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UNIVERSITY OF NORTHERN IOWA CEDAR FALLS, IA
CEDAR FALLS, IA
Tips and advice for UNI’s biannual career fair in McLeod. CAREER FAIR PAGES 5-7
UNI defeats Valpo, Drake BRIELLE KIEWIET Sports Writer
UNI men’s basketball is now 21-3 overall and 10-2 in the MVC after a split home and road week. The Panthers defeated the Valparaiso Crusaders 63-51 in Indiana on Wednesday, Feb. 5 and the Drake University Bulldogs 83-73 in the McLeod on Saturday, Feb. 8. The Panthers came ready to play in Indiana on Wednesday night, where they held the Crusaders to only 19 points in the first half. Ahead 34-19 at the break, the Panthers shot 39 percent compared to the Crusader’s 17 percent. Austin Phyfe led the Northern Iowa offense with ten points and six rebounds. Trae Berhow
THURSDAY, APRIL 5
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 10
CAREER FAIR
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VOLUME 114, ISSUE 42
VOLUME 116, ISSUE 34
I HEART FEMALE ORGASM
SOFTBALL
CAMPUS LIFE PAGE 8
SPORTS PAGE 9
CAB and Student Wellness host “I Heart Female Orgasm” lecture.
The Panthers hold season opener in the UNI-Dome Classic.
and Tywhon Pickford followed with five and four. In the second half, Valpo outscored UNI 32-29 but still came up short with UNI shooting 36 percent from the field. AJ Green led the Panther offense with 14 points. Phyfe continued his impressive play into the second half adding seven more rebounds and recorded his sixth double-double of the season with ten points and 13 rebounds. Berhow added six rebounds, ending the game with 11. The Purple and Gold returned home to the McLeod on Saturday to host the MVC fourth-ranked Drake bulldogs in front of a sold out crowd of 6,497. See BASKETBALL, page 9
TONI FORTMANN/Northern Iowan
Imagining America presents at UNI KIMBERLY CAVALIER Staff Writer
“Think of ten white artists, writers, or poets. I’m sure you can think of them fairly quickly. But can you name ten black artists, writers or poets off the top of your head?” This was the challenge that Katelyn Brockmeyer, a junior art history major at UNI, posed to the attendees of her presentation over black artists in history. Brockmeyer is an intern with Imagining America at UNI and as part of her internship, she is facilitating presentations on various topics in art. “I am in charge of campus and community outreach and this is sort of a pilot of what that looks like. It’s getting students involved, getting the community involved and just kind of centering it around the values of Imagining America, which is community engagement through arts, humanities
and design. I kind of took that and ran with it. As an art history major, I decided that a good idea would be to educate people during Black History Month about black artists in history,” Brockmeyer said. Brockmeyer gave an infor-
KIMBERLY CAVALIER/Northern Iowan
mational presentation over several important black artists, writers and poets, including Kihinde Wiley, Betye Saar, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Maya Angelou, Faith Ringgold and more. Chawne Paige, a UNI graduate and curator for the
Waterloo Center for the Arts, also spoke at the event. Paige discussed the center’s collection of Haitian art, which is the largest collection of its kind in the country.
See BLACK ARTISTS, page 8
TONI FORTMANN/Northern Iowan