Monday, Oct. 5, 2015

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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | M O N D AY, O C T. 5 , 2 0 1 5 | I D S N E W S . C O M

Body identified as student

Names released for off-campus deaths The Bloomington Police Department released the names of the two dead bodies found in Stratum Apartments on Wednesday night. Yaolin Wang, a 21-year-old female, was a junior who transferred to IU this fall from North Seattle Community College to study at the Kelley School of Business, according to a statement from Provost Lauren Robel. The 20-year-old man, Chuanlin Xiao, was not an IU student, IU spokesperson Mark Land said. At 9:21 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 30 BPD responded to Stratum Apartments, 3130 Goodnight Way, in reference to a male and female being found in the common area of one of the apartment buildings.

When officers arrived, they found Xiao dead from an apparent suicide by hanging. Near him, officers discovered Wang dead from apparent stab wounds. Based on preliminary investigations detectives believe Wang was killed by Xiao who then took his own life. Xiao and Wang had been in a relationship for approximately six months. They had lived together at the apartment on Goodnight Way for approximately a month. No additional individuals are thought to be involved, according to the release. BPD has an investigation underway, but police have confirmed this was an isolated event that poses no threat to students.

From IDS reports

The body of IU sophomore Joseph Smedley was found in Griffy Lake on Friday, Oct. 2. The cause of death is consistent with drowning, according to a statement released by Monroe County Joseph coroner Nicole Smedley Meyer. Smedley, of Indianapolis, was a biochemistry major and Sigma Pi brother. At 6:32 p.m. Friday, Oct. 2, the Bloomington Police Department responded to the report of a body found in Griffy Lake, located off

Sunday, Sept. 27, 11:30 p.m. Joseph Smedley is last seen by his roommates at his residence on South Mitchell Street. Monday, Sept. 28 Smedley is reported missing to IUPD by a family member who he contacted and said he was leaving the country, though he did not provide a reason.

GRIFFY LAKE

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Friday, Oct. 2 BPD respond to a report of a body in Griffy Lake. The body is identified as male.

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Saturday, Oct. 3 The body found in Griffy Lake is identified as that of Smedley. 10TH STREET

SEE SMEDLEY, PAGE 6

Alyson Malinger

TIMELINE OF SMEDLEY’S DISAPPEARANCE

N WALNUT STREET

From IDS reports

Joseph Smedley found dead at Griffy Lake

GRAPHIC BY MICHAEL WILLIAMS | IDS

Cooking contest benefits community

34-27

IDS

By Anne Halliwell ahalliwe@indiana.edu | @Anne_Halliwell

HALEY WARD | IDS

Wide receiver Ricky Jones walks off the field after the final pass of the game was called incomplete against Ohio State on Saturday at Memorial Stadium. The Hoosiers lost to the No.1 ranked Buckeyes, 27-34.

The competition was heated at the 2015 Chefs’ Challenge, where three local cuisiniers prepared one-hour meals on the BuskirkChumley Theater stage. Jason Damon, a sous chef at Feast Bakery Cafe, won the Golden Spatula placard. The judging panel — Andrew Appel, the owner of “Goods for Cooks;” GFC co-founder Charlotte Zietlow and Carol Kugler of the Herald-Times — complimented Damon’s use of multiple peppers in his two dishes. “Jason, I didn’t watch you in the prep as much, but what you came back with was incredibly good,” Kugler said. Emcee Brad Wilhelm said the challenge draws from Food Network’s “Iron Chef America,” where celebrity chefs are presented with a secret ingredient and given a limited amount of time to create a dish that features the item. “The difference between ‘Iron Chef’ and this is that ‘Iron Chef’ is done for the glory of the trophy,” Wilhelm said. “This is done for the

“You thought you could play.

SEE CHALLENGE, PAGE 6

NOW YOU KNOW” Kevin Wilson, IU Coach

Big plays in Ohio State rushing attack hurt IU defense in 34-27 loss

Hoosiers take No. 1 Buckeyes to final play despite injuries in the offense

By Taylor Lehman

By Brody Miller

Football column, page 9 IU might not have completed the upset against No. 1 Ohio State, but they made a statement. really, there’s not much you can do there,” sophomore linebacker Marcus Oliver said about the three long runs. “We had him when we kept him running side-to-side, but those few plays where we broke down and beat ourselves, that’s what happens when one person doesn’t do their job.” Allowing an average of 138.5 rushing yards per game, IU surrendered a total of 272 to Ohio State, and allowed Elliott to average 11.9 yards per carry. The Hoosiers allowed just 14 rushing yards in the first half, but in the second half,

The snap went errant and the IU quarterback was forced to pick it up on the move, run in a semi-circle and evade several Ohio State defenders. He quickly scampered to the sideline and floated a high-arching pass toward the corner of the endzone. The pass went incomplete as

Scoring breakdown After leading No. 1 Ohio State throughout the entire first half, IU lost in the second half, 34-27, while trading the lead four times. 40 30 20 10

1st quarter SEE DEFENSE, PAGE 6

SEE INJURIES, PAGE 6

2nd quarter

3rd quarter

4th quarter

By Anne Halliwell ahalliwe@indiana.edu | @Anne_Halliwell

The elevated three-bedroom house painted in gray stood out among the red and white tents and tailgaters across from Memorial Stadium on Saturday morning. Habitat for Humanity partners each year with the Whirlpool Corporation, an appliance manufacturer, and the Kelley School of Business, to put together a house on campus during football season. Saturday marked the sixth house built at IU, before being moved to its permanent location on West 12th Street. Whirlpool chairman and CEO Jeff Fetting, a Kelley Business School alumnus, presented the keys to the completed house to Nereyda Garza early Saturday afternoon on the elevated porch of the newly-constructed house. The keys were presented again on the IU Memorial Stadium field before the football game began. Garza, 28, said she and her three children shared a single room and bed in the apartment where she lived with her parents, sister and brother. “I’m probably going to miss that,” Garza said. “But they’ll probably still

GRAPHIC BY MICHAEL WILLIAMS | IDS

SEE HABITAT, PAGE 5

E & CO TUR M L U

TOMORROW! OCTOBER 6

G ARTS ,C TIN A R

Coming into the Hoosiers’ matchup with No. 1 Ohio State, there were several questions asked about how IU Coach Wilson and the IU defense could stop the three Buckeye quarterbacks in senior Braxton Miller, junior starter Cardale Jones and sophomore JT Barrett. There was little asked about Ezekiel Elliott. There was also little stopping the junior running back, as the Hoosiers lost to the Buckeyes 34-27 Saturday evening. “I thought we got really good pressure on them,” Wilson said, “except for those three long runs that they popped.” Elliott ran the ball 23 times against IU’s 47th-ranked rushing defense and broke open runs of 55, 65 and 75 yards, all for touchdowns, on his way to a 274-yard, three-touchdown day. “Just beating ourselves,

brodmill@indiana.edu | @BrodyMillerIDS

time expired and IU’s upset bid of No. 1 Ohio State fell just shy of forcing overtime. The IU quarterback at the time was not starter Nate Sudfeld. It was sophomore Zander Diamont, yet IU still found itself one play away in the 34-27 loss. Even before the injuries, IU led the defending national champs at halftime, and IU

CELE B

trlehman@indiana.edu | @trlehman_IDS

Athletic director, page 7 IU Associate Athletic Director Jeremy Gray works behind the scenes to enhance IU fan experience.

Habitat for Humanity builds home on campus

INDIANA UNIVERSITY

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IUAUDITORIUM.COM

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