Tuesday, April 4, 2017

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Tuesday, April 4, 2017

IDS Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com

WINNING HIS TRUST IU Athletics Director Fred Glass didn’t just judge Archie Miller’s performance on the court when he chose him to be the next men’s basketball coach. He also considered how Miller would act in the face of serious situations off the court, like sexual assault allegations against a player on his team.

Poets read for undocumented By Cody Thompson Comthomp@umail.iu.edu | @CodyMThompson

President Trump sent an email urging supporters on Monday to sign a petition that would defund sanctuary cities. The email claimed Attorney General Jeff Sessions has been cracking down on sanctuary cities, or cities that allow undocumented immigrants as residents and help them avoid deportation, but the city of Seattle is slowing Sessions’ progress by suing the administration. On the same day the email was sent, UndocuHoosiers Bloomington started an event by passing around a tablet with its own petition to create a staff position at IU that supports undocumented students. The event was called UndocuPoets: Resistance through the Arts. It was in a garage-style building with exposed ceilings and a concrete floor and featured two poets who read their work relating to undocumented activism. “President Trump’s always going to do a lot of crazy stuff,” said Willy Palomo, co-founder of UndocuHoosiers Bloomington. “This isn’t something shocking or something sanctuary cities aren’t prepared for.” The poets were Janine Joseph and Christopher Soto, who went first. He set a chair up on a raised wooden platform and set his laptop

on the table in front of him. His poems varied in length and theme, but some of them included immigration, gender, race, sexuality and incarceration. At the conclusion of his first poem, about half of the room snapped and the other half clapped. “And I have been marching for Black Lives and talking about the police brutality / against native communities too, for years now, but this morning / I feel it, I really feel it again,” said he, reading from his poem titled “All The Dead Boys Look Like Me.” Boxcar Books was selling works by the poets and other writers at the side of the room, which was nearly full. The crowd began to murmur with approval after Soto concluded his poems. “This border — is not a stitch [where nations meet]. This border is a wound // where nations part,” he read from his poem “Self Portrait as Sonoran Desert.” During his performance, rain began to fall on the metal roof, so he had to raise his voice over it before it quickly stopped. Soft yellow light lit the back wall and turned the poets into silhouettes to the audience. He finished his reading and stepped down. He went to Joseph, whispered something in SEE POETRY, PAGE 6

By Jordan Guskey jguskey@indiana.edu | @JordanGuskey

N

ew IU Coach Archie Miller’s résumé showed he could win. It showed Miller could inspire his players, become the face of Indiana basketball and lead the program toward its sixth national championship banner. But there was one variable Fred Glass considered that received less fanfare. Miller could handle significant legal situations involving his student-athletes. Two separate players, one in 2012 and the other in 2015, were investigated for allegedly committing sexual assaults while Miller coached at the University of Dayton. With the help of a search firm based in Atlanta, Glass decided Miller handled both cases appropriately. “Nobody can guarantee that a young person on their team is not going to get in trouble,” Glass told the Indiana Daily Student. “All they can do is guarantee that they’ll handle those situations appropriately.” University of Dayton took the lead. The allegations weren’t hidden within the team. They weren’t hidden within the athletic department. This wasn’t Baylor University, where the law firm Pepper Hamilton found

numerous instances of institutional failure in regards to how Baylor University handled sexual assault cases, leading to the university’s president demotion and later resignation, in addition to the athletic director’s resignation and the football coach’s firing. This wasn’t Penn State University, where the mishandling of child sex abuse cases saw the football coach fired and the university’s president and athletic director both depart. Glass wouldn’t consider a candidate’s coaching abilities if the coach couldn’t prove he cared about honoring the sensitivity of sexual assault investigations. “I wanted to hear ... from his lips to my ears that he understood the importance of those being handled by the institution through the Title IX process as opposed to within the athletic department or the basketball program,” Glass said. Neither case during Miller’s tenure resulted in criminal charges against the then-Dayton Flyers players, but both Matt Kavanaugh and Dyshawn SEE MILLER, PAGE 6 GREG GOTTFRIED | IDS

Above photo Archie Miller and IU Athletics Director Fred Glass shake hands after the press conference announcing Miller as the new head coach of IU men’s basketball.

Trump budget cuts may affect Bloomington’s most vulnerable By Molly Grace mograce@indiana.edu | @mollograce

Hoosier Hills Food Bank is full of ceiling-high stacks of boxes full of tortilla chips, mountains of cereal boxes, piles of canned beef ravioli and baked beans. Hoosier Hills served more than 100 agencies last year and distributed almost four and a half million pounds of food across Monroe, Brown, Lawrence, Martin, Orange and Owen counties. But next year, this warehouse’s shelves may be emptier. Its staff may be shorter. Its reach may be smaller. The food bank and many of the agencies that rely on it may lose a vital source of their funding. President Trump’s “America First” 2018 budget proposal plans to eliminate the Community Development Block Grant program, a $3 billion annual federal grant allocated to communities around the country. The grant allows those communities to serve vulnerable populations. However, the proposal said the grant “is not well-targeted to the poorest populations and has not demonstrated results.” Bloomington will allocate a total of $700,000 to various agencies this year, thanks to CDBG. The 10 agencies in Bloomington that have been approved for it will receive what may be their final year of funding from the grant in June.

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The directors of several recipient charities say it is going to be difficult to make up for the loss of the grant. The city’s most vulnerable residents will likely be the ones hit hardest by this cut. “We hope that there’s no way in the world it would pass this way, but we’ve been hoping all kinds of other things that we didn’t think would happen in the last six months,” said Vicki Pierce, executive director of Community Kitchen. The food insecurity rate in Monroe County is 17.8 percent, which is 2.4 percent higher than the national average, according to Feeding America, a non-profit that aims to end hunger in the United States. It’s even higher for children in Monroe County: 20.8 percent. Food insecurity is a United States Department of Agriculture term that refers to limited or uncertain access to adequate food. Community Kitchen is one of the organizations currently trying to figure out how it will cope if the budget is passed as written. In addition to a daily meal service that provides hot meals to those in need, Community Kitchen has a variety of programs that benefit children, which includes ones that keep low-income kids fed throughout the weekends and during the summer. More than half of the people served by the organization’s various programs are children, Pierce said. The problem is the children’s

idsnews.com & @idsnews

Food insecurity rate in Monroe County is higher than Indiana, U.S. average President Trump’s proposed budget would affect support for those with limited or uncertain access to adequate food. In 2014, 17.8 percent of Monroe County’s population was affected by food insecurity. Monroe County Indiana

17.8%

15.3%

U.S. 14.7% SOURCE FEEDING AMERICA 2014 DATA GRAPHIC BY EMILY ABSHIRE | IDS

programs are the most expensive of all the services they provide. “All of our other programs exist because they’re reaching the most vulnerable populations: children, seniors and people who are chronically ill,” Pierce said of the programs outside of their meal service. “Who do you throw out in that equation? There’s no winner.” Community Kitchen, like many of the other organizations that receive CDBG funding, uses the “social service” portion of its funding to SEE BUDGET, PAGE 6


Indiana Daily Student

2

NEWS

Tuesday, April 4, 2017 idsnews.com

Editors Dominick Jean and Cody Thompson | campus@idsnews.com Sarah Gardner and Melanie Metzman | region@idsnews.com

TRUMPDATE

Supreme Court vote could be filibustered By Sarah Gardner gardnese@indiana.edu @sarahhhgardner

In the last few days, Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch’s confirmation has dominated much of the news coming from the federal government. Here’s what you missed and why it matters. Senate Democrats have enough votes to filibuster Gorsuch With the support of Sen. Chris Coons, D-Delaware, on Monday, Democrats in the Senate appear to have enough votes to filibuster Neil Gorsuch, nominee to the Supreme Court. Coons would be the 41st vote against Gorsuch, which would prevent the 60-vote majority needed in the Senate to confirm a Supreme Court nominee. The Senate Judiciary Committee voted 11-9 along party lines Monday to send Gorsuch’s confirmation to the Senate floor. Current Senate rules state Gorsuch can be blocked by the filibuster unless eight

non-Republicans vote for his confirmation. If there is a successful filibuster this week, Republicans are likely to try to change the rules to allow a simple majority vote to confirm Gorsuch in the Senate. Donnelly supports Gorsuch as Supreme Court pick Sen. Joe Donnelly, DIndiana, announced Sunday he will support Gorsuch’s nomination. Donnelly is one of the eight non-Republicans needed to nullify the filibuster. “It is my obligation as Senator to consider the qualifications of each nominee that comes to the Senate floor,” Donnelly said in a press release. “After meeting with Judge Gorsuch, conducting a thorough review of his record, and closely following his hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee, I believe that he is a qualified jurist who will base his decisions on his understanding of the law and is well-respected among his peers.” Many senators compared

TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

President Trump speaks about trade as Vice President Pence looks on before signing Executive Orders in the Oval Office of the White House on March 31 in Washington, D.C.

the planned Democratic filibuster of Gorsuch to the refusal of Republicans to consider former president Barack Obama’s Supreme Court nominee, Merrick Garland. “I was deeply disappoint-

ed by the way the most recent Supreme Court nominee, Judge Garland, was treated by the Senate.” Donnelly said in the statement. “But as Senator, I can only vote on the nominee that comes to the Senate floor.”

Ivanka Trump takes White House position Trump’s daughter, Ivanka Trump, announced last week she will be taking a position in the White House. She will be serving as an unpaid adviser to her father.

Ivanka had an office in the West Wing of the White House. She was in the process of gaining security clearance before she was officially named a White House employee.

Friends of Library sells books to fund library programs By Christine Fernando ctfernan@indiana.edu | @christinetfern

After arriving at the “Animals and Nature” section of a book sale, Jessica Hinkebein opened up her backpack to survey her precious cargo. The IU graduate student pulled out several mysteries and one romance novel and plopped them onto the table. “Just some light reading,” she said. Hinkebein, who studies library science, attended the semiannual Friends of the Library book sale that took place Monday at the Monroe County Public Library. Starting last Friday, book buyers were able to sift through thousands of books, movies, magazines and audiobooks ranging from 25 cents to $1. Hundreds of books remained and sat idly in dusty cardboard boxes and on metal shelves that ran across the perimeter of the room. As a result, the Friends of the Library offered the books for free in hopes that they’d find a home. “There’s nothing better than free books,” Hinkebein said. Even when the books were sold instead of given out for

free, Hinkebein said $1 is a small price to pay to gain entry into a new world through a book. Bookstore coordinator Mike Burns said the low prices were meant to give everyone access to new perspectives through books. “We’re really the cheapest bookstore in town,” Burns said, “We try to keep prices low so the books get into the hands of people who might not be able to afford it.” While Hinkebein shoveled her books back into her backpack, a child waddled around the room with a picture book in front of her face. Hinkebein said children had the most to gain from these sales. Because many families can’t afford to buy new books, used books from the Friends of the Library can be their gateway to reading, she said. “The little ones need books the most to jumpstart that love and passion for reading,” she said. “This way, they get that access to books that they normally couldn’t afford.” As an aspiring librarian, Hinkebein said she already embraces her own love of reading. The sale only added fuel to her passion, she said. She said the books would

be the newest addition to her personal collection of about 700 books filling six full bookcases. She’s not completely sure how she’ll fit them all into her bookshelves, but she’ll find a way, Hinkebein said. “I’m being a bad girl and gathering up more books than I can fit in my apartment,” she said. But the book buyers are not the only ones who stand to gain from the event, volunteer Patrick Murray said. While attendees get to buy cheap books, the library benefits from the extra funding. So far, the library has earned about $5,000, all of which will filter back into the community through library programs. These programs include tutoring for children, teenagers and adults; events to support parents of young children; book clubs; new language instruction; and efforts to teach students about technology, among others. “We serve the community first and foremost,” he said. “All our programs are for the children, the teens, the adults, everyone in the community.” Wilson said he hopes the sale will help people understand the importance of

ROSE BYTHROW | IDS

A few people browse tables full of books at the Friends of the Library book sale Monday morning. The Friends of the Library bookstore normally sells books at a discounted price on the ground floor of the Monroe County Public Library, but today all of its books were free with no limit on how many someone could take.

libraries. Not only do they provide programs for people of all ages, but they are also a source of information vital to building an informed citizenship. “The library helps people become good citizens who are capable of understanding the state of the world,” Wilson said. “The library is a keystone of being a good citizen, a cornerstone of democracy.” Wilson encouraged

Author to give profits to LGBTQ+ center By Hannah Boufford hbouffor@umail.iu.edu @hannahboufford

Throughout the month of April, author Amy Kaufman Burk will be donating 50 percent of her book sale profits to the LGBTQ+ Culture Center at IU. This decision came after Kaufman Burk, 58, began to see her LGBT friends’ fears grow in the current political climate, and she said she wanted to help where possible. She looked for state universities or colleges with an LGBT center that provided a safe environment and empowered students, according to her blog post. She said she came across the LGBTQ+ Culture Center at IU during her online searches and read about the role model organization that Bauder had created within the center. She also said the recent name change from Gay Lesbian Bisexual Transgender Student Support Services to LGBTQ+ Culture Center perfectly reflected the work Bauder had done. “They have held strong and steady through what is eventually going to be looked back on as a shameful chapter in our country’s history,” she said. “They protect their students and give them all kinds of support, but they also do much more. They have really built a model culture of what education is all about.” Bauder said he is grateful for the donation, along with the other donations that the

center has received in the last couple of months. He said he recognizes that gift agreements like these reflect not only the generous donors, but the consistency of the work that the center does on a dayto-day basis. “It makes me appreciate the fact that people pay attention to the things we do, and clearly it has meaning,” Bauder said. He said the money from Kaufman Burk’s donation will probably go toward updating the center’s library resources in books and films regarding the gay community, Kaufman Burk said she loved this idea. Her support of the gay community goes back to her childhood, she said. Growing up in Hollywood Hills, California, she was unaware of the differences between heterosexual and homosexual couples. “I didn’t think of our gay friends as gay friends, she said. “I just thought of them as friends.” Kaufman Burk said her parents, both heterosexual, were very unusual in the sense that they were completely comfortable with gay people and straight people. As a result, she didn’t learn what terms like “gay” and “lesbian” meant until the third grade. She went to a private school until she transferred to the public Hollywood High School, which she said opened her world. It was at this school where she observed gay students being bullied, and she decided

people to come by when it is open Tuesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays or Sundays in order to benefit themselves and the community at the same time. If people have more books than they can handle, they can donate some, he said. Library volunteers will even pick them up if need be. If she finds she can’t fit all her books into her six bookcases, Hinkebein said she would consider donating

Ford F-150 crashes into restaurant, injures several From IDS reports

COURTESY PHOTO

Amy Kaufman Burk, 58, will be donating 50 percent of the profits from her two novels to the LGBTQ+ Culture Center. Her novels explore LGBT themes, and she said the center at IU is a model organization to donate to.

that she wanted to write about the bullying and homophobia that she saw. She was motivated by these observations to write her first novel, a fictionalized version of her first year of high school. “Hollywood High: Achieve the Honorable,” was published in July 2013. Kaufman Burk’s second novel, “Tightwire,” was published in December 2014 and further explores the LGBT themes of the first book. She said she tried to provide models of healthy gay-straight friendships and strong lesbian mothers in the novel to encourage people to view the community in the same way she did while growing up. “Both novels are about the importance of becoming your full self and feeling safe being your full self,” she said. In between the two nov-

els, Kaufman Burk published the first post on her blog regarding how to be an ally in the LGBT community in December 2013. In the past months, Kaufman Burk has donated book profits to other organizations. In February, she said she donated all her profits to the American Civil Liberties Union, Southern Poverty Law Center, California Rural Legal Assistance and Planned Parenthood. In March, 100 percent of the profits went towards Welcoming America and A Home Within. “At the core, that’s what it’s all about: trying to make a difference, trying to help,” she said. “Especially now, with this brewing, simmering culture of rage and hatred and fear, it’s especially important for each of us to step forward.”

them to Friends of the Library to give them a new life and purpose. By donating, Hinkebein said the books are passed on to people who will read them and benefit from what they have to say. “A lot of the books are worn and dog-eared,” she said. “They had a life before this, but now they get a new one with a new person who wants to read.”

ELLETTSVILLE, Ind. — A Ford F-150 crashed into the east side of the Village Inn Restaurant around 2 p.m. Monday afternoon, which sent a handful of people to the hospital with what the restaurant’s owner said were minor injuries. The Ellettsville Police Department could not be reached at press time to confirm injuries or other details of the incident. The owner, Roger Green, said the crash occurred after an elderly man’s foot slipped off the brake and onto the gas while trying to park. The truck drove through several posts, a flower bed and into the building’s limestone wall, on the other side of which

sat two booths full of people. When the crash occurred, Green was working in the dining room and was turned away from the entryway where the truck hit. “It sounded like a bomb went off,” Green said. Green said no one was knocked from their seat but rather just jolted from the impact, which pushed the wall in 10 inches. The truck’s driver was not harmed, and did not need medical attention, Green said. “If the wall had been glass, the truck would’ve come into the building,” Green said. At 3 p.m., despite the crash, the restaurant was still open for business. Nyssa Kruse

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4

NEWS

Tuesday, April 4, 2017 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com

PHOTOS BY ROSE BYTHROW | IDS

CARRY THE LOVE Top left Graham Marshall, the leader of the Carry the Love event, welcomes students into the Wilkie Auditorium on Monday. Marshall and his team traveled from Huntington Beach, California to play worship music and minister to students at six college campuses around the US. Top Students sing and lift their hands as the Carry the Love worship band plays Monday night in the Wilkie Auditorium. “We believe that all over Bloomington the best is yet to come,” said event leader Graham Marshall. Bottom left Sarah Martin signs up for the Carry the Love email list at the worship night on Monday. Around 30 students from CRU and other Christian organizations attended the event at the Wilkie Auditorium.

Man gets 14 years for theft Traditional powwow grows, event open to all students By Taylor Telford

ttelford@indiana.edu | @taylormtelford

A Bloomington man with an extensive criminal record was sentenced to 14 years in prison Monday for a break-in and burglary that took place last May. William DeWayne Booker, 45, was convicted of burglary, theft where the defendant has a prior conviction and being a habitual offender in a February jury trial in Monroe County Circuit Court. Booker’s criminal history stretches back to 1990 and includes several felonies, including theft, burglary, domestic battery and voyeurism. About 11:30 p.m. May 10, 2016, police were called to a house on North Jefferson Street where a burglary in progress had been reported. The woman who owned the house was not home at the time but saw the break-in on a video stream from her security system. When police arrived on the scene, they saw Booker walking out of the backyard with his arms full of stolen goods from the house. In interviews with police, Booker admitted to breaking into the house through a window. Among the items Booker stole were several men’s watches, a pair of headphones and loose change inside a

cigar box, according to court records. The total retail value of the items was less than $100, according to testimony during the jury trial. During his sentencing hearing Monday afternoon, Booker wore thick-rimmed glasses, his hair grown longer into a grey-flecked afro. When he entered the courtroom, he grinned and waved at his older sister. He asked to address the judge directly and said he wanted to apologize. He said he knew he had no one to blame but himself for what he had done. Booker explained that his criminal record began when he was a young man, left in charge of his younger brother. He started selling drugs to make money, he said, and then became addicted to his own product. “Through my addictive phase, I didn’t care about anything but the drugs,” Booker said. More misfortune followed for Booker. He got clean and had a girlfriend who was pregnant with his son, but then the child died shortly after he was born. He became depressed and started using again and got into more trouble with the law. Prosecutors pointed out during the hearing that the

Mennonite Fellowship of Bloomington 2420 E. Third St. 812-339-4456 bloomingtonmenno.org • Facebook Sunday: 5 p.m. A welcoming, inclusive congregation providing a place of healing and hope as we journey together in the Spirit of Christ. Gathering for worship Sundays 5 p.m. in the Roger Williams room, First United Church. As people of God's peace, we seek to embody the Kingdom of God. Ross Martinie Eiler rossmartinieeiler@gmail.com

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only stretches where Booker went for an extended length of time without committing a crime in the past 15 years were when he was incarcerated. At the time of his most recent burglary, Booker said he had lost his job and was strapped for cash. He’d gotten a notice saying his power was about to be shut off due to unpaid bills. He went to his sister and told her about his situation and said he told her of thinking about committing a crime because he didn’t see another way out. “She begged me not to do it,” Booker said. Sniffling, Booker said he knew he had no one to blame but himself. One of the bailiffs handed Booker a tissue, and he dabbed at his eyes. “I was hoping the victim would be here today,” he said. “I’ve been wanting to apologize for what I did to her. I wouldn’t want that happening to anyone in my family or to me.” As Judge Kenneth Todd delivered Booker’s sentence, he said he understood Booker had come from many disadvantages but said that did not excuse his behavior. “Life doesn’t deal us all equal hands,” Todd said. “But this hand you dealt yourself, Mr. Booker.”

From IDS reports

IU will celebrate Native American culture Saturday at the annual IU Traditional Powwow. IU’s First Nations Educational and Cultural Center will organize the event, which will take place from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. that day in Dunn Meadow. “The IU Annual Traditional Powwow is something I truly look forward to each year, because not only is it a great way to honor the Native American community, but it’s an inclusive event that allows the IU community to come together and have a good time,” James Wimbush, vice president for diversity, equity and multicultural affairs, said in a press release. The event has drawn crowds of around 1,500 spectators and participants in the past and is free and open for the public. The powwow will have traditional Native American dancing, singing, food and craft vendors for everyone there. Two sessions of traditional Native American dancing will occur, the first from 1 to 5 p.m. and the second from 7 to 10 p.m. Saturday.

COURTESY PHOTO

The IU Sixth Annual Traditional Powwow will take place from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday in Dunn Meadow. The event is free and open to the public.

Groups from other cultural centers will also attend to showcase their support for Native American people and culture. Paso a Paso, a Latino dance group at IU, and the Indiana School of Polynesian Arts will perform during the event. This is also the first time the event will occur outside and during spring semester rather than fall. “The powwow has continued to grow over the years, so it’s great to have it in Dunn Meadow, where it is much more visible and more accessible to the campus and

local communities,” said Nicky Belle, director of the First Nations Educational and Cultural Center, in the press release. The newly established IU First Nations Leadership Ambassadors Council will have its first meetings before the powwow April 6 and 7. Nicky Michael, a member of the council and of the Delaware Tribe of Indians, will give a lecture the night before the powwow at the Mathers Museum of World Cultures. Dominick Jean


Indiana Daily Student

OPINION

Tuesday, April 4, 2017 idsnews.com

Editors Dylan Moore and Zack Chambers opinion@idsnews.com

5

EDITORIAL BOARD

ON YOUR MIND

Think ahead when talking to roommates Because IU is such a diverse community, there are very few things students have in common. Maintaining a relationship with one or multiple roommates is something almost every student has had to go through. Even the ones lucky enough to get their own room in a dorm probably have to share a bathroom or kitchen space. Roommates have a significant impact on our daily life and can either cause us a lot of happiness or a lot of stress. We should be intentional in maintaining these roommate relationships by purposely learning how to communicate well, because a negative or even less than positive relationship with someone you share space with can lead to problems and anxiety. According to research done at IU and Ohio State, the habits and beliefs of our roommates can significantly impact our diets, study habits and even openness to other cultures. Having a roommate that is watching their weight is likely to cause you to do the same thing. Living with someone who constantly plays video games may keep you from studying nearly as well as you could. I have a friend who lives in an apartment with a few other people. They mostly communicate with snarky, passiveaggressive Post-it notes left on the fridge. She constantly has stories of things they do that cause her stress, but she is not able to solve them because they do not have a good relationship or communicate well. Often times she loses money or sleep because they leave the hallway lights on late at night, eat her food without asking or turn the heat up to a point where she is uncomfortable in her own room. A positive relationship

STEVEN REINOEHL is a sophomore in business.

with your roommate can result in you picking up new and good habits while mitigating the likelihood of bad ones. The best way to keep your relationship positive is by learning how to communicate with your roommates. There are a bunch of different vague tips we have all heard about communicating that might be good ideas but are not always easy or practical to implement. Being told to “listen to understand and not to respond” or “pay attention to body language” may help when talking to your best friend about politics, but it does very little to help you tell your roommate he needs to stop leaving his half-empty dishes all over the room. The best way to improve your communication with someone is to understand how they communicate. We all grow up through different experiences, and therefore we all have different ways of getting our message across. Now, you may not be able to ever figure out all the intricacies of your roommates’ communication style, and you may not want to, but the more you know about the way they express themselves, the better prepared you are to speak their language and understand what they’re saying to you. John Maxwell, an author and public leader in leadership and communication, says the best thing you can do to communicate well with another is to understand them. Understand who your roommate is and where they are coming from and all of your conversations with them will be far easier. And the better your relationship with your roommate, the lower your stress levels will be. sbreinoe@umail.iu.edu

ILLUSTRATION BY MERCER T. SUPPIGER | IDS

Future Caucus offers respite New caucus at Indiana Statehouse is a positive development The Indiana Statehouse has taken initiative to encourage young people to get involved in politics. On Wednesday, Indiana representatives Dan Forestal, D-100th District, and David Ober, R-82nd District, announced the creation of the Indiana Future Caucus, a bipartisan effort to focus on Millennial issues and encourage political participation. Indiana will be the 17th state to have a chapter of the Millennial Action Project’s Future Caucus network. The Editorial Board agrees that a bipartisan effort to encourage Millennial participation in politics, delve into Millennial issues and combat hyper-partisanship is an initiative Indiana needs. Indiana Future Caucus will also ensure that Millennial issues aren’t overlooked. According to WHTR.com,

the founding handful of Republicans and Democrats less than 40 years of age are emphasizing the integral role Millenials play in combating hyper-partisanship. “We want more Millennials to be active in politics. Our democracy, quite frankly, depends on it,” said Steven Olikara of the Millennial Action Project. Paying attention to Millennial concerns is essential not only for the future of the United States, but to ensure younger people feel as though they have a say in politics. Through working with a bipartisan base, the Future Caucus could transform the way Millennials engage with political issues and raise awareness among older generations of Millennial concerns. “We join in a common purpose and cause to ensure

the concerns of Millennials are not lost when the Indiana General Assembly sets its agenda each session,” Rep. Forestal said Wednesday. One of the reasons for disparate engagement is the overarching beliefs that politicians are dishonest and don’t work to protect the interests of anyone other than themselves. In the book “Running from Office: Why Young Americans are Turned Off to Politics,” political scientists Jennifer Lawless and Richard Fox find that only one out of nine young people have ever taken the idea of running for office seriously. Additionally, there is strong distaste for politics that hits along all major demographics. “Black or white, rich or poor, liberal or conservative, northeastern or southern,

the next generation is turned off to politics,” write Fox and Lawless. The caucus creators echoed these concerns. “We need to be encouraging young Hoosiers to get involved in politics,“ Rep. Ober said. “To run for office. To make a difference for our younger generations, but also for the future of our state. That is why our caucus is being formed.” Indiana Future Caucus could serve as a landmark initiative opening the younger generations’ eyes to the power of political action. Millennials have the power to transform our current political landscape. As more states join MAP’s Future Caucus network, hopefully Millennials’ politics and concerns will be taken seriously. Perhaps some will even run for office.

TUESDAY’S TOPICS

GETTING IN THE GROOVE

Mcconnell must nuke the filibuster

Beware of consumer culture

Speaking to Fox News this Sunday, Senate Majority Leader Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky, stated that one way or another, Neil Gorsuch will be confirmed this week. This is a not-so-veiled threat to change the Senate rules removing the option for a filibuster. This would allow Grouch to be confirmed with just 51 votes. I am here to tell Mitch McConnell if it comes to it, nuke the filibuster. For all the weeping and moaning and gnashing of teeth that would inevitably accompany such a decision, Democrats would fully own the destruction of one of the finest instruments of allowing the minority party to flex in this country. Historically, the filibuster has been used by those out of power to maintain some sway over the majority party. This forces some compromises to be made on legislation and judicial appointments, adding a nice degree of bipartisanship to an otherwise majoritarian system of government. Icons of the Senate, such as McConnell himself, are certainly reluctant to see such an instrument go. History and precedent matter in the Senate, so such changes

should not be made lightly. However, Democrats would have short memories to argue revoking the filibuster is not of their own doing. In 2013 after Republicans had blocked a series of judicial appointments by Obama, Senate Democrats under-then Senate Majority Leader Sen. Harry Reid, DNevada, decided to nuke the filibuster for judicial appointments below the Supreme Court. They made the same argument then that Republicans are making now – obstructionism from the minority party necessitates the filibuster be ended. But they cannot just change the rules when they are in power and expect Republicans to play with gloves on when they take over. If the filibuster is expendable when Democrats want circuit court justices approved, there is no reason it is not expendable when Republicans want a Supreme Court justice approved. McConnell would be justified then in changing Senate rules and doing away with the filibuster. Institutions such as the filibuster require cooperation. It only works when both sides are willing to respect it. Democrats decided the obstructionism had become

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too great when Republicans held up three nominees to the Washington, D.C., Court of Appeals. Apparently, this was too great a threat to the republic to tolerate. Greater than debates about slavery and the Civil War, greater than economic policy during the Great Depression, greater than Strom Thurmond’s opposition to the Civil Rights Act, for the filibuster was never nuked during these much more contentious times. The lack of historical and strategic perspective reflected in the Democrats’ decision to begin undoing the filibuster is appalling. Because of this, Republicans must resist the urge to take the high road, hoping that somehow by behaving better than their opponents they can restore the standard to what it once was. To do so would simply be to fight with one hand behind their collective back. Having seized the opportunity to retain Justice Antonin Scalia’s seat, Republicans must do what it takes. While it is unfortunate to see treasures such as the filibuster go, blame lies squarely at the feet of Reid and his ilk. zaochamb@indiana.edu

Be wary of our consumer culture I’ve been thinking a lot about stuff this past week. No, truly, I mean it. Stuff. As in all of the clothes, books, gadgets and other things I own, and why I’m starting to think I don’t need most of it. In my geography class last week, we watched a video called “The Story of Stuff.” I highly recommend giving it a watch, although it did terrify me to a certain degree. It’s about the ethical and environmental consequences of our consumer culture, many of which are invisible to us unless we go looking for them ourselves. One part of the video that’s stuck with me all week is when Annie Leonard, the narrator of the video, discusses the idea of planned and perceived obsolescence. Planned obsolescence is when companies construct a product so that it will stop working properly within a certain time of the consumer purchasing it. iPhones are a great example of this. Apple loves to keep updating its iOS software so that within a few years after you’ve bought your iPhone, it won’t be

able to run efficiently or effectively anymore. Eventually, you’ll get so fed up with the utter slowness of your phone that you’ll cave and buy the newest iPhone. Perceived obsolescence is when other people can perceive that whatever product you have is not the newest one available to buy. Again, iPhones illustrate this well. It’s pretty easy to see when someone has an iPhone that’s more than a few years old, because all of the old models are thicker and less sleek than the newer ones. Perceived obsolescence, then, works to pressure us into buying the newest, most stylish items. This could be technology, clothes, shoes or anything else, really. On a more superficial level, I think this works because we don’t want to be perceived as being out of touch with current trends. On a deeper level, this strategy works so well because — as Leonard points out — contributing to the economy by purchasing things is hugely valued in the United States. It’s to the point that shopping is basically a ritual within our civil religion narrative. This all makes sense if

ANNA GROOVER is a freshman in English.

you look at it from the perspective of manufacturing companies: if they can convince us that the completely functioning things we own aren’t good anymore, we’ll continue to buy more goods from them. Then, of course, all of the items we replace with new items end up in a landfill somewhere. All of this is starting to disgust me, largely because I’ve fallen prey to it so many times myself. It grosses me out to think of all the times I’ve bought new shoes because mine aren’t the most stylish ones at the moment, or all the times during high school that I just had to buy that year’s tennis team shirt because not owning the current one would be a fashion faux pas. So please, give that video a watch. Or, at the very least, whenever you’re about to buy something, think about the invisible forces at play prodding you to buy it. I think you’ll find that there are an awful lot of them. acgroove@umail.iu.edu @anna_groover

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.

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Âť MILLER

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 Pierre received suspensions because they violated University of Dayton’s code of conduct. Kavanaugh was suspended in October 2012 for the remainder of the 2012-13 academic year. He returned for the 2013-14 season. Pierre was suspended for the fall 2015 semester before returning to the team in late December of the same year. Peter Ginsberg, a New York City attorney, represented Pierre when he sued University of Dayton to have his suspension reversed. Ginsberg said he couldn’t speak to Pierre’s communications with Miller but knows Miller did what he could. “Archie understood his responsibilities to the university and 100 percent abided by those responsibilities and at the same time acted in a very humane, caring way toward Dyshawn,� Ginsberg

Âť POETRY

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 her ear and kissed her cheek. Joseph followed Soto on stage. She lived as an undocumented immigrant in the United States for 15 years. “It was tough,� she said. “It was really really tough.� She read her poem titled “Leaving the Nonprofit Immigration Lawyer’s Office,� to the crowd. “My brothers had left and my father had left / and my mother, seven times, came and left until the ashes of seven beagles were buried in tins under the largest tree,� she said.

Âť BUDGET

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 cover staff salaries. According to Pierce, the CDBG is one of the few grants available that can be used for staff salaries. “In the grant world, there’s not a whole lot of opportunities for us to just fund our basic operations,� Pierce said. “CDBG funds, being able to use those to offset staff

said. “That’s consistent with the reputation Archie has, and it’s consistent with the experience I had with him.� After a federal judge decided against a motion Pierre made during the legal battle, Ginsberg said Pierre decided to serve out the remainder of his suspension. Glass said he discussed the two cases with Miller when the two met to discuss the IU job, and after addressing them, Glass didn’t have any concerns moving forward. Any coach Glass said he would consider had to have a track record of caring about the wellness of all students, not just his players, and a commitment to academics. They also had to be absolutely willing to follow the rules, especially regarding Title IX. Glass said he spoke to about two dozen former IU players, Indiana high school coaches, Indiana AAU coaches and knowledgeable basketball people from around the state and nation to gauge in-

terest and gather advice. They all had their own views, but Glass said the vast majority told him to find someone who could come in and “win, win the right way and bring the family back together again.� Glass indicated his threepart threshold helped cull the list. “We did disqualify candidates from consideration because they didn’t meet one or more of those issues — following the rules, being committed to the wellness of students, and being committed to the academic success of students,� Glass said. Although he declined to comment on any specific individual candidate, of those rumored to be in consideration for the job was UCLA coach and former Hoosier basketball player Steve Alford. Alford’s journey as a college coach to UCLA included a head coaching stop at Iowa from 1999 to 2007. In 2002, one of his student athletes, Pierre Pierce, was

charged with sexual assault and later pleaded guilty to a reduced charge of assault causing injury. Alford publicly declared Pierce innocent numerous times. A report released in 2003 by a University of Iowa committee that investigated how the school handled the case criticized Alford’s actions. According to the report, Alford’s statements “implied that he disbelieved and discredited the claims of the student victim, and his words were perceived as reflecting insensitivity to issues of sexual assault and sexual violence.� Anne Lahey, a prosecutor assigned to the 2002 Pierce case, said she understood how a coach would have certain loyalties to a player. “But his seemed to be beyond that,� Lahey said. Pierce remained on the team until 2005, although the aforementioned case caused him to miss the 2002-03 season, before Alford dismissed him from the team after

She read from books that she had published, and one poem even included an exclusive hand-written introduction that did not make the final cut. It was from her poem “Between Chou and the butterfly.� The poem drew from newspaper articles, immigration files and applications. “Before anyone finds me I am heartwood exposed / by lightning By the Young Republicans / By newscasters playing Find the Illegal Immigrant / Find the unwed single The crier The Spouse,� she said from the poem. Between each section, she paused.

“I hear they raid when you’re naked / in bed Packed like a sardine Pillows tucked / around you I hear Like dogs Like Alien Relatives / While you cry and hug They swarm / They ax your back door,� she said from the poem. The event concluded with a question-and-answer session with the audience. Every day for the rest of the week will feature one event as part of the UndocuStudents Week. The event Tuesday is called UndocuBlack: A Conversation about Criminalization and Policing, which will be at 6:30 p.m. in Ballantine 310.

Poet Christopher Soto reads several of his poems at the event UndocuPoets: Resistance through the Arts event Monday evening. This event was the first in a series that Undocuhoosiers Bloomington organized as part of its annual UndocuStudents Week.

salaries is a big deal for us.� Without funding from CDBG, many of these organizations will be looking to other parts of their budgets to make up for the losses, and will have to rely more heavily on fundraising. But if the extra dollars don’t come in, they’ll likely have to cut back on staff and programming. Julio Alonso, the executive director of Hoosier Hills Food

Bank, echoed the importance of CDBG in covering salaries. He said that if the budget proposal is approved, Hoosier Hills will be looking at scaling back some of its services. He said he believes the effects of eliminating CDBG could be worsened by the fact that many of the agencies that rely on Hoosier Hills also receive funding from the grant. This would leave those agencies scrambling to make

up for lost funding, putting additional pressure on Hoosier Hills, which would be struggling to maintain its current level of services. “It could definitely be a double whammy if the cuts go through,� Alonso said. CDBG funding also goes to Middle Way House, a domestic violence shelter and rape crisis center. Debra Morrow, the organization’s executive director,

another arrest. Pierce plead guilty to third-degree burglary, false imprisonment, fourth-degree criminal mischief and assault with intent to commit sexual abuse. Alford apologized for his handling of the 2002 case through a statement in 2013 in his introductory press conference as the head coach at UCLA. He said he handled the case as he was told to, but in a later statement he said he would have handled it differently. Glass declined to confirm whether Alford was a candidate or not but acknowledged timing dictated to some degree who he could and couldn’t interview. “This wouldn’t be limited to Steve Alford, but there were people who could potentially have been candidates who were still playing in the tournament, and those people in my view wouldn’t have been available for me to interview,� Glass said. Glass said it’s an absolute

CODY THOMPSON | IDS

said the shelter relies on funds from CDBG to have staff available 24/7. The elimination of the grant could leave them short-staffed. Middle Way House also relies on the “physical improvements� part of the grant to ensure shelter residents’ safety and quality of life. In the past, they have been able to provide baby monitors for the mothers, as well as a new security camera system,

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which wouldn’t have been possible without the grant. Morrow said the proposed elimination of CDBG funding would be a huge loss for the community. Often, she said, emergency shelters such as Middle Way House are the only safe places for victims of domestic violence to stay. “It’s easy to get rid of things that don’t personally affect you,� she said.

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must for a coach to have a proven track record of following any and all obligations in sexual assault cases, especially with regard to Title IX. The same goes for the wellness of students. “That’s another one where we look and see, are there any compliance issues where the person fell short and could be a predictor of future challenges?� Glass said. In a statement provided to the IDS, Miller said his team followed the university’s rules. “In cases of discipline at the University of Dayton, our program followed the proper protocol the University had established regarding student conduct,� Miller said. Glass doesn’t think Miller will have any trouble holding his players accountable. “I think Archie has demonstrated that he’ll handle those appropriately and has committed to being able to handle those appropriately,� he said. “I have a high degree of confidence in that regard.�

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BOB KNIGHT’S LAST FIGHT By Brody Miller brodmill@indiana.edu | @bybrodymiller

B

ob Knight likes hunting birds. Unlike land animals, birds can dodge and dart their way from a shot. There’s real skill in bringing one down. This is Bob Knight. He wants as much competition as possible. Now that he’s retired, Knight has some extra time to hunt. Whenever Knight tells his longtime scribe and good friend Bob Hammel he’s going out on a trip, Hammel likes to joke he’s rooting for “God’s creatures.” Hammel remembers the time recently when Knight got back from one of his hunting trips and gave him a call. “Well, it was God’s creatures: 1, Knight: 0,” he said laughing. Wait, did Bob Knight just laugh off a loss? * * * Knight cares more about not losing than he does winning. He wrote an entire book on “The Power of Negative Thinking.” His strategy was less about what his team could do to win, but more what it had to do to keep them from losing. He sweats the small stuff and lets nothing go. It’s what makes him the fiery, grudge-holding, controversial man he is. That’s why one stops for a second to question Knight laughing off a loss. Sure, it’s just hunting, but it’s something. Then there’s the fact he spoke at Bloomington High School North on Thursday. He was open with the fans who love him and reciprocated that love. Knight even endorsed a new IU men’s basketball coach. These are things Knight doesn’t normally do. Even just a few weeks ago, Knight told Dan Patrick on the radio he hoped the IU administrators who fired him were all dead, and for those who aren’t, he said “I hope the rest of them go.” He will always be a man of contradictions. His entire relationship with Bloomington is paradoxical. He’s the man everyone wants to move past but still wants to embrace. He wants to be embraced by the fans, too. He got choked up when fans stood for him Thursday. He had plans of retirement in Bloomington spent watching IU games. That dream ending didn’t happen. Instead, he was fired for violating IU’s zero-tolerance policy with his violent behavior. He thinks his dream ending was

robbed from him. Others think he threw it away. Regardless, his bitterness from losing that dream is why he can’t go back to IU. Knight is 76 now. He’s getting older. He walks a little slower. He has his memory lapses. It’s natural. But Hammel says Knight isn’t fighting the inevitability of aging. “I don’t see any signs of bitterness or resentment about it,” Hammel said. “Sometimes when he draws a blank on something, he will just laugh about it and want me to fill him in.” Knight doesn’t have a choice in this one. Everybody loses to time. * * * Knight slept on a pullout couch in high school — all 6-foot-5 of him. His grandmother needed the bed. Knight wrote in his 2003 autobiography, “Knight: My Story,” about how much his grandmother Sarah Montgomery meant to him. He credits her for much of his belief system on negative thinking. In a 2013 New York Times interview discussing “The Power of Negative Thinking,” he caught himself while talking about her. “I’m glad you asked me, because I don’t think they put this in the book,” he said. “It’s supposed to be dedicated to my grandmother. Damn it — I’m going to call them.” Montgomery’s influence implemented a strong idea in Knight that elders should be respected. He admits it helped him later connect with and learn from older coaches. He wanted to be respected like that. “An element of his personality that people never grasped was the absolute reverence he had for older people,” Hammel said. Coaches, strangers, anyone. He was more patient, more kind to older people. It wasn’t even age as much as generation, Hammel said. He wanted to learn as much as possible from older coaches like Pete Newell, Clair Bee, Joe Lapchick and Everett Dean — many of whom were in their 70s by the time Knight took over at IU. Younger people or those Knight’s age had to prove themselves to Knight. Maybe that’s why when he talks of Quinn Buckner’s intellect he gets so excited. Maybe that’s why Knight grabbed and scolded student Kent Harvey for saying, “What’s up, Knight?” When a younger person impresses him, they really impress him, but not much angers him more than a lack of respect for elders. Knight wanted to be one of those

elder statesmen. He said in his autobiography he just cared about being respected as a coach. That’s why the broadcasting job at ESPN appealed to him so much after he retired. It was a chance to be America’s coach. Unfortunately, he has become known as much for his negatives as his positives. There isn’t an older generation for Knight to look up to anymore. He is the older generation now. Some of the IU administrators he wished dead, like former president Myles Brand, are already gone. Someday soon Knight might have to turn around and enjoy who’s still here. * * * Knight had a seat picked out for where he would watch games after he retired at IU. It was just inside the south lobby of Assembly Hall in a spot where he could quickly get up and leave when he wanted. He figured Hammel would probably retire around the same time as him, so they’d sit there together. “That didn’t work out,” Hammel said, followed by silence. Knight never got the dream ending he craved. He didn’t get to finish as the legendary — and respected — figure he always hoped being a coach would make him. Hammel isn’t sure he ever could have walked away, though. Knight was close to joining CBS after the 1981 championship. He reached out to them about it. He came with ideas about interviews he wanted to do. He told the Boston Globe’s Bob Ryan about how his idol, Ted Williams, mastered both hitting and fishing. Knight wanted to master coaching and broadcasting. Then player Landon Turner was seriously injured in a car accident, and Knight felt he needed to come back to raise money and help Turner. “But it was always going to be something of that nature,” Hammel said, “because he put a lot into recruiting every kid.” There were promises to each kid he recruited and their families. Retirement would mean leaving before fulfilling those promises. IU never got to find out if he could leave on his own. IU administration made Knight leave. They fired him in disgrace and took away his perfect ending. It was a loss, and Knight doesn’t like losing. It’s the greatest grudge he holds on to. It is the one that led to him saying he hopes people die. It is one that, even during a happy, upbeat speaking event

Thursday, he couldn’t help himself from mentioning “the sons of bitches I don’t give a damn about.” He does give a damn. He gives such a damn that he mentions them every chance he can. He says awful things about them. Meanwhile, he laughs off getting older. He jokingly admitted Thursday, “I’m getting old. I gotta straighten things out a bit.” Knight couldn’t control whether he got old, but IU took away how he wanted to grow old. * * * The event at Bloomington High School North was running late. Many people there knew Knight wasn’t the best guy on Earth, but they loved him. Others weren’t sure what to think of him. Some just wanted to see a legend while he was still able to speak publicly. But once Knight walked out those doors and shrugged in his red sweater, the people fell back in love with him. He was there to say thank you, and he did it several times. In all of the years of hostility between himself and the University, the fans were always the children of divorce stuck in between. This thank you was only addressed to less than 3,000 people in attendance. This wasn’t some mending of a wound for all of Hoosier nation, but it was a step. Knight let people in Thursday night. He told stories ranging from his childhood baseball days to his glory days at IU. When Pat Ryan, the widow of former IU President John Ryan, was pointed out to him, Knight hopped off the stage without using a step. The front row parted so he could reach her in the second row, and he hugged her. “What the hell are you going to do to me?” she asked jokingly. Fighting back tears, he said, “In all of my years in athletics, your husband was my favorite person.” Another woman asked if she could take a picture with him in his bright red sweater. Knight obliged, hopped down with her, playfully smacked her behind and posed for the picture. “I can’t smile,” he said. “If I do that, it will ruin my reputation.” He read from a guide he gave to every player about what an IU basketball player should be. This declaration talked about how limiting mistakes is more important than good plays and how an IU player should conduct himself. Then, it read, “He can only be defeated when a clock runs out of time.” ILLUSTRATION BY MAIA RABENOLD | IDS


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Editor Sanya Ali arts@idsnews.com

Musical rebel Mapfumo to perform at IU By Clark Gudas ckgudas@umail.iu.edu @This_isnt_clark

Zimbabwean political revolutionary and world music star Thomas Mapfumo started his career playing Elvis Presley covers. He then inspired the people of Rhodesia, modern day Zimbabwe, to overthrow their British colonizers in the 1960s and 1970s. Mapfumo is set to take the stage Thursday as a part of IU’s First Thursdays festival. He, along with University of California-Santa Barbara professor Mhoze Chikowero, will also be speaking at a lecture, titled “Chimurenga Intersections: Epistemologies of Self-Liberation through African Music Scholarship and Performance.” The lecture will take place at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday in room 1122 of the School of Global and International Studies Building. The concert will start at 6:30 p.m. Thursday at the IU Showalter Arts Plaza. The talk will discuss Chimurenga as a cultural movement, highlighting it as a philosophy in self-liberation, according to the abstract from the event’s flyer.

Associate professor in the Department of Folklore and Ethnomusicology Daniel Reed said it’s wonderful to have the opportunity to invite Mapfumo to campus. “He’s had a really important role in what has been a very important political revolution in his country of Zimbabwe,” Reed said. Mapfumo helped pioneer Chimurenga music, which combines traditional mbira style, used in African spiritual ceremonies, with Western pop. “He took this important religious, ceremonial music and found a way to put it on guitar, bass, drums and keyboard,” associate professor in the Department of Folklore and Ethnomusicology David McDonald said. “It was modern and traditional at the same time.” Chimurenga is the Shona term for “struggle,” which was also the name applied to the revolution Mapfumo and others inspired in the ‘60s and ‘70s. Reed said Chimurenga music instilled pride in being Zimbabwean and African. “That popular music style was very instrumental in the

overthrow of the government,” Reed said. McDonald said Mapfumo’s music also created a strong sense of national identity. “His music was one of the things that brought people together to figure out what it meant to be Zimbabwean,” McDonald said. “His music basically created a musical image of Zimbabwe before Zimbabwe existed.” He sung nationalist poetry over top of these songs, which became the rallying cry for the resistance, McDonald said. Mapfumo became a world music star following the revolution because of the popularity of his style. His western-African form of Chimurenga created a brand of music world audiences could enjoy, Reed said. “This music was based in a really long standing musical, religious tradition,” Reed said. “It’s really hypnotic and joyous music, that when you hear it, you can’t sit still, you want to dance.” Mapfumo is a great case study on how traditonal music can be modernized and put into pop music format,

COURTESY PHOTO

Thomas Mapfumo, a music legend of Africa and Zimbabwe, will present the latest IU concert Thursday at the Showalter Arts Plaza during First Thursdays. Mapfumo rose to fame as a guerrilla artist during the peak of the South African liberation movement in the early 1970s.

McDonald said. “Expect amazing dance music,” McDonald said. “A lot of fun, great South African pop music.” Reed said Mapfumo’s music bridges the gaps between contrasting cultures, about 50 years after he first brought pop and mbira together.

“The study of music is a way in which we can better understand and transcend the difference between cultures and different kinds of people in the world,” Reed said. “To bring a major act from Africa here, to expose the people of Bloomington to that alone is a value.”

LECTURE WITH THOMAS MAPFUMO AND MHOZE CHIKOWERO 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, SGIS 1122 FIRST THURSDAY CONCERT 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Showalter Arts Plaza

KINSEY CONFIDENTIAL

Focusing on pleasurable sensations can be key to achieving orgasm I’ve never had an orgasm during any sexual activity with a man and haven’t been with a man in years due to my Bipolar symptoms. Now, however, while masturbating or reading or writing erotica, my body has surprised me by my back spontaneously arching. It’s crazy, it feels great, & I ache like crazy in the region of my vagina. What’s happening? Is my body signaling it’s ready? It certainly sounds as

though you’re experiencing sexual arousal and excitement. You’ve found a few things – masturbating, reading erotica, and writing erotica – that help take your body and, I would guess, your mind, to an erotic place where you feel ready and able to open yourself to sexual arousal. Whether or not you will experience an orgasm is not something I can tell you. Nearly all people are capable of orgasm, so it’s very likely that you are too. Some sexuality educators and therapists

encourage people to focus on sexual pleasure and enhancing arousal rather than putting pressure on oneself to orgasm. As it turns out, orgasm appears to be more likely when the focus is on pleasure or arousal. You might try exploring your sensations. When you find your back arching and sensations arising in your vagina, you might try relaxing and focusing on them. If you are open to it, you could consider fantasizing about someone or something

exciting, pleasurable, or romantic. No matter what your sexual orientation is, know that people sometimes fantasize when thinking about either same- or other-sex partners. And some people fantasize simply by focusing on their own bodily sensations, such as feelings of warmth, fullness, tingling, build-up, or waves of pleasure. If you are interested in using a vibrator, you might try a multi-speed dial that offers various intensities – many

silver bullet vibrators are affordable and offer different speeds and intensities, so that you can explore and find sensations that feel enjoyable to you. If you’d like to explore orgasm and arousal, you might like reading the book “Becoming Orgasmic.” It’s written with a gentle style that encourages experimentation, exploration, and getting familiar with one’s own body, emotions and feelings. It also includes a good deal of fact-based information that may help you to feel

educated and empowered in your own sexuality. Kinsey Confidential is a collaboration of the Kinsey Institute and the IU School of Public Health. Dr. Debby Herbenick is an associate professor at IU and author of six books about sex including “The Coregasm Workout” and “Sex Made Easy.” Find our blog and archived Q&A at kinseyconfidential.org. Follow Dr. Herbenick on Twitter @DebbyHerbenick and Kinsey Confidential at @KinseyCon.


Indiana Daily Student

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Tuesday, April 4, 2017 idsnews.com

Editors Jake Thomer and Jamie Zega sports@idsnews.com

9

FOOTBALL

NOBLE GUYON | IDS

Senior wide receiver Mitchell Paige attempts to catch the ball for a touchdown during the second half against Purdue on Nov. 26, 2016. Paige participated in IU’s Pro Day last week.

Mitchell Paige back to square one on Pro Day By Taylor Lehman trlehman@indiana.edu @TaylorRLehman

Immediately after wide receiver Mitchell Paige’s NFL Pro Day inside John Mellencamp Pavilion on Friday, the receiver said he didn’t know what his measurements were. He didn’t know his 40yard dash was 4.52 seconds. He didn’t know that his vertical jump was 31.5 inches or that his broad jump was 9 feet and 8 inches. He didn’t know his 3-cone pro agility or his 60-yard shuttle times either. All the former Hoosier walk-on knew was that he did his best to show 30 NFL scouts in Bloomington that he can play at the next level. “I don’t know what happened with clocks or what

the scouts thought,” Paige said. “Personally, I thought I did as well as I was going to do. I’m just happy for it to be over. It was a long process since early January.” After IU lost to Utah in the Foster Farms Bowl on Dec. 28, Paige got to work preparing for a potential NFL Combine invitation and his NFL Pro Day put on by IU. The Combine invite didn’t come for Paige like it did for teammates Devine Redding and Dan Feeney, but Paige, along with seven other Hoosiers including Redding and Feeney, got the opportunity to showcase their abilities at the Pro Day. Paige said he knew he wasn’t going to blow any scouts away with a 4.2 40yard time but said he was

comfortable that he’d do enough. “Once I got on the field and once I get on the field and get a chance, it’s back to square one where I was here, being a guy that’s got a lot of work to do,” Paige said. Paige is used to not being the eye-popping prospect on any given team. The 5-foot-7 receiver had no Division I offers when he graduated from Guerin Catholic High School in Noblesville, Indiana, in 2013. He weighed less than 150 pounds but got an invitation to IU’s walk-on camp and landed a spot on the program’s roster. By the time he finished in Bloomington, Paige recorded a total of 115 receptions for 1,330 yards and 10 touchdowns in two seasons as a starting receiver. In

other capacities, Paige returned two punts for touchdowns, took one reverse handoff for a touchdown, passed to quarterback Richard Lagow for a touchdown and held kicks periodically in 2015 and 2016 for rising senior kicker Griffin Oakes. Beyond the field, Paige was the pulse of the team. The receiver dropped an overtime touchdown pass against Michigan to lose to the Wolverines in 2015. He took the blame when former IU Coach Kevin Wilson wouldn’t place it on him, and he stayed forward-looking and optimistic after the loss. IU then nearly won the Pinstripe Bowl against Duke in New York City. Paige was also the first player the media turned to in regard to Lagow’s

GOTT TAKES

struggles in 2016. The slot receiver supported his quarterback throughout the entire season and even cheered for him during a postgame interview after the loss to Penn State when he yelled “Let’s go, Rich” while the transfer was answering questions. Paige has always been heralded by his coaches and teammates for his offthe-field capabilities. They come easy to him. Anyone can tell by the way he ran around the weight room and the turf field of John Mellencamp Pavilion on Saturday while cheering on his teammates as they faced the same pressure he was facing. “It was a lot of pressure, walking out here seeing everything set up and the bleachers, but then you look

back at my mom, my sister, my dad and best friends over there, and it was just another day,” Paige said. Paige said in the last few months when he wasn’t playing Guitar Hero and Rocket League in Indianapolis, he was training for this showcase — the Pro Day that gets him as close to NFL scouts as he will be before the NFL Draft on April 27. The draft process has been stressful for Paige because he’s hard on himself and wants to be the best, the receiver said. At the very least, he wants a chance in the NFL. “I’m not a track star,” Paige said. “Whatever I’m doing, just let myself do it. Whatever they want me to do, need me to do to get me a chance, that’s what I’m gonna do.”

MEN’S BASKETBALL

Significant IU donors are pleased with Miller hire By Andrew Hussey aphussey@indiana.edu @thehussnetwork

FILE PHOTO

IU players storm the court and jump over Kentucky’s Darius Miller and onto Christian Watford after he made the game winning basket against Kentucky Dec. 10, 2011 at Assembly Hall. New head coach Archie Miller has talked about bringing this rivalry back.

Bring back Kentucky-IU rivalry He turned to his left, mouth agape. Bespectacled former IU Coach Tom Crean intently watched as his 2011-12 Hoosiers made a leap right in front of him. A No. 1 Kentucky team led by current NBA star Anthony Davis had lost in Assembly Hall, and the recently downtrodden Hoosiers had reinserted their name into the college basketball stratosphere. This moment will forever be associated with Crean. No matter what happened after, this moment of glory dubbed the “Wat Shot” will always be part of the Crean regime shown on a loop into oblivion. There’s many reasons why this game is so special: from

the shot to Dickie Vitale’s near-incoherent screeching to the chaos ensuing on the Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall court immediately after the buzzer sounds. Chief among them, however, is the blue — the sadness of the Wildcats and the fall of the top-ranked leviathan. The IU-Kentucky rivalry dates to 1924, when IU won 20-18. They have played 55 times since that first affair, and after the Hoosiers beat the Wildcats in the 2016 NCAA Tournament, then-freshman center Thomas Bryant shouted, “This is why I’m here!” This is a rivalry , and the fact that we don’t get to see the matchup every year is a

Greg Gottfried is a senior in journalism.

travesty. Like Bryant, we’re here for it. It’s time to bring the red and blue clash back. During new coach Archie Miller’s press conference, IU Athletic Director Fred Glass said exactly what Hoosier nation wants to hear. “I’m very receptive to restarting the Kentucky series,” Glass said. “I’d like to play one of the games in the cycle here, but I think the most important thing is we get that thing going again.” Miller echoed the sentiment by stating that it’s an “important piece to the puzzle SEE KENTUCKY, PAGE 10

Tom Crean and Cindy Simon Skjodt sat on stage together last October for the dedication of the newly renovated Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall. Both were excited about the future of IU basketball with the unveiling of the changes, and Crean said the state-of-the-art facilities funded by Skjodt’s generosity would help in future recruiting efforts. Less than five months later, Crean is no longer the coach at IU. “He’s a very good man, and I wish him the best,” Skjodt said. “It was sad, but I think it was time. There needed to be a change.” Skjodt donated $40 million to help with the renovation but said she likes to stay out of those types of decisions because she doesn’t have the basketball knowledge or experience. “When we donated the money, it’s about the University, not necessarily which coach we have or which players are here today or ever,” Skjodt said. “It’s to go on for a long time. There’s going to be change. That’s the way it is.” Nevertheless, Skjodt said she was excited about the hiring of Archie Miller and

said she felt IU Athletic Director Fred Glass chose the best candidate available. “I’m always up for allowing a new coach to do what he needs to do,” Skjodt said. “He has a very good track record. I think he’ll be great for the students.” Another top IU donor, Bart Kaufman, also said he liked the hire of Miller. Kaufman made a significant donation to IU that helped build a new baseball facility with his name on it in 2013. Prior to the hiring of Miller, Kaufman said he thought the coaching search was a huge opportunity for Glass. “I think Fred Glass did as good as he could do,” Kaufman said. “He wasn’t going to get Brad Stevens, and he wasn’t going to get Billy Donovan. President McRobbie wasn’t going to spend $8 million for a basketball coach, in my opinion.” Given Miller’s young age, Kaufman said he has an opportunity to be a great coach at IU for decades to come. Kaufman even said he hopes Miller will be able to join the ranks of all-time great IU coaches Branch McCracken, Bob Knight and Everett Dean. “The next building to replace Simon Skojdt Assembly Hall might be called Miller Arena if he coaches 30 years and puts up three or

Archie’s discipline, page 1 Fred Glass approved of Miller’s handling of player misconduct at Dayton. four banners,” Kaufman said. “They’ll forget about Bob Knight, Branch McCracken and Everett Dean. He has that chance. Now, is that going to happen? I don’t know.” Kaufman said he didn’t care that Miller earned praise for his performance in his introductory press conference and doesn’t like the phrase “winning the press conference.” “I don’t give a pig about press conferences,” Kaufman said. “I want him to win in the Big Ten.” One part of Miller’s first public appearance that Kaufman did say he liked was Miller talking about creating a strong nonconference schedule. As a season ticket holder, Kaufman said he’d like it if IU would play better opponents at home in the nonconference season. “It will be interesting to see if Miller is going to dump playing Houston Baptist, which I clearly hope he does,” Kaufman said. Overall, both Skjodt and Kaufman said they were very happy with the new direction of IU basketball. “It’s a new day for Indiana basketball with a new coach,” Kaufman said.


10

SPORTS

Tuesday, April 4, 2017 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com

» KENTUCKY

BASEBALL

IU looks to end homestand with a win By Taylor Lehman trlehman@indiana.edu @TaylorRLehman

During IU’s onslaught of offense in a 10-game win streak before its first home Big Ten series against Nebraska last weekend, the Hoosiers tallied 70 runs and went 8-2. IU Coach Chris Lemonis left a loss against Evansville on Wednesday searching for better starting pitching, and IU’s fate seemed to be at the hands of its bullpen. The Nebraska series, however, was completely backwards from what had fueled IU’s hot 8-2 stretch. The offense didn’t score runs, but the pitching staff held down the Cornhuskers. IU lost two games and tied the finale against its Big Ten foe and in the process lost its first home series since 2015 and third since Bart Kaufman Field was built in 2013. Now IU plays its final game of a 6-game home stand against Ball State on Tuesday. Against Nebraska, IU’s run production struggled. As a team, IU put together hit totals of 10, five and eight in three games where it scored just five runs combined. Junior outfielder Logan Sowers had the most productive day at the plate in the series finale Sunday. He went 3-for-5 with an RBI double, which drove in the Hoosiers’ only run in a 1-1

MICHAEL WILLIAMS | IDS

Senior Tony Butler flips a ground ball to junior Colby Stratten during Game 2 against Nebraska on Saturday. IU lost to Nebraska 3-1.

tie. The Hoosiers failed to hit a home run against the Cornhuskers even though they ranked second in the Big Ten in that category before the series. The strength of the Hoosiers was their starting pitching. Sophomore Jonathan Stiever allowed three runs Friday, junior Brian Hobbie allowed three Saturday, and sophomore Pauly Milto allowed just one in his first

Horoscope

start of the season Sunday. All three tossed quality starts by lasting six innings or more and allowing three earned runs or less, but none of the pitchers got a win. Before IU takes on Purdue for its sixth road series of the season and its third overall Big Ten series this weekend, it takes on Ball State in its third to last home mid-week matchup of the season.

To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.

Aries (March 21-April 19) — To-

Gemini (May 21-June 20) —

Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today

day is an 8 — Relax and avoid nasty traffic. Enjoy yourself without spending a fortune. Travel is better tomorrow. Hang around with people you love, and make your own fun.

Today is an 8 — The truth gets revealed. Don’t get distracted or react blindly. Stand up for yourself. Disagree thoughtfully and respectfully. Explore creative writing and expression.

is a 9 — You’re especially hot today and tomorrow. An unexpected situation requires a cool head. Things could get profitable. Don’t spend it before you get it, though. Wait.

Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 7 — Home and family have your attention over the next few days. Tend your garden and beautify your surroundings. Release an old trepidation. Listen and learn.

Cancer (June 21-July 22) —

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) —

Today is a 9 — Unexpected expenses could arise. Balance your financial accounts over the next two days. Confirm intuition with hard data. Profits are available; get creative.

Today is a 5 — Look back for insight on the road ahead. Pay attention to your dreams through tomorrow. Criticism rolls off your back. Let go of a preconception.

BLISS

HARRY BLISS

The Cardinals come into Bloomington with an 8-game losing streak, a team batting average of .234 and a team ERA of 4.04. Lemonis said he will send sophomore Tim Herrin to the mound for Tuesday’s game. Herrin has pitched in two of IU’s last three mid-week games, against Cincinnati and Evansville. The sophomore combined to throw nine innings and

IU (14-11-2) vs. Ball State (11-17 6 p..m. tonight, Bloomington allow seven hits and three runs while walking six batters in those appearances. IU will try to put together a whole game against Ball State at 6:05 p.m. after struggling to find a balance between offense and defense in recent series.

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is an 8 — Strategize with friends and teammates through tomorrow. Distractions and surprises abound; misunderstandings are possible. Music, silence and beauty soothe. Share peaceful moments. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) —

Today is a 9 — Career matters are on the front burner today and tomorrow. Unpredictable difficulties could arise with communications or transport. Make backup plans. Lucrative opportunities tempt. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) —

Today is an 8 — Your adventure

Crossword

takes a new turn over the next few days. Keep your cool even if others lose theirs. Discover beauty in unexpected circumstances. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is a 9 — Follow a profitable hunch. Handle family financial matters over the next two days. Challenge the generally held opinion without disrespecting elders. Use what you’ve kept hidden.

Today is an 8 — Collaboration flows well over the next two days. Share ideas, resources and expenses. You may need to

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. Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis

su do ku

How to play: Fill in the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 grid contains the digits 1 through 9, without repeating a number in any one row, column or 3x3 grid.

Answer to previous puzzle

© Puzzles by Pappocom

NON SEQUITUR

1 Complain and complain 5 Frolic in the field 9 Searched for shells in the shallows 14 Where to find Java 15 Governor Kasich’s state 16 Be a ham 17 Verizon invoice, e.g. 19 Way to get there 20 Saint at a gate 21 Melt frost from, as a windshield 23 Self-serve salad site 24 Old World Style sauce brand 26 The “c” in a + b = c 28 Govt. agency that lends to start-ups 30 Second wife of Henry VIII 34 “It’s __-brainer!” 35 Humerus neighbor 36 “__, black sheep ... ” 37 Pierced ear parts 39 Gives approval to 41 Horse’s harrumph 42 Consider carefully 44 Coup d’__ 46 Opposite of SSW 47 Country divider that allows unrestricted travel

gigottfr@indiana.edu @gott31 make a mess to create a work of beauty. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is a 7 — Get moving over the next two days. Balance work with physical activity, rest and good food. Take extra care with kitchen tools. Watch your step.

© 2017 By Nancy Black Distributed by Tribune Media Services, INC.All RightsReserved

L.A. Times Daily Crossword

Publish your comic on this page.

ACROSS

here with our tradition.” The hold-up right now is that Hoosiers want the series to be played on the respective campuses. Kentucky Coach John Calipari is intent on having the games in Indianapolis, a neutral court. It seems obvious, at least to me, that the best possible scenario would be a home-andhome bout, but just seeing the two teams on the same court again would be enough. One of the main complaints about IU basketball last season was its poor non-conference schedule filled with matchups against teams like Houston Baptist and UMass Lowell. They are the Davids to IU’s Goliath, but if Goliath beat up David and then kicked him a few more times while David is laying on the ground. Not only would scheduling Kentucky signify an emphasis on a stronger schedule by Miller and his staff, but it would reignite a rivalry that has been needlessly sidelined. It’s time to see Miller take on the Wildcats. A rite of passage for IU head coaches should be how they fare in one of the best rivalries in college basketball. How will Miller respond to a last-second victory like the “Wat Shot”? Maybe he’ll make the same blank stare Crean did. Perhaps he’ll jump in elation with his fist reaching for the rafters. Possibly a group hug with his assistant coaches. We’ll never know until the matchup returns. Let’s find out.

Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) —

The IDS is accepting applications for student comic strips for the spring and summer 2017 semesters.

Difficulty Rating:

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 9

49 Free app annoyances 50 __ Manor: “Batman” mansion 51 Mani go-with 53 Sound of disdain 55 Tot’s reply to a taunt 57 Shady retreat 61 Appliance maker 63 Sensitive elbow area, and a literal hint to the circled letters 65 Flat hat 66 Spring blossom 67 Moniker 68 Perfumer Lauder 69 Pinup Hayworth 70 Raised, as cattle

DOWN

by two atoms 12 Sundance’s sweetie 13 Bambi, for one 18 Hurler’s stat 22 __ salad 25 Guy’s partner 27 Actor Alda 28 Nosy one 29 “Button-Down Mind” comedian 31 Not wearing a thing 32 Tall tales 33 “Big” comics kid 34 Dog food brand 35 Milk-souring warning number 38 Novelist Ferber 40 “Hit the gas!” 43 Rice-A-__ 45 “__ we alone?” 48 Colorful timber tree 49 Online rent-aroom option 52 Week segment 53 Yankee Ruth 54 Iowa college town 56 TomKat’s daughter 58 Wild hog 59 “I’ll pick up the tab” 60 Oboe or bassoon 62 Marriage announcement word 64 CIA cousin

Look for the crossword daily in the comics section of the Indiana Daily Student. Find the solution for the daily crossword here. Answer to previous puzzle

1 “Li’l Abner” creator Al 2 Arthur with three Grand Slam singles titles 3 Civil mayhem 4 Bakery-café bread company 5 Steal from 6 “Hmm, gotta think about that ... ” 7 Eight furlongs 8 Well-mannered 9 “Mom’s gonna kill us!” 10 Latin “I love” 11 Molecular link with two pairs of electrons shared

WILEY BREWSTER ROCKIT: SPACE GUY!

TIM RICKARD


Indiana Daily Student

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2002 Toyota Highlander Limited 4x4, great offer! 210k mi. $3988, neg. zhan6@iu.edu 2003 VW Passat GLS. 70k mi. $4500. lmurray@indiana.edu 812-391-1407

Pier One-$30. Yellow, 10 dinner plates, 9 salad plates, 11 bowls. srmcgloc@gmail.com

2004 Dodge Ram 1500. 4WD. 4.7 V8 motor. 174k mi. $6500. cmsettle@indiana.edu

Selling 70lb. Everlast punching bag and stand. $200. macfishe@indiana.edu Unopened box of 100 “Donut Shop” Keurig cups. $40. krhiers@indiana.edu

2008 BMW 335xi. 87k mi., clean title. Tuned. $16,200. kishah@iupui.edu

Pets

Free neutered dog. Great jogging companion. Maggie needs a loving home. 812-360-4779

Automobiles 03 Infiniti G35. 103k mi. Well maintained. Clean inside & outside. $6000.

Michael Kors black and white women’s loafers. Size 6. $60. 812-671-1747

Unlocked Dualism Huawei Honor 5x Smart Phone, $120. dhoy@indiana.edu

Furniture

TRANSPORTATION

MCAT flashcards from Kaplan and McGraw-Hill. $20/each or $35 both. jaaguayo@indiana.edu

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Selling lightly used Vox AC15C1 tube amp. $400, firm, no trades. rbwalter@indiana.edu

Kohl’s dishes, new in box, white, 40 piece, service for 8, $50. srmcgloc@gmail.com

Panasonic 50 in. 1080p TV. Good condition. $300. TV stand avail. fuyudi@indiana.edu

Music Equipment DigiTech RP200 Guitar. Multi-effects pedal, great cond. Power supply incl. $30. jusoconn@indiana.edu

AB Lounger for working abdominal muscles. $40 obo ccowden@indiana.edu

New Samsung Galaxy Alpha Gold. Includes charger. Still in box. $200 sojeande@iu.edu

Sublet Apt. Unfurn. 1 BR/1 BA avail MayAug. $610/mo. Close to Campus & bus stops. Free prkg. jp90@iu.edu

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Mid 2010, 13” Macbook Pro w/ 8GB ram and 256GB SSD. $500. rforgas@indiana.edu

Nintendo Mario Kart 8. Deluxe set Wii bundle. $249, neg. leile@indiana.edu

Traditional Balkan slippers. Great for decoration. US size 9. $10. besmer@indiana.edu

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Bontager Solstice helmet: Black, $20. sancnath@indiana.edu

4 BR, 4.5 BA townhouse avail. til July. Discounted to $475/mo., furn., cable & internet. 208-221-5382

Houses

2 Yakima bike carriers. carry bikes w/front wheel still on. $65

HP Envy Laptop. 15.6’ Touchscreen. 2015 model. Great cond. $650 njbaranc@indiana.edu

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Size 9.5, black, Steph Curry shoes. Barely used. $85, obo. johndeck@indiana.edu

Misc. for Sale

Beautiful dark oak golf ball holder. Looks like new. $45. laumlewi@indiana.edu

Nikon D3200 Camera w/ 2 lenses, memory card(s), bag & charger. $500. danilebo@iu.edu

Plato’s Closet pays cash on the spot for trendy, gently used clothing. 1145 S. College Mall Rd. 812-333-4442

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1 BR in 2 BR/2 BA apt. at The Avenue. Near IUPUI. Avail. 6/1. $845/mo.+elec.

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Instruments

Clothing

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General Employment

Electronics 32” Insignia TV. Comes with remote. $150, obo. 651-210-0485 telbert@indiana.edu

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Large 1, 2 & 4 BR apartments & townhouses avail. Summer, 2017. Close to Campus & Stadium. 812-334-2646

EMPLOYMENT

Lenovo IdeaPad 100IBY, Intel i5 quad core, Windows 10 OS. $250, neg. bjdugan@iu.edu

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Textbooks

Pro-line pool table w/ accessories. 99”x55”38”. Great cond. $800. tombethschro@gmail.com

Computers

14” Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon 4th Gen laptop. Barely used. $1200, obo. chongch@iu.edu

4 BR, 2 BA. 2 fireplaces. By IU. New appls. Deck. $1800. 760-994-5750

Large 1 or 2 BR, avail. now. $499/month. Includes utils. Free prkg. Close to Campus. 812-339-2859

Large apt., downtown. Houses 3-5 / 2 BR + loft. 812-333-9579

Lightly used Frigidaire AC unit. 14x23 - 36 in. $50, obo. casechen@iu.edu

goodrents.homestead.com

4 BR house avail. Aug. 2 blocks South of Campus. 2 BA. Off-street parking, no pets. ***3 BR, 2 BA avail. Aug. No pets. 812-325-0848

Appliances

445

3 BR house- A/C,W/D, D/W. 319 N. Maple, for Aug. $900/mo. No pets. Off street parking. 317-490-3101

Mini Fridge. Good condition. $30. 203-448-0064 acehrlic@iu.edu

450

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** 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

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.

Houses

MERCHANDISE

415

Campus Walk Apts. Close to Campus, avail. Fall, 2017. Utils. incl. & free prkg. 812-332-1509 Cwalk@crerentals.com

ANNOUNCEMENTS Announcements

Apt. Unfurnished

ONLINE POSTING: All classified line ads are posted online at idsnews.com/classifieds at no additional charge.

Furniture Like new 7 pc. bedroom set, bought Aug., 2016. $550. 314-363-2860, jnachman@indiana.edu

420

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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.

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.

COPY ERRORS: The IDS must be notified of errors before 3 p.m. the date of the first publication of your ad. The IDS is only responsible for errors published on the first insertion date. The IDS will rerun your ad 1 day when notified before 3 p.m. of the first insertion date.

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HOUSING ADS: All advertised housing is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act. Refer to idsnews.com for more info.

COPY CHANGES: Ad copy can be changed at no additional charge when the same number of lines are maintained. If the total number of lines changes, a new ad will be started at the first day rate.

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CLASSIFIEDS ADVERTISING POLICIES

450

CLASSIFIEDS

Tuesday, April 4, 2017 idsnews.com

AD ACCEPTANCE: All advertising is subject to approval by the IDS.

To place an ad: go oline, call 812-855-0763 or stop by Franklin Hall 130 from 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Monday - Friday. Full advertising policies are available online. idsnews.com/classifieds

Bicycles

24” orange 7 speed HotRock mountain bike. Good for beginners. $150 obo shadrumm@iu.edu Trek Madone 3.1 road bike. In great condition. Less than 2000 mi. $900. trgold@indiana.edu

ELKINS APARTMENTS

NOW LEASING FOR 2017 & 2018 1, 2, 3, 4 & 5 BR Houses, Townhouses and Apartments Quality campus locations

Subscribe for free at idsnews.com/subscribe

ELKINS APARTMENTS

339-2859 Office: 14th & Walnut

www.elkinsapts.com


the care and services you need to stay healthy at idsnews.com/health

Health Spotlight

Karen Reid-Renner, M.D., MHP 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 1403 E. Atwater, Suite 1 812-339-6744 sifpchealth.com

Physicians

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

Bloomington Mon. - Fri.: 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. Sat.: 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. 812-333-2020

Brian Logue, M.D. Eric Smith, M.D. Dave Elkins, P.A.C.

Ellettsville Mon. - Fri.: 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. 812-876-2020

New Outlook Counseling Center Inc.

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.

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

Mon. - Wed.: 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Thu.: 8 a.m. - 2 p.m. Fri.: 8 a.m. - 4 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.

Or visit us a our other location.

1105 S. College Mall Road Located just Left of Kroger and Plato’s Closet

Behavioral/Mentall

Dr. Warren L. Gray 2200 John R. Wooden Drive Suite 207 Martinsville, IN 46151 765-342-8427

Chiropractic

4719 West State Road 46 Located across from Richland Plaza

5010 N. Stone Mill Rd., Suite B 812-929-2193 newoutlookcc.com

Dr. Mary Ann Bough

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. - Fri.: 7:30 a.m. - 6 p.m. Sat.: 9 a.m. - noon

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. 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

322 S. Woodscrest Drive 812-332-2020 precisioneye.com

Oral/Dental Care

Dr. James Fox Dr. Andrew Pitcher

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

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!

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. Mon. - Fri.: 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. 1116 S. College Mall Rd. 812-332-2204 oralsurgeryofbloomington.com

J. Blue Davis, D.D.S. The Center for Dental Wellness

Mon. - Fri.: 9 a.m. - 8 p.m.

Structural Integration Chiropractic

HoosierEyeDoctor.com

Dr. Brandy Deckard, O.D., F.A.A.O. Dr. Derek Bailey, O.D.

Oral/Dental Care

Oral/Dental Care

Timothy J. Devitt, D.M.D.

2907 McIntire Drive 812-332-8765 summiturology.com

2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS!

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.

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 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

Sun-Sat by appointment only

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

Jackson Creek Dental 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

General General Health Health

Mon. - Fri.: 9 a.m. - noon, 2-6 p.m. Sat. 9 a.m. - Noon

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.

We Strive to Provide you with the highest-quality care in a relaxed and attentive atmosphere. WE OFFER: • I.V. Sedation • Wisdom Tooth Removal • Dental Implants Make your appointment today! 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!

Ryan D. Tschetter, D.D.S.

615 N. Fairview, Bloomington IN Rolfposturebalancing.abmp.com 812-583-1433

1710 W. Third St. 812-336-BACK bloomingtonchiropractor.com

Welcome IU Students and Staff!

Karen Reid-Renner, M.D., MHP 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

Moving soon to Campus: 1403 E. Atwater, Suite 1 Bloomington, IN 47401 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.: 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.

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.

1403 E. Atwater Ave. 812-339-6744 sifpchealth.com PAID ADVERTISING


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