11-22-13

Page 1

THANKSGIVING

ANIMALS

WRESTLING

CAMPUS LIFE PAGE 4

OPINION PAGE 3

SPORTS PAGE 10

Staying in the residence halls over break? Find crafts in Campus Life.

David Pope wants people to stop and think before they chow down on turkey.

The wrestling team dominated at the Cobber Open on Saturday.

Friday

Nov. 22, 2013

Volume 110, Issue 25

northern-iowan.org

Opinion X3 Opinion

Campus Campus Life Life X 4Sports X SportsGames 10 X

Classifieds Classifieds11 X

PRESIDENTS

Panelists discuss Kennedy’s history

REGENTS

Discussion of new education Rumors and conspiracies still flying 50 years later center continues AMBER ROUSE

JORDAN AUNE

Whether it is the conspiracy theories surrounding his death, the changes in how the president is protected or the effect of the assassination on the American public that comes to mind at the mention of John F. Kennedy, the former president will always be remembered for something. Monday night’s panel, “Reflections on the 50th Anniversary of President John F. Kennedy,” in Seerley Hall was a chance to reflect back on the life and death of Kennedy during the anniversary week of his death. The American Democracy Project and the University of Northern Iowa’s history and political science departments sponsored the panel discussion. John Johnson, UNI history professor and speaker at the event, focused on some conspiracies that surround the assassination. “Lots of things don’t fit together, lots of things are still dangling,” Johnson said about why the theories are so popular. He spoke about the lone gunman theory, which says single gunman Lee Harvey Oswald assassinated Kennedy, and the “grassy knoll,” an area the majority of witnesses claim the fatal shots came

The University of Northern Iowa will be the subject of plenty of conversation during the Iowa Board of Regents’ upcoming telephonic meeting Dec. 4 in Ames. In addition to the state university tuition and fees discussion, the board plans to bring up professional development assignments for UNI faculty and an update on the Iowa Research and Development Center for Educational Transformation at the UNI. The center, which was approved by the BOR in October, will “offer a new, original model in which the state can both address its research and development needs and engage in projects of national significance,” according to the BOR website. The plan outlined by the BOR’s Education and Student Affairs Committee states that the center’s director will be a tenured faculty member, and the search for said director began earlier this fall. Finalists will come to campus in late November or early December. As far as research at the center is concerned, the BOR states that it will “focus on three to five central themes, within which specific questions will be addressed by project teams and other staff.” One such initial theme will be math and science education in Iowa, and it will build on UNI’s current work in education, a strong state-level emphasis on STEM education and future workforce needs.

Staff Writer

News Editor

ERIN KEISER/Northern Iowan

Panelists discuss the history and rumors that surround John F. Kennedy in Seerley Hall on Monday.

from. Johnson also shared that in 2001, 81 percent of Americans believed there was a conspiracy involving Kennedy’s assassination. “There are over 2,000 books and over 30,000 documents about the assassination,” Johnson said. Johnson went on about what Kennedy was doing in Dallas the day he was shot. “As popular as Kennedy was, he was in danger of losing the South for his re-election,” said Johnson. Panelist Dick Broadie, newspaper columnist and radio commentator, brought up some of

Kennedy’s views and how they changed. Broadie said Kennedy was a conservative, but it is argued that he tended to lean towards liberalist views while in office. In an interview, Kennedy even called himself a liberal.

ERIN KEISER/Northern Iowan

See JFK, page 2

See BOR, page 2

THEATER

‘Original Bridesmaids’ comes to UNI KATHERINE JAMTGAARD Staff Writer

Coming to Strayer-Wood Theatre is the UNI Student Theatre Association’s studentrun production “5 Women Wearing the Same Dress,” or, as the organization has dubbed it, the “original ‘Bridesmaids.’” Director Nathan Jorgensen, senior communications and theater teaching major, chose the play for its comedic and meaningful script and storyline.

“It’s not just a mindless comedy; it’s got some meat to it. … I thought it would be something that people would want to go see, that they would enjoy watching,” he said. Jorgensen said a production normally has four to six weeks of rehearsal, depending on the show and venue. However, UNISTA has only two weeks for its upcoming production. This is because Jorgensen was a student coordinator for the recent Iowan Thespian Festival that took

place Nov. 15-16. One of the actors in the show, Olivia Frisch, junior theater major with a double emphasis in performance and drama for youth, has faith that the production will be a success. “I believe all of us are up for it because we have a very talented cast and crew who are extremely dedicated, so we take great pride in our work,” she said. See UNISTA, page 9

Courtesy Photo/JKray Photography

The cast members of “5 Women Wearing the Same Dress.”


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