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Freshman dies in car crash From IDS reports
Amanda Ludwig, an 18-year-old IU freshman from Hebron, Ky., and her mother Elaine Ludwig, 59, died in a car accident at about 11:40 a.m. Saturday, according to the Boone County Sheriff ’s Department. Amanda and Elaine were traveling westbound in a Pontiac Grand Prix on I-275, just outside of Cincinnati, according to a BCSD press release. The Pontiac came to a complete stop in the right lane. A semi driver behind them swerved to his left and
avoided a collision, but another semi behind him was unable to avoid the car and ran into the rear of the Pontiac, according to the release. The impact caused the vehicle to burst into flames. Amanda and Elaine died as a result of the impact and fire, but Boone County Deputy Coroner Missy Rittinger said she could not confirm the cause of death, and it is still under investigation. The driver of the semi, Ronnie York, 63, of Greenwood, Ind., was reportedly uninjured. His tractor trailer was hauling general freight, according to the release.
Amanda and Elaine are survived by Jay Ludwig, Amanda’s father, Rittinger said. Because of damage from the impact and fire, a bridge inspector was called in to examine the structure, according to the release. The Boone County Sheriff ’s Office Accident Reconstruction Unit is investigating the collision. If you knew Amanda and would like to talk to us for a memorial piece, send an email to campus@idsnews.com. Suzanne Grossman
Music professor dies in Bloomington From IDS reports
Professor of Music and director of the IU Singing Hoosiers Steve Zegree died Saturday in Bloomington. Zegree was 61 years old, according to a press release from the Jacobs School of Music. Zegree was born May 5, 1953 in Vancouver, Wash., according to the press release. He joined IU’s music program as a faculty member in August 2012, which
is the same year he was inducted into the Downbeat Jazz Education Hall of Fame. He directed the Singing Hoosiers Zegree and the Vocal Jazz Ensemble at the music school, according to the press release. “It’s a huge loss for the Jacobs SEE ZEGREE, PAGE 8
IDS
To save a species By Matt Bloom | aambloom@indiana.edu | @matthew_bloom
In his hands, he cradles a mold of an orangutan skull. The animals he worked with every day at the zoo, the animals he dreamed about as a child, are disappearing. Dr. Robert Shumaker remembers the trip to Borneo. There were more than 200 baby orangutans crammed into cages by the dozen. Watching the doctor with their brown eyes, their long fingers clung to the metal bars. As he stepped between the cages, he realized he was looking at what could be the last generation of orangutans on Earth. He brushed his finger against their tiny hands. That was 15 years ago. Now, through a thin opening in the exhibit window, another orangutan reaches toward him. This one has never seen a rainforest, never climbed a tree outside of the United States. Dr. Robert Shumaker — almost everyone calls him Dr. Rob — places a paper cup full of banana chunks in the open palm. The orangutan tilts the cup into his mouth. “All right, Azy. Ready?” When he walks around the Indianapolis Zoo, he carries himself with a sense of focused urgency. At 51, Dr. Rob is known for his research on the cognitive abilities of orangutans. He’s more than 6 feet tall and wears plaid shirts tucked into khakis. He nevers calls his demonstrations shows. People think less of apes, he believes, when they’re made into a spectacle. Dr. Rob has worked with Azy for more than 30 years. He calls Azy his colleague and his friend. Through his daily demonstrations, he pins his hopes for the future against the threat of extinction by showing people how similar we are to orangutans. The 250-pound orangutan slouches against the wall of glass. Behind him, fire hoses dangle like vines above the concrete floor. His orange-brown fur is thick and long, covering his back and legs, with
matted tassels hanging from his arms. Wide cheek pads frame his dark brown eyes, which scan the room of people. Dr. Rob turns to Azy while attaching a body mic to his collar. “Check, check.” He looks out at the crowd. “Let’s get started.”
MATT BLOOM | IDS
Top Dr. Robert Shumaker-Dr. Rob, 51, looks at Azy, his colleague and friend of more than 30 years, through the window of the learning studio at the Indianapolis Zoo. When it opened last May, the Simon Skjodt International Orangutan Center became the largest research and conservation exhibit of its kind.
* * * His most vivid childhood memory is standing in his sneakers, lunchbox in hand, watching an orangutan at the National Zoo. He was only 5 years old, but he still remembers the large, round face and the small, intense eyes staring back. He saw a humanness there. He wondered what the orangutan was thinking. Ever since that day, he’s wanted to work in a zoo. Dr. Rob first met Azy in 1981, as a high school volunteer in the National Zoo’s Ape House. He made sure the animals were safe and the exhibit was clean. Whenever he got the chance, he held informational classes for zoo visitors. Azy was already a juvenile. His impressive cheek pads hadn’t formed yet. Rambunctious and
COURTESY PHOTOS
Middle Azy points to a flash card of the symbol for apple as a part of Dr. Rob’s research at the National Zoo in Washington, D.C. During the past three decades Dr. Rob has taught several orangutans the symbols for more than a dozen objects, including other orangutans. Bottom Dr. Rob visits Azy at the Great Ape Trust of Des Moines, Iowa. Dr. Rob lived and worked with Azy in Des Moines, Iowa for several years before transferring to the Indianapolis Zoo in 2009.
SEE ORANGUTAN, PAGE 6
Fuller Projects opens interactive 2-part art installation By Sanya Ali siali@indiana.edu | @siali13
Upon entry, the stark white room is divided into two spaces. The left has music and activity; a wall of white balloons obscures view of what happens inside. A dark curtain hides the right side, and no activity is apparent besides the footsteps of other patrons. The latest installation at the Fuller Projects, “Why Ask Y,” opened Friday night. The show by Nelson
Kaufman and Ben Jaggers had two parts: a more traditional gallerytype display on the right and an interactive activity with the artists themselves on the left. Vincent Edwards, coordinator of the Fine Arts workshop down the hall, said he attended the show to get a better idea of what the students he works with do in their studio time. This exhibit, Edwards said, created an entertaining experience for all attending.
“That was a really fun and engaging environment they had created in there,” Edwards said. “It seemed like they had a lot of people’s attention riveted and caught up in the moment nicely.” Senior Anna Goldfarb said she had no experience with the Fuller Projects before but, upon suggestion from a friend in the BFA program, she attended this show. “We went to another art opening tonight and wanted to check out this one out,” Goldfarb said. “I’ve
always wanted to come see inside the school, I always walk by it.” According to Goldfarb, the experience resonated with her because of a memory of the sort of game they played on the interactive side. The challenge the artists posed was for patrons to join in to keep a piece of light plastic in the air by blowing underneath, never touching the piece with their hands. “I always used to play that game SEE FULLER, PAGE 8
“That was a really fun and engaging environment they had created in there. It seemed like they had a lot of people’s attention riveted and caught up in the moment nicely.” Vincent Edwards, coordinator of the Fine Arts workshop down the hall from the Fuller Projects
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Committee to assess education programs
CAMPUS
IU has formed a blue ribbon committee to assess the education programs at Bloomington, Indianapolis and the regional campuses, according to an IU press release. The committee will provide reviews of the
EDITORS: ALISON GRAHAM & SUZANNE GROSSMAN | CAMPUS@IDSNEWS.COM
education programs and will help develop strategies to better prepare education students for the challenges of the field. Dean of the College of Education at Michigan State University Carol Ames will chair the committee.
NICOLE KRASEAN | IDS
Sophomore Andrew Ireland is running as president for the UNIFY for IUSA ticket. IUSA elections will be held April 8 and 9.
UNIFY for IUSA to run on April election ticket By Ashleigh Sherman aesherma@indiana.edu | @aesherma
UNIFY for IUSA is one of three IU Student Association tickets that have informally announced their intention to run in the upcoming IUSA elections, scheduled to take place April 8 and 9.
COURTESY PHOTO
Nathaniel Harbison (left), Benjamin Verdi and Skyler Hutto are newly elected officers of GPSO. Not pictured is Adam Reneker.
GPSO under new leadership By Ashleigh Sherman aesherma@indiana.edu | @aesherma
The IU Graduate and Professional Student Organization, soon to be called the Graduate Professional Student Government, will be under new leadership. GPSO representatives chose new elected officers during a general assembly meeting March 6. The GPSO executive committee comprises four elected officers, four appointed officers and two hired staff. Chosen by GPSO representatives, elected officers include the president, vice president, treasurer and parliamentarian. The GPSO executive committee will nominate applicants for the appointed officer positions. The GPSO general assembly will then approve the nominees. Earning a $1,000 fellowship, the appointed officers include the awards officer,
the benefits officer, the diversity officer and the sustainability officer. Applications for the appointed officer positions are open until March 20. The GPSO executive committee will also select applicants for the hired staff positions. Earning a $12,500 stipend and a fee remission for 12 credit hours per fall and spring semester and six credit hours per summer semester, the hired staff include the community development coordinator and the communications coordinator, a position that will be held by current communications coordinator Jessie Mroz. MEET THE REPRESENTATIVES Benjamin Verdi, president-elect: “Broadly speaking, I want GPSO to continue to lead on-campus sustainability issues. But I also want to shine a brighter light on issues like
sexual violence, particularly CAPS’ currently inadequate level of funding for the counseling of its victims, which IUSA addressed through an admirable resolution that took a lot of courage to author and press for, in addition to using GPSO to help students, through our events, outreach and on-campus, as well as online presence, gain access to the pre-professional resources they need to graduate from IU with jobs, and ultimately a better chance at paying off their loans.” Earning a $12,500 stipend and a fee remission for 12 credit hours per fall and spring semester and six credit hours per summer semester, the president runs the general assembly meetings and executive board meetings, sits on various campus and university meetings and holds 15 hours of office hours each week.
“Broadly speaking, I want GPSO to continue to lead oncampus sustainability issues. But I also want to shine a brighter light on issues like sexual violence.” Benjamin Verdi, GPSO Presidentelect
Skyler Hutto, vice president-elect: “The most important tool any student government officer has is the opportunity to speak with his or her peers. This year, our graduate student committees have been more productive than ever before. All of my efforts next year will be focused on growing that trend by creating better means of communication among graduate students, assembly representatives SEE GPSO, PAGE 3
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Meet the Ticket: UNIFY for IUSA Jack Langston, the ticket’s vice president of congress candidate, said the ticket’s platform, 16 by ’16, addresses four major areas: affordability, safety, student empowerment and social innovation. Langston said he hopes to address affordability by eliminate tuition payments for internship credits and donate executive salaries to a textbook fund. “We’re of the belief that IUSA should be serving the
people,” he said. “So every year, $12,000 to $15,000 of the IUSA budget goes to executive salaries. Our party is in it to impact the campus, not to really pad our pockets.” Plans to tackle safety include expanding IU Health Center hours of operation to Sunday and reintroducing IU SafeRide to work with IU Safety Escort. To address student empowerment, according to the platform, the ticket may expand priority registration status to all veterans and expand free speech zones to the Arboretum. Plans to tackle social innovation include returning alcohol sales to athletic events and introducing meal points to the Indiana Memorial Union. “I’ve done plenty and SEE IUSA, PAGE 3
Poetry reading attracts campus arts community By Bridget Murray bridmurr@indiana.edu @bridget_murray
There was only standing room left in the back room of the Bishop Bar for the Blue Light Reading Series on Saturday night. Students and local spectators crowded the room, attentive to the writer on the stage washed with blue light. Alissa Nutting, one of the featured writers, shared a piece she said was inspired by modern technology changing certain boundaries. She said she had always wanted to perform at the Blue Light Reading Series, organized by the Indiana Review literary magazine. “I’m so honored to be here,” Nutting said. Indiana Memorial Union Board’s Canvas committee co-sponsored the event. Austin Atkinson, director of the Canvas committee, said the series is an influential experience for students wanting to share their art someday. Canvas Assistant Director Mitchell Sigmund said he was thrilled with the audience that evening. “I’m happy that the
Submit to Canvas Any students can submit works to be featured in the IMU Gallery by sending them to canvas@indiana.edu crowd is active,” he said. “It’s always better when an audience is involved.” One audience member, junior Hannah Murray, felt compelled to respond to the readings. She said Nutting’s reading was especially vivid and humorous, allowing the audience to react. “That definitely captures your attention,” she said. Sigmund said the committee is honing in on efforts to collaborate with the broader arts community beyond their own publication, Canvas magazine. “Union Board really wants to promote this sort of collectiveness on campus, especially in the arts community,” he said. Atkinson said the committee is continually expanding their efforts to reach not only a larger group of artists but a larger group of students as well. “We seek to program a diverse variety of events for everyone on campus,” SEE POETRY, PAGE 3
Sunday Worship: 10:30 a.m. at Harmony School, 909 E. Second St. HopePres is a community of broken people, renewed by the grace of Jesus. We want to grow in the messiness of real life, and seek to be hospitable to the cynic and the devout, the joyful and the grieving, the conservative and the liberal, the bored and the burned out. We invite you, wherever you are in your story, to HopePres. Know God. Love People. Renew Our Place. Rev. Dan Herron, Pastor
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The Indiana Daily Student and idsnews.com publish weekdays during fall and spring semesters, except exam periods and University breaks. From May-July, it publishes Monday and Thursday. Part of IU Student Media, the IDS is a self-supporting auxiliary University enterprise. Founded on Feb. 22, 1867, the IDS is chartered by the IU Board of Trustees, with the editor-in-chief as final content authority. The IDS welcomes reader feedback, letters to the editor and online comments. Advertising policies are available on the current rate card. Readers are entitled to single copies. Taking multiple copies may constitute theft of IU property, subject to prosecution. Paid subscriptions are entered through third-class postage (USPS No. 261960) at Bloomington, IN 47405.
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» POETRY
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2
SCOTT TENEFRANCIA | IDS
INTRODUCING TECHNOLOGY Sophomore Avani Kshatriya demos an Oculus Rift on Saturday during the “Techie Women Have More” conference. The two-day conference featured events meant to introduce female students to technology they can use in a future career.
» IUSA
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2 plenty of research over IUSA platforms and platforms of different student governments all across this country,” the ticket’s presidential candidate Andrew Ireland said. “I’ve read every article that the IDS has published since 2001 that’s online about IUSA, and I really believe that this may be the most comprehensive and bold plan that’s ever been put out in the last 15 years.” In recent years, IUSA has faced criticism regarding a lack of student voice. Langston said the ticket aims to increase student voice by filling as many of the more than 60 congressional seats as possible. “We want to make sure every section of campus, whether academic or residential, has the opportunity to voice their opinion,” he said. Langston also said the ticket will make a concerted
effort to address student problems rather than just internal concerns. “You aren’t a leadership body, but a representative body,” Ireland said. “It’s the students’ congress. It’s the students’ association. Whether that’s simply a cultural fix, or actually a systematic fix, through a series of webinars and weekly mailers, I think there are a lot of things you can do.” For the full platform, visit unifyiu.com. MEET THE CANDIDATES Andrew Ireland, presidential candidate. Ireland is a sophomore studying public finance and journalism with a minor in health systems management. Goal: “Expanding education opportunity is my primary concern as a student leader and will continue to be if I am fortunate enough to head IUSA. My administration is, and will continue to be, laser-focused on chipping away at the cost of attendance
and empowering students through education to make responsible financial decisions.” Mariah Smith, vice president of administration candidate. Smith is a sophomore studying policy analysis with a minor in business. Goal: “One core goal of mine is to foster a more inclusive and accepting community through education and actionoriented initiatives. It disappoints me that too often we look at crimes and dangerous situations as simply a fact of life here at IU. No place is perfect, but I know student government can play a more active role in enhancing student safety and enriching campus culture.” Jack Langston, vice president of congress candidate. Langston is a freshman studying finance, entrepreneurship and
computer science. Goal: “My biggest priority is to be sure that our ticket unifies the campus as we aim to accomplish our safety, affordability and sustainability objectives. Personally, I would most like to push through our initiatives to promote a healthy and safe student body, by reevaluating aspects of the on-campus healthcare system, SafeRide service, bystander intervention trainings and more.” Robert Liu, treasurer candidate. Liu is a sophomore studying finance, accounting and mathematics. Goal: “I plan to hold the treasurer’s office to the highest standards of accountability and to build a quality budget that serves as a planning tool featuring outlays, outputs and, most importantly, outcomes, as opposed to simply blocking expenses.” The deadline for tickets to formally announce their intention to run is today.
he said in an email. “We’re anxious to present the student body with some very exciting programs this year.” To achieve this goal, Canvas has expanded their programming and promotional efforts. This includes their continued management of the IMU Gallery, located in the seating area of the IMU Starbucks. Atkinson said most submissions for the Gallery are from various student groups across campus. Sigmund said the collection of submissions bring together the different sectors of the arts community at IU. Any student can submit their work in an email to canvas@indiana.edu to be featured in the Gallery, Atkinson said. Members of the Canvas committee are also on the judging panel for the Limelights Film Festival, programmed by the Union Board Films Committee,
» GPSO
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2 and the GPSG officers.” Earning a $1,000 fellowship, the vice president places GPSO delegates on campus and university committees as well as on GPSO standing and ad hoc committees. Nathaniel Harbison, treasurer-elect: “By successfully developing and maintaining the GPSO’s budget, I will help ensure the organization remains financially healthy so that it can continue serving over 8,000 graduate and professional students. Additionally, I am excited to work closely with the GPSO’s newly elected president, Ben Verdi, to ensure we have all the finances necessary to meet our goals this upcoming year.” Earning a $1,000 fellowship, the treasurer
3 Atkinson said. Sigmund said this collaboration with different sectors of the arts community is a step toward the committee’s mission this semester. “We’ve been really looking to branch out,” he said. Murray said she once shared her work in a similar environment as the Saturday readings. “It was really exciting to be able to present your work like that,” she said. The event at the Bishop creates an especially open environment for the writers and audience, Murray said. She said readings on campus tend to feel more formal, whereas the Blue Light Reading Series was relaxed. “It’s a very different environment,” she said. As an English major with a concentration in creative writing, Murray said she came to see published authors perform and sees the value she can take from their experience. “I think it gives people who want to be creative writers insight,” she said. prepares the annual budget, maintains financial records and provides financial updates. Adam Reneker, parliamentarian-elect: “I am excited to be parliamentarian, because one of the main parts of my job will be to help ensure the efficiency of GPSO ... Over the last five years, I have developed a sense of pride and responsibility for the University. GPSO works hard to help our campus continue to become a better place, and I hope to help the organization become more effective at our job.” Earning a $1,000 fellowship, the parliamentarian takes minutes at general assembly meetings and executive board meetings, conducts the annual membership audit and is responsible for knowing the Robert’s Rules of Order.
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Regional Bigfoot group to camp out
REGION
EDITORS: EMILY ERNSBERGER & HANNAH ALANI | REGION@IDSNEWS.COM
The Indiana Bigfoot Field Researchers Association will be camping April 30-May 4 in the Morgan-Monroe State Forest. According to the Indiana organization’s website, there have been 76 reported sightings
of Bigfoot in the state. Monroe County has seven reported findings since 1979, most recently in 2009. The campout is open to nonmembers of the Indiana Bigfoot Field Researchers Association.
Whole Foods talk continues today From IDS reports
The Bloomington City Plan Commission will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at Bloomington City Hall to discuss plans for a new Whole Foods at College Mall. The plan, introduced by the Indianapolis-based Simon Property Group, looks to redevelop the north portion of the mall currently occupied by Sears. In addition to Whole Foods being added to College Mall, the plan calls for two freestanding restaurants — a Panera Bread located off the Third Street frontage and a BJ’s Restaurant and Brewhouse located on the College Mall Road frontage. The new Whole Foods will be 31,000 square feet and
will be made of concrete and wood cladding on the building’s west façade with a glass storefront. The proposed Panera Bread will be 4,500 square feet and will feature a drive-thru. The BJ’s Restaurant and Brewhouse will be 7,500 square feet. The design for the building will be introduced at today’s meeting after the planning commission raised concerns about the aesthetic fit of the proposed building. The entrances on Third Street and College Mall Road will be modified to increase traffic flow and accommodate the slew of new proprietaries to the supermarket and restaurant chains. Neal Earley
PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY NICOLE KRASEAN I IDS
A pair of newly introduced bills look to put regulations on e-cigarette ingredients and the e-cigarette industry as a whole.
E-cig liquids need regulations By Daniel Metz dsmetz@indiana.edu | @DanielSMetz
Cappuccino, cherry, peach, blueberry, apple, grape and the list goes on. These are just some of the more than 7,000 flavors of e-liquids used in electronic cigarettes. A pair of identical bills, Senate Bill 539 and House Bill 1432, have been introduced to the Indiana General Assembly this legislative session that will add a number of regulations to the e-cigarette industry, specifically focusing on the production and distribution of e-liquids. The bills would require manufacturers of e-liquids to obtain permits from the Indiana Alcohol and Tobacco Commission, limit the ingredients that manufacturers are able to include in e-liquids and establish manufacturing requirements so that all containers are child-proof. Senate Bill 539 passed through the Indiana Senate on Feb. 24 with a vote of 43-6 and has been referred to the House Committee on Pub-
lic Policy. House Bill 1432 passed in the Indiana House of Representatives on Feb. 24 with a vote of 85-9. It has been referred to the Senate Committee on Tax and Fiscal Policy. The e-cigarette industry is relatively new and almost entirely unregulated, and many are claiming the variety of candy and fruit flavors of eliquids make the products more appealing to youth. E-cigarettes use a battery to heat and vaporize liquid in cartridges. E-liquids are the flavored, nicotine-filled substances that are vaporized in e-cigarettes, which users then inhale. According to a study published in August by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 250,000 youth who had never smoked a cigarette used ecigarettes in 2013. Currently, in order to purchase an e-cigarette a person needs to be at least 18 years old, but there are no age restrictions on the purchase of e-liquids. Bridget Cochrane, who
has worked at Circle K convenience store since April 2014, sells cigarettes, e-cigarettes and e-liquids while she works. She doesn’t normally sell to people who appear to be under 18. “No, honestly,” she said, when asked if the sale to underage customers is common. “In order to use liquid you have to have an e-cig.” Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller proposed his own legislation at the beginning of the year in an effort to curb the growing use of e-cigarettes among Indiana’s youth and has voiced his concerns about the effects the unregulated growth of the e-cigarette industry will have on public health. “My goal is to get ahead of the curve unlike what happened with traditional tobacco products, and implement tools to reduce access to youth before we see more kids addicted to nicotine,” Zoeller said in a press release. 2014 was the first year more teens smoked e-cigarettes than traditional ciga-
“My goal is to get ahead of the curve unlike what happened with traditional tobacco products.” Greg Zoeller, Indiana Attorney General
rettes, with approximately 16 percent of high school students having reported using e-cigarettes, according to a study by the National Institute of Drug Abuse. Zoeller’s legislation, which did not gain traction in the General Assembly, would have introduced a number of regulations on the e-cigarette industry. These regulations include requiring e-cigarette shops to be licensed by the Indiana Alcohol and Tobacco Commission, taxing e-cigarettes similarly to traditional tobacco products, including ecigarettes in Indiana’s statewide smoking ban and requiring e-liquid containers to be sold in child-resistant packaging.
Volunteers take out invasive species By Bailey Moser bpmoser@indiana.edu
After 20 years as Natural Resources Manager for the City of Bloomington, Steve Cotter is taking action against one of his toughest competitors yet: invasive plant species in the Griffy Lake Nature Preserve. “I’ve been here 20 years and invasive species have definitely been an issue since before then, but they seem to be spreading more rapidly now and I’m not sure why that is,” Cotter said. “Some people aren’t sure why some plants can be around for a while and not be invasive then all of a sudden something clicks and they become invasive. I think that we are seeing a rapid increase in the rate of spread of some of these species.” Controlling invasive species in the most ecologically
sensitive manner has become a top a priority for Cotter. He said he plans to combat the invasive plant species in order to protect Bloomington’s native plant life with Adopt-an-Acre, a new community program. “The reason they become a problem is because they outcompete some of our native plants,” Cotter said. “These invaders typically don’t have a lot of things that eat them. They shade out the native plants; they take the water and nutrients from the plants and in some cases they have harmful chemicals in their tissues that make it harder for other plants to grow.” The City of Bloomington Parks and Recreation Department is looking for volunteers who will stop invasive plant species growing in the Griffy Lake Nature Preserve with the Adopt-an-Acre program.
As part of the program, volunteers will be trained and wielded by the beginning of April with the proper tools, such as weed wrenches, to clear their assigned plot, Cotter said. They will be required to inspect their plot of land at least once a month. Cotter said he was pleased with the first round of Adopt-an-Acre volunteers. “We’re set for this round, but we plan to recruit again for the fall,” Cotter said. “We wanted to get five and we received 10 applications, so we’re deciding what to do about the difference of the number. We’re excited that there’s that much interest.” One of the Adopt-an-Acre volunteers, Dick Stumpner, said he signed up for the program to take responsibility for his effect on the environment. “Doing something like
“We’re set for this round, but we plan to recruit again for the fall.” Steve Cotter, Resources Manager for the City of Bloomington
this is tied to sustainability, but not just sustainability as it relates to energy matters,” Stumpner said. “These plants have gotten foothold because of human activities and I’ve seen personally what happens when they get out of control.” Residents who wish to assist in the fight against Bloomington’s invasive species but are unable to volunteer for the next Adoptan-Acre program can still help with half the battle by being aware of what these invasive species are, then refraining from planting them, Cotter said.
Thinking About a Career in Healthcare?
Health Programs Fair Tuesday, March 10, 2015 11:00 a.m.–3:00 p.m.
IMU Alumni Hall
Come find out about career choices and educational opportunities related to the healthcare professions.
Find out about volunteer opportunities and student organizations.
For more information Meet with representatives from medical schools and health professions programs from across the country.
Call the Health Professions and Prelaw Center at 812-855-1873 or email hpplc@indiana.edu.
Co-Sponsored by: Applied Health Science, Biology, Biotechnology, Chemistry, Kinesiology, Nursing, Physics, Psychological and Brain Sciences, Sociology, Speech and Hearing Sciences.
Environmental group to create protection area By Annie Garau agarau@indiana.edu | @agarau6
Since 2002, logging in Indiana has increased by 1,000 percent, according to the Indiana Forest Alliance. “In 2002, the Division of Forestry sold a million and a half board feet of lumber from public forests,” Hoosier Forest Watch Coordinator Myke Luurtsema said. Board feet is the unit used to measure timber. It is equal to a 12-inch by 12-inch board of wood that is one inch thick. “In 2004 it was 3.5 million. Now it’s anywhere between 14 and 16 million board feet and it’s just not sustainable,” Luurtsema said. The Indiana Forest Alliance’s Wild Indiana Campaign aims to establish 13 State Wild Areas in seven different state forests. These areas would be off-limits to commercial logging and preserved as wild forests for public recreation. “The campaign has allowed us to have a rallying point,” Luurtsema said. “It’s given people who care about these forests an attainable goal to work towards.” Together, these areas would make up about 36,820 acres, which is 24 percent of the state forests in Indiana. The proposed Wild Area closest to Bloomington is 3,750 acres in the MorganMonroe State Forest Back Country Area. Some of these woods are more than 100 years old and provide a habitat for endangered species such as the Eastern box turtle. The campaign helped create two state bills: House Bill 1580 and Senate Bill 548. The latter was sponsored by Sen. Mark Stoops, D-Bloomington. The bills were not supported by Indiana’s Department of Natural Resources. “The Department of Natural resources did not support the bill,” Pierce said.
How much would be protected? Total 36,820 acres, which is 24 percent of the state forests in Indiana. Near Bloomington 3,750 acres in the Morgan-Monroe State Forest Back Country Area. “That made it really difficult for the bill to make it out of committee. I have done a lot of work in the past with the Indiana Forest Alliance. I think it’s important work and I plan on continuing to work with them on new bills in the future.” “The Indiana Forest Alliance is now proposing to prohibit forestry practices on 36,000-plus acres that have a long history of resource management, protection, and conservation,” DNR Director Cameron Clark said in a letter to the IFA. “Adopting such an extreme measure would negatively impact both the economic and wildlife habitat values of this land.” Luurtsema said the DNR would say that counties benefit from the logging, “but the most that any of these counties get is around $70,000 which isn’t a lot for a county and doesn’t cover the cost of repairing and maintaining county roads which were not built to hold these extremely heavy logging trucks.” Neither of the bills were ever heard in either house, so they are now effectively dead. IU senior Aaron Day, an environmental management student, said he believes this is one example of the problems with our government’s priorities. Campaigners refuse to give up. “We’re going to continue building a ground swell of support for these projects,” Luurtsema said. “Any sort of proactive steps towards environmental protection are going to be an uphill battle in Indiana. Grassroots pressure is what it’s going to take to get anything done.”
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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | M O N D AY, M A R C H 9 , 2 0 1 5 | I D S N E W S . C O M
PHOTO COURTESY OF THE INDIANAPOLIS ZOO
At the Simon Skjodt International Orangutan Center in Indianapolis, Azy uses a touch screen during his demonstrations with Dr. Rob.
» ORANGUTAN
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 mischievous, he always wanted to play and wrestle with the other apes. Dr. Rob never imagined how they would grow up together, how his fascination with Azy would turn into his life’s work. In 1992, as part of his graduate studies, Rob helped design an exhibit called the Think Tank. The exhibit tested the cognitive and toolmaking abilities of the zoo’s orangutans. At the Think Tank, the apes learned to combine biscuits with water to make gruel and to use rods to reach grapes from long distances. Dr. Rob used flash cards and computer monitors to teach orangutans to associate abstract symbols with things and people — a rudimentary language, just for them. Eventually, Dr. Rob opened the demonstrations to the public. He would ask Azy to look at a picture of an object and select the correct symbol for it, right in front of a crowd. Azy and the other orangutans learned the symbols for apple, banana, Dr. Rob and Azy. Dr. Rob noticed how Azy’s younger sister Indah always picked up numbers faster than he did. It was around then when Dr. Rob met Anne, a student volunteer who helped narrate the elephant demonstrations. Anne started making excuses to help out at the
Communicating with orangutans Dr. Rob created a language he uses to communicate with the orangutans at the Indianapolis Zoo. There are more than a dozen symbols the apes can recognize. Below are some symbols and their translations.
APPLE
GRAPE
CARROT
CHOW
BANANA
CUP
BAG
POPCORN
RAISIN
YES
!
Ape House. In her mind, Rob was a different class of keeper. He stopped carrying a wallet, because the orangutans kept fishing it out. He even made sure the zookeepers surprised the apes with cakes on their birthdays. Anne always joked Indah was the “other woman” in Rob’s life. She knew Indah was in love with him when she saw her looking at Rob with her hands clasped together, head tilted to the side like a hopeful romantic. “All dreamy-eyed,” Anne said. As the Think Tank’s popularity grew, Azy and Indah became something of celebrities. Their names were in the paper. Indah’s face was on the cover of Smithsonian magazine. In 2000, Dr. Rob and Anne got married. On his bookshelf, he put a picture of Anne from their wedding day next to a vintage Dr. Zaius action figure from “Planet of the Apes.” After almost two decades at the National Zoo, Dr. Rob moved to Des Moines, Iowa, where he joined the Great Ape Trust. With the support of the National Zoo’s primate curator, Dr. Rob brought Azy and Indah with him. But within six weeks of moving to Iowa, Indah developed an intestinal infection. One night, Azy watched as Dr. Rob and staff carried an unconscious Indah from the exhibit. Even with the emergency surgery, Dr. Rob knew it was too late. “When we lost her, we lost 50 percent of everything,” he said. She was 24. Dr. Rob knew he and Azy were grieving together. After Indah’s death, Azy sought out the company of others almost constantly. First thing each morning, he waited for Dr. Rob and the other keepers near the entrance of the exhibit. They sat near each other without speaking. Through mesh netting, they worked on Dr. Rob’s research or held hands. But mostly, they sat together on the floor of Azy’s living area and stared. All Azy wanted was his company. Dr. Rob couldn’t be sure Azy understood that Indah died. “But he certainly understood that she was gone,” he said. In 2009, Dr. Rob moved to Indianapolis to help open the Simon Skjodt International Orangutan Center. Dr. Rob’s role as the vice president of conservation and life sciences put him in charge of the zoo’s many animal and conservation departments, but his primary research remains with the orangutans. Dr. Rob and conserva-
tionists at the Indianapolis Zoo set out to make Indianapolis the most orangutan-literate community in the world.
Orangutans in the wild SOUTH CHINA SEA
* * * After arriving in Indianapolis, he hung a photo on the wall next to his new desk — Indah’s hand and his own, clasped together, tight. All Dr. Rob wants is to make people care more about orangutans as complex creatures that deserve our respect. Especially in a world that’s working against them. Development of palm oil plantations in the Southeast Asian islands of Borneo and Sumatra is destroying the wild orangutan’s habitat. Dr. Rob remembers the machines cutting through the rainforest like weed whackers, the severed tree trunks clogging the rivers. He knows if nobody does anything, orangutans will die out in 10 to 20 years. On his trip to Borneo in 2000, Dr. Rob watched local women at the rehabilitation center carry the babies from cage to cage. They fed them, they held them. When the orangutans matured, the center’s staff tried releasing them back into the wild. It worked for a few, but many orangutans needed to be taught to climb trees. Those that could be released trusted humans and became easy targets for hunters and farmers. For every baby he saw in the center, Dr. Rob guessed at least a mother and three other babies had died. Loggers and palm oil plantation owners have destroyed more than half of the orangutan’s natural environment in the past two decades. He looked at the infants and thought of the orangutans in zoos back home. They were safe. After opening in May 2014, the Indianapolis Zoo’s Orangutan Center became the largest of its kind. Architects designed it to give the orangutans choices within the exhibit. Hidden passageways connect the atrium to outdoor yards and the Hutan Trail, an aerial rope line 85 feet above the ground without a net. As visitors walk through the exhibit, a few swipe their credit cards at conservation stations that allow them to symbolically plant a tree in Borneo. Dr. Rob helped start a tree-planting project in conjunction with the Kutai National Park. The zoo spent more than $10,000 to restore orangutan habitats, which would plant more than 1,000 trees. More trees mean more homes for the orangutans. Some have labeled the plight of orangutans the worst conservation failure of our time. During the past decade, conservationists have increasingly looked to zoos and to people like Dr. Rob to rescue the species from extinction.
Philippines
CELEBES SEA
BORNEO SUMATRA
Indonesia Papua New Guinea
SUMATRA AND BORNEO Development of palm oil plantations has dwindled the wild orangutan’s natural habitat by more than half. Orangutans are the most arboreal of the great apes, meaning they need trees to survive. The rainforests of the Southeast Asian islands of Borneo and Sumatra are the last places orangutans live in the wild. “He’s very confident,” Dr. Rob says to the audience during his demonstration. “He can use photographs and drawings to identify objects.” In today’s case, he tests Azy’s ability to recognize and tap a symbol for the word “cup.” He presses the space bar on his laptop. A dozen symbols flash onto Azy’s touch screen panel, his eyes darting between each one. Some are squares. Some are lines or squiggles, all a part of the symbolic language Dr. Rob developed. Azy taps a circle with a dot in the center. “Good, good, good!” Another set of symbols appear on Azy’s screen. He motions toward the circle with a dot in the middle, but hits the wrong one. Buzz. No treat. Azy tries again, but the same thing happens. “Hold on, hold on,” Dr. Rob says, as Azy tries another time. “His hair is in the way. Give me your hand, Azy.” The audience chuckles. Dr. Rob grabs Azy’s palm and brushes his soft hair away from his fingers. Orangutan hands feel like human hands. Some are rougher, some are smoother. Every orangutan has a unique fingerprint. They don’t like to be dirty or touched by strangers. They let only their friends touch them. “We’ll have to trim that later,” Dr. Rob says, letting go. Orangutan fingers are twice as long as a human’s. Just one of their fingers can support the entire weight of their bodies. Male orangutan arms stretch nine feet from fingertip to fingertip, which is why wild orangutans hardly touch the ground. They’re climbers. “Good progress today,” Dr. Rob says. “Alright, bud.” It’s a busy Wednesday afternoon, and children are in awe of Azy as he recognizes symbol after symbol. They sit on the floor while
MATT BLOOM | IDS
Dr. Robert Shumaker and his family, Anne (from left), Carly, William and Rob. At their home in Indianapolis, they have rescued greyhounds and many other animals. “Rob always says, ‘Give me the dog that no one else wants,” Anne said. “They always end up being the best dogs.”
conservationist Paul Grayson stands nearby. “We want people to understand that the loss of orangutans would be like losing one of our closest friends,” said Grayson, the zoo’s senior vice president of conservation and science. Grayson’s phone rings. “Hello?” His wife is on the other end. She is bringing their grandsons to the exhibit. “Great,” he says. “I’ll be here.” Grayson tucks his phone in his pocket as more school groups watch the presentation. Some of the children yell, “Azy!” Huh, Grayson thinks to himself. They remembered his name. * * * Dr. Rob closes his laptop as the audience disperses. The school groups go on to the next exhibit, to the elephants or the dolphins. Three screens above Azy play footage of wild orangutans swinging from branch to branch. The rainforest looks lush and peaceful. Dr. Rob wonders if it will work. Will the exhibit make people care? Will he see the extinction of orangutans, even after all he’s done? Sometimes he can’t help
but bring his work home with him. One time Anne bought a VHS tape of “George of he Jungle from a garage sale. “No child of mine will watch this,” he said, opening the lid of a trashcan. He broke the tape in two and threw it away. Anne and Dr. Rob have two children: Carly, 9, and William, 13. Dr. Rob fears his two children will grow up to a world without orangutans. He knows if conservation efforts don’t improve, wild orangutans will die out within Carly’s and William’s lifetimes. Azy is 37, with a life expectancy of about another 15 years. Dr. Rob is about the same distance from retirement. In those next 15 years, Dr. Rob believes, the future of the orangutans will be decided. Azy scoots away from the window. Dr. Rob unclips his body mic. He doesn’t know anyone who has worked with one orangutan for 30 years, or even 20. “It’s not something you can really talk about with other people.” As far as he knows, their friendship is the first of its kind. He has to believe it won’t be the last.
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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | M O N D AY, M A R C H 9 , 2 0 1 5 | I D S N E W S . C O M
OPINION
EDITORS: NATALIE ROWTHORN & MADISON HOGAN | OPINION@IDSNEWS.COM
Lady burns own cash stash in oven Be careful where you stash your drug money, folks. Hao Bin, a woman in China, stashed $20,000 worth of staff wages in a woodburning stove before accidentally setting it aflame, according to the Mirror.
EDITORIAL BOARD
Bin, 35, hid the money that was meant to pay workers for a construction project but forgot it was there when she tried to make tea the next morning. The Bank of China would not replace it.
QUE SARAH SARAH
Gender imbalance
ILLUSTRATION BY GRIFFIN LEEDS | IDS
A worthwhile investment WE SAY: Pricier rents are painful, but needed As college students, we know all too well the struggle of paying tuition, room and board and meal plans at a Big Ten university. Our complaints have made several top Yaks. It’s expensive to go to college — many would say it’s too expensive. Yet, prices continue rising around the University, costing students more of their hard-earned or loaned dollars. Recently, the Board of Trustees, IU’s governing body, raised on-campus room and board rates for the 2015-2016 academic year. And — surprise! — they’re increasing. Here at IU-Bloomington, we have roughly 12,600 students living in residence halls or apartment housing. The most common room and board package, described as a “standard” rate with a meal plan, costs $9,493. Next year, it will increase by 3.2 percent, or $304. The standard meal plan will also increase 1.6 percent, or $51, raising the overall price to $3,250. The Editorial Board believes it’s important for students to know where
their money is going toward and for what it is being used. It’s important to remember RPS is an auxiliary department of the University, meaning it is under direction from the Board of Trustees, but is generally responsible for paying for projects it undergoes. This is important because it means RPS is responsible for raising its rates in order to invest in future projects, such as renovating Read Residence Center, and to pay off past projects, such as Rose Residence Center. Pair this with the fact that the University has a goal to renovate all residence halls by 2020 — in merely five years — and you have a recipe for consistently raising rates. With these facts in mind, it’s significantly easier to view these room costs as investments in the future of the University and the campus. Without raising the costs, it would be significantly harder — if not impossible — to update and fix what needs to be fixed in our residence halls. IU also remains one of the less expensive places to live in the Big Ten,
according to a data comparison made by Purdue University. The University of Michigan is the most expensive university on the list, with a double room with a meal plan costing $10,050. IU, by comparison, sits at No. 7 on the list costing $9,149 as of 2013. Now, would the Editorial Board advocate for a plan that would allow renovations without passing the cost onto students who already can barely afford University housing? Of course. However, it’s clear IU isn’t raising the cost to just squeeze more money out of the masses. We, as students, need to view these costs as investments in the future of the University we all love and adore so much. It is simply not possible to make money without spending money, and if IU wants to continue to attract the best and brightest students in the world, it needs to continue progressing in the world marketplace. For $304 a year, we think that’s a worthwhile investment.
MICHAEL’S MARGINS
U.S. involvement in fascist Ukraine Despite a lack of coherent reporting out of Ukraine, there is mounting evidence of the United States’ involvement behind the recent shifts of power in the country. On Feb. 4, 2014, a recording of a phone conversation between Victoria Nuland, assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian Affairs of the U.S. State Department, and U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Geoffrey Pyatt was published on YouTube. In the recorded call, Nuland and Pyatt discuss preferential candidates in opposition to European Union negotiations. Nuland summarizes her argument with, “Fuck the EU.” Via a BBC transcript, the following is an exchange concerning who may be the best potential candidate to move into the political spotlight, despite also being problematic. Pyatt: The problem is going to be (Svoboda Party Leader Oleh) Tyahnybok and his guys, and I’m sure that’s part of what (President Viktor) Yanukovych is calculating on all this. Nuland: *Breaks in* I think Yats (Ukrainian
Prime Minister Arseniy Yatseniuk) is the guy who’s got the economic experience, the governing experience. Nuland has more or less brushed the alleged bugging of her call aside, saying it was “pretty impressive tradecraft,” Reuters reported. While the State Department was quick to pin the leak as a “new low in Russian tradecraft,” U.S. officials refused to confirm or deny the tape’s authenticity. But state department spokeswoman Jan Psaki said, “I didn’t say it was inauthentic.” The political chess pieces, Tyahnybok and Prime Minister Yatseniuk, to whom Pyatt and Nuland refer to here, are none other than the leaders of the Ukrainian ultra-nationalist political party, Svoboda. Loosely associated with Stepan Bandera’s Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists formed pre-World War II, Svoboda has been charged as being racist, xenophobic, anti-Semitic and downright fascist. Of course, they reject Nazism because their leader Bandera was arrested by Nazis. In 2005, Tyahnybok came under fire after an
open letter to the Ukrainian Parliamentry urging an end to “organized Jewry.” A year earlier, he had been removed from President Viktor Yushchenko’s parliamentary faction for a speech calling for Ukrainians to fight against a “Muscovite-Jewish mafia.” The United Kingdom’s Channel 4 News reported last year that the World Jewish Congress called on the EU to consider banning the then-newly appointed Deputy Prime Minister Oleksandr Sych, who is a member of the Svoboda party. In a May 2014 conference titled “Ukraine: Thinking Together,” co-hosted by the New Republic, Ambassador Pyatt was prompted by a mentioning of the Holocaust to refute any association of fascism to the Ukraine government. “All this stuff about fascists and pogroms is laughable,” Pyatt said. “There has not been a wave of anti-Semitic activities in Ukraine since the change in government.” The public dissent in Ukraine began to boil over after “a sudden decision by President Viktor Yanukovich on November 21 [2013]
Michael Homan is a senior in journalism.
to walk away from a tradeand-political agreement with the EU and revive trade with Ukraine’s old Soviet master,” according to Reuters. Nuland’s dismissal of the European Union may have to do with tensions between the EU and the U.S. in regards to the union’s cooperation with Russia. This tension builds while Russia continues to point the finger at America. Those supporting the Svoboda party are vehemently anti-Russian, as well as claiming to be antiNazi. They are undeniably “pro-Ukrainian.” It seems the people of Ukraine are no more than a geopolitical bargaining chip between Russia and the U.S. But for what? Why do both of these governments insist the other is responsible for interventionism? Why is so little truth making its way into the public sphere? michoman@indiana.edu
LETTER TO THE EDITOR POLICY The IDS encourages and accepts letters to be printed daily from IU students, faculty and staff and the public. Letters should not exceed 350 words and may be edited for length and style. Submissions must include the person’s name, address and telephone number for verification.
Letters without those requirements will not be considered for publication. Letters can be mailed or dropped off at the IDS, 120 Ernie Pyle Hall, 940 E. Seventh St., Bloomington, Ind., 47405. Submissions can also be sent via e-mail to letters@idsnews. com. Questions can be directed to the IDS at 855-0760.
Indiana Daily Student, Est. 1867 Website: idsnews.com The opinions expressed by the editorial board do not necessarily represent the opinions of the IDS news staff, student body, faculty or staff members or the Board of Trustees. The editorial board comprises columnists contributing to the Opinion page and the Opinion editors.
The myth that women are moodier than men is a concept that’s been passed down generation to generation as one flower in a bouquet of gender stereotypes as resilient as they are pervasive and damaging. Tons of literature and analysis exists on the subject, but a column written by CNN’s Julie Holland on Friday throws the matter into sharp, modern relief. According to Holland’s column, Americans are supremely overmedicated: we comprise 5 percent of the world’s population, yet we take half its pills and nearly 80 percent of its painkillers. Even more distressing is the issue’s heavy gender imbalance: 25 percent of American women are taking antidepressants, compared to 10 percent of the nation as a whole. In analyzing this data, Holland makes reference to a phenomenon called “cosmetic psychopharmacology,” or the establishment of a new standard for women’s behavior as relaxed and rational. That implication in itself is problematic due to its assumption that women are naturally anything but the above traits. Where Holland misses the mark entirely is in her assertion that women are moodier than men and draw a sort of natural power from their mood swings. She links extreme emotional literacy to an evolutionary survival mechanism. A study done in 1998 by four psychologists from various American universities disproved this matter almost entirely; their data revealed a slight difference, but it was hardly statistically significant. Therefore, they concluded men and women manifest drastic emotional differences because their genders are deeply influenced by the socially perpetuated stereotype. In other words, they’re visibly different only because they’re told they are.
Sarah Kissel is a sophomore in English literature.
Mood — like gender itself — is performative, and shaped nearly completely by assumption. What, then, accounts for the dramatic difference in medication, specifically of mood controllers? For Holland, it points to a basic insecurity about the femininity of extreme emotion. According to her, women are dramatically more empathetic and sensitive than men, which is disdained in the workplace. So those who seek to “have it all” find they must chemically induce a “masculine,” emotionally-deadened state to earn colleague’s respect and trust. However, the truth resists simplicity. The psychological experience described above may be a reality for some, but it too finds its roots in social construct. Nine out of 10 pharmaceutical companies spend more on marketing than on research and development, undoubtedly targeting the cracks of female insecurity regarding emotion and apply the hammer of advertising until that uncertainty splits into the staggering data we see. Holland is well-intentioned in underscoring the gendered nature of overmedication in America, but her analysis fails to fully assess the underlying motivations of that discrepancy. Sure, men and women handle emotions differently, but it’s incorrect and subtly dangerous to assume that difference is inherent. When it comes to performative characteristics, we are what we learn, so err on the side of influence and assume it’s society talking before perpetuating the stereotypes that threaten to undo us. sbkissel@indiana.edu
WHIZZLES AND BANGS
You do you, and dance The Internet and I have a love/hate relationship. I love having access to endless amounts of information with the click of a mouse; it makes those research papers I put off so much easier. But on the downside, the Internet is accessible to everyone, and there is a veil that appears, separating people from each other with anonymous usernames. The veil of anonymity makes it possible for people to attack each other with words and images without much consequence. Though much of this personal attacking is illegal, the unveiling process that is finding an anonymous user’s real name can be quite the to-do, and oftentimes nothing is done about these attacks. Recently, a 4chan user posted two photos of a man to the anonymous message board. One photo showed a man dancing and having a good time. The next photo showed the man looking dejected and downtrodden. The message attached to the photos said, “Spotted this specimen trying to dance the other week. He stopped when he saw us laughing.” I’ve never seen something more heartbreaking. I found myself crying because I felt so much pain that this man should be shamed in such a way and made to feel bad about himself. The man in the photos is overweight and the individual who posted the photo is body-shaming him. Nothing about that is okay. It is not any person’s place to make commentary about another person’s body, especially a complete stranger. It’s impossible to know what that person has gone through and what has brought him to this point in his life, and it is not anyone’s job to make him feel bad about his body. The person who posted those pictures not only robbed
Tracy Johnson is a senior in English.
the man of an enjoyable experience making him feel ashamed, but they broadcast it on the Internet where everyone and their mother can see it. They made the shaming experience public and took away the man’s privacy. But one woman, Cassandra Fairbanks, came across the photos and, being a decent human being, started a Twitter movement to find the man in the photos using the hashtag #finddancingman. The search picked up supporters and gained force. People everywhere joined in the search and sent the man love and support and invited him to the best dance party ever. Thousands of people got behind the #finddancingman movement to find the man and give him the experience of a lifetime, just to show him love and support and to not be afraid to have fun and dance it out because of his body. Fairbanks’ search paid off — she found the dancing man, and the giant dance party is happening. And celebrities such as Pharrell Williams, Moby and Andrew WK have all said that they want to perform at the party. When I first heard this story, I was sickened and heartbroken. But after seeing how much outpouring love and support that has been directed toward the dancing man, I have hope. I have hope that things are changing and people are learning to love themselves and others. With each other’s the support, we can all learn body image is not nearly as important as busting a move and filling every single breath with as much life as possible. johnstra@indiana.edu
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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | M O N D AY, M A R C H 9 , 2 0 1 5 | I D S N E W S . C O M
BASEBALL
IU goes 4-0 in Classic, beats Ball State 16-1 By Andrew Vailliencourt availlie@indiana.edu | @AndrewVcourt
Despite not having its ace, Scott Effross, this past weekend, IU returned to Bloomington with a doubled win total. IU (8-4) swept its fourgame series in the Snowbird Baseball Classic in Florida by defeating Villanova, Dartmouth, Saint Joseph’s and Ball State. “We were pretty fundamental all the way around,” IU Coach Chris Lemonis said. “We had some great starts and timely hits. I’d like to defend a little better, but we’re a work in progress.” Starting pitching led the way over the weekend, as IU’s four starters allowed seven earned runs in 22.2 innings of work. Junior Caleb Baragar and sophomore Jake Kelzer each didn’t allow a run. “They were all great,” Lemonis said. “(Evan) Bell was very good, Christian Morris was really sharp early and Baragar and Kelzer were lights out.” On Friday the Hoosiers played both Villanova and Dartmouth. It took a late comeback with hits from senior second baseman Casey Rodrigue to give IU a 4-3 win against Villanova, while a seven-run second inning sparked an 8-6 win against Dartmouth. Senior Luke Harrison picked up the save, one of two he got during the weekend. Senior Ryan Halstead did not close this weekend, but did pitch two scoreless innings. Lemonis said the idea was to keep Halstead fresh. He
» ZEGREE
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
School and for the University as a whole,” IU spokesman Mark Land said. “We join all of our colleagues around the University and around
said he feels like he has three closers with Halstead, Harrison and sophomore Thomas Belcher. “We got all three guys closing and setting up and everything else,” Lemonis said. “I’m trying not to have a ton of ego back there because all three are vital to our success.” Harrison earned his second save Saturday, when IU beat Saint Joseph’s 3-2 behind Baragar’s first start as a Hoosier, a no decision. The transfer from Jackson Community College allowed just two hits and no runs. “He went right at them, he didn’t show any signs of nerves or anything,” Lemonis said. “He just pounded the strike zone. He’s got really good stuff, maybe as good as any on the team, and when he throws a ton of strikes like that it’s hard to beat him.” Baragar, who will be the team’s fourth starter once midweek games begin, said he feels ready to contribute. “It was pretty cool, I was excited and a little nervous too,” Baragar said. “I was just happy to get the opportunity. The hitters are a little bit smarter (in Division I), that’s for sure. The game is a bit quicker too, so I had to adjust to the game speed.” The weekend finale was over quickly as IU rolled to a 16-1 victory against Ball State. The Hoosier offense collected 17 hits, while 18 different players played. Fourteen of the 16 hitters got hits. “We’ve just been seeing the ball better,” sophomore outfielder Craig Dedelow said. campus mourning his death and send all our very best thoughts out to his family, his friends and his students.” Zegree is survived by his wife, Laurie Hofmann, his daughter, Sarah Zegree and his son, Nat Zegree.
IU (8-4) SNOWBIRD CLASSIC Friday Villanova, 4-3 Friday Dartmouth, 8-6 Saturday St. Joseph’s, 3-2 Sunday Ball State, 16-1 “We’re not swinging at balls in the dirt. We’re looking for a pitch to hit and hitting it.” One of the bench players who saw action was freshman outfielder Chris Lowe. He got his first hit and RBI in his first career at bat Saturday and picked up a hit and his second RBI in as many at bats Sunday. Another bench player who made an impact was freshman infielder Colby Stratten, who picked up his first career hit, a three-run triple. Dedelow, Rodrigue, freshman outfielder Logan Sowers and sophomore infielder Austin Cangelosi all hit home runs over the weekend. “It’s always good to come home after winning, and especially after a sweep,” Dedelow said. “It gives us a little bit more confidence going into our first home game against Eastern Michigan.” Dedelow leads the team in batting average at .356 while Rodrigue isn’t far behind at .354. The Hoosiers will be at home for the first time Tuesday against Eastern Michigan. “It should be nice. It’ll be a real atmosphere, playing in front of a bunch of people instead of just our friends and family,” Baragar said. “It’ll be nice to have some students out there and some local supporters. It’ll be good for our team.” The family asks that gifts be given to the Steve Zegree Vocal Jazz Scholarship fund. Funds can be made out to the IU Foundation and mailed to P.O. Box 500, Bloomington, IN 47402. Storme Dayhuff
ECHO LU | IDS
The Fuller Project hosts an exhibition called “Why Ask Y?” showing works by Sculpture BFA Candidate Nelson Kaufman and Ben Jaggers on March 6. The Fuller Projects were established in 2002 by IU School of Fine Arts students.
» FULLER
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 as a kid, where you have to blow that thing in the air, so that was fun to see,” Goldfarb said. “I liked it, the ‘nohands’ approach.” Patrons were able to decide which room they visited first, so the experience was greatly shaped by where they began their journey. Edwards said he began his night on the quiet side then switched over to the interactive portion. “The other side, the second room, was interesting in how completely still it was,” Edwards said. “We went in that room first and they created a greater sense of mystery for what might be in the first room because there was so much motion, and it was fun to imagine what would be going before we saw it.” Edwards said the juxtaposition of the two rooms made the show what it was: an unexpected but enjoyable night.
“That’s what makes the entire show work nicely,” Edwards said. “It is fun to experience both things, but I’m glad I got to imagine what was going on in the louder room before I actually entered it.” Shan Gao, a recent IU graduate and friend of the Kaufman’s, said she came in with no idea of what to expect. “I know he’s a sculpture major, but the definition of sculpture — I still have the traditional description of what a sculpture is,” Gao said. “From his description, there’s more to it. I’m just here to check it out.” Gao said she was a little lost because of the more abstract idea of what the sculpture could be, but she hoped to gain insight by speaking with Kaufman after the show. “I kind of want to talk to Nelson about what was the idea behind it, and after talking to him, I’ll have a better idea,” Gao said. “I don’t
want to just walk out without knowing what I watched.” Edwards said the group of BFA exhibits, especially those chosen to display at the Fuller Projects, draws inspiration from a new perspective growing in the Henry Radford School of Fine Arts. “It seems like about half of them are performancebased,” Edwards said. “This particular group of sculpture BFA’s has been working a lot with the visiting professor to do more interactive work that engages people.” The Fuller Projects offer more of a performative venue for non-traditional art, Edwards said. This is an objective he believes the space has delivered on with many of its displays this year. “This particular space is really aimed at pieces that only happen as a performance one night,” Edwards said. “It’s not necessarily how the space is always used, but it’s how it functions best.”
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TROY WILLIAMS MS
YOGI FERRELL YOG
5.2
55.9
shots made per game.
FG%
0.1
40.0
3-pointers made per game.
3P%
minutes played this season out of 1,240 ,240 total.
785
assists this season in the 29 games Williams played. ayed. He had average of 2.0 per game.
57 60
offensive rebounds with an average of 2.1 per game.
145 defensive sive rebounds unds with an average erage of 5.0 per er game.
3.3
84.9
BREAK DOWN OF A BREAK DOWN
free throws made per game.
FT%
shots made per game.
FG%
2.6 71.7
5.2
44.1
free throws made per game.
FT%
2.4
42.0
3-pointers made per game.
3P%
played out of 1,080 minutes 1,240 total. in the 31 games 155 assists Ferrell played. He had average of 5.0 per game.
20
87
offensive ensiv rebounds reboun with an average of 0.6 per game.
defensive rebounds with an average of 2.8 per game.
By Anna Boone | anmboone@indiana.edu | @annamarieboone
IU finished its season Saturday with a loss against Michigan State, making its overall record 19-12 and 9-9 in the Big Ten. Here’s an in-depth look at the Hoosiers’ season through the lens of statistics.
JAMES BLACKMON JR. 42.6 FG%
82.1 FT%
38.5 3P%
5.4 shots made per game.
COLLIN HARTMAN
2.6 free throws made per game.
MAX HOETZEL
EMMITT HOLT
48.1 3P% 26 made of 54 attempted
36.0 3P% 9 made of 25 attempted
93 rebounds Average of 3.2 per game
70.0 FT% 14 made of 20 attempted
70 rebounds 29 offensive rebounds 41 defensive rebounds
0.4 3-pointers made per game.
ROBERT JOHNSON
played this 903 minutes season out of 1,240 total. this season in the 30 42 assists games Blackmon played. He had average of 1.4 per game.
43
117
offensive rebounds with an average of 1.4 per game.
defensive rebounds with an average of 3.9 per game.
STANFORD ROBINSON
NICK ZEISLOFT
43.9 FG% 104 made of 237 attempted
30.4 FG% 28 made of 92 attempted
46.2 3P% 61 made of 132 attempted
39.7 3P% 48 made of 121 attempted
36 assists Average of 1.2 per game
49.0 FG% 73 made of 149 attempted
HANNER MOSQUERA-PEREA 103 rebounds Average of 4.3 per game 32 blocked shots Average of 1.3 per game
Along with Ferrell, Williams and Blackmon, these were the seven other players that were a part of IU Coach Tom Crean’s rotation. Johnson was a regular starter while MosqueraPerea and Hartman both started at center for IU throughout the season. Zeisloft also started at the beginning of the season in place of the suspended Williams.
The score of every game IU played against opposing teams 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 MVSU
TSU
SMU Lamar EWU UNCG Pitt
SCHEDULE Nov. 14 Nov. 17 Nov. 20 Nov. 22 Nov. 24 Nov. 28 Dec. 2 Dec. 6 Dec. 9 Dec. 13 Dec. 20 Dec. 22 Dec. 27 Dec. 31 Jan. 5 Jan. 10 Jan. 13 Jan. 18 Jan. 22 Jan. 25 Jan. 28 Jan. 31 Feb. 3 Feb. 8 Feb. 11 Feb. 15 Feb. 19 Feb. 22 Feb. 25 March 3 March 7
vs. Mississippi Valley State vs. Texas Southern vs. SMU vs. Lamar vs. Eastern Washington vs. UNCG vs. Pittsburg vs. Savannah State vs. Louisville vs. Grand Canyon vs. Butler vs. New Orleans vs. Georgetown at Nebraska at Michigan State vs. Ohio State vs. Penn State at Illinois vs. Maryland at Ohio State at Purdue vs. Rutgers at Wisconsin vs. Michigan at Maryland vs. Minnesota vs. Purdue at Rutgers at Northwestern vs. Iowa vs. Michigan State
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IU falls to Michigan State 74-72 in the last game of the regular season 70 points 60 50 40 30 20
Michigan State’s score progression
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Needing a win to help secure a berth in the NCAA Tournament, IU lost 74-72 against Michigan State in its final game of the regular season. The Hoosiers trailed 67-56 with 3:50 remaining in the game but fought back to trail by two with four seconds left. IU junior guard Yogi Ferrell drew a foul and had a chance to tie the game. Ferrell made the first free throw, but missed the second that would have tied the game.
25 mins
IU’s score progression
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Final
More on the game, page 10 Read more about IU’s heartbreaking loss against Michigan State. Michigan State Coach Tom Izzo defended IU Coach Tom Crean in his post game press conference, calling him one of the best coaches in the country. IU now plays Northwestern on Thursday in the first round of the Big Ten Tournament.
PHOTOS BY BEN MIKESELL | IDS
Top Junior guard Nick Zeisloft crashes to the floor after attempting a rebound with freshman forward Emmitt Holt, during IU’s game against Michigan State on Saturday at Assembly Hall. Left Holt reaches for the ball during IU’s final game of the regular season against Michigan State.
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Despite exciting game, questions loom for IU In the most exciting game IU has played all season, the Hoosiers lost to Michigan State, 74-72. But, the implications of Saturday’s game go well beyond one more tick in the loss column. Right now, the biggest concern for IU fans is that their team failed to pick up their 20th win of the season and 10th conference win in three tries. The question on everyone’s minds: will it make the tournament? IU is on the bubble for the NCAA Tournament and a 10-8 conference record looks a lot better than where they stand at 9-9. And 1912 overall doesn’t look too pretty, either. The Hoosiers will likely need to win at least one game in the Big Ten Tournament to earn a spot in the premier postseason tournament. That’s the short-term future of this Hoosier squad. They won’t want to leave any doubt in the eyes of the selection committee. The other thought is on the long-term future of IU Coach Tom Crean. There’s been a lot of speculation about Crean’s future with IU — a lot of fans believe that without an NCAA Tournament berth, Crean won’t return to the program. If that is true, is it possible that one missed free throw ended the Crean era in Bloomington? When junior guard Yogi Ferrell missed his second free throw with IU down one and two seconds left, that may have cost IU its spot in the NCAA Tournament, putting more pressure on Crean. I don’t want to speculate too much on that issue, but it needs to be at least mentioned as a possibility. I wrote last week that Crean should stay and I stand by that — I think he needs one more year with this group.
Casey Krajewski is a senior in journalism.
But it’s not my decision to make; all I know is that a lot of fans want him gone, and it’s not any of their decisions to make either. The other takeaway that came to mind is IU’s pressure defense. At the 3:50 mark with the Spartans up 11, IU switched into a press defense that had a lot of success Saturday. The same press was employed near the end of the Northwestern game last week, to another decent showing. IU’s roster is full of athletes with long wingspans and quick feet. Why don’t they press more often? I’m not suggesting the Hoosiers go full-on Havoc like VCU, but they should mix in their press defense like any other in their arsenal. It’s one of the easiest ways to throw teams off, or at least force timeout calls early in the game. That’s something for Crean to think about as IU prepares to enter the Big Ten Tournament — the most important Big Ten Tournament of his career. The encouraging thought is that IU looked like they worked harder than they have than almost any game this season. For most of the game, they played with passion and looked like they actually wanted to win. The Hoosiers need that type of effort for an entire game if they want any sort of success this year. We will find out if IU is capable of that with their postseason lives on the line. ckrajewsk@indiana.edu
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Junior guard Yogi Ferrell walks off the court after losing to Michigan State, 74-72, on Saturday at Assembly Hall. Ferrell missed a crucial free throw in the final seconds, which would have tied the game.
Ferrell, Hoosiers come up just short against Spartans in finale By Sam Beishuizen sbeishui@indiana.edu @Sam_Beishuizen
Yogi Ferrell dropped his head and pulled his IU jersey over his face. The junior guard’s free throw attempt — one that would have tied IU with Michigan State with two seconds left — had missed. The ball bounced high off the right iron and fell into the hands of Michigan State’s Marvin Clark. His first free throw attempt almost missed but bounced in. The second bounced out and the Hoosiers fell to the Spartans 74-72. “I guess the basketball gods felt good for me for that first free throw, and then the second one just rolled out,� Ferrell said. “So I’m pretty disappointed missing the second one, but it happens.� It was the third time in the conference season the game rested squarely on Ferrell’s shoulders. All three times — against Maryland, Purdue and now Michigan State — he failed to convert late. The Hoosiers (19-12, 9-9) clawed their way back into the game in the final minutes with a little help from the Spartans (21-10, 12-6) missing 7-of-17 free throws in the second half. It gave Ferrell a chance to force overtime from the line that ultimately bounced away. It’s a situation Ferrell said he’d want again at next week’s Big Ten Tournament. IU Coach Tom Crean said Ferrell is one of “the greatest winners� he’s ever coached. But that’s what makes it that much harder for Ferrell, twice a state champion in high school. He wants to be in situations with the team on his back and the table set for the heroics. Saturday, it wasn’t meant to be. “He hurts,� Crean said. “My shirt is drenched from holding onto him.� Ferrell would not have been in a situation to force overtime had it not been for a late game surge.
MICHIGAN STATE 74, IU 72 Points Ferrell, 21 Rebounds Blackmon, Ferrell, 7 Assists Ferrell, 6 IU made a surge from being down 11 with 3:50 left by forcing Michigan State, the Big Ten’s worst free-throw shooting team, to beat the Hoosiers at the line in the closing minutes. That strategy worked, giving IU two chances to tie the game with less than 15 seconds left. Crean said he was proud of the way his players fought back in the face of adversity. Freshman guard James Blackmon Jr., however, was less pleased. He said the run came too late. “I feel like we all tried to turn it on too late,� Blackmon said. “We turned it on and made that run, but we should have just picked it up from the start.� Crean credited Michigan State’s Travis Trice for leading the Spartans through lulls in the offense. He made eight of his nine free throw attempts in the second half. “He made some big plays,� Crean said. “He’s really good. Really good.� The loss was IU’s eighth in the last 12 games. Ferrell’s team-high 21 points weren’t enough to stop the Hoosiers from entering the Big Ten Tournament in a three-game losing streak. With IU slipping further and further down in the eyes of NCAA Tournament bracketologists, the Hoosiers now say their focus is on the Big Ten Tournament, where a win or two would go a long way toward salvaging a Tournament bid. “Right now, we’re just working and preparing for the Big Ten Tournament,� Ferrell said. “We’re ready to leave Thursday for Chicago. We’re not looking to see where we stand for the NCAA Tournament right now, just trying to get into the Big Ten Tournament and win a couple games there.�
Michigan State Coach Tom Izzo talks to forward Matt Costello during IU’s final game of the season against the Spartans on Saturday.
MSU’s Izzo supports Crean postgame By Alden Woods aldwoods@indiana.edu | @acw9293
As soon as the buzzer sounded and ended IU’s regular season with its eighth loss in 12 games, questions about the Hoosiers’ postseason fate grew louder, and the calls for IU Coach Tom Crean’s job intensified. Boos have scattered through Assembly Hall for weeks. Fans have grown unhappy with the program’s seemingly listless state and the late-season collapse that may leave the Hoosiers out of the NCAA Tournament field come next Sunday. The Internet is full of cries for Crean’s replacement. At least seven separate accounts exist solely to call for his firing, and a new website, tomcreanbuyout.com, counts down the seconds until Crean’s $12 million buyout drops to $7.5 million on July 1. After another disappointing regular season, with IU’s final record at 19-9, support for Crean is waning. But after IU’s 74-72 loss to Michigan State on Saturday, Crean found himself at least one supporter: Michigan State Coach Tom Izzo. In Izzo’s postgame press conference, he was asked how he had seen Crean evolve since he left Michigan State, where he was an assistant coach for five years. Izzo didn’t answer. Instead, he went into a threeminute support for Crean. “I think he’s a great recruiter, I think he’s a great X’s and O’s coach,� Izzo said, rubbing a finger into the corner of each eye. “He’s misread sometimes, for a variety of reasons. Some he’s got to own
“I think he’s a great recruiter, I think he’s a great X’s and O’s coach,� Tom Izzo, Michigan State Coach
up to and some he doesn’t, but you can’t have distractions and be successful at this level.� He grew more and more agitated as he spoke. The offcourt issues that plagued the program before the season shouldn’t be factored into Crean’s overall evaluation — sooner or later, the burden has to be put on the players. “Is the program out of control?� Izzo said. “Let me tell you something, my program had problems a few years ago too. And as you look on the ticker, there’s a lot of really good programs that have them. Some keep them down a little more than others. Sooner or later they come out.� As of now, there’s no indication Crean won’t be IU’s coach next season. This season isn’t even over yet — next week is the Big Ten Tournament and the IU’s last chance to play themselves into an NCAA Tournament berth. Crean himself said he isn’t worried about anything but preparing his team for its next game. He said he hasn’t thought about whether IU will earn a Tournament berth and that his only concern is getting better on the court. “I don’t read anything with my name in it, I really don’t,� Crean said. “I haven’t for some time ... It’s locked in. I read, but I don’t read about that stuff. We just want to get better.�
Lectures 2014–15
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March 27............Ja Rule Apr. 7...Robert Earl Keen Apr. 10.............Lil Dicky
Crying Wolf v. Fiddling While Rome Burns: Historical Perspectives on Scientists’ Social Responsibility Monday, March 9, Presidents Hall, Franklin Hall, 7:30 p.m.
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Merchants of Doubt: How a Handful of Scientists Have Obscured the Truth on Issues from Tobacco Smoke to Climate Change Wednesday, March 11, Presidents Hall, Franklin Hall, 7:30 p.m.
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‘Hairspray’ coming to Indianapolis Friday Footlite Musicals opens its newest production, “Hairspray,” Friday at Indianapolis’ Hedback Community Theater. Winner of eight Tony Awards, “Hairspray” is a “family-friendly musical piled high with
laughter, romance and deliriously tuneful songs,” according to a Footlite Musicals press release. Tickets range from $10 to $20, and there is a discount offered to Footlite Musicals members.
Classical concert adds Fortepiano in performance By Lanie Maresh emaresh@indiana.edu
Hsuan Chang, a Jacobs School of Music adjunct lecturer and fortepiano player, said she couldn’t believe it when the department asked her to perform as the featured soloist for the Concentus and Classical Orchestra concert. She said she was not used to playing with an orchestra, and this event would be a totally new experience for her. “As keyboardists, we usually practice in the small room by ourself,” Chang said. “It’s great working with the orchestra and to have so many people in one group.” At 8 p.m. Friday, Chang played the fortepiano as part of the Concentus and Classical Orchestra concert at Auer Hall. Both the Concentus and Classical Orchestra are musical groups part of the Historical Performance Institute, which offers music students the opportunity to play or sing repertoire spanning from the 16th to the 19th centuries. For this concert, there were 21 vocalists of Concentus and 12 different kinds of instruments played as part of the Classical Orchestra. The concert featured two pieces, both composed by Joseph Haydn. The first piece performed, “Piano Concerto No. 4 in G major,” featured Chang as a soloist. The string instruments of the Classical Orchestra gathered in a semicircle on the stage as Chang played the fortepiano. Chang said it was an early composition of Haydn’s that is very upbeat. She said his style incorporates a lot of surprise rhythmic dynamics. “This piece is more fun, more joyful and you can dance,” Chang said. “The second movement is calmer and peaceful, but it’s a sunny and warmer peaceful. This piece never goes to the dark corner, never goes to real sadness.” Chang said she also enjoys the cadenza, or the area of improvisation written in the music for the soloist, because it gives her a chance to show off her skills. After practicing many versions of her own, Chang found Haydn’s own version of the cadenza and decided to play his for the concert. “It’s so amazing,” Chang said. “It doesn’t sound like classical cadenza compared to Mozart. This cadenza sounds like something I would improvise in the 21st
“As keyboardists, we usually practice in the small room by ourself ... It’s great working with the orchestra and to have so many people in one group.” Hsuan Chang, Jacobs School of Music adjunct lecturer
century.” Chang said she doesn’t have any particular warmup she likes to do before every performance, but for the past 10 years she has had to have a steak before each performance. “That gives me lots of energy,” Chang said. “Some singers say they cannot eat anything before singing, but for me, I need steak. If I have one that day I am happy enough.” After the concerto, Chang left the stage as the Concentus and Classical Orchestra got ready for the next piece, “Mass in B-Flat Major,” also know as “Harmoniemesse.” David Belbbutoski, a Bloomington resident and IU alumnus, said he has gone to recitals and concerts at IU since 1976. Before the concert, he said he looked forward to hearing the vocalists from Concentus perform the most. “I sang in a church choir, so it’s a special treat for me,” Belbbutoski said. “They’re good singers accompanied by the instruments, which isn’t so usual.” Dana Marsh, coordinator for the Historical Performance Institute and conductor for the concert, said he chose this mass because it is a piece of Haydn’s that is not played often. He said part of the job of the department is to take music that might usually be sitting in an archive, that is of good quality, and bring it back to life. “‘Harmoniemesse’ is a fantastic piece,” Marsh said. “These pieces that we use that are in our culture all the time, but it’s those pieces that fall between the cracks that are really high-end quality that we like to bring out.” Although they only had two rehearsals with everyone together, Marsh said it was very important to him that everyone get in the mindset where they can, in a sense, enjoy it for the first time. “It has to still have that spontaneity there,” Marsh said. “It can’t sound like you’re rehearsing it again. You’re making a real spontaneous, in-the-moment performance.”
ECHO LU | IDS
The Blueline Gallery holds an exhibition called “Comfort and Confusion: Works by Erin Tucker and Izzy Jarvis” on March 6. The exhibition was free and open to the public.
Blueline opens new exhibit By Sanya Ali siali@indiana.edu | @siali13
Inviting noncollaborative artists to display in a gallery space is not uncommon in the art world, though properly arranging the room to allow the two styles to mesh can prove challenging. The Blueline Gallery took on this challenge Friday when they opened their latest exhibit, “Comfort and Confusion,” which celebrated the works of recent BFA graduate Izzy Jarvis and MFA sculpture student Erin Tucker. Jarvis displayed an array of prints, mainly portraits working in fabric. “I have a couple of other pieces that are dealing with, like, the concept of material and representing material,” Jarvis said. “The show is just about exploring new work after graduation.” Jarvis said her inspiration stems from people she knows and cares about. Family and friends frequently make appearances in her portraits, but one standout source for ideas is her grandmother, whom she recently lost. “It’s a portrait of her using objects of adornment,” Jarvis said. “I drew the still life of a bunch of belts and jewelry that I inherited after she passed away and I
rachgood@indiana.edu
ECHO LU | IDS
Keirsten Hodgens from Ball State University performs “One Night Only” at the 11th Annual Indiana Campus Superstar Semi-Final Competition in the Buskirk-Chumley Theater on March 8. The top 10 finalists will perform in the final competition event on April 19 at the Toby Theater in Indianapolis.
“I have a really close connection with clothing, so I think that work is just a little bit about me navigating all of those things at the same time.” Erin Tucker, MFA sculpture student
“I have a show in Knoxville, Tenn., at the end of month, so that will be the end of showing traditional printmaking work.” Tucker’s work similarly focuses on atypical medium and subject matter, though her inspiration draws from a different pool. “I used to work as a theatrical costume designer, so the body and costume and thread is something that I’ve always worked with,” Tucker said. “I have a really close connection with clothing, so I think that work is just a little bit about me navigating all of those things at the same time.” Along with her experience in costume, Tucker said she spent part of her younger years modeling, so clothing took on an even greater significance to her as she began pursuing her creative path. Tucker said she believes there is a link to draw between the clothing worn and the person wearing it. “My whole life, I’ve really had a strong connection to clothing,” Tucker said. “That’s where the relationship to the body comes
from, because you can’t really talk about clothes without the body or the body without clothes.” The colors Tucker favors for her artwork also mirror a sort of consciousness of the female form. “A lot of the colors I’m attracted to are similar to a feminine or flesh tone, more pink and natural, something that relates back to the body,” Tucker said. In order to execute a couple of the pieces she displayed, Tucker had to immerse herself in a brandnew skill: casting metal. “I was part of a residency program this past summer where I traveled to a foundry and learned about moldmaking and fabricating these things,” Tucker said. The next few months of Tucker’s artistic career will be invested in her MFA thesis show, which will open at the Grunwald Gallery near the end of the semester. “The works I will be showing for my thesis are all made from actually garments, from found objects and clothing,” Tucker said. “So it’s connected but definitely different.”
‘South Pacific’ concludes after 4 weeks of preparation By Rachel Goodman
SINGING HER HEART OUT
arranged them, carved a linocut and printed it and sewed it all together into this scarf that moves at the base.” According to Jarvis, her grandmother had a knack for dressing well, which she now carries on with clothing and jewelry her grandmother gave her. Jarvis said she held positive memories with her as she worked on pieces in memory of her lost loved one. In the place of sorrow, Jarvis said she felt renewed creative strength. “She was really welldressed and she always gave me her clothes,” Jarvis said. “I’m wearing her cardigan today. She was a very snazzy dresser and, after she passed away, I kind of wanted to turn those feelings of sadness into something productive.” The gallery, Jarvis said, was the perfect open forum for her work to speak for itself. “It’s a very open space, nice movement that happens with the fans, plus there’s a lot of nice natural light so it doesn’t feel like my work is compacted into a space,” Jarvis said. In terms of the future, Jarvis said she sees herself working with more of the nontraditional mediums. “I’m continuing to work with new materials, working on more textiles,” Jarvis said.
The actors took their final bow as the purple curtains drew to a close at the last performance of “South Pacific” on Saturday night at the Musical Arts Center. The musical tells the story of Nellie Forbush, a nurse from America who is working in the South Pacific during World War II. She meets and falls in love with a French plantation owner, Emile de Becque, despite her discomfort with his mixed-race children. The story of these two romances explores the problem of racism during this time. “It is something that is still relevant today,” junior Kayla Eilers, who played the role of Nellie in Saturday’s show, said. “We deal with racism even now. It reaches out to multiple different audiences of all ages.” There were two separate casts for the show, including 10 principal roles and an opera chorus of about 30 for each cast. Eileen Jennings is a lastyear doctoral student who played Bloody Mary, a unique Asian islander who sells souvenirs to the U.S. sailors who are stationed there. She said her favorite part of the show
“It is something that is still relevant today ... We deal with racism even now. It reaches out to multiple different audiences of all ages.” Kayla Eilers, actress who played Nellie Forbush
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was her first scene. “It’s a storytelling moment and it’s a fantastic moment,” she said. “It’s one of those moments in any show that I’ve done where you know you’ve captured a character when everybody in the room is silent and watching you.” With four weeks of preparation prior to performing in five shows, the actors could finally settle down and fully take in the applause. Attendees from the audience could go to the Green Room in the basement of the Musical Arts Center and talk to the actors after the show. This provides a place for the actors to acknowledge and thank everyone for coming, Jennings said. Many of the actors got close to each other offstage as well as on. There was also a cast party they all attended after the last show to celebrate and enjoy the little time they had left together. Cast members took their roles seriously and tried to get into character as best they could, Jennings said.
“I am loud and boisterous,” Jennings said. “I love laughing. These are all things that I had to remind myself that Mary is as well. You find a way to make the character your own by loving the character. I would love to be a mother just like her.” The cast can now reflect back on the show and think ahead to what is in their future. After this show, Jennings will finish up her last round of exams. “During that time, I’m going to start the whirlwind of interviews and auditioning for companies,” she said. “That’s kind of nerve-wracking.” Eilers said she will continue her theater endeavors. “I am doing a children’s show at Cardinal Stage Company,” Eilers said. “They are doing ‘Junie B. Jones.’” As the cast members start preparing for their next shows and move on to other projects, the theater program will prepare for the next musical, “Into The Woods.” Tickets are available now, and the show starts April 17.
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Must present this coupon prior to the initial donation to receive a total of $50 on your first, a total of $50 on your second and a total of $50 on your third successful donation. Initial donation must be completed by 3.31.15 and subsequent donations within 30 days. Coupon redeemable only upon completing successful donations. May not be combined with any other offer. Only at participating locations.
Wisconsin
• Online Banking & Mobile Banking
SCHEDULE AN APPOINTMENT AT BIOLIFEPLASMA.COM
$150
One player from each Big Ten team to watch during the Big Ten Tournament March 11-15 at the United Center in Chicago.
IU Credit Union is never too far away.
ªª ª3ª,IBERTYª$Rªsª"LOOMINGTONªsª NEW DONORS OR DONORS WHO HAVEN’T DONATED IN SIX MONTHS OR MORE, PRESENT THIS COUPON AND RECEIVE $150 IN JUST THREE DONATIONS.
Players to watch
Whether you’re home or away, you’ll always have home court advantage.
Frank Kaminsky 19.9 ppg 8.2 rpg 3.0 apg
• Nationwide ATM network • Shared Branching network Manage your finances and apply for a loan online anytime at:
3 MILES FROM INDIANA UNIVERSITY
w ww.iucu.org www.iucu.org
Close to bus line, grocery stores & College Mall
CALL NOW
812.337.9000
thefields.com
Federally insured by NCUA
2015 BIG TEN TOURNAMENT March 11
March 12
March 13
Michigan St.
812-855-7823 • iucu.org
Travis Trice 16.2 ppg 3.4 rpg 5.4 apg
Iowa
March 14
Dez Wells 15.2 ppg 5.0 rpg 2.8 apg
Purdue
Raphael Davis 11.0 ppg 4.4 rpg 2.7 apg
Ohio St.
March 15 Aaron White 15.9 ppg 7.4 rpg 1.4 apg
#9 Michigan
Indiana
D’Angelo Russell 19.2 ppg 5.6 rpg 5.1 apg
Illinois
GAME 3 WINNER
#8 Illinois
Yogi Ferrell 16.0 ppg 3.5 rpg 5.0 apg
GAME 7 WINNER
Game 3, 11 a.m. ET, BTN
#1 Wisconsin
#13 Penn State
Michigan
Rayvonte Rice 17.0 ppg 6.4 rpg 1.9 apg
Northwestern
Game 7, 12 a.m. ET, ESPN GAME 11 WINNER
GAME 1 WINNER
#12 Nebraska
Zak Irvin 14.0 ppg 4.5 rpg 1.3 apg
GAME 4 WINNER
Game 1, 4:30 p.m. ET,
Minnesota
#5 Iowa
Alex Olah 11.7 ppg 6.9 rpg 1.5 apg
Nebraska
GAME 8 WINNER Game 11, 1 p.m., ESPN
Game 4, 25 minutes after Game 3, BTN
#4 Purdue
#10 Northwestern
Game 8, 25 minutes after Game 7, ESPN
Big Ten Champion Game 13, 3:30 pm, CBS Sports
Andre Hollins 14.3 ppg 4.1 rpg 2.7 apg
Penn St.
Terran Petteway 17.8 ppg 4.8 rpg 2.9 apg
Rutgers
GAME 5 WINNER
#7 Indiana
GAME 9 WINNER D.J. Newbill 20.7 ppg 4.8 rpg 3.1 apg
Game 5, 6:30 p.m. ET,
#2 Maryland
#14 Rutgers
Game 9, 6:30 p.m. ET, ESPN GAME 12 WINNER
GAME 2 WINNER
IU’s Big Ten Record The Hoosiers went 9-9 during the 2014-2015 Big Ten season. IU finished the season losing eight of its last 12 games of the season.
#11 Minnesota Game 2, 7 p.m. ET, BTN
GAME 6 WINNER
#6 Ohio State
GAME 10 WINNER
Game 6, 25 minutes after Game 5, ESPN2
Game 12, 25 minutes after Game 11, ESPN
#3 Michigan State Game 10, 25 minutes after Game 9, BTN
Make leasing with us your
GAMEPLAN Sign a lease with Millenium & Bloom Apartments
n! o s a e s Great Stay connected with us...
Receive a $10 gift card from Noodles & Company when you take a tour and mention IDS Lunch on Us.
1/2 PRICE
Appetizers 8 p.m.-10 p.m. • Sunday - Thursday All sandwiches only
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Text MILLBLOOM to 47464 for property info at your fingertips
$5 every Friday Earn
³ FDVK VDYLQJ WH[WERRN WLSV ³ DOHUWV RQ QHZ PHUFKDQGLVH LQ VWRUH HYHQWV
Brand new Party Bar remodel with 360 degrees of TV’s perfect for March Madness!
Call ahead! 812-323-1000
110 Franklin Road
DECEMBER 31, 2014 Indiana at Nebraska Lincoln, Neb. W, 70-65
FEBRUARY 3, 2015 Indiana at Wisconsin Madison, Wis. L, 92-78
JANUARY 5, 2015 Indiana at Michigan State East Lansing, Mich. L, 70-50
FEBRUARY 8, 2015 Indiana vs. Michigan Bloomington W, 70-67
JANUARY 10, 2015 Indiana vs. Ohio State Bloomington W, 69-66
FEBRUARY 11, 2015 Indiana at Maryland College Park, Md. L, 68-66
JANUARY 13, 2015 Indiana vs. Penn State Bloomington W, 76-73
FEBRUARY 15, 2015 Indiana vs. Minnesota Bloomington W, 90-71
JANUARY 18, 2015 Indiana at Illinois Champaign, Ill. W, 80-74
FEBRUARY 19, 2015 Indiana vs. Purdue Bloomington L, 67-63
JANUARY 22, 2015 Indiana vs. Maryland Bloomington W, 89-70
FEBRUARY 22, 2015 Indiana at Rutgers Piscataway, N.J. W, 84-54
JANUARY 25, 2015 Indiana at Ohio State Columbus, Ohio L, 82-70
FEBRUARY 25, 2015 Indiana at Northwestern Evanston, Ill. L, 72-65
JANUARY 28, 2015 Indiana at Purdue West Lafayette, Ind. L, 83-67
MARCH 3, 2015 Indiana vs. Iowa Bloomington L, 77-63
JANUARY 31, 2015 Indiana vs. Rutgers Bloomington W, 72-64
MARCH 7, 2015 Indiana vs. Michigan State Bloomington L, 74-72
*While supplies last*
lunch 11 a.m. - 3 p.m.
2XU IDQV DUH WKH ÀUVW WR JHW
Myles Mack 13.4 ppg 4.1 rpg 4.2 apg
flexible schedule
Support
per hour
Apply at telefund.iu.edu
*standard rates apply*
SELL CLOTHES FOR CASH 812-558-0800
812-333-4442 • 1145 S. College Mall Road
www.PlatosClosetBloomingtonIN.com
bloom-living.com
mpm-living.com
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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | M O N D AY, M A R C H 9 , 2 0 1 5 | I D S N E W S . C O M
Must be avail. M-F, 8-5. For approx. 15 hrs./wk., 1 YR. (3 sem.) commitment, includes Summer. To apply for this paid opportunity: Send resume & samples: gmenkedi@indiana.edu Ernie Pyle Hall, Rm.120.
Burnham Rentals
APARTMENT & HOUSE LEASING SINCE 1942
444 E. Third St. Suite 1
Now Hiring
Marketing Students Great opportunity for IU undergrads to expand your resume and be a part of a fun team. Strong oral & written communication skills needed. Must be able to work independently & with team members.
General Employment
NEED MONEY? SAVE A LIFE. Schedule a plasma donation. New donors receive $150 in just three donations. Call 812-334-1405 or visit biolifeplasma.com to download a coupon and make an appointment.
Now Hiring: line cooks. Part time/full time. Apply at: quaffonbloomington.com
812-339-8300 1 BR apts. by Stadium. 301 E. 20th.,avail. Aug., 2015. Water, trash, A/C, D/W, off-street parking included. $475. Costley & Co. Rental Mgmt.
HOUSING
All Appliances Included Free Parking Some with Garages 650 - 1750 Sq. Ft.
1 BR apts. by Stadium. 304 E. 20th, avail. Aug., 2015. $440. Water/trash included. Costley & Co. Rental Management. 812-330-7509
www.costleycompany.com
1 BR apts., minutes from campus & dwntwn. (10th & Indiana). Pet-friendly. Water, sewer, trash removal, & prkg incl. $450/mo. 812-334-8819 hallmarkrentals.com 2 BR apts. South of Campus. 320 E. University. Avail. Aug., 2015. $575 for 1 person, $680 for 2 people. Water/trash incl. A/C, D/W, range, refrigerator. Costley & Co. Rental Management. 812-330-7509 www.costleycompany.com
Grant Properties
Call Today 812-333-9579 GrantProps.com 1 BR, quiet, studious environment. 3 blks to Law. 812-333-9579 1 BR,1 BA. Close to Campus. 519 N. Lincoln. $595/mo. On site laund., covered prkg. Avail. Aug. Please call 339-2700.
colonialeastapartments.com
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METHODIST ANGLICAN CHRISTIAN SCIENCE NATURALISM COMMUNITY BELONGING SPIRIT ONG HYMNS BIBLE AFTER LIFE SHRUTI TIPITAKA ANALECTS OF CONFUCIOUS TAO TE CHING VEDAS DIVINE PRINCIPLE URANTI LOGY JUDAISM ISLAM ADVENTIST SPIRITUALITY ENLIGHTENMENT YIN AND YANG AHIMSA SHAMANISM NIRVANA SIKHISM WO REINCARNATION BLESSING CREATION PILGRIMAGE COSMOLOGY GOD DHARMA MEDITATION GURU I CHING PEACE SEVEN VIRT ETHICS ANCESTOR TRADITIONS KARMA DEITY QUR’ANIC LOVE PATRIOTISM MIRACLE REBIRTH NEOPAGANISM PAGANISM QI P IVENESS CONTRIBUTIONS REVELATION RITUAL SAINT SPIRIT TORAH MANTRA VENERATION WABI-SABI DEVOUT HUMANISM JA DUISM CONFUCIANISM JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES CHRISTIANITY BUDDHISM WICCA CATHOLIC LUTHERAN MENNONITE NON-DEN EPISCOPAL BAPTIST ADVENTIST SALVATIO DALAI LAMA DAO DE JING PRAYER BOOK ANGLICAN CHRISTIAN SCIENCE NATURAL BELONGING SPIRITUAL SACRIFICE FAMILY AFTER LIFE SHRUTI TIPITAKA ANALECTS VEDAS DIVINE PRINCIPLE URANTIA DIANE JUDAISM ISLAM ADVENTIST SPIRITUALITY YIN AND YANG AHIMSA SHAMANISM NIRV ENTHEISM REINCARNATION BLESSING CREATION PILGRIMAGE COSMOLOGY GOD DHARMA MEDITATION GURU I CHING PEACE ON ETHICS ANCESTOR TRADITIONS KARMA DEITY QUR’ANIC LOVE PATRIOTISM MIRACLE REBIRTH NEOPAGANISM PAGANISM IVENESS CONTRIBUTIONS REVELATION RITUAL SAINT SPIRIT TORAH MANTRA VENERATION WABI-SABI DEVOUT HUMANISM JA DUISM CONFUCIANISM JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES CHRISTIANITY BUDDHISM WICCA CATHOLIC LUTHERAN MENNONITE NON-DEN PISCOPAL BAPTIST ADVENTIST SALVATION AMISH MUHAMMAD DALAI LAMA DAO DE JING PRAYER BOOK OF SHADOWS METHO NATURALISM COMMUNITY BELONGING SPIRITUAL SACRIFICE FAMILY MUSIC SONG HYMNS BIBLE AFTER LIFE SHRUTI TIPITAK TE CHING VEDAS DIVINE PRINCIPLE URANTIA DIANETICS SHINTO SCIENTOLOGY JUDAISM ISLAM ADVENTIST SPIRITUALITY EN IMSA SHAMANISM NIRVANA SIKHISM WORSHIP SOUL PANENTHEISM REINCARNATION BLESSING CREATION PILGRIMAGE COS ON GURU I CHING PEACE SEVEN VIRTUES DIVINE INTERVENTION ETHICS ANCESTOR TRADITIONS KARMA DEITY QUR’ANIC LOV NEOPAGANISM PAGANISM QI PANTHEISM REPENTANCE FORGIVENESS CONTRIBUTIONS REVELATION RITUAL SAINT SPIRIT TO SABI DEVOUT HUMANISM JAINISM VODUN BAHA’I FAITH HINDUISM CONFUCIANISM JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES CHRISTIANITY BU N MENNONITE NON-DENOMINATIONAL ORTHODOX UNITY EPISCOPAL BAPTIST ADVENTIST SALVATION AMISH MUHAMMAD DAL OF SHADOWS METHODIST ANGLICAN CHRISTIAN SCIENCE NATURALISM COMMUNITY BELONGING SPIRITUAL SACRIFICE FAMI ER LIFE SHRUTI TIPITAKA ANALECTS OF CONFUCIOUS TAO TE CHING VEDAS DIVINE PRINCIPLE URANTIA DIANETICS SHINTO S AM ADVENTIST SPIRITUALITY ENLIGHTENMENT YIN AND YANG AHIMSA SHAMANISM NIRVANA SIKHISM WORSHIP SOUL PANEN ESSING CREATION PILGRIMAGE COSMOLOGY GOD DHARMA MEDITATION GURU I CHING PEACE SEVEN VIRTUES DIVINE INTERV TIONS KARMA DEITY QUR’ANIC LOVE PATRIOTISM MIRACLE REBIRTH NEOPAGANISM PAGANISM QI PANTHEISM REPENTANCE F VELATION RITUAL SAINT SPIRIT TORAH MANTRA VENERATION WABISABI DEVO UN BAHA’I FAITH HINDUISM CONFUCIANISM JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES CHRISTIAN C LUTHERAN MENNONITE NON-DENOMINATIONAL ORTHODOX UNITY EPISCOPAL PRAY ATION AMISH MUHAMMAD DALAI LAMA DAO DE JING ODIST ANGLICAN CHRISTIAN SCIENCE NATURALISM COMM AFTE TUAL SACRIFICE FAMILY MUSIC SONG HYMNS BIBLE S OF CONFUCIOUS TAO TE CHING VEDAS DIVINE PRINCIPLE URANTIA DIANETICS SHINTO SCIENTOLOGY JUDAISM ISLAM A IGHTENMENT YIN AND YANG AHIMSA SHAMANISM NIRVANA SIKHISM WORSHIP SOUL PANENTHEISM REINCARNATION BLESS LOGY GOD DHARMA MEDITATION GURU I CHING PEACE SEVEN VIRTUES DIVINE INTERVENTION ETHICS ANCESTOR TRADITION
Discover local places of worship online or in the newspaper every Friday.
www.costleycompany.com
Brownstone Terrace
325
14th and Dunn St. 1, 2, 3 BR Flats & Townhomes w/ Pool
BROWNSTONE ERRACE. T812.332.3609 COM
Lrg. 1 BR. Prkg., close to bus stops, furn. or unfurn. 812-333-9579
ParkerMgt.com 812-339-2115 Completely remodeled duplex. 3 person occupancy. Close to campus. Less than $500/ person. www.GTRentalGroup.com 812-330-1501 Lavish dntwn. apts. Extreme luxury dntwn. living. Call or text: 812-345-1771 to schedule your tour today. www.platinumdevelopmentllc.com.
Going fast. Parking incl.
Now Leasing 2015! Campus Walk Apts. Close to Campus, 1&2 BR avail. Call today for an appt. 812-332-1509. cwalk@crerentlals.com
4 BR - 5 BA 5 BR - 6 BA HOUSES
Now Leasing for Fall: Park Doral Apartments. Studio, 1, 2, and 3 BR. Call 812-336-8208.
All Appliances Included 2 Car Garage W/D & D/W 2,500 Sq. Ft.
Now leasing: Fall, 2015. 1 & 2 BR apts. Hunter Ridge. (812) 334-2880 Studio, eff. 1 BR next to bus stop. 1 blk. to Law. Res. prkg. 812-333-9579
Condos & Townhouses
3 BR twnhs, 1520 sf, N Campus, bus line, $950, avail. May. 614-596-4161
Houses !!!! Need a place to Rent?
rentbloomington.net
!!UNIVERSITY VILLAGE Leasing for 2015-2016: 1325 N. Washington St.5 BR, 3 BA w/ garage. 1331 N. Washington St.5 BR, 3 BA w/ garage. LiveByTheStadium.com
336-6900 www.shaw-rentals.com Now Renting August, 2015 HPIU.COM Houses and apartments. 1-3 bedrooms. Close to Campus. 812-333-4748 No pets please.
1 & 2 BR apts. Avail. Aug., 2015. Close to campus. 812-336-6246
www.costleycompany.com
2 BR next to Kelley. Residential prkg., D/W. On site laundry. 812-333-9579.
2 BR, 2.5 BA twnhs. near stadium for $680/mo. Please call: 812-320-3391.
Stadium Crossing 2, 3, & 4 BR Great Location Pet Friendly!
Cedar Creek 2 BR 1.5 Bath Outdoor Pool Cat Friendly!
Varsity Court
2, 3, 4, 5 BR Houses. Close to campus. Avail. Aug., 2015. 812-336-6246
Two- 5 BR, 3 BA homes from $1800. See our video: cotyrentalservice.com or call: 574.340.1844 or 574.232.4527.
BY THE
3 & 5 BR close to campus. W/D, D/W, and A/C. Avail. Aug. 2015. 327-3238 3 blks to Kirkwood. 5 BR, 2 BA. Clean, nice. Porch, basement. 334-0094
STADIUM. COM
3 BR, 2.5 BA, 2 car garage, 2 balconies. Gentry Quarters. Opposite of Mall. $850 /mo. 812-320-3391
2 BR, 1 BA. apts. 344/352 S. Dunn St. TWO blks. from Campus. $1150/mo. No utilities incl. No pets.
Aug., 2015. 3 BR, westside of campus. 2 BA, D/W, carpet, 2 porches, priv. off- street prkg., W/D, A/C, $990. Call 336-7090.
812.334.0333
www.burnhamrentals.com
812-339-8300 3 BR twnhs. Newly remodeled. Next to Kelley. 812-333-9579
1-5 bedrooms by stadium, law school & downtown
(812)
339-2859 Available 2015-2016
3 BR, 1209 N. Grant. Near Stadium, avail. now & Aug., 2015. $1050 for 3; $750 for 2. C/A D/W, on-site laundry. Costley & Co. Rental Management. 812-330-7509 www.costleycompany.com
Avail Aug., ‘15. 205 S. Clark. 3 BR, 1 BA, hdwd. floors. Close to Campus. $1500 + utils. 812-360-2628 www.iurent.com
Sublet Apt. Furnished Lease takeover. $500 signing bonus. Near IU, bus line, W/D, cable/wifi, $380/mo. 317-225-1962
www.costleycompany.com
1, 2, & 3 BR Individual Baths Covered Patios
LIVE
THE BEST! Location, style, size & charm! 3-8 BR. 812-334-0094
2-5 BR houses, August 2015. GTRentalGroup.com 812-330-1501
20
www.shaw-rentals.com
10
336-6900
2 BR apts. near Stadium. 304 E. 20th, #5. Avail. Aug., 2015. $650. Water/ trash included. Costley & Co. Rental Management. 812-330-7509
ELKINS APARTMENTS
Valparaiso, Indiana Childrens’s Camp Lawrence looking for counselors, lifeguards, & a nurse for 6 wks. (219)736-8931 or email nwicyo@comcast.net
Locations throughout the Bloomington area
Large 1 & 2 BR. Close to Campus & Stadium. Avail. Aug., 2015. 812-334-2646
Outstanding locations near campus at great prices
2 BR (from $620) & 3 BR (from $790) apts. avail. August. Hdwd. floors, quiet. Call 333-5598.
Apartment Furnished
We’ve got it all... Houses, Apartments, Condos, Townhomes
La Chateau Luxery Townhomes. Newly constructed, 3 BR townhomes. Avail. Aug., 2015. Call for pricing. 812-287-8036
1, 2, 3, 4 & 5 Bedroom
2 Different Locations
1-9 Bedrooms
bestrentsrdw@yahoo.com
812-330-7509
2 & 3 BR APARTMENTS
Close to Kelley. Great location. 4 blks. North of IMU. Avail. Aug. 1 BR, private entrance. Wi-Fi, W/D. Cable ready. No pets, NS, all utils. paid. $495/mo. 336-6561
For Aug., 2015. 2 BR, D/W, W/D, A/C, Wifi. Bus line, trail. $300/mo. each.
www.costleycompany.com
Must be avail. M-F, 8-5. Approx. 12-15 hrs./ wk., 1 YR. (3 sem.) commitment, includes Summer. To apply for this paid opportunity, send resume: gmenkedi@indiana.edu Ernie Pyle Hall, Rm.120.
305
220
EMPLOYMENT
burnhamrentals.com
Properties Available NOW and 2015-2016
812-339-8300
340
PREGNANT? Thinking of Adoption? Happy, loving married couple wishes more than anything to raise your newborn with care, warmth, and love. Home Study Certified. Expenses paid. Your choice for an open or closed adoption. Please call Nora & Rich anytime at: 1-888-57-ADOPT. www.ourspecialwish.info
1-2 BR. South edge of campus, grad. discount. 812-333-9579
www.burnhamrentals.com
LF female. Furn. BR + BA sublet open AVAIL now at Reserve on Third. (219) 801-8041
Summer, 2015. March, April, & May Avail. Neg. terms & rent. 812-333-9579 345
Adoption
Call 333-0995
Close to IU. 5 BR, 3 BA, 902 East 14th St. $2350/mo., 3 blks. to Geology & SPEA, off street prkg. A/C, free W/D, 12 mo. leases, Aug. ‘15-’16, no pets. 812-333-5333
Sublet Apt. Unfurn. 1 BR+office+garage: $1085/mo. Woods at Latimer. http://www.abodes.com/
1100 E. Atwater. Free util & Wifi. Off-street prkg. avail. for $400/mo., w/o: $300. 812-361-6154 Summer, 2015. March, April, & May Avail. Neg. terms & rent. 812-333-9579
Avail. Aug., ‘15. 203 S. Clark. 3 BR, 1 BA, fenced in back yd. Close to Campus. $1650 + utils. 812-360-2628 www.iurent.com Avail. Aug., ‘15. 2618 E. 7th. 3 BR, 2 BA. Huge home w/ rec room. $1500/mo. + utils. 812-360-2628 www.iurent.com AVAILABLE NOW! 4 BR, 2 BA. house close to campus. $1600/mo. No utils. incl. No Pets. www.burnhamrentals.com.
812-339-8300 Houses by IU. 3, 4, or 5 ppl. Aug 1, 2015. www.iu4rent.com 760-994-5750
MERCHANDISE 415
Great opportunity for IU undergrads to expand your portfolio & resume. Must have experience in Illustrator, Photoshop, and InDesign. Video and Flash experience a plus.
1-3 BR Apts. A/C, D/W, W/D Internet & Water included omegabloomington.com
Houses
3 BR, 3 BA apts. 320 S. Dunn St. TWO blks. from Campus. $2,175-$2250/mo. Internet incl. No pets.
10
105
ANNOUNCEMENTS
**Lease now for August. Sign lease by March 30, 2015, get August Free! Nice, lg., 4 BR, 3.5 BA, W/D, D/W. Kinser Pike, Northlane Condos. 812-325-3262
2-6 BR Houses A/C, D/W, W/D
315
Now Hiring
Graphic Designers
Apt. Unfurnished
Downtown and Close to Campus
Apt. Unfurnished
3 BR, 2.5 BA, 3 level, 1400 sq. ft. apt/condo. Stadium Crossing Apts. by football stadium. $1200 for 3 ppl. or $1300 for 4 ppl. $500 signing bonus paid upon lease signing. Avail. Aug., 2015. Contact Mark: 317-997-0672.
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General Employment
ONLINE POSTING: All classified line ads are posted online at idsnews.com/classifieds at no additional charge.
Now Leasing for Fall 2015
P R O P E R T I E S
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.
220
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.
Apt. Unfurnished
O M E G A
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.
310
AD ACCEPTANCE: All advertising is subject to approval by the IDS.
idsnews.com/classifieds
310
CLASSIFIEDS ADVERTISING POLICIES
Full advertising policies are available online.
310
CLASSIFIEDS
To place an ad: go online, call 812-855-0763 or stop by Ernie Pyle Hall 120 from 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Monday - Friday.
Electronics 13” 2010 MacBook Pro. Functional & runs like new. Few minor cracks on left panel beside the screen. Incl. fuchsia Speck case & laptop charger. $575, obo. marbholl@umail.iu.edu
LG 32” LCD HD. No remote. Will incl. HDMI, if needed. $120. 630-7772139, heok@indiana.edu
TI-84 Plus Silver Edition, $80. ramoa@imail.iu.edu
435
Very gently used pair of Purple Beats Solo HD headphones. Original box, case, auxiliary cord, & headphones. Perfect cond. $100 firm, below market value, never used headphones. Thank you! acreeden@indiana.edu.
Dakine low roller snowboard bag, exc. cond. Padded,has wheels, perfect for airport or long distance travel. Has separate compartments to store your boots & gear. wtbeauli@indiana.edu
Misc. for Sale Fairfax elevator tripod Quality, excellent cond. $25. julie@iu.edu
34 Coca Cola glasses. Green & clear, free Bloomington delivery! No chips/cracks. $25 julie@iu.edu
H. Harold Hancock/4 signed clown prints-$40. 4 full color prints from original paintings. 4 covers to hold the prints incl. Approx. 12X16 unframed. Excellent cond. bosmith@iu.edu
38 pieces Johnson Brothers Indies Blue Ironstone dinnerware. $300. julie@iu.edu 41 pc Sheffield Imperial Gold China $120 - Great cond. Gold tone in excellent cond. White w/beautiful gold scroll work & gold trim. bosmith@iu.edu
Kawasaki KX60 dirt bike. Good cond. No mechanical issues. Great racing bike for a child. $600, obo. For more information or pictures: walkerrm@indiana.edu
Benjamin Medwin cast iron skillets - 2 sizes $25.00 - Nice set of 6.5” & 8” cast iron skillets. Both have two pouring spouts. Good cond., needs re-seasoned. bosmith@iu.edu Blue studio lamp with 3 adjustable lights. Excellent condition. $15. julie@iu.edu
Horoscope
Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 9 — You’re in the right place at the right time. You’ll be more patient with finances over the next few days. Minimize the risks. Uncover family secrets. Better go over your resources again. Talk about what you love.
Pink Ugg boots. Size 10, $50. cbfink@indiana.edu Rosina bone china tea cup & saucer - Made in England. Very attractive blue leaves on this cup and saucer. Great condition. bosmith@iu.edu Selling: 25+ Norman Rockwell Collection of mugs, tankards, glasses, cups. $40. julie@iu.edu Set of 2 vases. Large 6” clear glass ivy bowls. Excellent condition. $5. julie@iu.edu Set of 2: Heart 2 Mugs. Free Bloomington/ Campus area delivery. $6. julie@iu.edu Set of 4 ivy bowls. 5.25” crystal Indiana glass vases. Excellent cond. $10. julie@iu.edu
Large 9” herringbone pattern glass vase. Excellent condition. $5. julie@iu.edu
Set of six aprons. Excellent cond. Tan/khaki, 2 front pockets. 100% cotton. $25. julie@iu.edu
Musical jewelry box. Wood exterior, red fabric interior. Wind up plays “Somewhere My Love”. $10. julie@iu.edu
Sturdy snowboard bag for boards that are 165 cm or shorter. Strong zippers, nice handle 4 carrying. Very good condition! wtbeauli@indiana.edu
To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 7 — Your creativity gushes. Capture it. Today and tomorrow favor collaboration. Expect it to get interesting. Your partner can get what’s needed. Conversation with friends reveals the next step to take. Share and express your affection and admiration. Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Today is a 9 — Get fully engrossed in your work. Weave your personal magic into it. Profit from meticulous service. Think through the logic. Prepare to go public. Remind colleagues
NON SEQUITUR
of the goals and timeline. A fabulous job benefits your professional status. Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Today is an 8 — Begin a two-day romantic phase. Give in to fun. Play like (or with) a child. Talk about a subject of your passion. Practice your skills. Ask a coach for feedback. Share your game with someone you love and trust. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is an 8 — Focus on home and family over the next two days. Find out what’s needed. It could get busy, with
WILEY
WONDERMARK
Looking for your new BFF? You’ve found the spot!
Vintage Depression Glass Candlewick Boopie Pattern Ashtray Tony Soprano TV Show. I have 2 of these and are selling for $20.00 each. bosmith@iu.edu
Vintage Esquire Footman Lanolize Boot Polish Organizer - $25.00 - 10” tall, 7” wide & 11” long. Incl. 2 brushes, 4 oz. dubbing & 4 shoehorns. bosmith@iu.edu
Vintage Radio Flyer red wagon - $20.00 - 15” wide, 34” long. Quite a bit of wear on the wagon. Great working condition. bosmith@iu.edu
Answer to previous puzzle
© Puzzles by Pappocom
BREWSTER ROCKIT: SPACE GUY!
12 Grand Sports Corvette. 18,800 miles, $ neg. jaejoung@indiana.edu
Clothing
2004 Nissan Murano. 200k mi. Runs great at speeds less than 30 mph. Shakes 40 mph & may need servicing. $4,000, obo. gapiyo@indiana.edu
Plato’s Closet pays cash on the spot for trendy, gently used clothing. 1145 S. College Mall Rd. 812-333-4442
Music Equipment Morris M-65 classical guitar & case. $395 OBO. Very nice. 812-929-8996
2006 Southwind V-10 Triton motorhome. 28k mi. 33ft., sleeps 6, dvd, 2 slideouts. 812-325-3262
Bicycles
Tenor Ukulele, great cond. Incls.soft case, & 8 books from Jack Johnson to old time string band music. I can text a pic. 812-202-3185
Men’s Giant Cypress DX. Ex. cond. 15” frame. Silver grip shift, 21 speed. $125. jantgreenwood@gmail.com
Windproof UV400 protective glasses. Dustproof & windproof half face mask. New! thichiaf@indiana.edu
Westminster 500 classical guitar & case. $225 OBO. Very nice. 812-929-8996
Thule 938 Rak n Loc, space station-2 bikes. Lot of accessories incl. $150. jantgreenwood@gmail.com
information flying. Listen carefully and take notes. Research purchases thoroughly first. Make sure the solution fits the problem.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is an 8 — Shop for items to enhance a private tryst. Plan for fun and games. You’re especially attractive. Jump into a two-day confident phase, and take control. Follow through on a decision. Make a delightful connection. Express your passion.
row are great for meetings. Talk and network. Discover necessary resources. But don’t make a change quite yet. Hold off on a household decision. Confer with family. Listen and learn. Everything’s beginning to make sense.
Wilton Angel Food cake pan. Excellent condition. $10. julie@iu.edu
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is an 8 — Today and tomorrow favor communications and transport. Get the word out. Write, record and express yourself. Listen and learn from others. Take notes. It’s a good phase for studying. Share with a friend in need. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is a 9 — Gather up the fruit of your labors. Grab as much as you can while you can. There’s money coming today and tomorrow. Walk, jog or run. Work hard and make more. Keep track of your earnings.
Crossword
ACROSS 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.
101k miles, maintenance records avail. Great gas mileage. Addit’l features sdales@umail.iu.edu
For sale: The Praxis PLT Textbook, Grades K-6. Incl. 2 full length exams & other guides. $20. 812-834-5144
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is an 8 — Take time for meditation and spiritual reflection. Options emerge as if from a dream. To manage deadlines, list what to do next and schedule actions. Delegate some. Get introspective, and review the big picture from multiple angles. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is an 8 — Today and tomor-
1 Works with yarn 6 Anheuser-__ Brewery 11 Solomon, for one 14 Valium drug company 15 Snow-block home 16 Logger’s tool 17 Past one’s prime 19 Doc for a kitty 20 Thickness measuring instrument 21 Hiker’s tool 23 Mauna __ 24 Actress Zellweger 25 Perilous course to go down 30 Margarita condiment, in Mazatlán 32 Tiny amt. of time 33 Ballet skirt 34 Vote in 36 Tom Collins liquor 38 Red giant with a carbonrich atmosphere 39 Say with assurance 40 Red-shirted bear 42 Prefix with bar 43 Achieves one’s goal 48 Skin openings 49 “Saw __”: second “Saw”
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is an 8 — Consider new professional opportunities for the next few days, and provide requested information. Practice makes perfect in the coming phase. Sign contracts, make agreements and lay the track for a profitable venture. Discover fresh inspiration and enthusiasm. © 2015 By Nancy Black Distributed by Tribune Media Services, INC. All Rights Reserved
L.A. Times Daily Crossword
DAVID MALKI
Difficulty Rating:
Automobiles
Textbooks
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
su do ku
505
445
435
NEW Jansport backpack. Never used, originally $70. Red, black, & purple. $40. julie@iu.edu
Used Morrow Sky snowboard w/Preston Ride binding. 146 cm., regularly waxed & edged, awesome design of a crow! wtbeauli@indiana.edu
TRANSPORTATION
520
Butcher block kitchen island. Exc. cond., provides addt’l counter space & storage. Great for chopping & preparing! wtbeauli@indiana.edu
Pets Hamster for sale! Short hair, soft, tan, cuddly. Incl. bi-level cage w/ colorful tubing, water bottle, toys, food, treats, large bags of scented bedding, etc. Price neg. apeickle@indiana.edu
Two 3rd Infantry Div. Military Veteran US Army hat lapel pins. Marked P14858. 3/4” x 3/4”. $10. julie@iu.edu
450
TI-84 Plus Silver Edition Calculator for sale. Used one semester only. $60. 812-834-5144
Milk Glass Vase - $10.00 - Approx. 7 3/4” tall & the top opening is approx. 4 3/4” in diameter. Bottom of vase marked E.O. Brody Co. M5000 Cleveland, Ohio. Excellent condition. bosmith@iu.edu
Misc. for Sale
465
Brand new wicker picnic basket - Never used. Green & white checked cloth interior. Approx. 12” tall & 18” long. bosmith@iu.edu
Misc. for Sale
441
Like new 42’’ LG Flatscreen Smart TV. klgillia@indiana.edu
Misc. for Sale
435
Electronics
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is an 8 — Travel and fun are favored today and tomorrow. Get out there and go explore. It’s a good time to ask for money. Discover new tricks and ideas. Check the itinerary, and look farther out into the future.
15
I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | M O N D AY, M A R C H 9 , 2 0 1 5 | I D S N E W S . C O M 435
415
CLASSIFIEDS
sequel 50 Popeye’s adoptee 53 Lacking a handle? 57 Bother a lot 58 Interest-paying institution 60 Alphabet finale 61 Where embryos develop 62 Do-or-die poker bet 63 Finale 64 Heat-resistant glassware 65 Writer/director Allen with four Oscars
22 Furrier’s hides 24 Cookbook contents 25 Streamlined 26 Take down a __: humble 27 Navel variety 28 School support gps. 29 Peseta replacement 30 Tailor’s line 31 Thomas __ Edison 35 __ suzette: dessert pancake 37 Christmas quaff 38 Logger’s tool 41 Round gasket 44 Cleans with a paper towel, as a spill 45 War-ending pact 46 Shot put competitor, e.g. 47 Devil, in Durango 50 Small or medium 51 Small songbird 52 __ out a living: barely got by 53 Windows alternative 54 Bueno’s opposite 55 City near Tulsa 56 Big Apple fashion initials 59 Anger Look for the crossword daily in the comics section of the Indiana Daily Student. Find the solution for the daily crossword here.
DOWN 1 McDonald’s founder Ray 2 __ Scotia 3 Atlantic republic at the edge of the Arctic Cir. 4 Roller-coaster ride feeling 5 Climactic tennis match situation 6 Oktoberfest quaff 7 “That turns my stomach” 8 Deli machine 9 Ant complex 10 Watson’s associate 11 Perked pot contents 12 Couple that’s split 13 Dampens 18 Piles
Answer to previous puzzle
TIM RICKARD
16
I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | M O N D AY, M A R C H 9 , 2 0 1 5 | I D S N E W S . C O M
MEN’S TENNIS
MEN’S SOCCER
Thompson shines against Indy Eleven By Michael Hughes michhugh@indiana.edu @MichaelHughes94
LIONEL LIM | IDS
Sam Monette closes in to return with a volley against Sam Shropshire of Northwestern on Friday at the IU Tennis Center. Monette lost the match 6-4, 7-5.
IU fails to close out No. 21 Northwestern at home By Danny White danswhit@indiana.edu
IU couldn’t seal the deal. After two wins the previous weekend, the Hoosiers returned to play No. 21 Northwestern. In front of a large home crowd, the Hoosiers unraveled in a 4-3 loss Friday afternoon to Northwestern at the IU Tennis Center. The momentum would swing in the match, but Northwestern ultimately prevailed. No. 27 IU (9-4) got off to a strong start by winning the doubles point. “That was a very key thing, something that we talked about all week,” IU Coach Jeremy Wurtzman said. “You’re going to feel more comfortable going into the singles, not only from feeling confident being up 1-0, but also feel comfortable in your surroundings and in your own building.” While the Hoosiers have been strong lately in the doubles point, they continue to put themselves in a hole in singles. This trend plagued them again Friday. “It could be that we feel
we are up 1-0 and feel we can put the brakes on a little bit,” Wurtzman said. “I think when we talk between doubles and singles, we make it known that we have to get good starts and good leads in our singles matches.” In singles, senior Sven Lalic dominated his opponent Mihir Kumar 6-1, 6-2. Down 2-0, Northwestern (95) responded. No. 116 Strong Kirchheimer defeated junior Daniel Bednarczyk 6-4, 6-4. Then, No. 93 Sam Shropshire beat junior Sam Monette 6-4, 7-5. Northwestern’s Alp Horoz defeated sophomore Stefan Lugonjic 7-5, 6-2. “We were up big in some matches,” Wurtzman said. “They just didn’t give in and fought until the end to pull through.” The Hoosiers would fight back briefly before falling to the Wildcats. Freshman Raheel Manji defeated Logan Staggs 6-4, 3-6, 6-3 in a difficult match against a left-handed opponent. “What was tricky about it was that being a lefty and the way he plays is very
NO. 21 NORTHWESTERN 4, NO. 27 IU 3 No. 1 No. 93 Shropshire 6-4, 7-5 No. 2 No. 116 Kirchheimer 6-4, 6-4 unorthodox,” Manji said. “And he is good at it too.” All eyes turned to the final court where sophomore Matthew McCoy faced Fedor Baev of Northwestern. With the match tied, Northwestern and Baev won the match 6-3, 4-6, 7-6 (7-4). The Hoosiers fall to 4-1 at home. Northwestern improves to 3-3 on the road and returns home to play Purdue on Sunday. While the Hoosiers lost, they received great support. A constant in the match was Wurtzman’s unwavering support for his players. “I think you play a lot of different roles,” Wurtzman said. “I feel like you can be a friend to them; you can help with strategy, cheer for them, make them laugh, you have to recognize if they are feeling uncomfortable or nervous, find the best way to communicate with them.”
RECREATIONAL SPORTS
CIRCUITSTRENGTH, CYCLEFIT, AND YOGA/PILATES
IU was missing a few key elements from its 2014 team in its 2-1 victory Friday against Indy Eleven. It lost defender Patrick Doody and midfielders Jamie Vollmer and Dylan Lax to graduation. Junior midfielder Femi Hollinger-Janzen was on the sidelines but in street clothes. But most noticeably, junior forward Andrew Oliver was not with the team. To replace its starting forward from last season IU primarily deployed a false nine, meaning a midfielder plays in place of a forward. One of those players was sophomore Tanner Thompson, the only member of IU’s starting front four from last season who played Friday. Thompson bent in a free kick from about 25 yards out for IU’s first goal and assisted the game winner from a corner kick. “His sophistication, his cleverness to get him out of trouble, finding his teammates — I thought it was a comprehensive performance from Tanner,” IU Coach Todd Yeagley said. In addition to occupying the false nine position, Thompson played both the left and right wings, underneath the primary attacker and even in the defensive midfield. Yeagley said it’s Thompson’s intelligence that allows him to be played in those variety of positions. He can move to the wing when play becomes too congested in the middle, allowing him to find gaps in the opposing
team’s defense. He can control the game from the back of the midfield and he can score or make the final pass when he plays further up the field. “He can move and adjust to whatever we do and the team has to still find him,” Yeagley said. “Clearly where we want to have the ball is Tanner.” One of the players who was tasked with supplying the ball to Thompson was freshman Austin Panchot. Panchot, who graduated high school a semester early in December, played the last 45 minutes of the match on the right wing. He was also wearing No. 9, Oliver’s former number. “He’s not even in college yet and he comes out here against a pro team and left a mark,” Yeagley said. “That’s tough to do for a kid who’s only been here for two months.” Panchot is listed at 5-foot-7 and 140 pounds, but Yeagley said because of his intensity, he plays like he’s 50 pounds heavier. It’s this intensity combined with Panchot’s work rate and aggressiveness that Yeagley said gives him an opportunity to be a starter as early as next fall. Another player in line for an increased role next season in Francesco Moore. As a freshman last season, Moore didn’t play a single minute, but not because he wasn’t capable. “We knew we had something, but because of Dylan Lax being a senior and his veteran role, we decided to hold Frankie back and redshirt him,” Yeagley said. Moore was one of five
IU 2, INDY ELEVEN 1 Goals Thompson, Creviston Assists Thompson midfielders who started Friday in what Yeagley called a 3-4-1 formation. Each team played with nine players because of the field dimensions of Mellencamp Pavilion. IU alternated sending different midfielders into the false nine role, creating a fluidity Yeagley said is lethal. “I thought the reading of our teammates and how they vacated and introduced space, the tactical cues to be fluid was really good,” Yeagley said. The interchangeability of IU’s front four attackers combined with the aggressiveness of its outside backs running along the sidelines creates an unpredictable attack for IU. If executed properly, its opponent won’t know which player to key on and where the attack is coming from. “The key is, we have to be predictable for each other and assume the roles, and yet very difficult for the other team to manage and figure out,” Yeagley said. The onus for operating this attack falls to Thompson, the team’s creative director. Not only was Thompson directly responsible for both of IU’s goals Friday, but he controlled the game and set up more chances that went unfinished. “Tanner was the best attacker on the field tonight for either team,” Yeagley said. “Besides the goal and assist, which is obviously what you want, his play in between all those moments was phenomenal.”
Hoosier forward not at IU this semester From IDS reports
Last season’s starting forward Andrew Oliver is not attending IU during the spring semester, IU Coach Todd Yeagley said after IU’s scrimmage Friday. The would-be junior scored four goals last season and recorded one assist while playing in all 22 of IU’s matches, starting in 21 of them. “He’s trying to get a few things squared away, but we certainly hope in the future
that he will be back with us,” Yeagley said. Yeagley would not go into specifics as to why Oliver was no longer at school. The Indianapolis native and Southport High School graduate is a former member of the U-17 men’s national team, where he won the Golden Boot at the CONCACAF Championships in 2011. Oliver was unable to play in the U-17 World Cup, however, because he was suspended from the U-17 Residency Program in
Bradenton, Fla. for disciplinary problems. Oliver has been removed from the roster on iuhoosiers.com. Yeagley said he remains hopeful Oliver will return to the team in time for the 2015 season, but that it is still uncertain. “That’s not to be determined yet,” Yeagley said. “We’re still waiting to see what’s going to happen with Andrew.” Michael Hughes
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CYCLEFIT
RIDE YOUR WAY TO FITNESS! Sessions take place on a stationary exercise bike and simulate the varied terrain of an outdoor ride including steady flats, hills, and sprints.
YOGA/PILATES FOCUS YOUR MIND AND BODY
Build muscle tone, strengthen your core, and improve flexibility with Yoga, Pilates, and Pilates Reformer!
Spring Break Shuttle Service
ONLY
$
17
www.SOAshuttle.com Book online and save money!
Check out our punch card options at the WIC or SRSC Member Services Suite! Campus Recreational Sports is a division of the
Reserve tickets online or pay the driver 1-800-228-0814