorced my Dad when he hit her within an inch of her life. We watched,” read the tee. “A judge told her that he deserved visitation until my sister and I were 18,” continued the message on the shirt. “All 3 of us have SCARS,” the messaged concluded. The Women’s and Gender Studies program at UNI partnered with Student Wellness Services to participate once again in The Clothesline Project for Domestic Violence
Awareness Month. “The project’s main goal is to raise awareness for violence against women, and other marginalized communities,” said Anna Blaho, a women’s and gender studies graduate student. The Clothesline Project is an international movement founded in 1990 in Cape Cod, Massachusetts, and universities all over the world are able to participate. According to the Clothesline Project website, there are 500 different Clothesline Projects currently happening across 41 states and five countries. Students were invited to decorate t-shirts in Maucker Union and the WRC throughout the week and the shirts were displayed beginning late Thursday afternoon. The World Health Organization has reported that one in three women all around the world have or will have experienced physical violence or sexual violence by an intimate partner or a non-partner during their lives. Blaho said students participated in decorating a t-shirt of their choice and could express themselves in
Northeast Iowa Food Bank in Waterloo. The entrance will be located by the parking lot on the west side of Noehren. Noehren’s annual Horror on Hudson is produced by the hall’s senate. Thomas Randall, a junior management business administration major, is one of the organizers for the two-night event. Randall is optimistic about this year’s turn out. “We are expecting over 600 visitors to our haunted house
between Wednesday and Thursday nights,” Randall said. “Last year, between the two nights, we had 621 visitors. That was more than the first year the event was held and we expect even more this year.” According to Randall, students who reside in Noehren Hall typically staff the event. “The event is put on by the Noehren Hall Senate, the senate executives and the
SYDNEY HAUER Staff Writer
COMEDY Arts critic reviews Drew Lynch’s comedic performance at UNI. CAMPUS LIFE PAGE 5
WOMEN Columnist takes issue with the treatment of conservative women by the left.
OPINION PAGE 3
FOOTBALL UNI football trounces Missouri State Bears by a 54-point margin. SPORTS PAGE 6
GABBY LEITNER/Northern Iowan
GABBY LEITNER/Northern Iowan
T-shirts with messages such as: “It’s not consent if you make me afraid to say no” hang in the Maucker Union. UNI’s Women’s and Gender Studies program partnered with Student Wellness Services for the Clothesline Project last week.
See CLOTHESLINE, page 5
Haunted house horrors you’ll want to see KATHERINE JAMTGAARD Staff Writer
Ghouls, ghosts and ghastly scares will be on full display this week when Noehren Hall hosts their third annual Horror on Hudson haunted house. Horror on Hudson will be from 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. on Oct 26 and 27. The cost of admission is $2 or two cans of non-perishable food with the proceeds going towards the
Noehren Hall RAs,” Randall said. “They are also in charge of the production of the haunted house.” See
HAUNTED, page 2
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OCTOBER 24, 2016
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NEWS
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Panel to discuss freedom of speech on campus A session focused on a First Amendment issue will be held on Monday, Oct. 24, from 2:00 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. in the Elm Room in Maucker Union on the UNI campus. Panelists will address the topic of whether or not some speakers should be allowed
on campus. The panel members will be Rekha Basu, columnist for the Des Moines Register, Nick Fisher, executive editor of the Northern Iowan, and Joe Gorton, President of UNI United Faculty/AAUP. The event is free and open
to the public. It is sponsored by UNI’s American Democracy Project (ADP), a multi-campus initiative that aims to create “an intellectual and experiential understanding of civil engagement,” according to UNI’s ADP website.
CLINTON OLSASKY News Editor
VOLUME 113, ISSUE 17
THIS DAY IN HISTORY -1861: Western Union completes the first transcontinental telegraph line, putting the Pony Express out of business. -1901: At the age of 63, Annie Edson Taylor becomes the first person to safely go over Niagara Falls in a barrel. -1916: Henry Ford awards equal pay to women. -1929: A then-record number of shares are traded on the New York Stock Exchange, triggering the onset of the stock market crash; it has since been dubbed “Black Thursday.” -1945: The United Nations is established, less than two months after the end of World War II. -1969: The classic western film “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid,” starring Paul Newman and Robert Redford, premieres. -1972: Jackie Robsinson, the first African American baseball player for the Brooklyn Dodgers, dies at 53. -1986: Canadian rapper/singer Drake is born.
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If any students are interested in assisting, Randall advised that they attend the event and support the Noehren Hall Senate. Randall has gone through the Horror on Hudson as both a participant and as a “scare actor.” He said he is looking forward to seeing everyone come through the haunted house from the other side. “It will be really nice for
all the Noehren Hall Senate members to see their hard work paying off,” Randall said. There are other places that will offer plenty of frights in the Cedar Valley for those not able to attend Horror on Hudson. Heart of Darkness, located in Waterloo, is open on weekends throughout October. According to their website, they are the largest haunted attraction in Iowa, boasting more than 22,000 square feet. This includes 10
separately themed haunted areas.
I don’t mind scary houses; it’s [...] being touched or being followed that I don’t like. Moesha Poole
Junior elementary and middle level education major
The hours of operation, as well as admission prices, vary depending on the day. Heart of Darkness also does not allow touching by their scare actors. Harris Haven Funeral Home in Evansdale is also open to the public with $13 tickets and hours starting at 7 p.m. throughout the week, according to their website. Moesha Poole, junior elementary and middle level dua l NI Archives education Noehren Hall will be hosting their third annual “Horror Hudson” haunted house this major, has attended Wednesday and Thursday with proceeds going to the Northeast Iowa Food Bank in haunted houses in Waterloo. the past but is wary
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of being touched by scare actors. “I’m more of a person that would rather go to a haunted house where it’s scary, but I don’t like to be touched,” Poole said. “The last experience I had, it was one where the people there were allowed to touch you and it wasn’t the greatest result. I don’t mind scary houses; it’s [...] being touched or being followed that I don’t like. So those are the only things I don’t really [like] in haunted houses. But other than that, I like them. They’re fun; they’re enjoyable.” Mikayla Dearden, junior textile and apparel major, said she enjoys haunted houses even though it’s hard for her to be scared. Having recently gone to a haunted house, Dearden
said, “It really wasn’t that scary, honestly, because I kept expecting it to happen.” Nick Mitchell, senior public relations major, said he hasn’t been to a haunted house in several years. “I went to a haunted house when I was in high school; I guess that would be the last time I went,” Mitchell said. “That was five years ago, so I’m trying to think of what it was like. […] I haven’t been to one since I’ve been in college or in the Cedar Falls area.” Students won’t have to go far to get their fill of scares this week, whether it be from Noehren Hall’s Horror on Hudson, Heart of Darkness in Waterloo or Harris Haven Funeral Home.
DAILY SPECIALS
The Northern Iowan is published semi-weekly on Monday and Thursday during the academic year, except for holidays and examination periods, by the University of Northern Iowa, L011 Maucker Union, Cedar Falls, IA 50614-0166 under the auspices of the Board of Student Publications. Advertising errors that are the fault of the Northern Iowan will be corrected at no cost to the advertiser only if the Northern Iowan office is notified within seven days of the original publication. Publisher reserves the right to refuse any advertisement at any time. The Northern Iowan is funded in part with student activity fees. A copy of the Northern Iowan grievance procedure is available at the Northern Iowan office, located at L011 Maucker Union. All material is © 2016 by the Northern Iowan and may not be used without permission.
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OPINION
NICK FISHER Executive Editor
OCTOBER 24, 2016
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NORTHERNIOWAN.COM
VOLUME 113, ISSUE 17
It’s time to talk about conservative women Last Monday, I happened to walk by when Brother Jed was preaching. A woman working with him was noticed by a guy in the crowd, and he asked if she was the preacher’s wife, joking about the size of her breasts. (For those who were there, yes, that was I in the crowd, calling out the blatant body shaming.) Last month, Comedy Central (CC) held one of their famous roasts, this time ostensibly targeting actor Rob Lowe. I say “ostensibly” because it ended up being an Ann Coulter roast featuring Rob Lowe, as the conservative pundit herself joked. CC’s roasts are supposed
to be brutally hilarious, and when the roasters actually roasted Lowe, it was. As a Washington Post writer put it, there was “an undercurrent of affection” for Lowe (and the other roasters) throughout the night. There was no such undercurrent for Coulter, however, who heard that night that she should kill herself (Jimmy Carr) because she was repugnant and “hatched-faced,” that she was a “racist cunt,” (Pete Davidson) that she should start making America great again by wearing a burka (Jeff Ross), and that the only person she would ever make happy was the Mexican who would dig her grave (Nikki Glaser). Among other things. Now, Coulter has heard all of this and worse throughout her time in the public eye. She’s a tough
woman who, love or hate her, has demonstrated that she can take it as well as she can dish it. I’m not worried about her, or most other conservative women, who are consistently the most capable and confident women I know (including my wife). My concern is with the staggering hypocrisy on display. Conservative women are routinely subjected to the same sort of commentary that progressives, rightly, denounce as demeaning and unfair. Progressives’ apparent incapacity to comprehend the very possibility of sincere, thoughtful conservative women who are worthy of engagement in public discourse somehow compels them to go to incredible lengths to discredit them. This discrediting even extends to assuring whoever will listen that conservative women are, somehow, not really women, or at least not really “pro-women.” “Female impersonator” is apparently a favorite phrase of feminist activist Gloria Steinem, who uses it to refer to any woman who deviates from progressive sexual orthodoxy, including Republican Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison. After Senator John
Static.Flickr.com
Conservative pundit Ann Coulter speaks at a conference. Coulter was on the receiving end of jokes Day says went too far at a Comedy Central roast.
LTE: Vote Rod Blum Two candidates are running for Congress, but only Rod Blum showed up. My name is Jon Fossum and I’m the Founder and former President of the University of Northern Iowa chapter of Young Americans for Liberty. We are a diverse group of young people that are concerned with the future of our country and the issues that affect it. Earlier this fall, our chapter invited both Congressional candidates to speak to our group about why they were running, what they believed in and why their oath to the United States Constitution is important to them as elected officials. When we quickly got back a response from Congressman Rod Blum that he would indeed speak with us, I was excited that we would have both candidates appear and would be able to compare and contrast them. Unfortunately, that was
not the case. Monica Vernon’s campaign not only failed to make time for us — candidates are very busy and I understand — but neither she, nor her campaign, even gave us the courtesy of acknowledging our invite and completely ignored us. This was disappointing on multiple levels; the worst of which were my members were unable to find out where she stood on the issues we care about. Partially, from Blum’s visit I learned he was fighting for a lot of the things I find wrong with politics today. As a younger American, the system in place is passing bills and creating debt that I will have to pay for eventually — and they are doing it seemingly without concern for the consequences. We Our Board of Directors need fundamental change, and Rod Blum is determined to provide it.Our volunteer Board of Directors have
served for a minimum of one year to over 25 years. Board members are elected to the positions they hold by our membership.802
-Jon Fossum senior, Chairman Gary Shontzscience major political Director UNI Controller, Secretary,Treasurer Instructor -Accounting
Vice Chairman Fred Abraham Department Head Professor Economics
William T. McKinley
Assistant Director Physical Plant
IRIS FRASHER/Northern Iowan
“Sister Cindy,” a street preacher, speaks to UNI students outside the Rod Library Oct. 17. Day says students made hurtful comments toward her while she was preaching her divisive sermon.
McCain announced that Governor Sarah Palin was his VP nominee in 2008, Cintra Wilson remarked in an article for Salon.com that she “may be a lady, but she ain’t no woman.” Betty Friedan, a feminist leader and author, once called Phyllis Schlafly, a leading female conservative also during Friedan’s time, “Aunt Tom;” and Feministing founder Jessica Valenti backed out of a 2010 panel because doing so would concede that a fellow panelist (conservative Allison Kasic) qualified as a feminist. My column inches are not enough to document the
sheer scope of this demonization. It is so reliable a feature of the conduct of American progressives that I’ve given it a name. I call it the ‘Law of Merited See WOMEN, page 5
NI CORRECTION
In the Oct. 20 edition, the NI committed an editorial error. In the column titled, “Public opinion: Politics and cognitive dissonance”, editors falsely stated that the ‘Q’ Source, a theoretical religious text, was the Quran. The NI editors regret their mistake.
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OCTOBER 24, 2016
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CAMPUS LIFE NORTHERNIOWAN.COM
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NICK FISHER Executive Editor
VOLUME 113, ISSUE 17
Lynch’s comic persona, wit shine COLIN MATTOX
Arts Critic
What makes a good comic? Is it their material or their stage presence? Is it the audience? Can anyone do it? Someone outside of the comedy game may ponder these questions when they see someone onstage with nothing more than a microphone and their wit — they are by no means easy questions to answer. Ultimately it comes down to what each comic is comfortable with, and that idea can lead to some odd performances. In all honesty, I was not looking forward to the comedy stylings of Drew Lynch who performed in the Maucker Union Ballroom
Thursday. I was not familiar with his material and all I had really heard about him was that he had a stutter and that he was the runner up in the last season of America’s Got Talent. Armed with this minimal knowledge, I went to the show and came out pleasantly surprised. Maybe it’s because I’m a comic myself but I am very critical of comedians and I’m leery when someone tells me, “This guy is so funny!” But laughs cannot lie, and Lynch struck a good balance between witty material and a relatable and charming stage persona. Lynch was injured in a sporting accident years ago and this left him with a permanent stutter. Since comedy
is essentially talking for long periods of time, one might think that this would hamper his comedy but that’s not the case at all. He is very quick and has excellent comedic timing. His material is mostly clean but does include some risqué moments (including a joke about Bill Cosby), but they are uproarious nonetheless.
I see so many comics trying to fit into a niche. The awkward bookworm. The alpha male. Lynch’s evidently came to him by accident. Colin Mattox Arts Critic
HANNAH GIBBS/Northern Iowan
Comic Drew Lynch performs at the Mauker Union Ballroom Oct. 20. Mattox says Lynch’s stage persona is a gift.
I think what makes his act is actually what some might think of as his handicap. His stutter makes him take time in delivering his jokes, giving a feeling of anticipation to the audience. When he finally gives the punchline, he almost has to force it out. This makes the end of his jokes just land so well. It’s interesting because I can say from experience that
finding a stage persona is difficult. Some comics search for it for a long time and never find it. Some just have that quality to them. Lynch got his in a softball accident. I see so many comics trying to fit into a niche. The casual nerd niche. The awkward bookworm. The alpha male. Lynch’s evidently came to him by accident. He also has the ability to improvise. This is not easy for most comics. He made several jokes at Iowa’s expense, often forgetting the difference between us and Idaho. As a side bar, I want to use this platform to voice a request: If you are in the audience during a comedy performance, do not speak up towards the comic. This may seem like a given and I wish so much that it was. During Lynch’s performance, there were several instances of people trying to add their own touch to his bits or commenting on them. One girl actually told a full story, yelling it to him onstage. I applaud Lynch for making the comments part of the act but I was fuming. A comedy show is not a panel discussion, it’s a performance. Let the man do his job. I promise you he’s funnier than you think you are.
HANNAH GIBBS/Northern Iowan
Lynch also was able to take the audiences reactions to his jokes and turn them into his own bits. He seemed very fond of callbacks as well — that is, referencing previous jokes that often worked for him. It is difficult for a comedian to make his mark on the world. It takes discipline, sacrifice and endless hours. We do not all have the ironic gift that Drew Lynch does but he, in a way, is the perfect embodiment of modern stand-up comedy. He can take tragedy in life and see what’s funny about it. He can joke about anything. In this era of overt political correctness, we could all be reminded that it is okay to laugh.
NICK FISHER Executive Editor
OCTOBER 24, 2016
CLOTHESLINE
continued from page 1
their own way. “They are able to decorate it with pictures and words depicting their thoughts, feelings and emotions as a survivor or as an ally against violence,” she said. Each T-shirt color symbolizes a different type of violence against women. For example, choosing a yellow shirt would represent a bat-
GABBY LEITNER/Northern Iowan
Sam Blatt, junior political science major, writes a message on a T-shirt for UNI’s iteration of The Clothesline Project.
tered or assaulted woman. Students could select the color of shirt they wanted and felt was most representative of their experience.
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CAMPUS LIFE
“Even running this program [...] it’s hard to believe some of the acts of violence that people have experienced in this world, so we just want to do our part in making sure that people acknowledge that this isn’t just something that happens on TV or is dramatized for effect,” Blaho said. “This is something that happens to real people and it’s an issue that needs to be heard.” Claire Guderjahn, a sophomore theater and communication double major participated in the event by decorating a T-shirt. “I feel that the clothesline project is such an important way to spread awareness and love throughout campus,” Guderjahn said. “There are so many survivors who deserve to feel appreciated for who they are and what they’ve been through. I’m thankful to be a part of this comforting initiative.” Brenna Wolfe, treasurer of the UNI Feminist Action
This project allows individuals to bear witness to the experience of survivors. Brenna Wolfe
UNI Feminist Action League
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VOLUME 113, ISSUE 17
WOMEN
continued from page 3
GABBY LEITNER/Northern Iowan
Roberto Estrella, sophomore digital media production major, writes a message to raise awareness about domestic violence.
League, said, “The clothesline project is really important because it gives voices to survivors of gender-based violence and brings awareness to domestic violence and sexual assault. This project allows individuals to bear witness to the experiences of survivors.” The next event UNI Women and Gender Studies program will put on is a forum called, “Towards an Ethics of Care: Ecofeminism, Taxidermy, and Animal Portraiture in Contemporary Art,” featuring associate professor of art history Elizabeth Sutton. It will be held on Nov. 7 at 12 p.m. in Rod 287.
Misogyny’ (the language borrowed from Rod Dreher’s ‘Law of Merited Persecution’), and it states: “It is perfectly appropriate to express any degree of sexism, provided that the intended target sufficiently steps outside of the bounds of acceptable opinions for women to hold.” The singer Jewel practically confessed to this double-standard at the beginning of her contribution to the Lowe roast, when she joked, “As a feminist, I can’t support everything that’s being said tonight, but as somebody who hates Ann Coulter, I’m delighted.” Progressives know their hypocrisy. They just don’t care. The few who do care aren’t succeeding in changing that. When liberal pundit Kirsten Powers
wrote a column calling for “equal-opportunity accountability” for liberal media personalities guilty of such mistreatment, one of those personalities (Keith Olberman) doubled-down on his vitriol by targeting Powers herself. I daresay that the only opponents that progressives hate more than female conservatives are black conservatives. But that’s another column for another time. My point here is at least twofold. To conservatives: pay attention for this, and when you notice it, don’t hesitate to call it out. If nothing else, few things destroy your opponents’ credibility more than effectively revealing their moral and intellectual inconsistencies. To progressives: get your act together. You wouldn’t think that needed to be said explicitly. Yet here we are.
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PAGE 6 DYLAN PADY Sports Editor
OCTOBER 24, 2016
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SPORTS
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VOLUME 113, ISSUE 17
FOOTBALL
UNI dominates the Bears, 61-7 RYAN NELSON
Sports Writer
The University of Northern Iowa Panthers started the season strong with a big win at FBS rival Iowa State. Since then, they haven’t been able to find much consistency. They sat at 2-4 after winning against Southern Illinois. UNI made a huge step in the right direction Saturday as they answered the bell with a complete dismantling of Missouri State with a final score of 61-7. In his first career start, sophomore quarterback Eli Dunne and the Panthers came to the UNI-Dome ready to compete. The defense began with a near pick-six on the very first play of the drive by AJ Allen. The Panthers had to settle for a field goal, scored on the ensuing possession and the one after that. UNI quickly jumped out to a 17-0 lead, and matched that performance in the second quarter, taking a 34-7 lead into the break. In the second half, it was more of the same scenario. UNI outscored the Bears 27-0 in second half. Following one of their offensive touchdowns,
LOGAN WINFORD/Northern Iowan
LOGAN WINFORD/Northern Iowan
Karter Schult (93) and Preston Woods (61) line up against Missouri State’s offensive line. Schult finished the night with five tackles and Woods had four.
Eli Dunne (14) hands the ball off to Tyvis Smith (32). Dunne passed for 418- yards against the Bears and completed a 61-yard touchdown pass, his longest of the night.
UNI’s defense turned around seconds later with a pick-six to increase the lead to 47-7. In the closing seconds of the third quarter, UNI had yet another pick-six. The Panthers put the final nail in the coffin later in the fourth quarter after J’Veyon Browing carried the ball for an 11-yard touchdown. Offensively, the Panthers were led by an impressive performance from Dunne. He
Receiver Daurice Fountain contributed with 87-yards in the air too, including a spectacular catch on the sideline from a deep pass by Dunne. Defensively, UNI dominated Missouri State. Along with Allen’s interception, Elijah Campbell and Duncan Ferch both intercepted Missouri State’s passes for touchdowns. Karter Schult added another sack to his list. Schult con-
threw for 418-yards with two touchdowns and no turnovers. Michael Malloy also proved to be quite useful in the red zone, scoring a pair of touchdowns by leaping over the line and into the endzone. Freshman wide receiver Trevor Allen came away with 108-receiving yards and a touchdown, and freshman receiver Jalen Rima scored off of a 17-yard pass.
tinues to lead all of Division 1 (both FBS and FCS) in sacks, with nine. UNI then improved to 3-4 on the season. The Panthers return to action next weekend on Oct. 29 when they welcome the fourth-ranked Bison from North Dakota State. The NDSU game is being themed as a “black-out.” Kick-off is set for 6 p.m. in the UNIDome.
VOLLEYBALL
Volleyball homestand proves successful BRENNAN WHISLER Sports Writer
The UNI volleyball team was able to garner their sixth and seventh straight wins this weekend by beating the Evansville Purple Aces by a set score of 25-14, 25-10 and 25-14. On the season, UNI has never allowed Evansville to reach 15 points in any of the six sets. They also beat the Southern Illinois Salukis by a set score of 25-14, 25-15, 20-25 and 25-16. As they did in Evansville, UNI stifled the Aces offense and smashed down their defense. This match lasted only a few minutes longer than their last meeting, an hour and 10 minutes versus an hour and 15 minutes. Simply put, UNI rolled Evansville for two easy wins this season. UNI’s stat distribution was a hightlight of the match as three players all recorded double digit stats. Sophomores Kendyl Sorge and Bri Weber reached on 15 and 10 digs
each. Junior Heather Hook tallied 25 assists. This victor y allowed UNI to get ever yone invovled, including some of the team’s younger players. 15 of the 17 total players on the roster saw action in at least one set. The first two sets against the Salukis went as well as could be expected. UNI scored first in both sets and even managed to get out to a 10-point lead at least once in each set. They also never trailed in a set, until the first point in the third. While in the third set, SIU scored first and got out to a large lead. The biggest difference was that the Panthers surged to tie the game, late, on several occasions. The final set saw early back and forth action until UNI got in front 7-6 and never looked back. After losing to SIU early this year, the Panthers definitely showed out for their parents in attendance on Family Day. Senior Amie Held put on a show as she recorded
the only double-double for UNI with 11 kills and 13 digs. She also had a team high: three aces and assisted on one block. Sorge also recorded an ace as well as a match-high 19 digs. With these wins and Missouri State’s upset of Wichita on Friday, UNI is now in third place in the Valley and are only a halfgame behind both of MSU and WSU who are tied in first. Ne xt weekend could prove to be the most difficult and important games for all three of those teams. UNI plays WSU on Friday and MSU on Saturday. If UNI wins on the weekend, they would be at least tied for first, depending on if SIU also wins both of their games. After ne xt weekend, UNI plays five teams; four of which UNI have already beaten — their one loss came from Illinois State. If UNI wins their eighth and ninth straight games next week, they will most likely win the Valley.
ANTHONY SCHULTES/Northern Iowan
Bri Weber (4) and Ashlee Sinnott (8) set up for a spike against Evansville on Family Weekend. Weber has scored 290 points and recorded 259 kills on the season.
PAGE 7 HANNAH GIBBS Managing Editor
FUN & GAMES
OCTOBER 24, 2016
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VOLUME 113, ISSUE 17
FOR SALE / FOR RENT
We are now showing and signing leases for the 2017-2018 school year! Contact us to set up YOUR showing and lock in your new home TODAY!
Contact John john@rentfromjohn.com Across 1 “Handle __ care” 5 Burns with hot liquid 11 Ex-Florida governor Bush 14 “__ Ben Adhem” 15 Reacts facially to a bad joke, say 16 Chopping tool 17 What snowbirds seek in winter 19 “Mamma __!” 20 Mecca’s peninsula 21 Heat in a microwave 22 Indy service areas 23 “Do __ others ... “ 25 Most doubtful 27 Ready-to-send correspondence 31 Network with regular pledge drives 32 D-Day French city 33 Steak orders 37 Calm under pressure 39 Since Jan. 1, in accounting 41 Folksy account 42 “Bewitched” witch 45 Buster Brown’s dog 48 Jamaican music genre 49 Liqueur holder 52 Last word of a verbally cited passage 55 “Doctor Zhivago” heroine 56 Potpie veggies 57 Hydroelectric facility 59 Quik maker 63 Dad, to grandpa 64 Ideal party thrower described by the first words of 17-, 27- and 49-Across 66 Cutoff point 67 C to C, in music 68 Richard of “A Summer Place” 69 Org. with a PreCheck Program 70 Sets free 71 Facts and figures
Down 1 Electric guitar effect 2 Letter-shaped beam 3 __ Bora: Afghan region 4 Scrooge’s “Nonsense!” 5 Worry about something, slangily 6 Cloak-and-dagger org. 7 Animated bug film 8 Bar mitzvah toast 9 What fries are fried in 10 Ukr. or Lith., once 11 Actor Foxx 12 Freeway off-ramps 13 Savage sort 18 Tipplers 22 Cockpit figure 24 “I’m __ human” 26 Little lie 27 First fairy tale word 28 Second fairy tale word 29 Trampled (on) 30 ‘80s-’90s crime boss John 34 Mission Control org. 35 Benevolent fraternal group 36 Salty expanses 38 Center of power 40 Bygone phone feature 43 Pal of Piglet 44 Radio City Music Hall design style 46 Cursory looks 47 Long-legged wader 50 “... near and __ my heart” 51 Assailed verbally, with “out” 52 Surprise win 53 Bright signs 54 Press conference format, briefly 58 Degs. for choreographers 60 Old Roman robe 61 Future D.A.’s exam 62 Sicilian volcano 64 D.C. big shot 65 Morn’s counterpart
MUST SEE!! 2 bedroom house. Newer large ranch style home, large lot. 1/2 mile to old downtown. New updates, bath , kitchen, A/C. Lots of parking. Lease June - May $695/ month. Available 6-16-17. Call of showing. (319) 731-0220
For Rent House Large flat lot, no close neighbors. Large 3 bedroom newer ranch style home. 1/2 mile to UNI campus. Many new updates, bath and kitchen. Central air, lots of parking. June May lease, $895 total rent. 319-731-0220. Available 6/1/17. Call for Showing.
GOLD FALLS VILLA
1 and 2 bedrooms available for Spring semester. Rent includes water, sewer, trash, cable and WIFI. Call now for a showing at 319-277-5231 or visit our website at www.goldfallsvilla.com.
HELP WANTED Help Wanted: Ag related position. 10-15 hours per week. Flexible . $14.00/hour. 319-296-1898
6301 University Ave 319-433-1166 319-433-1166
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OCTOBER 24, 2016
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CLASSIFIEDS
NORTHERNIOWAN.COM
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HANNAH GIBBS Managing Editor
VOLUME 113, ISSUE 17
Allen College
Now accepting applications for the new Accelerated Hybrid BSN Program This one-of-a-kind program allows students the opportunity to practice in the Des Moines area while achieving their BSN degree. Students will spend May through August on the Waterloo campus and then complete the last twelve months of clinical study at agencies in the Des Moines area. • 15 months for degree completion • Begins each May • First summer courses taken on Allen College campus - Housing available through University of Northern Iowa • Remaining semester courses offered in Des Moines using a hybrid format • Clinicals in the Des Moines area
CONTACT ALLEN COLLEGE TODAY FOR MORE INFORMATION AT
(319) 226-2014 or
admissions@allencollege.edu