BSU 11-11-15

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DN WEDNESDAY, NOV. 11, 2015

THE DAILY NEWS

BALLSTATEDAILY.COM

Can you crack the code? Escape Room opens in Indianapolis

MOVING ON Ball State field hockey

coach returns to Australia SEE PAGE 5

SEE PAGE 3

WE PEOPLE remember what ‘

want to help

PHOTO COURTESY OF WIKIPEDIA

Obie Trice is starting his Cheers to the Hangover tour with a stop in Muncie at Be Here Now on Thursday. The doors open at 8 p.m., and he will be performing at midnight.

HIP-HOP ARTIST TO PERFORM AT BE HERE NOW THURSDAY

VETERANS DAY

Obie Trice, partially notable for working with big hiphop names—like Eminem, Dr. Dre, Tupac and The Notorious B.I.G.—and partially for surviving a shot to the head, is kicking off his Cheers to the Hangover tour with a stop in Muncie. Trice will play at Be Here Now on Thursday. The doors open at 8 p.m. and Trice takes the stage at midnight, according to Be Here Now’s Facebook event page. The event is $15 for people 21 and older and $25 for everyone else. The show is for 18 and older. Trice was first signed to Shady Records in 2000 after several appearances in productions such as the movie “8 Mile” and Eminem’s “The Eminem Show” album. Trice’s first album also included production from the “rap god,” with Eminem contributing alongside Dre, Busta Rhymes, Nate Dogg and Tony Yayo. Trice will perform after seven opening acts starting with KAY05, Matt Foy and Phonomancer. Foy said sharing a stage with an artist that has toured extensively, such as Trice, is always a “special opportunity.” “That’s where we all want to be: … on tour getting paid to do what we love,” he said. Other acts include L.A.M.E. Crew and Planet Boom Bap, both returning to Be Here Now to brandish their unique styles of hip-hop.

is all about.’

Student Veteran Organization hosts holiday ceremony ALLIE KIRKMAN MULTICULTURAL REPORTER

W

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aekirkman@bsu.edu

hen Lydia Holliday joined the U.S. Marine Corps after high school, her family was surprised. The Ball State student and secretary of the Student Veteran Organization said they expected her to study, go to school and graduate from college. “My family is Hispanic and they don’t believe in women serving,” Holliday said. “I don’t believe in traditional things, so I broke the stereotype of my home and did what I wanted to do.” In honor of those who served the nation in the past and present and all who have fallen, SVO will host a ceremony at 11 a.m. today in the Cardinal Hall Ballroom in the L.A. Pittenger Student Center. SVO is hosting the ceremony in hopes of attracting a large crowd of students, community members and veterans, said Travis Stinson, a U.S. Marine Corps veteran and president

– ZACH BURGER

Grove offers residents ride in white limo

of the Student Veteran Organization. “The ceremony is all about honoring not only the local veterans but every veteran who has served and sacrificed,” Stinson said. “We want to help people remember what Veterans Day is all about.” For Holliday, Veterans Day is about reminding people that their freedom comes with great sacrifice.

Apartment complex provides luxury transportation to campus

See VETERANS, page 4

TEAM RETURNS 4 STARTERS FROM LAST YEAR Ball State seeks 4th consecutive winning season |

COLIN GRYLLS GENERAL REPORTER @Colin_Grylls

One year removed from winning the Mid-American Conference West Division women’s basketball title with a 13-5 conference record (17-14 overall), Ball State was picked to finish second in the division in the MAC coaches’ preseason poll. Head coach Brady Sallee doesn’t mind the results of the poll, as the Cardinals pulled more first-place votes (8) than division favorite

Eastern Michigan (4). “I think those preseason polls are about as useful as wet toilet paper,” he said. “We don’t talk about them, whether we’re picked first, last, whatever.” With Sallee at the helm, Ball State has three consecutive winning seasons and looks to make it four in 2015-16, with Sallee giving all the credit to the players. “I learned a long time ago this level’s got very little to do with coaching,” he said. “Recruiting is big and being able to have really good players. ... What separates people is the talent level that they’re able to put in their jerseys.” Four returning players started at least 15 games last season

MUNCIE, INDIANA TODAY IS VETERANS DAY. THANK YOU FOR PROTECTING OUR COUNTRY.

CONTACT US

News desk: 285-8245 Sports desk: 285-8245 Features desk: 285-8245

DN FILE PHOTO BREANNA DAUGHERTY

The Ball State women’s basketball team was picked to finish second in the MidAmerican Conference West Division in the MAC coaches’ preseason poll. Senior Nathalie Fontaine is coming into the season as the sixth all-time leading scorer with 1,506 points at Ball State.

— senior Nathalie Fontaine and juniors Jill Morrison, Renee Bennett and Calyn Hosea. Last season, senior Shelby Merder and sophomore Moriah Monaco appeared in all 31 TWEET US

Editor: 285-8249 Classified: 285-8247 Fax: 285-8248 1. CLOUDY

Receive news updates on your phone for free by following @bsudailynews on Twitter.

6. RAIN

11. SNOW FLURRIES

2. MOSTLY CLOUDY

|

JENNA LISTON GENERAL REPORTER jrliston@bsu.edu

If you ever see a white limo cruising through campus through the day, it’s what drives residents of The Grove to and from campus. The Grove, an apartment complex located on Oakwood Avenue, started the transportation service for students this year. The price is included in their overall rent each month. For students, pulling up in the limo is a chance to not have to drive or walk to campus. Rachael Dominguez, a graduate student at Ball State studying actuarial science, said the rides are convenient for her and save her extra money because she doesn’t have to buy a parking pass. “At first I thought it was kind of cheesy, and many people were asking me questions about the limo, but I don’t mind it,” Dominguez said. The Grove provides transportation with two different vehicles. The main vehicle used for students is the bus, which includes plush leather couches, some seats with a recliner lever and hand rails for students to stand if there are no seats left. The second vehicle is the white limo, only used when the bus has maintenance issues and is being worked on. THE PULSE OF BALL STATE

games, averaging more than 15 minutes per game. While none of them are “drill-sergeanttype” leaders, Sallee said, several could step up and fill the role.

See BASKETBALL, page 5

THE PULSE OF BALL STATE

See LIMO, page 4

THE PULSE OF BALL STATE

VOL. 95, ISSUE 32 FORECAST TODAY

Clear skies

High: 59 Low: 49 3. PARTLY CLOUDY

5. SUNNY

4. MOSTLY SUNNY

Thunderstorms return this evening along with gusty winds. Expect sunny skies for the remainder of the week and into the weekend. - Nathan DeYoung, WCRD weather forecaster

THE PULSE OF BALL STATE

myvoice.bsu.edu

7. PERIODS OF RAIN

12. SCATTERED FLURRIES

10. DRIZZLE

9. SCATTERED SHOWERS

13. SNOW SHOWERS

IT’S YOUR CAMPUS. IT’S YOUR CHANCE. IT’S YOUR VOICE. 15. HEAVY SNOW

16. SLEET

SUBMIT YOUR IDEAS BY NOVEMBER 13. 19. RAIN/SNOW MIX

20. THUNDERSTORMS

17. FREEZING RAIN

18. WINTRY MIX

@bsumyvoice

21. SCATTERED THUNDERSTORMS

facebook.com/bsumyvoice

Ball State University


PAGE 2 | WEDNESDAY, NOV. 11, 2015 | THE BALL STATE DAILY NEWS | BALLSTATEDAILY.COM

FORUM

Got beef? Join the conversation. Email us at opinion@bsudailynews.com to get your voice out there.

OPINION@BSUDAILYNEWS.COM

FIVE TAKEAWAYS FROM REPUBLICAN DEBATE KAITLIN LANGE KAITLIN’S LANGEUAGE KAITLIN LANGE IS A JOURNALISM AND POLITICAL SCIENCE MAJOR AND WRITES ‘KAITLIN’S LANGEUAGE’ FOR THE DAILY NEWS. HER VIEWS DO NOT NECESSARILY AGREE WITH THOSE OF THE NEWSPAPER. WRITE TO KAITLIN AT KLLANGE@BSU.EDU.

I always learn something new during the presidential debates. Sure, I learn about the candidates’ political policies, but I also know an odd amount about their parents’ jobs. Mark Rubio’s father was a bartender and his mother was a maid. John Kasich’s father “carried mail on his back.” Of course, Ben Carson also pulled the family card as he mentioned his granddaughter was in the crowd. And we can’t forget about Ted Cruz’s mother, whom he almost always brings up when social security is brought up. Looking past the candidates’ attempts to play the family card and appeal to voters’ emotions, here are five takeaways from the Fox Business Network and Wall Street Journal GOP Debate.

1. As usual, Bernie Sanders received little to no attention during the Republican debate. Everyone on the stage

seemed to assume they would be facing Clinton next November. Gerard Baker, one of the moderators, at one point said, “You’ll probably be facing a Democrat named Clinton.” Another question the moderators asked referred to how the Republican candidates would compete against all of Clinton’s experience. While Clinton is still polling the best out of all the Demo-

THINGS TO KNOW ABOUT THE REPUBLICAN DEBATE WHERE THE DEBATE TOOK PLACE

Milwaukee Theater in Milwaukee, Wis. In this same venue on Oct. 14, 1912, Teddy Roosevelt was shot in the chest shortly before giving a campaign speech. “It takes more than that to kill a bull moose,” he said. WHO PARTICIPATED AND WHERE DID THEY STAND?

Donald Trump Ben Carson Marco Rubio Ted Cruz Carly Fiorina Jeb Bush Rand Paul John Kasich WHO MODERATED?

Maria Bartiromo and Neil Cavuto, anchors at Fox Business, and Garard Baker, the Wall Street Journal’s editor-in-chief, moderated the debate. THE NEXT REPUBLICAN DEBATE

Dec. 15 in Las Vegas.

cratic candidates, Sanders has steadily increased in popularity, yet remains unacknowledged.

2. Kasich is getting aggressive. During the first Republi-

can debate, he mainly faded in the background, except for his brief moment of fame when he tolerated gay marriage. Tuesday’s debate was vastly different for the Ohio governor. He was quick to interrupt people and ask for his time to talk. At one point, even Donald Trump told Kasich to let Jeb Bush speak. However, the attention wasn’t necessarily positive.

3. Essentially every candidate in the primaries, Republican and Democrat, has

mentioned big banks. They use it as a talking point, but Tuesday’s debate emphasized how some of them simply don’t have a strong solution. Cruz mentioned he wouldn’t bail out the big banks, but avoided the question of if he would just let them fail. Kasich too said he wouldn’t bail them out, but also wouldn’t let them fail. His wishy-washy response elicited some of the only “boos” of the night. 4. Overall, the Republican candidates agreed on most topics. Most want small government, flat taxes and a stagnant national minimum wage. The one topic they

couldn’t seem to agree on was the military. Rand Paul’s views on the topic especially stood out. While all of the other candidates supported a no-fly zone over Syria, Paul didn’t. All of the other candidates also called for a strong military presence, while Paul wanted to reduce spending on all fronts, including military spending. The moderators essentially lost control of the debate as Rubio and Paul went back and forth discussing military expenditures. Other candidates also capitalized on the discussion and jumped in before moderators could regain control.

EDITORIAL BOARD

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Kaitlin Lange MANAGING EDITOR Jake Fox

feedback on our website. Letters to the editor must be signed and appear as space permits each day. The limit for letter length is approximately 350 words. All letters must be typed. The editor reserves the right to edit and

PRINT EDITOR Christopher Stephens CREATIVE DIRECTOR Ashley Downing

IDESK EDITOR Rachel Podnar SOCIAL MEDIA COORDINATOR Alan Hovorka

FORUM EDITOR Anna Bowman NEWS EDITOR Kara Berg

Crossword ACROSS 1 Inaugural ball, e.g. 5 Calcium source 9 Open, as toothpaste 14 Very dry 15 Down to business 16 Former Cleveland oil company acquired by BP 17 San __, Italy 18 “Of course” 19 Match with bishops 20 Access to 54-Across 23 Catalina, e.g. 24 Houston-based scandal subject 25 Wood-shaping tools 27 Phone button trio 30 Badminton barrier 31 Short-legged dog 32 Emotionally out of control 34 “Mad” social in 54-Across 37 Spud 38 Benefit 39 Butte relative 40 Like 2016 41 Antacid choice 42 Deteriorate 43 34-Across napper in 54-Across 45 Remove pieces from? 46 Fencing defense 47 Keep out 48 Mao __-tung 49 Shortening brand 51 Divided country

condense submissions. The name of the author is usually published but may be withheld for compelling reasons, such as physical harm to the author. The editor decides this on an individual basis and must consult the

ASST. NEWS EDITOR Rose Skelly FEATURES EDITOR Danielle Grady

5. Paul was the clear winner. The crowd resonated with

him as he questioned how conservative Rubio was. Paul criticized his plans for a tax credit for those with children. And seconds later asked, “How is it conservative to add a trillion dollars in military expenditures?” Despite his strong performance, Paul may be too far down in the polls for a recovery, easily behind Trump, Carson, Rubio, Cruz and Bush. And the most important takeaway from the night? Trump was on “60 Minutes” with Vladimir Putin once.

EDITED BY RICH NORRIS AND JOYCE LEWIS

53 Wild West weapon 54 Setting for a novel originally published 11/11/1865 59 Loafs 61 Some intersections 62 Slushy treat 63 Approaches 64 Bond girl Kurylenko 65 Facial area under a soul patch 66 Prickly shrub 67 Corset stiffener 68 Fish caught in pots DOWN 1 Teri of “Tootsie” 2 Neck of the woods 3 Common perch 4 Acrobat creator 5 Restaurant host 6 Soup server’s caution 7 Use, as a chaise 8 “As seen on TV” record co. 9 Pac-12 powerhouse 10 Baseball rarities 11 Critter who kept disappearing in 54-Across 12 It may be graded in an auditorium 13 Plays to the camera 21 Deep-seated

Sudoku CROSSWORD SOLUTION FOR MONDAY

22 Online money source 26 Alsatian dadaist 27 Took steps 28 “Top Chef” network 29 Hookah smoker 54-Across 31 Bus. brass 33 Highly respected Buddhists 34 Improvised booster seat for a tot, maybe 35 Romanov royals 36 Selfcongratulatory cheer 38 Active 41 “The Burden of Proof” author 42 Restaurant visitor 44 Hobbit enemy 45 Venture to express 47 Barrio food store 49 Keeping in the loop, briefly 50 Wild West show 51 Lowered oneself? 52 Visitor to 54-Across 55 Plains people 56 Overexertion aftermath 57 Diamond of music 58 Man caves, maybe 60 Nottingham-toLondon dir.

| BY MICHAEL MEPHAM

SUDOKU SOLUTION FOR MONDAY

writer before withholding the name. Those interested in submitting a letter can do so by emailing opinion@ bsudailynews.com or editor@bsudailynews.com

SPORTS EDITOR Robby General ASST. SPORTS EDITOR Chase Akins

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FORUM POLICY The Daily News forum page aims to stimulate discussion in the Ball State community. The Daily News welcomes reader viewpoints and offers three vehicles of expression for reader opinions: letters to the editor, guest columns and

THEWEATHER FORECAST ICO DN

MULTIMEDIA EDITOR Breanna Daugherty ASST. MULTIMEDIA EDITOR Samantha Brammer

01 - CLOUDY

THURSDAY Cloudy, breezy High: 52 Low: 39 FRIDAY Partly cloudy, breezy High: 46 Low: 30

03 - PARTLY CLOUDY

SATURDAY Clear High: 48 Low: 35 05 - SUNNY

SUNDAY Clear High: 56 Low: 40 05 - SUNNY

SERVICE DIRECTORY

The Ball State Daily News (USPS144-360), the Ball State student newspaper, is published Monday through Thursday during the academic year and Monday and Thursday during summer sessions; zero days on breaks and holidays. The Daily News is supported in part by an allocation from the General Fund of the university and is available free to students at various points on campus. POSTAL BOX The Daily News offices are in AJ 278, Ball State University, Muncie, IN 47306-0481. Periodicals postage paid in Muncie, Ind. TO ADVERTISE Classified department 765-285-8247 Display department 765-285-8256 or 765-285-8246. Office hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday. TO SUBSCRIBE Call 765-285-8250 between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday. Subscription rates: $90 for one year. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Daily News, AJ 278, Ball State University, Muncie, IN 47306. BACK ISSUES Stop by AJ 278 between noon and 10 p.m. Sunday through Thursday and afternoons Friday. CORRECTIONS To report an error in print or online, email editor@bsudailynews.com with the following information: the date, if it appeared in print or online, the headline, byline and an explanation of why it is incorrect.

DESIGN EDITOR Krista Sanford GRAPHICS EDITOR Tyson Bird

COPY DIRECTOR Melissa Jones ASST. COPY DIRECTOR Sophie Gordon


WEDNESDAY, NOV. 11, 2015 | THE BALL STATE DAILY NEWS | BALLSTATEDAILY.COM | PAGE 3

FEATURES

Escape Room opens in Indianapolis New attraction tests patience, problem-solving

|

MEGAN MELTON GENERAL REPORTER memelton@bsu.edu

Find the code. Get the key. Solve the riddle. Escape the room. It might sound like a spy movie, but it’s actually real life. The Escape Room Indianapolis is where thrill-seeking intellectuals flock to put their abilities to the test. Participants choose to be locked into one of the business’s five themed rooms and are given 60 minutes to solve brain teasers of all types and escape.

Scott Neal is a founder and CEO of the business, which became the first escape room in Indiana when it opened on Oct. 2. “The puzzles are varied,” Neal said, “Some are mathematical, others are logical. Some are riddles, finding keys and figuring out combinations.” Neal’s implemented an upscale vision for The Escape Room Indianapolis. “We have a lounge, we serve beer and wine, … and it’s not in a back alley somewhere or in some warehouse,” Neal said, “It’s right in the middle of Indianapolis.” Above the Old Spaghetti Factory at 200 S. Meridian St., to be exact. The idea for The Escape Room came to Neal and his

DOGS OF MUNCIE

WHAT:

The Escape Room Indianapolis WHERE:

200 S. Meridian St., Indianapolis (Above the Old Spaghetti Factory) PRICE:

$29 per person ROOMS:

KGB Interrogation Room, Jail Break, Bank Heist, Art Gallery and Hoosier Hysteria.

wife on a make-or-break trip to Budapest, Hungary. Neal lost his job flying as a corporate pilot, but the couple had already scheduled a European trip to their favorite city. “We were kind of torn between, ‘Do we go on the trip and pray that I get some sort of steady in-

BREANNA DAUGHERTY IS A JUNIOR PHOTOJOURNALISM MAJOR AND PHOTOGRAPHS ‘DOGS OF MUNCIE‘ FOR THE DAILY NEWS. HER VIEWS DO NOT NECESSARILY AGREE WITH THOSE OF THE NEWSPAPER. WRITE TO BREANNA AT BLDAUGHERTY2@BSU.EDU. ‘DOGS OF MUNCIE‘ IS A PHOTO FEATURE SHOWCASING DIFFERENT DOGS IN THE MUNCIE AREA. FOR MORE DOGS, FOLLOW @DOGSOFMUNCIE ON TWITTER, SEARCH #DOGSOFMUNCIE ON INSTAGRAM, CHECK OUT THE BLOG ON BALLSTATEDAILY.COM OR GO TO DOGSOFMUNCIE.WORDPRESS.COM.

come afterwards?’ or, ‘Do we cancel it?’” Neal said. They decided to chance it. In Budapest, they visited one of the city’s popular tourist attractions — an escape room. “It was an old, Soviet-era apartment building. You know, crumbling from several decades of wear and tear, and it was in a basement through an iron door,” Neal said. “It was kind of moldy and smelly, and everything was peeling and the furniture was falling apart, but we had a great time.” On the flight home, Neal and his wife decided they would do research on the industry, and in October of last year, they officially formed the company. They had never founded

a business on this scale and the new experience brought obstacles. “I never doubted it would work out at all,” Neal said. “I just had to convince everyone else around me that it would work.” And he wasn’t disappointed. The Escape Room Indianapolis has had many participants from all over the state. College kids are part of their target audience. The students who come don’t seem to mind the drive, Neal said. Some Ball State students wouldn’t either. “[The Escape Room] sounds really cool,” said Ian Smith, a junior social studies education major. “It is certainly a new challenge and would be a unique experience.”

PHOTO COURTESY OF ESCAPEROOMHUB.COM

Part of the challenge is The Escape Room’s “no cellphones, no cheating” rule. Each room has video surveillance to make sure the rules are followed. An Escape Room visit costs $29 per person, and participants can choose from the KGB Interrogation Room, Jail Break, Bank Heist, Art Gallery and Hoosier Hysteria.

Are you looking to

MAKE A DIFFERENCE in the life of a child?

The YOC is seeking an Applied Behavior Analyst (ABA) Qualifications: A master’s degree in applied behavior analysis from an accredited school. Board Certified Behavior Analyst (BCBA) preferred. Experience working with children with developmental and intellectual disabilities (DD/ ID) preferred. Compensation is *$40,000 with full benefits. If interested, complete an application at yocinc.org or stop by our office:

This is Harley. He’s a very friendly 7-year-old Australian cattle dog that I met at the Annual Bed Races for Homecoming Week in 2014. His human told me that it was his third homecoming.

YOC Human Resource Dept. (Entrance #1) 3700 W. Kilgore Ave., Muncie

Summer Plans?

Lea der shi p

Apply to be an

Orientation Leader FREE summer housing FREE summer meal plan $7.25 per hour pay The Office of Orientation seeks to employ Student and Family Leaders for the summer orientation program (May 24—July 14, 2016). Student Leaders work up to 36 hours a week with a total compensation package exceeding $3,500. Family Leaders work up to 20 hours a week with a total compensation package exceeding $1,600. Visit the site below to learn more about the position, choose your interview date, and apply. Applications are due Nov. 20 at 5 p.m.

bsu.edu/orientation/apply

Make memories here. Make friendships and memories that will last a lifetime at University Apartments. Experience the most affordable apartment living with the added convenience of being on campus! We have several unique benefits that you’ll love: • 1, 2, 3 bedroom apartments and townhomes • Semester and yearly leases • Free utilities • Monthly activities • Free campus shuttle and on the MITS line • 24/7 maintenance • On-site laundry • Rent starts at $345 per person Save money! Ask about our leasing specials!

Apply online today at bsu.edu/apartments 3460 N. Tillotson Ave., Muncie (765) 285-5095

University Apartments www.bsu.edu/apartments


PAGE 4 | WEDNESDAY, NOV. 11, 2015 | THE BALL STATE DAILY NEWS | BALLSTATEDAILY.COM

NEWS

Students opt out of flu vaccine

Health Center offers preventative shots each day

|

LAURA ARWOOD GENERAL REPORTER llarwood@bsu.edu

It’s flu season again. Last year’s flu epidemic filled up beds at IU Health Ball Memorial Hospital, but students say they still aren’t getting the flu vaccine. The Ball State University Student Health Center offers flu shots to students daily from 8-11 a.m. and from 1-4:30 p.m., by appointment or walk-in. Students are encouraged to get vaccinated to prevent the flu from spreading. Around 40 percent of adults got the flu vaccine in 2012-13, according to the

Centers for Disease Control. Sophomore nursing major Ashley Criswell said she usually doesn’t get vaccinated for the flu, but is planning on doing it this year because she is required to for her major. Criswell said students may resist getting flu shots because of their age. “We hear flu prevention for the very young and the very old, but never really anything for our age, which is kind of a bad deal,” Criswell said. “It’s spread so easily on campus. A lot of people think they’ll never get that sick, so I resisted getting one. But I can’t resist anymore because I have clinicals in the spring.” Some students refuse the vaccine because it makes them sick. Rachel Selke, a sophomore art education major, said her encounter

with the flu vaccine was not a good one. “Apparently, I have the rare thing [that] when I get a flu shot, I get the actual, full-blown flu,” she said. “It’s the only time I ever got the flu in my life, so I’m not going to be getting it again.” However, Selke said she may think differently when she’s teaching children. Kelsey Moore, a nurse practitioner at American Health Network in Muncie, said unless patients are allergic to the vaccine, the vaccine won’t make them sick. She recommends her patients get vaccinated. “When you get the flu vaccine, it does lower your immune system at first while it begins to work, so therefore if [you] were starting to get sick anyways it does make the symptoms more notice-

Bed bugs, scabies return to dorms

Students reported at least 2 cases during October

|

LAURA ARWOOD GENERAL REPORTER llarwood@bsu.edu

Editor’s note: If you have had trouble with bed bugs or scabies this semester and would be willing to talk to the Daily News about it, please email news@bsudailynews.com. Bed bugs and scabies outbreaks are back again in the residence halls this year. Bed bugs cases have been reported in LaFollette Complex and Woodworth Complex. Woodworth has also had reports of scabies. Matt Kovach, assistant director of Housing and Residence Life, said housing works to fight bed bugs, but a few still slip through. “Honestly, the cases we’ve had have been pretty rare,” Kovach said. “I’m not saying we haven’t had them, but we do a lot of things preemptively to prevent it from happening. In the summer, we clean all the rooms, we seal our mattresses in hypoallergenic bags. We do what we can.” There were two confirmed cases of bed bugs last year. Kovach wouldn’t confirm how many cases there were this year. However, there were at least two cases reported in one weekend in October. Bed bugs and scabies hide in soft things, like clothing, luggage and bedding, which makes them hard to detect. They aren’t considered dangerous, but scabies burrow eggs under the skin and require follow-up treatment, according to cdc.gov. The procedure in place for a bed bug or scabies infestation begins by

LIMO:

SIGNS OF BED BUGS AND SCABIES SCABIES SYMPTOMS:

• Intense itching, a pimple-like itchy rash. • Found in the wrist, elbow, armpit, webbing between the fingers, nipples, genitals, waist, belt-line and buttocks. • Burrows are sometimes visible on skin, appear as “tiny raised and crooked grayish-white or skin-colored lines on the skin surface.” HOW IS IT SPREAD?

• Usually is spread by direct, prolonged, skin-to-skin contact with a person who has scabies. • A quick handshake or hug usually will not spread scabies. • Easily spread through sexual partners and housemates • Sometimes spread indirectly by sharing articles such as clothing, towels or bedding used by an infested person BED BUGS SYMPTOMS:

• Range from an absence of any physical signs of the bite, to a small bite mark, to a serious allergic reaction • Found usually on face, neck, arms or hands • Usually gone unnoticed until days after bitten Source: cdc.gov sending the student to the Health Center to diagnose the bite. “Once the Health Center has determined it’s not a spider bite or something else, once we know it’s a case of either bed bugs or scabies, we sanitize and heat,” Kovach said. Pest control will visit a dorm room and set up traps, housing staff will wash all bedding and drapery with a heater left in the room to exterminate and sanitize. Scabies procedure calls for four to six weeks of follow-up treatment. “Our staff will come in and swap out mattresses,” Kovach said. “If they can be treated, great. If not, they’ll be disposed of.” Freshman actuarial science major Kathryn Mirabella and freshman public relations major Lindsey Sharp said the location of

the bed bugs is concerning. “Man, I feel like I shouldn’t be sitting here [in Woodworth Commons]. I feel like this is one of the more trafficked food courts, so it’s definitely a little freaky,” Mirabella said. Sharp said she thinks students living in residence halls should be given instructions on how to look for bed bugs and what to expect. “Do kids know to go to the Health Center when they have a bug bite?” Sharp said. “I wouldn’t go, I would just think I have a bug bite. When we move in, we should be briefed on this.” Mirabella said she plans to tell her friends about the bed bugs and scabies. “Now I’m going to go to my friends and say, ‘Hey, be aware,’” she said “Because that’s not something you get in a list of instructions.”

| CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 Ashley Stowe, a sophomore women and gender studies major, said this is her first year at The Grove and enjoys it because of these special benefits. “The new transportation is a big reason why I chose The Grove,” Stowe said. The bus has broken down numerous times and had an original completion deadline of Nov. 2. As of now, the main bus is back and running for students to use, so students won’t see the limo cruising up and down McKinley again until the bus needs maintenance. Students said it was fun to ride to class in the limo but didn’t feel as comfortable compared to the bus. “I was excited at first, then the novelty wore off

DN PHOTO JENNA LISTON

The Grove is providing transportation for students to get to and from campus without having to drive themselves with a limo and a shuttle bus. The white limo is used when the bus is having maintenance issues and being operated on.

with how uncomfortable it is getting on and off,” said historical researcher Olivia Boles. Boles posted a photo on her Instagram showing followers how cramped the limo is. Bus driver Stephania Grove said the bus is more

cost efficient because it has room for more students and uses gas more efficiently. Students who are current residents at The Grove can use this service between 7:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m., Monday through Friday to get to and from campus.

able,” Moore said. “I will have patients say, ‘Well I did have a runny nose when I got the vaccine before.’ Then it is not the flu vaccine that caused you to be ill.” Preventative measures can ward off the flu, and Deidre Dorman, health center director, said good hand hygiene and properly covering a cough are instrumental in prevention. Research conducted by Xu Lu from the University of Findlay in Ohio found college students may not be washing their hands properly. Once students were instructed with hand washing protocol from CDC, hand hygiene significantly improved, according to the American Journal of Infection Control. The CDC recommends hand washing before, during and after prepar-

VETERANS:

FLU FACTS

• Flu season is from October to May • The vaccine takes two weeks to take effect • Most flu vaccines protect against the H1NI, H3N2 and influenza B viruses. • Shots are manufactured by growing the flu virus in eggs • Higher dose vaccines are given to people 65 and older. • Everyone 6 months and older is recommended to get a flu shot Source: cdc.gov ing food, eating food, caring for someone who is sick, after using the toilet, changing diapers, blowing your nose, coughing or sneezing, touching an animal, animal waste or animal food or touching garbage, according to cdc.gov. Covering coughs and sneezes and good hand hygiene helps, but the flu

vaccine is best, Dorman said. But even so, students still don’t plan on getting their vaccine this year. “No, I’m not getting this year,” said Dakota Clark, a sophomore telecommunications major. “I don’t know why not. I guess I just don’t care.”

| CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 “Freedom does not come free, it doesn’t not come free at all,” Holliday said. “Every day I was in the military, I thought of all the sacrifices that are made every day with how many go in and out and leave their homes to serve our country.” During that time serving in the Marine Corps for four years, Holliday never got to deploy because she was always working alongside sergeants, captains and lieutenants who looked at her to be the leader of her group. While she was serving, Holliday got married and had a child in Japan, but wasn’t there to be a part of his life as he group up. “Because I was serving in places like Malaysia, Cambodia, the Philippines and Thailand, I missed a whole year of my son growing,” Holliday said. “The sacrifice to be away from him was hard, and going through all I did emotionally broke me. That’s why I decided to get out.” In addition to missing her son, Holliday said she didn’t want her children to have to see or go through the things she did. In Thailand, Holliday saw the reality of poverty as people ate off of the floor, sold their bodies for meals and children begged for money. Holliday also worked with the clean-up crew in Japan, where she was surrounded by dead bodies and families crying out to the soldiers. But they didn’t speak English, so all she could understand from their Japanese was “excuse me” and “help.” “I don’t ever want my children to be missing me and ever have to see or go through that,” Holliday said. Once Holliday got out of the military, the transition from serving to being back in the U.S. was emotionally challenging. “The transition was hard

DN PHOTO BREANNA DAUGHERTY

The Student Veteran Organization will be hosting a Veterans Day ceremony at 11 a.m. in the Cardinal Hall Ballroom in the L.A. Pittenger Student Center. The group is hoping for a large crowd of students, community members and veterans.

for me because I am a mother, wife and daughter, and I got to see all of that at once,” she said. “It changed me.” Even though she has not been diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder — something that one in three veterans are diagnosed with, according to PTSD Foundation of America — Holliday said she still has images from overseas that haunt her. Holliday takes things one day at a time, but she is always proud to be a veteran. “I am grateful and thankful that I am alive and here, and I don’t take that for granted,” Holliday said. “I want others to know that it does not come free. [Veterans] don’t just do it just because. We sacrifice a lot just to get to this point.” The ceremony today will focus on honoring both local veterans and veterans all across the country. U.S. Navy veteran Meredith W. Fry with be awarded the Hometown Hero award during the ceremony as well. Fry enlisted in the Navy in 1942 and served as a Navy Corpsman during WWII. After serving, he went on to earn a bachelor’s degree in engineering from Tri-State, known today as Trine University. Later, he worked as the department head for the Physical Plant Planning

Office at Ball State University. In 1985, he earned his master’s in economics from the university and worked as the superintendent of Planning and Construction until his retirement in 1987. Even after his retirement, Fry still stays active. He currently belongs to more than 20 professional and military organizations. Members of SVO sent in nominations to the organization’s planning committee for the Hometown Hero award, but Anthony Marquez, SVO’s social media coordinator and U.S. Marine veteran, said nothing matched Fry’s resume. “Not only is he a World War II veteran, but he is also a Ball State Cardinal,” Marquez said. “He has been retired for so many years, but he has never stopped and continues to give back.” Although Fry is one veteran being awarded at the ceremony, Marquez emphasized the importance of giving thanks and honor to all veterans, not only on Veterans Day, but every day. “As long as I am alive, I will make sure that others around me know that it is because of the veterans that this country has the freedom to be what it is today,” Marquez said.


SPORTS SPORTS@BSUDAILYNEWS.COM TWITTER.COM/DN_SPORTS

WEDNESDAY, NOV. 11, 2015 | THE BALL STATE DAILY NEWS | BALLSTATEDAILY.COM | PAGE 5

FRIDAY The men’s basketball team travels to Peoria, Ill., to take on Bradley in its season opener. Tip-off is set for 8 p.m.

FIELD HOCKEY

FIRST-YEAR COACH RESIGNS Sally Northcroft decides to pursue other opportunities

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COLIN GRYLLS GENERAL REPORTER @Colin_Grylls

First-year Ball State field hockey coach Sally Northcroft announced her resignation on Monday to pursue opportunities outside of the United States. “After giving careful personal and professional consideration to my future, I have made the decision to return to Australia,” Northcroft said in a statement. “I feel privileged to have had the opportunity to coach at my alma mater. It has been an honor to be entrusted with this role, and I am extremely grateful to have been able to coach, educate, mentor and motivate this exceptional group of young women.”

Northcroft was a former player for the Cardinals, and her journey led her to Muncie this season. Ball State finished the 2015 season 2-16 overall with zero wins in Mid-American Conference play. The program has not finished above .500 since 1999 — Northcroft’s senior season as a player. That year, the Harare, Zimbabwe, native set single-season MAC records with 52 goals and 107 points and career records with 126 goals and 270 points, all of which still stand. She was inducted to the Ball State Athletics Hall of Fame in 2010 and the MAC Hall of Fame in 2014. She won the Honda Award as the nation’s top field hockey player and earned both MAC Player of the Year and All-American honors in two consecutive seasons. She was first-team All-MAC during her four-year career at Ball State and holds the NCAA Division-I

records for goals scored in a single game (7) and goals per game in a single season (2.74). Between her time playing and coaching with the Cardinals, Northcroft coached field hockey in Australia, first at Somerset College in Mudgeeraba and then at Brisbane Girls’ Grammar School, where she was also director of sports. In her statement, Northcroft also said she is confident the Cardinals will improve and draw closer to the Cardinals’ heyday during the ’80s and ’90s, when her former coach, Karen Fitzpatrick, led Ball State to 16 MAC regular season titles and 10 conference tournament championships. “The field hockey team has worked so incredibly hard this year, and I believe it is in a better place to now become a legitimate contender in the Mid-American Conference and beyond,” Northcroft said.

SATURDAY Women’s volleyball hosts Central Michigan in its final regular season match at 7 p.m.

BASKETBALL: | CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 “I’ve always believed that leaders emerge,” Sallee said. “You can’t make them. We’ve got some natural candidates—Nathalie Fontaine, one of the best players to ever come through these doors, [and] Jill Morrison, an all-conference-level kid.” Fontaine enters the season as Ball State’s sixth alltime leading scorer with 1,506 career points. “She’s got a chance to be the all-time leading scorer here if she has a good year,” Sallee said. “We don’t want her chasing that necessarily, but we think it can be a byproduct of her playing at a really high level. There’s no reason she’s not playing pro this time next year. She’s got that kind of talent.” After the Cardinals’ 151-72 exhibition victory on Nov. 3, Morrison, who finished fourth in the MAC last season by

sinking 38 percent of her shots from beyond the arc, said the returners have collectively helped the underclassmen. “I think our experienced players have really helped our new players adjust and learn that system quickly,” she said. “That’s going to help us in the long run. I think in the learning stages there’s definitely some things we can tighten up.” A pair of underclassmen — freshman Carmen Grande and sophomore Brionna Simond — are looking to fill the open point guard spot, Sallee said. “Between [Grande] and [Simond] I think, honestly, it can be a year of competition,” he said. “Whoever’s playing the best, we’re gonna put out there. But I think they’re both gonna play a ton of minutes for us.” Overall, the Cardinals thrived on efficiency in 2014-15, finishing second in the MAC in field goal percentage (41.9 percent), third in free throw percent-

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Help Wanted

age (73.5 percent) and field goal percentage against (36.7 percent). Sallee said the problem is that the team’s efficiency was often canceled out by the opposing team’s volume. Ball State was 10th in the MAC with a -2.7 rebounding margin. “We made it hard on ourselves last year because we didn’t have the number of possessions that the other team had,” Sallee said. “So we had to be that much more efficient.” Ball State opens the season on Friday at Charlotte and will play its home opener on Nov. 19 against Western Kentucky. Sallee said the Cardinals will be prepared for every game this season. “We’re going to try to beat everybody’s brains out, and I’m assuming everybody’s going to try to beat our brains out,” he said. “It’s what this level is, and for us, we focus on who we are. It’s not who we play, it’s how we play.”

(765) 285-8247 dnclassified@bsu.edu AJ 285, Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m. BallStateDaily.com/Classified 140

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Get connected with campus Today’s Birthday (11/11/15). Together, you can work miracles this year. Financial discipline earns a nice return. Your strength lies in your networks and communities. Discover new passion this spring, leading to a shift in priorities. Your team effort peaks next autumn, before changes in a romance. Love guides you. To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. (c) 2015, by Nancy Black. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC. All rights reserved.

Aries (March 21-April 19) Today is an 8. One door closes as a new one opens in a partnership, with this New Moon in Libra. Begin a new phase in your relationship. Realign your collaboration to new priorities. Support each other. Contribute to a miracle.

Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) Today is a 7. You’re learning new tricks. Complete old projects and launch new creative works, with the New Moon in Libra. Begin a new phase in communications, including research, broadcasting, writing, recording and publishing. Begin a new direction.

Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Today is a 7. Begin a new phase in friendship, social networks and community with tonight’s New Moon in Libra. A new stage dawns in a group endeavor. Together you can accomplish a goal that would be impossible for an individual.

Taurus (April 20-May 20) Today is a 9. With power comes responsibility. Begin a new phase in service, work and health, with tonight’s New Moon in Libra. Listen to your heart. Believe in your own abilities. Invest in your dreams. Expand doing what you love.

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today is a 9. A profitable new phase expands your finances under the Libra New Moon. A breakthrough in your relationship with money allows for a new level of prosperity. Abundance is available. Complete previous projects as you prepare for what’s next.

Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Today is an 8. New opportunities blossom. One professional phase ends as the next begins with this New Moon in Libra. A rise in status is available. Complete old promises and invent new possibilities. Work out terms and contracts.

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Today is a 9. Try something new. Begin a new personal phase with tonight’s New Moon in your sign. Take advantage of energy and confidence to step into leadership. Use your power for good. Rest to recharge your batteries.

Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Today is an 8. Your studies take off. Begin a new phase in education, travels and exploration under this New Moon in Libra. First person experience is most memorable. Go to the source. Follow your fascination and document what you find.

Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Today is a 6. Transitions mark a new phase in your private plans under the New Moon in Libra. Make the changes you’ve been wanting. Ask for what you’ve been promised. One game folds and another begins. Work your magic from backstage.

Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) Today is a 9. Set vacation goals. A turning point arises regarding family finances under this New Moon in Libra. Sit down and work it out, to discover new possibilities. Together you’re more powerful. Love finds a way. Take walks with your honey.

Gemini (May 21-June 20) Today is a 7. Complete one game and begin anew, with this New Moon in Libra. Begin a family, fun and passion phase. Play together. Transform your attitude. Completion fosters creativity. List what you want to be, do, have, and contribute. Cancer (June 21-July 22) Today is a 7. Try out an innovation at home. One domestic phase closes as another begins under this Libra New Moon. Complete the past and invent new possibilities. Relocation or renovation blooms. Share love and gratitude. Reaffirm a commitment.

B A L L S T A T E D A I L Y . C O M


PAGE 6 |WEDNESDAY, NOV. 11, 2015 | THE BALL STATE DAILY NEWS | BALLSTATEDAILY.COM

SPORTS

Ball State looks to compete in MAC Roster features new additions, more experience

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DAVID K. JONES GENERAL REPORTER @dkjones_BSU

The men’s basketball program has the tools to compete for a Mid-American Conference championship this year. Head coach James Whitford knows his team has the potential, but knows his lineup has to come and stick together. “We have to come together, but I certainly feel that we can be one of the teams to compete for it,” Whitford said. After Whitford labeled his second season as disappointing, he answered the questions that riddled Ball State last season by recruiting length, a true point guard and more experience. Senior guard/forward Ryan

Weber is the most notable addition to this year’s roster. He maintains junior eligibility after sitting out a season due to transfer rules. Weber and MAC Freshman of the Year Sean Sellers (11.8 points per game, .440 3-point percentage) will face off against each other for the starting small forward position this upcoming season. Another notable player is the 6-foot-2 sophomore shooting guard Jeremie Tyler. After starting in all nine of his appearances last season, he was ruled academically ineligible for the second semester of the school year. During his time on the roster, Tyler averaged 12 points per game, with a 46.1 shooting percentage and .429 3-point percentage, which would have been in the top five in the MAC if he had played in enough games. His presence was missed on the court as he watched the Cardinals drop 17 straight

contests to end the season. Francis Kiapway filled in for Tyler as the starting shooting guard and finished seventh in the MAC for freshman scoring during his 28 appearances last season. Junior guard Naiel Smith is a new face this season, but will look to make an impact this season. The Brooklyn native is a point guard who brings a pass-first mentality to the position. Last season at San Jacinto College, Smith averaged nearly 7 points and five assists per game. He will look to challenge fifth-year senior Jeremiah Davis (7.1 points per game, 2.8 assists per game) for the starting point guard spot. Whitford will look to lead this upperclassman-heavy group as the team’s season begins on Friday in Peoria, Ill., against the Bradley Braves. “Coach is doing a great job of leading us,” Davis said. “But it’s on us to do

whatever we have to in order to win games.” Senior Bo Calhoun and junior Franko House are Ball State’s tandem at the power forward position. Calhoun stepped up for Ball State in a big way last season — he is the second-most improved offensive player in the conference behind Justin Moss of Buffalo, who was named MAC Player of the Year last season. Calhoun averaged 2.4 points per game and 3.1 rebounds per game in his 27 appearances in 2013. The 6-foot-6 man increased his average to 9.6 points per game and six rebounds per game, throughout the season, which included a 30-point outburst at Toledo. While Calhoun has proven what he can do as an individual, he knows his team has a lot to prove as a whole. “I’ve always been a person to work hard,” Calhoun said. “I feel like we have a lot to

prove as a team and not from the individual aspect.” Ball State’s “biggest” edition is the 7-foot-1 transfer from Davenport, Iowa, center Nate Wells. He is Ball State’s first 7-foot player since Lonnie Jones in 2001-02. Wells transferred from Bradley as a graduate student and will play this season. Last season, Wells averaged seven points per game, 3.3 rebounds and 1.4 blocks on his way to emerging as the starter for the Braves to end out his four-year career. Whitford’s first commit to this season’s string of new addition was 6-foot-9 freshman Trey Moses. Moses will likely be placed at the power forward and center position this season. He left high school as the No. 3 recruit in the state of Kentucky after averaging 12.5 points, eight rebounds and four blocks per game as a junior.

DN FILE PHOTO BREANNA DAUGHERTY

Ball State men’s basketball head coach James Whitford knows the team has the ability to compete in the Mid-American Conference this year. Junior power forward Franko House is looking to play a big role for the Cardinals this season.

When asked about Wells and Moses, Whitford only had good things to say. “I’m pleased with both of them,” Whitford said. “They both 75004 have really bright futures.”

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