GALLERY
PROFESSORS
GOING PINK
View a colorful gallery of 5Kolor Run photographs from Sept. 23.
Opinion columnist Corey Cooling discusses the influence of professors and Clifton Chancey.
Panther sport teams will wear pink garb for breast cancer awareness.
CAMPUS LIFE PG 6
OPINION PG 4
Opinion 4
Campus Life 6
SPORTS PG 8
Sports 8
Games 10
Classifieds 11
DANCE MARATHON
Runners meet the color of the rainbow KATHERINE JAMTGAARD Staff Writer
A confection of colors splattered University of Northern Iowa students during the 5Kolor Run on Sept. 23, as students raced to raise funds for the University of Iowa Children’s Hospital. Sponsored by UNI Dance Marathon, students raised $5,000 to go toward a new pediatric intensive care unit room for the children’s hospital. “I think what appeals to you (about the race) is that it was going to be everyone on campus and I thought the whole color run part of it was
ERIN KEISER/Northern Iowan
Participants of the Dance Marathon 5Kolor Run get splashed with orange dye. The event raised $5,000 for the University of Iowa Children’s Hospital.
a really fun thing to do and it’s a fun way to get exercise,” said Abbie Provost, freshman
elementary education major. The race started at the Office of Sustainability
LIVE MUSIC
and runners passed through five different color stations. Volunteers lined up to throw colored corn starch at the runners while others squirted them with water guns and tossed water balloons at them, turning their white apparel into tiedyed works of art. It cost $25 to register for the race, but UNI Dance Marathon did not < See 5KOLOR, page 6
ERIN KEISER/Northern Iowan
LGBT
Bands take the stage at Octopus RILEY COSGROVE Staff Writer
Cedar Falls can get “nasti” at the Octopus on College Hill on Sept. 25.
Pop quartet Annaliberia and electronic psychedelic folk band MR. NASTI are currently touring together to support their newest music releases.
Annaliberia, a Des Moines based group, just released their third extended play record. Their newest EP is self-titled and has gained positive reviews from publications like the Ames Tribune and Cityview, a magazine in Des Moines. MR. NASTI recently released their new single “Change It.” The Fairfield, Iowa, band uses themes of life and death through electronic dance music. The show begins at 8 p.m and the cover charge is $5. Participants must be 21 years old to attend.
WANT MORE INFO ABOUT OCTOPUS? ERIN KEISER/Northern Iowan
Visit them on Facebook or call 317-242-7789.
Heterosexism still prominent among college students AMBER ROUSE
Staff Writer
Although young adults and the college population are more likely to support lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender issues than the rest of the general population, a study published recently by the Journal of Community Practice shows that “heterosexism” — a bias in favor of opposite-sex relationships — is still obvious among students. For the study, over 2,500 heterosexual students were surveyed. One in five were opposed or neutral to LGBT specific policies regarding employment and one in three were opposed or neutral to same-sex marriage and civil
unions. At the University of Northern Iowa, the presence of the LGBT commu-
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For many people, college is the time of their lives that is the most integrative, the most collaborative and the most equal. Carissa Froyum-Roise
Associate Professor of Sociology
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nity is steadily growing more prominent, especially with an LGBT center opening in < See STUDY, page 2
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