Tuesday, April 25, 2017
IDS Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
Two rape reports near campus By Jack Evans jackevan@indiana.edu | @JackHEvans
During the weekend, Bloomington Police Department received reports of two rapes. The first involved a 21-year-old woman who was visiting Bloomington during Little 500 weekend and reported she’d been raped Saturday night near campus while walking from a party to an apartment. Police responded at about 9:25 p.m. to the intersection of East 17th Street and North Dunn Street, where they met the woman, who told them she’d been assaulted in the area, BPD Lt. John Kovach said. The woman told police she’d been at a party with her boyfriend and brother and had become separated from them. She was walking north from the party to an apartment when she saw a silver SUV, possibly a Toyota, pull up near her. Police believe the incident happened somewhere in the area of East 16th Street and Dunn, Kovach said. A man — who the victim described as Middle Eastern with black hair, a skinny frame and a gray T-shirt — got out of the car, she told police. He grabbed her, pushed her to the ground and raped her. He fled and the woman called police. She said the rape may have happened in the yard of a residence, but she didn’t know the exact location. She was taken to Bloomington Hospital for a sexual assault examination. The case is still active. The second involved a woman who reported Sunday that she had been raped early that morning outside a residence on the near south side of town. Police obtained the report while collecting a sexual assault evidence kit Sunday afternoon from Bloomington Hospital, BPD Lt. John Kovach said. The woman had been brought to the hospital that day by family members. She did not want to speak to police immediately, so a nurse relayed information to police, Kovach said. The rape occurred at about 2 a.m., the victim told the nurse. She had been looking for a friend outside a residence when an unknown man, who she described as dark-skinned and about 6-feet-tall, assaulted her. The case is still active, and police plan to follow up with the victim, Kovach said.
ILLUSTRATION BY EMAN MOZAFFAR | IDS
Digital defense As technology continues to evolve, threats to security grow. IU’s IT team tries to eliminate these risks as quickly as possible. By Eman Mozaffar emozaffa@indiana.edu | @emanmozaffar
For every step IU’s cyberinfrastructure takes, the cyber criminals take two. Information technology professionals work every day to stop them. Technology users at IU, whether they’re careless or not, can be phished, breached, mishandled, misrepresented, hacked or overtaken by cyber criminals. Recently, thousands of IU employees had their private information accessed through some of these scams. It is up to people under the Office of the Vice President of Information Technology to make sure instances like these are as rare as possible. More than 1,100 employees work under the associate vice presidents in OVPIT and the University Information Technology Services, and about 31 specialize in information security, OVPIT chief of staff Dan Calarco said. Employees in the University Information Security Office are the main experts, but security responsibilities usually cut across different departments because it’s such a complicated field, Calarco said.
“They may be installing security patches on servers or helping integrate single-sign-on for a new service,” Calarco said. “Even I handle our UITS phishing education and simulations. Cybersecurity is not my primary job, but it is certainly part of it.” Internet safety workers don’t just make sure IU’s technology is properly functioning and highly protected. They educate staff and students on the best practices to protect themselves online by training employees, making information accessible on their website and easing users into better practices. The offices also work to formulate a proactive security strategy rather than a reactive one so prevention is more of a focus than simply fixing the problems as they come. “In UITS, at least in UISO, it’s all security,” IT human resources officer Deb Allmayer said. “Typically UITS has depth in roles while departmental positions have greater breadth of responsibility.” Because these employees oversee all eight campuses and not just Bloomington, they’re often stretched thin. One area Calarco said the office is focusing on is recruitment, so they can
keep up with the demand. “We’ve been recruiting from IU and internationally,” Calarco said, “We often lose potential employees to companies like Microsoft and Amazon. We have to make sure we’re competitive.” In addition to the people who work directly underneath IU’s IT department, every school has its own department of security services that operates separately. Many of these schools contract specifically with UITS to get work done within their departments. “It can get confusing,” Calarco said. “But as long as these schools comply with IT-28, IU’s recent cyber risk mitigation policy that tries to contain cyber threats at IU, schools get to decide what they invest in.” Regardless of the trouble they’ve had figuring out logistics or recruitment, information security is a field that has growing national interest, which helps with the expansion of OVPIT’s services, Allmayer said. Policy analysts, journalists and industry professionals mention cybersecurity on a national scale on a daily basis, especially with the recent hacking SEE SECURITY, PAGE 5
BASEBALL
Hoosiers look for win at Victory Field in Indianapolis By Spencer Davis spjdavis@umail.iu.edu | @spencer_davis16
For the third consecutive year, the Hoosiers will head to Indianapolis to play a game at Victory Field, the home of the Triple-A Indianapolis Indians. After taking on in-state foe Notre Dame at the venue in the previous two years, IU will match up Tuesday against yet another in-state opponent in Ball State. The Hoosiers enter the game with a 21-16-2 overall record, and the Cardinals are 21-19. In IU’s first game at Victory Field in 2015, the Hoosiers came from behind in the bottom of the ninth inning to beat the Fighting Irish 6-5. Last year, Notre Dame shut IU out 5-0. The opportunity to play at Victory Field raises the potential for exposure of each team because nearly 7,000 fans attended the game last year. IU’s Bart Kaufman Field seats 2,500 fans, and Ball State’s Ball Baseball Diamond has a capacity of just 1,500 spectators. If Tuesday’s contest is anything
like IU and Ball State’s first meeting of the season, the additional fans will be in for an exciting game. In that April 4 ballgame, sophomore designated hitter Matt Lloyd led the Hoosiers to victory with a walk-off solo home run with two outs in the bottom of the 11th inning to bury the Cardinals 3-2. Heading into this week, IU received a boost in its RPI ranking from No. 41 to No. 33 after beating Michigan in two of three games on the road this past weekend. Michigan entered the series ranked No. 13 in d1baseball.com’s top 25 with a 17-2 record at home before IU won the series. The Wolverines had also won 13 of their last 14 games before the Hoosiers won the series opener Friday. IU’s win Sunday tied it with Minnesota for the third-most conference wins in the Big Ten; however, IU’s win percentage puts the Hoosiers at sixth in the standings. Freshman pitcher Cal Krueger will start against Ball State at Victory Field in just the second start of his college career.
MICHAEL WILLIAMS | IDS
Freshman Cal Krueger strikes out a Nebraska batter to end the top of the seventh inning Saturday. Krueger will be the starting pitcher on Tuesday against Ball State.
In his first start, Krueger earned the loss but did not allow an earned run. The Jasper, Indiana, native tossed
LIVE UPDATES | MULTIMEDIA | + MORE
three innings and gave up just one hit, but Cincinnati pushed across one run on a costly error by sophomore third baseman Luke Miller and
idsnews.com & @idsnews
another on a passed ball by sophomore catcher Ryan Fineman SEE BASEBALL, PAGE 5
Indiana Daily Student
2
NEWS
Tuesday, April 25, 2017 idsnews.com
Editors Dominick Jean and Cody Thompson | campus@idsnews.com Sarah Gardner and Melanie Metzman | region@idsnews.com
Nonprofit offers talk on sexual assault issues By Brooke McAfee bemcafee@indiana.edu @bemcafee24601
Justice Unlocked senior staff attorney Michael LoPrete said he wants people to feel like they have access to the justice system when dealing with issues of sexual assault. “I think it’s important to demystify the legal process,” he said. “I think there’s a real access-to-justice problem.” Justice Unlocked is a local nonprofit that offers legal aid on a sliding-scale basis for people who do not qualify for free legal services but cannot afford a standard attorney fee. The organization presented a seminar on legal matters related to sexual assault and domestic violence Monday to a small group at the Monroe County Public Library. LoPrete discussed issues like rape culture, definitions of sexual assault and sexual violence, protective orders, and resources for victims of sexual assault at the seminar. Deputy development director Lasserina Dowell said she wanted to have members of the community discuss the issue of sexual assault and to inform the public of available resources. “It just gets the conversation going, and really
the purpose of it is just to educate the public on their rights and what resources there are,” she said. LoPrete said it is important to encourage people to talk about issues of sexual assault because it helps the victims feel more comfortable speaking up about their experience. “If we are afraid to talk about certain issues because they feel taboo, the people who are in that situation are going to feel that pressure too,” LoPrete said. LoPrete said rape culture is one factor that discourages people from discussing issues of sexual violence. Rape culture includes issues such as victim blaming, inappropriate comments or jokes about rape, , denial of widespread rape, and silence on issues of sexual assault. One of the topics LoPrete discussed was the definition of consent. He emphasized the need for a clear expression of agreement. “Consent is not merely the lack of a no,” he said. “It’s an enthusiastic, affirmative yes.” He also focused on the role of bystanders in the issue of sexual assault. He said it is essential for people to speak up. “If you are willing to no longer stay silent when you see things or witness things
REBECCA MEHLING | IDS
Justice Unlocked, a law firm that focuses on criminal defense and family law, presents a seminar Monday evening at the Monroe County Public Library about sexual assault. Justice Unlocked gives access to legal representation and aims to create a greater public knowledge about rights of people.
that are not okay, you are taking steps to fighting sexual violence in the community,” LoPrete said. Justice Unlocked executive director Jamie Sutton said one of the main issues victims of sexual assault face is trying to get people to believe them. It is important
not to brush away these incidents, he said. LoPrete said it is easy to feel intimidated by the legal system but he wants to encourage outreach that allows people to ask questions. When people deal with the legal system after a sex-
IUSA execs take annual trip to D.C. By Jesse Naranjo Jlnaranj@indiana.edu | @jesselnaranjo
Current and former IU Student Association executives and staff traveled to Washington, D.C., this week for the Association of Big Ten Students’ Big Ten on the Hill conference. The annual event brings together student leaders from all 14 schools in the Big Ten Conference. Outgoing IUSA president senior Sara Zaheer; her two vice presidents; seniors Alex Trevino and Tyler Knox; and treasurer junior Patrick Kennedy were present on the trip. They were accompanied by their co-chiefs of state and legislative affairs, sophomores Molly Connor and Alex Wisniewski. Connor is the incoming IUSA vice president of administration. “We’re really excited for IU’s office that just opened in D.C.,” Zaheer said, referencing the recently established Office of Federal Re-
lations. which the group will be visiting while they’re at the conference. One of the topics discussed recently in national conversation was legislation that would require sexual assault charges at a university level to be recorded on any transfer records, Wisniewski said. This means if an offender switched schools, their transcript would have a misconduct mark comparable to if the student had been caught with plagiarism. Wisniewski said this is not something that is pushed as a student government but more so an idea that has been discussed on a national level. He said many concerns that arise from the concept involve due process but on the other hand some students have had multiple misconduct charges leveled against them. The representatives from IU also visited with staff at the Department of Education and the House Education and Workforce
Subcommittee. Part of the meeting with the Department of Education was in question-and-answer format, and Zaheer said many of the questions posed pertained to mental health. Zaheer said she wanted to know how the new department, under Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos, would put into effect plans for new and innovative education given DeVos’s position on alternative forms of learning. Zaheer said college completion rates play a large role in determining school ratings and school funding. “I specifically asked if the department had any plans to address the mental wellness piece,” said Zaheer, explaining that mental health was key in ensuring students graduate in a timely manner. IUSA’s delegation in Washington also discussed ways to promote political involvement among the student body. ABTS’s recent “VoteB1G” initiative
encouraged students at Big Ten universities to register to vote. On Monday the representatives met with Sen. Todd Young, R-Indiana. “We actually just met with Senator Young, and some of the feedback we’re getting is kind of bringing civic engagement back on campus,” Wisniewski said Monday. Wisniewski said part of what he’s learned in his experience and from the conference was that civic engagement begins with old-fashioned tactics like writing to candidates and calling their offices with concerns. Wisniewski said politicians may not read every single letter they receive from their constituents, but it sends a message. A central theme in student engagement with their elected officials is making sure their concerns are expressed properly. “If there’s an issue we care about, we want to make sure we’re taking it to the right people,” Zaheer said.
Hillel honors Holocaust survivors By Christine Fernando ctfernan@indiana.edu | @christinetfern
In Israel, a siren sounded at 11 a.m. Monday, and the streets went silent. Traffic stopped. Theaters, pubs and restaurants closed, and candles were lit. In Bloomington, community members — Jews and non-Jews alike — gathered at the Helene G. Simon Hillel Center and walked to Sample Gates in silence. The silent procession was part of the program for Yom HaShoah Ve-Hagevurah or Holocaust Remembrance Day, at the Hillel Center. The evening included a tree-planting ceremony; a lecture by Gunther Jikeli, scholar at the Institute for the Study of Contemporary Antisemitism; and a panel of Holocaust survivors. “It’s so important to us that we share their stories and understand them from generation to generation,” said Sue Silberberg, rabbi and director of Hillel. “We want to give honor to those who perished.” Attendees first gathered in the garden, where a hole had been dug into the dirt and a shovel was propped up against a red brick wall lining the perimeter of Hillel. The community members chatted to one another until someone shushed the crowd, and the group went silent. A volunteer pulled the maple tree out of a pot, dropped it into the hole
and buried it with dirt from the mound beside him. A pinkish-white petal fell from the tree and fluttered to the ground below before the crowd began to sing the Hebrew song “Eli, Eli.” “My God, My God, I pray that these things never end,” the crowd sang. “The sand and the sea, the rush of the waters, the crash of the heavens, the prayer of the heart.” The song and the tree were a means of remembering the past while capturing hopes for the future of the Jewish people, Silberberg said. While she wants Jews to always move forward, she said this is only possible if they remember their past. “We want to remember the past but know that the future continues,” she said. “Life grows and continues like a tree would.” As the song ended, attendees ascended the stairs to a gathering room where Jikeli sat in front beside three Holocaust survivors — Naum Kolotinskiy, Sonya Shulkin and Era Solyar. “I admire your strength to speak out about your personal experience with the Holocaust and what you saw with your own eyes,” Jikeli said to the survivors. Jikeli said words often seem inadequate to describe the monstrosity of the Holocaust, but hearing the stories of survivors can help people begin to understand. “We must prevent the
words ‘never again’ from becoming meaningless,” Jikeli said. After Jikeli spoke, six IU students lit six candles in memory of the six million Jews who died in the Holocaust. Then the students lined up in front of the audience and recited a chant. “The human spirit is the light of God,” they said in unison. “As we look at these lights, try to imagine six million candles, each one with the name of another human being who was murdered in the Holocaust.” As a child of a lawyer and economist, Solyar, whose granddaughter is an IU student, lived a comfortable life in Kiev, Ukraine. When the war started, her father went to fight in the army, and she evacuated to the North Caucus region with her mother, younger brother and grandmother. During the trek to the North Caucus, Solyar was starving and had no water. She watched as people around her contracted malaria and died. She smelled dead bodies every day. “People were carrying little babies,” she said. “Some people just dropped and died right on the way.” Shortly after arriving at a hospital, Solyar’s mother, brother and grandmother died on the floor where there were no beds left for them. “I can’t talk too much about this,” she said with her hand on her chest. “It
was a miracle that I survived.” Solyar said she thought she was an orphan until her father found her and brought her back to an army base in Stalingrad, Russia. In Stalingrad, she survived on the meager food rations her father could bring her. After the war, she returned to Kiev with her father, only to find their apartment empty and all their belongings stolen by the Germans. “I’ve never told anyone this story in my whole life while in Ukraine,” she said “Now, you guys have to know so that it doesn’t become a reality.” IU senior Casey Stover said while the perpetrators caused the Holocaust, it was the people who stood by silently who allowed it to happen. She said it’s important to learn from stories of the Holocaust so that people can prevent it from happening again. “There’s still hatred and ignorance and violence in the world today,” Stover said. “It’s important to be aware and not deny it so that we can face it together.” Solyar said she urges Jews today never to be bystanders, to always watch out for anti-Semitism and never to forget that they are Jewish. “No matter what, stay true to the fact that you are Jewish,” she said. “Judaism should not be something you shy away from.”
ual assault, they often do not know where to turn, Dowell said. “You just don’t know what the steps are, and of course you can Google things, but that doesn’t always help your case as much as you would like to think,” she said.
Dowell said Justice Unlocked’s goal is to break down complicated legal matters for people and walk them through the process. “It’s kind of like a partnership,” she said. “The whole goal is that they don’t have to go through this process alone.”
Numbers steady for Little 500 arrests, citations By Jack Evans jackevan@indiana.edu | @JackHEvans
Preliminary numbers from the Bloomington Police Department and numbers released by Indiana State Police and Indiana State Excise Police of those arrested and cited during the Little 500 weekend appear to be consistent with last year’s numbers. BPD’s early numbers show 42 people arrested between 4 p.m. Thursday and 4 a.m. Sunday, Lt. John Kovach said. Eleven of those people were cited for misdemeanors and released, and 31 were jailed. Last year, BPD arrested 41 people during what Capt. Steve Kellams described then as a “very quiet” iteration of the celebratory weekend. Kovach said more official numbers for this year should be available later in the week. As of now, the most serious crimes in BPD’s jurisdiction from this weekend appear to be three reported rapes. Those crimes are under investigation. BPD has not assisted with the IU Police Department’s investigation into two reported abduction attempts, Kovach said. BPD also responded to a slew of smaller crime reports. A delivery driver reported being assaulted after he tried to remove a dancing partygoer from the hood of his car, and at least two men were arrested after drunkenly trying to force their way into other people’s apartments. Also under investigation is a report from early Sunday morning of shots
Details on reported rapes, page 1 Two rapes were reported during Little 500 weekend. The first case involves a 21-year-old woman who was visiting Bloomington for Little 500, and the second involves a woman who said she was raped near the south side of town. The first suspect is described as Middle Eastern with black hair and a skinny frame, and the second is a dark-skinned man about 6-feet-tall. Both cases are still active. To read more about these reports, turn to the front page. fired near the 100 block of South Kingston Drive, Kovach said. One officer who responded to the report found a brass shell casing in the middle of the roadway near Marsh Supermarket. ISP increased patrols in Monroe County during the weekend, according to a press release. Troopers made a total of 114 arrests during the weekend, including 15 for operating while intoxicated and a total of 25 felonies. Drug possession arrests and warrant arrests were among those made. Excise police arrested or cited 151 people, including 114 minors, on a total of 316 charges, according to an IndyStar report. That number decreased from 179 in the same time frame last year. This year’s Sunday pretrial diversion program offered by the Monroe County Prosecutor’s Office brought in 166 people ticketed for underage drinking and public intoxication.
Hannah Alani Editor-in-Chief Emily Abshire Managing Editor of Presentation
Vol. 150, No. 40 © 2017
www.idsnews.com Newsroom: 812-855-0760 Business Office: 812-855-0763 Fax: 812-855-8009
Lindsay Moore & Jordan Guskey Managing Editors Roger Hartwell Advertising Director Faishal Zakaria Circulation Manager
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.
130 Franklin Hall • 601 E. Kirkwood Ave. • Bloomington, IN 47405-1223
NEWS
3
Tuesday, April 25, 2017 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
Charleston shooter on death row in Indiana By Taylor Telford ttelford@indiana.edu | @taylormtelford
The Charleston, South Carolina, church shooter has been moved to Indiana’s federal death row. Dylann Storm Roof, 23, was convicted of murdering nine people at Mother Emanuel AME Church. Among his 33 federal charges were hate crimes and damage to religious property or destruction to religious belief. He is the first federal hate crime defendant to be given the death sentence. He is being held at the United States Penitentiary, a high-security prison in Terre Haute, Indiana, with 1,409 inmates, according to its website. Nationwide federal executions are fairly rare. Only three federal inmates have been executed in the past 30 years. Roof is the last of 62 people on federal death row. The most recent person to receive a federal death sentence before Roof was the Boston Marathon bomber, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev . All federal death row inmates are kept in Terre Haute. The remoteness of the facility makes it ideal, said Jody Madeira, a law professor and capital punishment expert in the Maurer School of Law. “It’s in the middle of nowhere,” Madeira said. “That’s where all the facilities are.
That’s where the officials are trained.” After the moratorium on the death penalty was lifted in 1976, the first person to be executed by the federal government was Timothy McVeigh, the Oklahoma City bomber. McVeigh was executed in 2001. Since 1976, Indiana has executed 20 people, including McVeigh. A scarcity of lethal injection drugs throws a wrench in the process, making some states scramble to carry out executions. Arkansas tried to schedule eight executions in 11 days this month, rushing before an ingredient in its supply of lethal injection drugs expires at the end of April. Four of the eight inmates have had their executions stayed by the courts. If lethal injection drugs become difficult to obtain, states have the option of employing older, less humane methods, including electrocution, hanging or a firing squad, Madeira said. President Trump and Attorney General Jeff Sessions have both expressed their ardent support of capital punishment. It’s likely they may usher in a new wave of federal executions, Madeira said. Because he was sentenced in federal court, Roof only has one possible level
of appeal. Madeira said. It is likely he would be executed fairly quickly if he either loses or terminates his appeal, which would push him to the front of the list of federal executions. After terminating his appeal, McVeigh was executed within a year. In the time leading up to their executions, prisoners are moved to the “death house,” where they are under constant surveillance, Madeira said. In the death chamber, there is space for 10 people to watch, including victim’s families, journalists and government officials. For the execution of McVeigh, the government offered a closed-circuit broadcast for families of victims at the site of McVeigh’s attack. More than 230 people watched live in Oklahoma City. Madeira said whether or not a similar broadcast might be offered for Roof’s execution is up in the air. Federal prosecutors chose to pursue the death penalty for Roof, but many family members of Roof’s victims expressed dismay. They wanted to show him the mercy he did not show their loved ones. On June 17, Roof entered Mother Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, a historically black church, and prayed with the congrega-
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE
Charleston, South Carolina, shooting suspect Dylann Roof is escorted from the Shelby Police Department on June 18, 2015, in Shelby, North Carolina. Today he is on federal death row in Indiana.
tion before murdering nine people. During his January jury trial, Roof expressed no remorse. Previously he had told FBI agents he’d been
TRUMPDATE
Trump discusses successes in office By Melanie Metzman mmetzman@indiana.edu @melanie_metzman
As President Trump approaches his 100th day in office, he has already begun to address his accomplishments and media perception at rallies and on Twitter. “No administration has accomplished more in the first 90 days,” Trump said April 18 before an audience of manufacturing workers and technical students at the headquarters of SnapOn, a Wisconsin-based manufacturing company. Since taking office, Trump has had his Supreme Court nomination Neil Gorsuch confirmed. He has also signed 28 bills into law, the highest number for a new president since 1949, according to the Washington Post. He has also signed executive orders, such as the failed travel ban, and released a proposed budget for 2018. However, polling firm Gallup reported that
Trump has a historically low approval rate of 41 percent since his inauguration in January. The previous president to hold Gallup’s lowest approval ratings in the first quarter was Bill Clinton with a 55 percent approval rating. The firm said the average presidential approval rating at the end of the first quarter is 61 percent. Trump said that these low numbers are due to the media’s portrayal of him. “No matter how much I accomplish during the ridiculous standard of the first 100 days, & it has been a lot (including S.C.), media will kill!” Trump tweeted Friday. White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus said in an interview on NBC’s “Meet the Press” that the president is “fulfilling his promises and doing it at breakneck speed,” particularly in reference to increasing military spending and removing the United States from the Trans-Pacific Partnership free trade deal.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE
President Trump signs the so-called “Buy American, Hire American” executive order April 18 during a visit to Snap-on Inc. in Kenosha, Wisconsin. The order clamps down on guest worker visas and require federal agencies to buy more goods and services from American companies and workers.
However, Trump’s travel ban was blocked by the courts twice, his proposed bill to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act did not pass Congress and Mexican president Enrique Pena Nieto said his country will not pay for the border wall between the U.S. and Mexico. Nevertheless, Trump’s
supporters still stand behind him. According to an ABC News and Washington Post poll, 4 percent, or about 2.5 million voters, of those who voted for Trump regret their decision. As the president approaches his 100th day in office Saturday, he is expected to sign more executive orders this week.
Subscribe for free at idsnews.com/subscribe
111 N. Rogers St. 812-336-4310 • bloomingtonsa.org Facebook: The Salvation Army Bloomington Indiana Twitter: @SABtown & @SABtownStore Sunday: Sunday School for All Ages, 10 a.m. Coffee fellowship, 10:30 a.m. Worship Service, 11:00 a.m.
He was sentenced to death Jan. 11, 2017, and pleaded guilty to nine counts of murder in the same case April 10, 2017.
IU’s first engineering program shows results From IDS reports
The Salvation Army
Get weekly news headlines sent straight to your inbox.
trying to start a race war. “I felt like I had to do it, and I still do feel like I had to do it,” Roof said in his closing argument.
Most students don’t have the opportunity to build a 7-foot-long skee-ball machine or an interactive laser maze, but IU’s first ever engineering class got to do just that. The small class of 18 for intelligent systems majors is a part of a hands-on atmosphere put in place this year during the inaugural year of IU’s engineering program, according to an IU press release. “We focus on beginning to build things from day one,” said Martin Swany, a professor and associate chair of the program, in the release. “We introduce a concept, and the students get to apply and contextualize that concept immediately in a hands-on way. Then, we circle back to the concept again. This approach gives our students a very marketable set of skills, so that when they enter the workforce they are ready to solve modern challenges.” The program was put together to respond to the need for more science, technology, engineering and mathematics oriented students after an In-
diana task force assessed the needs of the state. Freshman Jackie Youngs said she was happy to be on the ground floor of a new program like this one. She said she wasn’t worried about the small class and saw it as an advantage for the program. “The small class size allows our instructors to gauge where we are as a class and make sure we are understanding not only what we are doing but why we are doing it,” Youngs said in the release. “If we are grasping a subject quickly, they can fly through it, but if we are struggling, they can slow it down.” The different groups within the class created laser mazes, a skee-ball machine and an LED cube which created light patterns based on the rhythms of music. “There’s so much to learn about what computers can do and what you can do with computers,” Youngs said in the release. “If you learn that in college, you’re more prepared and relevant in the workforce.” Dominick Jean
ATTENTION
GRADUATES Come visit and get eyewear while you can still use Bursar billing. Bring the family! 10% discount on all eyewear materials for IU students, staff and faculty. The Atwater Eye Care Center offers the latest advances in eyewear, eyecare services, and examinations all at one convenient location!
We are a multi-generational congregation that offers both contemporary and traditional worship. We live our our mission: "To preach the Gospel of Jesus Christ and meet human needs in His name without discrimination." Everyone is welcome at The Salvation Army.
Atwater Eye Care Center
Lt. Sharyn Tennyson, Pastor/Corps Officer
744 E. Third St. 812-855-8436
Check
the IDS every Friday for your directory of local religious organizations, or go online anytime at idsnews.com/religious.
We can bill your Bursar!
www.opt.indiana.edu
Indiana Daily Student
4
OPINION
Tuesday, April 25, 2017 idsnews.com
Editors Dylan Moore and Zack Chambers opinion@idsnews.com
EDITORIAL BOARD
ILLUSTRATION BY AUSTIN VANSCOIK | IDS
Profit dumped O’Reilly Bill O’Reilly loses his show at Fox for all the wrong reasons Last week, Fox News removed Bill O’Reilly, host of “The O’Reilly Factor,” from the network due to sexual harassment allegations that emerged in early April. Notably this also took place after 50 advertisers pulled their support from O’Reilly’s show since April 1. Although this is a positive step for Fox, as it creates a better workplace environment, the Editorial Board worries this didn’t take place solely because of the allegations but because of the loss of advertising revenue.
On April 1, the New York Times reported 21st Century Fox and O’Reilly had paid out roughly $13 million combined in five sexual harassment settlements. After the April 1 article was published, 21st Century Fox enlisted a law firm to investigate O’Reilly’s workplace behavior. Additionally, since its publication, other women have come forward with complaints against O’Reilly. April 19, the company decided to fire him. The Editorial Board finds
it hard to believe Fox and the Murdochs — Rupert and Lachlan, the co-chairmen of 21st Century Fox — needed an investigation to ascertain whether O’Reilly had been harassing female employees and guests at Fox. If the settlements are any indication, they’ve known about how he treats women for a long time now. The earliest settlement dates back to 2002, but the network didn’t know about that one, which O’Reilly settled privately, until the Times reported it. They were, however, aware of
a settlement that took place in 2004. If the Murdochs and the other stakeholders in the company truly cared about the poor treatment of women within their news outlet, they would have worked to change the workplace culture years ago — not after news of all five settlements surfaced. After Fox News chairman Roger Ailes was removed from his position on similar allegations last July, Lachlan and James Murdoch, the co-chairmen of 21st Century
A modest proposal for the English Graduate Solidarity Coalition put its bold vision into action. First, they should notify the Provost before holding any meeting, event, rally or protest on campus, so the Provost can be more “transparent” in alerting critics of the time and place for accessing the event and confronting any speakers. This will provide an example to the 750+ student organizations and countless academic units at IU who may hold events on campus. Second, the EGSC should open all of their meetings, events, rallies and protests on campus to the public, and allocate sufficient time and space to accommodate anyone who wishes to confront a speaker. When you include the mandatory question-andanswer session, you could be in for some long nights. Finally, the EGSC should use contracts with paid speakers and vendors that excuse them from the contract if the Provost cancels the event, based on her de-
how many advertisers remove their support after the dirty laundry is aired. Granted, it’s good that Fox finally dealt with this. Wendy Walsh, one of the women who made a complaint against O’Reilly, made a comment after the news of O’Reilly’s departure: “Today, we have entered a new era in workplace politics.” Yes, it’s good that O’Reilly was finally held accountable for his actions, but perhaps his reckoning should have come a little sooner.
NOT HOT TAKES
GUEST COLUMN
Recently, the IDS ran a letter by IU Bloomington Provost Lauren Robel addresing the protesters at the Charles Murray event recently held in Franklin Hall. The English Graduate Solidarity Coalition issued a response to that letter which the IDS also published. Here, clinical professor of business law Tim Lemper discusses his reaction and thoughts to what was said during the exchange. I was excited to read the letter by the English Graduate Solidarity Coalition. In it, they demand that IU exclude speakers from campus if the event may require security, be poorly attended or heavily criticized, “pause” student access to campus buildings or promote “dubious scholarship.” They demand the right to access any event, confront speakers and require speakers to do a questionand-answer session. Finally, they demand that IU be more transparent about events on campus. I’d like to make a modest proposal: The EGSC should
Fox, made a press release in which they said, “We continue our commitment to maintaining a work environment based on trust and respect. We take seriously our responsibility to uphold these traditional, long-standing values of our company.” Upholding these values should happen regardless of whether the misdemeanors of the network’s hotshots and executives are made public. And they definitely should be upheld based on standards of workplace decency — not based on
TIM LEMPER is a professor of business law.
termination that the event may be poorly attended or heavily criticized, may require security or impede student access to campus buildings, or may promote dubious scholarship. I hope to see the EGSC’s members “live their values” at their next event. I’ve got my bullhorn, pot suitable for banging and speech entitled “Careful What You Wish For.” If I cannot attend, perhaps they can reschedule for a time when I won’t threaten violent protest until the Provost cancels the event. After all, I have a right to defend myself against speech that threatens to harm me. In the words of Jonathan Swift, “I can think of no one objection that will possibly be raised against this proposal.” If you would like to submit a letter to the editor, email opinion@idsnews. com or mail to 6011 E. Kirkwood Ave. Bloomington, IN 47405
Trump should not break tradition Instead of carrying out presidential tradition and attending the White House Correspondents’ Dinner on Saturday, President Trump will be holding a post-campaign rally. He will be the first U.S. president to skip the dinner since Ronald Reagan and the first to skip without a substantiated reason for doing so. Trump will be in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, while Hasan Minhaj, comedian and senior correspondent at “The Daily Show,” will be knocking Washington, D.C. elites down a peg in a ballroom absent of Trump and his boycotting staffers. Alternatively, comedian and late-night talk show host Samantha Bee will be host to her own version of the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, an event named “Not the White House Correspondents’ Dinner.” Washington, D.C.’s one night of jokes is becoming increasingly eerie. It’s not surprising that Trump will be skipping the annual dinner and roast. His political career as a birtherproponent was famously criticized when comedian and late-night talk show host Seth Meyers roasted the real
estate and media-mogul at former president Barack Obama’s White House Correspondents’ Dinner in 2011. It’s clear he isn’t capable of meeting such public scrutiny without retaliating. The public knew since February that the president would be skipping this year’s Correspondents’ Dinner since he announced it on omit his Twitter. It was expected that a man who whines daily from his social media would miss out on a celebration of his most personal failings. But while Trump prefers the cheering crowds to self-deprecating humor, it’s strange and unnerving that he would continue his campaign celebration months after his inauguration. Trump’s insists on continuously celebrating his election victory while chaos reigns within his cabinet and judges and legal experts scrutinize his executive orders. This exhibits his refusal to acknowledge any personal failings. While the man’s 100day approval rating looms the lowest of any president since Dwight Eisenhower, Trump continues to claim that his successes are “yuge.” In his eyes, any media member or
JULIA BOURKLAND is a sophomore in philosophy.
citizen claiming otherwise is a liar. What do we make of a person unable to handle criticism or rejection, much less if that person is our president? Trump is undoubtedly the most insecure man in public office. What’s befuddling, however, is that this insecurity seems to make him — not break him. He built his political career out of insecurityinduced retaliations against other public personas. His insecure attacks against people or issues he has no knowledge of are labeled merely “telling it like it is.” The man is incapable of living up to his words. And instead of facing humorous criticism, he will rally a crowd to attack anyone who dares to speak ill of him. Regardless of what deepcutting insults are hurled at the Correspondents’ Dinner or Pennsylvania rally, the country will become even more divided as Trump supporters and dissenters refuse to sit in the same room, laughing at the same jokes. jsbourkl@umail.iu.edu
A NOTE FROM THE EDITORIAL BOARD The Editorial Board is made up of the Opinion section editors and columnists. Each editorial topic is selected and discussed by the Board until we reach a consensus, and a member of the board volunteers to write the article. 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. Spring 2017 Editorial Board: Dylan Moore, Zack Chambers, Kaitlynn Milvert, Miranda Garbaciak, Becca Dague, Neeta Patwari, Anna Groover, Maddy Klein, Emma Getz, Colin Dombrowski, Jessica Karl, Steven Reinoehl, Austin VanScoik, Julia Bourkland, Kathryn (Katie) Meier, Lucas Robinson, Sam Reynolds, Mercer Suppiger, Brian Gamache, Justin Sexton
LETTER TO THE EDITOR POLICY The IDS encourages and accepts letters to be printed daily from IU students, faculty and staff and the public. Letters should not exceed 500 words and may be edited for length and style. Submissions must include the person’s name, address and telephone number for verification.
Letters without those requirements will not be considered for publication. Letters can be mailed or dropped off at the IDS, 6011 E. Kirkwood Ave. Bloomington, IN 47405. Send submissions via e-mail to letters@idsnews.com. Call the IDS with questions at 855-0760.
Indiana Daily Student, Est. 1867 Website: idsnews.com
5
Tuesday, April 25, 2017 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
» SECURITY
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 scandals in the 2016 presidential election. Now OVPIT can take on projects like the rollout of two-factor authentication while being more aggressive in safety education for staff and students. Duo Login, the twofactor authentication system at IU, prompts users to confirm their login with a verified device after entering their username and passphrase. During the spring 2016 semester, Calarco said one of the most pervasive attacks took OVPIT by surprise. A series of emails prompting IU students and employees to click on a link to view an “important message” from the staff portal was sent to thousands. When clicked, the link redirected to a mockup of the Central Authentication Service webpage, the familiar login form that users see before accessing any online IU service. After the recipient entered their login information, the page redirected once again, but the message they were promised was nowhere to be seen. Most people who received this email likely thought it was a glitch and did not report it. However, this was a example of phishing, or a scam where people send emails pretending to be a legitimate source to solicit personal information. “This is why we’ve now introduced many opt-in security services at IU,” Calarco said. “We detected fraud, but we also need to prevent it in the future.” The bad actors, or people who attempt to access a system with malicious intent, now had direct access to many IU usernames and passphrases. They could redirect paychecks and view the sensitive information of thousands of people. IU security experts went through all the possibilities
they could think of to stop the messages from reaching the inboxes of unsuspecting IU affiliates. Eventually all subsequent messages were blocked, and the original recipients were forced to change their passphrases. Duo, the two-step login system that is now required for all employees, was introduced because of this phishing scam. Calarco said the office is expanding Duo soon by gradually requiring it for more IU-affiliated bodies, like student organizations, but these efforts come with a challenge. “We need more education for people so they know why it’s important to opt in, even if it’s not required for them yet,” Calarco said. Education goes beyond telling users about what might happen. It includes making them capable of detecting when a message they receive doesn’t look quite right and reporting it to the technology services so the problem can be stopped as quickly as possible. Calarco said he sees digital signatures and trusted messages becoming more common defense mechanisms. These authorizations ensure the email’s recipient that the message they’re looking at was legitimately sent from that person. These security measures may become commonplace in the IU network, but for now Calarco and his office try keeping as many threats as possible at bay. “The cyber criminals continue to become more professionalized, convincing, and sophisticated,” Calarco said. “If there is some information of value, they will try to find a way to capitalize on it.” Bad actors are out to profit from IU in many ways, whether it’s by stealing sensitive data from unsuspecting staff and students or by accessing expensive textbooks and research materials that aren’t open to the public. As the University becomes more reliant on the
Common security terms Bad actor Any person or group that has malicious intent online. Can be a scam artist or an engineer who tries to infiltrate online systems. Firewall A security program that keeps track of all network connections. This is a protection mechanism to make sure that nothing suspicious is accessing your computer. Malware Stands for ‘malicious software.’ Consists of a program that usually hijacks a computer to steal or compromise data and is often spread through human interaction or through networks the user has interacted with. Patch When a program has any vulnerabilities, this is released to update and fix the system. Phishing Attackers will send out emails, pretending to be a trusted source, in order to fool victims into following prompts and handing over important data. internet and the digital landscape to access, exchange and develop information, there is a greater potential for vulnerability. Calarco said with every advancement IU makes, cyber criminals are nearly always going to match those advancements with some of their own. “As they develop tools, and as the things that we hold dear become increasingly digital and increasingly valuable, they will continue to try to tilt the game in their favor,” Calarco said. “With solutions like Duo and two-factor authentication, we can tip the game back in our favor.”
PHOTOS BY MICHAEL WILLIAMS | IDS
Above Matt Gorski slides in to second base April 14 at Bart Kaufman Field. Gorski and the Hoosiers will take on the Ball State Cardinals on Tuesday at Victory Field in Indianapolis. Below Freshman catcher Jake Matheny looks to the dugout after Butler scores in the second inning April 19 at Bart Kaufman Field. IU lost to Butler 7-5.
» BASEBALL
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 before Krueger was relieved. Cincinnati won that game 6-1.
Krueger has thrown 28.2 innings and is 1-1 with a 2.51 earned run average and one save this season. In games he has appeared in, the Hoosiers have
outscored their opponents 105-85. IU will look to continue its strong play with Krueger on the mound at 7 p.m. Tuesday.
OPEN
the DOOR TO MORE Find more: INFORMATION REALTORS HOUSES APARTMENTS OPTIONS Find your new place at
Housing idsnews.com/housing
Indiana Daily Student
6
SPORTS
Tuesday, April 25, 2017 idsnews.com
Editors Jake Thomer and Jamie Zega sports@idsnews.com
WOMEN’S TENNIS
Win clinches Big Ten Tournament berth for IU By Dylan Wallace dswallac@iu.edu | @D_wall1
The IU women’s tennis team’s season was on the line Sunday, and the Hoosiers managed to play themselves into the Big Ten Tournament with a 6-1 win against the Penn State Nittany Lions. The two teams were 3-7 in conference play coming into the match and tied for 10th place. With only 10 of 14 Big Ten teams making the postseason tournament, one team’s season would end after the match. Coming into the match senior Paula Gutierrez said the doubles point would prove to be crucial. Gutierrez and her partner, sophomore Natalie Whalen, took care of business in their doubles match at the No. 2 spot by winning 6-4. Senior Kim Schmider and sophomore Madison Appel trailed five games to three at the No. 1 doubles spot. Then, the No. 41-ranked NCAA doubles team won four consecutive games to win their match and put the Hoosiers up 1-0. IU Coach Ramiro Azcui said the doubles point was a huge momentum builder for
the team. Play then moved to the singles, where the Hoosiers have struggled lately. They only needed three players to score a victory to clinch the match, and five of them did. Azcui said the adjustment of switching Schmider to the No. 6 singles spot and moving freshman Pauline Jahren to the No. 5 spot really helped his team. “Kim did a great job getting up 6-0 on her opponent,” Azcui said. “To win five out of the six singles matches was a statement to show how well the team played today.” Both teams had played two days prior to Sunday. IU lost 7-0 to No. 5 Ohio State while Penn State beat Purdue 5-2. Sunday was the Nittany Lions’ senior day, and with five seniors on the roster, emotions were high. “We knew they were going to come out with huge intensity,” Azcui said. “For us to be able to overcome that first punch was huge and helped the momentum of the match.” Azcui said he was proud that his two seniors picked up victories while none of the
KINSEY JOHNSON | IDS
Sophomore Natalie Whalen cheers after scoring a point in a doubles match against Illinois on April 7. The Hoosiers fell against the Fighting Illini. 6-1.
heading to their second consecutive Big Ten Tournament. In the first round, the Hoosiers will take on the Iowa Hawkeyes, who took down IU
Nittany Lions’ seniors did. The Hoosiers finished the regular season with a 1313 record, including 4-7 in the conference, and are now
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
earlier this year 6-1. Azcui said his team knows it didn’t play well against the Hawkeyes but is looking to use this momentum to get
some revenge. IU’s opening match of the conference tournament will be 3 p.m. Thursday in Champaign, Illinois.
ROWING
IU lands Notre IU rowing finishes in 8th at Clemson Dame transfer guard Ali Patberg By TC Malik
tcmalik@umail.iu.edu | @TCMalik96
From IDS reports
IU women’s basketball has gained a transfer in former Notre Dame guard Ali Patberg, IU Athletics announced Monday. IU Coach Teri Moren expressed her excitement about the addition of Patberg in a release. “As one of the most decorated players to come out of the state of Indiana, she will Ali Patberg be a great addition to our roster,” Moren said in the release. “She comes from a great basketball family and we are looking forward to having them all join the IU Women’s Basketball program.” Patberg was Indiana’s Miss Basketball in 2015. The rising sophomore is from Columbus, Indiana, and attended Columbus North High School. She was also a McDonald’s All-American and the 2015 MaxPreps National High School Player of the Year. Patberg was redshirted her freshman season at Notre Dame due to a torn right ACL, which she suffered during practice in November. This past season Patberg played in 22 games while averaging 0.8 points and just less than eight
minutes per game. Patberg’s career has been slowed by injuries, but given her talent level and high school accolades, Patberg will likely get a shot at taking over the point guard position when rising senior guard Tyra Buss graduates after this upcoming season. Due to NCAA transfer regulations, Patberg will be forced to sit out the 201718 season but will have at least two years of eligibility remaining starting in the 2018-19 season. The Hoosiers have already lost four guards from this past season’s squad, including two starters in seniors Karlee McBride and Alexis Gassion. With two additional younger guards, freshman Ria Gulley and sophomore Tia Elbert, recently deciding to leave the program, Moren needed to find a long-term replacement in the back court. Patberg may fit that bill, but IU also has top guard commits in each of its next two recruiting classes. Jaelynn Penn is a 5-foot-10 wing and is part of IU’s 2017 five-member recruiting class, while 2018 guard Grace Berger has also committed to the Hoosiers. Penn is ranked No. 39 in ESPN’s 2017 overall player rankings, while Berger is ranked No. 46 among 2018 players. Josh Eastern
In one of the most prestigious regattas in the nation, the Clemson Invitational, IU finished in eighth place out of 21. The Hoosiers only finished behind teams ranked among the top 20 in the country. However, IU did outlast No. 18 Louisville who finished in 11th place. The regatta spanned two days, with Saturday’s morning and afternoon results determining the field Sunday. IU had two of its top three crews compete in the A final Sunday morning. Senior Hanna Henry said she loved the way her crew, the first varsity eight, 1V8, competed to position themselves to win Sunday. “We had the third fastest time on Saturday,” Henry said. “It gave us the confidence to be able to go out there and do it again on Sunday.” The 1V8 and 2V8 crews both competed in the A final Sunday morning, with the 1V8 placing sixth and the 2V8 placing seventh. Although IU was hoping for a better finish, they were just off the mark as three seconds separated the 1V8 from third place. Senior Spencer Manton said she still believes the team is pleased with their showing. “It’s hard to gauge our speed until we get to a bigger regatta like this one,” Manton said. “It’s nice to see the speed of those teams and know that it’s doable to catch up with them in the next couple weeks.”
YULIN YU | IDS
Sophomore Sophia Wickersham and junior Caroline Taylor move their boat after a competition April 1. During the weekend, IU competed in the prestigious Clemson Invitational and came in eigth place.
The team is getting toward its most meaningful part of the season. The Big Ten Championships are just a couple of weeks away and the NCAA Championships commence in nearly a month. “Having the younger rowers see competition like this is really good in preparation for Big Tens and NCAAs,” Manton said. “I remember from my freshman year that it’s really nerve-racking if you haven’t seen these big powerhouse teams.” Although the team didn’t get the result they wanted this weekend, the experience is something to build
on for the rest of the season. Manton is a part of the 2V8 crew, which is only comprised of three seniors, making the rest of the crew rather inexperienced when dealing with the national powerhouses during NCAAs. Manton said that inexperience has been shrinking as the season progresses and the team gets more competitive experience on the water. The team’s maturity shows them they can compete with some of the best teams in the conference. “We were up on Ohio State for some of the race, who were back-to-back national champions a couple years ago,” Manton said. “Its
MEN’S GOLF
GOTT TAKES
I’ve ‘gott’ one last column for you “Zain said that you were interested in a columnist position... Is that correct?” On May 9, 2016, I received a direct message through Twitter from then Indiana Daily Student Sports editor Jordan Guskey that would unknowingly change my life. I had written for the IDS before this DM on-and-off during my last four years at IU. I started with a story about a roller derby team, interviewed Kyle Schwarber and became the women’s tennis beat writer weeks into my freshman year. Then I went off the grid, IDS-wise. I joined the IU Athletics Department as a social media and photography intern and had to leave the sports desk in order to start. Eventually, I re-entered the fold as the Weekend editor and designer for the Opinion section and was finally given the chance this school
year to write about sports as the national sports columnist with free reign: the best type of “reign,” over “Purple Rain” and the reins for horses. I took the position Guskey and I talked about and then chaos ensued. The first words I wrote for the national column were, “Sports are stupid,” a sentiment I have echoed ad nauseum to this very day. I immediately, for better or for worse, found my voice: one consisting of the first person, inane puns and a pop culture lexicon that started with “Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy” and ended with “Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues.” Ultimately, mistakes were made by those in charge, a common occurrence when I am involved, and I became the IU men’s basketball columnists. I somehow finagled my way into perhaps the most popular beat of the IDS.
Accompanying me was a strong sense that I was a fraud, a satchel of jokes and an intense desire not to screw up. As my senior year reaches its fitful conclusion and my brain recovers from the brain cell damage that is required for celebrating the Little 500, I can’t help but get a bit emotional. I would not be who I am without the IDS. For a time, I was afraid to write and put my opinions into the public stratosphere. Putting yourself out there in person is hard. To do it with words is petrifying. Days after I accepted the position as national sports columnist, I woke up in a panic and thought that I would fail magnificently. The same exact feeling, to the umpteenth degree, occurred after the IU basketball gig was finalized. I’d like to think I did okay, but even if I didn’t, and I just
nice to see that our speed is comparable to theirs, especially seeing as we’re so close to Big Tens and know that we can catch them in the next couple weeks.” Big Ten Championships will take place in Indianapolis on May 13-14 and the NCAA Championships will occur in West Windsor, New Jersey, from May 26 to 28. However, before IU gets there it still has one last tune-up this weekend in Bloomington. The Dale England Cup will take place in Bloomington at 9 a.m. Saturday. IU will play host to Duke, Notre Dame and San Diego State as they will compete.
Greg Gottfried is a senior in journalism.
haven’t seen more emails calling me a “nobody ass,” at least I tried. “Sports are stupid.” The fact that we care about who won a particular game or what statistics a random player put up will always strike me as the most absurd thing we do as a civilization, and we do quite a few absurd things. With that said, sports and the IDS have fueled my college career just like how coffee fuels the students in Wells Library. To deny that would be a shame. Through all of the words that I’ve written and odd anecdotes I’ve told, one thing has remained the same. “Sports are stupid.” That’s what makes them great. gigottfr@indiana.edu @gott31
IU men’s golf struggles in final regular season match From IDS reports
Scoring was at a premium for all 15 men’s golf teams at Ohio State’s Kepler Intercollegiate this weekend, as no team managed to post a score below par for the tournament. Sophomore Jake Brown’s final round 74 (+2) led IU on Sunday, and Brown finished in a tie for 34th in the tournament while the Hoosiers tied for 14th as a team with a final team score of 933 (+81). Illinois came in first during the weekend by shooting 864 (+12) as a team. Brown had a rocky start to his final round by making three bogeys and one birdie in his first six holes but played his final 12 holes at one-over par to finish the 54-hole event with a score of 230. After Saturday, Brown was one shot behind IU senior Andrew Havill and freshman
Brock Ochsenreiter after his scores of 79 and 77 put him at 156. The Hoosiers’ 36-hole score of 624 put them in 15th place going into Sunday, but they were just eight shots out of ninth place. Havill and Ochsenreiter paced IU on day one by both finishing with a 36-hole score of 155 to tie for 42nd. Havill was just two shots behind Brown for the tournament after his final-round score of 77 put him at 232 to tie for 39th. Ochsenreiter registered the third-best round of the day for IU with a final round 78 to tie for 45th. With the regular season now complete, the Hoosiers’ next tee time will be in the Big Ten Tournament next weekend at the Baltimore Country Club. Reese Anderson
News On The Go! Download the new IDS mobile app and get the latest in news from around campus.
Real-time push notifications from sports and breaking news
Access content streams from:
B
C
R
Breaking
Campus
Region
S
Sports
O
Opinion
A
W
E
F
Weekend
Events
Arts
Find It
Indiana Daily Student
*** Now renting *** 2018-2019. HPIU.COM 3-14 bedrooms. 812-333-4748 No pets please.
Available for August Studio-5 Beds
2 BR / 1 block to Law. D/W + 1 res. parking. 812-333-9579
***For 2017*** **1 blk. S. of Campus** 5 BR, 3 BA, W/D, D/W, A/C, trash, parking, $465/mo. each plus utils. bestrentsrdw@yahoo.com
220
EMPLOYMENT General Employment FT Summer Position Painting & lawn care Grant Properties 812-333-9579 kkey@grantprops.com Help with yard work, $10/hour. 812-339-5223 IU Students! Want a “cool” job this summer?
Home City Ice Co. is now Hiring Delivery Drivers! Competitive pay/hours. Apply @ homecityice.com
235
Lake Monroe Boat Rental and Fishin Shedd seek FT/PT for spring/summer Contact: 812-837-9909 jenshedd930@gmail.com
Campus Walk Apts. Close to Campus, avail. Fall, 2017. Utils. incl. & free prkg. 812-332-1509 Cwalk@crerentals.com
Deluxe 3 BR, 3 BA w/ private garage & 2 balconies. All appliances incl. W/D, D/W. Minutes from Campus & Stadium. Water incl. $1750/mo. Call for more info.: 812-336-6900.
Large 1 or 2 BR, avail. now. $499/month. Includes utils. Free prkg. Close to Campus. 812-339-2859
Now leasing for Fall: 2 and 3 BR apartments. Park Doral 812-336-8208
bestrentsrdw@yahoo.com
305
Newly renovated & 1 block to campus
APARTMENT & HOUSE LEASING SINCE 1942
444 E. Third St. Suite 1
burnhamrentals.com
812-339-8300
Sublet Houses
310 N Dunn St. Sublease May-Aug. 5 BR/2 BA. 2 min to Kirkwood/Campus. kellylanglas@gmail.com 7th & Dunn. 1 BR avail. W/D, hrdwd. & parking. 1st mo. rent paid, $550, obo. Arbogdan@indiana.edu Lease 1 BR of 3 BR house. SE neighborhood, $490/mo. For more info: lnicotra@indiana.edu
205 S Clark. 3 BR, 1 BA. $1800, utils. incl. New photos! iurent.com, 812-360-2628 3 BR house- A/C,W/D, D/W. 319 N. Maple, for Aug. $900/mo. No pets. Off street parking. 317-490-3101
pavprop.com | 812.333.2332
MERCHANDISE
goodrents.homestead.com
Rent discounts: Aug.,’17. Houses & apts. Sarge Rentals 812-330-1501
5,3,2 BR. All with W/D, D/W, A/C. Near Campus. Avail. Aug., 2017. 812-327-3238
ourt
LiveByTheStadium.com 1332 N. Washington St. 4/5 BR, 2.5 BA. Now renting 2017-2018 HPIU.COM Houses and apartments. 1-2 bedrooms. Close to Campus. 812-333-4748 No pets please.
Discover Bloomington’s Hidden Gem 1 - 5 Bedrooms Houses & Townhomes 4 Bedroom $365/bed
5 Bedroom $420/bed
(812) 331-1616 RegencyCourt-Apts.com
Condos & Townhouses
2 BR, 2 BA, 1 car garage condo, Gentry Quarters, S. College Mall Rd. Excel. cond., 2 pools, $995/mo. 812-276-1606 2 BR, 2.5 BA townhouse. Near stadium. $690/mo. Call: 812-320-3391
Microwave for sale! Almost new condition. $20. Text 812-360-3920 kim561@iu.edu
Apts./houses for Aug., 2017. sargerentals.com 812-330-1501 For Aug., 2017 518 S. Swain Ave. 3 BR/2 BA, W/D, D/W, remodeled. $550/mo. + utils. 740-591-6425
Sublet Apt. Furnished
1 BR in 2 BR/2 BA apt. at The Avenue. Near IUPUI. Avail. 6/1. $845/mo.+elec. shameena_singh@hotmail.com
4 BR, 4.5 BA townhouse avail. til July. Discounted to $475/mo., furn., cable & internet. 208-221-5382 Aug 17-18 sublease. Priv. BR w/BA in furn. 2 BR apt, $710/mo + elec. Call/text: 317-519-3055 Avail to Aug Neg terms & rent Close to Campus 812-333-9579
Appliances Lightly used Frigidaire AC unit. 14x23 - 36 in. $50, obo. casechen@iu.edu
8 BR on Atwater, W/D, 3 BA, avail. Aug. Off-street prkg. 812-361-6154
The Flats On Kirkwood Avail. for lease: 1 studio + parking. Also, four: 3 BR/2 BA units. Washer/dryer in units. Call: 812.378.1864.
parkdoral@crerentals.com
Burnham Rentals
***For 2017*** **1 blk. S. of Campus*** 4 BR apts. Utils. pd. except elec. $485/mo. each.
1 bed loft with exposed concrete
Large apt., downtown. Houses 3-5 / 2 BR + loft. 812-333-9579
Scenic View Restaurant now hiring: line cooks & dishwashers! Competitive pay, $9-$15/hour. 4600 S. SR 446
Apartment Furnished
AVAILABLE NOW AT PAVILION HEIGHTS
1304 S. Grant. Spacious 3 BR, 2 BA. Garage, backyard. Avail. 08/06. $1,200/mo. Dan (812) 339-6148 or damiller@homefinder.org
Sublet Condos/Twnhs.
1 BR avail in 5 BR, 3 BA twnhs. on 14th & Indiana. $510/mo. + utils. Guys only. cw94@indiana.edu
1-5 BR. Avail. May & Aug. Best location at IU Got it all. 812-327-0948
egency
Restaurant & Bar
HOUSING
colonialeastapartments.com
Large 1, 2 & 4 BR apartments & townhouses avail. Summer, 2017. Close to Campus & Stadium. 812-334-2646
Now leasing Fall, 2017! 1 & 2 BRs. Hunter Ridge 812-334-2880
sadie@svthbloomington.com
Prime location: 2 BR apt. (from $645) & 3 BR twnhs. (from $825). Hdwd. floors, quiet. 812-333-5598
**For 2017** 3 BR, 2 BA. Living & dining rm, gas heat, bus, 8 blks. from Campus. $900/mo. + utils. bestrentsrdw@yahoo.com
340
Need a ride to the airport? Luxury cars with professional, screened drivers at your service. Please call 937-470-0293 to reserve a time to be picked up. $95.
AVAILABLE NOW! Renovated 1 BR, 1 BA. $700/mo. No pets. 1955 N. College Ave. 812-339-8300 burnhamrentals.com
Call 812-333-2332 to schedule a tour
315
** Just diagnosed with Mononucleosis or Mumps? $200-$700 in 2 visits, or refer a qualified patient for $100. For more info. Call: 800-510-4003 or visit: www.accessclinical.com
3rd & Grant, 1 BR. $300/mo. + utils. Share BA & kitchen. No pets. 812-879-4566
1 BR/1 BA available May 18. Unfurn., close to downtown & campus. $600/mo. 574-536-5670 350
2-3 BR GREAT LOCATION Clean, bright & spacious. Discounted for Aug. 2017 812-333-9579
Apt. Unfurnished
Sublet Apt. Unfurn. 1 BR/1 BA avail MayAug. $610/mo. Close to Campus & bus stops. Free prkg. jp90@iu.edu
355
**!!Great Location!! 125 E. 10th St. 5 BR, 3 BA, W/D, D/W, A/C, remodeled kitchen, $650 per bed. Omega Properties 812-333-0995 Omegabloomington.com
ONLINE POSTING: All classified line ads are posted online at idsnews.com/classifieds at no additional charge.
345
sassafrashillapartments.com
Houses
Computers Lenovo IdeaPad 100IBY, Intel i5 quad core, Windows 10 OS. $250, neg. bjdugan@iu.edu
Electronics
Electronics 43” Ultra HD Smart LED TV. Made in 2015, looks brand new. $325. lscavino@indiana.edu
44” LED TV w/ TV stand. Can connect to WiFi, HDMI plug. $250. alangilb@indiana.edu 46 inch Coby TV. No remote. $150, obo. TV stand for $20. mjali@indiana.edu 50” Samsung Smart TV w/ TV stand. Less than 1 yr old. $400. jefhnguy@indiana.edu Barely worn black Apple Watch Series 1. Comes w/charger and box. $225. eorth@indiana.edu Bose AE2 Around-Ear Audio Headphones, black. As good as new. $80. gfvidale@iu.edu Chromecast 2nd gen. $5 cheaper than in store. $30. 260-4665411 josediaz@iu.edu Grey iPhone 6 plus, in good condition. 64 GB. xiaoqiu@indiana.edu 812-361-0288 HP-All-In-One Desktop. New, 8GB ram w/touch-screen monitor. $300-$350. jaytpate@iu.edu HP Envy Laptop. 15.6’ Touchscreen. 2015 model. Great cond. $515 njbaranc@indiana.edu Insignia 40” TV. 1080P HD. As good as new. $150 obo. 812-821-2390 aditsach@indiana.edu iPad Mini 2. 32gb space, grey w/detachable bluetooth keyboard. $250 obo. amyrowla@indiana.edu Mid 2010, 13” Macbook Pro w/ 8GB ram and 256GB SSD. $500. rforgas@indiana.edu New Samsung Galaxy Alpha Gold. Includes charger. Still in box. $200 sojeande@iu.edu Nintendo Mario Kart 8. Deluxe set Wii bundle. $249, neg. leile@indiana.edu Toshiba 40”1080p HDTV w/ remote and original box. Like new. $200,obo. chang74@indiana.edu
40” LED 1080P Smart HDTV Roku, black. $200, neg. 812-369-2328 minzhong@indiana.edu
Unlocked Dual sim Huawei Honor 5x Smart Phone. Great battery life! $120. dhoy@indiana.edu
ELKINS APARTMENTS NOW LEASING
FOR 2017 & 2018 1, 2, 3, 4 & 5 BR Houses, Townhouses and Apartments Quality campus locations
ELKINS APARTMENTS
Get weekly news headlines sent straight to your inbox.
Subscribe for free at idsnews.com/subscribe
415
Sublet Apt. Furnished Seeking 4 fem. for 5 BR/3 BA house. Near Kirkwood/Campus. mkommor@indiana.edu
405
Announcements
Now leasing, 2 BR, 1.5 BA twnhs. at Sassafras Hill. 812-339-1371
410
110
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Apt. Unfurnished
Condos & Townhouses
415
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.
310
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.
325
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.
315
CLASSIFIEDS ADVERTISING POLICIES
340
CLASSIFIEDS
Tuesday, April 25, 2017 idsnews.com
8
To place an ad: go oline, call 812-855-0763 or stop by Franklin Hall 130 from 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Monday - Friday. Full advertising policies are available online. idsnews.com/classifieds
339-2859 www.elkinsapts.com
9
Queen mattress set Excellent, like new cond. $250. 812-219-0617 rahamlet@indiana.edu
AB Lounger for working abdominal muscles. $40 obo ccowden@indiana.edu
Swarovski crystal heart necklace. Perfect gift for girlfriend. $30, obo. ssoundra@iu.edu
03 Infiniti G35. 103k mi. Well maintained. Clean inside & outside. $6000.
Black couch in great cond. Comfortably fits 3. $100, neg. Must pick up. jmazin@indiana.edu
Queen size memory foam mattress and bed frame. $300, neg. yingqian@indiana.edu
Brand new: Zagg Slim Book for iPad Pro 9.7 in. Unopened. $70, obo. parkms@indiana.edu
Clothing
1999 Dodge Stratus w/ only 85k mi. New tires, battery, & starter. $2000. carlmeye@indiana.edu
BR set: chair, bed frame, head board, queen mattress, night stand. $425. jnachman@indiana.edu
Table. Good condition & high quality! Barely used. $25. 812-606-0560
Canon zoom lens. 75300 mm. Never used. Price for best offer. carewall@indiana.edu
Twin XL bed frame and box mattress. Great condition. $70 for both. psaravan@iu.edu
Husqvarna Rider Mower. 21 horse power. 48 in. cut Hydromatic transmission.
Wooden desk w/ dimensions of W: 44”, L: 16”, H: 28”. $60. elpicket@indiana.edu
Indoor/Outdoor Reversible Braided Rug. 6 ft. round. $80. piachaib@iu.edu
$1300, obo. 812-360-5551
Instruments Casio PX-800 keyboard, full piano action and pedals in like new cond. $700. mcgintyh@indiana.edu
Durable Graco 4-in-1 convertible crib. $80 obo. liqi@indiana.edu
Emperador AAC-70 Classical Guitar w/ case. In great cond. $150. mhouston@indiana.edu
Giant custom-made entertainment center. 9 ‘x 6.5’ x 1.5’. $500 neg. nikwebst@iu.edu
Luis Rossi Clarinets. (Bb/A) w/double case & Altieri cover. $5000. bjdugan@iu.edu
Giant white couch with pillows and blankets. Slight damage. $115. tavukovi@indiana.edu
Traynor custom valve YCV50 guitar tube amplifier. $400. jusoconn@indiana.edu
Grey Mainstays metal arm futon w/ full size mattress. $120, obo. mahiagga@iu.edu
Misc. for Sale 1990s Budweiser “King of Beers” bar sign/mirror. Used condition. $35. jeowhite@indiana.edu
Mini Fridge. Good cond. $30. E 3rd St pick-up. 203-448-0064 acehrlic@iu.edu
2 Yakima bike carriers. carry bikes w/front wheel still on. $65
Outdoor Saucer Chair, black. Good condition. $20. yichu@indiana.edu
rnourie@indiana.edu
Horoscope
Women’s Ovation Blizzard winter boots. Size 8.5. Used only once. $30. lbrasili@indiana.edu
2007 Toyota Camry w/ 161,010 Mi. $5500. sunshiy@iu.edu
Textbooks
The Complete Earth. Douglas Palmer pub. Quercus, London. Like new. $50. 812-585-5749
Jewelry
Seiko mens black dial, gold-tone, stainless steel, solar watch SNE100. $120. drstegge@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) —
Cancer (June 21-July 22) — To-
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) —
Today is a 9 — Unexpected news could require adaptation. You’re a powerful force, especially today and tomorrow. It’s easier to ride the horse in the direction it’s going.
day is an 8 — Share delicious flavors and conversations with friends and colleagues. Your team has the necessary resources. Coordinate your response to breaking news.
Today is a 7 — Classes, seminars and educational adventures stimulate understanding and share new views over the next few days. Learn useful tricks and techniques.
Gemini (May 21-June 20) — To-
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — To-
day is a 7 — Strategize plans to follow rules and deadlines. Schedule carefully to avoid risks or error. Consider things from a spiritual perspective. Clarify your direction.
is an 8 — Focus on short-term professional objectives. Manage the details of a job impeccably. Coordinate with your team to adapt to surprising news. Make it look easy.
day is an 8 — Discuss shared finances today and tomorrow. Strategize to reach determinations and decisions together. Manage short-term cash flow with a sense of humor.
BLISS
Selling lightly used Vox AC15C1 tube amp. $400, firm, no trades. rbwalter@indiana.edu
Bulwer’s works 9 vol. Edward Bulwer Lytton Good Cond. pub 1880. $75. 812-585-5749
462
435
Metal bed frame for full size mattresses. Excellent condition. $35. mselli@iu.edu
MCAT flashcards from Kaplan and McGraw-Hill. $20/each or $35 both. jaaguayo@indiana.edu
Fender Strat w/case, $600, obo. Fender Blues Jr. Amp. $400, obo. 812-360-5551
HARRY BLISS
2010 Honda Civic LX Sedan. Less than 53k mi. Excellent condition. $9777, neg. zhao78@iu.edu
lkaindl@indiana.edu
TRANSPORTATION Automobiles
2010 Mercedes SUV GL450 w/74,500 mi. $23,000. gasdhali@iupui.edu
01 Volkswagen Cabrio. Convertible. No issues. $1300, neg. sboyadji@indiana.edu
2013 Ford Explorer XLT 4D w/ 74,800 mi., in excellent cond. $20,000. imoh@iu.edu
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is an 8 — Step lightly. Dance gracefully with your partner over the next few days, despite changing tempo and rhythm. Expect surprises. You’re not alone. Offer a hand.
and friends. Kindle up some romance. Express your heart to one who’s captured it.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
— Today is a 7 — Disciplined efforts earn reward. Energize your workout for the next few days. Take one step at a time. Balance your health and work practices. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
— Today is a 7 — Practice what you love over the next few days. Relax with family
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.
Answer to previous puzzle
© Puzzles by Pappocom
NON SEQUITUR
Motorcycles
Suzuki GW250 Motorcycle w/extended factory warranty. $2650. rnourie@indiana.edu
2010 Kia Rio w/ 119k mi. Runs well, fuel economy: 27 city/ 32 hgwy. $4,000.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is a 7 — Domestic projects benefit from disciplined action. Get practical, and clean a mess. Talk things over with family. Reward worker bees with something delicious.
1 Oysters are found in one 4 Campfire leftovers 9 Bowler’s challenge 14 Deli loaf 15 Kingdom 16 Escape detection by 17 Notable period 18 *Increases homeowner levies, say 20 “Pitching” or “sand” golf club 22 Tartan wrap 23 Candidate’s goal 24 *EMS group 27 2015 FedExCup champ Jordan 29 ’80s-’90s legal drama 33 Williams in the Country Music Hall of Fame 34 “Brokeback Mountain” director 39 Go astray 40 Dutch financial powerhouse 41 *Meaty barbecued pork dish 42 You, in Paris 43 Dessert with a crust 44 Corrects a pencil mistake 45 Soft “Hey!” 46 “Buzz off!” 48 Siouan speakers 50 *Marinara sauce ingredient
Bicycles
Cannondale Silk Path 400 bike, $150. 1 owner. 812-272-9830
Aries (March 21-April 19) —
Today is a 9 — Focus on the job at hand. Catch coins today and tomorrow. Don’t worry about the future; stick to practical objectives. Deliver results with a smile.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) —
Today is an 8 — Your writing and communications could get surprisingly productive and effective through tomorrow. Learn voraciously, and share your understanding. Your view supports others.
© 2017 By Nancy Black Distributed by Tribune Media Services, INC. All Rights Reserved
L.A. Times Daily Crossword
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
Difficulty Rating:
Black ‘14 Jeep Cherokee Latitude 4*4. Remote start. $18,000. 765-4763926 zhanhaiy@indiana.edu
2010 BMW 328i sedan. 49k mi. Clean title. Minor cosmetic flaw. $11,000, neg. hj20@indiana.edu
Publish your comic on this page.
su do ku
Benz ML350, 2008. 147,000 mi. $5500. nameaddie@163.com
2008 BMW 335xi. 87k mi., clean title. Tuned, $16,200. kishah@iupui.edu
The IDS is accepting applications for student comic strips for the summer 2017 semester. Email five samples and a brief description of your idea to adviser@indiana.edu by April 30. Submissions will be reviewed and selections will be made by the editor-in-chief.
2014 Porsche Panamera S E-Hybrid w/ wall charger. 29,500 mi. banghuan@indiana.edu
2003 Infiniti G35. 103k mi. Well maintained. Clean inside & outside. $5500 sgeng@indiana.edu 2007 Pontiac Grand Prix GT. Supercharged V6 w/ 108k mi. $5,000. akellis@indiana.edu
Music Equipment
2014 Jeep Cherokee Sport 2.4L, white. Clean title. $20,000. 812-3602392 biaozhan@indiana.edu
2000 Nissan Altima. 120k mi. Awesome ride quality. $2600, OBO. soudey@ iu.edu. 240-855-4674
Vintage 1980’s Satin IU Jacket. Size XL, kind of fits like a Large. $120. joviedo@indiana.edu
Target Pendant Lights, jet black & mint green. $15 each, $20 for both. kbwooldr@indiana.edu
Yamaha Keyboard Piano Synthesizer. PSR-E313, great cond. $80, obo. joskendr@indiana.edu
2000 Acura TL 3.2L. 162k mi. Well maintained and good cond. $2100. chang79@indiana.edu
J-Rac for car-top kayak transportation. $25. 812-822-0399
Rival 700 watt microwave. Nearly new, multiple preset options. $20. swunderl@iu.edu
450
Dresser, good cond. Black. Must be picked up. $50. kabakken@indiana.edu
Traditional Balkan slippers. Great for decoration. US size 9. $10. besmer@indiana.edu
441
430
Dining room table, incl. 2 chairs. Like new cond. $100. 812-219-0617 rahamlet@indiana.edu
Plato’s Closet pays cash on the spot for trendy, gently used clothing. 1145 S. College Mall Rd. 812-333-4442
505
Custom-made entertainment center for sale. Pick up, only. $200, neg. nikwebst@iu.edu
Jordan 11 XI Lows Columbia. Brand new, just released. $225, obo. jdekker@indiana.edu
Automobiles
2013 Ford Focus 4 DR SDN SE. Under 17,900 mi. Clean title. $10,000. lj57@indiana.edu
sgeng@indiana.edu
520
stchou@iu.edu
Brand new IKEA “Kungsmynta“ full/double mattress protector. $20, obo. nirobert@indiana.edu
465
Bed, bedframe w/ drawers underneath, pillows, comforter. $200. abandyop@indiana.edu
505
Automobiles
515
Jewelry
505
Misc. for Sale
462
Furniture
435
Furniture
420
420
Tuesday, April 25, 2017 Indiana Daily Student idsnews.com
55 Medication 58 San Joaquin Valley problem 59 Prying type 62 *Restaurant chain named for a Rolling Stones hit 65 Make public 66 “Hello” Grammy winner 67 Part of an act 68 Mining supply 69 French hat 70 Smooths in shop class 71 Pig’s pad
DOWN 1 Coffee or tea 2 Fictional governess 3 Double 4 Take into custody 5 Pirate’s milieu 6 Japanese 17-syllable poem 7 Borden spokescow 8 Silvery food fish 9 Ready to go 10 Blood component 11 Very fancy 12 Creative spark 13 Trial run 19 Sault __ Marie 21 Adorkable one 25 Rocker, e.g.
WILEY BREWSTER ROCKIT: SPACE GUY!
26 Tavern drinks 27 Ocean crossers 28 __ button 30 Chant for D.C.’s baseball club 31 Cropped up 32 Court orders 35 Org. with Warriors and Wizards 36 Alfa Romeo sports cars 37 Tell tall tales 38 Surrey town known for salts 41 San __: Riviera resort 45 Hors d’oeuvres spread 47 Diamond-shaped pattern 49 Go along 51 The Spartans of the NCAA 52 “Don’t make __!” 53 Puccini premiere of 1900 54 Nash who rhymed “grackle” with “debacle” 55 Dull 56 Lacking manners 57 Popular rideshare app 60 Window shade 61 Pretentiously cultured, and a phonetic hint to the answers to starred clues 63 Spring Festival : China :: __ : Vietnam 64 “What else?”
Look for the crossword daily in the comics section of the Indiana Daily Student. Find the solution for the daily crossword here. Answer to previous puzzle
TIM RICKARD
the care and services you need to stay healthy at idsnews.com/health
Health Spotlight
Mon. - Fri.: 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. 1116 S. College Mall Road 812-332-2204 oralsurgeryofbloomington.com
Timothy J. Devitt, D.M.D. Board Certified Specialist in all phases of oral and maxillofacial surgery, especially the removal of wisdom teeth, IV sedation and dental implants. Bloomington’s only IU trained Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeon serving IU students, faculty and their families and Indiana residents. Provider for most insurance plans, including IU and Medicaid. New patients welcome, no referral necessary. Discover, Mastercard, and Visa accepted.
Chiropractic
Optometry
• Eye Exams • Contact Lens Exams • IU Student & Employee insurance provider
• 24-hour Emergency Service (call 812-340-3937) Our Designer Frames and Sunglasses include: Flexon RayBan Nike Nautica Calvin Klein Nine West Bebe Coach
Lacoste Anne Klein Kate Spade Burberry Prada Dragon Fossil Michael Kors
2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS! Bloomington Mon. - Fri.: 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. Sat.: 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. 812-333-2020 1105 S. College Mall Road Located just Left of Kroger and Plato’s Closet
Dr. Brandy Deckard, O.D., F.A.A.O. Dr. Derek Bailey, O.D. Precision Eye Group specializes in comprehensive vision health. We offer examinations and treatment for a wide array of eye diseases, conditions, and problems, with advanced diagnostic and vision care technologies. We help our patients achieve and maintain good eye health for life. You can shop our wide variety of designer frames including Ray-Ban, Barton Perreira, Tom Ford, and many more! Schedule your appointment now, and see your world with the best vision possible.
Mon., Wed., Fri.: 8:30 a.m. - 6 p.m. Tue.: 1 - 6 p.m.
3901 Hagan St., Suite C 812-336-7552 Emergency: 812-219-4927 drmaryann.com
Oral/Dental Care
Dental Care Center Jill Reitmeyer, D.D.S. We provide quality, affordable general dentistry for all ages. We can accept insurance and Medicaid/HIP 2.0. Discounts are available to student and student family members. Call for an appointment. Mon., Tue., Thu.: 9 a.m. - 1 p.m., 2 - 5 p.m. Wed.: 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. 1602 W. Third St., Suite A 812-339-7700 drjillreitmeyer@comcast.net drjillreitmeyer.com
Check
New Outlook Counseling Center Inc. Cheryl L. Mansell, LCSW Erin Coram, LMFT Rhonda Souder, LMHC Gloria Thompson, LCSW Kate Minelli LMFT Amy Davis, LMHC Tony Hinz, LMHC Maria Carrasco-Williams, LCSW
5010 N. Stone Mill Rd., Suite B 812-929-2193 newoutlookcc.com
Dr. James Fox Dr. Andrew Pitcher Dr. Fox has 30 years of helping students reduce back and neck pain, stress, headaches, migraines, carpal tunnel, shoulder pain, nerve pain, whiplash injury, sports injury and TMJ. Our office is well equipped with the most modern equipment and student friendly staff. Special Discounts for IU Students. We accept all insurance plans. Give us a call today! Mon. - Fri.: 9 a.m. - noon, 2-6 p.m. Sat. 9 a.m. - Noon 1710 W. Third St. 812-336-BACK bloomingtonchiropractor.com
Physicians
Structural Integration Chiropractic
Not getting relief from other therapies? Try Rolf Method of Structural Integration. Rolf Method Structural Integration, a scientifically validated system of body restructuring and movement education as taught by Ida P. Rolf. Similar goals to chiropractic, but without jolting joint adjustments. Focus is on fascia and connective tissue that stabilize muscles and joints. Your body is released from lifelong patterns of tension and bracing, permitting gravity to realign you. We offer Ekah Yoga student discount, IU student discount and now offering Crystal Singing Bowl Therapy
Brian Logue, M.D. Eric Smith, M.D. Dave Elkins, P.A.C. Board certified physicians with over 70 years combined experience. Services include: kidney stones, urinary tract infections, urinary incontinence, prostate problems, same day emergency appointments, vasectomy. Mon. - Wed.: 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Thu.: 8 a.m. - 2 p.m. Fri.: 8 a.m. - 4 p.m. 2907 McIntire Drive 812-332-8765 summiturology.com Or visit us a our other location. Dr. Warren L. Gray 2200 John R. Wooden Drive Suite 207 Martinsville, IN 46151 765-342-8427
the IDS every Tuesday for your directory of local health care services, or go online anytime at idsnews.com/health
For membership in the Indiana Daily Student Health Directory, please contact us at ads@idsnews.com.
SIFPC is a family practice that offers family health & wellness, women’s health services, diabetes management, sports physicals, cholesterol & blood pressure monitoring, weight analysis and Medicare wellness exams. We now offer a walk-in clinic Mon.: 8:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Tue. - Thu.: 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. Fri.: 8:30 a.m. - 2:30 p.m.
To ensure that individuals of all ages experiencing mental illness and serious emotional or behavioral disturbances can better manage, achieve their hopes and dreams and quality of life, goals, and live, work, and participate in their community. We value the strength and assets and strive to tailor treatment to each individual and family. Mon. - Fri.: 9 a.m. - 8 p.m.
Mon. - Fri.: 7:30 a.m. - 6 p.m. Sat.: 9 a.m. - noon 322 S. Woodscrest Drive 812-332-2020 precisioneye.com
Oral/Dental Care
Karen Reid-Renner, M.D., MHP Discover Chiropractic for the entire family! We are a stateof-the-art chiropractic facility using computerized analysis and adjustment techniques. We specialize in gentle “no-TwistTurn” adjusting of infants to seniors! We are close to campus and near major bus routes. New patients are welcome and most insurance plans accepted. Call today and find out how you and your family can stay naturally healthy with chiropractic care.
Ellettsville
HoosierEyeDoctor.com
General General Health Health
Dr. Mary Ann Bough
Mon. - Fri.: 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. 812-876-2020 4719 West State Road 46 Located across from Richland Plaza
Behavioral/Mentall
Certified Practitioner, Philip Clampitt, has over 3500 hours of clinical experience covering over 30 different conditions including: Back & Neck Pain Stress MS Headaches, Migraines Carpal Tunnel Shoulder Pain, Sports Injuries
1403 E. Atwater Ave. 812-339-6744 sifpchealth.com
Jackson Creek Dental Ryan D. Tschetter, D.D.S. Jackson Creek Dental is a privately owned dental practice conveniently located on South College Mall Road. Most insurances accepted, including the Indiana University Aetna and Cigna Insurance plans as well as the Aetna Graduate Student plan, and IU Fellowship Anthem. Dr. Tschetter offers state of the art dental technology such as Zoom whitening, same day crown appointments, and Invisalign. Dr. Tschetter also provides restorative, cosmetic and emergency care. We pride ourselves in giving the best care to our patients while offering a pleasant yet professional atmosphere. Mon. - Fri.: 7 a. m. - 5 p.m. 1124 S. College Mall Rd. 812-336-5525 jcdsmiles.com
J. Blue Davis, D.D.S. The Center for Dental Wellness A privately owned, people-oriented practice located next to the College Mall. Dr. Davis provides cosmetic, restorative, family and emergency dentistry in a comfortable, relaxed atmosphere with a caring, knowledgeable and experienced staff. We use Cerec technology, allowing us to make restorations in one visit. Dr. Davis is a provider for Invisalign, Zoom! and Under Armour Performance Mouth Guards. Also offering other advanced services. We look forward to getting to know you and take care of you and your entire family with the goal of improving your smile and dental health. Mon. - Thu.: 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. 2909 Buick Cadillac Blvd. 812-339-3427 dentalwellness.com
Health & Beauty Chiropractic Timothy J. Devitt, D.M.D.
Rejuv Spa
1403 E. Atwater Ave. 812-339-6744 sifpchealth.com
WE OFFER: • I.V. Sedation • Wisdom Tooth Removal • Dental Implants Make your appointment today!
615 N. Fairview, Bloomington IN Rolfposturebalancing.abmp.com 812-583-1433
By appointment only
We Strive to Provide you with the highest-quality care in a relaxed and attentive atmosphere.
Oral/Dental Care
Sun-Sat by appointment only
Introducing the new opening of Rejuv Spa. We offer safe, effective and gentle aesthetic laser treatment to all skin types, including treatment of: age spots, rosacea, ingrown hair, hair removal, spider angiomas, acne scars, acne removal and sun spots. All in a relaxed, comfortable environment.
Welcome IU Students and Staff!
Board Certified Specialist in all phases of oral and maxillofacial surgery, especially the removal of wisdom teeth, IV sedation and dental implants. Bloomington’s only IU trained Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeon serving IU students, faculty and their families and Indiana residents. Provider for most insurance plans, including IU and Medicaid. New patients welcome, no referral necessary. Discover, Mastercard, and Visa accepted. Office is located just south of College Mall next to Pier 1 Imports.
David J. Howell, D.D.S. Timothy A. Pliske, D.D.S. 2911 E. Covenanter Drive 812-333-2614 IndianaOralSurgery.com
Matthew L. Rasche, D.D.S., M.S.D. Certified, American Board of Pediatric Dentistry
Southern Indiana Pediatric Dentistry with Dr. Matt Rasche specializes in providing comprehensive dental care for infants, children and adolescents, including those with special needs. We provide quality dental care and an exceptional experience for each patient. We welcome new patients! All insurance plans and private pay accepted. Our office is located near College Mall in Bloomington, at 828 Auto Mall Road in Bloomington. 812-333KIDS. Call today! Mon. - Thu.: 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Fri.: By appointment 828 Auto Mall Road 812-333-KIDS (5437) sipediatricdentistry.com
Dr. Whitney Laverty Crystal Lynn, Erika Cook Julie Waymire, Kim Cramer Campus Family Dental is the preferred choice for dental care among many IU students and professors. We will work with your schedule to provide the highest quality of general dentistry services. We pride ourselves in our professionalism and hightech equipment to make your appointments as comfortable and efficient as possible. Enjoy the convenience of walking to our office. We are located near the southeast corner of campus and accept many forms of insurance. Mon. - Wed.: 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Thu.: 8 a.m. - 2 p.m. 409 S. Dunn St. 812-339-6272 campusfamilydental.com
Mon. - Fri.: 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Your deadline for next Tuesday’s Health Directory is 5 p.m. Thursday.
The Health Directory is your guide to health and wellness in the Bloomington area.
1116 S. College Mall Rd. 812-332-2204 oralsurgeryofbloomington.com
PAID ADVERTISING