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The Alpha Rho Chi Fraternity hosted Halloween Extravaganza on Oct. 28, 2015. They decorated the Architecture Atrium with themed tables, signs, drawings and orange lights.
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The Alpha Rho Chi Fraternity hosted Halloween Extravaganza on Oct. 28, 2015. They decorated the Architecture Atrium with themed tables, signs, drawings and orange lights.
David Vasquez, a 21-year-old UF architecture senior, places a jenga block while 26-year-old landscape architecture sophomore Gayandrial Henderson looks on. The game gathered a crowd as the tower managed not to topple after many close calls.
Blair Davis, right, a 23-year-old architecture and construction management junior, roasts a marshmallow in her halloween costume. The Halloween Extravaganza provided s'mores supplies - including fire - to everyone who came.
The Alpha Rho Chi Fraternity hosted Halloween Extravaganza on Oct. 28, 2015. They decorated the Architecture Atrium with themed tables, signs, drawings and orange lights.
David Vasquez, a 21-year-old UF architecture senior, places a jenga block while 26-year-old landscape architecture sophomore Gayandrial Henderson looks on. The game gathered a crowd as the tower managed not to topple after many close calls.
Taylor Mott-Smith, right, an architecture freshman, sketches interior design freshman Valerie Pretto, who was dressed as an angel in the Architecture Atrium on Oct. 28, 2015. The 18-year-old UF students participated in Alpha Rho Chi Fraternity’s Halloween extravaganza.
Students hang posters in the Architecture Atrium on Oct. 28, 2015. The event featured a donut eating game, water balloon fight, bean bag toss and photo booth.
Jessie Wang, a 20-year-old UF psychology junior, speaks at a Student Senate meeting on Oct. 27, 2015, about the University Athletic Association banning students from dancing or meeting outside Ben Hill Griffin Stadium. She asked senators to support the Asian American Student Union for its right to practice at the stadium.
Alex Landry (top center), a 23-year-old UF alum, chews cheesy pizza with his group of friends who call themselves “The Gumby Guys” at Gumby’s Pizza’s 30th anniversary on Oct. 26, 2015. The group has been meeting at Gumby’s every Wednesday after Bible study for about 7 years. On Wednesday’s, Gumby’s has $0.50 pizza rolls. “For college kids,” Landry said, “it’s the dream.”
Teonia Burton, a national outreach consultant for The Monument Quilt, decorates a square reading “believe in love again” for the quilt.
Participants used felt, zippers, stencils and paint to create squares for The Monument Quilt. Wild Iris co-owner Erica Merrell said the finished blanket will be over a mile long.
Teonia Burton, a national outreach consultant for The Monument Quilt, decorates a square reading “believe in love again” for the quilt.
Participants used felt, zippers, stencils and paint to create squares for The Monument Quilt. Wild Iris co-owner Erica Merrell said the finished blanket will be over a mile long.
Merrell chooses fabric to use on a square for The Monument Quilt. She said the workshop was held to help survivors heal and combat rape culture.
Sexual assault survivors came together to quilt their stories Oct. 19, 2015, at Wild Iris Books, a feminist bookstore at 22 SE 5th Ave. The evening was the last of three monthly workshops at Wild Iris where participants created squares for the Monument Quilt, a project that collects stories from rape and abuse survivors on red fabric squares and displays them in public spaces around the U.S.
A survivor sews her fabric square for the Monument Quilt.
Jim Obergefell smiles after retelling his experience in the federal marriage equality court case Obergefell v. Hodges to an audience in the university auditorium on Oct. 14, 2015. Obergefell, the lead plaintiff in the case, remembered ignoring the dissenting opinion when the Supreme Court ruled in his favor.
College Democrats president and economics senior Jesse Fallen, 21, watches the Democratic Primary Debate with more than 40 of his fellow club members at Murphree Commons on Oct. 13, 2015. While the club does not officially support any of the candidates, the College Democrats look forward to hearing what the candidates have to say, Fallen said. “Our members will get a better sense of what the candidates stand for and how they cope with pressure,” he said.
Lizzie Wetzel, a 21-year-old UF zoology senior, follows people on the Plaza of the Americas dressed as a shark on Oct. 8, 2015, during the UF Marine Biology Club’s Shark Week event. Wetzel, the club’s secretary, tried to engage the students in a giant game of sharks and minnows to promote the club.
UF Alpha Epsilon Delta honor society members (from left) Sabina Braverman, a 21-year-old UF psychology senior; Alex Huellssman, a 22-year-old fifth-year UF biology student; Jamie Luntz, a 19-year-old UF health science sophomore; and Michelle Smith, a 19-year-old UF health science sophomore rehearse for a puppet show in the Reitz Union Breezeway on Oct.5, 2015. They will perform at the Boys & Girls Club of Alachua County as part of a skin cancer awareness campaign.