BSU 11-4-2015

Page 1

DN WEDNESDAY, NOV. 4, 2015

OPINION

THE DAILY NEWS

THREE REASONS SOCCER DOMINATED THIS SEASON

BALLSTATEDAILY.COM

SEE PAGE 6

VIRTUAL VISIT Ball State now offering in-depth online campus tours STEPHANIE AMADOR | GENERAL REPORTER skamador@bsu.edu

V

irtual tours of campus are available for prospective students who are from out of the state, out of the country or just unable to fit a visit into their schedule. The virtual tour guides are meant to be more convenient for high school students and international students who are interested in Ball State. Students who find it hard to commit to the scheduling of on-campus tour guides can use the virtual tour guides to see around campus. Katrina Ent, a junior public relations major, worked with Communications Manager Alix Sappington and Associate Vice President of Enrollment Services Chris Munchel to start the program. See VIRTUAL, page 3

PHOTO COURTESY OF YOUVISIT.COM

Ball State now offers virtual tours of campus for students from out-of-state, out-of-country or unable to come to campus. The tours are in-depth and show an overview of the entire campus.

NOYER RESIDENT WHO DIED REMEMBERED AS ‘GREAT GUY’ One by one, about 30 Baker/Klipple staff members, fellow residents and friends gathered Tuesday night to celebrate the life of freshman computer science major and Noyer Complex resident Zachary Barnes. Barnes died unexpectedly Tuesday morning after falling ill, said Lisa Renze-Rhodes, director of media strategy. A high school classmate of Barnes’ talked about how Barnes would drive fellow students around on the back of his wheelchair. Baker/Klipple hall director Ashley Taylor led the conversation and said Barnes was extremely special to the floor. Taylor also said cards will be available at the Baker/ Klipple front desks, and there are plans to purchase a wreath for his family. Funeral arrangements are pending. If students would like to talk to someone about their emotions or about how Barnes’ loss is impacting them, they can call the Counseling Center at 765-285-1736 or go to Lucina Hall Room 320 to make an appointment. Timothy Hess, interim director of counseling and health services, said the Health Center will make time available for anyone who has been impacted by Barnes’ death. – MICHELLE KAUFMAN

Village coffee shop only place in Muncie to offer new brew

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ALAINA KING GENERAL REPORTER anking2@bsu.edu

A nozzle is pressed and dark liquid streams into a cup. Foam appears at the top, but the drink isn’t beer — it’s coffee.

SEE PAGE 3

MUNCIE, INDIANA CONTACT US

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

This innovative concoction is called nitro coffee and has been available at The Cup for about four months. It may not be brand new, but it’s still a novelty in Muncie. The Village business might have been the second place in Indiana to serve nitro coffee, said Kyle Raines, who is a general manager at The Cup. The Cup installed a system behind their counter to create the coffee. A double tap

runs down to three kegerators, which normally function as draft beer dispensers. The kegerators are filled with cold steep espresso running through a nitrogen tank. The coffee and nitrogen interact for about 48 hours, and the pressure creates a nitrogenous liquid. Nitro coffee’s origins are hazy, but Cuvee Coffee, a shop in Austin, Texas, started offering the drink in 2012.

The Cup employees found out about nitro coffee through the Internet, but a customer also mentioned nitro coffee after hearing about it during a visit to Texas. “After doing more research, we had everything installed within three days,” Raines said. The Cup has sold three to four half-barrel kegs, or 46.5 to 62 gallons-worth, of nitro coffee since it installed the equipment.

See CUP, page 4

CARDINALS FACING MUST-WIN SITUATION Ball State looks to stay bowl eligible in WMU matchup |

CHASE AKINS ASST. SPORTS EDITOR @akins27_akins

Ball State will travel to Western Michigan University in a must-win game if it hopes to keep its bowl eligibility alive. The Cardinals are coming in hot off a 20-10 win against University of Massachusetts and sit on a 3-6 record, needing to win the remainder of their games to qualify for the postseason.

INDIANA TOP 10 FOR BUSINESS ON THIS DAY IN 2008, BARACK OBAMA BECAME THE FIRST BLACK PRESIDENT.

Nitro coffee available at The Cup

Editor: 285-8249 Classified: 285-8247 Fax: 285-8248

Western Michigan is riding a four-game win streak, blowing out its latest victim, Eastern Michigan, 58-28. It has averaged 36 points per game while allowing 29. It’s high-scoring offense is one of the main threats Ball State’s head football coach Pete Lembo sees in the Bronco offense. “They’ve got some very explosive skill players that are performing very well right now on offense,” Lembo said. The bulk of their offense comes from their top two receivers, Daniel Braverman and Corey Davis.

See FOOTBALL, page 5

THE PULSE OF BALL STATE

THE PULSE OF BALL STATE

DN PHOTO BREANNA DAUGHERTY

Ball State travels to Western Michigan Thursday to play in a must-win game to keep its bowl eligibility for this season. Sophomore running back Darian Green has rushed 630 yards this season. THE PULSE OF BALL STATE

VOL. 95, ISSUE 29

TWEET US

Receive news updates on your phone for free by following @bsudailynews on Twitter. 1. CLOUDY

6. RAIN

FORECAST TODAY

Partly cloudy

High: 73 Low: 56 2. MOSTLY CLOUDY

7. PERIODS OF RAIN

THE AMAZING TASTE 11. SNOW FLURRIES

12. SCATTERED FLURRIES

3. PARTLY CLOUDY

High pressure and partly cloudy skies will remain over the area today with our temperatures to reach into the lower 70s. - Cody Blevins, WCRD weather forecaster

4. MOSTLY SUNNY

9. SCATTERED SHOWERS

5. SUNNY

10. DRIZZLE

13. SNOW SHOWERS

THE AMAZING TASTE 15. HEAVY SNOW

16. SLEET

17. FREEZING RAIN

THE PULSE OF BALL STATE

18. WINTRY MIX

GLOBAL FESTIVAL THIS THURSDAY | 5-8 p.m.

L.A. PITTENGER STUDENT CENTER

bsu.edu/dining > Special Events


PAGE 2 | WEDNESDAY, NOV. 4, 2015 | THE BALL STATE DAILY NEWS | BALLSTATEDAILY.COM

THE SKINNY

5 THINGS TO KNOW

TODAY

THE FORECAST POWERED BY WCRD.NET/WEATHER

THURSDAY Mostly cloudy High: 70 Low: 58 02 - MOSTLY CLOUDY

FRIDAY Thunderstorms early High: 64 Low: 41

3. PALESTINIANS SAY VIDEO BACKS CLAIMS

PHOTO COURTESY OF WIKIPEDIA

1. PUBLIC NOT WORRIED ABOUT WARMING WASHINGTON (AP) — Americans are hot but not too bothered by global warming. Most Americans know the climate is changing, but they say they are just not that worried about it, according to a new poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. And that is keeping the American public from demanding and getting the changes that are necessary to prevent global warming from reaching a crisis, according to climate and

RAMALLAH, West Bank (AP) — Recent videos show Israeli troops shooting a wounded Palestinian at close range, pepper-spraying Palestinian medics, ramming a Palestinian with a jeep and threatening refugee camp residents with tear gas “until you die” unless they stop throwing stones. Palestinians and Israeli human rights groups contend the images, many captured by amateur smartphone users, buttress long-standing allegations of

4. RUSSIAN STRIKES TAKE TOLL ON CIVILIANS

social scientists. As top-level international negotiations to try to limit greenhouse gas emissions start later this month in Paris, the AP-NORC poll taken in mid-October shows about two out of three Americans accept global warming and the vast majority of those say human activities are at least part of the cause. However, fewer than one in four Americans are extremely or very worried about it, according to the poll of 1,058 people.

KADIRLI, Turkey (AP) — The 4-year-old Syrian girl was ending her first trip to her grandparents’ house. Posing for the last family photos before returning to Turkey with her mother, Raghad dressed up in a pretty blue-and-white polka dot dress and put her hair up in ponytails with red barrettes. About an hour later, the family

EDITORIAL BOARD

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Kaitlin Lange MANAGING EDITOR Jake Fox

PRINT EDITOR Christopher Stephens CREATIVE DIRECTOR Ashley Downing

SEATTLE (AP) — Chipotle’s industry-leading commitment to tracking its ingredients from farm to table is being put to the have not been tested. Seven law entest by an E. coli outbreak that forcement agencies did not report data. has sickened at least 37 people The agency said the data is prelimias of Tuesday, nearly all of whom nary and the agencies might update the ate recently at one of the chain’s information. restaurants in Washington state Rape kit testing backlogs has been an issue across the U.S. In September, or Oregon. Scientists also said Tuesday federal officials said an estimated that they identified the specif70,000 rape kits sitting in laboratories ic microorganism responsible, and evidence collection rooms across which they believe was carried the country will be tested.

IDESK EDITOR Rachel Podnar SOCIAL MEDIA COORDINATOR Alan Hovorka

FORUM EDITOR Anna Bowman NEWS EDITOR Kara Berg

Crossword ACROSS 1 Bit of talk show selfpromotion 5 Judean king 10 “Hurry up!” 14 Real snoozefest 15 Native New Zealander 16 Angelic aura 17 *Guys’ hair coloring product 19 Cruise stop 20 Dry, as bread 21 Maui memento 22 Kind of computer error that may cause data loss 23 Steel-cut grain 25 Eccentric person 27 Chain with headquarters at One Geoffrey Way, Wayne, N.J. 31 Former Southwest subsidiary 34 Give __ on the back: praise 35 Criticize nonstop 37 Hold in, as a sneeze 38 Cheering word 39 *Radioactive emission 41 Suffix with percent 42 Defeats soundly 44 Actress Ullmann or Tyler 45 Ran off 46 Informer, to a cop 48 Allergy stimulants 50 Pig noises

ASST. NEWS EDITOR Rose Skelly FEATURES EDITOR Danielle Grady

EDITED BY RICH NORRIS AND JOYCE LEWIS

52 “__ is me!” 53 Sends junk e-mail to 55 Busy pro in Apr. 57 Digilux 3 camera maker 61 Red “Sesame Street” puppet 62 Hard-to-define element, or a hint to what can precede each last word in the answers to starred clues 64 Bank claim 65 Bluesy Memphis street 66 Danish shoe brand 67 Not as much 68 Made inquiries 69 Like plow horses DOWN 1 Sandwiches with Jif, briefly 2 Rude dude 3 Heavenly bear 4 “Beat it!” 5 Gp. with a copay 6 Countess’ spouse 7 Lover of Juliet 8 Crispy Crunchies! fries maker 9 Noisy clamor 10 Ristorante red 11 *Root source for a database 12 Southwestern pot 13 Holiday season 18 Emotion causing quaking

Sudoku CROSSWORD SOLUTION FOR MONDAY

heard Russian warplanes overhead and the missiles struck. Raghad, her grandfather and another relative were killed. The girl is among dozens of civilians who activists say have been killed in the Russian air campaign in Syria, which Moscow says is aimed at crushing the Islamic State group and other Islamic militants.

5. HUNT ON AS E. COLI LINKED TO CHIPOTLE

2. 10,900 SEXUAL ASSAULT KITS UNTESTED ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) — Nearly 11,000 rape kits have not been tested in Florida, according to statistics released by the state Thursday, mirroring backlogs at law enforcement agencies nationwide because of a lack of funding. In a spreadsheet released on its website, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement showed that 10,900 kits from 262 agencies around the state

excessive force — particularly amid a wave of Palestinian stabbing attacks in which top Israeli politicians and security commanders have encouraged forces to shoot to kill suspected assailants. “There is a very clear message sent by those politicians and military commanders that this is how law enforcement should behave,” said Sarit Michaeli of the Israeli group B’Tselem, which documents rights abuses.

22 Winks count 24 Listens to, as a radio station 26 Repudiate 27 Fruit pastries 28 Eye-fooling genre 29 *Big place to play online 30 Minded the kids 32 “Magic in the Moonlight” director Woody 33 Food, shelter, etc. 36 Cowboy’s lady 39 Nearly excellent grade 40 Tear apart 43 Latter-day Saints 45 Defrauds 47 Carves in stone 49 “Copacabana” temptress 51 Command to Spot 53 Go like hotcakes 54 Ballerina’s bend 56 Wheel-connecting rod 58 Restless desire 59 Chanel of perfume 60 Yankee with more than 3,000 hits, familiarly 62 Schedule abbr. 63 Nourished

| BY MICHAEL MEPHAM

SUDOKU SOLUTION FOR MONDAY

on fresh produce such as lettuce or tomatoes. The chain of casual Mexican restaurants voluntarily closed 43 locations in the two states after health officials alerted them to a growing number of E. coli cases involving people who shared one common experience: a meal at Chipotle during the last two weeks. The numbers grew from three to 12 probable cases in Portland area and from 19 to 25 probable cases in five counties near Seattle on Tuesday.

SPORTS EDITOR Robby General ASST. SPORTS EDITOR Chase Akins

MULTIMEDIA EDITOR Breanna Daugherty ASST. MULTIMEDIA EDITOR Samantha Brammer

21 - SCATTERED T-STORMS

SATURDAY Partly cloudy High: 52 Low: 35 03 - PARTLY CLOUDY

SUNDAY Sunny High: 50 Low: 34 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. 4, 2015 | THE BALL STATE DAILY NEWS | BALLSTATEDAILY.COM | PAGE 3

NEWS

Indiana 8th-best state for business Even with top rank, some alumni leave after graduation

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MICHELLE KAUFMAN GENERAL REPORTER mekaufman@bsu.edu

For the first time, Indiana received a top 10 ranking on Forbes’ Best States for Business list. However, students may not be staying in Indiana to fill those jobs and instead may only be staying to work in the state after graduation for certain, less well-known fields, a university researcher said. Indiana was ranked eighth for qualities such as having a below-average cost of doing business. Michael Hicks, an economics and business professor, said this rating could spawn additional business relocation, which is good news for the state. “You have to be in this top

VIRTUAL:

| CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 On-campus tours are about an hour-and-a-half long and are usually only available Monday through Friday. With the time restriction, students miss some parts of campus, like insides of classrooms or some of the dining halls. The virtual tours are more in-depth and have a better overview of campus. Munchel and Ent said the tours still have guide leaders, such as Ent, and presentations to click on and learn more about campus. There are 360-degree pictures, videos and detailed information about where the user is. “It was a really cool experience,” Ent said. “I’d like for students, even if they’re already here, to check it out because there were some things when I was reading the script that I didn’t even know about that Ball State offered. I think that’s some-

ranking for a long time,” Hicks said. “Businesses aren’t just worried about just a snapshot. They’re worried about what it’s going to be like in 10 years as well.” Indiana’s college attainment rate is nearly 25 percent, according to Forbes. Hicks said the majority of Ball State business students get jobs in urban areas in fields like finance, accounting, marketing and management and will be the ones more likely to stay in Indiana. “Where we lose our biggest students is, ironically, in our best known colleges — journalism and [the College of Architecture and Planning],” Hicks said. Students come from throughout the Midwest to be a part of the business college or chemistry program, but journalism and architecture attract students from across the world, he said. “If you’ve come to Ball thing good for Ball State students to know.” Ball State created the virtual tours to increase physical campus visits, keep up with technology and competing schools, and be more inviting to students who live outof-state and international students who want to check out Ball State. “The benefits of creating a virtual tour helps Ball State establish a stronger and more complete presence online, which will draw more visitors, generate more quality inquiries, increase diversity and ultimately help attract the best talent,” Munchel said. Jeremy Taylor, a sophomore architecture major, is from Richwood, Ohio. He said he wished these tours existed when he wanted to visit Ball State. “When I came to visit, I had no idea where anything was,” Taylor said. “I did not know where all the dining halls were, so I was not aware of all the food choices.” Taylor hopes the virtual

State from New York to get a degree in journalism, then the chance of you staying in Indiana is going to be a lot lower than if you came for the accounting program from another town in Indiana,” Hicks said. The problem Indiana has with retaining graduates is a lack of communities that families would want to live in, Hicks said. Not having enough “destination communities,” such as Carmel or downtown Indianapolis, may deter young professionals from staying in Indiana. Hicks said communities need a combination of good schools, reasonably priced homes and recreation options. “[To fix this,] Indiana can promote communities thinking more about their quality of place and how good their schools are,” Hicks said. “It’s really up to mayors and local government leaders to make communities that people want to live in.”

TOUR LOCATIONS

• Beneficence • Welcome Center • L.A. Pittenger Student Center • The Quad • Applied Technology Building • Scramble Light • Teachers College • The Atrium • Art and Journalism Building •D avid Letterman Communication and Media Building • Architecture Building • Whitinger Business Building • Bracken Library • Fine Arts Building • Honors College • Housing and Dining • J o Ann Gora Student Recreation and Wellness Center • Cardinal Athletics • Johnson Complexes • Rinard Orchid Greenhouse • Marilyn K. Glick Center for Glass tours will be a good place for new students to see campus before they visit the school. The tours need to be well thought-out though, he said. “It would need to be very detailed to give a good preview or it could be confusing,” Taylor said.

Natalie Martin, a junior child development and family studies major, hasn’t decided if she wants to stay in Indiana after graduation. She grew up in Indiana and is the daughter of a university employee. “I think for my job I’d love to go down South and open a daycare, but I could also see myself staying here since my family is here,” Martin said. “It kinda depends where life takes me.” Elizabeth Landers, a senior marketing and economics major, has lived in the Midwest for the past 14 years and knows after graduation she wants to live in a new place. “My dad’s an economist for the state, and so I hear a lot of the background,” Landers said. “[Indiana] has a good economy, but the wage growth, from what I’ve seen, hasn’t grown a ton, and I want to experience new things and not really the Midwest. A part of

DN FILE PHOTO BREANNA DAUGHERTY

Indiana was ranked in the top 10 for Forbes’ Best States for Business list. Indiana is ranked eighth for having a below-average cost of doing business.

me really wants to move out west to Portland or Seattle.” First-year graduate student Silvey Shamsi is currently working to earn her MBA while majoring in business. Shamsi is from Bangla-

desh and came to Ball State to pursue her higher degree. “I have a plan to do my Ph.D after I finish my graduation and settle here, or I will go back to my country to serve there,” Shamsi said.

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myvoice.bsu.edu IT’S YOUR CAMPUS. IT’S YOUR CHANCE. IT’S YOUR VOICE. My Voice is your chance to make a difference at Ball State. First, take a minute to submit your idea for change. Then, when it comes time to vote, do your part and get your friends to vote for your favorite ideas

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

FEATURES

The Amazing Taste will return to Ball State for its fifth year from 5-8 p.m. on Thursday in the L.A. Pittenger Student Center. The event will feature several new countries’ food and activities..

DN FILE PHOTO JORDAN HUFFER

THE AMAZING

TASTE International food fair returns with new featured countries, activities SAMARIA HAMILTON GENERAL REPORTER

Ball State’s annual international food fair and cultural celebration returns for its fifth year on Thursday and will feature several new countries and activities. The Amazing Taste will take place from 5-8 p.m. at the L.A. Pittenger Student Center and feature food from more than 18 countries, including the previously absent nations of Thailand, Israel, Morocco and Argentina. Other new additions to The Amazing Taste include scorpions at the bug tasting, live ice sculpting and a raffle drive. Students will complete sheets by visiting certain booths and turn them in to be entered into a drawing for free items. The Amazing Taste’s displays, activities and entertainment are free to students and the Muncie community, but admission to the food fair portion is a meal swipe, $8.95 for students without a meal plan, $8.95 plus tax for non-Ball State students and $5.95 plus tax for children aged 3 to 12.

There is a 1,500-person cap for the food fair, but people can pre-order wristbands at the Student Center Tally Food Court until Thursday. Tally will close at 1:30 p.m. on that day. Ball State University Dining, the Multicultural Center, the Rinker Center for International Programs and University Program Board will sponsor the event. All the organizations have a role in organizing, planning, marketing and promoting the event, but they each make a specific contribution. Dining is in charge of setting up and running the main food areas. There will be four different areas: Europe on the main floor, the Middle East on the third floor, the Americas in the basement, and Asia on the second floor. Lucas Miller, an executive chef and an assistant director of Ball State Dining, helped organize Dining and made sure everybody stayed on task. He said the event exposes Ball State students to the di-

DN PHOTO STEPHANIE AMADOR

CUP:

| CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 “Most of the people who are trying it for the first time get a look of surprise on their face and get really excited about it,” said Brandon Shawver, another manager at The Cup. “When they taste it ... they didn’t expect it to be as good as it is. It has changed a lot of people’s opinions on cold brew, actually.” Other Muncie coffee shops plan to add nitro coffee to their menu in the future. “We will be offering it at

srhamilton@bsu.edu

versity of the student body. The Multicultural Center is responsible for coordinating volunteers and booking the professional entertainment for the Tally Stage, as well as the henna tattoo artists, dance instructors and exotic animal show. Ro Anne Royer Engle, a chairwoman on the planning committee, helped oversee the Multicultural Center’s Amazing Taste responsibilities. “[The Amazing Taste is an] innovative and engaging event that is fun, informative and allows guests to learn about the art and culture and cuisine of different countries around the world,” she said. The Rinker Center also helps. They get international students to set up booths. Haruka Nakamura, an intercultural communications major, is a Japanese exchange student attending Ball State for one year. She will represent her cultural background with her friends at The Amazing Taste. Nakamura is Ainu, an eth-

The Cup in the Village installed a system to create nitro coffee, which uses kegerators filled with cold steep espresso running through a nitrogen tank. The business might have been the second place in Indiana to serve this type of coffee.

our next location, and we will be retrofitting the first one eventually. We just haven’t gotten there yet,” said Frank Reber, owner of The Caffeinery in downtown Muncie. The Caffeinery also wants to formulate a certain blend of coffee that compliments the nitrogen before they offer it to their customers, he said. Meanwhile, The Cup has been experimenting with different flavors of nitro coffee. “As far as just the nitro coffee goes, we find it is very good on its own,” Raines

|

said. “Standard flavors that work with it are chocolate, vanilla, hazelnut and caramel. The flavor aspect of nitro coffee isn’t that broad right now. We play around with different ideas here to keep things fresh.” Nitro coffee isn’t the only thing that makes The Cup different. “The Cup is special because we don’t just sell coffee, we sell an attitude,” said Martin George, the owner of The Cup. “We’re a place where people connect with people.” The business takes pride in the community, food and, of course, coffee, he said.

nic group from the northern part of Japan, according to the website for the Ainu Museum. “It is important for me to share my culture,” she said. “A lot of American people don’t know about Ainu, and even not many Japanese know about Ainu. I want everyone to know [about] Ainu.” Hannah Nunn, a sophomore criminal justice major, will be volunteering at The Amazing Taste. She said the event is important because it brings the international students together, but she likes it for other reasons as well. “I am definitely excited about seeing all the food and tasting it, because I feel that we don’t get a huge variety on campus,” she said. Other Amazing Taste activities include African drumming, a reggae and steel pan band, Brazilian music, salsa and cha-cha dance instruction, a caricature artist, a photo booth, a global fashion show, 15 student music and dance performances and a study abroad fair.

THE AMAZING TASTE WHERE

L.A. Pittenger Student Center WHEN

5-8 p.m. Thursday COST

Students with meal plans $8.20 or a meal swipe Ball State students $8.95 Non-Ball State students $8.95 plus tax 3-12-year-olds $5.95 plus tax PRE-ORDER

Wristbands will be available for pre-order until Thursday at the Student Center Tally Food Court ACTIVITIES

•Food from more than 18 countries •Live ice sculpting •Raffle drive •African drumming •Reggae and steel pan band •Brazilian music • Salsa & cha-cha dance instruction •Caricature artist •Photo booth •Global fashion show •15 student music and dance performances •Study abroad fair


WEDNESDAY, NOV. 4, 2015 | THE BALL STATE DAILY NEWS | BALLSTATEDAILY.COM | PAGE 5

SPORTS

THURSDAY Football travels to Kalamazoo, Mich., to face off against the Western Michigan Broncos. Kick-off is 7:30 p.m.

SPORTS@BSUDAILYNEWS.COM TWITTER.COM/DN_SPORTS

FRIDAY Men’s golf will travel to Lahaina, Hawaii, to participate in the Ka’anapali Collegiate Classic.

Men’s volleyball looks to rekindle West Coast rivalry against UCLA Ball State to play school for 1st time since 2011 match

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ELIZABETH WYMAN MEN’S VOLLEYBALL REPORTER egwyman@bsu.edu

Head men’s volleyball coach Joel Walton and his team will travel to Los Angeles on March 7, 2016, where they will face off against 19-time National Collegiate Athletic Association champions University of California Los Angeles. The two programs have the most wins in NCAA history and agreed to the non-conference matchup, which will be the first time the teams will have seen each other since 2011. The Bruins won the previous matchup, set in Honolulu, in four sets. The two teams have a storied history with each other that Walton has not soon forgotten, as he recalls facing UCLA during his days

as an assistant coach under head coach Don Shondell. The Cardinals were the only team to defeat the Bruins in their 1995 season. UCLA would later go on to win the national championship, knocking out the Cardinals in the semi-finals. West Coast schools such as UCLA, Pepperdine and UC Irvine have always been known as volleyball powerhouses. “In everybody’s minds, West Coast volleyball was way up here, and we weren’t nearly as competitive as they were, so it was difficult at that time in the ’80s to play against those teams and feel like you really had any chance,” Walton said. Walton played for Ball State from 1985-1988. During that time, he participated in two of the 15 total NCAA tournament appearances that Ball State has made. Playing West Coast teams prior to the tournament was a rare occurrence due to the fact they did less traveling

DN PHOTO BREANNA DAUGHERTY

Ball State football will travel to Western Michigan tomorrow to play in a must-win game to keep its bowl eligibility alive. Junior wide receiver KeVonn Mabon has played in all nine games this season.

FOOTBALL :

| CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

DN FILE PHOTO ALAINA JAYE HALSEY

The men’s volleyball team will travel to Los Angeles on March 7, 2016, to face off against UCLA. Senior outside attacker Marcin Niemczewski had 320 kills last season.

than what they do today. In three out of the last five years, a team from the MIVA has won the national championship. Walton claims a number of different factors have contributed to this shift of power. From a geographical stand-

point, Walton, along with other coaches in the MIVA, is now recruiting club volleyball players out of the Milwaukee, Ohio, Chicago and St. Louis areas. These players have experience playing against and defeating these elite West Coast club teams.

Braverman has 80 receptions, 927 yards and 11 touchdowns and currently sits outside the top ten receivers list, while Davis is ranked 32nd in the country. Passing defense has been a repeating issue for the Cardinals, as they allow 293.7 yards per game. With the Broncos having one of the better passing attacks in the country, this game has the potential to be a high-scoring game. The Cardinals’ passing attack hasn’t been quite as prolific as the Broncos’ this season, averaging 237 yards per game through the air. Western Michigan struggles against the run game,

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1 subleaser, Spring 2016. $340 + util. Furniture for sale. 4 male roommates. Call 787-636-3122

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Houses For Rent

!!!!!! 4 Brdm Hs. 2 full Ba. Washer/dryer. Central A/C. Aug17July17. $350/Bdrm 2320 W. Euclid. Behind Johnson Hall. 765.717.9910 !!!!1,2,3 bdrms. Great location, remodeled. www.signaturet.com W/D, AC. (765) 808-6107

Need subleasers for Spring. !3,4,5,6, BRs deluxe homes for '16Corner of Dill/Gilbert. $350/mo plus '17. All appl. walk to BSU. Great utilities. Call 260-450-4714 Rates. May & Aug leases 765-7495646, www.bsurentals.info

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which is something that Ball State has excelled in this year. There are only 10 Football Bowl Subdivision teams that allow more than the Broncos’ 5.3 yards per carry. On the shoulders of running backs Darian Green and James Gilbert, the Cardinals are picking up 4.3 yards per rush. Lembo is familiar with Western Michigan’s offensive coordinator, Kirk Ciarrocca, as well as its defensive coordinator, Ed Pinkham. “We coached against each other several times when we were all on the East Coast,” Lembo said. The year after Lembo left Elon, Pinkham was brought in as the defensive coordinator. Kickoff is at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at Western Michigan University.

Apartments For Rent

1 bdrm apt. close to BSU. Some utils included, not AC. 800 sq ft. $430. Call for details. 289-0550.

*****U DESERVE THE BEST***** FuseCollegeRentals.com 3 & 4 bdrm May or Aug 2016 lse. Call/Text Carrie 765-744-1198

3 bdrm apt or 6 bdrm house. Close to BSU. All util. pd. 50 in TV. W/D. D/W. A/C.Aug-Aug. 744-4649 3 Bdrm home, 2 Ba, W/D. Appliances, off-street parking, 909 W. Neely, 350/per br + Utilt. Avail. Aug. 16. Call/Text 317.797.5872 3 bdrm houses 2108 N Ball Ave, 604 W Queen St $275/mo per person + util, August lse (317) 7167174 3 Bdrm, W/D, C/A, wood floors, basement, parking. 420 S. College. $300/each. Aug. 765-717-5714 4 Bdrm houses, Avail Aug 16-17. 1805 W Main, 1809 W Main. 5 Brdm 2008 W Main, 121 N Martin. Call John 744-1235 or 284-5334

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Houses For Rent

4 &6 bdrm, close to Village, AugAug lease, all utilities included including cable, high-speed WiFi, W/D, $440/person, 765-717-1670 5 bdrm w/ swimming pool, W/D, C/A, D/W, new carpet & paint lawn maint. incl. $1250 per/mo 765-7600364 5 bdrm, 3 ba Lg rms. $300 ea+ utils. on/off st. prkg 1 blk from campus 1109 Carson St. 732-267-3713 6 bdrm. full finished bsm. $350/mo per tenant. May 11th Lease, 2016. 317-446-0334 to schedule Shelly Most upscale 6-7 bdrm, 3.5 ba. house avail. around BSU. All amenities 765-744-0185 New 4 bdrm house on Ball Ave. Avail Aug. 765-744-0185 Now showing our 2-7 bdrm homes for next school year. Many amenities, most have flat screen TVs. Our houses go fast. Call Tom 744-0185, email tmay123@comcast.net.

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Houses For Rent

Pd. Utilities & High Spd Internet Qlty 3-6 bdr. From $325 ea. Some hottubs 765-744-1079 joecoolproperties.blogspot.com

Very Nice 2 or 3 bdrm. close to BSU. Avail Aug 2016. $325 - $350 ps + util. 317-902-5725

WHAT A DEAL!! @ CAMPUS EDGE! 2,3,4 Bdrm - Immediate Move-in only! CALL 765-286-2806

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For Sale

Grass fed lambs for sale. Locally raised. 765-289-3611 or 748-1931

390

Adoption

Loving family seeks baby to adopt. Involved, professional dad, stay at home mom. 4hopingtobe5.com, 1-844-310-9483

Get connected with campus Today’s Birthday (11/04/15). Win together this year. Your friends are the aces up your sleeve. Consistency profits. Passionate possibilities spark (after 3/9). Thoughtful planning pays (after 3/23). A group project shifts (after 9/1). One game folds and another begins (after 9/16). Play. 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 a 9. Today and tomorrow get especially busy. Work requires your personal touch. Discover and resolve a structural problem. Pull what you need out of storage. The action is behind the scenes. Learn the value of what you have.

Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) Today is a 7. Take care of financial matters over the next few days. Tally up your balance sheet. Keep payments current, and issue reminders on accounts receivable. Patience pays off. Keep your agreements. Be determined, and not dissuaded.

Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Today is a 7. A professional challenge requires your attention over the next few days. Opportunities could arise if you play your cards right. Fix something before it breaks. Postpone travel. Take on more responsibility. Teach what you’re learning.

Taurus (April 20-May 20) Today is a 9. Let friends arouse your curiosity. The next two days are reserved for fun. Encourage creativity. Play around. Romance blossoms if lovingly tended. Practice your arts and magic. Follow the beat of the music and dance.

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today is an 8. Your confidence and personal power expands today and tomorrow. With strength, you also gain options. Let your team know how they can help. Pay attention to a brilliant, yet bizarre, suggestion. Wait for a roadblock to clear.

Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Today is an 8. Educational adventures draw you out today and tomorrow. Discover new methods, tricks and ideas. Listen to a mentor or teacher. Go and see for yourself. Make long-term plans and dream big. Imagine ways to apply what you’re learning.

Gemini (May 21-June 20) Today is a 7. Your home and family require more attention. Fix up your place today and tomorrow. Get creative with color, form and line. You can get what you need without straining the budget. Prepare for an upcoming social event.

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Today is a 5. The next two days are nice for laying low. Upgrade your equipment and organize your space. Prepare for a new project by closing up old ones. Stick close to home. Listen to someone who thinks differently than you.

Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Today is a 9. Plan strategically over the next few days, especially regarding money. There’s no rush. Join forces with another for funding. Others seek your advice. Come up with a plan together. Gain more than expected. Enjoy a tranquil evening.

Cancer (June 21-July 22) Today is an 8. Things are getting clear over the next few days. You see a solution. Read, write and study. Issue press releases. Communicate with your networks. Resupply locally. Meditate on what you want before speaking. Make long-range plans.

Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Today is an 8. Enjoy a two-day party phase. Social activities and team projects go well today and tomorrow. A risk could pay off big. Ask for help to gather resources and talents. Stifle rebellious tendencies. Build a strong foundation together.

Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) Today is an 8. Someone nice thinks you’re cute. Get your homework done before going out to play. Discover romance where least expected today and tomorrow. Charm with your talents and passions. Your reputation precedes you. Dress to impress.

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


PAGE 6 |WEDNESDAY, NOV. 4, 2015 | THE BALL STATE DAILY NEWS | BALLSTATEDAILY.COM

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THREE REASONS SOCCER HAD BEST SEASON IN HISTORY ROBBY GENERAL GENERALLY SPEAKING ROBBY GENERAL IS A JOURNALISM NEWS AND TELECOMMUNICATIONS MAJOR AND WRITES ‘GENERALLY SPEAKING’ FOR THE DAILY NEWS. HIS VIEWS DO NOT NECESSARILY AGREE WITH THOSE OF THE NEWSPAPER. WRITE TO ROBBY AT RJGENERAL @BSU.EDU.

Senior midfielder Lauren Hall placed the ball on the ground, the fate of the Ball State Cardinal soccer season relied on this kick. Down 4-3 and on their fifth penalty kick, Hall was the Cardinals’ last chance to keep their season alive. Hall inhaled then exhaled deeply. Now was the moment. She took several steps forward, planted her left foot, pulled her right leg back and sent the ball flying at Akron goalkeeper Annabelle Hegeman. The kick missed the goal wide left. As Akron celebrated the upset victory, Ball State stood still. Hall fell to the ground, the season over. It was a heartbreaking end to the season for the Cardinals. Despite the way the season ended, this was the most successful season in the team’s 17-

year history, and here are the top three reasons why.

1. The team finished as regular season MAC Champions for the third time in history.

The only other times the Cardinals won the regular season championship was back in 2006 and 2007. To say the team dominated the regular season would be an understatement. The Cardinals went 10-1 against Mid-American Conference opponents while outscoring them 21-6 collectively. Their conference record is the most successful in team history. Overall, the Cardinals were 14-3-3. The 14 wins tied for the second most in team history. The three losses and eightgame win streak tied for best in team history.

They held their own against big-name schools like Indiana University and Louisiana State University as well, taking both of them into double-overtime, which ended in eventual ties.

er Alyssa Heintschel. In a single season, she finished fifth or better in average goals against, wins, minutes played and shutouts, putting her among the greatest names in Ball State goalkeeper history.

2. This season set numerous new school records.

3. Team depth was strong throughout the year and will stay strong moving forward.

It’s clear that the team held its own with Cardinal teams of the past, and individual records will be immortalized in the school’s record books for years to come. Offensively, Abbie Boswell and Chelsy Swackhamer rank among the top five goal scorers and top six point totals, points per game and goals in a single season of any Cardinal. Boswell finished with 10 goals and 20 points, while Swackhamer finished with nine goals and 21 total points. There’s not enough you can say about sophomore goalkeep-

The Cardinals saw goals from 11 different players throughout the course of the season, five of whom scored three or more times. Outshooting opponents 370-131 scoring 35 times, which is nearly three times as many as the amount of goals they allowed. To make things more interesting, the team will be just as, if not more, successful next season. Six seniors will graduate this year, but the talent that remains

is more than capable of leading Ball State to another dominant season and another MAC regular season championship. This team is scary good; noticeable by the way it dominates teams and burns opponents on breakaways. Boswell led the Cardinals in goals this season as a freshman. Heintschel shut out opposing teams seven different times and picked up 14 wins as a sophomore. Three returning juniors are Lorina White, Leah Mattingly and Gabby Veldman. They are some of the team’s top scorers, despite two of them being defenders. This team just had the best season in Ball State history, and it can be even better next year with the coaching ability of Craig Roberts, who has 75004 improved his record each year.

OUR FUNDS HAVE A RECORD LIKE A BROKEN RECORD. TIAA-CREF: Lipper’s Best Overall Large Fund Company three years in a row. For the first time ever. How? Our disciplined investment strategy aims to produce competitive risk-adjusted returns that create long-term value for you. Just what you’d expect from a company that’s created to serve and built to perform. 1

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The Lipper Award is given to the group with the lowest average decile ranking of three years’ Consistent Return for eligible funds over the three-year period ended 11/30/12, 11/30/13, and 11/30/14 respectively. TIAA-CREF was ranked among 36 fund companies in 2012 and 48 fund companies in 2013 and 2014 with at least five equity, five bond, or three mixed-asset portfolios. Past performance does not guarantee future results. For current performance and rankings, please visit the Research and Performance section on tiaa-cref.org. TIAA-CREF Individual & Institutional Services, LLC, Teachers Personal Investors Services, Inc., and Nuveen Securities, LLC, members FINRA and SIPC, distribute securities products. ©2015 Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of America–College Retirement Equities Fund (TIAA-CREF), 730 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017. C24849B 1

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The Lipper Awards are based on a review of 36 companies’ 2012 and 48 companies’ 2013 and 2014 risk-adjusted performance.

Consider investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses carefully before investing. Go to tiaa-cref.org for product and fund prospectuses that contain this and other information. Read carefully before investing. TIAA-CREF funds are subject to market and other risk factors.


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