IDS THURSDAY, MAY 15, 2014
Enjoy every drop of your summer TV binge PAGE 7
INDIANA DAILY STUDENT | IDSNEWS.COM
PHOTOS BY SAMANTHA STARR | IDS
The Light Totem, the tall, iconic light tower created by IU Professor of Lighting Design Robert Shakespeare, was reinstalled on the lawn of the IU Art Museum May 12. The official relighting of Light Totem will take place June 21 at the museum’s annual Midsummer Night at the Art Museum event.
Light Totem reinstalled at Art Museum CATHERINE HUYNH cathuynh@indiana.edu @cathuynh
After nearly a year-long hiatus, a long-standing tradition returned to campus Monday. The iconic Light Totem, created by IU professor and professional lighting designer Robert Shakespeare, was reinstalled in front of the IU Art Museum. During summer orientation, new students receive a copy of the IU bucket list. Many new students were denied a popular bucket list item that reads: “At night, lay on the ground and watch the lights change on the side of the IU Art Museum,” as the Light Totem was taken down earlier in the year. Sophomore Ashton Moody said she was upset she wasn’t able to participate in
the IU tradition as a freshman. “At orientation, I remember the Totem being mentioned in videos about the unique traditions of IU but never could find it since it was taken down before we actually moved in,” Moody said. Linda Baden, project curator at the IU Art Museum, said the Light Totem was originally created to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the Art Museum’s I.M. Pei building in 2006. Baden said she recalled how the museum building was very dark at night. The museum wanted a presence on campus, even when it was closed., she said. “It was intended to be a very temporary display, only three months long, but the great popularity of the piece led to the IU Trustees making it a permanent fixture in 2010,” Baden said in an email.
Because it was meant as a temporary installation, the IU Art Museum had to do annual inspections of the tower. They found that it was time to replace the structure with a new one. “We did not expect that it would be so popular with students, and we are thrilled that it is,” Baden said. “Rob Shakespeare, however, knew that people are drawn to light, and he was confident that the Totem would become a gathering place for folks on campus at night. “We just never expected it would become the campus icon that it is.” After taking down the Light Totem, the museum saw that the community missed it. Rita Grunwald, a donor with a long work history at the School of Fine Arts, said she
loved the iconic piece. That was why she gave the museum the money to replace the structure. The Office of the Provost and Executive Vice President then contributed the remaining funds to reinstall the Totem. Although recently reinstalled, the Light Totem will not have the full lights displayed until the official relighting ceremony at 9:15 p.m. June 21. The ceremony will include music by the Dynamics, art and crafts activities, selfguided tours of the museum galleries, food vendors and refreshments. The ceremony is open to the public. Sarah Ditlinger, former IU Art Museum marketing and communications intern, said the official relighting date will
also be when the museum celebrates it’s annual Midsummer Night. “This celebrates the shortest night of the year for the summer solstice,” Dillinger said. “But this year there will be that added excitement with the Totem being lit back up again.” Returning students and alumni have expressed they are looking forward to seeing the Light Totem when they return for the fall school year. “My friends and I definitely plan on seeing the Light Totem once it’s back,” Moody said. “We really want to complete all the different IU activities on the IU bucket list before we graduate.”
No. 9 IU clubs No. 10 Louisville 7-2 Asian immigrants experience discrimination BY EVAN HOOPFER ehoopfer@indiana.edu @EvanHoopfer
LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Several players said it was the longest home run they’ve ever seen. “We were all speechless,” relief pitcher Luke Harrison said. “I’ve never seen a ball hit that far. Ever.” Junior preseason AllAmerican catcher Kyle Schwarber drilled a home run over the center field wall against Louisville in the top of the ninth inning Tuesday. The three-run shot sealed No. 9 IU’s 7-2 victory against the No. 10 Louisville Cardinals and left his teammates in awe. “It’s just like any other home run,” Schwarber said. “This time it just went really far.” With the Hoosiers leading 4-2 in the top of the ninth, Schwarber stepped up to bat with runners on first and second. On a 2-1 count, Schwarber drilled the pitch to deep center field. “I knew it was gone,” IU Coach Tracy Smith said. The ball not only carried the wall in center field, which is 402 feet from home plate, but it also cleared the approximately 50-foot tall batter’s eye. As Schwarber rounded third, Smith, who is also the
BELLE KIM bk8@indiana.edu
IDS FILE PHOTO
Then-sophomore outfielder Will Nolden bumps fists with then-sophomore outfielder Kyle Schwarber during IU’s 8-1 win against Indiana State on April 24, 2013, at Bart Kaufman Field.
third base coach, told him, “Hell yes, Kyle.” The blast put IU up 7-2, which would be the final score. Schwarber said this was either the farthest or second farthest ball he’s ever hit. He said when the ball came off his bat, he knew it was gone. “I’ve watched a lot of baseball in my life,” Smith said. “And you won’t see too many like that. It’s fun when you see one of the best power hitters in the country show why he’s one of the best power hitters in the country.”
With the victory, IU swept the season series from the Cardinals three games to none. In the three games, the Hoosiers beat the Cardinals by a combined score of 22-7. Both IU and Louisville are ranked in the top 15 in most of the national polls, so the game was of great importance for the Hoosiers in trying to secure a national seed come postseason time, the players said. IU and Louisville are two of the best teams from the North, and Smith credits Cardinals Coach Dan McDonnell for making college
baseball in the north relevant. Most of the country’s powerhouse programs come from the South where the weather is more conducive to playing year round. The announced crowd was 2,433 people in Jim Patterson Stadium, with a good portion of the crowd donning cream and crimson. Several of the players said Louisville was one of their biggest rivals, and they always enjoy playing the CarSEE BASEBALL, PAGE 6
She still remembers the day she got into Berkeley three years ago. She’d been rushing to and from the mailbox each day, consumed with trepidation and anxiety. She had opened each admission letter with trembling fingers and bated breath. When Dohkyung Kim got the letter from Berkeley, she didn’t celebrate. She didn’t flounce about emitting a highpitched squeal of excitement. The university had not offered her funding of any kind, and there was no way her parents could pay for the high costs — not when she was an international student ineligible for student loans or financial aid. Kim’s most cherished dreams slipped away in an empty envelope. *** Assistant professor of history Ellen Wu said America is often conceptualized as a melting pot and a nation of immigrants, but both histori-
cal and current immigration policies have proven this to be false. “America likes to tell itself that it stands for freedom, democracy and tolerance, but the real story is much more one of white supremacy, exclusion, imperial domination and slavery,” Wu said. “The impetus for regulating Asian immigration came out of the desire of Americans to exclude people from Asia altogether — to bar them from entry, bar them from citizenship and meaningful participation in the U.S.” An examination of the lives of Asian immigrants in Bloomington challenges the concept of universal equality in America. Students Dohkyung Kim and Lynn Zhang, along with business-owner Kyungsil Choi, have each discovered they are not privy to the same opportunities as Americans because of their race and lack of American citizenship. Under U.S. immigration policy, junior Dohkyung Kim is classified as a non-immigrant visa-holder despite SEE IMMIGRANTS, PAGE 6
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CAMPUS EDITORS: JESSICA CAMPBELL & CARMEN HEREDIA RODRIGUEZ CAMPUS@IDSNEWS.COM
Free summer yoga sessions in Art Museum The Vibe Yoga Studio currently offers a free yoga class every Saturday on the second floor of the IU Art Museum. Classes alternate each week between basic and advanced exercises. The hour-long class begins at 11:30 a.m. and will run weekly from May 5 to Oct. 25.
Participants are recommended to bring their own mat, water and comfortable clothing to each session. Space is limited to the first 23 participants on a first-come, first-served basis.
Herrera named Latino Educator of the Year JAVONTE ANDERSON ja69@indiana.edu
As a native Colombian, department of Spanish and Portuguese lecturer Israel Herrera never anticipated living, let alone teaching and being a community activist, in the United States. This month, Herrera was named the 2014 Indiana Latino Educator of the Year. Indianapolis Mayor Greg Ballard presented the award to Herrera on May 3 at the Indiana Latino Expo. As a high school teenager, Herrera was captivated with American music. As a monolingual, the lyrics were beyond Herrera’s comprehension, but he remained enchanted with the rhythmic melody, instruments and composition of American music. He said he fondly remembers gravitating to a radio to hear his favorite song, Guns N’ Roses’ “Sweet Child O’ Mine.” Herrera’s desire to learn English, ignited by his passion for American music, prompted him to study “teaching languages” at his university in Colombia. Herrera began his coursework exuberantly learning different languages, unaware that the program was preparing
him to be a teacher. “At first I didn’t realize it was for teaching students. I was just learning different languages,” Herrera said. After completing his studies in Colombia, Herrera got an opportunity to teach Spanish at South Dakota State University. Soon after, he departed for the University of Iowa, where he earned his master’s degree in Hispanic literature. Upon receiving his master’s, Herrera said he yearned to study a subject related to Latin America. “The IU Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies was the best program in the country,” Herrera said. After completing his second master’s degree, Herrera was offered a position as a lecturer in IU’s Department of Spanish and Portuguese. The Indiana Latino Educator of the Year is selected based on the merits of his or her educational and community impact. “They have to be exemplary in their field. We assess the numbers of lives they may have affected and how their impact has affected students and teachers in the state of Indiana and beyond,” Pamela Gemmer, an ILE awards committee member, said.
“I’ve seen Israel make things happen for students, teachers and colleagues at all levels.” Herrera contributes to language education on a local, regional and national level by also serving as the president of the City of Bloomington Commission on Hispanic and Latino Affairs. “We try to promote and educate all aspects for the Latino community,” Herrera said. Herrera also serves as advocacy chair in the Indiana Foreign Language Teachers Association, where he is working to incorporate the Seal of Biliteracy in Indiana. The Seal of Biliteracy is an award given by a school, district or county office of education in recognition of students who have studied and attained proficiency in two or more languages by high school graduation. The Seal of Biliteracy encourages students to learn different languages and is attractive to future employers and college admissions offices, Herrera said. When the requisites are met and the legislation passes, Indiana will be the fifth state in the country to receive this distinction. Additionally, Herrera was
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2014 Indiana Latino Educator of the Year recipient Israel F. Herrera stands with his wife Claudia Aparicio and Indianapolis Mayor Gregory Ballard on May 3, 2014, at the Indiana Latino Expo in Indianapolis.
recently elected the president of the American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese. This organiza-
tion promotes the learning of Spanish and Portuguese languages and cultures at all levels, Herrera said.
“We organize workshops, conferences and programs SEE HERRERA, PAGE 6
AAADS awards first doctorate in program’s history BY CATHERINE HUYNH cathuynh@indiana.edu @cathuynh_
As a young girl raised near Grenada and the West Indies, recent alumna Maria Eliza Hamilton Abegunde was exposed to a high degree of African influences. “It was the culture, history and art of black people all over the world in my upbringing,” Abegunde said. “My family is Caribbean, and we always went to the theater. My father is also an artist.” Last Friday, Abegunde became the first person to receive a Ph.D degree from the IU Department of African American and African Diaspora Studies since the program was established in 2009. “The Ariran’s Last Life,” the dissertation Abegunde successfully passed with distinction, recounts the effects of the African slave trade upon their descendants, in which she uses memory work from ancestors that survived the Middle Passage.
A retired IU professor and chair of Abegunde’s research committee, John McCluskey described Abegunde as a hardworker and a pleasure to work with. “She was well ahead of me in terms of working on assignments,” McCluskey said in an email. “My thing was to simply guide her and focus her energies. She has a great amount of energy. She was never prodded to write certain things and re-write certain things.” To earn the Ph.D., Abegunde had to be engaged in the department for five years. Valerie Grim, chair of the AAADS department and mentor to Abegunde, acknowledged Abegunde’s extensive commitment to her studies. “The process required focus, clarity and a determination that she was not going to quit,” Grim said in an email. “Abegunde spent long hours writing the dissertation, while also teaching.” Grim said she believes in
the necessity of studying the experience of black people in and out of the U.S.A. “Awarding the first Ph.D means a lot to the Department of African American and African Diaspora Studies,” Grim said. “It means this department and IU join an elite group of universities, 13 of them, that offer a Ph.D. in some form of Africana/Black Studies.” Abegunde pursued her bachelor’s degree at Northwestern University and her master’s degree at DePaul University. Abegunde said she chose IU because the department allowed her to write a creative dissertation. “I’m a fiction writer and poet by training and practice,” Abegunde said. The department gave Abegunde the opportunity to utilize her training in writing to craft her dissertation. “It allowed me to write a world beyond, to creative forms to pursue the work I wanted to do that’s combined with research.”
Abegunde said she believes her doctoral degree means a lot of responsibility to her community. “In speaking to other people, I’ve become very conscious of the responsibilities of opening the door for my colleagues and other places who are working on the creative processes, as well as traditional research,” Abegunde said. “I’m a community-based person, so I have a responsibility to my community. It’s an opportunity to do good with what I’ve earned.” While at IU, Abegunde said one of the most rewarding things was introducing students to African American studies and watching as they created processes to engage in the world. She often allowed students to be creative in their final projects and encouraged them to turn theories they learned in class into reality. “Black studies is part of the focus and engagement of the community,” Abegunde said. “How is your research
Asian Culture Center addresses mental health BY CATHERINE HUYNH cathuynh@indiana.edu @cathuynh_
Confidenial counseling will be available this summer though a partnership between The IU Asian Culture Center and the School of Education’s Department of Counseling and Educational Psychology. Although the ACC has offered counseling in different formats before, this summer will be the first time they will have staff interns available in the building. Melanie Castillo-Cullather, director of the ACC, said she believes there’s a need for accessible counseling services in the Asian and Asian-American community. “There is a host of reasons why people don’t seek counseling, and one of the biggest obstacles is stigma,” CastilloCullather said. According to a report by the National Alliance on Mental Illness in 2011, shame is often the reason Asian-Americans do not seek mental care. The report also acknowledged the lack of access to health -care as another factor behind the phenomenon.
“We would like for people to see the ACC as one of the spaces that they can come to for this type of service,” Castillo-Cullather said. “By making it a part of the ACC’s identity, it would eventually help break any obstacles to seeking this type of help.” ACC intern counselor Rose Xu said she hopes the counseling services will help students grow personally. “As a counselor, my role is to be here and assist my clients to achieve their goals for themselves,” Xu said. “We’d really like to see people in need get the help they want. We are here to support in a understanding and nonjudgmental environment.” Castillo-Cullather hopes to continue this service all year because it benefits clients and provides professional training to the intern counselors. The free confidential counseling service will be available until July 31. Walk-in hours will soon be determined for Mondays and Wednesdays, and the services are available by appointment Monday through Friday.
connected? Teaching builds the research. Students have great ideas about what’s important, and in order to stay relevant, we have to listen to our students.” Abegunde said she hopes to continue teaching and writing, as well as serving as a doula, a person who assists a woman both physically and emotionally during pregnancy. “It’s connected to the next phase of work I want to do in terms of studying black motherhood and black motherhood in literature,” Abegunde said. “The doula work is empowering, whether the mom-to-be or the students in my class, them to have a voice in their own lives.” McCluskey said he believes Abegunde’s accomplishment is important to the department because her good work will set a bar for the three to four students in the department still working on their doctoral degree. But because of staffing issues, the
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Marla Eliza Hamilton Abegunde
college has suspended admissions for the program. “We hope Abegunde’s work will reopen the application process,” McCluskey said. “People are very proud and supportive of her, and they made their presence known during commencement when they called her name. People are really excited to get the work going and do well.”
Summer Publication Dates This is the first edition for Summer 2014. Throughout the summer, the IDS will publish on Mondays and Thursdays. To contact the IDS with breaking news information, please email editor@idsnews.com.
Happenings Calendar The Center for Dental Wellness J. Blue Davis, D.D.S. A privately owned, people-oriented practice located next to the College Mall. Dr. Davis provides cosmetic, restorative, family and emergency dentistry in a comfortable, relaxed atmosphere with a caring, knowledgeable and experienced staff. We use Cerec technology, allowing us to make restorations in one visit. Dr. Davis is a provider for Invisalign, Zoom! and Under Armour Performance Mouth Guards. Also offering other advanced services. We look forward to getting to know you and take care of you and your entire family with the goal of improving your smile and dental health.
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OPINION EDITORS: STEPHEN KROLL | OPINION@IDSNEWS.COM
‘Sugar Man’ director dead at 36 Director Malik Bendjelloul, 36, died. He directed the Oscar-winning documentary “Searching for Sugar Man.” Bendjelloul’s brother, Johar, said the director committed suicide and had previously battled with depression.
Bendjelloul was a reporter, but he quit to travel the world. When he learned the story of missing folk singer Sixto Rodriguez, he spent more than four years filming a documentary about two fans searching for the singer.
VOX PERSONAL
MIND THE GAP
Working for no one?
#JusticeforJane CASEY FARRINGTON is a junior majoring in political science.
STEPHEN KROLL is a junior majoring in journalism.
CNN recently investigated Rep. Todd Young, and Young had to pay $5,300 in back taxes. It was discovered he claimed a homestead credit for a house he was no longer living in. Young said it was an honest mistake. It very well could have been. You’d be hard pressed to find someone who fully understands U.S. tax code. However, Young is on the House Ways and Means Committee, which writes tax law. He isn’t the only one who had problems. At least eight members of the committee had some sort of tax error. The people who make the taxes should probably get their forms right the first time around. This problem extends to more than just one representative, more than one committee. Our government is overwhelmingly letting us down. We’re entrenched in wars we can’t win, and in wars we can’t safely exit. The National Security Agency is spying on us, lying about it and spying more. Our representatives never get anything done and seem to flounder and argue before taking a month-long vacation. The new standard is government incompetence. Tax mistakes are hardly the worst. Congressional approval is hovering around 14 percent. If they had any other job, they’d be fired instantly. So why haven’t they been? The government is not the core of the issue. We’re a democracy, and, unfortunately, that means if there’s a problem, it’s our responsibility and our job to fix it. If we don’t like the way things are being run, we have to change it, and that means voting. But the data tells a story of indifference. As of 2012, 90 percent of House incumbents who sought re-election won. Maybe it’s name recognition, maybe it’s loyalty and sunk costs or maybe we just don’t care. But something is driving us to keep pounding on the chest of a dead system, giving third chances to people who wasted their second ones. We have to ask ourselves if these representatives are working in our best interest. Are they keeping their promises? Are they beholden to only their constituents? If we can’t be sure of these answers, we need to try and make our government better. But we also have to ask ourselves questions. Are we satisfied with our representatives? Even if they’re from our party, did they really do a good job? Are they dealing with the issues that matter to us? Are we informed on all the candidates? Are we going out and voting in meaningful ways? If we can’t answer these, what we think about our representatives doesn’t really matter. If we’re not an informed public, we can’t shape the government in good ways. We need to ask ourselves not only if our government is working for us, but also if we’re working for ourselves. If not, then why even bother with democracy? sckroll@indiana.edu
ILLUSTRATION BY GRIFFIN LEEDS
Opposing views: Drones DISSENT FROM THE BENCH
JUST JOSH Consider yourself in these two situations. One — You’re sitting on your couch playing “Call of Duty.” You are on a massive killing spree, say 10 or 20 people, when all of a sudden somebody comes out of nowhere and puts a knife in your back. You are upset, and when you respawn, you blow him up with a grenade. Two — Consider yourself on an actual battlefield. You are terrified. Explosions are going off all around you. You’ve just seen one of your comrades go down, and, though you try to help him, he dies in your arms. Obviously, the second situation is far different from the first because it is tangible. The loss experienced in war becomes so incredibly real that it is etched into your mind. This emotional connection in war — the ability to recognize there are actual people involved rather than a series of faceless enemies — is one horrible thing about war. The soldiers remember their time, and, though they do their duty for their country, they understand war has a price. Citizens hear about the horrors of war and work to spread peace because they can empathize with the victims. However, we are at risk of losing that by relying on drone strikes. In the last 10 years, there have been 383 confirmed drone strikes on Pakistan. Thousands have been killed, including hundreds of civilians. How many of those have been reported? It is a noble goal to minimize American casualties, but we are destroying the relationship between the target and the person eliminating the target. With relationships that exist solely through a
JOSHUA ALLEN is a freshman majoring in English and philosophy.
computer screen, we begin to approach the nonchalance of killing prevalent in video games. When we do not lose anything in war, what is there to make war horrible? Let’s say there are no American deaths in a hypothetical war fought solely between our enemies and American drones. What is there to stop us from going to war again and again and again? Perhaps we will get to the point when the only losses we will experience are economic ones — the cost of building a drone and its missiles. It indeed is hard to argue against the merits of drones when we are concerned with our people — our mothers, our brothers, our fathers — and our intense desire to not see them harmed. But what we lose if we make war impersonal is far worse than any one life. We lose the ability to see human life as valuable and sacred. I do need to point out a crucial distinction, however, and perhaps this is where my personal limit is. Terrorism cannot be fought like a normal war, for terrorists are not limited to any one country, and they fight without regard for human life. That does not necessarily mean we should also fight without regard for human life, but the ethical and moral considerations are far different than in a traditional war. That’s a topic for another column. allenjo@indiana.edu @IAmJoshAllen
The inexorable march of technology has always been on the minds of our creative artists through the generations. Therefore, I will address the concerns of the majority opinion using concepts from a movie, a video game and a book. The movie “Captain America: The Winter Soldier” is a superhero film masquerading as a political thriller. The allusions the film makes to our current geopolitical situation are clear. Samuel L. Jackson’s character, Nick Fury, justifies launching a trio of computercontrolled Helicarriers with enough firepower to level a city to Steve Rogers as necessary. “We’re going to neutralize a lot of threats before they even happen,” he says. Rogers responds with, “I thought the punishment usually came after the crime.” This is one of the major criticisms of the CIA’s drone program, where the United States goes to ridiculous lengths to prosecute supposed threats before they materialize. But when enemy combatants resort to tactics not covered by the Geneva Convention, we must make do with what we have. This is not preemption. The drone campaign in Pakistan and Yemen is made specifically to root out terrorism and take down Al Qaeda with the President’s enemies list carefully vetted. These are not random trigger-happy video game players who have control of these drones and are given carte blanche to blow up blocks indiscriminately. Speaking of which, a video game mentality is the majority’s primary concern with the use of drones. The concern is that viewing the carnage and horrors of war through a screen is somehow different from viewing the carnage and horrors of war through eyes. However, nothing could be further from the truth. It is fallacious to assume that acts of war committed
MICHAEL SU is a sophomore majoring in violin performance.
from a secret base in Nevada or Colorado are somehow more detached than deployment to Afghanistan. On the surface, this would appear to be the case, but the truth of the matter is that “playing” this most dangerous game is just as involved. As much press as drones get for causing collateral damage, their primary use is for surveillance and reconnaissance rather than raining down rockets. Thus, drone operators see the suspected terrorists quite a lot as they go about their daily lives. In our quest to minimize civilian casualties, drones are a least–worse option that must be carefully weighed against more traditional military action. Mark Bowden’s “Black Hawk Down” provides a perfect example of a snatch-andgrab operation in Mogadishu, Somalia, gone horribly wrong. The final point that I wish to make is how in our quest to minimize civilian casualties, drones are much safer and reduce the chances of embarrassing incidents where American troops or operators are caught in a dangerous situation. Furthermore, the tragedy of civilian casualties is greatly reduced with drones, which is especially useful when the realities of modern warfare require precision weaponry. In fact, arms manufactures have jumped to deliver munitions that hit softer, but much more precisely, as a consequence of the prevalence of drones and their efficacy. Though they might seem like Orwellian sentinels ready to strike at the whim of eggheads in Langley, drones are actually not the menaces they seem to be. That may be a different issue, though, for Al Qaeda members. mjsu@indiana.edu
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Letters without those requirements will not be considered for publication. Letters can be mailed or dropped off at the IDS, 120 Ernie Pyle Hall, 940 E. Seventh St., Bloomington, Ind., 47405. Submissions can also be sent via e-mail to letters@idsnews. com. Questions can be directed to the IDS at 855-0760.
Indiana Daily Student, Est. 1867 Website: idsnews.com
The opinions expressed by the editorial board do not necessarily represent the opinions of the IDS news staff, student body, faculty or staff members or the Board of Trustees. The editorial board comprises columnists contributing to the Opinion page and the Opinion editors.
Imagine you were forced to spend 22 hours a day in a cinder block box. Imagine someone watching you defecate. Someone watching you shower. Imagine you as your only company. Imagine your conversations. Imagine ticking the number of days on the wall, waiting until your term in solitary is up. But you haven’t officially been charged with anything. You were only supposed to be there for a few days. Those days have turned into weeks. It’s bordering on months now. Jane Doe, a 16-year-old transgendered girl of color in Connecticut, doesn’t have to imagine. It happened to her. The events leading up to Jane’s incarceration seem clear enough — a Department of Children and Families worker illegally restrained her, according to the American Civil Liberties Union. Jane, who had been sexually assaulted by DCF staff members previously, responded violently. A DCF staff member was reportedly fired because of the incident. Meanwhile, Jane was sent off to an adult prison. No charges have been filed. Jane’s story isn’t unique. Though only 2.7 percent of the general public experiences incarceration, 16 percent of transgendered people have been to jail or prison. This rate is almost double for transgendered Native Americans and almost triple for black transgendered people. It is estimated that, on average, half of all transgendered people have been victims of sexual violence, many while they were imprisoned. But as CeCe McDonald, a black transgendered woman who was unfairly jailed, pointed out following her release, prisons suck for everyone, not just transgendered people. Instead of rehabilitation, American prisons have institutionalized abuse. Police profiling has something to do with it. Transgendered women are arrested for things like “manifesting prostitution,” a charge that basically amounts to looking like a prostitute. Society categorically rejects transgendered people. Upon coming out as transgendered, more than half of transgendered people were rejected by their families. Twenty percent have been homeless. They experience twice the average rate of unemployment, as most states do not prohibit discrimination against employees based on gender non-conformity. Because of the overwhelming rejection from mainstream society transgendered people face, some of them resort to prostituting themselves or selling drugs to survive. In kicking transgendered people out of our homes and our offices, in subjecting them to individual and institutional violence, we are complicit in their trauma, if not directly responsible. We need to fix our institutions, but we also need to fix ourselves. In the meantime, I hope we can find #JusticeforJane. casefarr@indiana.edu @casefarr
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REGION EDITORS: SARAH ZINN & BRIAN SEYMOUR REGION@IDSNEWS.COM
Legislators to meet and fix two new laws State legislators announced Wednesday that they intend to have a one-day session June 17 to fix issues in two new laws before they come into effect. The first is a bill governing a tax credit for trucks that use natural gas, which caused taxes
to increase on alternative fuels. The second is an adjustment to some drug offense and shoplifting sentences in which the rewrite of Indiana’s criminal code mistakenly moved the penalties in the wrong direction.
Local club to recognize officer JAVONTE ANDERSON ja69@indiana.edu
The Northside Exchange Club of Bloomington will be honoring a Monroe County police officer today as the 2014 Police Officer of the Year in its 54th annual awards dinner. The Exchange Club is a national service organization for men and women who want to serve their community, develop leadership skills and enjoy each others’ fellowship. The Exchange Club Programs of Service is divided into four main areas: Americanism, Youth Program, Child Abuse Prevention and Community Service. “As part of Community
Service, we recognize and express our appreciation for police officers and firefighters who serve the community,” said Ken Todd, Exchange Club member and chair of the Officer of the Year awards. “We select and honor a Police Officer of the Year and Firefighter of the Year from county departments annually.” The Exchange Club solicits nominations from Monroe County’s five law enforcement agencies: the sheriff ’s department, the Bloomington Police Department, the IU Police Department, the Indiana State Police and the Ellettsville Police Department. After receiving one nom-
ination from the department chiefs of each respective agency, the Exchange Club’s selection committee reviews the nominations before determining the Officer of the Year. “Nominations by department chiefs may be based on a specific act, such as an act of heroism, a lifesaving act or solving a particularly significant or complicated crime,” Todd said. The nomination can also be based on years of distinguished service, overall excellence in the performance of duty or commitment to the enhancement of the department’s mission, Todd said. The Northside Exchange Club then appoints a selec-
tion committee that reviews the nominations and makes the selection, he said. The Officer of the Year will be announced at the award dinner. The first Monroe County Police Officer of the Year was named in 1961. “This year marks the 54th consecutive year in which we have held an award dinner attended by the chiefs of each county law enforcement agency, past recipients of the award, current nominees, elected officials and others to honor each of the nominees and announce an Officer of the Year,” Todd said.
SAMANTHA STARR | IDS
Congressman pays for back taxes BRIAN SEYMOUR briseymo@indiana.edu
U.S. Rep. Todd Young, RInd., paid more than $5,000 in back taxes after it was discovered this past month by Monroe County auditors that he wrongly claimed a homestead credit in 2012. The issue probably will not have any repercussions for the congressman, who has been representing Indiana since 2011. According to Indiana law, a homestead deduction can only be taken on a primary residence, not on housing that is rented. Application for the deduction only needs to happen once and is applied indefinitely as long as the resident is paying property
taxes. According to his campaign staff, Young lived in the house for several years, during which time the homestead deduction was applied properly. He then moved into a rental home, where he was not paying property taxes. Because he was not paying property taxes on his new residence, the need to make the change to the homestead deduction was missed, Young’s spokesman, Trevor Foughty, said in an email. “There was definitely no fraud involved, and there was no trying to dodge paying the taxes,” said Steve Hogan, Monroe County Republican Party chair. “It’s a very common occurrence.”
Unless someone tries to paint an ill-conceived picture of the incidence, Young’s reputation will not be damaged, Hogan said. Despite not being potentially hazardous to his campaign, Young still issued an apology. “I accept full responsibility for these embarrassing oversights and have paid all the taxes and fees I owed. I regret the errors and offer no excuses,” Young said in an email. Catherine Smith, Monroe County treasurer, said the issue is not whether or not Young forgot to pay his taxes, but rather why the issue happens at all. Smith, a Democrat, also said this should not be an issue at all because of how
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often it occurs. Young is also a member of the House Committee on Ways and Means, the nation’s chief tax-writing committee. Several members of the committee also had issues with taxes, said Bill Bailey, Young’s opponent in the upcoming general election. “They’re making the rules but they’re not playing by them,” Bailey said. Young recently won the Indiana primary election in a landslide vote over competitors Kathy Lowe Heil and Mark Jones. He is currently seeking reelection against Bailey in the general election this November.
IU Bloomington’s science research building, Simon Hall, was constructed using limestone from the Indiana Limestone Company. The building is covered in 5,808 cut limestone pieces.
Limestone Co. launches again FROM IDS REPORTS
People of Bloomington have been known as limestone “cutters” for more than 40 years. The local, famed limestone mill has had a hand in building structures across the country — from the Empire State Building to buildings on IU’s campus. Despite enduring $50 million in debt, bankruptcy and changes in ownership in the past year, the Indiana Limestone Company cuts on. The company has started
quarrying and fabricating the stone again. The company was bought by Wynnchurch Capital at the beginning of May after the company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy earlier this year. As a result, many of the 166 workers who were laid off have been rehired. However, official employee numbers are not known at this time, according to a Herald Times article. Sarah Zinn
Japan-America Society to have 15th awnnual gala BY ANGELA HAWKINS anlhawki@iu.edu
The ambiance of the Indiana Roof Ballroom is what attracts many Japanese citizens to the annual Gala for the Japan-America Society. On May 22 the Indiana Roof Ballroom will be filled with hundreds of people for the Gala beginning at 5 p.m. Those in attendance will hear from keynote speakers such as the Ambassador of Japan Kenichiro Sasae and Indiana Gov. Mike Pence. “The year’s Gala is expected to be a little more serious with the ambassador speaking,” said Robert Reynolds, Honorary Consul General of Japan in Indianapolis. Although the society does not know what the ambassa-
dor will talk about, they speculate it could be about the relationship between Indiana and Japan. “The Gala is an informal meeting, and there is entertainment after the speakers,” said Tom Easterday, president of the board of directors of JASI. Because the Ambassador of Japan will be in attendance, the society decided to have the Gala during a time when the Indianapolis 500 is preparing for the race to show some of the state’s culture.w “We wanted the Ambassador to experience Indianapolis during the time leading up to the Indy 500,” executive director Theresa Kulczak said. JASI is comprised of Japanese businesses that are either in Indiana, have moved
to Indiana from Japan, or Japan companies that work with Indiana companies, Reynolds said. Indiana is also the only state with Japanese vehicle plants, he said. There are three total. “Indiana has a lot of Japanese-based companies, which has kept the relationship growing,” Reynolds said. JASI is comprised of both Japanese and American companies, and its mission is to help build relationships between the Japanese and Indiana, he said. The Gala has been occurring since 2000. “The Gala is considered to be the signature gathering of the Japan-Indiana relationship,” Kulczak said.
THIS WEEK IN BLOOMINGTON CRIME FROM IDS REPORTS
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MAY 11 Bloomington Police Department received a report at approximately 4:30 a.m. of a robbery and battery. The 22-year-old male said he was approached by two white men after walking a friend home. The two men, who were in their early 20s, allegedly beat the 22-year-old man on the 200 block of East Ninth Street. The victim was then transported to IU Health by medical staff. He had at least one tooth knocked loose and complained of dizziness. MAY 12 On the 1100 block of Clarizz Blvd., a 22-year-old male was approached by two unknown males who allegedly robbed him of his backpack as he was waiting at the bus stop. After stealing his backpack, the two men fled southeast toward an apartment complex. Two witnesses confirmed
the subject’s story. Putnamville troopers arrested a man for the production of methamphetamine within 1000 feet of a daycare facility. Acting on tips and other investigative information, the troopers descended upon the home of the suspect’s mother at 10:00 a.m. At the home, troopers found two small working methamphetamine labs, approximately one gram of finished product, numerous items of paraphernalia, and numerous chemicals associated with the production of methamphetamine, according to a police report from the Indiana State Police. The illegal items were found in numerous out buildings and various holes dug in the ground throughout the yard. MAY 13 Daniel Collay was arrested and charged with a class C felony for criminal recklessness with a firearm
and the possession of a firearm without a permit after firing gunshots Tuesday night. A man reported hearing the firing gun at approximately 8 p.m. at 11440 N. Arlington Dr. The man who reported it to the police said he was involved in a verbal altercation with Collay and another man concerning inappropriate comments made about his girlfriend. He then said he returned to his apartment and heard gunshots. A third-party female eyewitness said she heard the altercation outside and observed one of the men tell Collay to “go get a gun.” She then observed him take out a handgun and fire six rounds into the air. The BPD located Cwollay at apartment 511 in the complex and eventually got a search warrant. They found a revolver and a 9 mm handgun that wasn’t full. They also found ammunition missing. Sarah Zinn
Connect with members of many diverse faiths at idsnews.com/religious Paid Advertising
Adventist-Christian
Christian Science
Bloomington Seventh-day Adventist Church
Christian Science Church
2230 N. Martha St. 812-332-5025
bloomington22.adventistchurchconnect.org
2425 E. Third St. 812-332-0536
bloomingtonchristianscience.com Sunday: 10 a.m.
Saturday Mornings: Sabbath School, 9:30 - 10:30 a.m. Worship Service, 10:30 a.m. - Noon The Bloomington Seventh-day Adventist Church is part of a worldwide organization with more than 15 million members in countries around the world. We would love to have you join us in worship or at one of our church events. Mike Riley, Elder Hernan Hammerly, Elder John Leis III, Elder
Anabaptist/Mennonite Mennonite Fellowship of Bloomington 2420 E. Third St. 812-337-7899
bloomingtonmenno.org Meets Sunday evenings at 5 p.m. We welcome you to join this congregation of committed Christians seeking to be a place of healing and hope as we journey together in the spirit of Christ. As people of God’s peace, we seek to embody the kingdom of God. Kelly Carson, Pastor mfbpastor@gmail.com
Wednesday: 7 p.m. Welcome to an inspiring, healing church at 2425 E. Third St. near campus! Listen to Sentinel radio programs on CATS channel 7 at 1 p.m. Sundays and 8 p.m. Mondays and Thursdays. Free Christian Science Monitor, “Daily Lift” online at bloomingtonchristianscience.com. IU Christian Science group meets on campus. See website in September.
Episcopal (Anglican)
Highland Village Church of Christ 4000 W. Third St. 812-332-8685
highlandvillage@juno.com Sunday: Bible Study, 9:30 a.m. Worship, 10:25 a.m., 6 p.m. Wednesday: Bible Study, 7 p.m. *On the second Sunday of each month services are at 10:25 a.m. & 1 p.m. A place where the pure Gospel is preached. Where a dedicated body of people assemble to worship, and where souls are devoted to the Lord and His word. Phil Spaulding and Mark Stauffer, Elders Justin Johnston and Roy Wever, Deacons
Christian (Disciples of Christ) First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) 205 E. Kirkwood Ave. 812-332-4459
719 E. Seventh St. 812-334-7971 • 812-361-7954
indiana.edu/~canterby canterby@indiana.edu Sacramental Schedule: Weekly services Sundays: Holy Eucharist with hymns, followed by dinner 4 p.m. at Canterbury House
Wednesdays: Evening Prayer & Bible Study at 5:30 p.m. at Canterbury House 5:15 p.m. at Trinity Church (111 S. Grant St.) Episcopal (Anglican) Campus Ministry is a safe, welcoming and inclusive Christian community; it is an inter-generational nesting place for all who pass through the halls of Indiana University. All people are welcome. All people get to participate. There are no barriers to faith or participation. There are no constraints — gender, sexual orientation, ethnicity, country of origin, disability or ability, weak or strong. In the end, it’s all about God’s love for us and this world.
Opportunities for Fellowship
With all our differences – in age, ability and physical condition, in race, cultural background and economic status, in sexual orientation, gender identity and family structure – God has received each one with loving kindness, patience and joy. All that we are together and all that we hope to be is made more perfect as the richness of varied lives meets the mystery of God’s unifying Spirit, and we become the Body of Christ. Helen Hempfling, Pastor
Religious Events Submit your religious events by emailing: marketing@idsnews.com
High Rock is a newish church in B-Town that loves students. While the church is for everyone, we really want to see loads of students get involved. The coffee is strong, the dress is casual, the music rocks, the teaching is relevant and God is real. Come check it out.
Lutheran (LCMS) University Lutheran Church & Student Center 607 E. Seventh St. 812-336-5387 • indianalutheran.com
facebook.com/ULutheranIU Sunday: Divine Service, 10:30 a.m. & 5 p.m. “The Best Meal You’ll Have All Week,” 6 p.m., College Bible Class, 9:15 a.m. & 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday: “LCMS U” Fellowship & Bible
Thursday: Graduate Bible Study, 7 p.m. “U. Lu” is the home of LCMS U. Our oncampus facility across from Dunn Meadow at the corner of Seventh & Fess is open daily and supports being “In Christ, Engaging the World” through worship, Bible studies, mission trips, retreats, international hospitality, music and leadership.
For more information, contact First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) at fccbloomington.org or 812-332-4459.
Saturday, May 17 Vineyard Community Church Event: Archery Group Time: 10 a.m. - noon For more information, contact Vineyard Community Church at btnvineyard.org or 812-336-4602.
Monday, May 19 Unity of Bloomington Event: Chi Gong at Unity (8-week session) Time: 5:30 - 6:30 p.m. For more information, contact Unity of Bloomington at unityofbloomington.org or 812-333-2484.
Wednesday, May 21 Connexion / Evangelical Community Church Event: Connexion Book Club Time: noon - 1:30 p.m. For more information, contact Connexion / Evangelical Community Church at eccbloomington.org or 812-332-0502.
All Saints Orthodox Christian Church 6004 S. Fairfax Rd. 812-824-3600
allsaintsbloomington.org Wednesday: Vespers 6 p.m. Saturday: Great Vespers 5 p.m. Sunday: Matins 8:50 a.m. Divine Liturgy: 10 a.m. A parish of the Antiochian Archdiocese of North America – our parish welcomes Orthodox Christians from all jurisdictions around the globe and all Christians of Protestant and Catholic backgrounds as well as seekers of the ancient church. We are a caring and welcoming family following our Lord Jesus Christ. Rev. Fr. Peter Jon Gillquist, Pastor Rev. Lawrence Baldwin, Deacon Marcia Baldwin, Secretary
Unity
Rev. Richard Woelmer, Campus Pastor
Mondays: 2:30 – 4:30 p.m. Open House for study tables with coffee bar & snacks Wednesdays: 5:30 p.m. Bible study and
Non-Denominational
discussion
Unity of Bloomington 4001 S. Rogers St. 812-333-2484
unityofbloomington.org
Opportunities are available for service projects (Winter Shelter volunteer) social gatherings, Bible Study and retreats. Spiritual direction and pastoral counselling are available by contacting the chaplain.
Chaplain’s Office Hours: Tuesday & Wednesday: 4 - 7 p.m. Friday: 2 - 4 p.m.
Connexion / Evangelical Community Church 503 S. High St. 812-332-0502
eccbloomington.org • cxiu.org Sundays: Service: 9:30 a.m. & 11 a.m. Connexion: 6 p.m.
Counseling available by appointment Mother Linda C. Johnson+, University Chaplain Jaimie Murdock, Communications Victoria Laskey, Intern for Student Engagement
Independent Baptist Lifeway Baptist Church
Connexion is the college ministry of ECC, a place where students can grow in their relationship with Christ and others. We value learning, discussion, worship and prayer in community. We don’t claim to have all the answers, but we refuse to ignore the difficult questions. Come check us out! Josiah Leuenberger, Director of University Ministries Bob Whitaker, Senior Pastor Dan Waugh, Pastor of Adult Ministries
7821 W. State Road 46 812-876-6072
lifewaybaptistchurch.org
9 a.m. Sunday
Sunday Worship: 10 a.m. & 6 p.m. Wednesday Night Bible Study: 7 p.m. Thursday Campus Bible Study: 7 p.m. * Free transportation provided. Please call if you need a ride to church. • Matt 4:19 And he saith unto them, follow me, and I will make you fishers of men. • To follow Him, you need to first believe in Him • Romans 10:13 For whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved.
High Rock Church 3124 S. Canterbury Circle 812-323-3333
highrock-church.com Sunday: 11 a.m. at the Bloomington Convention Center, 302 S. College Ave. (3rd & College) High Rock is a newish church in B-Town that loves students. While the church is for everyone, we really want to see loads of students get involved. The coffee is strong, the dress is casual, the music rocks, the teaching is relevant and God is real. Come check it out. Scott Joseph, Pastor
Campus Meeting: Barnabas Society
You will be our honored guest! You will find our services to be uplifting and full of practical teaching and preaching by Pastor Steve VonBokern, as well as dynamic, God-honoring music. Steve VonBokern, Senior Pastor Rosh Dhanawade, IU Coordinator 302-561-0108, rdhanawa@indiana.edu
Lutheran/Christian (ELCA)
Sunday: Service, 10 a.m., Youth Education, 10 a.m., Book Study 9 a.m. Unity of Bloomington offers practical, spiritual teachings that empower abundant and meaningful living. As a progressive Christian community, we honor the universal truths in all religions and are open to exploring teachings from Buddhism, Taoism and more. Check out our Diversity Statement at What is Unity? on our website. Rev. Lauri Boyd, Minister
United Methodist Open Hearts * Open Minds * Open Doors
St. Mark’s United Methodist 100 N. State Rd. 46 Bypass 812-332-5788 stmarksbloomington.org
Sunday Schedule
College & Career Age Sunday School Class:
9:30-10:30 a.m.: Breakfast 9:30-10:15 a.m.: Adult Sunday School Classes (Nomads,Pilgrims, Bible Banter) 9:30-10:15 a.m.: Celebration! Children’s & Family Worship 10:30-11:30 a.m.: Sanctuary Worship 10:30-11:30 a.m.: Children & Youth Sunday School Classes Ned Steele, Pastor Mary Beth Morgan, Pastor
Roman Catholic St. Paul Catholic Center 1413 E. 17th St. 812-339-5561
hoosiercatholic.org
7 - 8 p.m. on Thursdays, Cedar Hall C116. Every other Thursday starting Jan. 16 - April 24
Thursday, May 15 First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) Event: Book Bunch Time: 4 p.m.
Orthodox Christian
Please join us for these programs at Canterbury House
ship: worship, group discussion and fellowship As God has welcomed us, we welcome you.
Sundays: 11 a.m. at the Bloomington Convention Center, 302 S. College (3rd & College)
Study, 7:30 p.m., Vespers, 7 p.m.
fccbloomington.org Sunday: 8:30 a.m. & 11 a.m. Wednesday: 9 p.m., Disciples Student Fellow-
3124 S. Canterbury Circle 812-323-3333 www.highrock-church.com
Scott Joseph, Pastor
Canterbury House Episcopal (Anglican) Campus Ministry at IU
Thursdays: Evening Prayer & Holy Eucharist at
Christian
High Rock Church
Weekend Mass Times
Redeemer Community Church 930 W. Seventh St. 812-269-8975
redeemerbloomington.org Sunday: 9 & 11 a.m. at Banneker Community Center Redeemer is a gospel-centered community on mission. Our vision is to see the gospel of Jesus Christ transform and redeem us as individuals, as a church and as a city. We want to be instruments of gospel change in Bloomington and beyond. Chris Jones, Lead Pastor
Lutheran Campus Ministry at IU
Saturday: 4:30 p.m. Sunday: 8:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 5:30 p.m., 9 p.m. Spanish Mass Sunday, 12:30 p.m. Korean Mass 1st & 3rd Saturdays, 6 p.m.
Weekday Mass Times 7:15 a.m. & 5:15 p.m.
Weekday Adoration & Reconciliation 3:45 - 4:50 p.m. We welcome all; We form Catholics to be alive in their faith, We nurture leaders with Christian values in the church and the community; We promote social outreach and justice, We reflect the face of Christ at Indiana University and beyond. Fr. John Meany, O.P., Pastor Fr. Simon-Felix Michalski, O.P., Campus Minister Fr. Cassian Sama, O.P., Associate Pastor
The Rose House 314 S. Rose Ave. 812-333-2474 • lcmiu.org
Sunday Worship: 8:30 a.m. & 11 a.m. at St. Thomas Lutheran Church. Free student lunch following the 11 a.m. service.
Vineyard Community Church
Wednesday: “Table Talk” Dinner & Spiritual
2375 S. Walnut St. 812-336-4602
Growth, 6 p.m. at the Rose House. Free to students. LCM-IU is an inclusive Christian community – not just a ministry to people who call themselves Lutheran Christians. Visit our student center, the Rose House, for spiritual (and physical!) nourishment 24 hours a day. LCM-IU is an intentionally safe space available for all students to reflect and act on your faith life through Bible study, faith discussions, retreats, service and more! Jeff Schacht, Campus Minister Rev. Kelli Skram, Campus Pastor Colleen Montgomery, Pastoral Intern
btnvineyard.org Sunday: 10 a.m. Our small group meets weekly — give us a call for times & location. On Sunday mornings, service is at 10 a.m. We are contemporary and dress is casual. Coffee, bagels and fruit are free! Come as you are ... you’ll be loved! David G. Schunk, Senior Pastor Tom Rude, Associate Pastor D.A. Schunk, Youth Pastor Lisa Schunk, Children’s Ministry Director
Loving God, Serving People, Changing Lives
For membership in the Indiana Daily Student Religious Directory, please contact us at advertise@idsnews.com. Submit your religious events by emailing:
marketing@idsnews.com or visiting
idsnews.com/happenings.
The deadline for next Thursday’s Religious Directory is
5 p.m. Tuesday.
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the fact that she has lived in Bloomington since she was 12 years old. She came to America as a dependent on her father’s student visa back in 2004. While she speaks English fluently and has American friends, Kim continues to feel unwanted in the U.S. “I don’t feel like I belong here,” Kim said. “We’ve been here for years, and we pay taxes, but we don’t get any benefits.” She has felt this way since her younger brother was initially denied an F-1 student visa to go to college in the U.S. “My brother is completely American, and the possibility that he might not get to stay here really scared him,” Kim said. House Bill 1402 passed in 2012, and it classified her brother as a non-resident for tuition and fee-paying purposes, adding another significant weight to her parents’ alreadystrained budget. Because Kim does not want to burden them, she plans to return to Korea to get a job and, eventually, to attend graduate school. “The American dream doesn’t exist. To me, that means the opportunity to be happy and live a good life,” Kim said. “For us, for immigrants, there are so many laws that impede our success here.” Wu said understanding exclusive immigration policies is crucial to making sense of American identity. “In thinking about debates on immigration, we end up reflecting on profound, fundamental questions of who is American,” Wu said. “Who gets to consider themselves American? Who gets the power to decide the answers to these questions?” *** Senior Lynn Zhang would like to be American. She wants to go to graduate school, find a job and maybe marry her American boyfriend. Like Kim, Zhang has a student visa. She has been studying in the U.S. for three and a half years. She decided to attend a college in America because she was interested in
psychology — a field she said she feels is too often dismissed as mind-reading or talking to crazy people in China. Her mother had to borrow a substantial amount of money to send Zhang abroad. But Zhang said coming to America is one of the best decisions she ever made. Though she paints a glowing picture of the life she has, Zhang admits she has been disappointed by the discrimination and racism she has encountered in America. “At first, I was very naïve,” Zhang said. “I thought Americans are all about equality and that racism doesn’t exist, but that’s definitely not the case.” She recalls when she first arrived, and she had to do group work with other Americans in class, they would ignore her and direct all their comments and questions to each other. When she would muster up the courage to say something, they would barely respond or even glance her way. This made her feel excluded and upset. “I cried after my first day of class two years ago when that happened,” Zhang said. “It made me realize, ‘Oh, no society is perfect.’” Even now, she sometimes experiences feelings of alienation from her American friends. “Although I’ve tried to Americanize myself, I have had the realization that I’m not part of them,” Zhang said. “They make jokes and social references that I just don’t get.” *** Kyungsil Choi, 55, owns and manages Sobon, a Korean restaurant in Bloomington. She said she has felt a similar sense of isolation since moving to Bloomington in 2010. Choi immigrated to the U.S. because her two daughters wanted to study in America. Back in Korea, Choi was a music teacher in secondary school. Her younger daughter professed an interest in music and wanted to attend IU to study cello. As a teacher, Choi was well aware that the Korean education system benefits only those who can excel in academia. “You have to be good at studying, or you’re nothing,” she said. “Your rank in school
follows you for life. That’s not the case in America — there are opportunities for everyone.” Because Choi did not want her daughters to fend for themselves in a foreign country, she moved with them. “It was a difficult decision, leaving everything behind,” she said. “I didn’t want to break up the family.” Yet, she bid farewell to her parents, siblings and even husband to start a business in America. She applied for an E2 investor visa, which allows individuals to enter and work in the U.S. provided they have a substantial investment large enough to capitalize a new venture and employ American workers. “It is a really hard visa to get,” Choi said. “I was rejected the first time I applied because I didn’t have enough documentation. You have to have money, investment, capital.” Soon she found herself a restaurant owner in America with little experience in managing or operating such a business. Because she does not have a large staff, Choi works an average of 15 hours per day in order to ensure her business operates smoothly. “I have to do everything — cooking, accounting, sorting through tax issues and managing the employees,” Choi said. “Life here is so, so hard — a hundred times harder than life in Korea.” Choi said one of the worst aspects of life in the U.S. is the discrimination she faces from Americans because of her foreign appearance and lack YING LIU | IDS of knowledge of the English Sobon owner Kyungsil Choi, 55, sits in the restaurant’s dinning room Wednesday. Choi immigrated to the language. U.S. from Korea so her daughters could study in America, and she moved to Bloomington in 2010. According to the Pew Research Center’s 2012 report, to go along with whatever they have with others,” she said. “I of resources,” Wu said. “World“The Rise of Asian Americans,” say since I can’t speak Eng- am grateful for the opportu- wide inequality in terms of merely 30 percent of foreign- lish.” nity to do business in Ameri- resources leads people to seek Choi has no American ca, and there are many good better lives, however they can, born Korean immigrants in things here, but this life is so and the kinds of choices they America reported they can friends in the U.S. have are limited by circum“I’ve been living next to my difficult.” speak English well. Choi is not stances beyond their control.” proficient in English and feels American neighbor for years, The influx of Asian immi*** uncomfortable whenever she but I haven’t ever exchanged gration into the U.S. is also a attempts to carry out a conver- one word,” she said. Wu is often frustrated by result of American presenceas While she interacts more sation with an American. “When I have to go into an with the Korean community the attitude of some Ameri- a global and imperial power in office or buy supplies or deal and attends a Korean church, cans that immigrants have no Asia, she said. “I would like to live in a with problems with Ameri- Choi generally keeps to her- right to complain about the cans, I have trouble convey- self and her family. Most of her way they are treated in the U.S. world where access to opporing my meaning,” she said. time is eaten up at the busi- since they came here volun- tunities and resources are not tied to such circumstances like tarily. “I don’t like interacting with ness anyway. “A response like that accident of birth,” Wu said. “That’s one of the things I Americans because I feel ignored and dismissed. I get so miss the most about Korea — doesn’t take into account is- “Unfortunately, this is not the frustrated because I just have the sense of camaraderie you sues of power and inequality case in America.”
BPD currently looking into child molestation FROM IDS REPORTS The Bloomington Police Department received a report Thursday, May 8 from the Child Services Department, inspiring an investigation of a possible child molestation. A 9-year-old female reportedly told a grandparent
» BASEBALL
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 dinals. “They’ve set the standard for baseball in the Midwest,” Smith said. “So I’m proud we caught up to them a little bit. I’m sure going forward these are always going to be good games, and they’re always well attended.” After the win, IU moved up one spot in the projected RPI rankings to No. 3 in the nation. Finishing the season is important for the Hoosiers because they are trying to become one of eight teams to be awarded a national seed. If they’re named a na-
» HERRERA
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2 promoting activities where teachers can improve and have professional development,” he said. Coming from Latin America, Herrera understands the need to advocate for the Latino community. “There are many members of society,” Herrera said. “We are a minority, so if you are a minority, people won’t constantly see you or realize what you are doing for other people.” Through his organizations, Herrera recognizes Latino high school students who excel academically, helping them obtain scholarships for college. He also strives to get recognition for language teachers across the state. Despite Herrera’s relentless advocacy for the Latino community and language ed-
that she was inappropriately touched by an 8-year-old female. Upon further investigation, the 8-year-old was discovered to have been playing with her dolls in inappropriate ways. BPD Sgt. Joe Crider said when children exhibit this kind sexual behavior, which
is not normal for their age, it could mean they were victims of molestation. The 8-year-old female is was taken in for a forensic interview Wednesday. More on this story will be available as the investigation develops. Sarah Zinn
tional seed, IU will get to be the location of not only the regionals in Bloomington, but also the super regionals. If the Hoosiers get through those two weekends and win at home, they’ll go back to the College World Series in Omaha, Neb. IU will have its final regular season series this weekend against Minnesota. The three game series will be a Thursday-Friday-Saturday format with Thursday and Friday starting at 8 p.m. and the series finale scheduled for a 3 p.m. first pitch Saturday. IU has played well as of late. In their past 26 games, the Hoosiers are 24-2. With
just one win against Minnesota (26-20, 12-9), IU (36-12, 19-2) will clinch the outright Big Ten regular season title. It’ll be the seniors final time playing in Bart Kaufman before postseason play. Senior ace Joey DeNato, who is 11-1 on the year with a 1.91 ERA, will throw the opening game on Thursday to try and clinch the conference title. “It’ll be just like any other game,” DeNato said. “I’m going to have the same mentality coming out, and hopefully we can get the ‘W’ that day.”
ucation initiatives, he remains fervent about teaching and his students. “That’s my passion. That’s my thing,” Herrera said. “There will never be a moment when I don’t like teaching.” Herrera said he believes his impact and duty transcend the classroom. “I don’t see my role here as just teaching them grammar or teaching them to say ‘Hola, cómo estás?’” Herrera said. “It’s doing the personal things.” Herrera’s passion and teaching style has resonated with some of his students. “The difference with Israel is that he’s so passionate about teaching, and he loves the language,” William Northdquist, a sophomore and former student of Herrera, said. “He dedicates himself to his students and his classes like a professor I’ve never seen.” Northdquist said taking
Herrera’s class had a lasting impact. Herrera told him education is indispensable, and promoting education is paramount. “He encouraged me personally to double major in Spanish,” Northdquist said. “If you don’t have education, you won’t take advantage of life as the maximum level,” Herrera said. “You can share and help people with what you know and assist in the welfare of many people.” “You will help with the development of a city, of a country, because you will be cultivating with your knowledge.” Herrera’s work ethic, benevolence and selflessness is lauded and has been recognized by his peers. “Israel’s leadership, creativity and dedication to turning ideas into reality are highly esteemed in the world language communities,” Gemmer said.
EDITOR GRIFFIN LEEDS weekend@idsnews.com
MAY 15, 2014 | PAGE 7
safebinge TV mass consumption nsumption on for your summer Summer is officiially here. You u’ve made it. Now what? We shouldn’t evven have to answer that question. Dedicate your newly acqu uired free tim me for binging — on TV shows, that is! Why hit the barss when there e are back-to-back programs to imbibe? Rene ew your Netfl flix or Hulu Plus account, or create a new paassword (sincce you most likely forgot your old one) and lett the summerr-long marathon begin. Need some suggestio ons to kick off ff your online TV bar crawl? That’s where we e come in. FEATURE AND ILLUSTRATIONS BY GRIFFIN LEEDS
“Orange is the New Black”: One Season Post-millennial Post -millennial yuppie Piper Chapman finds herself herse elf doing time for a crime she committed backk when she was younger and more adventurous. adve enturous. Now she finds herself haunted by her he past in a bleak bl k present. You’llll find d by drug-addled religious her confronted c zealots, a former lady lover, and inmates zealo whose struggles are truly more complex and whos sympathy-inducing than her own. We’d like to symp think you’ve already plopped down and made and insightful dark comedy a part this clever c of your yo repertoire. If not, take some time to watch this 13-episode series and be thankful watc season begins June 6 because the the next n season finale is a doozy. Plus, since Netflix seaso produces the show, it is specifically designed prod to be watched en masse.
“The X-Files”: 9 Seasons Speaking of sexual tension, you could enjoy Spea the same and more with this sci-fi thriller s series serie that is so ’90s your hair will start to part down the middle This monster-of-the-week style show is about idiosyncratic Fox Mulder and sskeptical Dana Skully, a turbulent pair of agents agen who cover the FBI’s supernatural casess with pheromonal ferocity. Be sure to turn off your beeper while you watch this engrossing g collection of 202 episodes inspired by myths colle and u urban legends from around the world sure to creep you out. This show was wise to go governmental plots before it was cool, so be prepared to develop Conspiracy Theorist pr Syndrome. You can even play a game in which Synd ch you take a shot every time Gillian Anderson’s t Agent Agen Skully says the words “logical explanation. ” Then again, that would probablyy expla be irresponsible. She says it a lot. irr
“Cheers” : 11 Seasons A show about a Boston bar filled with an eclectic and loveable gang? Be honest with yourself — you’re not going to find anything better on Kirkwood. This throwback series represents the pinnacle of multi-camera, live studio audience sitcoms. It received the Best Comedy Series Emmy nomination all 11 seasons, a record stat shared only with “M*A*S*H.” This show also marks a hilarious shift to comedies that focus on character development. The famous title song is as memorable as Ted Danson’s womanizing lead character, Sam. The writing is as sharp as Woody Harrelson’s character is dim-witted. This show will provide you hours of pleasure with many familiar and now-famous faces as well as a will-they-won’t-they relationship that predated Ross and Rachel’s on “Friends.”
“Broad City”: One Season Maybe you just want to spend a day to knock out a whole season of a show? A comedy, you say? We’ve got you covered. Enjoy this web-series-turned-TV show about a pair of near-broke young adults (we use the term “adult” loosely) and their friendship as they live in New York City. While you might think this must be another anti-hero in NYC template that can’t offer anything new, you’d be wrong. This series, produced by comedy superstar Amy Poehler, features a lot of undiscovered talent, an adorable friendship and surprising, sidesplitting writing that passes the Bechdel Test with reefer-infused, flying-high colors. The first season is 10 30-minute episodes: an amount of time un-scientifically proven sufficient to create a butt-shaped depression in your couch.
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ARTS
Celebrate American Craft Beer Week In celebration of American Craft Beer Week, the Bloomington Brewpub at Lennie’s will be preparing 10-Speed Hoppy Wheat, a special menu item, from 4 to 6 p.m. today. 10-Speed Hoppy Wheat was honored as the
EDITOR: ANU KUMAR | ARTS@IDSNEWS.COM
Hoosier Beer Geek’s Best Beer of 2013. From 4 p.m. to close, guests can receive a free ounce of mosaic hops to use for their own home brew recipes.
COURTESY PHOTO | IDS
This 2013 piece, a digital pigment print by Michael Max McLeoden, is titled “Zone D’Erotica, near Amarillo, TX.” It will be featured in the ninth annual Juried Art Show, which begins this weekend.
IDS FILE PHOTO
Busman’s Holiday performs during Chocolate Prom Feb. 1, 2013, at Rhino’s Youth Center. Proceeds from the event supported youth programs at Rhino’s.
COURTESY PHOTO | IDS
The ninth annual Juried Art Show artist Jen Lewis’ work, “Beauty in Blood,” features what happens to menstrual blood when it is put in salt water.
9th annual Juried Art Show opens Friday ANGELA HAWKINS anlhawki@iu.edu
“Orgy in the Oval Office” is one of the many pieces visitors will find while walking around the Kinsey Institute Juried Art Show. There will be an open reception for the ninth annual Juried Art Show from 6 to 8 p.m. Friday in the Grunwald Gallery of Art, and it’s free to the public. Four selected jurors choose contemporary art pieces from artists to be displayed, said Catherine Johnson-Roehr, Grunwald Gallery art curator. The show usually averages an attendance of 300 people at the opening reception, and they hope to reach that number this year too, she said. “This is the sixth year the
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show has been held in the gallery,” Grunwald Gallery director Betsy Stirratt said. The exhibit will be open from Saturday to July 12 following the reception. The show will feature artwork of a variety of themes — sex, gender, eroticism and sexuality, among others. Gary Milius is the associate curator of art, artifacts and photographs at the Kinsey Institute. “Visitors can expect to see pieces from all over,” Milius said. The show not only brings in a wide range of visitors, but it also brings exposure to the Kinsey Institute, Johnson-Roehr said. “A lot of artists do not know about Kinsey and find out about us through this event,” Johnson-Roehr said. There will be pieces that
reflect an artist’s pain from abuse to more informative pieces about a study of men’s pheromones. Artist Jen Lewis’ work, “Beauty in Blood,” will be featured at this year’s show. Her work shows what happens to menstrual blood when it is put in salt water. “Myself and other jurors try to select pieces that are both fun and serious,” Milius said. The show will feature pieces of art from artists across the country, including Arizona, Colorado, Montana and Wisconsin. Many of the pieces are only for show, but there will be some available for purchase. They can be picked up after the exhibit ends July 12, Milius said.
Bloomington duo begins tour with Kishi Bashi JACOB KLOPFENSTEIN jklopfen@indiana.edu @jfklopfenstein
After releasing its latest album “A Long Goodbye” in April, Bloomington band Busman’s Holiday says farewell to Bloomington as it starts its biggest tour. The band is made up of Bloomington brothers Lewis and Addison Rogers. The trip begins today in Columbus, Ohio, and includes stops in Washington, D.C., Athens, Ga., and Minneapolis before wrapping up June 2 in Toronto. “It will be a totally different experience, but it will be exciting,” said Lewis, who sings and plays guitar. The second half of the tour will pair Busman’s Holiday with Kishi Bashi. Both bands are on Joyful Noise Recordings, an Indianapolis-based record label that began in Bloomington. Lewis met Kishi Bashi frontman Kaoru Ishibashi on a previous tour. Ishibashi, who has toured previously with Of Montreal
and Regina Spektor, asked Lewis if he knew anyone from a label. Lewis said he did and helped deliver Ishibashi’s demo to Joyful Noise. “That flourished, and now we’re touring with him,” Lewis said. “We’ll be on a tour bus for the first time, and we’re playing bigger shows, so it’s nice to do that.” Though Lewis said he hasn’t been on a tour this size, Addison, a drummer and singer, previously toured with Swedish musician Jens Lekman. Lewis said Addison got a taste of a bigger tour with Lekman. “A Long Goodbye” took the duo four years to complete before releasing it April 1. Lewis said the latest album involved him bringing songs he had started writing to his brother. “Addison finishes songs,” Lewis said. “He helps me get through them sometimes.” Lewis said he likes the feeling of releasing an album and seeing what it becomes
once it’s out in the world. “It’s nice that it has its own life, and it lives with people,” he said. “You don’t get that sharing element of music if you haven’t released an album in a while.” Even though Lewis has been a part of other projects, such as the local band Sleeping Bag, he has playedwith Busman’s Holiday since he was 15 years old, and he said his band with his brother has always been the one he feels most passionately about. “Addison and I see eye to eye on a lot of things,” he said. “That has a lot to do with being brothers.” Overall, Lewis said they’re looking to have a good time on this tour. He and Addison will head back to the studio in September to begin working on a new album. He said he’s trying to sustain the band and make a career out of it, and it seems to be happening slowly but surely. “We’ll do it until we can’t play anymore,” Lewis said. “We’re in it for the long haul.”
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SPORTS
Damon Bailey joins Butler coaching staff Former IU basketball All-American Damon Bailey has been named an assistant coach for the Butler women’s basketball program. Bailey was the former head coach of the Bedford North Lawrence High School women’s team where he coached his daughter, Alexa,
EDITOR: EVAN HOOPFER | SPORTS@IDSNEWS.COM
who has committed to Butler for the 20152016 season. Bailey was named an Associated Press AllAmerican in 1994 for the Hoosiers and joins first-year Head Coach Kurt Godlevske at Butler.
IDS FILE PHOTOS
Athletic director Fred Glass, right, presents the Women's Big Ten Swimming and Diving Championship trophy to coaches Ray Looze, left, and Jeff Huber, center, during halftime of the Hoosiers 64-59 loss to No. 8 Michigan State March 6, 2009, at Assembly Hall. Dennis Dale will join Looze as associate head coach.
Dale joins coaching staff FROM IDS REPORTS
Dennis Dale has been named the associate head coach for the IU men’s and women’s swimming team, Head Coach Ray Looze announced Monday. Dale spent the past 29 years at the helm of the University of Minnesota men’s swimming program. Under his direction, the team won seven Big Ten titles, and Dale was Big Ten Coach of the Year six times. “Dennis Dale brings a wealth of swimming knowledge to our staff,” Looze said in a May 12 release. “Not only is he one of the NCAA all-time great coaches, but is a firstclass individual who puts his swimmers needs above all
else. There are very few people involved in swimming who possess are greater passion for the sport.” Dale’s duties officially begin July 1. He will join Kyle Hastings in working with the men’s and women’s sprint groups. “It is my belief that by assigning two full-time staff members to sprinting we will take the necessary steps needed to move IU back into contention for the Big Ten title and into the NCAA top-five national rankings as we ultimately pursue an NCAA championship,” Looze said. Dale coached the Golden Gophers to five consecutive top-10 NCAA finishes from 2000-04. His team has placed
no lower than fourth in the Big Ten in each of the past 26 seasons. Dale coached more than 100 different All-Americans in the past 20 years. Minnesota was also home to 48 individual Big Ten title winners during Dale’s tenure. Before being hired at Minnesota, Dale spent 13 years as head boy’s coach at Burnsville High School. Dale coached the team to four Minnesota state championships, and was named Coach of the Year in his final four seasons. “I am excited and thrilled to join Coach Looze and his staff, as well as the Indiana family,” Dale said. Grace Palmieri
SPORTS FROM THE NORTH
Column: Move NHL playoffs back Austin North is a junior majoring in journalism
So far, this year’s NBA playoffs have been nothing short of amazing. In the first round alone, five of the eight playoffs series ended in a game seven. Both conferences’ number one seeds were pushed to the brink of elimination, and it felt like each series ended up as an instant classic in its own right. Between the four consecutive overtime games between the Oklahoma City Thunder and the Memphis Grizzlies and Damian Lillard’s ice cold buzzer-beater that sent Dwight Howard and company back to Houston on an early summer vacation, the playoffs have shown that there’s no question — the NBA owns April and May. Ratings have been through the roof, as the first eight matchups alone averaged 3.5 million viewers per game. The story lines have been compelling – from the public relations dumpster fire that is the Donald Sterling incident to the inexplicable late-season collapse that affected the Pacers starting way back in March. It’s all been captivating. So captivating that it’s blinded us to the fact that, quietly, the National Hockey League is putting together an enthralling postseason of its own. For those who haven’t
been watching, this year’s Stanley Cup playoffs have failed to disappoint. Newly successful markets like Anaheim and Colorado have proven a force to be reckoned with, and the league’s parity seems unmatched by any other sport. The NHL’s most storied rivalry in the Boston Bruins and the Montreal Canadiens ended in a game seven on Wednesday, and the star-studded Pittsburgh Penguins lost their series in a heartbreaker to the Rangers as Henrik Lundqvist channeled the ghost of Patrick Roy, amassing 35 saves. But according to Forbes, the average audience for an NBA playoff game is still five times larger than this year’s average NHL playoff game. The NHL’s viewership is on the rise, but it pales in comparison to its hardwood counterpart. Even its most-watched game of the first round ranked behind an episode of “SpongeBob SquarePants” and a rerun of “Full House.” Now we all love Uncle Jesse and the Tanner family’s heartwarming antics, but that the NHL is playing second fiddle to a corny ’90s sitcom and a cartoon sponge is cause for concern. Part of this has to do with cable giants ESPN and TNT carrying the NBA playoffs, while the much smaller networks like NBCSN and CNBC have carried NHL playoff games.
But the league’s biggest problem is competing with the NBA in the first place. Almost nobody has the time to watch 16 different series between both sports, and in the battle of casual fan viewership the NBA seems to be winning out handily. If hockey wants to boost mainstream interest, it should move the start of the season back a month and a half. That way, as the NBA playoffs are winding down, the NHL playoffs will just be starting up. By the time the Stanley Cup finals roll around, the league’s only competition for viewers will come in the form of midseason MLB play — hardly a factor given the MLB’s marked drop in popularity during the past 10 years. It would save us from the sports purgatory that exists from June until August, and it might finally allow ESPN a reason to give hockey more than a passing acknowledgement on SportsCenter. It would give Middle America the opportunity to see that hockey players are the toughest athletes in sports despite their difficult last names. But most of all, it would help turn the most underappreciated North American sport into something even casual fans can enjoy. aknorth@indiana.edu
IDS FILE PHOTOS
Runners compete in the Men's 1-Mile Run Feb. 9 2013, at the Harry Gladstein Fieldhouse. The track and field team will compete in the Big Ten Championships this weekend in West Lafayette.
Track and field goes to Big Ten Championships BY EVAN HOOPFER ehoopfer@indiana.edu @EvanHoopfer
It might be a rebuilding year and it might be a young team, but IU Coach Ron Helmer doesn’t want to use that as an excuse for his team. The Big Ten outdoor track and field championships are this weekend at the Rankin Track and Field Complex in West Lafayette. The facility is Purdue’s home track, but will welcome all the other conference teams this weekend. IU, traditionally a strong track and field school, has suffered a down year after losing some key seniors from a year ago. Now, Helmer said he hopes for his team to finish in the top six or so of the Big Ten.
“I would hope that we would have team that in a mediocre year, we’d still be in the top half of the conference,” Helmer said. This season IU is replacing stars Andy Bayer and Derek Drouin – who won a bronze medal in the 2012 summer Olympics in London. Helmer said they still have the premiere talent they need to win some events, but the biggest obstacle this year has been the depth. During the Big Ten outdoor championships this weekend, Helmer is looking for some people to step up and secure some top-10 finishes to help the team grind out points. “I hope that we have enough depth to get those fifth and sixth and seventh place finishes to get enough
points at the end,” Helmer said. Compared to teams Helmer has coached in the past, this one is younger than usual. In a transition year between competing at a higher level, Helmer has to balance looking forward to the future while still giving the attention and effort this team deserves. “I don’t want to sit here and say ‘You know, next year we’re going to be pretty good,’” Helmer said. “But we will be really good, because all these kids will be a year older.” “But that doesn’t get you through this year,” he said. “But I’m not going to accept that quite yet.” SEE BIG TEN, PAGE 11
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Student web startup seeks campus rep for marketing campaign. fundsponge.com/jobs
The IDS is accepting applications for Advertising Account Executives to start April, 2014. 15 hours per week. Flexibility with class schedule. Real-world Experience. NO WEEKENDS! All Majors Accepted. Great Resume Addition 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 be able to work through May, 2015. Must be able to work summer, 2014. Apply in person at: Ernie Pyle Hall,RM 120. Email: rhartwel@indiana.com
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P.K. Samaddar, MD Ear, Nose, Throat & Associated Allergy. Experienced/ Professional/ Courteous/ No Unnecessary Surgery 420 W. 2nd St. 339-1253
Apartment Furnished
Hickory Grove now leasing for August – reserve your spot today. Great rates, limited availability. 812.339.0799
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www.TenthAndCollege.com
Great 4 bed. Great price. Call today 312-805-0284.
3 BR houses- A/C,W/D, D/W. 319 N. Maple, 801 W 11th. for Aug. ‘14. $975/mo. No pets. Off street parking, free WiFi. 317- 490-3101
Housing for up to 9 near 8th & Fess. 6 BR w/ wood floors, stainless applns. & prkg. Satelite television and high speed internet provided. 317-502-4428
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812-339-8777
3 BR, 1209 N. Grant. Located near Stadium. $900 for 3; $675 for 2. for August, 2014. C/A, D/W, on-site laundry. Costley & Co. Rental Management. 812-330-7509
4 and 5 BR, $1400-$2k. A/C, D/W, W/D, with pics at www.iu4rent.com
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505 W. 16th - 3bd, 1ba Hse East Bay II - 3bd, 2.5ba Apt
340 S. Walnut 1 & 2 Bedrooms omegabloomington.com 812-333-0995
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3 BEDS...ONLY 2 LEFT!
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Walnut Place
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2 blks. to Campus. Nice 3 BR, 1.5 BA house,$1440. Near 3rd & Indiana. No pets. Call 334-1100 or email: zinmanlaw@aol.com.
435
HOUSING
3 BR apts. All appliances: W/D & D/W. On site parking. 812-336-6900 www.shaw-rentals.com
OMEGA PROPERTIES
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4 Yakima rail grabs; 2 Yakima 48” cross bars; 4 SKS lock cores. $180. danmkirwan@netsc Buying/selling portable window A/C and dorm refridgerators. Any size. Cash paid. 812-320-1789 auldoc11@gmail.com
336-6900 www.shaw-rentals.com Avail. now. 3 BR, 1.5 BA ranch w/ unfinished basement & large fenced yard. South-side of Blgtn. 236 Church Lane. $1,125/mo. Great for Grad Students or Faculty. 812-825-5579 deckardhomes.com
Electric mower: $150. 248-894-6927 441
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
Apt. Unfurnished
Apt. Unfurnished
Cute, older home. 2 BR/ 1 BA. Hardwood floors, W/D, small yd. & mowing provided + trash removal. $710/mo. (812) 336-6900 Free Aug. rent if signed by 4/30! 5 BR/2 BA, close to campus. Text 812-323-0033. Houses/Twnhs./Flats Avail. Aug., 2014. Call for pricing: 812-287-8036.
Music Equipment Crate RFX30 guitar a mp, 10” speaker, many effects! Excellent $100. Call 812-929-8996.
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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | T H U R S D AY, M AY 1 5 , 2 0 1 5 | I D S N E W S . C O M
IDS FILE PHOTOS
Singer-songwriter Jennie Devoe performs at WFHB's fourth annual Acoustic Roots Festival May 16, 2011, at Upland Brewing Company.
The Indiana Boys perform at the sixth annual WFHB Acoustic Roots Festival May 11, 2013, at Upland Brewing Company. The festival raised funds for Bloomington Community Radio.
Acoustic Roots Festival showcases regional artists location since its move. All ages are welcome. Gates will open at 2:30 p.m. Saturday and the festival will run from 3 to 11 p.m. According to a press release, WFHB’s Acoustic Roots Festival is a fundraiser for Bloomington Community Radio. The festival will focus on the heritage of American roots music, and it allows local and regional artists to showcase their work. The 2014 line-up features
FROM IDS REPORTS
The Acoustic Roots Festival has become somewhat of a Bloomington summer tradition, now going into its seventh year. The festival originally took place as a Fourth of July festival but was moved to Bloomington from Story, Ind., in Brown County. This year’s festival will take place Saturday at Upland Brewing Company, which has become the new
T.V. Mike & the Scarecrowes, Timm Grimm and Jan Lucas, White Lightning Boys, Indiana Boys, Lexi Len & the Strangers, Ottomobile, the Underhills and Jacob Latham. “Many people just think of older people with gray hair when they think of acoustic and folk music, but we have many performers that are younger as well,” WFHB music director Jim Manion said. “Part of our mission is to
celebrate an increase in local cultural diversity.” A number of the artists have played in the festival before and have close ties to Bloomington, Manion said. “It’s really gratifying to see these connections with musicians build,” Manion said. The lead singer of the headliner, T.V. Mike & the Scarecrowes, used to work at Upland, Manion said, but the group is currently based in California.
Weather cancels IndyCar practice FROM IDS REPORTS
With Indy 500 qualifications scheduled for this weekend, every practice counts. Unfortunately for the qualifying field, drivers lost a day of practice after rain caused a cancellation of Wednesday’s practice run. Rain also played a factor Tuesday, canceling practice at 2:47 p.m. because of the poor conditions. Before the cancellation, 31 drivers were able to participate in practice, with Team Penske’s Helio Castroneves running 56 laps, the most of any driver who was able to
get on the track before it was closed down for the day. “It was another great day for Pennzoil Chevrolet,” Castroneves said. “We did what we needed to do before the rain came in. When the track goes green,” Castroneves continued, “We will be ready. We are getting close to qualifying, and that is what we are starting to think about.” Of the drivers to practice Tuesday, E.J. Viso led the field with an average speed of 224.488 mph. Viso was selected to take over for James Hinchcliffe, who suffered a concussion in
Horoscope Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 7 — Enter an expansion phase today and tomorrow. Travel sounds wonderful... and romantic. Investigate new possibilities for exploration and discovery. Schedule events and make reservations. Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is an 8 — Review financial arrangements with a partner. Complete the paperwork and deliver it. You have inside information on a good deal. You’ve got connections. Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Today
the Indy Grand Prix Saturday. “I’ve taken on the full role for James,” Viso said. “Whatever his crew and engineer had planned to test and experience, I’ve been doing.” After recording an average speed of 225.025 mph Monday, which was the highest of any driver, Ryan Hunter-Reay finished practice Tuesday with a speed of 223.612 mph, making him the fourth fastest car during practice. Monday, Hunter-Reay and the other drivers for Andretti Autosport ran in a pack during practice in order to simulate what the actual race will feel like.
To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. is an 8 — You and a partner can stir things up today and tomorrow. A new revenue source appears. Choose solid options over nebulous. Work takes precedence over partying. An investment pays for itself. Provide great service, and receive nice perks and benefits. Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Today is an 8 — Today and tomorrow get busy. Make an important connection. An interesting development pre-empts scheduled programming. Your circle comes up with a profitable idea. Take advantage of help
QUASSY
from a powerful female. Let people know the costs in advance. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 9 — Travel and romance entice today and tomorrow. Take a gamble on love (with Mercury sextile Uranus and Venus, which is conjunct Uranus). Sexy words work wonders. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is an 8 — Romantic sparks could fly, with Venus conjunct Uranus. Invest in home and family. Your love sets you free. Express your feelings, with Mercury sextile
KYLE MAYES
BREWSTER ROCKIT: SPACE GUY!
“Just getting a feel for downforce levels and race (simulation),” Hunter-Reay said. “It was fun, we got through a lot of work today and it’s only Monday.” If the weather is clear, practice is scheduled to begin at 12 p.m. today. The first day of qualifying is set to take place at 11 a.m. Saturday. Positions 10-33 will compete for positions on Sunday, while Fast Nine qualifying will begin at 2 p.m. Dan Matney
“This definitely is a bit of a homecoming for him,” Manion said. The festival had more than 300 people attend last year, and Manion said he expects higher attendance numbers this year. Tickets cost $15 if bought in advance. Tickets are available at WFHB, Bloomingfoods, Upland Brewing Company, the WFHB tent at the Bloomington Farmers’ Market and Muddy Boots in Nashville,
» BIG TEN
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 9 Helmer said he wanted the depth to develop throughout the season and hasn’t seen as much of it as he would have liked. But with the Big Ten outdoor championships this weekend, NCAA regionals from May 29 to 31 and potentially the NCAA Championships from June 11 to 14, there are still more opportunities for the younger teammates to shine on the brightest stages. “It’s lurking on the surface. It’s right there,” Helmer said of the potential of young athletes. “The challenge we have is to get people to step
Venus and Uranus. Add color.
brilliant idea and solve a riddle.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is a 7 — All of a sudden, everything starts making sense. Travel and romance come together in conversation. It could get intense. A lucky break (or breakdown) at work catches you by surprise. Intuition rings like a bell. Love grows in communication. Share with family.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is a 9 — You’re extra confident and clever today and tomorrow. Count your blessings. Your holdings are gaining value. It’s a good time to sell. Invest in new technology. Invention, creativity and inspiration come easily.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is an 8 — Bringing home the bacon has your focus today and tomorrow. Discourage pipe dreams. Update your equipment and technology. Prioritize projects that invoke your passion. Your love sets you free. Go along with a partner’s
Crossword
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is an 8 — Today and tomorrow feel retrospective in mood. Brainstorm and reap creative abundance, with Mercury sextile Uranus and Venus. Study dates can be productive. Venture out intellectually. Share information and resources.
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
su do ku
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
1 Quiets 6 Fund-raising target 10 Combat group 14 Muslim deity 15 Tom Joad, e.g. 16 Gp. for leather loathers 17 Quench 18 Moderate, with “down” 19 Piece of land 20 Loser’s hopedfor path 23 __ standstill 24 __Kosh B’gosh 25 Comical routine 28 Significant dry spell? 31 Drift, as on the breeze 34 Himalayan legend 35 Take a turn in the box 36 Where surfers shop 38 A good one follows the starts of the four longest puzzle answers 39 “Affliction” actor 41 Ex-Saudi ruler __ Saud 42 Such-is link 44 Pro votes 45 Disruptive occupation
Anu Kumar up when the pressure is on.” In track and field, one of the biggest obstacles for tackling the mental aspect of the game is not allowing the other competitors to get in your head, Helmer said. A person in front of you might do something incredible or an All-American might just be better than you vvv, but as a competitor you must be able to block that out and just do the best you can do without worrying about other people. “Some people have learned how to do that,” Helmer said, “And other people are still learning how to do that.”
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is an 8 — Friends have excellent ideas today and tomorrow. Intuition tells you what’s hot and what’s not. Paying debts increases your confidence. You could fall in love instantly. Seductive words and images propel your campaign. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is an 8 — Assume responsibility, for a rise in status. Good news arrives. Listen to your heart. Practice a craft you love. Get the word out, and start generating a buzz. They’re saying nice things.
© 2013 By Nancy Black Distributed by Tribune Media Services, INC. All Rights Reserved
L.A. Times Daily Crossword
TIM RICKARD
ACROSS
Ind. Tickets can be bought at the gate as well and will cost $20. Food and beverages from Upland Brewing Company will be available on site. Individual coolers with foods and drinks are not allowed to be carried into the festival. “It’s a really a great way to kick off the summer in Bloomington,” Manion said.
50 Poem part 51 “Rumble in the Jungle” winner 52 Botanist Gray 55 Telecommuter, perhaps 59 “Lovely” girl of song 61 “Am __ late?” 62 Numbered hymn 63 Actor Estrada 64 Zero 65 Cocoon dweller 66 Watch part 67 Tour stops 68 Whitehorse’s territory
DOWN 1 Brutus co-conspirator 2 Deal out 3 South American carrier 4 Rake in 5 Cyndi Lauper hit 6 “Check” 7 “All right already” 8 English class no-no 9 Eyes rudely 10 Snobbish 11 “Ten Days in a Mad-House” journalist, 1887
12 Judge in 1995 news 13 Art in a parlor 21 Enzyme ending 22 Twain/Harte play 26 Slatted box 27 Middleton and Spade 28 Arch home: Abbr. 29 Japan’s secondoldest university 30 Diagnostic test for epilepsy, for short 31 Houdini’s family name 32 Boundary 33 Extraordinary 37 Tenor who portrayed Caruso 38 Ang Lee, e.g.: Abbr. 40 Healthy grain 43 Fixing, in a way 46 __ manifold: engine part 47 Chevy SUVs 48 “Strange Magic” gp. 49 Without complication 52 “... __ and stormy ...” 53 Series of shots 54 Marketing pro 56 Yours, to Yvette 57 Half a bar tool 58 Genesis brother 59 Flag thrower 60 Portfolio element
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
reviews
COURTESY PHOTO
Tune-Yards’ synths and percussions prove off beat yet on point
Social commentary and supporting cast acting hotter than dragon fire family, gives a perjured testimony against Tyrion. This is the final straw for him. Overwhelmed by the injustice of the proceedings, Tyrion closes the episode by demanding a trial by combat. This aspect of the episode highlights what makes “Game of Thrones” so riveting. While the universe is mythical, the dystopian realities are universal. While crooked courts are obvious in the world of Westeros, it makes us wonder if the perception of our legal system is also a fantasy. The craft of the actors in this episode also cannot go without mention. Just as the Lannister family reigns in Westeros, the acting among the Lannister kin maintains a tight grip on the audience’s awe. With that said, there are some other performances in this episode from some less prominent characters that challenge the Lannister’s domination. When Davos Seaworth (Liam Cunningham) brings Stannis Baratheon (Stephen Dellane) to the Iron Bank in the hopes that they will receive sponsorship to fund the military might to take the throne, Seaworth delivers an impassioned oratorio defending Stannis. Cunningham’s conviction as Seaworth asserts that the stoic Stannis will be reliable in paying back the bank. He also vows that Stannis is the most promising prospective leader to fill the void that would be left when the aging Tywin passes away. Unperturbed
‘Game of Thrones’ Peter Dinklage, Charles Dance, Lena Headey, Emilia Clarke Grade: AWith the HBO-famous nudity count low and the premium television acting high, this past Sunday’s “Game of Thrones” sixth episode titled “The Laws of Gods and Men” made a great mid-season impression and reminded viewers that this fantasy show is about more than just rarely seen digitally generated mythical beings. Instead we see how Westeros is home to dystopic themes, and we see the astounding performances from its exceptional supporting cast. The central drama of this episode was Tyrion Lannister (Peter Dinklage) on trial for regicide. In this thread, we see witness after dubious witness testify against Tyrion before a court of King’s Landing elite. Tyrion reminds the attendees they are the same public that he had inventively saved at the Battle of Blackwater. Nonetheless, Tyrion cannot win in a court where his spiteful father Tywin Lannister (Charles Dance) resides. Even Shae (Sibel Kekilli), the former lover of Tyrion whom he sent away for her own protection from his treacherous
‘Nikki Nack’ Tune-Yards (stylized as “tUnE-yArDs”) GRADE: B+
by Stannis’ religious fanaticism, the Iron Bank deems Seaworth’s speech quite impressive, as does the audience. Alfie Allen’s work as the brainwashed Theon Greyjoy also left viewers in awe. We are informed through tragic moments in previous episodes that Theon has been completely rewired by the sick and sadistic Ramsay Snow (Iwan Rheon). Theon’s sister, Yara Greyjoy (Gemma Whelan) tries to retrieve her lost brother in an attack on the Dreadfort where he is kept. She finds her deranged brother sleeping in the kennels. Allen’s embodiment of a man treated like a dog remains simultaneously haunting and exquisite throughout his brief presence in this episode. After Theon, renamed “Reek” by Ramsay, remains loyal to his master after his sister’s failed rescue mission, he is given a special task. In this scene, Ramsay offers Theon a warm bath as a reward for his fidelity. Allen performs the fearful and untrusting role of a dismembered and reconditioned young man with an averted gaze and a hesitance that ripples throughout his body. Allen barely speaks, but his performance as an actor screams in the face of the audience. A once despised character, Theon has become a pitied and heartbreaking husk thanks to Allen’s execution.
Tune-Yards’ third album will have you bobbing your head, banging your head and scratching your head. The experimental pop duo of Merrill Garbus and Nate Brenner packed “Nikki Nack” with the power and quirkiness fans should expect. This danceable compilation of world beats, synthesizer and Garbus’ wild range of vocals retains the lo-fi feel with which the group was founded.
Stripped-down, bare moments of pure percussion with the occasional simple synth line break up full, multi-layered compositions, but even these thickly produced pieces have a raw quality to them. The tracks all draw their pushing power from percussive elements, which is no surprise to those who have seen the band perform live. While Brenner jams on bass, Garbus stands between a floor tom and a snare, pounding and creating drum loops as she sings. This taxing performance style took a toll on the vocalist during the group’s “Whokill” tour, and her remedy was surprisingly more movement in the form of dance. It was in taking Haitian dance classes where Garbus met her Haitian drum teacher, who played an ensemble of his native drums in the album. After a trip to Haiti as part of a cultural study, Garbus explained that Haitian song and dance comes out of dedication to a spirit strengthening the spiritual connection to music,
which is just what the artist said she needed after her recent tour. By studying drumming with dance, Tune-Yards published an album that begs for movement. “Find a New Way,” the album’s first track, lets you fall into a groove again and again as the polyrhythmic layers pause and mix with free-form vocals to create a beat punctuated by synth sounds. The wall of rhythm continues with “Water Fountain,” one of the album’s most upbeat tunes. These driving beats take a turn with more subdued tracks like “Time of Dark” and “Wait for a Minute” — a song so atypical of Garber’s vocal technique that it sounds almost normal. “Nikki Nack” ends with a trio of songs that recapture the kooky cadence and powerful progression prevalent in much of the album. Just in time for summer, Tune-Yards again lets go of convention and demands that we, too, let loose and move. By Will Royal
By Griffin Leeds COURTESY PHOTOS
Bucceto’s Smiling Teeth means pizza & pasta with personality! Bucceto’s is the perfect solution for a tasty, fast lunch or a relaxed gathering with family or friends. Enjoy our innovative and award-winning menu specializing Californiastyle pizzas, pastas, salads Italian chicken dinners, vegetarian dishes, calzones and sandwiches all prepared fresh every day, along with a thoughtful selection of beers and wines. Our menu now includes Gluten-free pizzas & pastas! We also offer a number of gluten-free appetizers & sandwiches. All of our salad dressings are gluten-free as well. Dine in with us in our casual, yet stylish atmosphere or call for carryout or delivery. Having a party? Ask about our party trays!
General
812-331-1234 E. Third & the 45-46 Bypass 812-323-0123 W. Third St. 350 S. Liberty Dr.
Mon.-Thu.: 11 a.m. - 10 p.m. Fri.-Sat.: 11 a.m. - 11 p.m. Sun.: 11 a.m. - 10 p.m.
Delivery Mon.-Thu.: 5 - 9:30 p.m. Fri.-Sat.: 5 - 10:30 p.m. Sun.: 5 - 9:30 p.m.
Poll results (Which calzone can you not wait to try?):
57.1% of readers said Chicken Bada Bing. More Than Great Beers!
READER POLL Esan Thai wants to know: what dinner entree do you want tonight? Sweet and Sour
Pad Thai Noodles
Cashew Nut Chicken
Pepper Steak
Vote online at www.idsnews.com/dining. Check for the poll results in next week’s paper.
• Btown’s Best Cheese Stix • Great Burgers & Steaks • Awesome Wings • House-made Veggie Burgers • Weekend Brunch • Weekly Drink Specials • Free Banquet Room
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One topping pizza for $5.95
812-336-8877 crazyhorseindiana.com
WE DELIVER! There are more than 55 places that deliver in town.
Dining
Offer good with purchase of drink and inside dining only. 1428 E. Third St. | motherbearspizza.com | 812-332-4495
Overflowing lunch buffet! North & South Indian cuisine. Lunch: 11 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. Dinner: 5 p.m. - 10 p.m.
We deliver!
316 E. Fourth St. | (812) 333-1399 | tasteofindiabtown.com
New easy online ordering at www.sugar-spice.catertrax.com
Located on the IMU Main Level
214 W Kirkwood
All day, every Tuesday
TEN INCH TUESDAY
Enjoy your IU Sugar & Spice or Delights Popcorn favorites anytime or send a surprise delivery!
Find what you’re craving at www.idsnews.com/dining
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$
$15 minimum dine-in or carry-out Mon. - Fri.: 11 a.m. - 9 p.m. Sun.: 11:30 a.m. - 8:30 p.m. 812-333-8424 ∙ 221 E. Kirkwood ∙ www.esanthairestaurant.com Must present ad to receive discount. Cannot be used in combination with any other discounts.
Give us a call & we’ll bring Smiling Teeth right to your hungry face!
East 3rd St next to Starbucks | 812-331-1234 West 3rd St in front of Kroger | 812-323-0123
See our full menu at Buccetos.com
Now serving fresh artisanal batch
GELATO
Buy one get one FREE gelato! limit one per person must present coupon