INDIANA DAILY STUDENT | THURSDAY, JUNE 26, 2014 | IDSNEWS.COM
IDS TIM FARIS | IDS
IU student Alex Anderson and her partner, graduate Ashli Lovell, share a kiss on the steps of the Monroe County Justice Building where many couples were wed after Indiana’s gay marriage ban was ruled unconstitutional. See the full story on page 10.
Walking off BY EVAN HOOPFER ehoopfer@indiana.edu
Casey Smith was lying in his bed, trying to ignore the excruciating pain. He just wanted to go to sleep.
SAMANTHA STARR | IDS
One night, Casey Smith was experiencing so much pain he wasn’t able to get out of bed to turn off the light in his room. Months later, Smith sits on the same bed he was unable to get out of.
He had a pinched nerve in his right leg. His ankles, feet and toes were swollen beyond belief, he said. He tried and tried, but sleep wouldn’t come. After taking batting practice earlier that day, as he had hundreds of times before in his career, he was sore. Being sore was normal for Smith. But he had been diagnosed with reactive arthritis a few years before, and the condition can cause severe pain everywhere from the eye to the toe. Smith had always fought through the pain in his career, but heading into his senior season, the pain was too much. Smith, who had helped IU reach its first ever College World Series the year before, hitting .309 as an outfielder, couldn’t even get up to turn off the light because of the pain in his body. He tried throwing a pillow at the light switch. No luck. He threw another one. Still nothing. His roommate and teammate Trace Knoblauch didn’t learn about the incident until the next day. Knoblauch told Smith he should have called him, and he would have come in and turned the light off for him. “He just kinda had a defeated look about him,” Knoblauch said. “Like he was too embarrassed. He didn’t wanna resort to that, you know?” Smith isn’t the type to ask for help. His mother, Jaime Smith, said she has always admired her son’s toughness. There was the time he got cleated in the face. With blood pouring down, he stayed in the game. There was the time in little league he was pitching and a line drive hit him in the head. Still, he kept playing.
“My kid, he is tough as all get out,” Jaime said. “I think he’s tougher than he even knows with his pain tolerance.” Unfortunately for Smith, who had dealt with injuries his whole life because of the reactive arthritis, paralyzing pain was becoming more and more common. Something was seriously wrong. The condition he had spent his whole life trying to manage was getting worse. “When I get those episodes,” Smith said, trailing off. “They suck, man. I can’t even crawl.” *** The 2013 season was a dream year not only for Smith, but also for IU. To go along with his .309 batting average, Smith finished with five home runs and 34 RBI, his best collegiate baseball season. The Hoosiers, who had never been ranked in the school’s history, became one of the country’s best teams. They advanced to the CWS, the first time a Big Ten team had reached Omaha, Neb., since the 1984 Michigan team. The next year, Casey came into his senior season ranked one of the top-100 senior prospects by Baseball America. But as 2014 approached, the pain he had dealt with his whole life became unbearable. On mornings where he had trouble walking, Knobloch would offer him a piggy-back ride to his car. “After seeing what he went through, I wouldn’t wish it upon anyone,” Knobloch said. Smith didn’t play as much as he had in 2013, but the times he did play in 2014, he was in pain. Sometimes he was on crutches in the dugout. He only played in 21 games, and hit just .179. SEE SMITH, PAGE 10
Column: With Tracy Smith’s departure, IU lost more than just a coach BY EVAN HOOPFER ehoopfer@indiana.edu
As a journalist, you’re supposed to be impartial. Unbiased. Objective. As much as my mom despises this, I don’t root for the team I’m covering to win or lose. I’m just there to report the facts. But journalists like certain individuals more than others. We are, after all, human. I know I’m not supposed to, but I like Coach Tracy Smith. And I know I’m not alone.
June 24 was a day IU baseball fans won’t forget. Smith left IU and took the head-coaching job at Arizona State University. The prestige of an Arizona State program that has won 30 games or more in each of the past 52 seasons and won five national titles was too much to pass up for Smith. At IU, he built a team that had no baseball tradition into a legitimate national title contender. At Arizona State, he’ll try to awake a sleeping giant. What surprised me most about
Tuesday was how genuinely happy people were for Smith. If you search IU’s hashtag on Twitter “#iubase” you won’t see the vitriol commonly associated with other IU sports. Sure, there were some “woe is me” fans who were upset about Smith leaving, but an overwhelming and astonishing majority of IU baseball fans were happy for Smith and his family. People were happy for Smith because he was open about his life with the fans and the media, which made him relatable. He posted selfies
of his beard on Twitter. He gave his critiques on the many, many Netflix shows he watched. He was the baseball coach of IU, but he was also the guy next door you stop and make small talk with. The Hoosiers are losing a lot with Smith’s departure. They lose the coach who brought them the most successful era in IU baseball. They lose their leader. Their head of the program. The man who helped make baseball relevant in Bloomington. But the Hoosiers lose something else with Smith’s departure.
Earlier this season I was lucky enough to spend two hours at Smith’s house for an extended interview for a profile story. The one thing I’ll remember most — other than him wearing a “Call of Duty” T-shirt — is him saying he ultimately doesn’t want to be remembered as the coach of a baseball program. First and foremost, he wants to be remembered as a “good dude.” And that’s exactly what IU lost Tuesday. A good dude.
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CAMPUS/REGION EDITORS:CARMEN HEREDIA RODRIGUEZ, BRIAN SEYMOUR AND SARAH ZINN | CAMPUS@IDSNEWS.COM , REGION@IDSNEWS.COM
Fulbright brings teachers BY ALEXIS DAILY aledaily@indiana.edu
TIM FARIS | IDS
Eleven teachers from five countries will be at IU for the fall 2014 semester as part of the Fulbright Distinguished Awards in Teaching Program. Sponsored by the Bureau of Education and Cultural Affairs of the United States Department of State, the Fulbright Distinguished Awards in Teaching Program recognizes and encourages excellence in teaching in the U.S. and abroad. It is part of the overall Fulbright Program, which promotes mutual understanding among people of the U.S. and other countries. The Global Teacher Programs Division of the Institute of International Education awarded $224,036 to the Center for International Education, Development and Research at the IU School of Education for its first time running the program. The Fulbright grant awarded to IU was the only one given in the U.S. this year. “For the federal government to think that we have something to offer these incredible teachers speaks volume about Indiana University’s School of Education,” IU graduate student and Fulbright scholar Hope Rias said. The educators are from several countries, including India, Morocco and New Zealand. They will attend
classes in the IU School of Education, share insight with IU faculty and students from their own countries and interact with teachers and students at Bloomington High School North and University Elementary. Nine of the International Fulbright Teachers are secondary teachers and two are primary teachers. “All of them are master teachers who are concerned about achievement gaps in their home counties, and dedicated to changing it,” Rias said. Patricia Kubow, the Center for International Education, Development and Research director, said IU will provide a broad range of programs and resources in the teachers’ fields of teaching expertise. “The teachers will have access to graduate level classes and a customized seminar to help them reflect on their learning, particularly as it relates to working with underserved populations,” she said in a press release. “It prepares them to share their new knowledge with teachers and education officials in their home communities.” Rias said she and Keith Barton, the coordinator of Curriculum Studies, will teach a special seminar for all Fulbright Scholars about the history of education in the U.S. and across the world. She
said the teachers will also visit local schools in Indiana to see firsthand what education looks like in America. “Comparing experiences from very different countries helps educators not only understand other parts of the globe, but deepens and extends their understanding of their own contexts,” Barton said. In addition, Kubow said teachers complete a capstone project of their own design and lead seminars or master classes for U.S. teachers and students that draw on their own expertise and best practices from their home countries. Kubow said some of the proposed capstone projects include learning how to teach English in large classes, how to use digital technology in English classrooms, comparative education studies of science classrooms to create active learning and how to retain and engage learners in secondary classrooms. The final capstone project will be presented in December to IU faculty and students and the general public, she said. “These are people coming to us who are leaders in education, showing that there is a lot to learn no matter where you teach in the world,” Kubow said.
INDIANA LEGALIZES SAME-SEX MARRIAGE Jeff Poling (left) and Jeff Jewel (right) fill out their marriage license Wednesday at the Monroe County Justice Building. Read the story starting on page 10.
Jewish groups honor abducted Israelis BY CARMEN HEREDIA RODRIGUEZ caheredi@indiana.edu
Although rain forced the event indoors, the weather did not dampen the group’s desire to bring their boys home. The Chabad Jewish Student Center organized a vigil to remember the abduction of three Israeli males Friday. About 20 participants congregated in the Indiana Memorial Union to show their support for the Israelis’ return. According to the Associated Press, the teenagers disappeared on the night of June 12 after leaving a religious seminary in the West Bank. One of the boys was an American citizen. Amit Boukai, president of Students Supporting Israel at IU, said the vigil was also organized in response to the lack of media coverage surrounding the incident. “It was important because the media coverage of the
kidnappings has not been as expected, when especially an American citizen has been kidnapped by terrorists and our country has been at war with terrorists since 9/11,” Boukai said. “Its appalling to know that it’s kind of a minor news report.” Participants were given a packet of information and engaged in a discussion regarding the importance of showing solidarity with the families of the males. They also took a photo with a banner that displayed portraits of the three boys and the Twitter slogan ‘#bringbackourboys.’ Although the abduction occurred overseas, Hillel executive director Sue Silberberg said IU is also impacted by the incident. “When anybody is a victim of terrorism, we all suffer through that,” Silberberg said. “It makes us a stronger world to care about everybody and anytime that there’s terrorism, we have a responsibility to speak out against it.” Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu has since blamed the abduction on Hamas, a Palestinian militant group that is considered a terrorist organization by both Israel and the United States. The incident has added strain to the historically tumultuous relationship between Israel and Palestine. Although all of the organizations sponsoring the event possessed Jewish or Israeli affiliations, Chabad Jewish Student Center president John Putz said he believes the kidnappings transcend the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Putz said he plans to continue organizing events for the abducted teenagers until they’re found. “It doesn’t matter if you’re Muslim, Jewish or Christian, we don’t want children being kidnapped for political reasons,” Putz said. “That’s why we’re trying to frame it that it’s not a Jewish issue. It’s really a human issue.”
IU tracks state corruption BY CATHERINE HUYNH cathuynh@indiana.edu @cathuynh_
Indiana is the 16th least corrupt state, according to a new study that identifies the most corrupt and least corrupt states in the U.S. The study comes from Researchers at IU and City University of Hong Kong. “The Impact of Public Officials’ Corruption on the Size and Allocation of U.S. State Spending” study indicated corruption was related to excessive state spending. Doctor Cheol Liu, lead author of the study and assistant professor at City University of Hong Kong, began the study as a brief version of his doctoral dissertation when he was studying for his Ph.D in public affairs at IU. IU Chancellor’s Professor of Public and Environmental Affairs and one of the researchers of the study, John Mikesell, had come across corruption data and wondered
if corruption impacted state spending. He then suggested Liu, his graduate assistant at the time, base his dissertation topic on corruption and state spending. “I was curious why all governments have made various efforts to balance their budgets and scholars suggested many economic and political policy tools to solve the problem but still most governments face the same problem,” Liu said in an email. “I confront the problem in a different angle. I questioned that corruption could be a reason of the problem.” By examining more than 25,000 convictions for federal anti-corruption law violations between 1976 and 2008, Liu and Mikesell found more corrupt states spent more money on construction and wages of public employees. They also spent less on education and public welfare, as well as spending more on law enforcement and prisons. Liu and Mikesell found nine of the 10 observed ex-
penditures of the most corrupt states were greater than the estimated expenditures because of the levels of corruption in those states being higher than average. “This implies that the nine most corrupt states could have spent $1,308 less annually per capita, on average, if they had succeeded in maintaining only an average corruption level,” they wrote. “This amounts to 5.2 percent of the mean per capita expenditure, $25,210, in the states over the period 1997–2008.” Mikesell noted Indiana’s low rating doesn’t mean Indiana it’s not immune from public corruption. “Indiana isn’t in the list of most corrupt states, but our state needs to be vigilant, i.e., to maintain strong budget processes, strong systems of financial management, open political processes, rigid internal controls and rigorous external audits to prevent the sort of distortions associated with public corruption.”
SR37 construction begins BY RUSSELL SMITH rusmith@indiana.edu
Construction began Friday on Highway 37 near Martinsville, Ind. The Indiana Department of Transportation hopes to restore sections of the rapidly deteriorating highway through a series of road projects. This lengthy, multi-phase undertaking will cost an estimated $7 million and take several months to complete. The initial leg of the project affects a two-mile stretch of highway south of Martinsville near Indian Creek and should be completed by Oct. 15. The second phase of the project will extend north of State Road 44, but construction won’t begin until next spring. According to INDOT Spokesperson Harry Maginity, the project quickly came to development because of the relatively poor state of the
Wanted woman found A woman was arrested after police found synthetic drugs in her pocket June 24, according to the Bloomington Police Department. The owner of a vacant house at 315 E. Dodds St. found Brandi Trisler, 28, and a male subject passed out in the garage of the residence at about 7:30 p.m. When police arrived, they noticed the smell of fumes in the garage, which turned out to be from varnish. They took Trisler and the male outside of the garage. After they found he had no previous record, police sent the male away. However, they discovered Trisler was wanted on a warrant after failing to appear in Monroe County Court. Police searched Trisler and found a small amount of Mad Monkey synthetic cannabinoid in a plastic container in her pocket. They also found a small amount of marijuana. Trisler was arrested and booked in Monroe County Jail. Jacob Klopfenstein
highway. “There are numerous locations in the road where pavement has failed and needs to be fixed,” he said. “This is beyond a normal resurfacing project.” The restoration process is cumbersome for this project because the amount of patching that needs to be done is substantial, and it has to be completed by the October deadline. In the meantime, drivers should expect bumpy roads and delays, Maginity said. For commuters to and from Bloomington, this could mean congestion and some bumpy roads. According to Maginity, regular weekday commuters and individuals traveling to Bloomington for game days shouldn’t have to worry about traffic delays. “We want to be out of the way before any significant traffic. When we do the actual
paving, we will pave weeknights, but there will be a lane open at all times,” he said. “There will not be any lane closures on game days. All of the work will be done on weekends and perhaps some week nights.” When the project resumes in the spring, workers will begin the milling process and eventually replace the top surface of the road. “We will come back after we get all the patching done and mill down the surface of the roadway,” he said. “We’re also doing a function overlay, which means bringing in an intermediate level of asphalt and topping it off at the surface.” Maginity said that while the amount of work might exceed a normal resurfacing project, the highway should remain in decent condition for several years after this section is completed.
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ARTS
Cloud Cult to play at Bishop Saturday Experimental chamber rock band Cloud Cult will come to Bloomington Saturday. The Midwest band has maintained a decade-and-a-half career by remaining completely independent.
EDITOR: ANU KUMAR | ARTS@IDSNEWS.COM
Philharmonic returns to stage BY LILIANE HO yuehe@imail.iu.edu
The stage is set, and it’s as close to the performance as they can get. “Stop! Go back again,” conductor David Effron said. “There are just some little things.” It’s the rehearsal for the Summer Philharmonic Orchestra, and Effron is working to fine tune the details. Effron, along with more than 50 young players, will perform as the Summer Philharmonic Orchestra Saturday. The concert will start at 8 p.m. at the Musical Arts Center. It’s the first time where classical music will meet a variety of creative performances this summer. “We’ve got Leonard Bernstein’s wonderful overture to ‘Candide’ to open the concert, a favorite, I think,” Effron said. “Then, we’ll play Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony, arguably the most popular of them all.” The second half of the concert will be where the elements of music “adventure” come into play, Effron said. Beginning with Leroy Anderson’s “Bugler’s Holiday,” a tour de force for three solo trumpets, the concert will transition to the symphonic narration of Frank Proto’s well-known folk tale “Casey at the Bat.” The folks tale will be narrated by Quinn Buckner, captain of the 1976 NCAA Men’s Basketball Championship team. Then, the performance will move to ballerina Morgan Stillman and IU alumna Cassie Dishman performing a tap-dance number from Mor-
They have sold more than 100,000 albums through their own label, Earthology Records. Tickets are $15 and the show starts at 8 p.m. at the Bishop.
BPP releases schedule for mainstage season FROM IDS REPORTS
Offering a combination of comedy, drama and musicals along with a series of special events, the Bloomington Playwrights Project has released their 2014-15 season. BPP is celebrating their 35th season as the only professional theatre in In-
diana that solely focuses on new works. Guests can purchase subscriptions at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater box office or online at bctboxoffice.com. Subscribers to the season will receive five tickets at the price of four. It costs $80 for general admission and $68 for students and seniors.
2014/2015 MAINSTAGE SERIES
TIM FARIS | IDS
Speaker Quinn Buckner rehearses for his narration of “Casey at the Bat.” The narration will have an accompaniment from the IU Philharmonic Orchestra. The performance will begin at 8 p.m. Saturday, June 28 at the IU Musical Arts Center.
ton Gould’s “Tap Dance Concerto” and Duke Ellington’s “It Don’t Mean a Thing (If It Ain’t Got That Swing).” “It’s unusual for any kind of classical concert,” Effron said. Effron said the inspiration for the selection of the repertoire came from wanting to show a different side of classical music. “It’s in the middle of a beautiful summertime, we are trying to expose the entrancing side of classical music for everyone to enjoy and have fun during the concert,” Effron said. Performers are up for a challenge and appreciate the innovative style this concert takes on. “This is the most exciting concert for me,” IU master’s student Jihye Choi said. “The
pieces are actually hard to perform well. However, with the unique mixture of jazz, tap dance and folk tale, it adds so much fun to the performance.” Featured artists include John Rommel, Leah Hodge, Evan King, Marietta Simpson, Cassie Dishman and Morgan Stillman. After conducting the Summer Philharmonic Orchestra for more than 16 years, David Effron is collaborating for the first time with some of the artists in this performance. “We have a relatively short period of time for preparation actually,” Effron said. “Although every group is a little bit different, we try to approach classical music from the best way in order to get the best result.” Effron said the Summer
Philharmonic Orchestra is one of the top groups in the world. “We have wonderful players from many different countries represented,” Effron said. “It’s the best of the best.” The tickets cost $12 for the general public and $6 for students. Guests can purchase the tickets online or at the Musical Arts Center box office. “Mr. Effron got so many great ideas during rehearsals, and he has been a great communicator with our players on the performing styles and that gives us a lot confidence,” Choi said. “We know other players very well, and we are getting better every time we perform and rehearse together. I enjoy the great progress we have made.”
SEPT. 26-OCT. 11, 2014 “Kalamazoo” by Michelle Kholos Brooks and Kelly Younger. Directed by Chad Rabinovitz. Winner of the Reva Shiner Comedy Award. This story follows two 70-somethings, Peg and Irving, and their love story after meeting on an online dating site. DEC. 5-20, 2014 “She Kills Monsters” by Qui Nguyen. Directed by Scott Weinstein. Agnes and Tilly are two sisters with their own interests. Tilly is very involved in role-playing, and Agnes pays little attention to her. But once tragedy strikes and Tilly is lost, Agnes goes searching for her in this fantastical world of role-playing. JAN. 30-FEB. 14, 2015 “Make Me Bad” Music and lyrics by Drew Gasparini, book by Alex Brightman. Directed by Chad Rabinovitz. This will be a BPP and IU collaborative musical. It follows the story of Daisy Harris who falls for a mys-
terious man named Max, just as a string of unexplained murders surfaces around town. APRIL 3-18, 2015 “Ugly Lies the Bone” by Lindsey Ferrentino. Directed by David Anspaugh. Winner of the Woodward/Newman Drama Award. This story follows female soldier Jess as she returns from war to find her hometown decaying, forcing her to move in with her sister and find a new sense of “normal.” MAY 15-MAY 30, 2015 “The Capables” by Jay Stull. Directed by Timonthy O’Neal. Mother Anna Capable is a hoarder causing her daughter, Jessy, to call a TV network in order to help cure her mom and clean the mess. But the TV network’s producer, David, has his own agenda, which he enacts in order to get the ratings he needs. Anu Kumar
Summer Commune to debut in Bloomington in July BY ANU KUMAR anukumar@indiana.edu
Two people are looking to bring a new, collaborative community to Bloomington. Inspired by movements of the past and the community fostered by hostels, organizers Nicole Kelly and Joshua Heller decided to have the first Summer Commune in 2012. Then, it was in Moscow, Idaho, and now it’s coming to Bloomington. The Summer Commune is described as “a diverse and temporary intentional community.” According to its website, summercom-
mune.com, it’s like a summer camp but with more potlucks and no curfew. Kelly and Heller visited Bloomington during Lotus Fest, and it was then that Kelly said she realized Bloomington had the atmosphere they were looking for. For the first summer commune, Kelly and Heller made a post on Tumblr and were able to gather friends, acquaintances and strangers. “People were really into it,” Kelly said. Their virtual community grew for 6 months in Moscow before June 2012, when
“Communers” met one another for the first time. “It’s something unfamiliar,” Kelly said. “It’s a challenge where you and others grow.” Communers traveled from places as far away as New York and London, as well as from more local areas. The summer was spent working at local cafés, helping on farms, playing with local musicians and just hanging out on porches, the website says. For the 2014 Summer Commune in Bloomington, there are already events
planned, but Kelly said interested participants are encouraged to enter their own event suggestions. “We really want to take advantage of the nature in Bloomington, have camp-outs and events like that,” Kelly said. Participants are not obligated to stay the entire month of June, but the longer visitors can stay the better, she said. Individuals already living in Bloomington are welcomed to partake as well. Kelly said it’s unconventional, but the organizers actually don’t directly help
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with living accommodations. “We just recommend people use Airbnb, Craigslist and other tools like that to find housing,” Kelly said. With small towns, especially college towns with sublets, it’s not really a challenge, Kelly said. It’s free to attend the Summer Commune, but some events cost a basic fee, which is indicated on the calendar using a dollar sign. But each participant pays their own travel and living expenses. The motivation behind the event is accessibility to
community and culture. “We are over the idea of starving for our art,” the Summer Commune’s website says. “We are being alienated from nature and each other. We want to live in communities where our friends live, but we’re priced out of neighborhoods that gentrify in 10 seconds, and gentrification makes us feel weird, anyhow. We want to live in great communities that we can also afford; our plan is to go somewhere new together, and to make cool happen where we are.”
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SPORTS EDITOR: EVAN HOOPFER | SPORTS@IDSNEWS.COM
Hoosiers compete in USA Championships Seven former and current IU track and field members will compete in Sacramento, Calif., for the USA Track and Field Championships. The championships started Wednesday and will continue through Sunday. Hoosier senior Kyla Buckley will compete
in the women’s shot put. Buckley has been named Big Ten champion three times in her career. Former Hoosier standout Andy Bayer will compete in the 3,000-meter steeplechase Friday.
SPORTS FROM THE NORTH
2014 NBA Mock Draft AUSTIN NORTH is a senior majoring in journalism.
The 2014 NBA Draft this Thursday will pull from one of the most talented classes in recent memory. From Andrew Wiggins to Jabari Parker to Marcus Smart, it has as many or more household names than any draft in the past 10 years. Here are the picks I see each team making Thursday night. 1. Cleveland Cavaliers — Andrew Wiggins The Cavs will take Kansas forward Andrew Wiggins with the first pick in the draft. Although his freshman season at Kansas was a bit of a disappointment, he possesses the talent to score from anywhere on the court and he already defends better than everyone on the Knicks and Sixers combined. He’ll be a starter from day one on a team that needs someone, anyone, with a post game. 2. Milwaukee Bucks — Jabari Parker The Bucks are in desperate need of offense. Between Brandon Jennings’ laughably low field goal percentage and Larry Sanders’ inability to stay away from bar fights and suspensions, Parker gives the team a legitimate scorer from the wing for the first time since the Bucks Glenn Robinson. 3. Philadelphia 76ers — Noah Vonleh Noah Vonleh offers some of the best raw talent in the draft. At 6 feet and 9 inches and boasting a 7-foot-9 wingspan, he has the ability to stretch the floor from long range or bang down low and rebound as a solid
starting power forward with the past year’s pick, center Nerlens Noel. 4. Orlando Magic — Dante Exum Although they earned the third-worst record in the league this past year, the Magic are young and in the middle of rebuilding the franchise. Dante Exum, a 6-foot-6 point guard from Australia offers the playmaking ability to replace an aging Jameer Nelson at the point, and shows the distributing prowess to make plays for promising second-year man Victor Oladipo. 5. Utah Jazz — Joel Embiid The Jazz need an inside presence, and Embiid has the potential to fill that role and then some. Although a foot injury and surgery caused his stock as a probable number one overall pick to evaporate into thin air, his talent as a pure scorer and an enforcer in the paint is rare and something the Jazz can’t afford to pass up. 6. Boston Celtics — Aaron Gordon General Manager Danny Ainge and the Celtics have been high on Aaron Gordon since early June, and I don’t think that’s just deceptive pre-draft talk. They need inside defense and scoring badly, and Gordon provides both of those. His jumper is a train wreck, but down low he’s a force to be reckoned with. 7. Los Angeles Lakers — Marcus Smart This pick is so Lakers, and it happens to be a perfect fit for the Lakers and for Smart himself. Marcus Smart was polar-
izing in every way in a season which many believe he underperformed offensively and hurt his draft stock. But he’s still an elite defender and competitor and has the ability to drive and score. 8. Sacramento Kings — Julius Randle Frankly, the Kings just need someone who can give an effort night-in and nightout. Randle provides just that, as a high-motor guy with the ability to score in the paint and rebound as well as anyone in the class. Who knows, maybe that work ethic could even rub off onto Rudy Gay and DeMarcus Cousins. 9. Charlotte Hornets — Nik Stauskas The Charlotte Hornets surprised everybody this past year by making the playoffs, but their lack of outside scoring led to them being swept by the Heat in the first round. Michigan’s Nik Stauskas has the best three-point stroke in the class and has an underrated ability to dish it out and rebound. 10. Philadelphia 76ers — Doug McDermott He’s listed as a power forward, but McDermott has the skill set to serve immediately as a solid small forward for a young Sixers team without one listed on the roster. He averaged 27 points on 52-percent shooting in a system that ran the offense through him. aknorth@indiana.edu
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Saturday, June 28 | 8pm | Musical Arts Center ADDITIONAL HIGHLIGHTS: Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony, show tunes, tap-dance, and more. You’re guaranteed to have a blast!
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Quinn Buckner, captain of the Hoosiers’ 1976 NCAA Men’s Basketball Championship team, will be narrator for “Casey at the Bat.”
SUMMER FESTIVAL
OF THE ARTS
MUSIC.INDIANA.EDU/SUMMEREVENTS
IDS FILE PHOTO
Senior Danielle McNally runs upfield during IU’s match against Robert Morris on Sunday at the IU Field Hockey Complex.
Field hockey 2014 schedule FROM IDS REPORTS
On the heels of a 9-10 season, including a 1-5 record in the Big Ten, the IU Field Hockey team announced its 17-game schedule for the 2014 season Monday. IU Coach Amy Robertson said there was an emphasis placed on scheduling teams outside of IU’s region for 2014. “To challenge our growth and to reach our goals for the 2014 season, we wanted to put together a tougher schedule and one that included opponents from outside the West region,” Robertson said. The season will officially begin Aug. 29 against New Hampshire in Louisville, Ky.
New Hampshire finished the 2013-2014 season with a 15-7 record, landing the Wildcats at No. 19 in the national rankings in the past season. IU’s home opener is Sept. 5 at the IU Field Hockey Complex against the California Golden Bears. Robertson said IU’s schedule includes some of the best teams in the country. “This year’s schedule will give us an opportunity to compete against some of the best in the country,” she said. “We have two ACC teams on our schedule next year and one of those, Duke, was the runner up in the National Championship.” The match against Duke
will be one of nine matches against members of the past season’s Top 25 poll. Conference play begins for the Hoosiers in Iowa City against No. 23 Iowa September 26. Following the conclusion of the regular season Oct. 31 against Rutgers, the Big Ten Tournament will begin Nov. 6 in Ann Arbor, Mich. IU will attempt to advance part the first round of the Big Ten Tournament for the second time in three seasons. Last year, IU’s season ended with a 6-0 loss to Michigan State in the first round. Dan Matney
5
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, J U N E 2 6 , 2 0 1 4 | I D S N E W S . C O M
OPINION EDITOR: STEPHEN KROLL | OPINION@IDSNEWS.COM
SWAT raids for drugs rather than danger 62 percent of Special Weapons and Tactics operations in the U.S. were initiated to search for drugs, according to a year-long study by the American Civil Liberties Union. 36 percent of raids found no contraband.
In contrast, only 7 percent of raids were for hostage or active shooter scenarios, or in laymans’ terms, actual danger. It’s a good thing the war on drugs is around to justify these expensive police action.
VOX PERSONAL
ILLUSTRATION BY ROSE HARDING
What’s in a grade? The harsh reality is, your time in school can be boiled down to a single number; your grade point average. When that one number means so much, it isn’t surprising people will go to extreme lengths to keep it high. Still, an entire class caught cheating is unusual, but that’s exactly what happened at a high school in Downriver, Mich. Two juniors took photos of an answer key to a test, and shared it with the rest of the class. The teacher got suspicious when every single student got a perfect score. If you’re going to cheat, you should try to be a little smarter about it. At least get
a gradient going so it looks like a class full of humans took the test. Is it the students’ fault for cheating and cheating badly? Of course. But why would an entire class cheat? Maybe the way we look at grades is part of the problem too. Regardless of whether you believe GPA is an accurate representation of knowledge acquired and skills learned, it is an easy way to quantify school success. Employers care about it because it tells them who they should hire. I know, we’re all told that grades don’t actually matter.
It’s who you know, your experience in internships and your social skills. Those land you jobs. Those skills help, but in the real world, the numbers still count. A one-point increase in high school GPA has been translated to an 11.85-percent increase in annual earnings for men, and a 13.77-percent increase for women. According to a senior human resources employee at InterActiveCorp, which employs 33,000 people, GPA is the single best predictor for job performance, and is what companies look at when they’re hiring. A majority of employers look at GPA, and many set
cutoffs for the people they hire. 3.0 is pretty standard, but the cutoff is higher for the better paying jobs. Cheating to get a slightly better grade doesn’t seem that absurd now, does it? What’s more, there has been a trend of grade inflation through the years. The average GPA has risen in the U.S. by about 0.1 point per decade, from 2.52 in the 1950s to around 3.11 today. Grades have also inflated at IU, going from a 2.83 average in 1976 to 3.16 in 2008. We’ve probably gotten a little smarter. But grade inflation can also be attributed to our desire to stand out from the crowd and be seen as smart.
AN EMMA DILEMMA
On top of all that, Pauline DeWenter, a scheduling clerk at the Phoenix VA office, has come forward within the past week and has revealed someone above her has been changing VA documents. She was often in charge of marking a veteran as deceased. More often than not she would call to schedule a patient only to find the person had died while on the waitlist. “Deceased” notes had disappeared. They had been written over and the patient marked as alive, all to make the VA statistics look better. DeWenter was never notified of the changes, or given an explanation. If they are lucky and healthy, a veteran will go on to live a productive and meaningful life. But the vast majority of veterans find themselves stuck with mental problems
and physical injuries, such as post-traumatic stress disorder or missing limbs, and forced to go on government programs that clearly take advantage of the situation. We’ve all seen a homeless man on the corner, his sign proclaiming he is a veteran of the United States, now out on the streets. Imagine how terrible that would be, especially if you were suffering from a physical or mental issue. More disturbing, DeWenter’s story is proof of this deliberate mismanagement and gross oversight. When the story initially broke, there was some doubt as to whether or not the VA had actively forced veterans to wait, or if it was the organic result of systematic problems within the department. Now it not only seems the VA was aware of these illegal activities, but also were actively encouraging it in order to prevent investigation and,
EMMA WENNINGER is a sophomore majoring in English.
given the state of some senior managers’ salaries, for money. This scandal allows us to engage with our government by pinpointing specific problems and working toward overall change. Regardless of your political ideology, I think we can agree that government corruption is a pretty terrible thing. And hopefully these revelations will allow us to ensure the government does not take advantage of vulnerable groups. It seems like that should be obvious. ewenning@indiana.edu
LETTER TO THE EDITOR POLICY The IDS encourages and accepts letters to be printed daily from IU students, faculty and staff and the public. Letters should not exceed 350 words and may be edited for length and style. Submissions must include the person’s name, address and telephone number for verification.
STEPHEN KROLL is a junior majoring in journalism.
As long as schools and employers focus on GPA, students will focus on it as well. They’ll do whatever they can to keep it high, even if they don’t learn the material organically or get the experiences they should. School is about more than the grades you receive. But as long as our futures rely on the numbers, we’ll act like it’s not. sckroll@indiana.edu
JUST JOSH
Department of veterans vulnerabilities The Department of Veterans Affairs has been through the ringer. After the monumental revelation that the VA’s records had been fudged and that a large percentage of veterans were receiving little to no medical care, many feel that it is now imperative to protect those who have protected us. In recent reports it has been revealed that as many as 1,000 veterans might have died because of malpractice. At a congressional hearing, Gina Farrisee, the VA assistant secretary for human resources and administration, confirmed that 78 percent of VA senior managers qualified for extra pay or other compensation. Meanwhile, the VA simultaneously shelled out millions in legal settlements, despite malpractice controversies and reports of delayed health care.
Schools inflate their grades to make their graduates look better and help them land the best jobs. And the process becomes cyclical; employers raise their standards to get the best new kids, and GPAs are bumped up to accommodate students. Students want to learn. But I think, more than that, they want to succeed. They want to have a good life with a good job. They want to make their parents and friends proud. If they’re desperate enough, if they believe they will fail the rest of their lives if they can’t get a better grade, they’ll do whatever they can to succeed, even if that means cheating.
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.
The case for a day off Work, work and work. Now that summer has finally come upon us, the nearly-eternal struggle to stay ahead of, well, everything should have subsided and left us to relax. Or so you’d think. But even after the 15-18 credit hours cease, the work doesn’t end. Whether it’s online classes, internships, part-time jobs, full-time jobs or indentured servitude, we are still dogged by stress and worries. Perhaps we aren’t doing enough to prepare us for our careers. Perhaps we’re doing too much and aren’t enjoying our present life because of our perceived future life. I propose that we all take a day off, effective immediately, so we can live a day without imagining the worst just over the horizon or trying to find ways to make ourselves stand out of the faceless crowd so we are noticed. Let’s put aside the possibilities of our future for a day and enjoy the day as it is. It’s all well and good to prepare for the future, but that future’s worth is discounted if the entire journey is fraught with misery. It’s difficult to weigh the value of suffering now against a good future. And what if, in the future, you realize you’re not happy doing what you’ve chosen? What is all that suffering worth? It’s quite a gamble to be unhappy now just so that you
JOSHUA ALLEN is a freshman majoring in English and philosophy.
might be happy later. Isn’t the surest way to achieve happiness not to find it in an external factor, but internally? I know this sounds a bit new-agey, but if we can find satisfaction in the simple fact of living or in the realization most things that ultimately affect us are far beyond our control, wouldn’t that take a large measure of stress off our backs? I do not mean to suggest taking a day off will somehow provide this inherent self-satisfaction and you can go live your life as some guru atop a mountain afterwards. But at the very least it gives you an opportunity to consider if you are indeed happy with your life’s trajectory. And it is far better to do that now than five years down the road when you are in your clinical psychology program and you realize that you really dislike people. So go and take a day off. Take a walk. Read a book. See friends. Grab some coffee. Or, better yet, take a walk to a coffee shop to see friends and read a book while you wait. Enjoy the day. allenjo@indiana.edu @IAmJoshAllen
JUNE 26, 2014 | PAGE 6
EDITOR GRIFFIN LEEDS
Behind the screen Talking about free cinema with Union Board Films Committee Director Greta Smith IU students are lucky to find free movie screenings at the Whittenberger Auditorium in the Indiana Memorial Union and we have the Union Board Films Committee to thank. We had the privilege of joining the Films Committee director Greta Smith in her movie-paraphernalia-bedecked corner of the Union Board office to find out more about how these complimentary flicks are brought to screen. IDS For those who may not exactly be familiar with what the films committee does, could you give us an explanation? SMITH So basically we have been showing films every single weekend for 50 years now. We used to do Thursday through Saturday, but I am actually changing it to just Friday and Saturday for this next semester. So we’re showing films every weekend from 8 to 11 p.m. And basically we’re just bringing really popular new films for the students, and the students come in and see them for free with their student IDs. It’s a really fun thing to do on the weekends. It’s an alcohol alternative for a lot of students. Being a freshman, coming in to IU, there are so many things to do, and everyone loves going to see movies. It’s really cool to see them for free. IDS It’s definitely a fun Hoosier experience. SMITH It also brings students to the Union, which is basically the heart of campus. It broadens students’ view of the Union while watching new films and meeting a lot of people. IDS Before and after the Oscars you guys had a lot of the nominated films, which was great. I’m guessing that was intentional? It was very well planned. SMITH Last semester we were super lucky, because every weekend we had an awesome, popular movie. IDS So going off of that, what is the process for getting these movies on the screen for the students? SMITH When I came in the previous films director had planned two or three weekends in advance. We go through these two companies, Swank and Criterion, and they offer us the newest box office hits. They have a list of films to choose from starting on these dates and these are the college release dates. So you choose a film and ask them if we can show it this weekend, and then you build your film series off of that. One problem I came into as director my first month was finding films in 35-millimeter, which is the old, old film that we’d watch. We have recently switched to our digital projector. Over spring break we installed our new, digital projector, so now we have pretty much every single film. IDS The selection has expanded so much. SMITH For sure. That first month, finding new, popular films in 35-millimeter was very difficult. I’m very lucky to be the director the semester we got the digital projector. IDS And just bask in the opportunities. SMITH It’s been a really cool experience. I’ve actually selected the entire fall semester series. I’ve been working on that this past week. It’s all looking really good. IDS So my understanding is that
By Griffin Leeds weekend@idsnews.com PHOTOS BY SAMANTHA STARR | IDS
Top: The projector room is poised above the Whittenberger Auditorium. The walls are decorated with 100 years of movie stills and posters. Left: Smith sits at her desk in the Union Board office. She is surrounded by dozens of posters from past shows. Bottom left: The projector room is still home to the retired 35-milimeter projector.
the films are free to students at admission. I’m guessing that your two providers aren’t just handing these over to you. How do you guys get the funding? SMITH The Union Board gets its money from the student activity fee that each student pays with their tuition, and that’s how we get the money. If you think about it, you go see a movie for $10 at the regular cinema. Each student paying their $8 is open to the entire film series for the entire year. If you put that into perspective, it’s pretty insanely awesome. IDS It’s one of those classic examples in which you are paying for it already on some level, so you might as well. SMITH If you went every single weekend, that’s 16 films. That’s $160 if you were seeing the films when they first came out. So if you wait a month or two when we get them you are getting these for free. IDS And is there a way for people to see the season, especially since you said you already have the fall season figured out? SMITH We’re on pretty much every single social media site. We’re on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram. On Facebook it’s Union Board Films. I have the summer schedule posted, and very soon I’ll have the fall schedule posted. If you come into the Union we also have the display cases with the dates and times displayed. My advisor has told me that the entire semester has never planned like this before so I’m planning on getting huge posters and having them in the residence halls. I want to get crazy attendance numbers this time. It is the 100th year of Union Board Films, so I really want to advertise that. IDS Now, I know sometimes you do early screenings before the greater population gets to see them in the big theaters. I went to “Neighbors,” which was a riot. I know you filled that place up, too. I’d like to know more about that process as well, that unique college opportunity. SMITH We get at least one early screening, usually two. Basically the company comes to us, they have a student rep here. She asks me, “Do you want to show neighbors early?” and I was like, “Obviously!” So they come to us and we decide if we want to show it. We usually do because everyone wants to see these movies, especially early. IDS We were just saying how “Neighbors” was very successful, but what would you say was your most successful screening yet? SMITH “Frozen.” IDS Yeah, I was there that night. SMITH Definitely “Frozen.” I decided to play it the weekend of spring break so that the student could see it Thursday and then people from the Bloomington community could see it on Friday and Saturday. So Thursday night at 8 o’clock, over four hundred students tried to get into the Whittenberger. People
were standing in the back and we had to have people leave. I just had my one concessionaire and he pretty much had to handle all of those people. And then at the 11 o’clock showing there were still over four hundred people trying to get into the Whit. Apparently people were taking chairs from the Starbucks area and bringing them into the Whit for “Frozen.” IDS So I guess you could say people were excited to see “Frozen?” SMITH Yeah. People are obsessed with that movie. Because it was so popular I went ahead and got the sing-a-long version, so we had a total of twelve showings of “Frozen” this past semester. IDS During the school year you show stuff every week. Is it the same for the summer? SMITH No, I’ve only chosen about four for the summer. IDS And this is just because of the reduced student population? SMITH Yeah, and there just aren’t too many popular ones. We showed “Divergent” last month, and then this weekend is actually “Captain America: The Winter Soldier.” Then we have “Neighbors” next month and “Maleficent” and we’re showing “Godzilla” right before school starts during Welcome Week. IDS How can people get involved with the Union Board and the Films Committee? How did you hear about it and how did you get involved and how in general can that become a reality for interested students on campus? SMITH I have been on the films committee since freshman year, so this will be my fifth semester on it. Somebody on my floor at Wright asked me to go because she knew the films director at the time, and from the very first day I thought it was the coolest thing, being able to choose these films. I just found out through word of mouth, but people can learn more about it through our social media sites. Union Board has a huge call-out at the beginning of each semester. Just keep your eyes open in the Union for posters. Or people can email me at ubfilms@indiana.edu or even meet find me up hear at my office. I will talk to anybody who is interested. You will obviously know which is me. At this, Smith gestured to the collection of posters that adorn the Films Committee space. It is decorated with a pride that is present in all facets of her involvement with Union Board Films Committee.
reviews
weekend
PAGE 7 | JUNE 26, 2014
COURTESY PHOTO
just like the two of them. When Sarah fails to divulge anything useful, Rachel angrily smashes vials of life-saving bone marrow meant for another clone dying of respiratory illness before delivering what can be described as the strangest and most terrifying line in television history, “Enjoy your oophorectomy.� The intersection of storylines in this scene builds suspense and anxiety as only the best television writers can manage. Maslany does her part by expertly playing both women off one another. Of course, there was levity to be found among the scenes of stress and danger. The episode’s highlight comes after Sarah rescues her daughter and both escape the Dyad institute, she reunites with her brother Felix and three other clones with whom she has been in contact. Soon after they gather, the four clones, Felix (Jordan Gavaris), and Sarah’s daughter Kira dance together in a three-minute sequence. The light-hearted scene is perfectly timed within a very heavy episode, and it demonstrates a level of character development and resolution necessary in a season finale.
Sarah Manning (also played by Maslany). Sarah then desperately turns herself in to the institute for whatever insidious research it has been hunting her down to perform. The result is a frightening interrogation by faceless captors shot with a shaky camera and edited with rapid cuts to heighten the stress of Sarah’s surrender. Maslany performs brilliantly as an overwrought Sarah during her invasive questioning and when she is coerced into signing consent for the harvesting of her ova. However, it is as Rachel Duncan, the cold and cruel “pro-clone� that Maslany stands out in this episode. In her scenes as Rachel, Maslany transitions seamlessly between a heartless interrogator and an emotionally distressed woman still reeling from a traumatic childhood. In one scene particularly, Sarah is restrained on an operating table by a group of doctors and told she is about to have an ovary forcibly removed for experimentation. Before the operation, pro-clone Rachel asks to be left in the room alone with Sarah in order to solicit key information for the production of more clones
“Orphan Black�
Starring: Tatiana Maslany, Jordan Gavaris, Skyler Wexler A “Orphan Black� might not have much competition in the sci-fi-mistaken-identityaction-dramedy genre, but it is safe to say even if dozens of similar series occupy today’s television landscape, few if any can hold a flame to this BBC America powerhouse. With outstanding writing, fantastic performances and fictional science that is frighteningly plausible, “Orphan Black,� a saga about a group of young women who discover they are all clones, has been among the most gripping television series on air since its premiere this past March. Saturday’s season finale was one of the most captivating entries in the series to date, starting with a heartwrenching cold open. Rachel Duncan (Tatiana Maslany) — a menacing clone in the employ of Dyad — kidnaps Kira (Skyler Wexler), the daughter of
By Xander Harty
COURTESY PHOTO
“Teen Wolf� Starring: Tyler Posey, Tyler Hoechlin, Jill Wagner CThe fourth season of “Teen Wolf� premiered Monday, and if there is anything to take from the episode, it’s that the show’s cinematographers love their color filters. Ordinarily set in the fictional town of Beacon Hills, Calif., and shot in primarily cool colors, the premiere moved action south of the border to a town in Mexico and was shot entirely in warm tones to match. To be perfectly honest, this change was the most notable feature of a forgettable premiere. Generally speaking, the MTV series is a surprisingly
entertaining adaptation of a questionable-at-best 1985 Michael J. Fox iteration of the show. Unfortunately, the season premiere was somewhat of a let-down. The episode featured all of the “Teen Wolf� standard features: a loud rave concealing clandestine encounters, David-versusGoliath-themed battles and abundant glowing eyes. However, these individual pieces failed to produce an episode as enjoyable as can usually be expected from the series. In the premiere, werewolf pack-leader Scott (Tyler Posey) and his friends confront a Mexican gang called the Calaveras whose leader is played by a bonechilling Ivonne Coll. Scott’s friend Derek (Tyler Hoechlin) has gone missing, and Scott believes the Calaveras are responsible. Ultimately, the gang is revealed to know nothing
about Derek’s location, and the Calaveras leader tortures Scott until he realizes Derek’s actual abductor is Kate Argent (Jill Wagner). Argent was a first season antagonist presumably murdered in the season one finale until a big, albeit disappointing, cliffhanger in the past season’s finale revealed she had actually survived a werewolf attack and transformed into a ridiculous-looking super wolf. This discovery for Scott and his friends was the only noteworthy event in the season premiere. Otherwise, it was entirely devoid of meaningful character or plot development. Overall, “The Dark Moon� looked very pretty with its golden hues, but it failed to be anything more than a visually enjoyable production of bland writing. By Xander Harty
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Horoscope
a media release or statement, and send tomorrow. It goes farther than imagined.
To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 7 — Think about different ways to upgrade your career today and tomorrow. Make plans, and begin to shift your responsibilities in that direction. Don’t make a move yet. Travel could get tricky.
Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Today is an 8 — Review and edit communications before sending today and tomorrow. Consider the emotional tone, and how different recipients might react. Tailor your words with love. Prepare presentations for a specific desired response.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 7 — Friends know just what to say. Hang out with your buddies today and tomorrow. Groups get things done today and tomorrow. Find out what’s needed to really jam. Pick up supplies.
Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Today is an 8 — Talk to people and things get worked out today and tomorrow, with both the Moon and Mercury in your sign. You have confidence, and words seem to flow. Make sure everyone knows
BREWSTER ROCKIT: SPACE GUY!
NON SEQUITUR
what’s going on. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is an 8 — Your tongue seems golden, as your words charm clients and customers today and tomorrow. Schedule the action to back your promises, and it could get profitable. Allow extra time for the unforeseen. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a 7 — Art, music and writing seems especially charmed today and tomorrow. Creative work both challenges and pays well. Prepare
TIM RICKARD
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is a 7 — Today and tomorrow are great for beautifying your home. Clean, plan and design. Talk with others about your ideas. Family members have great suggestions. Repair any mechanical breakdowns, and fix up your place. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is an 8 — Fun calls out your name today and tomorrow. Invent ways to bring playfulness to work. Practice your skills, and help someone lighten up. Get outside and play with entertaining people.
Crossword
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is a 7 — Assess your health routines today and tomorrow. How’s your diet and exercise plan going? Talk to someone you respect for feedback. Find new ways to balance work and build energy. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is an 8 — Talk to your partners today and tomorrow. Resolve old issues and get clear on the action plan. Launch new endeavors after Mercury goes direct (July 1). Put your ideas into writing. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is an 8 — Review and make changes to family finances over the next two days with the Moon
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
Š Puzzles by Pappocom
1 Condo coolers 4 Link between God and you? 9 Hostess snack cakes 14 Clog part 15 Hair-raising 16 Like bighorns 17 Last words of the Parable of the Marriage Feast 20 Introductory studio class 21 Rebecca’s firstborn 22 Braying beast 23 Woodstock style 26 Triceps locale 27 “Am __ believe ...� 28 Nocturnal bird with a harsh cry 31 Banned orchard spray 32 On the job 33 Not for the squeamish 34 Radio studio feature, and what each of this puzzle’s four other longest answers literally is 39 Ruler deposed in 1979 41 Eternally 42 It may be sticky 43 Dojo move 49 MD workplaces
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is an 8 — Learning new places and ideas seems appealing today and tomorrow. Logistics could get sticky, so plot them out carefully before you go, and share the itinerary. Have a second option, just in case.
Š 2014 By Nancy Black Distributed by Tribune Media Services, INC. All Rights Reserved
L.A. Times Daily Crossword
WILEY
ACROSS
and retrograde Mercury in Cancer. The stakes could seem high. Talk it over with everyone involved.
50 Zip 51 Goddess who turned Medusa’s hair to snakes 52 Subj. of a ’90s CIA search 53 Behind 55 Some govt. prosecutors 56 Add one’s voice 61 When rights may not be denied? 62 King of Judea 63 Dijon season 64 Self-titled 2000 pop album 65 Links measures 66 Go-ahead
DOWN 1 Plate appearances 2 “Katie� host 3 Volleyball position 4 Drone, e.g. 5 Treasury Secretary Jack 6 Chunk of history 7 Stable stud 8 Vacillate 9 Dull 10 Ab __: from the start 11 Alluring dockside greeting 12 Poor Yelp rating
13 Kind of overload 18 Bona __ 19 Baseball’s Yastrzemski 24 Word accompanying a fist pump 25 Outer: Pref. 29 Poppin’ Pink Lemonade brand 30 Questionnaire catchall 31 Sit in a barrel, maybe 34 Dines on humble pie 35 2008 Benicio del Toro title role 36 Co-star of Burt in “The Killers� 37 Data lead-in 38 Author Harte 39 Calculated flattery 40 Insulin, e.g. 43 Sharp 44 “Why bother?� attitude 45 Secretary of Labor under Bush 46 “Marnie� star 47 Working by itself 48 Avoided flunking 50 It’s hard to swallow 54 Ostrich kin 57 Monarch catcher 58 Go amiss 59 Dried fish in lutefisk 60 Most TVs, now
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
8
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Redmen bldg 116 N. Walnut 2 BR apts • $675/bed Sassafras 10th & Indiana 1 BR apts • $630
OLYPROP.com 812-334-8200 Office 2620 N. Walnut 2 BR loft on B-Line. Hardwood floors, high ceilings. $1040.00 per month. 812-333-2332 www.pavprop.com 2, 3 & 4 bedroom apartments available downtown at Smallwood! $200 deposits. Open 7 days a week, call today at 812-331-8500 for more info or visit: www.smallwoodapts.com
1 BR - New construction. 2 blks. from Law School, next to Bloomingfoods. 812-333-2332 www.pavprop.com
BROWNSTONE ERRACE. T812.332.3609
1 BR - Park like setting. On bus line, close to shopping. $505 per month. 812-333-2332 www.pavprop.com
3 BR apts. All appliances: W/D & D/W. On site parking. 812-336-6900 www.shaw-rentals.com
430 435
Electronics 32” Vizio flat screen TV. About 1.5 yrs. old. Great condition. Contact: (812)606-3078.
Furniture
Mirror with white frame 41” tall, 21” wide. Small brass table with lamp 56” tall. 812-336-8322
5 BR, 6 BA houses. All appliances: W/D & D/W. On bus line. 812-336-6900 www.shaw-rentals.com
Nice bookcase 72” tall, 50” wide. White headboard full size. 812-336-8322
906 S. Fess, 3 BR, very nice, $1530/ mo. Avail. Aug. 327-3238 Aug. 2014, near campus. 2, 3, 4, and 5 BR houses. thunderboltproperty.com
Batchelor Heights. Condos and townhomes! Nice 3 & 4 BR’s avail. now & for Aug. move-ins. Great location! 812.339.0799
Free Aug. rent if signed by 4/30! 5 BR/2 BA, close to campus. Text 812-323-0033. House for rent. 3 BR, 3 BA, pets OK, car garage, fenced yard, 10 blks. to campus. 1105 S. Park. $1,300. 812-320-3382 Houses/Twnhs./Flats Avail. Aug., 2014. Call for pricing: 812-287-8036.
Great, South, IU location: 1 room/1 BR/2 BR apts. 12 mo. lease, $450-850. Offstreet prkg. & no pets. 812-334-3893 mwisen1111@gmail.com
MERCHANDISE
4 BR, 2.5 bath. Fenced yard, quiet culdesac. Elletsville/Bloomington $1800/mo. Avail. now. 812-334-3893
TenthAndCollege.com
Campus Walk Apts. 2 BR avail. Fall 2014-15. 812-332-1509 cwalk@crerentals.com
Park North 2620 N. Walnut Studios • $485 (short term leases avail)
14th and Dunn St. 1, 2, 3 BR Flats & Townhomes w/ Pool
4 BR, 2 BA. Completely updated. Wrap around deck. N. Grant St. - $2200/mo. 812-330-1501, gtrentalgroup.com
DOWNTOWN
The Mercury 212 N. Morton 2 BR apts • $650/bed
Brownstone Terrace
4 and 5 BR, $1400-$2k. A/C, D/W, W/D, with pics at www.iu4rent.com
Bachelor Heights 3 BR/ 2.5 BA. 1 attach. garage. Sublease ASAP. Quiet & pets ok. 773-633-1981
TICKETS!
335
3 BR, 2 BA. Stadium Crossing. Avail. now & August. 812-330-1501 gtrentalgroup.com
Aug., 2014: near campus. 1, 2, 3 BR apartments. thunderboltproperty.com
LAZY? There are more than 55 places that deliver in town.
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812-339-8777
Ideal for senior and grad. students. Close to campus. No pets. Parking. 812-332-2520 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
He Henderson H on Cr in Crossing Henderson 2 BR. 2nd d & top to level. Crossing Fireplace e & vaulted cei ceilings. gs. FREE reserved res pa parking. 2 blocks oc from Law w and Op Optometry schools. ls. 812-219- 5212 LARGE 1 BR apt. 6 blks. to Kelley. Only 1 left! 333-9579
Sell your stuff with a
5 BR - 6 BA HOUSES All Appliances Included 2 Car Garage W/D & D/W 2,500 Sq. Ft.
Leasing for Fall, 2014. 2 BR apts. Hunter Ridge. 812-334-2880
COM
LUXURIOUS 2BR/2BA located near Ed & Music. 333-9579
FREE
CLASSIFIED AD Place an ad 812-855-0763 for more information: www.idsnews.com/classifieds
Now leasing for fall: Park Doral Apartments. Eff., 2 & 3 BR. apts. Contact: 812-336-8208. Studio located between Campus & dntwn. Newly remodeled. 333-9579 Now renting for August, 2014. 1 & 2 BR. Great location next to campus. 812-334-2646
NOW LEASING FOR 2014 1, 2, 3, 4 & 5 BR Houses, Townhouses and Apartments Quality campus locations
339-2859
Office: 14th & Walnut www.elkinsapts.com
“Everywhere you want to be!”
315
305
HOUSING
P
10
Real-world Experience.
Sublet Rooms/Rmmte.
3 BR house. Avail. Aug., 2014. No pets please. 812-333-4748 www.HPIU.com
www.costleycompany.com
4, and 5 BR on campus. All amenities incl. $1800/mo. 331-7797 Elkinspropertiesrent.com
German- language version of award-winning Pillars of the Earth board-game. $30. starrylyon1@gmail.com
Rmmte. needed. 2 BR apt. near campus/bus. $350/ mo. NS. Avail. immed. 812-219-5143
goodrents.homestead.com
304 E. 20th Located near Stadium. 1 BR, $430. Avail. August, 2014. Costley & Co. Rental Management. 812-330-7509
OLYMPUS
Sublet Condos/Twnhs.
Misc. for Sale
812-369-0430
www.costleycompany.com
www.costleycompany.com
15 hours per week. Flexibility with class schedule.
350
340 S. Walnut 2 Bedroom apts. avail. omegabloomington.com 812-333-0995
colonialeastapartments.com
Gibson Les Paul Studio guitar & deluxe hard case, $695. Call 812-929-8996.
Sublet 2 BR townhouse, Colonial Crest. $672/mo. No deposit. On 6 bus line to campus. Avail. Aug. 1
!!!! Need a place to Rent? rentbloomington.net
2 BR apts. avail. Aug. Hdwd. floors & prime location, quiet. From $610. 333-5598
3 BR, 2 BA, Stadium Crossing. $1100/mo. August Lease w/ shortterm summer avail. 812-337-0114
Instruments
Houses
Walnut Place
www.costleycompany.com
Sublet Apt. Unfurn.
Apt. Unfurnished
OMEGA PROPERTIES
1 BR, 301 E. 20th, $465. Located near Stadium. Avail. August, 2014. Costley & Co. Rental Management, 812-330-7509
manager@smallwoodapts.com
1715 N. College Ave. CALL 812-333-5300 www.northgatetownhouses.info
360
Dock workers & laborers needed at Smallwood for the Summer. 20-40 hrs./wk. July-Sept. Must be willing to work weekends and lift up to 40 lbs. Must be able to pass a background check. Must be able to work in all weather conditions. We pay weekly!! Send resume to
AVAIL. AUGUST 2014 $995/mo
Condos & Townhouses
336-6900 www.shaw-rentals.com
4-5 BR townhouse, close to stadium. $2000/mo. 331-7797 Stella Ridge 2 & 3 BR, 2.5 BA, $1140. Oaklawn Park 3 BR, 2.5 BA, $990. Avail. Aug., 2014. Costley & Co. 336-6246 $100 off of Aug., 2014 rent if lease is signed by March 31, 2014. www.costleycompany.com
Now Renting August, 2014 HPIU.COM Houses and apartments. 2 bedrooms. Close to Campus. 812-333-4748 No pets please. 335
220
General Employment
close to Stadium & Busline
All units include washer and dryer
Rooms/Roommates Roommate wanted, nice loft, own room/bathroom in 10th & College. $816/mo. 305-335-0524.
415
1 BR apts. avail. Aug. $415/mo. Prime location, very clean, very quiet. 333-5598
EMPLOYMENT
2 MASTER SUITES TOWNHOUSES
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Apt. Unfurnished
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CLASSIFIEDS
To place an ad: go online, call 812-855-0763 or stop by Ernie Pyle Hall 120 from 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Monday - Friday.
Rooms/Roommates Looking for a fourth roommate for my apt at Smallwood. $600 monthly. 317-502-8876
*excludes ticket sales
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.
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
Canterbury House Episcopal (Anglican) Campus Ministry at IU 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 Please join us for these programs at Canterbury House
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
Saturday, June 28 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.
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.
2230 N. Martha St.
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. Thursday: Front Porch Cookout, 6 p.m. 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. Rev. Richard Woelmer, Campus Pastor
812-332-5025
Wednesdays: 5:30 p.m. Bible study and discussion 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. Counseling available by appointment Mother Linda C. Johnson+, University Chaplain Jaimie Murdock, Communications Victoria Laskey, Intern for Student Engagement
Independent Baptist
Orthodox Christian 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
Non-Denominational
Mondays: 2:30 – 4:30 p.m. Open House for study tables with coffee bar & snacks
ship: worship, group discussion and fellowship As God has welcomed us, we welcome you.
Saturday Mornings:
bloomington22.adventistchurchconnect.org
fccbloomington.org Sunday: 8:30 a.m. & 11 a.m. Wednesday: 9 p.m., Disciples Student Fellow-
Mike Riley, Elder Hernan Hammerly, Elder John Leis III, Elder
Episcopal (Anglican)
Thursdays: Evening Prayer & Holy Eucharist at
Christian
Bloomington Seventh-day Adventist Church
Unity of Bloomington 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. 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
4001 S. Rogers St. 812-333-2484
unityofbloomington.org 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
Lifeway Baptist Church
St. Mark’s United Methodist
7821 W. State Road 46 812-876-6072
100 N. State Rd. 46 Bypass 812-332-5788 stmarksbloomington.org
lifewaybaptistchurch.org
Sunday Schedule
College & Career Age Sunday School Class:
High Rock Church
9 a.m. Sunday
3124 S. Canterbury Circle 812-323-3333
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.
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
7 - 8 p.m. on Thursdays, Cedar Hall C116. Every other Thursday starting Jan. 16 - April 24
Steve VonBokern, Senior Pastor Rosh Dhanawade, IU Coordinator 302-561-0108, rdhanawa@indiana.edu
Ned Steele, Pastor Mary Beth Morgan, Pastor
Roman Catholic St. Paul Catholic Center 1413 E. 17th St. 812-339-5561
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.
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
hoosiercatholic.org 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.
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.
For more information, contact All Saints Orthodox Church at allsaintsbloomington.org or 812-824-3600.
Lutheran Campus Ministry at IU
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.
The Rose House 314 S. Rose Ave. 812-333-2474 • lcmiu.org
Fr. John Meany, O.P., Pastor Fr. Simon-Felix Michalski, O.P., Campus Minister Fr. Cassian Sama, O.P., Associate Pastor
Monday, June 30 Unity of Bloomington Event: Chi Gong at Unity Time: 5:30 - 6:30 p.m.
Sunday Worship: 8:30 a.m. & 11 a.m. at St.
Sunday, June 29 All Saints Orthodox Church Event: Celebration Cookout Time: 11:30 a.m. - 2 p.m.
Lutheran/Christian (ELCA)
Chris Jones, Lead Pastor
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. For more information, contact Unity of Bloomington at unityofbloomington.org or 812-333-2484.
Friday, July 4 Redeemer Community Church Event: 4th of July Party Time: 6 p.m. For more information, contact Redeemer Community Church at redeemerbloomington.org or 812-269-8975.
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.
10
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, J U N E 2 6 , 2 0 1 4 | I D S N E W S . C O M
Gay marriage legalized BY BRIAN SEYMOUR briseymo@indiana.edu @briseymo
“In accordance with the laws of the state of Indiana, I now pronounce you married.” These are words members of the local gay community did not expect to hear for a long time. But throughout the day these words were repeated with gusto by Rev. Mary Ann Macklin of the Unitarian Universalist Church of Bloomington. Scores of people filed into the Monroe County Justice Building to be wed to their significant other of the same sex. United States District Judge Richard Young ruled Wednesday Indiana’s gay marriage ban was unconstitutional. Individuals from three cases argued Indiana Code Section 31-11-1-1, which defines marriage as between one man and one women, was “facially unconstitutional,” according to a document from Young. No stay had been issued on the ruling, allowing samesex couples within the state to marry immediately. “Under authority of the ruling, clerks may begin to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples,” Monroe County Attorney Kevin Dogan said. “The state cannot prosecute the clerks.” Plaintiffs in the cases claimed the state code violated 14th-Amendement rights of due process and equal protection. “According to the amendment, everyone is entitled to fundamental rights,” Director of Student Legal Services Randall Frykberg said. “Only with compelling reason can these rights be taken away.” Frykberg said fundamental rights are defined by the federal government and include the right to marry. Traditionally, those arguing cases against gay marriage have used the same argument: It’s not the way the country is used to doing things. That’s not a compelling reason, Frykberg said. The news spurred dozens of same-sex couples from the county to obtain their marriage licenses.
TIM 'ARIS | IDS
Sarah Perfetti (left) and Abby Henkel (right) celebrate after receiving their marriage license at the Monroe County Justice Building.
“We’ve been awfully busy all day,” chief deputy clerk Nicole Browne said as she helped people get the proper paperwork. “We’re doing all we can to marry as many couples as possible today.” One such couple was IU criminal justice major Alex Anderson and IU graduate Ashli Lovell. “We both burst into tears this morning when we heard the news,” Lovell said. While on lunch break, the duo called the clerk’s office to see when they could get married. Around 3 p.m. Wednesday, the two were officially wed. “We thought Indiana would be the last state,” Anderson said. Abby Henkel and Sarah Perfetti were also among the many who married today. “We didn’t expect this at all,” Perfetti said. “We heard the news and two hours later, we were married. In Indiana of all places. We’re very relieved.” Despite the surprise the news brought, Doug Bauder, coordinator of the Gay Lesbian Bisexual Transgender office at IU, said marriage equality in Indiana was inevitable. “It’s great news, and I wish it could have been sooner,” he said. “But the writing was on the walls.” Bauder has been defending marriage equality for years and said he is pleased with how things are turning out. “It’s insulting that people had to go elsewhere to wed those they love,” Bauder said.
The legalization of gay marriage in Indiana had its inception just a few months ago when a couple solemnized outside of the state requested their marriage be recognized in light of tragic events. Young declared Indiana must recognize the out-ofstate marriage, sparking debate as to whether marriage within the state should be recognized as well. “They’re sort of the unsung heroes in this event,” Bauder said. While gay marriage is legal in Indiana, not everyone is onboard with the idea. Sources indicate Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller plans to appeal the federal court’s ruling. Support for Zoeller comes from Indiana Governor Mike Pence. “Governor Pence supports the Attorney General’s efforts to appeal the federal court’s ruling and defend Indiana’s right to define the institution of marriage for the residents of our state,” Pence’s press secretary Kara Brooks said in a statement. Though Pence and Zoeller plan to move forward with the appeal, they express compliance with the juvenile law. Despite state officials seeking appeal, Bloomington residents are at peace with the decision. “I’m really excited,” Bloomington citizen Laura Brikmanis said. “Everyone should have the same rights. I’m glad to see that we’re taking steps forward.”
» SMITH
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 “I just feel old,” Smith said. “This year I just felt like an old man. Just not the same speed and step.” He wasn’t the same physically. That was tough enough to deal with. But the mental side of things was even tougher for Smith, he said. He flip-flopped on whether he wanted to come back and endure the pain. He tweeted his college career was finished April 17. But 26 days later, on May 12, Smith announced he had changed his mind. He wanted to come back. The doctors had given him some new medicine, and he was feeling better, but still not 100 percent. With a new pep in his step, Smith met with the media May 12 and said he would return to the team as a righthanded pinch hitter. But what would Smith have to do to get back on the field? “If I can swing well enough in practice and prove that I deserve a roster spot,” Smith answered at the time. He would only be a situational player, but still, he would put on the uniform and have a chance to play for the Hoosiers. As it turned out, Smith would get one more shot. IU played Minnesota May 15. And in the ninth inning, the Hoosiers needed a righthanded pinch hitter. *** It was a situation worthy of a baseball poem: bottom of the ninth, two outs, IU was down by one run to Minnesota. Smith was the last chance for IU to pull out the win. Smith’s appearance at the plate came as a surprise to the team. Junior Will Nolden has been Smith’s roommate for three years. “We really didn’t even know he was activated,” Nolden said. “So once we saw that he was up there, everybody was obviously rooting for him.” Smith was matched up with the Gophers’ pitcher Dalton Sawyer, and Sawyer was throwing hard. First pitch: swing and a miss. Same for the second pitch. On the third pitch, Smith swung and missed
again. “The guy was pumping 93 and he was pretty good,” Smith said. “So at least I gave him a battle.” IU lost to Minnesota 2-1, and Smith wasn’t able to have the storybook ending to his career. He didn’t know it at the time, but that was the last at bat he would ever take in a Hoosier uniform. *** After the strikeout against Minnesota, Smith was done playing baseball for IU. The team went on to have one of the best regular seasons in program history. But their quest to return to Omaha, Neb., was thwarted in the regional stage of the NCAA postseason. Stanford hit a walkoff, two-run homerun in the bottom of the ninth to shock the favored Hoosiers. IU entered the year ranked No. 3 in the preseason Baseball America poll. Its season ended prematurely, and in the eyes of many, it wasn’t able to fulfill its potential, much like Smith’s senior season. With his baseball career finished, Smith must find a new career path. While he was injured during the season, he produced weekly videos called “Little Skip’s Scoop,” which featured humorous, behind-the-scenes looks at the team. The videos became popular on the IU Athletics YouTube page. Those episodes possibly served as a precursor to what Smith ultimately wants to do with his life. When his friends and family were asked what Casey would be doing in five years, they all had the same response; they saw him producing videos in some capacity. “I think his dream is to be out in L.A. making movies,” Nolden said. “So I’m rooting for him doing that.” “I see him doing something in film on the west coast, being good at that,” Tracy Smith said. “Using his creative eye. Working at movies or something.” “I know he’s starting up in L.A., and I know he might be trying to start up his new company,” Knochblach said. “I have no doubt in my mind he’ll be successful.”
Casey also sees himself in Los Angeles on the movie scene. He’ll be trying to fill the competitive void left by sports with being the best actor or producer he can be. “Hopefully I’m tearing it up in L.A.,” Casey Smith said. “I just wanna create a legacy in something. I love entertaining people and having fun. It’s always been a life goal of mine, just to be remembered for something.” *** Jaime was a high school English teacher for 10 years and Tracy has spent his whole life either playing or coaching baseball. When their son Casey was born, they combined their trades and named him after the famous baseball poem, “Casey at the Bat.” The poem is set in the late 1800s at a ballpark. The home team, the Mudville Nine, is down 4-2 in the final inning. The team’s best hitter, Casey, has a chance to win the game. He is at bat with runners on second and third with two outs for Mudville. The Casey in the poem is highly regarded by the fans, who are ecstatic when he comes to bat. Surely, they think, their best hitter will come through and either tie the game up or win it outright. But the final line of the poem reads, “But there is no joy in Mudville — mighty Casey has struck out.” Just like the character he was named after, Casey Smith’s last at bat playing competitive baseball was a three-pitch strikeout. “What irony,” Casey Smith said with a smile and a chuckle. “I’m named after the guy who strikes out. When all this is thrown at you, you have to stay positive. So I just laughed, I wasn’t demoralized. I had fun on those three hacks that I missed.” Casey Smith is done playing baseball. But nobody in his life thinks he is done being successful. Even if he doesn’t make it big in Los Angeles, Smith believes there is always something else on the horizon. “That’s life. Everybody strikes out at some point,” Jaime said of the poem, and her son. “It’s what you do next that counts.”
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