Monday, April 30, 2018 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
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IDS
IU takes series against Illinois
Seniors share IU memories Words by Emily Isaacman eisaacma@iu.edu | @emilyisaacman
By Cameron Drummond cpdrummo@iu.edu | @cdrummond97
Lauren Mardis
When Tim Herrin was a freshman, IU Coach Chris Lemonis said he couldn’t pitch an inning without walking a batter. The Terre Haute, Indiana, native also struggled with delivering long pitching outings for the Hoosiers. Prior to April 17, he had not pitched into the sixth inning of a game. The past two weeks have seen Herrin earn two victories for IU. One came against Notre Dame when Herrin pitched six shutout innings while walking just one batter, and the other came Sunday at Bart Kaufman Field. Herrin pitched a career-high seven innings, allowing two runs and walking no batters, as IU (3110, 9-5) defeated Illinois (25-14, 10-5) 9-2 to earn a 2-1 series win against the Fighting Illini. “He’s just come so far,” Lemonis said. “When he was a freshman we couldn’t pitch him, and now to go out there. He pitched like that against Notre Dame last week and he was really good at Ohio State, too. Big piece for us right now.” Of the 21 outs forced by Herrin, only one came via strikeout. This meant he relied heavily on the IU defense, which committed one error in the win, to take care of groundouts and flyouts.
Simon Herran
IDS How do you feel about leaving?
IDS How did you choose your major?
Mardis I could do four more years, easy. Me and my friends always joke, “What class could I possibly flunk so I could go one more year?” Just one more semester. One victory lap. But alas, never failed a class, and now I have to graduate.
Herran I was initially going to do business, and then I decided to change to informatics because I kind of saw that within informatics I could kind of do some of the similar things I wanted to do with business and then also have a technical background. It’s been fun, it’s been challenging, but it’s been rewarding.
IDS Most cliche IU habit? Mardis I try and walk through Sample Gates every day. That’s super weird, I know, but I just love it. It’s the feeling. It’s the IU total package.
IDS Favorite part of the last four years? Herran Not knowing anyone here really gave me the opportunity to really branch out and make some friends.
Jorge Campana
“I was going in there trying to execute pitches. Throw strikes, pitch to contact and I had a lot of good play behind me.”
Leah Lasher
IDS Favorite IU memory?
IDS What is your favorite spot on campus?
Campana Celebratory dinners at Lucky’s Express, with a small group of friends. That was always a highlight. We do that after we have something to celebrate.
Lasher When I was a freshman, I had a class in Woodburn and then a class in the Fine Arts Building and I had a break in between. I’d always sit in the grass around Showalter Fountain. I wouldn’t sit up in it, but on the sides.
IDS What advice to do you have for other IU students? Campana Explore anything and everything. Explore academic pursuits, relationships. These four years will go by fast, so you’ve really got to embrace each and every single day. Just get out there. Don’t get into a routine. Always try to mix it up. That’s kept me away from regrets.
Tim Herrin, freshman pitcher
“I was going in there trying to execute pitches,” Herrin said. “Throw strikes, pitch to contact and I had a lot of good play behind me.” As Herrin cruised on the mound, the IU offense put together two big innings at the plate. Consecutive home runs in the second inning from sophomore infielder Scotty Bradley and
IDS How do you feel as you’re getting ready to graduate? Lasher I definitely didn’t bloom in college like a lot of people do. I definitely feel ready to start the next chapter and do the next thing. This was a good time while it was, but I’m ready to move on and have something more stable, more all the time and definitive. SEE SENIORS, PAGE 6
PHOTOS BY MALLORY SMITH | IDS
SEE BASEBALL, PAGE 6
EDITORS NOTE
Alvvays, Big Thief, Frankie Rose To our readers: Thank you float and dream at Bluebird for a semester of stories
By Clark Gudas ckgudas@iu.edu | @this_isnt_clark
During Big Thief’s set, guitarist and vocalist Adrianne Lenker wanted to dim the lights. “Could we have the lights lower up here?” she asked. “Please and thank you.” The lights dimmed. During the band’s next song, they dimmed more. Then, they brightened and went out completely before returning to a dim state for the rest of the performance. In parallel, the music onstage experienced shifts between nostalgia, poignancy and youthful energy, as Canadian pop band Alvvays performed Saturday evening at the Bluebird Nightclub with Big Thief and Frankie Rose. Frankie Rose opened the show with indie pop and dreamy, echoing vocals. “Wasting our time on fiction and lies,” Rose sang in her song “Know Me.” “It’s a crime to make yourself cry.” During Big Thief’s set, Lenker said how pleased she was to be in Bloomington. “It’s good to be in the place I was born in,” Lenker said. “I lived here until I was four. Glad I get the chance to continue to visit.” Big Thief used sounds from genres including as indie rock, pop and folk. With a chugging
MATT BEGALA | IDS
Molly Rankin, lead vocalist and rhythm guitar for the band Alvvays, sings “In Undertow” off the band’s album “Antisocialites.” Alvvays played Saturday, April 28, at the Bluebird Nightclub.
bass drum and a lightly-distorted guitar, “Shark Smile” recounted the story of two lovers kissing on a drive in rural Iowa. “Evelyn’s kiss was oxygen,” Lenker sang. “I leaned over to take it in, as we went howling through the edge of south Des Moines.” Other songs, such as “Mythological Beauty,” had clean, shimmering riffs and a mellow pace. Lenker sang and bobbed up and down, her shoulder-length hair swinging across her eyes and cheeks. “You have a mythological beauty, you have the eye of someone I have seen, outside of ordinary situations, even outside of dreams,” Lenker sang.
Before playing “Masterpiece,” Lenker addressed the crowd. “This is dedicated to everyone,” Lenker said. Big Thief’s guitar solos were atmospheric and psychedelic walls of distortion and feedback. At times, Lenker leaned next to her amplifier and shoved her fingers across her guitar strings. Guitarist Buck Meek, who performed his solo project April 2 at the Bishop, nodded and kept the rhythm going when he wasn’t performing a solo. As Alvvays lead singer Molly Rankin walked onstage, she tucked her platinum blonde
MAY 15-20
SEE ALVVAYS, PAGE 6
We set out this semester at the Indiana Daily Student under a looming sense of change. The fall 2017 staff ushered in a new website, reimagined our print product and said goodbye to a strong advocate, adviser and friend. This semester immediately became one of experimentation. We challenged ourselves to rethink storytelling, to embrace a digital-first presence while maintaining the integrity of more than 150 years of independent student journalism. We told stories of heartbreak and triumph. We celebrated when the women’s basketball team clinched the WNIT championship. We explored struggling systems and communities that rallied around their own. We shared our own #MeToo story and profiled those who have dedicated their lives to helping others.
We made mistakes, but we learned along the way. Everyday brought a new challenge, which our reporters, designers and editors tackled head-on. Working this spring with such a talented team of journalists so deeply dedicated to serving our community has been one of my greatest privileges, and we know that for semesters to come, they will continue to serve you, our readers. Thank you for a semester of engaged curiosity. I’ve enjoyed so much hearing from you as we’ve looked to spark community conversation. Your feedback, letters and story ideas are essential to what we do, and I can’t wait to see what grows from your voice. As media evolves, I am confident the IDS will continue to forge a path of strong, independent work reflective of these stories and the many more ahead.
Matt Rasnic
Andrew Hussey
creative director
managing editor
Katelyn Haas
Eman Mozaffar
Carley Lanich editor-in-chief managing editor
managing editor of digital
Indiana Daily Student
2
FEATURE
Monday, April 30, 2018 idsnews.com
The children she has loved and lost look down from her living room wall. That’s where Kristy Evans tapes each of their pictures, so they’re still with her after they’ve been torn away, often without warning. She couldn’t have kids of her own, so she became a foster parent to adopt. In four years, she’s mothered 14 children in her home in Mitchell, Indiana. She’s walked into hospitals with empty car seats and walked out with newborns trembling from heroin withdrawal. She’s cradled an infant who came to her with ribs broken from abuse. She’s soothed babies who couldn’t stop screaming long enough to eat. Evans, 46, learned to live at the mercy of Indiana's Department of Child Services, her days dictated by the march of court dates and home visits and paperwork. But in the past few years, Evans has watched the agency come undone amid an unprecedented flood of cases. A year ago, she and her husband filed to adopt two toothy little girls. But the process dragged. Caseworkers and attorneys came and quit faster than she could keep up. Her texts and emails often went unanswered. And all the while the calls kept coming, with voices on the other end asking if she had room for another baby. Evans believes in grace and making the best of things. She tries to empathize with tired caseworkers and lost biological parents and overwhelmed judges. But sometimes it’s too much. “There’s days,” she said, “where I want to go outside and just scream.” * * * For years, DCS has struggled, plagued by high turnover, scarce funding and a barrage of lawsuits from employees and foster parents. Then the opioid crisis swept the state. Indiana has become a place where church signs
As Indiana's foster care system strains beneath the weight of the opioid crisis, foster parents fight to protect themselves and the state's neglected children. Words by Taylor Telford ttelford@indiana.edu @taylormtelford
Photos by Sara Miller sdm2@indiana.edu @SaraMilleer
offer deliverance not just from evil but from addiction. Where police stations and hospitals keep running out of medications that fight overdoses. Where parents shoot heroin in their cars, slumping against the wheel while their toddlers wail in the backseat. The stranglehold of opioids has yet to loosen. Nearly 22,700 kids were in Indiana's foster care system as of March, according to a DCS report. That’s more than twice the national average. In the midst of a crippling foster parent shortage, the agency is at a loss. Children with nowhere to go sleep in DCS offices. Foster homes are filled well past limits outlined by the state. Yet somehow, many foster parents wait with empty beds. DCS and the governor’s office exchange blows and blame, both denying their role in the agency’s unraveling. In December, longtime DCS director Mary Beth Bonaventura resigned, claiming cuts and policies from the governor’s office kept her from leading effectively. In her resignation letter, Bonaventura warned continued cutbacks would “all but ensure children will die.” Her warning was late — it was already happening. In August 2017, a 2-month-old died of malnutrition, hours after four DCS employees visited her home. A concerned foster parent had called the Marion County DCS hotline with concerns about the baby’s safety three times. When the news broke, Kara Cook was overcome with a familiar sense of outrage. Months earlier, a 1-year-old boy she’d cared for went limp and lifeless after riding with a DCS contractor. He died nine days later. The child's biological parents are suing the driver and contractor, alleging the boy died because he'd been strapped into his car seat incorrectly. Cook, 32, had shown the employee how to safely install the car seat, but something went wrong. “The bottom buckles weren’t buckled, and the way the car seat was placed just left him to hang,” Cook said. Now she keeps molds of the toddler’s handprints on a shelf in her house. The hospital staff made them for her before they
took him off life support. “It’s a miracle there haven’t been more deaths like this,” Cook said. * * * Bleary-eyed foster parents trickled into Monroe County's DCS office in the early hours of a humid fall Saturday. They’d left their partners with the kids or wrangled babysitters so they could be here, at one of many training courses required to stay licensed as foster parents. Kristy Evans and her husband, Greg, sat together and flipped through the pages of the workbook on their desk while crunching on ice from McDonald’s. At the front of the room, the foster parent trainer sat on a desk and kicked his feet back and forth. Behind him was whiteboard on which he’d written his name and the course title, “Darren Wilkinson: SelfCare.” Wilkinson, a former caseworker and foster parent, had just a few hours to teach these parents how to help themselves, so they could keep helping Indiana's children.
“There’s days where I want to go outside and just scream.” Kristy Evans, foster parent
Over and over, Wilkinson spoke of “Planet Chaos,” his term for the unstable environments foster children are forged in, where they acquire survival skills and scars. In these homes, neglected toddlers learn to take care of infants. Frequent brushes with police teach children to hide at the sound of sirens. Evans and other foster parents live on "Planet Normal,” Wilkinson said. But when foster kids first arrive, often carrying their whole lives in garbage bags, Planet Chaos follows. It’s embedded in their instincts, resurfacing as they shuffle between new lives and old ones. Meanwhile, the foster parents, tasked with loving and caring for these children, are left straddling the two worlds. Through tears and hushed
Editors Dominick Jean, Hannah Boufford and Jesse Naranjo news@idsnews.com
voices, tales of chaos tumbled out. One woman said police rescued her foster children from a dope house, where they were stabbing syringes into a Doc McStuffins doll. Another woman said her foster kids’ strung-out parents forgot to feed them, so they’d run down the street naked, begging for food. One man said his infant foster daughter’s addicted mom overfed her baby so much, the child returned from a home visit with her body swollen, skin taut like a sausage casing. Wilkinson, 53, walked them through ways to avoid burnout and manage their second-hand trauma. But as the class continued, many parents raged, not about exhausting days or dealings with difficult children and biological parents, but about DCS. They lamented the lack of support and the paltry compensation. They fumed about the organization’s focus on reuniting children with their biological families, a policy they believe puts parental rights over children’s stability and safety. They complained about overburdened caseworkers who often seemed unprepared and out of reach. “The caseworkers we’ve had don’t care. It’s just a paycheck to them,” a furious foster mother said. Wilkinson didn’t shy away from the parents’ grievances about the system. “When you ask your case manager for services for your kids, do you get it?” The woman snorted. “Eventually.” “And how does that make you feel?” he asked. “Helpless.” The foster parents nodded and exchanged knowing glances. They
* * * Even before the opioid crisis, DCS was crumbling. In 2015, the American Civil Liberties Union sued DCS and Bonaventura on behalf of an Indianapolis family case manager, Mary Price, and all other DCS family case managers. The lawsuit alleged Price and other DCS employees were SEE BROKEN, PAGE 3
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swapped stories about suffering from caseworker mistakes. One woman said her caseworker fired her foster daughter’s therapist, and the girl regressed to how she’d been to when they first got her — withdrawn and emotionless. A couple said their caseworker blacklisted them after a disagreement, even though DCS emailed them almost daily about the desperate need for foster parents in their county. Wilkinson saw the anger in the foster parent’s faces. He asked if the mounting frustrations made them want to turn their backs on the system. “I can’t imagine giving up on any of them kids,” Evans said. Her husband clutched her hand before he spoke. “If you walk away, you aren’t thinking about all the other kids that need you.”
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The Evans have had one of their girls since the day she was born, despite spending the first three weeks of her life in withdrawal from being born with an opiate addiction. The now-two-yearold wailed and shrieked for weeks, but when a pediatrician suggested Kristy bring the child back to the hospital so she could be placed on a morphine drip, Kristy couldn’t stand the thought of leaving the baby alone in a hospital crib. Instead, Kristy held her throughout each night and drove her to the pediatrician every day for treatment.
Vol. 151, No. 18 © 2018
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FEATURE
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Monday, April 30, 2018 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
» BROKEN
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handling caseloads vastly bigger than state standards. State law says family case managers can only be tasked with 17 ongoing cases or 12 initial assessments at once. At the time of the lawsuit, Price was handling 43 cases. Price’s lawyers argued that her caseload, as well as other family case managers’, had been this high for years, and that despite frequent claims from DCS about hiring enough new employees to comply with state standards, nothing was changing.
“When you ask your case manager for services for your kids, do you get it?” The woman snorted. “Eventually.” “And how does that make you feel,” he asked. “Helpless.” “Ultimately, it is the children of Indiana who suffer because of the caseloads,” the lawsuit stated. The case ended up in front of the Indiana Supreme Court, and in August 2017, the Supreme Court ruled unanimously in the agency’s
favor. In its decision, the court said it couldn’t force DCS to comply with the law because, while the law outlines the limits for caseloads, it does not outline the actions DCS must take to maintain them. "Granting relief here risks entangling the judiciary in the Department’s day-today affairs — what would likely be a time-consuming intrusion beyond our institutional competence to discharge," the decision read. DCS is divided into 19 regions throughout Indiana. In an evaluation of the 2016 fiscal year, only one region was keeping caseloads within state standards. When Bonaventura resigned in December, she said children would suffer from the agency’s staffing problems, but pointed to the governor’s office. In her resignation letter, she said the state abruptly canceled a much-needed technological update to the 30-year-old computer system that manages child support payments. She said efforts to cap staffing of caseworkers and child welfare attorneys were endangering children and families. She blamed the government for the fraying relationship between DCS and care providers — child placement agencies, residential treatment facilities and foster parents. “I feel I am unable to protect children because of the position taken by your staff to cut funding and services to children in the midst of the opioid crisis,"
Bonaventura wrote. Gov. Eric Holcomb said the state is “taking appropriate steps” to help the agency and pointed to its $450 million budget increase. Holcomb hired an outside group to evaluate DCS performance and efficiency. A March update from the investigation hinted at major troubles in the agency: understaffing, lack of training and power-sharing struggles. After the resignation, foster parents panicked and raged. The concerns they’d had for years were public knowledge now, but there were no signs of change. A movement had been growing, in homes and Facebook groups, to get themselves a voice. With DCS in the midst of another shakeup, it seemed more crucial than ever. Getting that voice, many thought, might begin with a bill soon to be introduced to the legislature, that would grant them their own bill of rights. * * * Ernie Shearer, 64, sat in his Suburban in the parking lot of his antique store, fumbling through his wife’s purse for a bottle as a baby wailed in the back seat. “I know, I know, you want your ba-ba,” he said soothingly, reaching toward the car seat behind him to put the bottle in his 10-monthold granddaughter’s outstretched hands. Two and a half years ago, he had just retired after
years of running an antiques and estate sale business in Indianapolis. He and his wife Laura were looking at properties in Florida and Alabama. They’d be snowbirds, they thought, or maybe nomads who drifted around the country in an R.V. Then, with a single phone call, the future he had planned evaporated. DCS told him his youngest grandchild had been born addicted to opioids. If he and his wife didn’t take the baby and their two other grandchildren, they’d go into the system. He and his wife followed instructions for DCS licensing within four months. Without it, they couldn’t get the compensation foster parents are given to help raise children. Months dragged past and the agency failed to license them, while their savings dwindled to nothing.
“If you walk away, you aren’t thinking about all the other kids that need you.” Greg Evans, foster parent
“I was mad as hell,” Shearer said. He learned firsthand how DCS can be blind to people who care for relatives. The agency knows they won’t abandon their kin, Shearer said, so it takes its time with processes that
offer them vital support. His rage grew as time passed. He and Laura had missed out on thousands of dollars to help raise the kids. He wondered how much worse off other unlicensed foster parents might be, who had no assets and retirement savings but still step up to help. After more than a year of foster parenting, Shearer and his wife were surprised by yet another phone call, informing them they had a fourth grandchild who had also been born addicted to opioids. They took the baby and filed adoption paperwork to officially become parents again, though they were both in their 60s. The couple wasn’t licensed by DCS until November 2017 — two and a half years after they took in their grandkids. By then, they’d missed out on more than $60,000 of compensation. Shearer’s anger was overwhelming. He couldn’t understand how the system had grown so deaf to foster parents it depended on. He needed an outlet. He needed to look the powerful people in the eye and make them understand the cost of their carelessness. So when he heard about the proposed Foster Parent Bill of Rights, Shearer knew he’d found his chance.
Left When DCS steps in to remove a child from their home, it first looks to see if any relatives are willing to take them in. If there aren’t, they’re under the gun to find a foster home with an opening. More than once, the Evans have made the drive from their Mitchell, Indiana, home to IU Health Bloomington Hospital with an empty car seat in the back of their van. “It can be hard, you know, because you never know what these kids have gone through or what lies ahead,” Kristy said. “All you can do is love them as much as you can.” Top right Most flat surfaces in the Evans house are covered with piles of newspapers and bills, diapers and groceries. But, for Kristy and Greg, it’s hard for housework to be a priority. “I’m sorry about the mess,” Kristy said. “It’s hard keeping up the place having three little ones around. They need so much. I just want to give them all I can.” Bottom right Greg and Kristy have seen dozens of caseworkers leave DCS and go into private care when the stress of the job and inefficiencies of the system get to be too much. Greg and Kristy agree the opioid epidemic has made things harder, but when they look at their girls, like this 2-year-old pictured playing with the light Greg uses at work, it never occurs to them to give up. Despite leaving the house at 3 a.m. six days a week to work in quarry near Louisville, Kentucky, Greg says there’s no room for him to be tired when he gets home. “You can’t think about yourself,” he said. “You just have to keep going because these kids need you.”
IDSNEWS.COM WEB SPECIAL | For the rest of the story, audio, graphics and more multimedia, visit idsnews.com/foster-care
Reminders for Commencement • Caps and gowns can be picked up April 30 - May 3 (8 a.m. - 6 p.m.), and May 4 (8 a.m. - 4 p.m.) in the Bookstore at the Indiana Memorial Union. If you did not pre-order, you can still rent them this week. More info is on the Commencement website, commencement.indiana.edu.
ATTENTION
GRADUATES Come visit and get eyewear while you can still use Bursar billing. Bring the family! 10% discount on all eyewear materials for IU students, staff and faculty. The Atwater Eye Care Center offers the latest advances in eyewear, eyecare services, and examinations all at one convenient location!
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• Commencement is free and open to the public. There are no tickets. Parking is free. • IU merchandise and flowers will be for sale on site before and after Commencement. • Graduate students report to your lineup location (see below) two hours before your ceremony. • Undergraduate students report to your lineup location (see below) two and a half hours before your ceremony. GRADUATE CEREMONY Friday, May 4 Grads report to Gladstein Fieldhouse, 1001 E. 17th Street, by 1 p.m. Graduate Commencement is held in Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall, directly west of Gladstein Fieldhouse. The ceremony begins at 3 p.m. UNDERGRADUATE CEREMONY Saturday, May 5 Grads report to Mellencamp Pavilion, 1001 E. 17th Street, by 7:30 a.m. Undergraduate Commencement is held in Memorial Stadium, directly south of Mellencamp Pavilion. The ceremony begins at 10 a.m.
#iubgrad18 Office of University Events (812) 855-3762 • iudegree@indiana.edu • commencement.indiana.edu
Indiana Daily Student
4
OPINION
Monday, April 30, 2018 idsnews.com
Editors Josh Hoffer and Neeta Patwari opinion@idsnews.com
EDITORIAL BOARD
Give a little freedom to the freshmen
ILLUSTRATION BY MADELYN POWERS | IDS
Duke University recently announced it will no longer be honoring requests for roommate assignments but will be randomly assigning roommates to incoming freshmen. Its goal is largely to promote diversity around campus by pairing people with those whom they may not have chosen on their own. "We believe that you'll enjoy the opportunity to meet someone you've not previously known and will have a great opportunity to explore your roommate's history, culture and interests," read Duke's announcement. The random assignments would be solely based on compatibility of certain preferences from sleep schedules to work habits. This information comes from the incoming students' application for roommate assignments. Duke administrators recognized that the bulk of students were taking advantage of social media and friends
from home when choosing roommates, and discovered students were gravitating to people from a similar background. Although this trend of homogeneity may be true, it does not validate the paternalistic values the university is exercising. Many students pick their friends from home or people from social media with whom they believe they will get along to be their roommates because a freshman dorm room is supposed to be a safe, comfortable place. It is more than just another room in which to study; particularly for a freshman, a dorm room is a place to relax and escape the stress of classes. Pairing roommates together solely based off of study habits would implicitly make the dorm room another coffee shop or library where students get work done. Likewise, the goal of the
university is to promote diversity. However, this random assignment system does not guarantee to break this homogeneity. According to a Duke report, the class of 2021 was made up of 53 percent minority students. The report did not include information about diversity of sexual orientation. With numbers like this, random assignments are more than likely to not truly make a reasonable difference in how students understand diversity. It is incredibly likely that two white students from similar backgrounds are going to be paired with one another. The university did say it would make accommodations for disabled students, students of color and members of the LGBT community who legitimately feel uncomfortable due to their rooming assignments. It would not make accommodations due to incompatibility. Although this system of
accommodations may be a good thing to reconcile many issues that could potentially arise, the university must recognize that roommate incompatibility is a legitimate hindrance to the progress of freshmen in college. Research done at Dartmouth College from The National Bureau of Economic Research shows peer effects from college roommates have a direct influence on students’ grade point averages, meaning that a bad roommate may cause a student’s GPA to suffer. If the university itself is to blame for increased social incompatibilities among roommates, then it may have the opposite effect of what the administrators had intended. This is ultimately not a move IU should make — at least until studies further show that this may have perfectly positive effects on not only diversity but academic performance as well.
EMMA GETZ IT
MULLING IT OVER WITH MERM
Starbucks' racial bias training is a good start
Involuntarily learning about incels
Emma Getz is a sophomore in English and history.
More than 8,000 Starbucks stores will close during the afternoon of May 29 for racial bias training after two black men were arrested recently for trespassing while sitting and waiting for a friend. This is a good idea and important step, but ending these racial biases will take much more than one day of training and education. The two men, Rashon Nelson and Donte Robinson, said in an interview with the Associated Press that they feared for their lives. The event led Heather McGhee, the president of the equal rights think tank Demos, to develop the Starbucks racial-bias training. McGhee was not surprised by the event and said, “It called to mind some of my earliest memories as an African American of feeling unwelcome and being discriminated against in stores
and restaurants and movie theaters.” And while Starbucks is actually addressing the incident with a proportional response, these kinds of racially prejudiced interactions have happened in thousands of other places that instead turn a blind eye to these kinds of discriminatory actions. This racial bias training is a good place to start. It could encourage interpersonal interactions among employees of different races and backgrounds. It could also lead to a review of rules and policies, such as if customers who have not yet made purchases can use the bathroom. But researchers are skeptical about the positive bias changes espoused by these trainings. While some racial bias programs, such as a 12week program studied by University of Wisconsin-Madison researchers, boasted a high bias reduction rate, other research suggests these trainings may actually reinforce
negative stereotypes or might not have any effect on explicit biases and actions. Starbucks has always made a good example of treating its employees well. For example, they offer free tuition to Arizona State University for the duration of an employee’s academic program and health insurance to employees working at least 20 hours a week. The decision to implement racial-bias training shows the company is aware of its mistakes and choosing to take the high road. This shows dedication to being a part of the solution instead of ignoring the problem. It would be beneficial for other corporations to follow Starbucks' lead and implement similar forms of this racial-bias training. That being said, the implicit biases common both in and out of the workplace must be rectified on a systemic level, not spot-treated in select companies and organizations. While addressing these
changes through a training may be a good start, there needs to be a more open conversation about how to address racial biases in work places, especially customeremployee interactions. This training may start the conversation about racial biases. However, there need to be more concrete steps to ensure that situations such as the one above will not occur again. For example, Starbucks also needs to ensure it hires a diverse staff and allows for people of different races and backgrounds to work together. It will lead for many different perspectives on the team and naturally help them face problems of racial bias. Incidents of extreme racial bias in public places are all too common, and all corporations should take similar steps in trying to solve the problem. Racial bias training will not fix the problem, but it is a good first step that proves Starbucks is dedicated to the cause.
COFFEE CHRONICLES
Nostalgia can have a positive effect on our lives Neeta Patwari is a senior in biology and Spanish.
It's weird for me to think about graduating. I always knew I was going to graduate, and for a long time, I was excited for it. I wanted to graduate. For my career, I had to do more schooling, and I was and am so excited to learn more about my field. But at the same time, I'm already feeling nostalgic. I look at freshmen going into classes and feel unbelievably jealous they still get to experience college and growing up. I walk by my old professors and wish I was still sitting in their classes, learning new exciting things for the first time. I have always been a sentimental person. I cried during
my high school graduation and when I moved to college, and I'm probably going to cry next week. However, I don't think this is a bad thing. Going to IU has been one of the best decisions of my life. While I was here, I learned more about myself than I ever expected. I discovered what I wanted to study and became confident enough to believe I could do it. I learned how to be a better friend and how to handle a break up. Moreover, I learned how to be myself and take opportunities, and I think that's why I am so nostalgic about graduating this weekend. This weekend, I will have shut a door on one stage of my life and that's scary. It's scary for me not to know what's going to happen in a year. And
at times like this, it's normal to be nostalgic. Nostalgia is a normal emotion, and in small doses, it can have a positive affect on our lives. The University of Southampton in the United Kingdom and the Nostalgia Group defined nostalgia as a complex emotion, which assigns a positive emotion to a past memory. It can be triggered by smells, sounds or loneliness. Nostalgia often involves a mixtures of emotions including happiness, loss and longing. And while I and other graduating seniors may be nostalgic now, this can have a positive affect on our lives. There have been multiple research papers about
how nostalgia affects our mood. Professor Constantine Sedikides of the University of Southampton found nostalgia can lead to a positive effect on mood and increase self-esteem and social connectedness. Another study found nostalgia can counteract loneliness because it increases the idea of social support. With all of this research, I feel more justified than ever to be nostalgic about graduating. I have had a great four years at IU. They have made me into the person I am and introduced me to some of my best friends. And I know in four months when I am missing IU, Bloomington and all of my friends, I still have my memories.
Miranda Garbaciak is a senior in English and creative writing.
Terrorism is taking on a new face. While there have been instances where a minuscule portion of society praises a terrorist, it has not quite reached the unprecedented level given to the arrested suspect of the Toronto van attack this past week. Ten victims were killed in this tragic attack, yet it is being overshadowed by statements being made by the attacker, Alek Minassian, who is claiming that the “incel rebellion has begun.” And some of the other incels around the world are rejoicing. Minassian posted on Facebook just moments before beginning his attack, leading to several comments such as, “I will have one celebratory beer for every victim that turns out to be a young woman between 18-35.” The Facebook post has since been deleted, but the comments will remain burned into my consciousness for a long time. I never thought in my time as a columnist for the Indiana Daily Student I would have to explain what incels are, but here we go. The term incel is a shorthand combination of the words involuntary and celibate. People who proclaim themselves as incels are in the mindset that they are not having sexual relations because “Chads” and “Staceys” — the incel community's derogatory term for sexually active men or women — are too busy sleeping with each other and won’t give any attention to these so-called intellectual and true men. The incels believe society is somehow conspiring against them to ensure their sexual failure, when, in reality, many of them have simply self-sabotaged any potential relationship by way of their
misogynistic behaviors. Incels aren’t always affiliated with the alt-right, but they run in the same circles of misogynistic men on the internet. The New York Times reports that "at their most extreme, incels have advocated rape and other forms of violence against women.” The fact that these men are finding a hero for themselves in this terrorist is frankly disgusting. It’s shocking and terrifying to hear that people are praising this terrorist because of his connection to the incel community. Minassian’s reference to Elliot Rodger in his Facebook post is probably the most concerning part. Rodger, another self-proclaimed incel, killed six people in 2014 before killing himself. He referred to himself as a “supreme gentleman” and encouraged future incels, like Minassian. The tragedy of this attack is being overshadowed by many media outlets' curiosity toward incels. Of course, I am only contributing to this by expressing my outrage over such a response, but it needs to be said. The media has not been fantastic when it comes to reporting tragedies. There will always be the fascination of the terrorist or killer or suspect, and such fascination will always outshine the victims. I didn’t hear anything about the terrorist attack until I saw people questioning the existence of incels on Twitter and, through further research, discovered the source of the buzz. In the future, when reporting about tragedies such as this, I just hope there is enough time to mourn the victims before the media moves on to be fully focused on the causative agents, such as the incel community.
NEWS
5
Monday, April 30, 2018 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
TY VINSON | IDS
Julie and Amy Gros Louis, Kenneth Gros Louis’ daughters, recite poems and stories that remind them of their father. A memorial took place in remembrance of Gros Louis on Saturday in the Ruth N. Halls Theatre.
Friends remember life of former IU chancellor By Peter Talbot pjtalbot@iu.edu | @petejtalbot
Friends, family and colleagues of former chancellor Kenneth R. R. Gros Louis gathered at the Ruth N. Halls Theatre on Saturday to tell stories about Gros Louis and remember his life. Gros Louis died October 20, 2017, at age 80. Gros Louis began at IU in 1964 as an assistant professor in the departments of English and Comparative Literature. Gros Louis also served as dean of the College of Arts and Sciences and vice president of the University among other leadership roles. Around 300 people gathered for the remembrance. Gros Louis shared the
title of University Chancellor with Herman B Wells, the only other person to occupy the position. Many speakers talked about the dry humor and wit Gros Louis brought to many speeches, meetings and interactions with students. "Ken delivered a punchline with the impeccable timing and subtlety of a Jack Benny, utterly diffusing the inevitable tense moments any academic leader faces with a hilarious non-sequitur or charming self-deprecating story," Provost Lauren Robel said. Perry Metz, executive director of Radio and Television Services at IU, worked with Gros Louis for more than 20 years. Metz said Gros
Louis was able to see the funny side in any situation. The joke could be in front of thousands of people or just for his own amusement. When Gros Louis was first appointed vice president, he was shocked that each vice president was expected to circulate his calendar for the week to the other vice presidents, Metz said. Gros Louis didn't like the idea, so he began peppering his calendar with the names of minor figures from medieval literature. No one said anything. At a monthly meeting of the campus deans, during a report on the Wells Scholars Program, the director was talking about a particular student who was facing a choice between getting her
Ph.D. or becoming an international fashion model, Metz said. Gro Louis interrupted, saying "Yes, a choice many of us in this room have been forced to make." Through his interactions with students, Gros Louis made Bloomington a welcoming place for students of all backgrounds, Robel said. He was an advocate for the creation of the Office of Gay, Lesbian & Bisexual Student Support Services. Julie and Amy Gros Louis, Kenneth Gros Louis’ daughters, spoke about having Gros Louis as a father and friend. “From getting advice about boys in grade school to having him proofread my articles I've submitted over
the past few years, he had a way of offering support and advice without explicitly giving advice,” Julie Gros Louis said. Amy Gros Louis said her father was someone who cared about students, colleagues, staff, parents, friends, family and IU. She said he was a mentor to most of the people in the room. “He truly cared about everyone in his life and wanted the best for all,” Amy Gros Louis said. “Dad wrote heartfelt, emotional Christmas cards to Julie and me, frequently reminding us, ‘Care for others and you'll be taken care of.’” Metz and other speakers continued to tell story after story about how Gros Louis
had supported them, mentored them or made them laugh. Others spoke about his support of student leaders. The remembrance event included a video presentation of students sharing their memories of Gros Louis. Mark Jensen, an IU alumnus, talked about Gros Louis’ private phone line in his office, the extension for which matched the initials of his full name, Kenneth Richard Russell Gros Louis. “He called that special phone extension his 'back phone,’” Jensen said. “If you ever wanted someone to listen, ever our own superhero, you dialed the secret digits that matched those crazy initials of the wonderful man with two middle names.”
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Monday, April 30, 2018 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
6
» SENIORS
» BASEBALL
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CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 sophomore outfielder Matt Gorski gave IU a 3-0 lead. “Back-to-back jacks is kind of a good feeling for the pitcher,” Herrin said. “You have a cushion, more than one-run cushion. Just want to go out there and throw more strikes and execute.” IU entered the bottom of the seventh inning with a 4-2 lead, but the Hoosier bats exploded, getting five hits and five runs to put the game out of reach. The nine runs scored were the most by the team in a conference game since April 15. “Hitting those two home runs back-to-back kind of took it off everyone’s shoulders,” Lemonis said. “We could relax and play the game.” While IU’s offense improved as the weekend series progressed, the same couldn’t be said for the most feared hitter in the Illinois lineup. Junior Bren Spillane entered the series leading the Big Ten Conference in batting average with a .444 mark and in home runs with 16. However, he collected just two hits during the three games. “Don’t let him beat us. That was our biggest approach going into this weekend,” Herrin said. “We knew he was one of the best in the country and we wanted to go into this weekend, not pitch around him, but execute pitches.” The two wins for IU came as the team also began to work two important players back into the rotation from injury. Junior
Elizabeth Bishop IDS Favorite IU memory? Bishop I gave a tour to a high school from my hometown. Just getting to share our experience with a younger generation, and getting to show what we’re so proud of and what we’ve worked so hard to be a part of. IDS Favorite spot on campus? Bishop My favorite spot is the benches outside of Woodburn. I actually just took a Snapchat story there yesterday. I think it’s a really calming spot. I go at least once a week. Twice a week. I always try to make a point to go a little early so I can sit there and recoup before class.
» ALVVAYS
Megan Read
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
hair behind her ear. She wore a black-and-white striped shirt and black pants, looking similar to a football referee. The band’s youthful, nostalgiadriven guitars and synth matched the deep-hued blue, red and white flashing lights behind the band. The word “Drum” was printed on drummer Sheridan Riley’s bass drum. Keyboard player Kerri MacLellan wore a blue sweater with red and yellow stripes and blocks and played on a keyboard from the 1970s. Alvvays played its dream-driven pop-rock anthem, “In Undertow,” from its 2017 album “Antisocialites.” Angelic blue and white lights
IDS Favorite memory? Read Little Five this year has been a great memory. I’m really glad I did that. Even though I was out, like, the third lap of the race. But the first three laps were great. I actually started a team with three other seniors. We were all rookies, and we just wanted to do the race for the fun of it. The race was a struggle for the team, especially since I crashed, and I was out for the rest of the race. One of my teammates also wrecked, about 50 laps later. She was fine, but then we had a flat tire. IDS Your go-to study spot? Read I really like to sit out in Dunn Meadow by the river by one of the trees, because you still get Wi-Fi, but you get to enjoy the fresh air. But in the winter, I like to sit by the fire in the Union. Or over in the Arboretum, too.
EVAN DESTEFANO | IDS
Junior Tim Herrin pitches the ball during the Hoosiers’ game against the Indiana State Sycamores on Tuesday, April 10. IU played Illinois on Sunday and won 9-2.
infielder Luke Miller made a pinch-hit appearance in each game and collected two hits, while junior pitcher Pauly Milto threw in the bullpen and was available to play Sunday. Miller has been out of the lineup due to a foot injury while Milto has been dealing with arm soreness. With no midweek games scheduled for IU prior to next weekend’s series at Minnesota, Lemonis said Miller will take part in team scrimmages this week. He
also said he expects Milto to pitch in some capacity next week. Because of its series win against Illinois, IU will remain in the top half of the Big Ten standings entering the Minnesota series. The Hoosiers are fifth in the conference standings and are among the top 25 teams nationally in RPI. “We had a rough week, so coming in and winning and fighting after that really tough Friday night loss was huge for us,” Lemonis said.
lit from behind as MacLellan played a synthesized keyboard intro. The vocals reverberated and the bass guitar thrummed. “You find a wave and try to hold on for as long as you can,” Rankin sang. “You made a mistake you’d like to erase and I understand.” At times, the screen behind the band displayed television static. At other times, lights and colors moved, exploded and waned with the music. Between songs, Rankin asked about the outcome of the Boston Celtics basketball game. At another point, she expressed her surprise at the amount of vape pens in the audience. “I didn’t have anyone in my class who had a vape,” Rankin said. “All these cool guys have vapes.”
Throughout the high-energy set, band members danced and swayed in a mellow fashion, in line with the band’s suburbia-youth image, heard in songs such as “Archie, Marry Me.” “We spend our days locked in a room, content inside a bubble,” Rankin sang. “In the nighttime we go out and scour the streets for trouble.” Long after the sun set outside the doors of the Bluebird, Alvvays performed “Party Police.” A video of a wavering white flag that read “Alvvays” appeared on the screen behind them. “You don’t have to leave, you could just stay here with me,” Rankin sang. “Forget all the party police, we can find comfort in debauchery.”
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Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com | Monday, April 30, 2018
7
MAY 15-20
SPORTS Editors Dylan Wallace and Michael Ramirez sports@idsnews.com
Stalemate
PHOTOS BY SAM HOUSE | IDS
IU shares spoils with Mexico U-20s to conclude spring season. By Michael Ramirez michrami@iu.edu | @michrami_
IU capped off its spring season against the Mexico U-20 National Team in an aggressive and high-paced match. There weren't too many chances for either side to score Sunday afternoon because both teams had just two shots each that were on target. The game ended in a 0-0 draw, and the teams shared the spoils of the match. Defense was a major emphasis for IU Coach Todd Yeagley against Mexico. Yeagley started junior defender Jordan Kleyn at center back, a position in which he usually doesn't play. Kleyn typically plays at right back, but he had to move over to the middle of the defense against Mexico. Sophomore defender A.J. Palazzolo was sidelined with a concussion and provided Kleyn with the opportunity to slot into the back line next to junior defender Timmy Mehl. "There were a few moments where I could've done a little better, but not having some of the game experience back there made me a little nervous coming into the game," Kleyn said. "I have great teammates around me, so I was pretty confident that I would go in there and get the job done." Kleyn and Mehl had the duty of stopping the Mexican attack, which managed to score against Notre Dame just two days prior. The Hoosiers were coming off of a loss to the Fighting Irish by a score of 3-0 on April 22. The Hoosiers tallied nine shots total Sunday but couldn't
place any of them past Mexico goalkeeper Carlos Avilez. Even though IU couldn't convert on any of its chances, Yeagley said he was impressed with how his team adjusted as the game progressed. "In the first half we weren't great in our first few passes in transition from defense to offense," Yeagley said. "Otherwise, I thought we could've had quite a few more chances. As we grew into the game, we created some great chances. We defended well, and I thought we tactically adjusted the field well and made some adjustments."
“We defended well, and I thought we tactically adjusted the field well and made some adjustments.”
Thomas Warr fights for the ball in the opposing team’s box just before the final whistle. The Hoosiers will return to Bill Armstrong Stadium for a match against Xavier in August.
down for the most part and limiting their shots to around 18 yards out," Kleyn said. "I didn't feel threatened by any of their shots." After seven matches under its belt, IU finished its spring season against an international side. Kleyn said after the game he was impressed with the way the team played against a quality opponent. "I'd say this was our best performance," Kleyn said. "Yeah, we didn't have a lot of the ball, but we definitely created some really good chances. It was just a fun and competitive match, and I thought we played really well. It is a good way to end the season."
0-0
Shots IU and Mexico finished the game with nine shots each.
Shots on goal Both teams had just two shots on target in the match.
Todd Yeagley, IU coach
The chances the Hoosiers had were created by a committee of players led by sophomore and senior attackers Griffin Dorsey and Austin Panchot. Both players had the only two shots on target in a game that didn't have too many threatening moments. Mexico used the sidelines with its wingers throughout the first half. It created some problems for senior defender Rece Buckmaster, who had to monitor Adrian Lozano. Yet both Buckmaster and Kleyn managed to limit the amount of space Mexico had on the wings, and it forced Mexico to play through its midfield in the second half. "They are very technical and gifted, obviously, but I thought we did a good job locking them
Trevor Swartz looks to cross the ball during Sunday’s tie against the Mexico Youth National Team. While both teams had chances, neither could find the back of the net.
THE HUSS NETWORK
My undying bond with my father: Why I write about sports Andrew Hussey is a senior in journalism.
For the past four years, I have written hundreds of stories for the Indiana Daily Student, but this is the first time I have used first person. It’s never been about me and I never want it to be. However, with my time at IU coming to a bittersweet close and with what would have been my dad’s 56th birthday Saturday the 28th, I thought it was time for me to explain why I write about sports. It’s for him. My dad died from a heart attack on August 19, 2012, weeks into my junior year of high school. His death came just over a month after sports journalism became my passion.
He was never able to read any of my stories, but he’s inspired each of the thousands of words I’ve written since that day. Not a day goes by that I don’t think about him and what he meant to me. Being an only child, I had a special bond with my father. My dad was my soccer coach from the moment I first kicked a soccer ball. He took me to baseball games as a baby and indoctrinated me into Notre Dame football. He was the reason why I love sports, and it was our undying bond. A month before he died, he and I went on a road trip to Washington, D.C., so that I could attend a Sports Management Camp at Georgetown University. During that week, I fell in love with sports journalism. Sports became my shelter in
those months following his death. I turned to my favorite teams as a welcome respite from the tears and the sadness. I volunteered as the manager of the Cathedral High School soccer team, a group that embraced me with open arms and allowed me to escape my grief. I will never forget that team and what it meant to me. Yet sports writing is where I found my sanctuary. Every sentence that has appeared in the IDS with my byline has been molded by my loss and how it has redefined me. I am a survivor of tragedy. I am a fighter who refuses to give up no matter the circumstances. I am someone who wears a smile on my face, despite the adversity I have faced. In this way, death has no power over me. The pain isn’t gone, nor
will it ever be. This is because when you love someone so much, losing them will always affect you no matter how many birthdays go by where they aren’t there to blow out their candles. Yet you become more powerful by how you live out the days following your loss. I know confidently the only way he would want me to live is to passionately follow my dreams. Through the IDS, I have been able to do just that. Sports have always been my normalcy, my safe haven through life’s challenges. Since his death, I have felt most at peace amid the thousands of roaring fans at arenas and stadiums across the Big Ten. It’s in those moments I silently soak in the crowd and the spectacle, and I often ask myself what my
dad would think if he could see me now. I know he’d be proud because I have endured and not for a second have I relented on the pursuit of my dream. Through tragedy I haven’t asked for sympathy. I have not felt sorry for myself. While he’s been gone so long that his words fade from memory, his spirit lives within me each and every day. I’ve come a long way as both a person and a journalist since August 2012. These have been two intertwined journeys — and forever will be. Sports are my connection to my dad and my way of remembering him. I’m never going to be the same without him, but I have every reason to continue down the path he helped pave for me.
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Monday, April 30, 2018 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
SOFTBALL
ROWING
IU wins at shortened Dale England Cup By William Coleman wicolema@iu.edu | @wcoleman08
BOBBY GODDIN | IDS
Freshman outfielder Makayla Ferrari looks to steal during the game against Michigan on Sunday afternoon at Andy Mohr Field. IU lost to Michigan, 2-0, to fall to 16-4 in conference play.
IU drops series on senior day By Phillip Steinmetz psteinme@iu.edu | @PhillipHoosier
Junior pitcher Tara Trainer couldn’t help but crack a smile despite her team losing the series against No. 15 Michigan, 2-1. Even though Sunday's game ended in a 2-0 loss, she reiterated that this weekend showed IU softball can compete with anyone in the conference, no matter the ranking. “I think it just shows that we can compete with anyone,” Trainer said. “Everyone wants to win. We’ve just got to keep our minds right and keep believing.” After losing game one, 5-1, Michigan had all of the momentum heading into Saturday. In game two, the Wolverines looked dominant after taking a 4-0 lead through four and a half innings. But behind a two-out rally, sophomore catcher Bella Norton brought some life into the IU bats after she found the gap in left field to score a pair of runs. Senior infielder Taylor Uden then followed it up
with a single to left field to make it a 4-3 Michigan lead. After both teams struggled to find much offense through the next two innings, sophomore outfielder Gabbi Jenkins came up clutch. In the bottom of the seventh with two outs and two strikes, Jenkins found a gap in left field to tie up the game. Freshman catcher Maddie Westmoreland was close on a walk-off home run, but it headed into extra innings.
“Everyone wants to win, we’ve just got to keep our minds right and keep believing.” Tara Trainer, IU junior pitcher
Trainer continued to battle in the circle for the Hoosiers and set up a golden situation in the bottom of the ninth. After Michigan threw the ball right down the middle of the plate, Uden sent a solo shot to left field to cap off the comeback in extra innings. “It was nice to see Uden come up and have a big
moment,” IU Coach Shonda Stanton said. “I couldn’t be more pleased with the competitiveness and guts and fight of our team all weekend long.” Both teams traded blows as they could not find a run through eight innings. Trainer remained consistent in the circle, and Stanton rode with her until the very end. IU’s best chance to score came in the bottom of the sixth after a pair of walks and a single loaded the bases. But Michigan freshman Meghan Beaubien retired the next two batters to end the threat. Michigan had a chance to score in the top of the seventh after Jenkins dropped the ball in right field, but senior outfielder Rebecca Blitz recovered and threw it to senior infielder Rachel O’Malley, who then sent a rocket throw home that resulted in tagging out the runner. After Blitz couldn’t make the diving catch in center field, Michigan started off the bottom of the ninth with a standup double. Then, Michigan made the sacrifice fly to advance the runner to third.
2-0 A weird sequence of events resulted in IU's tagging out the runner at home. With two outs, Michigan infielder Madison Uden followed in the footsteps of her Hoosier sister from the game before. Uden sent a double to left field to score a pair of runs as Michigan took a 2-0 lead. IU continued to string together hits in the bottom of the ninth as Michigan closed out the series with a victory. Despite the series loss, Trainer and Stanton continued to reiterate the fact that their goals are still right in front of them. If Michigan loses a pair of games, Minnesota drops one, and IU sweeps Rutgers, then the opportunity for a Big Ten regular season championship remains in play. “Our goals are still in front of us,” Stanton said. “We knew that we wouldn’t get an at-large bid because of the way we started. For us, it’s about the Big Ten Tournament and securing a top-4 bye.”
Practicing in worst-case weather conditions is a must for athletes. Baseball players know the struggle of playing through rain until lightning is spotted. Football teams put up with negative temperatures and thick snowstorms. For rowing, it’s the wind. The strong gusts of air create tidal waves that wreak havoc on boats. While rowing is hard enough already, imagine having to thrust your oars into the water in unison with your teammates while a set of waves rock your boat back and forth uncontrollably. Those conditions were very much in play Saturday at Lake Lemon. The IU rowing team hosted Duke, Notre Dame and Penn for the tenth annual Dale England Cup. A dozen races were scheduled for Saturday, but the heavy winds limited that number to just four races. “The conditions were really difficult,” IU Coach Steve Peterson said. “We’ll practice on days when the winds are this strong, but the difference is we’ll go to a part of the lake that’s really sheltered.” Each team at the event has received votes for the national rankings at some point this year, but only the Hoosiers, Blue Devils and Fighting Irish garnered top20 status this week. Pitted up against Duke and Penn, two schools it faced earlier this season, the Hoosiers were excited to see how the team has improved throughout the year ahead of the postseason. In the first varsity four, wind forced the teams to row into the start of the race. This confusing variant led
to unwarranted head starts for Penn and Notre Dame. The Hoosiers made a serious comeback despite the snafu and wound up winning the race by 11 seconds. The 1V8 boats rowed next, and they were able to carry out the race in its entirety. IU started out slow but had a nice second-half push to make it an interesting finish. Penn came out on top, but the three other teams were all within seven seconds of the Quakers. The Hoosiers placed second, two seconds off Penn. Up next was the 2V8, a heat raced in similar fashion to the 1V8. Not only did both have regular lengths of 2,000 meters, but both had intense conclusions, including a photo finish between Notre Dame and IU. Video evidence conjured a tie for first between the schools. Penn came in third and was just three-tenths seconds off the pace, while Duke lost by 10 seconds. The last race of the day was the 2V4. Strong winds came back to haunt the lake, so the boats had to row into the start again. No times were recorded, but IU came in first ahead of Penn, Duke and Notre Dame. IU has seen improvement throughout the team in terms of outlasting the competition. The Hoosiers’ 1V4 widened its gap against Penn and Duke by more than 10 seconds each. With 60 team points, IU clinched its second straight Dale England Cup despite the event’s shortened schedule. Sitting at No. 14 in the country, the Hoosiers are destined to see their national ranking move before the Big Ten Championships on May 13 in Indianapolis.
FOR LEASE 1640 N. Jordan Avenue
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
We are seeking a Greek organization that is looking for a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to live in a house that will be available for the 2019-2020 school year and beyond. There is no returning tenant. Currently built out as a fraternity house, we are willing to convert it to a sorority house. Currently in-room living. Cold dorm conversion is possible. 22,400+ sq. ft.
If interested, please have your housing corporation president or national office contact: UJ80 Corp. 444 Lake Cook Road, Suite 11, Deerfield, IL 60015 Email: 1640housing@uj80.org If leased, the property could be available to your organization for rush and other special events as early as Fall 2018.
CONGRATS, CLASS OF ’18! WE’RE PROUD OF YOU. BE AN ACTIVE PART OF THE WORLDWIDE NETWORK OF IU ALUMNI.
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*Your free year of membership is included when you order your graduation cap and gown online.
Indiana Daily Student
10
ARTS
Monday, April 30, 2018 idsnews.com
Editors Christine Fernando and Clark Gudas arts@idsnews.com
Varsity, Stef Chura, Weaves rock the Bishop By Kathleen Clark-Perez kpclark@iu.edu | @KatPerezIN
During the Weaves’ song “Walkaway,” guitarist Morgan Waters screamed into the holes of his electric guitar. He played the strings with his mouth like a harmonica. Lead vocalist Jasmyn Burke moaned repeatedly into an echoing microphone. Varsity, an indie rock band from Chicago, and Stef Chura, a punk band from Detroit, opened for the Canadian pop band Weaves at The Bishop Bar on evening on April 26. Varsity was the first band to take the stage. Lead vocalist Stef Smith said Varsity was stoked to be there because she and guitarist Pat Stanton went to IU. Varsity released its first EP “Thanks For Nothing” in 2014 and its self-titled, full-length album in 2015. Varsity opened with “Alone In My Principles” from the new album. Smith played the synth and danced as she closed her eyes and sang. “We stopped for gas,” Smith sang. “I got out to collect my thoughts.”
The crowd was thin, but the band members smiled at each other and danced as though the venue was full. Members of the headlining band Weaves moved close to the stage and made up most of the audience. Stanton wore yellow aviators and played rhythm on a red electric guitar. The red lights made the venue feel like a photography darkroom. The next song was “A Friend Named Paul.” “You know there’s nothing wrong here,” Smith sang. “It’s just my mind.” Later, Varsity played the song “Must Be Nice.” Smith said the band created a music video for this song which was featured on NPR Music All Songs TV in February. Varsity closed out the set with the song “Amanda.” “If we don’t talk about it, no one can get mad about it,” Smith sang. Following the Varsity show, Stef Chura took the stage. The three piece band delivered punk songs. While lead vocalist Chura tuned her bass, she bantered
ALEX DERYN | IDS
Varsity and Weaves play at the Bishop on Thursday, April 26. Both bands decided to perform in Bloomington after each recently released an EP.
with the crowd. “Anyone here like to pick their own scabs?” Chura said. “Satisfaction is a hard thing to get except for when you are picking your own scabs.” Weaves, a pop-rock group, hails from Toronto. It released
Two women turn ‘art play dates’ into new exhibit From IDS reports
Craft night creations by artists Lori Leaumont and Vanessa Monfreda will be displayed at Gather, a Bloomington art gallery and gift shop, from May 4 through the end of the month. The exhibit, titled “Flores y colores” — “flowers and colors” in English — is a celebration of spring, Gather owner Talia Halliday said in an email to the Indiana Daily Student. Collage artist Monfreda was born in Chile but lived in Ecuador for several years.
Ceramic artist Leaumont, on the other hand, is a New Orleans native. The duo’s backgrounds inspired the bright colors and flowers in their work, according to the email. When they don’t have work and their children are at school, Leaumont and Monfreda meet up to make art. They call these meetings their art play dates. “They inspire each other and listen to each others’ life and family stories,” Halliday said in the email. “They drink coffee and love to eat pastry, cupcakes or donuts.” The work in the ex-
hibit is the result of the two women’s art play dates. Attendees will be able to meet the artists while creating and buying art at the gallery opening from 5 to 8 p.m. May 4 at Gather, which is located at 116 N. Walnut St. Leaumont will offer face painting at the opening, while Monfreda will offer collage craft-making sessions. “Come join us for a very special gallery exhibition meets trunk show meets craft night meets animal carnival,” Halliday said. Christine Fernando
RENTAL RETURNS!!
Please return your rental books NO later than May 4, 2018. RETURN THEM BEFORE YOU LEAVE TOWN.*
Return your rentals at the IMU during regular store hours
8 am-6 pm Mon - Fri; 10 am-5 pm Sat; 11 am-5 pm Sun *If you don’t return your textbook rental, you will be charged the used book price, plus an additional 7.5% processing fee.
Year in 2017. Weaves released its sophomore album “Wide Open” in October 2017. This album was also nominated for the Juno Award for Alternative Album of the Year in 2018. Weaves bassist Zach Bines
a self-titled debut EP in 2014 and a self-titled, full-length album in 2016. The band played a NPR Music Tiny Desk Concert in June 2016, and the selftitled full length album was nominated for the Juno Award for Alternative Album of the
took the stage with balloons tied to his bass, flowers tied to each tuning peg and blue lipstick on his lips. Weaves played the song “Coo Coo,” while audience members danced and batted balloons. “Abortion of popcorn that’s popping and shopping for a fair chance,” Burke sang. In honor of Bines’ birthday, the band sang a distorted version of “Happy Birthday” and Chura brought doughnuts from Rainbow Bakery on stage with candles in them. The band stopped the set to enjoy a few bites of the treat. Audience members enjoyed doughnuts as well. “Does anyone want some?” Burke said. “Come on and share.” Toward the end of the set, Weaves played the song “Shithole” while audience members headbanged and jumped to the rock song. The crowd created a dance circle and began to toss and kick balloons again. “I’m living in a shithole not holding no one’s hands,” Burke sang. “Hoping for something to take me off of this land.”
KINSEY CONFIDENTIAL
Answering a question about ever-evolving sexuality I’ve been dating a man for several years, and I love him. We are sexually active, and we are both relatively satisfied. Recently, I’ve developed feelings it seems for a female friend of mine. I’ve always identified as straight, but now I’m not so sure. I really am not sure who I can talk to in order to sort all of this out. Sexual attraction is a curious thing. Nowadays we tend to use a lot of labels — someone may be homosexual, gay and lesbian, or heterosexual/ straight. Some use bisexual to indicate someone who has romantic or sexual attraction to people of more than one gender. Others use the term pansexual to either refer to attraction to people of more than one gender or even an openness to gender as well as a variety of consensual sexual experiences. And these are just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to sexual identities. Based on the thousands of interviews that he and his colleagues conducted in the early to mid-1900s, Alfred Kinsey saw romantic and sexual attraction as lying more on a continuum. He believed that individuals could locate their attracS SPORTS ARTS & ENTERTAINM MEDIA NEWS SPORTS ARTS & EN RES MULTIMEDIA NEWS SPORT & FEATURES MULTIMEDIA NEW OPINION IN DEPTH & FEATURES NTERTAINMENT OPINION IN DEP S SPORTS ARTS & ENTERTAINME MEDIA NEWS SPORTS ARTS & EN RES MULTIMEDIA NEWS SPORT & FEATURES MULTIMEDIA NEW OPINION IN DEPTH & FEATURES NTERTAINMENT OPINION IN DEP S SPORTS ARTS & ENTERTAINME MEDIA NEWS SPORTS ARTS & EN RES MULTIMEDIA NEWS SPORT & FEATURES MULTIMEDIA NEW OPINION IN DEPTH & FEATURES NTERTAINMENT OPINION IN DEP S SPORTS ARTS & ENTERTAINME MEDIA NEWS SPORTS ARTS & EN RES MULTIMEDIA NEWS SPORTS & FEATURES MULTIMEDIA NEW OPINION IN DEPTH & FEATURES NTERTAINMENT OPINION IN DEP S SPORTS ARTS & ENTERTAINME @idsnews MEDIA NEWS SPORTS ARTS & EN RES MULTIMEDIA NEWS SPORT & FEATURES MULTIMEDIA NEW OPINION IN @idsnews DEPTH & FEATURES NTERTAINMENT OPINION IN DEP S SPORTS ARTS & ENTERTAINME MEDIA NEWS SPORTS ARTS & EN idsnews RES MULTIMEDIA NEWS SPORT & FEATURES MULTIMEDIA NEW OPINION IN DEPTH & FEATURES NTERTAINMENT OPINION IN DEP idsnews S SPORTS ARTS & ENTERTAINME MEDIA NEWS SPORTS ARTS & EN RES MULTIMEDIA NEWS SPORT & FEATURES MULTIMEDIA NEW OPINION IN DEPTH & FEATURES NTERTAINMENT OPINION IN DEP S SPORTS ARTS & ENTERTAINME MEDIA NEWS SPORTS ARTS & EN RES MULTIMEDIA NEWS SPORT & FEATURES MULTIMEDIA NEW OPINION IN DEPTH & FEATURES NTERTAINMENT OPINION IN DEP S SPORTS ARTS & ENTERTAINME MEDIA NEWS SPORTS ARTS & EN RES MULTIMEDIA NEWS SPORT & FEATURES MULTIMEDIA NEW OPINION IN DEPTH & FEATURES NTERTAINMENT OPINION IN DEP S SPORTS ARTS & ENTERTAINME MEDIA NEWS SPORTS ARTS & EN
tions or sexual behaviors on a scale from zero to six, such that zero indicated exclusively heterosexual or opposite-sex interests or behaviors and six indicated exclusively homosexual or same-sex interests or behaviors. Not only that, but people could change over their lifetime. In other words, Kinsey would see it as relatively common that someone could be predominantly or entirely attracted to men for years and then find themselves having feelings for a woman. To use his scale, one might say that you started out as a zero but moved to a one or two, for example. That doesn’t mean that you keep moving further along the scale to a three or a six, though certainly that’s possible, too. According to these ideas, you could find yourself at a zero again. It’s impossible to predict. You also might consider how your reactions to your recent same-sex attraction compare to your past othersex attractions. Did those concern you in the same way? If not, why not? What is it that’s different about this attraction, other than her biological sex? Sometimes, in spite of all the cultural scripts that
suggest we’ll only fall for a person who is a certain gender, race, age, nationality, height, weight or type of attractiveness, we feel attraction or love or interest for someone simply because of their humanity, and it surprises us in some way. And that’s not necessarily a bad thing. I think it’s great that you’re taking the time to learn more about your personal sexuality. As you explore, you might find it interesting to read some of the research in this area. In addition to academic studies about women who are sexually attracted to both women and men, there is also an interesting book called “Sexual Fluidity” which, while based on research, tells the stories of women’s journeys into understanding their own changing experiences of sexual attractions, behaviors and identities. Kinsey Confidential is part of a joint partnership between the IU School of Public HealthBloomington (IU SPH) and The Kinsey Institute. The column is written by Dr. Debby Herbenick, professor in the IU SPH. Read past Q&A or submit your own question at KinseyConfidential.org. Follow us on Twitter @KinseyCon.
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Grace Baptist Temple & Preschool 2320 N. Smith Pike 812-336-3049 • mygracebaptist.org
Instagram • Twitter • Facebook @mygracebaptist Wednesday: 10 a.m. & 7 p.m. Sunday: 10 a.m. & 6 p.m. Sunday School: 9 a.m. Grace Baptist Temple is located a short distance from the IU campus. We are starting a student ministry, please come by for a visit. Our people will treat you like one of the family! Jose Esquibel, Senior Pastor Wesley Phillips, Children's Pastor Gail Lobenthal, Administrative Assistant Susie Price, Preschool Director
Check
the IDS every Thursday for your directory of local religious organizations, or go online anytime at idsnews.com/religious.
Reserved prkg., onsite W/D. 1 block to Law/Opt. 812-333-9579
Flexibility with class schedule.
Found: Car and house keys near Dunn Meadow. 812-272-1642
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
2 BR., res. prkg. Next to Info./Bus., onsite laundry. 812-333-9579
Real-world Experience. NO WEEKENDS! All Majors Accepted. Seeking students with good organization, time management, and communication skills to work in advertising sales. Previous sales experience preferred but not required. Must own reliable transportation and make 3 semester commitment
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EMPLOYMENT Camp Staff
Apply in person at: Franklin Hall, RM 130. Email: ads@indiana.edu
for a complete job description. EOE
General Employment
Aver’s Pizza Now Hiring. Bloomington’s Original Gourmet Pizza To Go, Since 1995. Managers, Servers, Delivery Driver, Cooks & Dishwashers. Apply Online: averspizza.wyckwyre.com
Customer Service Representatives Looking for students interested in Customer Service positions. 12-15 hours/week.
HOUSING
3-4 BR. Dntwn./Campus. W/D, D/W, off-street prkg. 812-333-9579
PAVILION
Book a tour today
Apartment Furnished EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
1, 2, 3 BR. 1 blk. from campus. Avail. now, also Aug. ‘18. 812-361-6154 mwisen@att.net
Avail. now and Aug. Near Stadium & Dntwn. Furn., 2 rm. apt. in house. 1 BR w/lg. closet, adjoining 2nd rm., office/living area. Lots of light. Share BA, kit., W/D, w/1 person. Priv.entrance, off-street prkg. Lg. wooded lot w/deck & firepit.$550/mo. includes utils. & WiFi. Call 812-336-8455. No texts.
Apt. Unfurnished
Must be available to start now and commit until May, 2019. Stop by the IDS office in Franklin Hall, Room 130, or email: ads@idsnews.com for an application. Application Deadline: May 7th. EOE
!!NOW LEASING!! August ‘19 - ‘20. Great locations. Omega Properties 812-333-0995 omegabloomington.com
Looking for summer help. Outside roofing work on Campus. Must be physically fit. $15/hr. (812) 824-3006
Call Today 812-333-9579 GrantProps.com
Now leasing for Fall 2018
!!NOW LEASING!! 2-3 BR. August ‘18 - ‘19. Omega Properties 812-333-0995 omegabloomington.com
Hiring PT leasing agents. Flexible schedule. Previous experience pref. Car req. Commission incl. cwalk@crerentals.com
Each unit accom. 2-5 tenants Outstanding downtown/campus location
Locations close to campus
305
Attn: Early Risers! NOW HIRING Delivery of the IDS. Mondays & Thursdays. 5:30 a.m. to 7:30 a.m. Must be here for Summer! Reliable vehicle required. $10.50/hr. + mileage. To apply send resume to: ads@idsnews.com or fill out an application at the IDS office in Franklin Hall, Room 129. Application Deadline: May 7th.
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Work at Quinipet! Great summer job opportunity at beautiful waterfront summer camp on Shelter Island, NY! Positions: Activity Counselors, Sailors, Lifeguards, leadership. ALL ARE WELCOME! Apply online: www.quinipet.org
Grant Properties
1 BR. Flexible lease. $600, incl. utils, wifi, prkg. Quiet and near campus. No pets. 812-322-4660
1, 2, 3 BR. 1 blk. from Campus. Avail. now, also Aug. ‘18. 812-361-6154 mwisen@att.net
pavprop.com 812-333-2332 Large 1 BR. Prkg. incl., onsite laundry 5 blks. to Info./Bus. 812-333-9579
Grant Properties
*** Now renting 2018 *** HPIU.COM 1-4 bedrooms. 812-333-4748 No pets please.
*Omega Properties* !!Now Leasing 2018-19!! 5 BR houses: 125 E. 10th St.: 5 BR, 3 BA, many updates. 526 N. Lincoln: 5 BR, 2 BA., new kit. 613 N. Lincoln: 5 BR, 4 BA, brand new. Call 812-333-0995!
Call Today 812-333-9579 GrantProps.com Large 1, 2 & 4 BR apartments & townhouses avail. Summer, 2018. Close to Campus & Stadium. 812-334-2646
Urban STAtioN live your lifestyle
BrAND NEW LuXurY aparTMENTS
1-4 bedrooms THEUrBANSTATioN.CoM 812.935.0135
Large 3 BR., parking laundry, D/W. 812-333-9579
TV with stand. Older model but works well. Must pick up. $100. teacton@indiana.edu
pavprop.com 812-333-2332
3-piece sturdy table set with table and 2 stools. $30. Must pick up. whsin@indiana.edu 3-shelf bookcase with adjustable shelves. Can include book stopper. $8 hwangye@indiana.edu
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
Sublet Apt. Unfurn.
4 IKEA upholstered dining chairs with white covers. $175 for whole set. rboveja@indiana.edu
*Sublets avail. Neg. terms/rent. Located on or close to Campus! 812-333-9579
Antique hutch dresser from early 1800s. 6 drawers, ornate. $1000, obo. 812-360-5551
Avail. Immediately! 1 BR in 5 BR unit. 10th & College, $700 mo., obo. willslido@gmail.com
Black armoire w/ mirror and space for jewelry & other items. $125. mrohlfin@indiana.edu
Sublet Condos/Twnhs. Avail. June. 2 BR, 1.5 BA townhouse w/basement. All pets ok! $800/mo. rowhites@indiana.edu
Clear plastic 3-drawer organizer. Clean, used 1 year. Price neg. ankhande@iu.edu
Sublet Houses
Comfortable twin mattress in excellent cond. Only used 6 months. $50 ecarlucc@indiana.edu
1 BR in 5 BR house. Avail. May 11- Aug. 7. 501 E. 7th at Dunn. Furn. Free prkg. 847-917-1177
Futon with 8 inch mattress on metal frame. Lightly used. $100, obo. teacton@indiana.edu
1 BR of 4 BR duplex. Avail. early May-Aug. 1. $670/mo.+utils. 422 N. Fess Ave. 317-341-0851
2408 East 4th Street 3 BR, 2 BA, big backyard, ALL UTILS. INCLUD. $2400/mo. www.iurent.com 812-360-2628
Green bungee chair in good cond. Must sell before May 5th. $10. ihubeny@indiana.edu
Avail. May 5th- Aug. 7th. 1 BR of 5 BR house. Great location! Call 708-977-6855.
IKEA full size bed and Sultan Havberg mattress. $150 for both. ncgreensource@gmail.com
3-5 BR. Parking, laundry onsite. Near Law/Opt./Music. 812-333-9579
Lightly used black leather love seat couch. $75 obo cgorkin@indiana.edu
501 E. Cottage Grove 4 BR, 2 BA, ranch over finished basement. Close to Campus & bars. Dan: 812-320-6806.
Appliances Washer/dryer set in great working condition. $400, obo. mbrej@indiana.edu
MOVING! Sectional couch & living room furniture in great cond. judympistol@aol.com
Washing machine- LG WT7200C. Used 1 month, like new. $550. 812-327-8853
Computers
Scandinavian style gray sofa. Like new. Fits 2 to 3 people. $350, obo. cle4@iu.edu
27” iMac in good cond. w/ 3.2 Ghz Intel Core i3. Incl. Logic Pro X. $700. tawobiyi@indiana.edu
New HP Spectre x360 8th gen laptop+tablet. 15”. Price neg. lee2003@indiana.edu
Electronics
Instruments Casci LK-22 61-key lighted note keyboard. Great for beginners! $50, obo. borlee@indiana.edu
Lenovo all-in-one gaming PC. Brand new, never opened. $1400, obo. rngann@iu.edu
313 North Clark 3 BR, 1 BA, fenced in backyard. ALL UTILS. INCLUD. $2100/mo. www.iurent.com 812-360-2628 5 BR, N. Washington: $2300. 4 & 3 BR by IU Baseball Field: $1900 & $1250. creamandcrimson properties.com
Like new faux fur zebra print saucer chair. Soft wide seat. $10. hwangye@indiana.edu
MERCHANDISE
3 BR. 1019 E 1st St. $1875 Aug. ‘18. 925-2544206 darusrentals.com 3, 4, & 5 BR houses for lease in AUG 18. Close to the stadium. Parking for up to 10 vehicles, large yards and outdoor spaces. Close to athletic training facilities. All pets welcome! $1,500-$2,000. Call or text Josh at: 614.266.0921 to set up a showing today!
Furniture 2 tan couches in good condition. $175 each. Must pick up. teacton@indiana.edu
Close to Campus
downtown WALK To campus
Sarge Rentals, Fall 2018. sargerentals.com 812-330-1501
Newly Remodeled
203 South Clark 3 BR, 2 BA, ALL UTILS. INCLUD. $2100/mo. www.iurent.com 812-360-2628
www.goodrents.homestead. com 317-661-1808
Outstanding locations near campus at great prices
Traynor CustomValve YCV50 blue guitar tube amp w/ footswitch. $375. jusoconn@indiana.edu
4 & 5 Bedroom Houses
1-3 BR home. 3 blocks to Campus. Avail. immediately. Call: 812-339-2859.
3 BR, 1.5 BA, W/D, D/W, A/C, 801 W. 12th St., for August, $900/mo.
1, 2, 3, 4 & 5 Bedroom
E 8th St & Lincoln. Works as 2 BR apt; 5 BR home; 6 BR home; 8 BR home. No pets. 812-879-4566
PAVILION
***IU Vice President’s house. 8th & Lincoln. 8 BR, 3 BA,3 kit. W/D. $4500/mo. 812-879-4566 *Large 3BR/2BA house: w/d, d/w, deck:$1,725; *3BR duplex: $1,450 ea; *5BR house: $2,350. All close to campus, on bus line, off st. prkg. Rates may be neg. Please contact to schedule showing (email pref) leasing@h3rentals.com or 812-606-3081
New SpeedStream 5100 Ethernet ADSL modem. Includes AC adapter. $15. grigutis@iu.edu
Matte black 32 GB iPhone 7. Great cond., $450. 317-979-9307 harvey@umail.iu.edu
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Newly Remodeled
!!NOW LEASING!! August ‘19 - ‘20. Many updates. Great locations. Omega Properties 812-333-0995 omegabloomington.com
Like new iPhone 5S. In great condition. Needs new battery. $80. jwesterg@iu.edu
Close to IU. 2 houses for rent. 1) 5 BR, 3 BA, 902 E. 14th St., $2450/ mo., 3 blks. to Geology & SPEA, off-street prkg. 2) 4 BR, 2 BA, 900 E. 14th St., $1600/mo. 3 blks. to Geology and SPEA, approved for 5 occupants. 812-327-7881
430
Biweekly pay.
Found
Houses
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facebook.com/e3rdStreet/
2 BR, 1.5 BA condo available JULY 1 at OAKLAWN PARK. 812-325-3550
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Studio,1,2,3 & 4 Bed Apts.
pavprop.com 812-333-2332
Condos & Townhouses
355
The IDS is accepting applications for Advertising Account Executives to start Spring, 2018.
rosalee.trimble1@gmail.com
!!NOW LEASING!! August ‘18 - ‘19. Omega Properties 812-333-0995 omegabloomington.com
PAVILION
Hardly used Kindle Fire with case. No scratches. Has factory reset. $50. mmatve@iu.edu
Semi-pro Gemeinhardt flute w/ solid silver head piece w/ polishing kit. $550. family@bh2.net 435
2 BR, 2 BA Waterview apt. near Stadium off Walnut. W/D, stainless steel applns., laminate & ceramic floors, secured building, water, trash, priv. prkg. lot. $700/ person. 317-965-8550
Close to Campus
STRESS RELIEF A FEW BLOCKS FROM CAMPUS Visit us on Facebook:
Gently used Xbox One console w/ 4 controllers & 5 games. $300. jtpierre@indiana.edu
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City Church For All Nations internship. This is not a paid position but an opportunity for Christian young adults to gain hands-on experience with daily operations of church ministry. More info at: www.citychurchfamily.org
Prime location: 2 BR apt. (from $655) & 3 BR twnhs. (from $825). Hdwd. floors, quiet. 812-333-5598
Beautiful limestone home avail. Aug. 1st. 3 BR, 1 BA, full dry basement, lg. front yd. No pets. Located in quiet secluded neighborhood. $1200/mo. 812-322-4104
Misc. for Sale “Attack on Titan” books. Volumes 1-4 & 8-10. Just like new. $35 for all. xuyum@indiana.edu
32 gb rose gold iPhone 7. Verizon, unlocked, great cond. $450 neg. snowakow@indiana.edu
(Lap/Bed) Table with folding legs, Decor-a bunch of artificial twig, etc hwangye@indiana.edu
Graphing calculator, TI-84+ silver edition. $45. 812-834-5144
12 pc. dinnerware set w/4 dinner & salad plates, bowls + 12 pc silverware. $15 yafwang@hotmail.com
ELKINS APARTMENTS NOW LEASING
now leasing for fall 2018
FOR 2018 & 2019 1, 2, 3, 4 & 5 BR Houses, Townhouses and Apartments
now leasing for fall 2018
Quality campus locations select apartments currently available
ELKINS APARTMENTS
339-2859 select apartments currently available
www.elkinsapts.com
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Electronics Audio Technica LP60 record player with new needle. $75, obo. jacepric@iu.edu
colonialeastapartments.com
Apt. Unfurnished
Houses
Parking incl., onsite W/D. 3 blocks to Law/Opt. 812-333-9579
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Announcements
Apt. Unfurnished
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NOW HIRING Newspaper Delivery and Maintenance of news stands for IDS. 10 hours/week. Must be here for Summer! Reliable vehicle required. $10.50/hr. + mileage. To apply send resume to: ads@idsnews.com or fill out an application at the IDS office in Franklin Hall, Room 129. Application Deadline: April 30
ANNOUNCEMENTS
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General Employment
ONLINE POSTING: All classified line ads are posted online at idsnews.com/classifieds at no additional charge.
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REFUNDS: If you cancel your ad before the final run date, the IDS will refund the difference in price. A minimum of one day will be charged.
PAYMENT: All advertising is done on a cash in advance basis unless credit has been established. The IDS accepts Visa, MasterCard, Discover, American Express, cash, check or money order.
COPY ERRORS: The IDS must be notified of errors before 3 p.m. the date of the first publication of your ad. The IDS is only responsible for errors published on the first insertion date. The IDS will rerun your ad 1 day when notified before 3 p.m. of the first insertion date.
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HOUSING ADS: All advertised housing is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act. Refer to idsnews.com for more info.
COPY CHANGES: Ad copy can be changed at no additional charge when the same number of lines are maintained. If the total number of lines changes, a new ad will be started at the first day rate.
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AD ACCEPTANCE: All advertising is subject to approval by the IDS.
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CLASSIFIEDS ADVERTISING POLICIES
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CLASSIFIEDS
Monday, April 30, 2018 idsnews.com
To place an ad: go online, call 812-855-0763 or stop by Franklin Hall 130 from 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Monday - Friday. Full advertising policies are available online. idsnews.com/classifieds
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Indiana Daily Student
Misc. for Sale 12 volt ATV. $150, obo. 812-219-2062, ask for Melissa.
Misc. for Sale
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Monday, April 30, 2018 Indiana Daily Student idsnews.com
435
Medium size “Midnight Jasmine” scented Yankee candle in jar. $10 hwangye@indiana.edu
2011 John Deer. D100 38” cut. w/ 400Hrs. $1000. Great cond.
NEW Ironing board & iron set. Bed risers 4-pk (with electric ports set).
danmkirwan@netscape.net
Nike Vapor Untouchable Pro men’s football cleats. Size 8, Never worn. $40. s.e.mosier1@gmail.com
hwangye@indiana.edu
9-gallon humidifier w/ filter and packaging. Works for whole apt. $15. taihlee@indiana.edu
Old Town-Loon kayak, 16ft, 2 seater. $600. 812-327-8853
Black Incipio Galaxy S7 Edge phone case w/ stand, card case. $10.
Plato’s Closet pays cash on the spot for trendy, gently used clothing. 1145 S. College Mall Rd. 812-333-4442
Suede booties. Womens size 8. Good cond. $10. amtufnu@iu.edu
Brand new floor lamp with 2 new bulbs. Must pick up, cash only. $20. quinle@iu.edu
BMW X3 sports utility model. Under 100k mi. Well maintained. $7500, obo. shhahn@indiana.edu 515
Black, size 8, Hunter rubber boots in perfect condition. $90. camcrouc@indiana.edu
Tom Ford sunglasses. Worn once. $100, OBO. RNOURIE@iu.edu Women’s riding boots. Size 9. $70. RNOURIE@iu.edu
Conair Ceramic hair styler (flat & curling iron). hwangye@indiana.edu
Yakima Halfback bike rack with Tubetop carrier. In perfect condition. $175 juscaldw@iu.edu
Floor lamp, clothes horse, & LED desk lamp. hwangye@indiana.edu
Textbooks
450
Brand new, black & gray Galaxy S7 Edge Pelican phone case. $12. lrgrove@iu.edu
Red Converse All-Stars. Size Men’s 9/Women’s 11. Only worn once. $25. msoueidi@indiana.edu
Unique and rare Carmar jeans. New with tag. Size: 26. $80, neg. lexlee@indiana.edu
Wedding/Cocktail dress. Size 4. White. Includes tulle netting. $150. mfcarril@indiana.edu
Spring, 2018, Spanish S200 loose-leaf textbook with binder. Great condition. $50.
Jansport hiking backpack w/ detachable day pack. $25, neg. zajacn@iu.edu
Horoscope
To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is an 8 — Together you can get whatever you need. Collaborate for shared gain. Support and appreciate each other. Nurture love to expand and grow it.
Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Today is a 7 — Relax and notice feelings as they pass. Beauty flits by, outshining momentary irritations. Follow a passionate thread to kindle a spark in your own heart.
Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Today is a 7 — Allow extra time for health and fitness routines. You’re surrounded by love. Get support with work and outside demands for your attention. Pamper yourself.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 6 — Prepare your home to support your family for a new season. What’s needed? Plant seeds and tend them carefully. Mulch and weed. Baby your seedlings.
Bicycles BIKE-Multitrack 7100. $125. 812-327-8853
Physiology P215 Lab Workbook. Used. Has notes in it. $10. aclaymil@iu.edu
IKEA standing clothes hanger. Almost new cond. $25. wang556@indiana.edu
Motorcycles 2014 CVO Harley Davidson in great cond. 9,320 miles. $22,000 judirobe@indiana.edu
6 Kaplan 2018-2019 MCAT prep books. Never opened. $15/each or $80 for all. jbarnath@iu.edu
Husqvarna riding lawn mower. 38” cut, 21 HP motor. $1300, obo. 812-360-5551
Place an ad 812-855-0763 for more information: www.idsnews.com/classifieds
2008 Audi TT Coupe FWD. 75k mi, clean title, great condition. $12,500. hkocabas@indiana.edu
Northface Bonanza winter coat w/ insulated jacket & hood. Size small. $100, obo. dangabba@indiana.edu
Red and white IU throw blanket with logo. 50 in x 60 in. $5. alyssaun@iu.edu
bmboland@indiana.edu
CLASSIFIED AD
Automobiles 1999 Pontiac Grand Prix. 170k mi. Some repairs need. $1000 obo dchelton@iu.edu
Nice cosmetic organizer for storing makeup. Like new. $7. hwangye@indiana.edu
Almost new double-sided mirror. Two vases (incl. artificial flowers). hwangye@indiana.edu
FREE
TRANSPORTATION 505
6 unused ink cartridges. Epson printer NX625 etc. $5 total.
Sell your stuff with a
New teal Patagonia quarter zip jacket w/ tags still on. Size large. $80, obo. hkipp@iu.edu
Mens Raybans polarized sunglasses w/ case. Great cond. $50, obo. dangabba@indiana.edu
812-876-3112/812-369- 2425
Clothing
520
435
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Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a 7 — Notice a philosophical shift. A fascinating conversation offers new possibilities. Participate and offer your own perspective. Maintain and upgrade your communications technology. Reach out. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is an 8 — Your personal financial stakes could seem high. Shake off temporary feelings of overwhelm. Take one step and then another. You can get what you need.
BLISS
HARRY BLISS
now leasing for fall 2018 Large 21-speed flat bar road bike w/ Stiguna bike lock. $120, obo. jonritte@iu.edu
Linus Women’s Bike. Excellent Condition. $375. Call for info. and pictures. 812-322-0808
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is a 9 — Your path ahead looks clear. You can see what worked and what didn’t. Discover more options than you saw before. Let bygones be bygones. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is a 6 — Rest and review your options and circumstances. Take time to process recent changes. Private introspection yields satisfying results. Be who you always wanted to be. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is a 7 — Friends share their wisdom and compassion. Come together to adapt to community changes. Investigate new options
Crossword
select apartments currently available
and possibilities. Share resources and inspiration. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is an 8 — Professional opportunities offer up a big prize. Handle integrity issues to advance. Assume authority and go for it! Get farther than imagined. Friends can help. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is an 8 — Focus on your next destination. Study and research to advance your agenda. Gracefully navigate changes and adapt to current realities on the ground.
Publish your comic on this page.
su do ku
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
ACROSS
Difficulty Rating: How to play: Fill in the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 grid contains the digits 1 through 9, without repeating a number in any one row, column or 3x3 grid.
Answer to previous puzzle
© Puzzles by Pappocom
NON SEQUITUR
1 Harley rider 6 Approved 10 “The lady __ protest ...“: “Hamlet” 14 Where one may be taken for a private word 15 Golfer’s warning 16 Slender woodwind 17 Fruity 12-Down topping 19 Drive or reverse 20 The “S” in “CBS”: Abbr. 21 Little green veggie 22 Vast chasm 23 Craftsperson using scrap metal, glass, etc. 26 “400 Richest Americans” magazine 30 Nagging troubles 31 Nimble 32 Stick a toothpick in, as a snack 34 “Bye, Luigi!” 38 Tax filing option for married couples 41 High-school kid 42 “On Golden __” 43 Rodeo lasso
© 2018 By Nancy Black Distributed by Tribune Media Services, INC. All Rights Reserved
L.A. Times Daily Crossword
The IDS is accepting applications for student comic strips for the summer 2018 semesters. Email five samples and a brief description of your idea to adviser@indiana.edu by May 30. Submissions will be reviewed and selections will be made by the editor-in-chief.
Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is an 8 — Review the budget to strengthen your finances. Good luck expands your well-laid plans. Keep your objective in mind and find ways to ease pressure points.
44 Film critic Pauline 46 “Town Without Pity” singer Gene 47 Restriction for quarantined patients 51 One who’s done for 52 Old studio letters 53 Olympic sword 57 Ridesharing company 58 Feature of the time periods hinted at by the starting letters of 17-, 23-, 38and 47-Across 61 Range in Europe 62 Country’s McEntire 63 Cove, e.g. 64 Viral internet phenomenon 65 Former couples 66 Like yesterday’s fashions
9 10 11 12 13 18 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 32 33 35 36 37 39 40 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 53 54 55 56 58 59 60
Rep.’s opponent Bone-shaped treat Follows orders Browned bread Word sewn on a towel Composer’s work Dined Spectator’s bit of disapproval Tony or Hugo Judge’s apparel Like greyhounds S-shaped molding Ready on the vine Poetry that doesn’t rhyme Popular vodka, popularly Square root of 100 Persia, today Required poker bet “__, can you see ... ” Zoo primates “Divergent” films heroine Oxygen is about 21% of it Luther’s sect: Abbr. Duke or earl Hr. after noon Many a casinoowning group Gumbo vegetables U.S. island territory Author Ferber Buddies Seers? Ninety degrees from norte Luigi’s three Whammy Cry from a pup
Look for the crossword daily in the comics section of the Indiana Daily Student. Find the solution for the daily crossword here. Answer to previous puzzle
DOWN 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Parts of cote tales? Kids’ road-trip game White wine apéritifs Cut and paste, e.g. Word with room or center Plenty of times TV cop with a lollipop Big Band __
WILY BREWSTER ROCKIT: SPACE GUY!
TIM RICKARD