Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2017
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Delta Tau Delta at IU suspended By Melanie Metzman mmetzman@indiana.edu @melanie_metzman
The Delta Tau Delta IU chapter was suspended Monday after multiple reports of hazing, according to a statement from the Delts national office. The suspension will last for five years, according to IFC President Andrew Cowie. “There is no place for hazing in Delta Tau Delta. It is absolutely contrary to our values and will not be tolerated,” said Jim Russell, executive vice president of the national Fraternity. “The Fraternity is clear about its expectations.” Russell and other national officials of Delts addressed expected behavior and consequences for failing to meet these standards at a meeting with the IU chapter at the start of the 2016-2017 academic year. This meeting came after the chapter violated previous sanctions imposed by the national fraternity during the spring 2016 semester. Members of the IU chapter declined to comment Monday, but Indiana Daily Student reporters heard music thumping from inside the North Jordan Avenue house Monday evening. One brother walked into the house and would not comment on the chapter’s suspension. “By the way,” he said, “I don’t
think anyone is going to.” The IU chapter of Delta Tau Delta was founded in 1870 and has operated continuously since 1887. In his statement, Russell did not detail the hazing incidents that lead to the suspension. In March of 2015 the IU Police Department arrested former Delts member Andrew Thrall on charges of dealing a scheduled drug after Thrall was reportedly shipping Xanax pills from Canada to his girlfriend’s sorority house, Alpha Chi Omega. Following the arrest, IUPD officers served a search warrant through the Delts house and found one capsule of ecstasy, a small amount of LSD and some marijuana edibles in Thrall’s room. In September 2015, former Delts member John Enochs, then 21, was charged with two rapes occurring two years apart. The first occurred in October of 2013 and the second allegedly took place in April of 2015. At both times, Enochs was an IU student and a member of Delts. Last summer a court dropped the charges to misdemeanor charges. After taking a plea deal, Enochs did not serve jail time. According to the Delts website, the IU chapter lost 45 percent of its members in 2015 following a social probation. The 2015 report did not indicate whether or not the Thrall and Enochs cases affected the probation or expulsion of members.
BASKETBALL
Hoosiers head to Maryland for first Big Ten road game By Andrew Hussey aphussey@umail.iu.edu | @thehussnetwork
IU (11-5) at Maryland (14-2) 9 p.m. tonight, Xfinity Center
After snapping its three-game losing streak, IU now looks to build on its first Big Ten conference win and start a winning streak Tuesday at Maryland. This will only be IU’s second game outside of the state of Indiana and its second road game of the season. Maryland has won two of its three conference games so far this season and is 14-2. The Terrapins’ only two losses have been at home against Pittsburgh and Nebraska. In IU’s win against Illinois on Saturday, the Hoosier defense was strong in the first half but struggled to contain the Fighting Illini in the second half. The Hoosiers know what they have to do to come out with a win against the Terrapins. “Building upon what we did last game,” sophomore forward Juwan Morgan said. “On the defensive end, having the talk go to an extremely high level, staying connected on everything we do and executing our coverages.”
Junior guard Melo Trimble has always been a prolific scorer in his career for Maryland, and this season he’s averaging 17.5 points per game and 2.9 assists per game. Trimble is a volume shooter. He takes an average of 11.6 shots per game while shooting 46.5 percent from the field. Shutting Trimble down will be a key for IU, especially because Maryland has moved away from using him at point guard in certain lineups. “I think when they go a little bit smaller, it allows him to play off the ball more, so he tries to get lost in the game where you can forget about him,” junior guard Rob Johnson said of Trimble. “I think we’re going to have to do a good job of not doing that.” IU’s coaching staff has focused on the fact that Trimble’s scoring
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Tweeting police officers seek to catch public eye Read more online at idsnews.com We compiled some of the best of Indiana State Police tweets.
By Jack Evans jackevan@indiana.edu | @JackHEvans
In the last 54 hours of 2016, Sgt. Todd Ringle took to Twitter, as he does regularly, interested in the information, that’s good,” and tweeted nine times with a total of 71 he said. Bloomington Police Department PIO emojis – tiny red and blue cars, mugs of beer and smiling policemen to remind readers of Capt. Steve Kellams hasn’t taken to using emojis, but he said that’s largely out of perwho’s watching. In the days leading up to the New Year, sonal preference. “I’m not a ‘WTF,’ ‘OMG’ kind of guy,” he Ringle, an Indiana State Police public information officer based in Evansville, said said. “I’d just as soon spell it out. Guys make he knew he had to remind the public of the fun of me because I use punctuation in my dangers of drunken driving. He knew, too, texts.” Five officers now assist on running social he needed to get the public’s attention and simple text-based social media posts or me- media, and Kellams has regular meetings with them to keep the content consistent. dia releases wouldn’t do the trick. “Your (family emoji) (heart emoji) u, so The department’s first Instagram page went don’t mess (up arrow emoji),” he tweeted online in November, and in 2016, its Facebook page grew from 4,000 to 14,000 likes. Dec. 29. Sgt. Philip Hensley, the ISP PIO for JasAs adept as Ringle is at making his tweets per, Indiana, hadn’t used eye-catching – they Twitter before taking the regularly receive dozjob in 2013, but once he ens or even hundreds of “I am not a ‘WTF,’ did, he said the drive to favorites and retweets ‘OMG’ kind of guy ... reach more people be– he’s not a native to the came addictive. He adsocial media landscape. I’d just as soon spell opted elements of TwitRingle, 52, has spent the it out. Guys make fun ter speech even before past 32 years as a state of me because I use Ringle did, and he said trooper and the past 16 the pair spearheaded a as a PIO. punctuation in my movement to make sure Like other offitexts.” all ISP PIOs used Twitter. cers and departments Capt. Steve Kellams, BPD PIO Hensley, 35, injects around the country, a strain of humor into he’s adapted to an era his tweets, often accomof technology that enpanied by pictures. A ables law enforcement to speak to the public more quickly and directly Christmas Eve post showed a humorous letter from Santa urging Hensley not to pull him than ever. “By getting creative with emojis and pic- over for speeding, and a New Year’s Eve post tures, your message will go farther,” Ringle reminded people pairing football-watching with beer that the scoreboard that matters is said. Though he began using Twitter in 2010, an Intoximeter reading “.000.” He’s come to believe that making his acRingle said he took some time to warm up to using pictorial language in his public mes- count fun to follow makes it more approachable than a wall of information, he said. sages. Finding new ways to effectively reach the As a long-time PIO and self-described old-school state trooper, he worried that public has become a necessity, Hensley said. adopting internet speech might make him TV news affiliates broadcast in Jasper are based in Evansville; Terre Haute, Indiana; appear unprofessional. However, he follows PIOs from across the and Louisville, Kentucky. “I don’t exactly have a large media marcountry on social media, and after he saw the success some of their posts had, he de- ket,” Hensley said. “I can’t get on TV or radio all the time. cided to adapt. So, by using social media, it was a genuNow, his idea of a good tweet has gone from one that gets between 20 and 50 ine change for a lot of people, because retweets to one that gets 150 and reaches they hadn’t had that interaction with law 20,000 people, he said. “The way I look at it is, if it gets people SEE TWITTER, PAGE 5
SEE BASKETBALL, PAGE 5
Doctoral student, well-known feminist launches Wells exhibit
Gov. Eric Holcomb inaugurated, page 4
By Sanya Ali siai@indiana.edu | @siali13
MATT RASNIC | IDS
Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb speaks during the gubernatorial debate Oct. 3, 2016 at the University of Indianapolis. Before running as the Republican candidate for Indiana governor, Holcomb served as lieutenant governor.
The Herman B Wells Library will soon launch the Arts and Humanities Council’s initiative “China Remixed” with the opening of a photographic exhibit. “Above Ground – 40 Moments of Transformation” was originally organized by Chinese feminist Lü Ping and is organized at IU by gender studies doctoral candidate Jiling Duan. The exhibit will be set up Jan. 10 in the Wells Library’s lobby. The photographs, depicting efforts by feminist activists working in China, are important to Duan for a variety of reasons, she said in an email. “As a Chinese feminist activist myself, I witnessed and
“ABOVE GROUND 40 MOMENTS OF TRANSFORMATION” Free Jan. 9 - March 10 Herman B Wells Library participated in some of the feminist activities in China, and reported many of the events included in this exhibit when I was a journalist,” Duan said. “I understand how difficult it is to do something like what the Young Feminist Activism (YFA) did in China.” Duan said she wants feminist friends who are fighting for the causes displayed in these photographs to feel supported. “I want to give to my Chinese SEE PHOTOGRAPHY, PAGE 5
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Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2017 idsnews.com
Bagpipes introduce addition By Hannah Boufford hbouffor@umail.iu.edu
Editors Dominick Jean and Cody Thompson campus@idsnews.com
IUSA addresses mental health By Joy Burton
Chattering in anticipation, faculty and students filled the atrium on the second floor of the older section of the School of Public and Environmental Affairs. Upon the entry of a bagpiper clad in a purple tie and a green and purple kilt, cheers arose and the excitement in the atrium intensified. The “Move-In March” at the SPEA building began at 10:45 a.m. with the purpose of getting as many students and faculty as possible together for an informal opening ceremony of the new Paul H. O’Neill Graduate Center. “We wanted to hold an event that was student-focused, celebratory and short that made the students feel like they were getting this place,” marketing and communication director Jim Hanchett said prior to the event. The idea to hire a bagpiper for this event came from wanting to match the noise level that the construction of the building had created. Just before bagpiper Ian Arthur began to play, executive associate dean of SPEA Michael McGuire said, “Make it loud, make it loud.” The move-in procession made its way from the second floor atrium up the stairs to the third floor. Led by the bagpiper, the cheering procession then moved through the hallways of the third floor to the new addition of the building, back down the stairs and into the new front commons area of the O’Neill Center. The crowd of people in the procession was so big that the bagpiping was inaudible toward the back of the group because it was so far down the hallway. Once in the new O’Neill Center, students and faculty were able to enjoy refreshments and talk amongst themselves as Arthur continued to play in the commons until 11:15 a.m. First-year graduate student Rich Eherenman sat at a table with other graduate students in the commons while Arthur played in the corner. “It is worth all of last semester here, all the jackhammering,” he said. “It makes it worth the wait.” Alex Raggio, another first year SPEA graduate student, agreed. “With the reputation that SPEA has — it being a topranked program — now we have the facilities that are commensurate with the reputation,” Raggio said. The construction of the new O’Neill Graduate Center began in January 2016 and was finished just at the end of winter break in January 2017.
joyburt@umail.iu.edu | @joybur10
PHOTOS BY YULIN YU | IDS
Top Angus Martin plays bagpipe in Move-in March on Monday morning at the School of Public and Environmental Affairs. Move-in March celebrated the opening of the Paul H. O’Neill Graduate Center. Bottom Students get free food at Move-in March on Monday morning at the School of Public and Environmental Affairs in celebration of the opening of the new addition to the SPEA building.
Though there are still finishing touches to be added to the new part of the building, McGuire said the classroom, elevators and technology were the first priorities. The new addition was created with the intent to provide more space for graduate students and thereby create room in the older part of the SPEA building for undergraduate students. “We were literally bursting at the seams,” McGuire
said. Created specifically with graduate students’ inputs and best interests in mind, the new center provides them with more space for classes and with larger areas for collaboration. After the students and faculty began to leave the common area in the new center, Arthur was taken outside of the new building to play in front of the glasswindowed exterior that faces
10th Street. People walking down both sides of the street held up their phones to record Arthur in action. The sounds of the bagpipes were clear even at the School of Global and International Studies when the SPEA building was no longer in sight. “It was intended to be loud and glorious,” McGuire said. “It shows our excitement for being in the new O’Neill Center.”
Professor emeritus dies, leaves mark By Rachel Leffers rleffers@umail.iu.edu | @rachelleffers
After a prolonged illness, IU professor emeritus and contributor to the Department of African American & African Diaspora Studies William Wiggins Jr. died Christmas Eve at the age of 82. Wiggins came to Bloomington in 1969 with his wife, daughter and aspirations to receive his doctorate from the IU Folklore Institute, now known as the Department of Folklore and Ethnomusicology. He became the first African-American man to receive a Ph.D. in folklore, and he made many contributions to the department with his African-American perspective. “He was a very necessary mentor, and his mere presence and gentle-but-enormously-firm demeanor was all we needed to get straight and keep our eyes on the prize,” Wiggins’ friend and fellow folklorist Fernando Orejuela wrote on the Department of Folklore and Ethnomusicology website Jan. 4. Professor John McCluskey Jr., a friend and former colleague of Wiggins, said he remembers Wiggins as a loyal and modest individual who had a stabilizing demeanor and a genuine sense of humor. He said Wiggins
COURTESY PHOTO
William Wiggins Jr. was IU’s Afro-American department’s first associate instructor.
prioritized the education of students by remaining calm in department disputes. Throughout Wiggins’ years working at IU, he developed many courses that provided students with the opportunity to understand the AfricanAmerican perspective. These
courses covered a variety of topics, such as African-American folklore, African-American culture, the black church and the African-American experience in sports. Wiggins was the first associate instructor in the AfroAmerican studies depart-
ment, or what is currently known as the Department of African American & African Diaspora Studies. The department was founded in 1971 after much student effort. Wiggins was one of the original faculty members of the department and the member who served IU for the longest time. Although he sought the associate instructor position as a means of supplementing his Folklore Institute fellowship, Orejuela said Wiggins remained a dedicated faculty member of the program. In 2001, when the program’s first master’s students graduated, he said his proudest moment as a faculty member was experiencing the approval of the master’s program two years earlier, Wiggins said in an IU newsletter from 2001. “Now I’m looking forward to the department enhancing its collaborative efforts with other academic and research units on campus,” Wiggins said. “In sum, I’m looking forward to the department becoming a Ph.D.-granting area within the College of Arts and Sciences.” Today the department of African American & African Diaspora Studies is a multidisciplinary department of the
Because mental illness is a silent struggle for countless students, IU student government is speaking out, IU Student Association public relations correspondent Kelly Burke said in an email. “We recognize that mental health is an important part of a healthy and successful college experience and want to do what we can to make sure our student body succeeds,” Burke said in an email. IUSA President Sara Zaheer said the organization has plans to incorporate mental health into their programs for the spring semester in 2017. “Between myself, the Iowa Student Body President (Rachel Zuckerman) and the Association of Big Ten Students Executive Director Sammy Geisinger, we coordinated a campaign to call our members of Congress and urge them to support the bill and bring it to a vote,” Zaheer said in an email. IUSA members sent out tweets, emails and phone calls to congressional members. A few IU students were able to meet with representatives in person, Zaheer said. “We really didn’t know how successful it would be when we began but we knew that we had to try anything to make this happen,” Zaheer said. “Luckily, the bill passed.” Last fall, Zaheer urged IUSA members to lobby for a U.S. congressional bill promising improved mental health care. The bill passed and has since become a law. The law is called the 21st Century Cures Act. Though it does not benefit colleges and university campuses directly, the legislation lays the groundwork for future mental health care laws benefiting the education system, Burke said. According to American Psychological Association, the law will improve the mental health problem in the U.S. by issuing a large sum of money to the National Institutes of Health for research on brain disorders. The 21st Century Cures Act will also distribute funding to destinations throughout the United
States with the goal of ensuring mental illness is taken just as seriously as other ailments. In 2014, one in five adults struggled with a mental illness, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Only 41 percent of adults in the U.S with a mental health issue received treatment in 2014. This means one in 10 Americans were living with an untreated mental issue, according to National Alliance on Mental Illness. According to the Department of Health and Human Services, 63.8 million Americans experienced a mental health issue of any type in 2014. From that group about 13 million were living with a mental illness or substance abuse disorder which causes significant impairment and interferes tremendously with daily life and activities, according to APA. That number includes numerous IU students. IUSA is currently working on their behalf to make sufficient mental health resources accessible. This time Burke is looking to the statehouse rather than the Capitol Building. “IUSA as a whole would like to see increased lobbying efforts at the Statehouse for expanding mental health funding here on campus,” Burke said. ”Our student body is doing what they can to improve resources and help one another out, but there are gaps in mental healthcare that need to be filled”. Though there is still more to be done, Zaheer said the effort IU students make to call attention to mental health is notable. She said the sheer number of student organizations promoting the cause is reflective of IU’s dedication and listed Crimson CORPS, U Bring Change 2 Mind, NAMI and Culture of Care as examples. “IU students are remarkable in creating and propelling solutions to problems they see,” Zaheer said. “In relation to mental health awareness, that was no different. When talking about how to improve our campus, students prioritize mental health.”
Research shows cancer risks do not stop tanners From IDS reports
Researchers at Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health at IU-Purdue University Indianapolis conducted a survey that indicated female college students, while aware of the risk of getting cancer, continue to tan indoors anyway. The survey was self-administered, without interference from researchers, to 629 female undergraduate students at IUPUI and IUBloomington, according to a press release from the IUPUI News Center. Keming Yang, a Ph.D. student in epidemiology, and Jiali Han, professor and chair of the Department of Epidemiology, analyzed and then jointly published the survey findings. The female students ranged from 18 to 30 years old, and the survey collected data on how these women perceived tanning and, if they had any, what their indoor tanning habits were. Of those surveyed, 99.4
percent said tanning can cause skin cancer and premature skin aging, yet the prevalence of tanning in the Midwest is the highest in the United States, according to the press release. While a majority agreed tanning could cause skin problems, 69.1 percent said they would still get a tan regardless of the risk. Eightythree percent of the women said they felt more attractive, relaxed and pleasant during and after tanning. There is, however, according to the survey, a 25-percent higher chance for someone who tans indoors to have melanoma before the age of 35. Yang and Han concluded tanning was more common among women who perceived tans as attractive, had family members who tanned or believed it increased vitamin D production, despite knowing the ill effects and possible risks. Dominick Jean
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Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2017 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
LGBTQ+ Culture Center reflects on inclusion By Hannah Boufford hbouffor@umail.iu.edu
In order to reflect an atmosphere of inclusivity, the previously named Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Student Support Services has changed its name to the LGBTQ+ Culture Center. “We wanted a name that fully encompasses everything that we do and who we are,” office supervisor Jamie Bartzel said. Bartzel said many students on campus seemed to believe the center was just in cases of a crisis, but in reality, the center is there to celebrate LGBT culture. This, in addition to wanting to make sure that the office was welcoming to all students, factored into the name change. “We had been hearing from students for a couple of years now that the name GLBT didn’t resonate with them or wasn’t particularly meaningful,” Bartzel said. In order to create a more meaningful name, the LGBTQ+ Culture Center researched similar centers and their names and then developed a survey asking students, faculty and others for their thoughts. The survey, created by graduate student Chris Owens, asked respondents to rank their preferences of the following names: LGBTQ+ Culture Center, Queer Culture Center, Gender and Sexuality Resource Center, and Pride Center. Respondents were then asked about their agreement with and attitude toward each of those names. This was in order to make sure the office found the best name possible to represent all students. Data was aggregated by demographic groups so that if a certain one was opposed
MARLIE BRUNS | IDS
The Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Support Services Office, after receiving survey results, changed its name to LGBTQ+ Culture Center to better reflect inclusivity. The organization asked multiple demographics about their opinions on the name change and took all opinions into account.
to a name, the name would be highlighted in the data and not used. “We wanted to make sure that everyone’s voices were heard,” Chris said. Another question on the survey asked students if they would be interested in participating in a focus group to dig further into data that had been collected. Bartzel was in charge of the focus groups and brought in about 20 students to engage with the survey’s participants. The survey also included questions that asked about
the respondents’ awareness of programs and services the office provides, as well as asking about the respondents’ gender identity and sexual orientation. The survey gathered nearly 700 responses. The survey results were sent to Vice President for Diversity Equity and Multicultural Affairs James Wimbush. It was then discussed with a campus naming committee and approved by Provost Lauren Robel. Director Doug Bauder of the LGBTQ+ Culture Center
said the response came fairly quickly and made people realize the name change was a no brainer. “I think that the name change really has been official,” Chris said. “I feel like it’s more representative of that people are currently aware of the terminology.” Bauder, Chris and Bartzel said the LGBTQ+ Culture Center feels this change in name is representative of the inclusiveness of everyone in the center, the celebration of queer culture and the changing ideas in society.
“It’s been an interesting change in terms of focus here on the campus, but I think that’s somewhat reflected on what’s going on in society,” Bauder said. “We have both helped influence that in society and have been influenced by it.” Bartzel said the office recognizes that gender and sexuality are expansive and that labels can often be limiting, hence the plus at the end of the new acronym. “Our arms are wide open, and we are very welcoming,” Bartzel said.
Events begin in IMU for returning students By Emily Berryman eberryma@imail.iu.edu @Ember_otter
The IMU is set to be host to some Winter Welcome Week events — everything from bowling, poster sales and career fairs. These events are to welcome students back from break and into the new semester. Jason Baran has been working the IMU poster sale for seven years. He said he spends a week and a half making all the poster selections and manual preparations himself, but he works with a network for ideas. “There are actually a bunch of us who do this. We collaborate,” he said. “We have connections with Netflix and HBO, so they send us info on which shows and movies are trending.” Baran explained many people in his line of work live in New York when they are not traveling selling posters. Those in the business are into the music scene, so they have a pretty good idea of what music people are getting into Baran said. Some residence halls are hesitating to organize events for students. “With it being a new semester, it is better to let people get accustomed to their schedules,” said Manny Cantu, a Teter Quad resident assistant. “Since most residents are freshmen, it is best to let them sort out their timing and how things are going to work.”
EMILY BERRYMAN | IDS
Hui Lin and Linlin Sun spent their time between classes the first day of the semester hanging out together and playing pool in the Indiana Memorial Union.
Residence halls do not usually have annual events because each year for them is different, said Genevieve Labe, Willkie Quad assistant residence manager. The events depend on what the students are interested in and what the CommUnityEducators wants to cover. “This year our CUE seems to enjoy collaborating with
others,” Labe said. “The residents seem to be more excited, and there is more energy than in previous years.” Labe explained the RAs are responsible for planning their own events, though they can consult with her and ask questions about their events. At this point in the year the RAs’ jobs become easier. The goal in the first se-
mester was to get the floor to form a community and make friends, but by second semester they have already done that, Cantu said. This helps take off the pressure to plan events. Right now, Cantu and his fellow RAs are creating bulletin boards and planning door decorations. Cantu said this board is better than his previous boards because
he had more time to plan and think about it over the break. As far as events for this semester Cantu explained the installation of a television on the floor would be helpful because more events could be planned around it. It has been a point of contention among his residents so it will be good for building community.
Bauder followed by saying the office tries to be as responsive to the students as possible because while the office is meant to support students, the students also support the center by bringing in new information and ideas regarding sexuality, gender identity and more. “I don’t really see us changing significantly the work that we have done,” Bauder said. “But I hope we’re being clear about being on the cutting edge all the time and open to students on campus all the time.”
» WIGGINS
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2 College of Arts and Sciences, which offers students a B.A., M.A., Ph.D. and the opportunity to receive joint degrees and minors. Wiggins’ persistence in creating a department that shared the African-American experience with IU students improved the campus community by increasing the University’s breadth of educational experiences and by creating a more welcoming environment for African-American students, Orejuela wrote. Wiggins is survived by his wife, Janice Wiggins, previously the director of the Groups Student Support Services Program at IU. She is a prominent member of the community and has received the governor’s highest service award, the Sagamore of the Wabash, for her distinguished contributions to Indiana. In 1988 Wiggins was awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship, which is awarded to individuals who demonstrate outstanding abilities in scholarship. Although he received numerous accolades throughout his career, McCluskey said Wiggins was never one to brag but instead remained quiet about his accomplishments. Throughout Wiggins’ career, he was not only a mentor to students but also to faculty and staff members across the campus. “He was a loyal friend, loyal colleague and loyal citizen,” McCluskey, said. “He was always finding the good in his students, the good in his colleagues and the good in his community.”
of 100’s es hoic New C
FILM FESTIVAL
January 26-28
Buskirk-Chumley Theater bloomingtonPRIDE.org
Where: Georgian Room Indiana Memorial Union When: Mon. Jan. 9 thru Fri. Jan. 13 Time: 9 A.M. - 6 P.M. Sponsor: Indiana University Outdoor Adventures
Indiana Daily Student
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REGION
Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2017 idsnews.com
Editors Sarah Gardner and Melanie Metzman region@idsnews.com
Indy man faces federal child porn charges By Taylor Telford ttelford@indiana.edu | @ttelford1883
EMILY ECKELBARGER | IDS
Eric Holcomb and Suzanne Crouch took the stage to celebrate their election as governor and lieutenant governor, respectively. Holcomb defeated Democrat John Gregg in his run for office.
Holcomb inaugurated as Indiana’s 51st governor From IDS reports
Eric Holcomb was sworn in Monday as Indiana’s 51st governor. Holcomb is the successor of Vice Presidentelect Mike Pence. Also sworn into state positions Monday were Republicans Lt. Gov. Suzanne Crouch, Attorney General Curtis Hill, Auditor Tera Klutz and Superintendent of Public Instruction Jennifer McCormick. “On behalf of all Hoosier Republicans, I want to say congratulations to our newly sworn-in statewide team,” Indiana Republican Party Chairman Jeff Cardwell said in a statement. “With these great
leaders at the helm, our best days are yet to come.” Cardwell also expressed support for Pence and outgoing Attorney General Greg Zoeller in the statement. Indiana Democratic Party Chairman John Zody released a statement as well. He said he would like to see Holcomb rise above Pence’s shadow and not surrender to “out-of-touch: GOP ideologies”. He also urged the new state leaders to prioritize wages, infrastructure and education. “As a Hoosier, I want to offer best wishes to our new governor as he comes into office,” Zody said in the statement. “We must
RACHEL MEERT | IDS
Then Indiana Republican Party Chairman and candidate for U.S. Senate Eric Holcomb spoke to a group about his career in politics in September 2015 in Hodge Hall.
always remember that Hoosier Common Sense will always prevail over
party lines and ideology.” Sarah Gardner
Middle Way selects new director By Brooke McAfee bemcafee@indiana.edu @bemcafee24601
The board of directors at Middle Way House announced Monday it has selected Debra Morrow as its new executive director. Morrow, 49, first came to Middle Way House as a client in 2005, and the staff helped her overcome the trauma of the abuse she had experienced. She said she has had the position of community service coordinator for the past seven years. “It seems so surreal that twelve years ago I was a client living at the Rise with my children, and today I am the executive director,” Morrow said. “To me this is a testimony for the services provided by Middle Way House staff.” Middle Way House is a nonprofit agency that serves as an emergency shelter and rape crisis center in Bloomington. It has been open since 1971, and it serves six counties in southern Indiana. After former executive director Toby Strout announced her retirement, the Middle Way House board of directors spent months searching for a new director to continue leading the agency in a positive direction, according to a Middle Way House press release. Board president Michael DeNunzio said in the release the search for the new executive was both wide and deep and the board was pleased to select Morrow to lead Middle Way House into its next era. “In the seven-plus years Debra has been with Middle Way, she has shown an unshakable commitment to the community, her colleagues, and the clients and residents,” DeNunzio said in the release. Strout, who was the executive director since 1987, said she was happy with the board’s selection and feels confident in Morrow’s ability to lead Middle Way House. “We have worked together for more than ten years and for all those years, I’ve been nothing but impressed with her intelligence, her insight, her work ethic, and her kind regard for all those who give their talents to the work at Middle Way and all those who make use of the resources we have to share,” Strout said in the release.
YULIN YU | IDS
Students ran through the starting line of 5K fundraiser to benefit Middle Way House at Waller Courtyard in April 2016. The mission of the Kelley 5K is to promote students’ health while benefiting local nonprofits.
An Indianapolis man is facing federal charges after investigators found thousands of pornographic pictures, some of which the man produced, of children on devices in his home, United States attorney Josh Minkler announced last week. Christopher Anthony Abraham, 38, is charged with sexual exploitation of four children — all of whom are under the age of seven and some of whom had been left in his care. He is also charged with possession of child pornography. Investigators received a tip Jan. 2 from a man who said he found photos of naked children on Abraham’s phone and computer. The man copied a folder with the photos from the computer onto a thumb drive and shared it with investigators. Some of the photos were from a known series of commercial child porn, according to investigators. Others, however, were of the four children. In the photos, the children are laying on their backs with their genitals exposed. When investigators went to Abraham’s residence on the east side of Indianapolis Jan. 2, Abraham cooperated. He provided passwords and access to various devices in his home, including multiple desktop computers and laptops, tablets and a cell phone. That day, investigators received a search warrant for Abraham’s property and began to search all his devices. They found thousands of commercial photos of child porn and roughly about 70 photos that appeared to have been produced by Abraham. He admitted to using a file-sharing system to download photos of
Nominations open for Black Male Leader of Tomorrow award From IDS reports
“It seems so surreal that twelve years ago I was a client living at the Rise with my children, and today I am the executive director.” Debra Morrow, executive director of Middle Way House
Since she first arrived at Middle Way House, Strout has been Morrow’s role model, hero and mentor, Morrow said. “I was always impressed with the dedication she had to this agency and the dedication to the mission, the cause and everything about the work that we do,” Morrow said. “I had a lot of time to learn from her, which I truly appreciated, and I do know that gives me an advantage to be ahead.” The organization’s services allowed Morrow to leave a life of domestic violence and explore new opportunities, she said. “As a client, it gave me the opportunity to create a different life for myself after a life of violence,” she said. “I used their services and moved into their transitional housing program. I went back to school.” Morrow started studying at Ivy Tech, and she later received a bachelor’s degree in criminal justice from Indiana State University, where she graduated magna cum laude. Before working for Middle Way House, she had worked with incarcerated women at New Leaf-New Life, where she discovered
ADAM KIEFER | IDS
Katelyn Lipa, a volunteer with Middle Way House, spoke about the stigma associated with survivors of human trafficking during the "This Century's Slaves: A Panel on Human Trafficking" discussion in November 2015 in the School of Global and International Studies.
how abuse the women had experienced influenced the circumstances leading to their incarceration. She said she used what she had learned at Middle Way House to help them. When she became the community service coordinator at Middle Way, it gave her the chance to come full circle and work with people who had helped her when she was a client. “With somebody who comes from an abusive situation, they tend to not feel like they have a whole lot of value,” she said. “To then turn around and work alongside people you thought were absolutely wonderful was amazing. I really enjoyed that.” Morrow said her goals for Middle Way House’s future include ensuring the stability of the services it provides and making sure it is providing exactly what its clients need. This means listening to suggestions from clients. Another goal of Morrow’s is to expand Middle
Way House’s prevention program. There would be nothing better than to have less domestic violence or preferably none at all, Morrow said. To accomplish this, Morrow said the organization can make sure people are aware that prevention programming is available and possibly expand it to younger ages, like elementary school. “That’s the only way we can truly change,” she said. “We can continue doing damage control work, but it is so vital to prevent the damage in the first place.” Morrow said in the release her story is just one of many client success stories from Middle Way House. “All over this community there are individuals who have overcome the devastation of domestic violence and who have successfully accomplished their goals with the help of Middle Way House,” Morrow said. “They all are the heroes, and I am honored to represent them in my job every day.”
models for some of the images he made himself. The images of the children Abraham knew were likely created between May 2015 and December 2016, according to court documents. When confronted with these images, Abraham admitted to creating them himself in the bedroom of his home. He identified the children in the photos — one is the child of a family friend who had lived with him for a period, one is a former neighbor and two are siblings, the children of one of Abraham’s friends. The youngest child is 2 years old. Some of the photos showed Abraham kissing the children’s genitals. Others showed him kneeling over the children with his pants down and pressing his penis into their genitals. He said he had done some of these things because the children had asked him to. Abraham admitted to being sexually attracted to children, according to court documents. The Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department, Indiana State Police and the Indiana Crimes Against Children Task Force investigated this case. “Protecting trusting children from predators who would sexually exploit them continues to be a top priority in my office,” Minkler said in a press release. “In this office, child victims will always have an advocate to hold their abusers accountable.” If convicted on all charges, Abraham could face a maximum of 140 years imprisonment, said Kristina Korobov, assistant U.S. attorney and the government’s prosecutor for this case. Abraham made his first court appearance late last week. He is currently in the custody of U.S. marshals.
Nominations for Bloomington’s 2017 Outstanding Black Male Leader of Tomorrow Award are open now through Jan. 31. The award is one of the city’s Black History Month events. The award is presented each year by the City of Bloomington Commission on the status of Black Males. Two men — one adult and one high school student — will be given the award. The award is presented to any black man who demonstrates “outstanding leadership, scholarship and involvement in making tangible, visible and meaningful contributions to the Bloomington community,” Bloomington
communications director Mary Catherine Carmichael said in a statement. To be eligible for the award, nominees must live in Monroe County. Nominees for the adult award may not be older than 30. Anyone can nominate an individual for the award. To nominate someone for the award, fill out a form at bloomington.in.gov/csbm and write a letter describing why the person deserves the honor. Finished nominations can be sent to safeandcivil@ bloomington.in.gov. Recipients of the award will be honored Feb. 25 at Bloomington’s Black History Month Gala. Sarah Gardner
Indiana State Board of Education publishes 2015-2017 finance report From IDS Reports
The Indiana State Board of Education announced the release of the Center for Evaluation and Education Policy School Finance Report for 2015-2017 on Jan. 3. The report looks at analyses of enrollment data. These analyses are done to find changes in student enrollment in Indiana public schools, including charter schools. The report found state funding continues to increase on a per-student basis from lowest levels in 2011 and 2012. However, rising costs
present challenges to a large number of traditional school corporations, which resulted in a lower total state revenue in 2017 compared to 2009. Nevertheless, the ADM is projected to decline in Indiana’s school corporations in 2017, according to the report. Total tuition funding is also expected to increase through the end of the 20152017 biennium. However, the increases in funding are not sufficient to restore funding to pre-2009 levels in terms of constant dollars with inflation adjusted. Melanie Metzman
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Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2017 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 enforcement.” The social media age could thrust police-press relations into a new realm altogether. Kellams believes in the press’s role as a government watchdog but police departments’ abilities to reach the public directly could terminate those relationships in places where they’re already frayed, he said. He said he could even see some departments using Facebook Live or Periscope to broadcast daily briefings rather than go through traditional media. “At some point in time, somewhere, there’s going to be a department where they won’t talk to the press,” he said. These PIOs have seen some drawbacks to social media, too, though. Kellams said people, including residents of Bloomington, Illinois, and Bloomington, Minnesota, have started to message the department on Facebook when they should be calling 911. Lapses in social media judgment can result in more serious incidents. After a sniper killed five Dallas police officers in July, the city’s police department tweeted a picture of
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feminist friends, especially those who are still under a lot of pressure in China, some of them are even continuously harassed by the government,” Duan said. “I hope this exhibit will be successful, and I sincerely hope that the audience will leave some messages in the guest book.” Michelle Crowe, director of communications for IU Libraries, said the exhibition is made for Wells because the library is the visual center among libraries on campus. “Last year, over 2 million visits were recorded here, making the Wells Library Lobby one of the most heavily used academic spaces at
a suspect. The man, Mark Hughes, in the image was not the shooter. Even though he turned himself in and was released by police a few hours after the shooting, the tweet remained online until the next evening and garnered more than 40,000 retweets. A lawyer for Hughes and his brother said in a press conference that day the pair had received thousands of death threats. Hensley followed the aftermath of the shooting as it happened and said he was dismayed by the Dallas Police Department’s Twitter presence. “They were getting kind of vile,” he said. “They were basically operating based off of emotion.” The shooting and aftermath were just one of many events – many of which have been shootings of unarmed black men and the following protests and police response – that have strained relationships between police and the public in recent years. Social media isn’t the cure to the problem but it could be an ingredient, Hensley said. “If there ever was a time to start trying to figure out how to build police relationships with the public, it’s now,” he said. “There are a lot of places that need to work on that. This is a good way to start.” Indiana University,” Crowe said. “Our work is tied closely to the teaching mission of this University, so hosting this exhibition here is an important way we can integrate the global humanities experiences happening on campus.” There are also many reasons why students should pay special attention to this exhibition, Duan said in an email. Not only are many of the activists of college and graduate-school ages, but the issues at play — sexual assault and violence among them — are some that can affect a wide audience, Duan said. The connection to feminism and women’s rights is just the beginning, Duan
VICTOR GRÖSSLING | IDS
Sophomore forward OG Anunoby awaits the result of an Illinois shot . The Hoosiers won, 96-80, Saturday night.
» BASKETBALL
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 ability allows for his teammates to get open shots. “When they go small, they play him off the ball and run some action, staggers and hand-off action,” IU assistant coach Chuck Martin said. “He’s been really good in the sense that he’s matured. You can tell he’s trying to get everyone else said in an email. The exhibit opens the door to discovering the truth about gender issues in China. “Since the young feminist adopted the performance art as the major strategy, this exhibit is also of art value,” Duan said in an email. “There are very interesting and exciting images included. You won’t be disappointed.” Duan said all the images are powerful, though some have a special connection to her own life. “Bloody Bride” and “Occupy the Men’s Room,” for example, feature Duan’s friends. “Those two are the very first few events successfully made on the street and drew a lot of attention from the public,” Duan said in
involved. He’s trying to bring the young guys along because they’re really talented, but still they’re freshmen.” Three other Terrapins are averaging in double figures. Freshman forward Justin Jackson is averaging 10.8 points per game, freshman forward Anthony Cowan is averaging 10.4 points per game, and junior forward Michal Cekovsky is averaging 10 an email. “Another one is particularly touching to me because I see the feminist solidarity around the world. Feminists will always carry on, no matter how hard it is.” Support for feminist causes is the main reason why this exhibition is important, Duan said in an email. After the 2014 detainment of feminist activists in China on the eve of International Women’s Day, there was an outpouring of support and solidarity. “I hope it would help strengthen the feminist solidarity and offer a chance for people of the same kind to get together, meet each other, and communicate with each other,” Duan said in an email.
points per game. “I think the best they do is that their spacing is tremendous,” Martin said. “They get you to move from side to side. They specifically know who they want to attack and when they want to attack them. I think more than anything they never compromise their spacing.” For many key IU contributors, this will be their first major road test of the season
in a hostile environment. Some of the older players, especially senior forward Collin Hartman, have pulled them aside and told them what they need to do. “You can’t go in there scared,” Morgan said. “You have to be in there ready to play on demand. Your name can get called at any time, and you have to know exactly what you are doing when you get in there.”
COURTESY PHOTO
On Feb. 14, 2012, three volunteers dressed in wedding dresses with fake bloodstains protested on a street in Beijing. The photo is part of “Above Ground — 40 Moments of Transformation,” the new feminist Chinese photo exhibit on display in Herman B Wells Library.
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IU combats
winter weather
200 tons
1,200 tons
snow melt per year
salt per year
campus workers
300 clear snow each day 21
miles of streets
By Kelly Evans evanskn@umail.iu.edu
It had not been a full week into 2017 when IU had its first big snowfall of this season. Up until this point, it had been a mild winter. There were, of course, a handful of bitterly cold days, usually due to a high wind chill. However, with snow now in the winter mix, the University will have to increase its efforts to keep the campus clear enough for students, staff and faculty to continue daily activity. According to IU online archives, the University has only been officially closed 12 times since 1908. Of these instances, eight of the closures were due to
52
miles of sidewalks
snowy weather and a ninth closure was due to a broken heating system. IU’s Campus Site and Landscape Services Division is responsible for a variety of maintenance work on campus, snow removal included. Its team consists of 41 appointed service maintenance workers who take care of the Bloomington grounds. During the winter season, however, as many as 80 full-time and part-time workers are devoted to snow removal. They are responsible for clearing the 21 miles of campus streets, 52 miles of sidewalks and steps, and 150 acres of parking lots. It can take as long as 12 hours to complete even just a preliminary removal. Twelve hundred tons of salt are used every winter
150
acres of parking lots
on this campus to combat snow and ice. Of course, salt is only one of the many materials necessary. IU also uses bags of snow melt and a variety of equipment to clear away large amounts of snow. In 2014, the campus division began experimenting with brine, a combination of water and salt, with the intention of reducing the large amount of salt typically used. With potentially more snow and ice on the way this winter season, IU advises students, staff and faculty to exercise caution in the face of inclement weather. The Protect IU website reminds readers to dress for cold temperatures and snow and keep up to date with current weather conditions, especially before leaving home. SOURCES INSIDE IU BLOOMINGTON AND FACILITY OPERATIONS MAIA RABENOLD | IDS
Indiana Daily Student
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ARTS
Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2017 idsnews.com
Editor Sanya Ali arts@idsnews.com
Parks dept. calls for submissions by local artists By Sanya Ali siali@indiana.edu | @siali13
Local artists will have an opportunity to showcase their wares in an open space this summer during the City of Bloomington Parks and Recreation Department’s Fair of the Arts. The event begins May 13. Vendor stall applications for artists are due Feb. 17. Greg Jacobs, community events coordinator for the department, said events take place on the second Saturday of each month from May to October alongside the Community Farmers’ Market. “A Fair of the Arts is a chance for Bloomington’s residents and summer visitors to see and buy the works of our exceptionally talented local and regional artists and craftspeople,” Jacobs said. By opening the stalls close to the weekly farmers’ market, Jacobs said the fair can allow attendees to gather surrounded by local artworks. The works presented for purchase can be fine arts pieces or usable, hand-made crafts with high artistic merit. “The Community Farmers’ Market is one of the most popular happenings in Bloomington, and a Fair of the Arts adds another local component to the market,” Jacobs said. “Similarly to buying food from the farmers at the market, it’s more fun to get to know the people who are producing what you’re buying. The art has a better story that way.” This is not the only chance to unite Parks and Recreation and the art community, he said. “Along with the visual arts highlighted in these summer shows and our Holiday Market the Saturday after Thanksgiving, we also offer musical and film events in many locations,” Jacobs said. “By bringing in art and artists to activate our open spaces,
people are drawn out to them for entertainment, recreation, social connection, physical activity and fun.” Though Bloomington is a small city, the talent within the wide active artist scene never fails to impress, Jacobs said. The amount of artists may feel metropolitan, but voice of the artists always reflects a Midwestern flair. This breadth of applicants does, however, make deciding on which artists will have stalls and where those stalls will be located difficult for the jury. “The art keeps getting better, and more talented artists are finding our show each year, so sometimes that means making tough choices about placements,” Jacobs said. “A Fair of the Arts is a juried show, meaning a panel or jury of members of the local art community score the applications. So I use the scores the jury provides to determine things like who gets in which shows and where they are placed.” Criteria for submission include a style, ranging from clay to fiber arts to painting, of original work and high quality, price and variety, Julie Ramey, community relations manager, said in an email release. Costs are a $15 jury fee for applicants and $55 per fair for selected artists. Jacobs said working in this community allows for appreciation of artists. “It’s an honor and a privilege to work in such a dynamic scene,” Jacobs said. “Bloomington and the surrounding area is such a charming place to live, and the arts is a big component of that. I’m excited by every opportunity to bring more exposure to art into the community. Not a lot of places have the level of support for the arts that Bloomington does, so I feel lucky to be here.”
COURTESY PHOTO
Electro-rock duo Cherub released its newest record, “Bleed Gold, Piss Excellence,” in 2016. The band plays Feb. 12 in the Bluebird Bar.
Alt bands to play in Bluebird By Sierra Vandervort svanderv@indiana.edu @the_whimsical
A popular Bloomington music venue is back with a new spring calendar. While crowd-favorite cover bands like the Rod Tuffcurls and the Phunk Nasty’s make their regular appearances on the Bluebird Bar’s schedule, there are already a few notable upcoming shows from a variety of musical artists. Marketing director for the Bluebird Patrick Milescu said the changing nature of Bloomington’s demographic sometimes makes it tough to pinpoint the musical tastes of his audience. “We definitely made an attempt to cover all bases and get a good range of acts that, in one demographic or another, could appeal to almost anyone who could be a music fan living in Bloomington,” said Milescu. “This year’s calendar hopefully manages to reflect a bit more of the community’s music taste and student’s taste.” From neo-funk and jam bands to dreamy indie pop
and classic alternative punk, this season at the Bluebird has a show for music lovers of all kinds. Check out these shows coming up this semester, and be sure to check the Bluebird calendar for additional shows. CHERUB + THE FLOOZIES Tickets: $20 8 p.m. Feb. 12 The Floozies’ Matt and Mark Hill will bring their Midwestern-bred brand of electro-funk back to the Bluebird alongside Cherub in February. After playing the venue with Chet Porter back in September, the Floozies went on to make appearances at some of the festival giants like Electric Forest, Bonnaroo and Camp Bisco. The band’s love for classic swing and funk meets the members’ skills in free-form jazz and electronic production in hits like “Sunroof Cadillac” and “Stuntin’.” It will join producers Jordan Kelley and Jason Huber with ProbCause for the Your Girlfriend Already Bought Tickets Tour.
DINOSAUR JR. Tickets: $20 8 p.m. March 16 As a popular band of the late 1980s, Dinosaur Jr. brought underground angst and heavy guitars back to the forefront of indie music. With help from musical fellows like Sonic Youth and the Pixies, the trio earned a reputation as one of the biggest influences on alternative rock. After disbanding in 1997, the band reunited in 2005 and released its eleventh studio album in August of last year. J Mascis’ songwriting and psychedelic, feedback-drenched guitar will be coming to the Bluebird this March. DIZGO & AQUEOUS Tickets: $5 9 p.m. Feb. 18 Quickly rising Bloomington electro-trio Dizgo will perform with New York groovers Aqueous in February. Consisting of members of former Bloomington groups Elephant Quiz and 800 lb. Gorilla, Dizgo combines
electronic funk with deepgroove soul and extended improvisations. Aqueous has shared the stage with jam giants Umphrey’s McGee and Lotus, and the band’s highenergy performances have been creating a buzz across the country. WHITNEY Tickets: $20 8 p.m. May 8 The indie-rockers, as artists signed to the local independent label Secretly Canadian, from Chicago have their own stake in Bloomington. Guitarist Max Kakacek joined former Unknown Mortal Orchestra drummer Ehrlich for the songwriting project Whitney. They have played support for other notable indie artists such as Tobias Jesso Jr. Their single “No Woman” was released in January of 2016 and was followed by the release of “Light Upon the Lake,” which was named as one of Pitchfork’s 50 best albums of 2016. Tickets will be available before the show at Landlocked Music.
IU Auditorium prepares for Cleveland Orchestra From IDS Reports
YULIN YU | IDS
VOCAL, PIANO PERFORMANCE IU alumnus Davis Hart, left, and Jane Dutton, associate professor of music for voice, perform Monday evening in Auer Hall.
A well-known music director and orchestra will be visiting the IU Auditorium as part of its spring event lineup. The Cleveland Orchestra and conductor Franz Welser-Möst will return to perform at 8 p.m., Jan. 19, in the Auditorium with pianist Yefim Bronfman, according to a press release. This year will also mark the Fourth Biennial Residency, an opportunity for aspiring musicians in the school to work with the orchestra, in partnership with the Jacobs School of Music and IU. Gwyn Richards, dean of
the Jacobs School of Music, said in the release that the chance to work with these musicians is a great one for students, and that she is grateful to the Auditorium and the university. “Our heartfelt thanks go to the orchestra for the opportunities provided to our students, campus and city through this year’s educational residency,” Richards said. The Cleveland Orchestra has worked on these kinds of residency programs from Miami to Vienna, according to the release. The goals of the orchestra include serving the community through music education, performance and
engagement. The New York Times called the Cleveland Orchestra the best American orchestra, and the group works with new combinations of musical works and composers to incorporate innovation into each performance, according to the release. The group is also often recognized for its connection to Welser-Möst as a conductor. Welser-Möst has been working as music director with the Cleveland Orchestra for fifteen years now, though he began his career in the United States working with the St. Louis Symphony after working across
Europe. Bronfman has appeared alongside many orchestral groups and even won a Grammy for his recording of three Bartók piano concerts in connection with conductor Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Los Angeles Philharmonic, according to the release. The concert Jan. 19 will feature the performance of Tchaikovsky’s “Piano Concerto No. 2 in G Major, Opus 44,” and Sibelius’s “Symphony No. 2 in D Major, Opus 43.” Tickets for this performance range from $21 to $42 for students with a valid ID. Sanya Ali
GOING DUTCH
Student prepares for new experiences in Netherlands
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
Check
the IDS every Friday for your directory of local religious organizations, or go online anytime at idsnews.com/religious.
When I made the move from my rural Monroe County home to Foster Quad as an IU freshman a little more two years ago, I rarely ever felt far from home. The move was hardly jarring, though my body may have disagreed. You try sustaining yourself exclusively on spicy chicken sandwiches and soggy alfredo pasta for eight months. When I embark on a semester-long adventure to study business at Maastricht University in Maastricht, the Netherlands, Jan. 19, the same won’t be true. It will be my first time in Europe and only my second trip outside the United States, so I’ll be going into this experience with my eyes wide open. Given my largely conventional upbringing, it doesn’t get much more surprising than that. Spending a semester abroad has long been an objective of mine. In December, I wrote about the importance of constantly exposing oneself to new ideas and perspectives, and this adventure ought to provide endless learning opportunities.
It will also help me achieve an academic goal — completing my international business co-major and becoming comfortable with the idea of conducting business in the age of globalization as I prepare to enter the full-time workforce. In some ways, Maastricht is not so unlike Bloomington. Maastricht University, founded in 1976, is noted for its growing population of international students. Of the university’s 16,000 students, nearly half hail from other countries. In all, the student body has students of more than 100 nationalities. Bloomington is home to its own mosaic of cultures, but I’m excited to experience this sort of environment from the other perspective — that of an international student. Maastricht is also rich in history. Though it’s subject to some contention, many consider it the oldest town in the Netherlands. Many beautiful medieval structures are still intact today. Since the Middle Ages, Maastricht has been subject to multiple sieges by the Spanish and French, Nazi
occupation, and a cultural and intellectual resurgence toward the end of the 20th century. Though I’ll surely never run out of things to explore in and around Maastricht, its central location within Europe made it difficult to consider studying elsewhere. Both the Belgian and German borders are within manageable and scenic bike rides. London, Brussels, Paris and Berlin are all among cities that are easily accessible via train, and discount airlines like EasyJet and Ryanair will allow me to reach the more remote corners of the region for absurdly low rates. The possibilities for weekend trips are virtually endless. While the mystique and allure of spending the semester in a far-off country has consumed much of my imagination in the weeks leading up to my departure, I’ve also devoted some thought to preparing mentally to succeed in an academic environment unlike one I’ve ever been part of. Maastricht University’s problem-based approach to instruction puts far less em-
Daniel Kilcullen is a junior in international business.
phasis on rote memorization and instead requires students to solve problems creatively to reach a solution. There will be no more Scantrons. Smaller, more intimate classes are another central tenet of problem-based learning. Professors simply provide direction and guidance while students work with one another to learn the subject. My transition to life in the Netherlands may be made easier by the fact that the majority of the population speaks English. However, I hope my introductory Dutch language course allows me to speak English as little as possible. Over the next several months, I’ll surely find myself out of my element on more than a few occasions, but a certain level of discomfort can be a good thing. This time around, thankfully, I’m confident the discomfort won’t be a result of my eating habits. dkilcull@indiana.edu @daniel_kilc_
Indiana Daily Student
SPORTS
Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2017 idsnews.com
Editors Jake Thomer and Jamie Zega sports@idsnews.com
9
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
IU kicks off two-game road trip at Michigan By Josh Eastern jeastern@iu.edu | @JoshEastern
The road has been very familiar this season for the IU women’s basketball team. IU Coach Teri Moren scheduled a stretch of nonconference games that saw her Hoosiers play five out of six games on the road. Three of the five road games were consecutive. The Hoosiers had their struggles but came out of that stretch having learned a lot about themselves. The Hoosiers will face another road test Tuesday when they travel to Ann Arbor, Michigan, to face the Michigan Wolverines at the Crisler Center. “I feel like we have a great game plan,” Moren said. “We just have to execute it once we get over there. I think our kids are excited to get back out on the floor although they appreciated the time off. We still went hard and were competitive in practice.” There was a reason why Moren decided to play all of those road games. With the amount of underclassmen on this team, she wanted to get them experience playing on the road. Thus far in conference play, the road hasn’t too hard on IU, which has a 5-3 record away from Assembly Hall. That competition will ramp up, however, as the season progresses. The Hoosiers have played two of their three games at home to start the Big Ten slate. In the lone road game at Penn State, the Hoosiers mostly dominated throughout the game and picked up a win. “I think they’re pretty confident,” Moren said of her
BOBBY GODDIN | IDS
Senior guard Alexis Gassion waits for the ball to be inbounded against Minnesota on Wednesday night. IU defeated Minnesota (78-62) to move to 2-1 in conference play and 12-4 on the season.
team playing on the road. “I think — our non-conference schedule, we were away from Assembly Hall quite a bit. Then to go on the road our first game against Penn State and play well was big for this group.” Michigan comes in to Tuesday’s matchup with a 2-1 conference record, the same as IU. Both teams have dropped a conference game to Ohio State. Another
common opponent between the two is Oakland, which both teams handled easily. Much like IU, Michigan has had success on its home court. The Wolverines are undefeated at home. Overall, Michigan comes in with a 13-4 record. Junior guard Katelynn Flaherty, who has averaged 19.1 points per game, has led Michigan. She is one of three Wolverines to average double figures in
scoring, but Flaherty is the central figure of the Michigan offense. “Containing their 3-point shot, especially Flaherty,” IU junior guard Tyra Buss said about Michigan. “She has a pretty quick release, and she’ll shoot it anytime, anywhere, whenever she feels like she’s open. Senior guard Alexis Gassion is going to do a good job of locking her down, and our team will help with her.”
Much like the Minnesota game Wednesday, Tuesday’s game at Michigan could be seen as a measuring-stick game for IU. The Hoosiers needed to get back on track Wednesday, and they did. After a six-day break, the Hoosiers will be refreshed but could also be trying to get some of the rust off early on. IU was picked to finish higher in the Big Ten than Michigan, so the Hoosiers feels confi-
IU (12-4) at Ann Arbor, Michigan (13-4) 7 p.m., Tuesday, Crisler Center dent they can go on the road and get wins against anyone. “I think just last year, knowing that we can go into other team’s home courts and steal a road win, I think we have that confidence that we can go in and play with anybody,” Buss said.
MEN’S BASKETBALL
GOTT TAKES
IU drops out of latest AP Top 25 poll From IDS Reports
IU men’s basketball dropped out of the rankings for the first time this season when the latest edition of the AP Top 25 poll was released Monday. IU, which was tied at 25 with USC in the rankings last week, dropped its third consecutive game Tuesday when it lost to Wisconsin, 75-68, before snapping the streak Saturday and beating Illinois, 96-80. IU received six votes,
which is fourth among teams not in the rankings this week. This is the first week the Hoosiers are unranked this season after starting the year at No. 11 in the polls and moving up as high as No. 3 in the Nov. 21 poll. Three Big Ten teams still remain in the top 25 with Minnesota, the newest ranked conference team, checking in at No. 24. Purdue is the highest-ranked Big Ten team this week at No. 17 after winning both of
its games this week against Ohio State and Wisconsin. The Badgers fell five spots this week to No. 18 after losing to the Boilermakers. The Hoosiers will travel outside the state of Indiana on Tuesday for the first time this season since beating Kansas in Hawaii when it plays at Maryland at 9 p.m. The Hoosiers will wrap up the week at noon Sunday at home against Rutgers.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE
The Cleveland Browns’ Joe Haden chases after the New York Giants’ Odell Beckham Jr. after a second-quarter catch Sunday, Nov. 27, 2016, at FirstEnergy Stadium in Cleveland. The Browns lost the game, 27-13.
In defense of Odell Beckham Jr. Sometimes you lose. This may sound a bit outrageous and absurd, but in the world of sports, that’s often the norm. Sometimes you get outplayed, and the other team is just better. That’s precisely what happened Sunday afternoon when the New York Giants were beaten by human flame emoji Aaron Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers. Odell Beckham Jr., the definitive best player on the Giants, received the brunt of the criticism because of his three drops — one a potential touchdown. “The ultimate test of being ready is what do you do when the lights are on, and he wasn’t ready,” former NFL star wide receiver Cris Carter said on FS1’s “Undisputed” on Monday. “Odell Beckham Jr. came up too small, smaller than Justin Bieber, quieter than Trey Songz,” the New York Post wrote. The chief criticism of the star wideout was that Beckham and a few teammates took a trip to Florida on their day off that included an outing on a boat. The announcers of the game brought this point up ad nauseum and linked it to the wide receiver’s inadequate play.
This is ridiculous. Honestly, just forget a-boat it. In the era of 24/7 sports coverage, any small story like this often blows way out of proportion. Beckham is the perfect example of a star who is scrutinized almost daily for every insignificant detail. Beckham punched a kicking net. Write a 2,000-word column reprimanding all wide receivers! He was upset after a game and stood silently outside the locker room before meeting the media. Someone compare this to the downfall of millennials and thus America! “I think it did a great job at creating distractions for us, and it’s unfortunate,” Beckham told reporters after the game. “That’s just the way this world is. There’s just no way you can connect something that happened seven days ago to this game today and how we came out and played and how the Packers have won seven in a row and how they scored 38 points and how they executed. They came up with the third downs, they did what they needed to do. So the connection is just not there in my opinion. But everyone can have their own opinion, so.” What makes this so gross is the tinge of racism lurking underneath, in the same vein of past critiques of former 76ers
Greg Gottfried is a senior in journalism.
point guard Allen Iverson or Carolina Panthers’ quarterback Cam Newton. “He’s not playing the right way,” is often an assessment with the undertone of, “He’s not playing our way.” Hall of Fame QBs Tom Brady and Peyton Manning chew out their wide receivers on a game-by-game basis, but they get honored while similar outbursts from Beckham would cause him to be declared a “thug.” It’s OK to say Beckham had a bad game. He did. It’s when the sportswriters try to create a deeper reason why that their columns seem forced. As a writer and reader of sports, it is this type of journalism that infuriates me. The constant ribbing and accusatory tone seems TMZish at times. Talking heads from ESPN to FS1 will try to blame the New York loss on Beckham having a life outside of football and his antics. The Giants’ superstar is getting reprimanded by the media. It’s about time we look at why. gigottfr@indiana.edu @gott31
FIND YOUR PARADISE
Meet with local vendors to find a place to live. Houses, apartments, townhomes & more, the Housing Fair has it all.
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Zain Pyarali
Indiana Daily Student
10
OPINION
Tuesday, Jan. 10. 2017 idsnews.com
STEVE SAYS
Editors Dylan Moore and Zack Chambers opinion@idsnews.com
EDITORIAL BOARD
Avoid the post-break hangovers Steven Reinoehl is a sophomore in business.
This winter break was one of many firsts for me. I went to Florida, walked the Atlantic beaches, kayaked with dolphins and woke up every morning around eight o’clock. Being an early riser during break has resulted in a very unusual sleep schedule for me as a college student. In semesters past, returning to school from break has been a wholly inefficient experience. Up until this year, my breaks from school consisted largely of lazy days of waking up late and achieving very little. As a result, the transition from lazy back to productive was very difficult. I got a winter break hangover. Getting up early was nearly impossible, doing simple readings for class felt like running a marathon, and taking notes in lecture was as laughable as reviewing them later on. My habits and tendencies during break sabotaged me for the weeks of school that followed. I and many other have set ourselves up for failure by being so lazy during the intermissions we get from semester to endless semester. Hangovers suck. In the last couple days leading up to this semester, I have felt infinitely more productive and prepared. My body doesn’t let me wake up later than nine, and all of the syllabi have been read. I found time to work out, shop for groceries, write and listen to Ed Sheeran’s new songs on repeat. A simple change in my sleep schedule the three weeks leading up to school has led to a significant change in my ability to return to the life of a student, and I bet most people would experience similar results. But why do little habits have such big influences on our mindset? Amy J. C. Cuddy and Caroline A. Wilmuth, associates at Harvard University, and Dana R. Carney, an associate at University of California at Berkeley, ran an experiment that you’ve probably heard of. They predicted that if someone strikes a powerful, dominant pose before going into a stressful evaluation such as an interview, they will feel more confident and do a better job. Their hypothesis was proven correct, and they showed us that our actions have a significant effect on our beliefs. What we do can affect how we view ourselves and the world. In my case, forcing myself to wake up early during winter break allowed me to come back to school with more vigor than ever. When I spend three weeks telling my brain that it’s a sin to wake up before eleven and getting up to go to the fridge is exercise, it will believe that I am a sloth. Sloths don’t do very well in college. However, when I am up early every day doing things and going places, my brain comes into the new year believing it’s supposed to be productive and efficient, which is infinitely more beneficial to my grades. As college kids, we set ourselves up for failure by spending our breaks doing nothing. A little productivity can go a long way during those days off, and who knows, maybe you and I will never experience another winter break hangover. sbreinoe@umail.iu.edu
ILLUSTRATION BY MERCER SUPPIGER | IDS
British economy grows after Brexit Experts have missed the mark on yet another important political event Welcome to 2017, the year of the first female president, an EU complete with the United Kingdom and the world champion Cleveland Indians. These were perhaps the biggest failed predictions of last year, though there were so many to choose from. With this in mind, the Editorial Board is not surprised to read the recent reports from some British media refuting the second half of the Brexit narrative from last year. We were told the British economy would be irreversibly damaged if the country were to go through with leaving the EU, but this hasn’t happened yet.
In fact, the Telegraph is now reporting that many signs show the British economy is in fact doing much better than anticipated. One measure, the purchasing manager’s index, put out by the business research firm IHS Markit, shows an increase in service sector activity after the Brexit vote. Additionally, the overall economy expanded. The PMI numbers estimate overall economic growth was at a 17-month high last December. This all goes to show that the so-called experts had almost no idea what they were talking about. First, we heard Brexit
would not happen. They said the polls were decisive and that there was no way Leave would prevail in the referendum. Undeterred by getting this wrong, they assured us the U.K.’s economy would suffer tremendously after defying the EU. We have come to rely too much on the predictive power of experts. In our constantly connected, technologically advanced age, there is an impulse to use science to explain everything. This is good where variables can be accounted for and measured, but with issues like a popular referendum, there are so many unpredictable factors.
This is not to say that polling is bad or unscientific, only that it has come to represent our over-reliance on science in matters that are inherently non-scientific. Humans are unpredictable. We make decisions under conditions that very rarely can be measured in a lab. The Brexit fiasco just goes to show that we must always remember this. Expert opinion and imperfect measures like polls must embrace the gray areas. We must be comfortable hearing those words, “I do not know.” In this sense, it is not just the fault of the experts, intelligentsia, media or other predictive groups. As a culture,
we’re afraid of the uncertain. We feel the need to know the result before the event. Only by becoming comfortable with not knowing will we be able to avoid such issues in the future. Perhaps if those on the losing side of Brexit and the presidential race had not been so self-assured, the results would have been different. This would have the fortunate side effect of adding to public discourse and debate because both sides would work as though they were losing, meeting every voter and collecting every possible signature. Overconfidence often gets in the way of victory.
GETTING IN THE GROOVE
BLABBERMOUTH
Don’t idolize Jennifer Lawrence
YouTube’s horrific ads
I’ll admit it. In middle school, I was one of those people. You know, the type of person who revels in being the first to discover a book, television show or musician. I read “The Hunger Games” by Suzanne Collins before it went mainstream and was entirely consumed by it. Several of my friends and I waited with bated breath for the film adaption to be released. We even made “Team Peeta” shirts to wear to the midnight premiere of the movie. I know, I know. Believe it or not, that wasn’t even one of the most cringe-worthy moments of my middle school years. That night, I sat in a movie theater and watched Jennifer Lawrence in her first performance as protagonist Katniss Everdeen. It was the first time I had ever seen her in a film. Fast forward about six years, and you’d find me again sitting in a movie theater. This time I was watching trailers before “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them” started. The trailer for “Passengers” begins. Lawrence and co-star Chris Pratt appear on the screen. I groan. As a feminist, I painstakingly avoid that oft-uttered phrase, the one that usually is targeted at women in positions of power — “I just don’t like her” — as if
likable is the most important thing a women can be. I’ve found that this statement usually cannot be backed up with evidence or reasons. It’s generally a visceral, vague disdain. I can, however, say I am both tired of seeing Lawrence in every single blockbuster movie and certain that I do not like her. First of all, how many times can film executives slap together Lawrence and Bradley Cooper as love interests? Is there really that much of a shortage of attractive people with halfway-decent acting chops in Hollywood? Sure, Lawrence is talented. I won’t deny that. However, there are so many other voices we could be hearing, especially right now, as minorities finally break into big roles in films. I don’t think the plot of “Passenger” by any means hinged on the minor detail that both love interests were white. It might have even made the story more interesting and more redeemable in the eyes of critics if the two love interests were of different cultural backgrounds. It even could have played into the story somehow. In summary, I’d like more diversity, please. Second — and this is partly the fault of the media — she’s been typecast as Hollywood’s darling golden girl that we should all love
Anna Groover is a freshman in English and religious studies.
because she’s apparently down-to-earth and real. In reality, though, she’s crass and classless. This past December on “The Graham Norton Show,” she talked about filming a movie in Hawaii. Particularly, she told a story about scratching her behind on a rock sacred to Hawaiian culture. In the interview, she was utterly disrespectful and mocking. When faced with public backlash, she released a statement that was hardly remorseful by merely saying, “I apologize if I offended anyone.” I know it’s easy to criticize someone for making a small misstep, but this is a pattern with Lawrence, and we should quit dismissing her callousness as keeping it real. She is oblivious to anyone other than herself. Let’s keep a high standard for those in the public spotlight who are influencing us and our impressionable children. So, Hollywood, can we have someone other than Lawrence in the next blockbuster hit? The odds are not in favor of me watching another Lawrence film. acgroove@umail.iu.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 500 words and may be edited for length and style. Submissions must include the person’s name, address and telephone number for verification.
Letters without those requirements will not be considered for publication. Letters can be mailed or dropped off at the IDS, 6011 E. Kirkwood Ave. Bloomintgon, IN 47405. Send submissions via e-mail to letters@idsnews.com. Call the IDS with questions 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.
I’m a college senior, and I’ve never seen a horror movie. This is largely due to the fact that I am scared of most things — spiders, snakes, clowns, people brushing their teeth too loudly. You name it, I’ve probably had a nightmare about it. But it seems that I may soon be forced to confront a few of my fears. During winter break, several new horror movie trailers surfaced as advertisements on YouTube. The trailers play as mandatory ads on all types of videos — from stand up comedy to Moana sing-alongs — and often cannot be skipped, even though they feature sensitive content. The phenomenon of must-watch horror movie trailers is nothing new to YouTube. Past pre-video horror advertisements include ”Insidious,” “Poltergeist,” “Unfriended,” and most recently ”Rings” and “Split.” The latter film stalked my YouTube activities over winter break, with the trailer updating itself and intensifying each time I clicked on a new video. From what I gathered from the ads, ”Split” is going to be terrifying — and not just because James McAvoy is bald, although that’s scary enough in its own right. What was truly disturbing about the whole experience was the notion that this scary content was being forced upon me. While it was scary enough for me as an adult, I can’t imagine what surprise horror movie trailers would be like for unsuspecting children just trying to watch kitten videos, not to mention the possibility of victims of violence or post-traumatic stress disorder being triggered by frightening images without any warning. Think about it. Most
Becca Dague is a senior in English.
theaters display trigger warnings before playing an R-rated trailer — that neon green screen telling you “the following trailer is rated R for violence and some disturbing images.” The green warning screen is largely there to give viewers an idea of what they’re about to see, and to warn them if, like me, they need to plug their ears and look away. With mandatory horror trailers, YouTube is showing their users even less respect than a courtesy theater warning. Forced viewing of fear-inducing content is not only potentially harmful, but it feels like a deliberate disregard of customer care on the part of YouTube. Of course I understand that horror movies, like any other type of film, rely heavily on advertising to sell their product. Although I’d like to, I can’t keep all whispers of the horror genre out of my life forever. There are even some people in the world that genuinely love a scary movie. Honestly, good for them. When the zombie apocalypse finally arrives, they will be the ones thriving in our new world. I, on the other hand, will be cowering in fear and eating all the perishables in the frozen food section of Target and just trying my best to survive alongside all the other card-carrying scaredy cats. Until that zombie apocalypse arrives, horror shouldn’t be forced upon anyone, and terrifying trailers certainly shouldn’t be mandatory YouTube advertisements exempt from user opt-outs. rjdague@indiana.edu
11
Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2017 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
FOOTBALL
Commit Harry Crider discusses IU football By Jordan Guskey jguskey@umail.iu.edu | @jordanguskey
MATT RASNIC | IDS
Tegray Scales knocks the ball out of a Ohio State player’s reach. Scales announced he will retun to IU.
Junior linebacker Tegray Scales to stay with Hoosiers for senior season From IDS reports
Junior linebacker Tegray Scales announced via an IU Athletics video that he will be staying in Bloomington for his senior year. “Hoosier Nation, just would like to say I’ll be staying for my senior year,” Scales said in the video. “I’m excited to be playing for him for one more year and excited to be part of this team.” Scales was a 2016 Sports Illustrated second-team All-American and a secondteam All-Big Ten selection. The junior led the Hoosiers in tackles with 126,
sacks with 7 and tackles for loss with 23.5. His 23.5 tackles for loss also led the nation. Scales also returned an interception for a touchdown against Florida International in the 2016 season opener. “Having Tegray back with us is huge,” IU Coach Tom Allen said in a separate video. “He was a catalyst for our defense, not only on the field with his production but really in the very beginning when I first got here and challenged our team to make changes in their mentality and the way that they prepared.
Horoscope Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is a 9 — Break routine with your partner over the next two days. Spontaneous acts and romantic gestures can have long-reaching impact. Avoid accidents, though. Listen and look. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is a 9 — Talk about money another day. Today is better suited to action. Focus on work and health for the next two days. Keep in motion.
He’s bought in from day one.” Barring injury, 2017 will be the fourth season in which Scales will see substantial playing time. The linebacker played in all 12 games in addition to the Foster Farms Bowl this season as well as his freshman season. Scales’ announcement comes just days after juniors Devine Redding and Marcus Oliver announced their intentions to forego their senior seasons for the NFL Draft. Taylor Lehman
To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is an 8 — Words are just talk. Today and tomorrow favor love and romance, including bold gestures. Avoid financial risk. Keep promises, and show your heart with your actions.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 6 — Find a quiet, peaceful sanctuary to write. Research and study. Journal your feelings, and keep disagreements private. Frugal productivity lets you avoid a mess.
Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 7 — You’re in a quiet mood. Stick close to home over the next two days, and handle domestic priorities. Pinch pennies and reuse something you have.
Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Today is an 8 — There’s more income available over the next two days. Test the limits before committing fully. Move carefully to avoid injury. Action speaks louder than words.
BLISS
HARRY BLISS
IU didn’t offer Harry Crider a scholarship until a little more than a month after he committed to Virginia, but about a week after that offer in Aug. 2016, he flipped his commitment to the Hoosiers. The Columbus, Indiana, native out of Columbus East High School is a 247Sports composite three-star offensive lineman who ranks as the 18th-highest recruit in his home state and is the 13th-ranked center nationally. He shared some insight on his recruitment and eventual commitment to IU football. Indiana Daily Student: Talk about when IU first expressed interest in you as a recruit and how you felt about that initial interest. Crider: “They had some interest all throughout my high school career, but it actually really picked up after I committed to the University of Virginia. So, that’s when, I guess, they started realizing more about me. After I committed they got in contact with me, and I actually went over to watch a practice and got to talk with the coaches and that’s when they made their offer to me. So, that whole experience was
Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Today is a 9 — Personal matters need attention today and tomorrow. Spontaneity wins over logistical plotting. If it’s good for your family, do it. Actions now have long-term impact. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 5 — Slow down and consider the road ahead. Manage existing responsibilities before taking on new, today and tomorrow. The truth becomes obvious. Decide what you want. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a 9 — Friends are a big help today and tomorrow. Share ideas and information. Potential
Crossword
tremendous for me because IU has always been a dream school for me so to get that opportunity finally was a relief.” What led you to make the decision to choose IU instead of Virginia and the other schools that expressed interest in you? “IU has always been a dream school, being from Indiana, obviously it means a lot to play for your home school. I had two siblings graduate from IU so it runs in the family and means a lot to continue on that tradition.” What coaches played the most significant roles in your recruitment and how did they build their relationships with you? “Coach Frey, the offensive line coach, was my main contact, especially going into that first practice. I got to see coach Frey in actual practice-like situations, so I got to see what practices would be like and what my experiences with a coach like him would be like. So, that’s when I really started to like him and like the IU program because I could tell it was a special program with special coaches and special people.” What recruits did you talk
breakdowns loom. Act together for long-term benefit. Stand for each other. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is a 9 — You’re attracting the attention of someone important. Focus on a professional opportunity today and tomorrow. Moves made now have far-reaching consequences. Act only when clear. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is a 9 — Expand your territory today and tomorrow, without taking financial risks. Stick with your studies. You can get a lot done quickly. Angry words are expensive.
to a lot about IU during your recruitment and what did those conversations entail? “I know right after that practice I was in contact with Britt Beery, Bryant Fitzgerald and Derrius Mullins mostly. They contacted me through Twitter and Bryant and Britt were actually at the practice that I was at so that was pretty cool to experience that with those commits that were there. I could definitely feel the connection with those guys, especially the Indiana guys, and it would mean a lot to play with those guys. We kind of hit it off right off the bat so I knew it was a great group of people that I wanted to be with.” With the coaching changes that have occurred recently, and National Signing Day less than a month away, what’s your outlook on the program as a recruit? “Definitely a positive outlook. I think all these changes are great for the program. Tom Allen is obviously a tremendous coach and great person so as a recruit I feel blessed to be able to be under him and the new guys coming in. It all looks promising and there’s a tremendous upside with IU football.”
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is a 9 — A lack of funds would threaten your plans. Handle financial details before tomorrow. Consider long-term impacts; strategize for growth with bold, committed action.
© 2017 By Nancy Black Distributed by Tribune Media Services, INC.All RightsReserved
L.A. Times Daily Crossword 24 25 27 28 29 31 33 34 36 37 40 44 46 48 50 52 53 54 55 57 58 59 62 63
Publish your comic on this page. The IDS is accepting applications for student comic strips for the spring 2017 semester. Email five samples and a brief description of your idea to adviser@indiana.edu by Jan. 20. Submissions will be reviewed and selections will be made by the editor-in-chief.
People with skill Toaster snack Publicity ploy Evangelist __ Semple McPherson Verses by Allen Ginsberg, e.g. Shake it on the dance floor Burglar “Deck the Halls” greenery Free (of) Yearbook gp. One on horseback Room with a crib Steel girders Luxurious Greets the judge Well-dressed Mention in a footnote Broke up some clods Senorita’s “other” Weapon with a tip guard Scotch go-with Walk of Fame figure Periodic table suffix Turntable no.
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
su do ku
ACROSS
Difficulty Rating: How to play: Fill in the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 grid contains the digits 1 through 9, without repeating a number in any one row, column or 3x3 grid.
Answer to previous puzzle
© Puzzles by Pappocom
NON SEQUITUR
1 Doofus 5 Dodge Aries and Plymouth Reliant 10 Smack on the mouth 14 Letter-shaped support piece 15 “For real!” 16 Pop singer Brickell 17 Dice roller’s exhortation 19 Scrabble piece 20 TV preview 21 Taken as a whole 23 Satchel feature 26 Margarita glass rim coating 27 Curved sword 30 Application info: Abbr. 32 Pool measure 35 What soccer shootouts resolve 36 Peaceful state 38 P-like Greek letter 39 Actress Thurman 40 Actor with nearsynonymous first and last names 41 Museum hanging 42 Amount after costs 43 Suitcase attachments 44 Yuletide 45 Not so hot? 47 __ Lanka 48 Swollen
49 Upper, in Ulm 51 Male voice range 53 “Toodle-oo!” 56 Evaluate for tax purposes 60 Wee bit 61 Cause trouble ... and a hint to this puzzle’s circled letters 64 Time in office 65 Emulate Vesuvius 66 Scarlet letter of fiction 67 Slow Churned ice cream brand 68 Hagar of Van Halen 69 Wine bottle number
DOWN
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
1 Random House vol. 2 Woodwind instrument 3 Dalai __ 4 Locks on heads 5 Soup mix brand 6 “Blue Bloods” extra 7 Pie-mode connection 8 TV host Kelly 9 Applies weatherstripping to 10 Stovetop whistler 11 Pretty darn simple 12 Housecat’s perch 13 Watermelon eater’s discard 18 Four: Pref. 22 Saddled (with)
WILEY BREWSTER ROCKIT: SPACE GUY!
TIM RICKARD
Indiana Daily Student
beautifully designed 1- 4 bedrooms downtown
***For 2017*** 5 BR, 3 BA. A/C, D/W, W/D, microwave, prkg. $1200/mo. + utils.
james.a.crane@gmail.com
bestrentsrdw@yahoo.com
Real-world Experience. NO WEEKENDS! All Majors Accepted.
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EMPLOYMENT Camp Staff
Seeking students with good organization, time management, and communication skills to work in advertising sales. Previous sales experience preferred but not required. Must own reliable transportation and make 3 semester commitment Apply in person at: Franklin Hall,RM 130.
Camp Mataponi is hiring for paid summer internships and jobs. We are a premier children’s summer camp on Sebago Lake, Maine. Over 100 different positions available. Salaries start at $2100+ room/board. 561-748-3684 or campmataponi.com
Email: rhartwel@indiana.edu
for a complete job description. EOE
Large 1, 2 & 4 BR apartments & townhouses avail. Summer, 2017. Close to Campus & Stadium. 812-334-2646
Now leasing Fall, 2017! 1, 2, & 3 BRs. Hunter Ridge 812-334-2880
AVAILABLE NOW AT PAVILION HEIGHTS Loft style unit with 9 foot ceilings Newly remodeled & 1 block from campus
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pavprop.com | 812.333.2332
General Employment
Monroe County Parks & Rec is hiring youth recreation leaders. Must be available late afternoons 2-4 days a week and have own transportation. Email Beth Cossairt at:
bcossairt@co.monroe.in.us
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***For 2017*** **1 blk. S. of Campus*** 4 BR apts. Utils. pd. except elec. $485/mo. each.
The Flats On Kirkwood Avail. for lease: 1 studio + parking. Also, four: 3 BR/2 BA units. Washer/dryer in units. Call 812.378.1864.
bestrentsrdw@yahoo.com
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Dental assistant. Part-time. No experience necessary. 812-332-2000
Apartment Furnished
Apt. Unfurnished
1 BR apt. w/flex lease. In quiet neighborhood 5 min north of Campus. Utils. & wifi incl. $500/mo. 812-322-4660
Large 1 BR. Close to Campus. Free prkg. Avail. now. 812-339-2859
***For 2017*** **1 blk. S. of Campus** 5 BR, 3 BA, W/D, D/W, A/C, trash, parking, $465/mo. each plus utils.
NOW LEASING Brand New Luxury Apartments Studios & 1-3 BR Available GRAD STUDENTS RECEIVE $25 MONTHLY DISCOUNT
812.669.4123 EchoParkBloomington.com
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rnourie@indiana.edu
4 in 1 Faberware Electric grill. Unopened, $40, obo. alachheb@iu.edu
bestrentsrdw@yahoo.com
1-8 BR. Avail. May & Aug. Best location at IU Got it all. 812-327-0948 108 S Clark. 3 BR, 3 BA. $2100, all utils. incl. iurent.com, 812-360-2628 203 S Clark. 3 BR, 2 BA. $1950, all utils. incl. iurent.com, 812-360-2628 205 S Clark. 3 BR, 1 BA. $1800, all utils. incl. iurent.com, 812-360-2628
MERCHANDISE
creamandcrimson properties.com
Avail. now 3 BR, 1.5 BA. $1000/mo. Close Close to campus. *** Also 1 BR, 5 mi E. Blgtn Avail. now $550/mo W/D, No pets. 812-361-6154 mwisen@att.net
Gold iPhone 7 360 case. Covers everything except screen/buttons. $10, obo. ascjames@indiana.edu Selling a clear Galaxy S7 case with a rose gold border. $15, obo. ascjames@indiana.edu Used, gray Nike Elite bookbag. Gently used. $30, obo. ascjames@indiana.edu White & teal Northface bookbag. Gently used. $40, obo. ascjames@indiana.edu
Electronics
32” LCD Samsung TV w/ cable. Almost new. $150. 330166708@qq.com
5,4,3,2 BR. All with W/D, D/W, A/C. Near Campus. Avail. Aug., 2017. 812-327-3238 Large 3 BR house for rent, 2017 School Year, on Campus, $1350. Call 317-532-7309 or
Computers
Canoe for Sale! 17 ft. OldTowne Discovery 174. Minor scratches. $450, obo. ciumm@hotmail.com
PC laptop, high-end Lenovo Y70 Touch. 17.3” screen. $650, obo. drdwhit@iu.edu
313 N Clark. 3 BR, 1 BA. $2100, all utils. incl. iurent.com, 812-360-2628
5 BR house for rent. Avail. Aug. 1203 S. Fess. $1850. 812-340-0133
Appliances
Whirlpool washer! Service model 8525079. Works perfect. $400, neg. rcrooks@indiana.edu
2408 E 4th St. 3 BR, 2 BA. $2100, all utils. incl. iurent.com, 812-360-2628
4 BR, 2nd St. 3 blks to IMU, $550 per. porch, prkg. Aug.17. 925-254-4206
HOUSING $150 sign on bonus! Drive for Lyft. Complete 30 trips in 30 days for the bonus. 812-552-1561 for referral!
Houses
Misc. for Sale
2 Yakima bike carriers. carry bikes w/ front wheel still on $90
8x Optical Zoom Canon Power Shot w/ 4GB SD memory card. $70. asostre@indiana.edu
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Free rides with Lyft. Enter “IULYFTS” for the promo code.
Grant & Third, 1 BR. Share BA and kitchen. No pets. $300 per mo + utils. 812-879-4566
Sublet Condos/Twnhs.
1 BR avail in 5 BR, 3 BA twnhs. on 14th & Indiana. $510/mo. + utils. Guys only. cw94@indiana.edu
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Flexibility with class schedule.
325
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Biweekly pay.
Announcements
Condos & Townhouses
Martin-Logan subwoofer. Dynamo1500. Int. amp. New, $1595. Now, $900. 812-331-4056
M118, V118 Spring 2017 book for sale. Barely used, like new. $70. icsantan@iu.edu
Black Canon Power Shot. 8x Optical Zoom w/4GB SD memory card. $65. asostre@indiana.edu
HP Pro Tablet 608G1 w/ Windows 10, tablet cover + Keyboard - $400. debalbertson@gmail.com
TRANSPORTATION
Touchscreen speaker w/aux hookup. $25. savemill@indiana.edu
Furniture
1997 Toyota Camry XLE. 178.5k mi. All power, sunroof, leather. $2800, obo. buddydeluce@gmail.com 2007 Toyota Corolla, 4 new tires, great cond., 115k mi, gray, $5800. graemecwn@hotmail.com 2012 Volkswagen Passat SE. Excellent condition w/ 52,000 mi. $13,000, neg. wl26@indiana.edu
1 chair w/oak frame + aqua print cushions, & NorticTrack CX work out machine. 812-824-4074
Nissan Cube, 2011 w/new battery and tires. 99,000 mi. $7200. oabdelga@indiana.edu
Queen size mattress w/wooden frame. Almost new. Avail. 1/15. $220. jx23@iu.edu
Real, strong wood dining table + 4 chairs. Dark cherry table w/ ebony legs. $350 fbaskin@iu.edu
Automobiles 05’ Dodge Minivan SXT. 76,700 mi. Seats 7. Well maintained. $3850. 812-825-1925
IU SOL Republic Tracks V8 headphones. $35. asostre@indiana.edu
TI-84 Plus Silver Edition graphing calculator. Pink w/ cover, case & cord. lilgresh@indiana.edu
Textbooks
Current recommended Orgo 1/Orgo 2 loose leaf textbook in binder. $50. jvu@indiana.edu 574-286-6146
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Avail. August: Studio in small, attractive, grad student community. Near Campus. 812-361-8996
Lease 1 BR of 3 BR house. SE neighborhood, no deposit required; $490/mo. For more info. email: lnicotra@indiana.edu
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
Apt. Unfurnished
812.558.2265 THEUrBANSTATioN.CoM 315
The IDS is accepting applications for Advertising Account Executives to start Spring 2017.
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220
live your lifestyle
Rooms/Roommates
Latin Percussion Gen. 2 Professional Bongos w/heavy duty steel stand, $400. amy.j.robinson@att.net
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graduate students receive $25 monthly discount
Instruments Keefer Williams trumpet w/ case, lyre, 3 mouth pieces, valve oil. $100. s.e.mosier1@gmail.com
Two- 5 BR, 3 BA homes from $1900. See our video: cotyrentalservice.com or call: 574.340.1844 or 574.232.4527.
BrAND NEW LuXurY aparTMENTS
Urban STAtioN General Employment
Houses
Motorcycles Suzuki GW250 Motorcycle w/extended factory warranty. $2900. rnourie@indiana.edu
520
ONLINE POSTING: All classified line ads are posted online at idsnews.com/classifieds at no additional charge.
Now Leasing for August 2017
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PAYMENT: All advertising is done on a cash in advance basis unless credit has been established. The IDS accepts Visa, MasterCard, Discover, American Express, cash, check or money order.
Apt. Unfurnished
350
REFUNDS: If you cancel your ad before the final run date, the IDS will refund the difference in price. A minimum of one day will be charged.
COPY ERRORS: The IDS must be notified of errors before 3 p.m. the date of the first publication of your ad. The IDS is only responsible for errors published on the first insertion date. The IDS will rerun your ad 1 day when notified before 3 p.m. of the first insertion date.
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HOUSING ADS: All advertised housing is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act. Refer to idsnews.com for more info.
COPY CHANGES: Ad copy can be changed at no additional charge when the same number of lines are maintained. If the total number of lines changes, a new ad will be started at the first day rate.
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AD ACCEPTANCE: All advertising is subject to approval by the IDS.
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CLASSIFIEDS ADVERTISING POLICIES
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CLASSIFIEDS
Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2017 idsnews.com
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To place an ad: go oline, call 812-855-0763 or stop by Franklin Hall 130 from 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Monday - Friday. Full advertising policies are available online. idsnews.com/classifieds
Bicycles
Nishiki bike for sale. White w/pink & purple accents. Almost new. $175, obo. amwintin@iu.edu
NOW LEASING FOR 2017 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!”