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WOMEN’S SOCCER
IDS
Seniors play in final IU match
BORN AGAIN
By Danny White danswhit@indiana.edu | @DannyWhite617
The IU women’s soccer team has yet to win a game at Bill Armstrong Stadium this season. In its last game of 2015, IU plays rival Purdue at 7 p.m. Wednesday, the final match of the Hoosier seniors’ careers. IU (3-9-6, 0-6-4) has been in a tailspin for much of its season. Its struggles continued with a 3-1 loss at Michigan State on Sunday. But the IU-Purdue grudge match is not just another soccer game. “It is a ton of emotion,” IU Coach Amy Berbary said. “Their fans are crazy and right above you, and it’s an awesome atmosphere to be in. I’m just glad to be playing on our home field against them.” In the non-conference part of its schedule, IU started the season by posting a 3-3-2 mark. However, in Big Ten play, its record plummeted to an 0-6-4 record going into Wednesday. The Hoosiers will be looking to earn their first conference win against the Boilermakers. Purdue (8-8-1, 3-6-1) is coming off a 1-0 overtime loss at Michigan and is 2-4 in away matches. The IU seniors have never lost to Purdue in their collegiate careers and will try to keep their emotions in check and focus despite the emotional toll of playing their last game, Berbary said. “I never like senior night to begin with,” Berbary said. “We’re going to have the celebration in the middle of our warm up, hopefully get back and focus and try to finish out our season.” IU will not only look for a win against its arch rival, but it will look to send five seniors out with a win. “It’s just gone by so fast.” Berbary said. “I came in and those
Planned Parenthood protester reconciles her past with her new faith By Erica Gibson ecgibson5@gmail.com | @ericagibson_596
Jane Miller and other pro-life advocates pray outside Planned Parenthood centers across the country as part of the 40 Days of Life Campaign which ends Nov. 1. They don’t confront anyone who enters the clinic. They pray, as Jane prays, for mercy. At the Bloomington Planned Parenthood, Jane glides her fingers across the beads of her rosary. Her slender, almost translucent hands move down the strand, blue veins against blue beads. She said she believes in the Holy Spirit, the Holy Catholic Church, the communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the body and the life everlasting. Amen. Jane is not a Catholic yet, but after 65 years of struggling with her Lutheran faith, she said plans to become one. On the sidewalk in front of the Bloomington Planned Parenthood clinic, Jane prays to end abortion. She prays for the babies, she prays
SEE SENIORS, PAGE 9
for the workers inside the clinic, and she prays for the women who she says just aren’t thinking ahead. * * * Our Father, who art in Heaven, hallowed be thy name. It’s Wednesday — St. John and St. Jude’s day. Two Catholic churches, one in Bloomington and one in Spencer, Indiana share a pastor, Father Daniel Mahan. He asked his parishioners to sign up for one-hour shifts of prayer and vigil from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. A volunteer paces the perimeter of Planned Parenthood. In her hand are several pamphlets about contraception and chastity: Ru-486: What You Don’t Know. Chastity & Purity – An Invitation to Love. If Sex Feels So Good, Why do I Feel So Bad? No one takes a pamphlet.
Jane will officially convert to Catholicism on All Saint’s Day, the day St. John Paul II was ordained as a priest. St. John Paul II is Jane’s favorite saint. He’s one of the reasons she said she’s converting. She said she liked his openness and his morals as Pope. She finds comfort in Catholicism and its rigidity. “There’s freedom in boundaries,” Jane says. She’s happiest when she follows rules. It isn’t always fun, but Jane said it helps know she’s doing the right thing. Jane brought a sign that reads, “Aren’t you glad your parents were pro-life?” The sign is plastered with pictures. Some are Jane’s family, some are celebrities. There’s a young Leonardo DiCaprio and a picture of Miley Cyrus from when she was Hannah Montana. * * * Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against
* * * Thy will be on Earth as it is in heaven.
IU (3-9-6) vs. Purdue (8-8-1) 7 p.m., Wednesday, Bill Armstrong Stadium
SEE BORN, PAGE 9
PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY KATELYN ROWE AND MICHAEL WILLIAMS | IDS
Behind the Score project combines performance, study
Zombie apocalypse seminar prepares for emergencies
By Brooke McAfee
Food and water. Batteries and charging cables. Toilet paper and hygiene products. All are resources needed to survive a zombie apocalypse, emergency management coordinator John Summerlot of IU Emergency Management and Continuity told residents and staff at the new Hoosier Den in Read Center on Tuesday evening. It was all a part of a zombiethemed emergency preparedness seminar put on by Summerlot to help teach preparedness for other disasters like severe weather, pandemics and massive power outages. In an idea first initiated by the Centers for Disease Control, Summerlot said people are more open to discussing preparation for a zombie apocalypse than they are to discussing a pandemic because people often say, “This will never happen to me.” In his position, Summerlot makes building-level plans for different types of emergencies, including fire safety, earthquakes and active shooters. He was approached about a year ago with questions about planning for a zombie apocalypse. “Well, I’m sure we’ve got a plan for that. A to Z, active shooter to zombie apocalypse, we’ve got a plan for everything,” Summerlot responded at the time. Summerlot developed IUEMC’s own zombie apocalypse emergency management plan, reading books, government reports and
bemcafee@indiana.edu | @bemcafee24601
Behind the Score allows musicians to look beyond the performance so they can understand the history and significance of the music, project curator and professor of violin Jorja Fleezanis said. “It’s imperative to be able to cross these disciplines,” Fleezanis said. “It requires deviating from how we normally do things.” Jorja The Behind the Score project focuses Fleezanis on Johannes Brahms’ composition “Symphony No. 1 in C Minor, Op. 68.” The Symphony Orchestra will perform the piece at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Musical Arts Center. The performance features guest conductor Cliff Colnot. The project is dedicated to teaching the musicians about more than simply performing the piece, Fleezanis said. Their curriculum includes two guest speakers who gave the orchestra extensive biographical and musical information about Brahms and his work. The concert will begin with a video that illustrates the project for the audience, Fleezanis said. Cellist Styra Avins presented her research on the life and historical background of the composer in her lecture, “Brahms: The Making
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to the ALE
By Carley Lanich clanich@indiana.edu | @carleylanich
BEHIND THE SCORE Free 8 p.m. Wednesday, Musical Arts Center of the First Symphony.” The lecture highlighted what the symphony meant to the genre, Fleezanis said. The knowledge of Brahms’ biography and the composition of the work will contribute to the Symphony Orchestra’s understanding of the piece, Fleezanis said. University of Minnesota professor Michael Cherlin spoke about the harmonic behavior of the piece in his lecture “Liminal Space and the Uncanny in Brahms’ First Symphony.” His presentation was an unusual blend of literature and translation of musical thoughts, Fleezanis said. Musicology, or the scholarly analysis and research of music, is important for the orchestra members to understand, and it should not be separated from the performance of music, Fleezanis said. Colnot said his experience of working with the Symphony Orchestra on Behind the Score has been overwhelmingly positive. “The students are serious, interested in learning and happy to donate their discretionary time to getting better,” Colnot said in an email. SEE SCORE, PAGE 9
TIANTIAN ZHANG | IDS
A zombie-themed emergency preparedness presentation was led by John Summerlot on Tuesday evening at Read Center to prepare students for emergency situations.
various websites to stay in the know of zombie happenings. Going through his personal survival kit, which contains a handcrank powered radio, flashlight, cell phone charger and more, Summerlot’s red backpack of zombie survival essentials mirrored what would be needed for a 24-hour emergency preparedness kit. “Having a cell phone is a key piece to have,” Summerlot said. “You’re going to want to get those IU-Notify messages, you know, if zombies have been spotted somewhere near the Auditorium.” Summerlot said he has fully embraced his role on the zombie outbreak response team. His boss gave him a zombie calendar for Christmas. His laptop sports a zombie apocalypse sticker. He has even created a zombie template
for fun within the IU-Notify alert templates. In his presentation, Summerlot incorporated as much of IU’s zombie culture as possible by referencing materials from a book by an IU professor, a short film by an IU student and even a song called “Zombie Lover,” performed by Elmo Taylor, a band of IU Police Department officers. Junior Brandon Newson, a resident assistant in Read Hall, said he took away practical lessons from the seminar. “You watch a lot of zombie movies and stuff, and they are all about we have to have weapons and you have to have X, Y and Z, and a lot of that stuff I would not already have with me.” Newson said. “So I feel like if you want a real kit, you need to have prepared that already.”
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CAMPUS EDITORS: ALYSON MALINGER & ASHLEIGH SHERMAN CAMPUS@IDSNEWS.COM
McRobbie to travel to Berlin for opening Starting Monday, Nov. 2, IU President Michael McRobbie will lead a delegation on a five-day trip to Germany, where he will preside over the opening of the third IU Global Gateway office and renew a relationship with a top university, Freie
Universität, according to an IU press release. Located in Berlin, the IU Europe Gateway is IU’s third such facility for international faculty and student activities. It comes after the launch of similar offices in New Delhi and Beijing.
Show funds fight against poverty, homelessness By Julie Masterson julmaste@indiana.edu
COURTESY PHOTO
At Delta Zeta’s “mocktail” party Monday night, members of Sigma Chia and Delta Zeta participated in activities to help increase alcohol awareness. The party was a part of the sorority’s “I Have a Choice” campaign to make people more accountable for their actions.
Sorority campaigns for safety By Sarah Gardner gardnese@indiana.edu @sarahhhgardner
Delta Zeta President Madelynn Kuerschner said she believes the most important part of her role in the greek community is accountability. It is with this word in mind that she planned her sorority’s annual alcohol awareness week, she said. The campaign, “I Have a Choice,” runs from Oct. 26 to Oct. 30, and Delta Zeta chapters nationwide sponsor the campaign every year. “You have personal accountability, you have accountability for the people around you, and you have accountability for your organization as a whole,” Kuerschner said. “I think ‘I Have a Choice’ gives you that sense that you really do have that choice to continue to keep yourself accountable.” Kuerschner began to list the choices she hoped to discuss during the week.
Every student has the choice to go home before getting too drunk, help a friend in trouble, leave an uncomfortable situation or not drink at all, Kuerschner said. The first event of the week sought to put these choices into action, Kuerschner said. Delta Zeta organized a “mocktail” party, or a sober cocktail party, Monday night. “Obviously, a big part of greek life is social events, so an issue that comes up is how to have those social events while making them safe if we’re going to choose to continue to do that,” said Alexis Blevins, Delta Zeta vice president of programming. “There has to be a line that’s drawn.” Delta Zeta invites a different fraternity to its “mocktail” party each year. This year, it invited Sigma Chi to attend. “Recently there’s been a lot of focus on having more of these sober events,” Reese Dorger, president of Sigma Chi, said. “I think there’s a
lot of value in these events in the long run, especially if it makes people safer and more comfortable.” Delta Zeta followed the sober cocktail party with a talk Tuesday from Sarah Cohen, the senior assistant director of fraternity and sorority life for the office of student life and learning. The event centered on the theme of accountability as well, specifically how it relates to alcohol, Cohen said. “I am actually a Delta Zeta, so I’ve seen ‘I Have a Choice’ grow at the national level and be something Delta Zeta chapters across the country have been able to use to help promote a safer environment,” Cohen said. For the rest of the week, members of Delta Zeta will be handing out brochures and hanging fliers and banners throughout campus in support of the awareness campaign. Though the IU chapter of Delta Zeta has been sponsoring the event
for years, this is the first time it has moved from an internal event to a campus-wide campaign, Blevins said. “We want to make sure students across the campus understand how to use alcohol, and it’s something that’s really prevalent nowadays on campus,” Kuerschner said. “And I think it’s important to realize that within the greek community, we are starting to make these changes and these choices.” The transition to a wider campaign for the “I Have a Choice” week was difficult and required a much larger effort from everyone in the sorority than in previous years, but its success within the chapter in the past pushed them to expand their efforts, Kuerschner said. “It’s tough to bridge that gap from greek to non-greek students, and I don’t know if there’s an easy way to change that,” Dorger said. “But it can’t hurt to start with events like these.”
IUSA congress talks anti-Semitism By Nyssa Kruse nakruse@indiana.edu | @nyssakruse
IU Student Assocation Congress passed one resolution, elected a new parliamentarian and tabled another resolution during its meeting Tuesday. A majority of the meeting was spent discussing the tabled bill. The resolution was meant to condemn antiSemitism on campus. The bill’s main sponsor, Jason Shader Smith, representing off-campus residency, said he drafted the bill because of incidents on campus with anti-Semitism and hoped the bill will protect students against such incidents in the future. “My job as a congressman is to represent the students of this campus, and if students on our campus are being hated against or persecuted or feel unsafe on our campus, then what I want to do is make it right,” Shader Smith said. Some of those opposed to the bill raised concerns
during the meeting about how the resolution deals with political criticism of Israel, as some parts of the bill specifically mention the country. Congresswoman Hannah Miller, representing offcampus residency, said she was not in support of the bill as it was presented Tuesday, though she said she feels antiSemitism is an issue across college campuses that should be addressed. “I have a problem with the resolution not because of the anti-Semitic issues,” Miller said ” ... I don’t feel comfortable with the statements about Israel not including Palestine whatsoever when we need to recognize that those are both legitimate groups. It is a very political issue, and I don’t feel that it’s IUSA’s jurisdiction to make a decision about Israeli-Palestinian issues as a body.” The first resolution of the meeting, which passed unanimously, filled vacant Congressional openings in the College of Arts and Sciences,
Jacobs School of Music, Foster Quad, Forest Quad, the Media School, Eigenmann Hall, University Division students and off-campus residents. Congress also voted to elect a new parliamentarian after the previous parliamentarian, Scott Zellner, had to step down due to time conflicts. The body elected Maria Halloran, head of the oversight and reform committee and congresswoman for the College Arts of Sciences, as the new parliamentarian. She said she wants to make meetings more orderly and create conditions that allow congressmen to have a positive experience with IUSA. “I would really like to see the meetings and people’s time being used as effectively as possible,” Halloran said. “I also want to increase the congressional members’ access to the steering committee, and I think I’d be very passionate about talking to people, helping with legislation, making sure that IUSA is really
operating in the best interests of students.” During the meeting, Maggie Oates, speaker of congress and congresswoman for the School of Informatics and Computing, said IUSA Congress is adopting a new plan whereby the main sponsor or sponsors of a congressional bill will meet with Stephen Browne, adviser to the vice president of Congress, in the days following a resolution’s passage to create a plan of implementation. Oates said the goal of the new procedure is not to create more work for Congress members, but rather to make sure the legislation Congress approves is actually carried out. “Previously, after a bill was passed in IUSA, it would go to the executive branch, get signed by the president and then fall into a void,” Oates said. “That’s basically what we’re trying to avoid this year by using implementation plans.”
Students danced, sang, played musical instruments, shared stories and performed original acts while coming together to call attention to an important social issue. The IU Social Work Student Association put the spotlight on homelessness and poverty in Bloomington during its third annual talent show at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Frangipani Room of the Indiana Memorial Union. “It’s really exciting to watch how fired up everyone gets to share their talents for a really great cause,” said Courney Sebo, an IU social work major who performed in the show. “It’s been awesome just seeing how the community in general around the social work program has pulled together.” Attendees could opt to pay a $3 entrance fee or make a non-perishable food donation. All proceeds from the talent show were divided equally between two local agencies in Bloomington: the Banneker Community Center and Stepping Stones. Funded by the Bloomington Parks and Recreation Department, the Banneker Community Center provides services, such as after-school programs for children and other youth. Banneker also features a Family Resource Center, which is a source of information and community support for families in Bloomington. Stepping Stones is an independent Bloomingtonbased nonprofit that provides supportive services and offers temporary housing to homeless youth between the ages of 16 and 20.
The organization is dedicated to helping youth, regardless of sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, race, national origin, creed, religion or disability, according to the organization’s website. The event also featured tables where attendees could speak with representatives from both organizations and make further donations and purchase student made T-Shirts that would benefit both organizations. Madison Crawford, a junior studying social work at IU, was part of the advertising team responsible for spreading the word about the event. Crawford said events like the talent show are important because, in addition to raising money, they also raise awareness regarding the problems these agencies work to address. Crawford said to combat issues such as homelessness and poverty in the community, we must first combat ignorance and apathy surrounding them. “Poverty and homelessness are very real issues affecting the Bloomington community,” Crawford said. “It is so easy to stay inside our college bubble and not confront these issues, but the School of Social Work wants to bring these issues to the awareness of the IU campus.” Sebo said rather than marginalizing the issue by passing surface level judgments, people should consider the ways they can help those in need. “People can help by looking for simple things to do out in the community, like making a sack lunch for those you see or just donating a couple dollars,” Sebo said. “There’s a lot of different shelters around Bloomington where you can volunteer.”
Civil rights, labor rights leaders to visit campus From IDS reports
Two leaders of the civil rights and labor movements will be at IU next week as part of the College of Arts and Sciences 2015 Themester “@Work: The Nature of Labor on a Changing Planet.” Rev. William Barber, president of the North Carolina National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, and Richard Trumka, president of the AFL-CIO, the nation’s largest labor organization, will share the stage for a discussion, “Labor and Civil Rights: Bold Legacies and New Directions.” The event will take place at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 4, in Presidents Hall of Franklin Hall. William Morris of the Bloomington Human Rights Commission will moderate the discussion. “Fifty years ago, Martin Luther King Jr. observed that one stage of the civil rights movement had ended and another needed to begin,”
said Benjamin Robinson, co-chair of the Themester 2015 advisory committee and associate professor in Germanic studies, in an IU press release. “There could be no progress in civil rights unless the whole of American society takes a new turn toward greater economic justice.” Barber and Trumka will explore initiatives like bringing civil rights and environmental groups into the labor federation and developing new forms of unionism organized around communities, according to the release. “One premise guiding our signature event is that there is no better way to learn about work than with those who are organizing its future,” Robinson said in the release. Tickets, available online, are required for the free event. The discussion will be streamed live and archived at broadcast.iu.edu. Alyson Malinger
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Jared Fogle recordings to air on Dr. Phil
REGION
On Doctor Phil this week, A former journalist will speak about IU alumnus and former Subway spokesperson Jared Fogle, who was accused of having sex with children. Rochelle Herman-Walrond, said she secretly taped Fogle as part of an FBI
EDITORS: ANNIE GARAU & CORA HENRY | REGION@IDSNEWS.COM
investigation, according to the television show’s website. The show, which is scheduled to air Thursday and Friday, will feature some of these recordings in which Fogle discusses having sex with minors.
2 movies aim to convince viewers of gun regulation By Anne Halliwell ahalliwe@indiana.edu | @Anne_Halliwell
REBECCA MEHLING | IDS
Banneker Green Thumbs Garden and Cresmont Community Garden will no longer be run by Mother Hubbard’s Cupboard
Cupboard to give up gardens By Emily Beck emebeck@umail.iu.edu
Mother Hubbard’s Cupboard will no longer run the Crestmont Community Garden and the Banneker Green Thumbs Garden after this winter. Instead, the organization will place more focus on its onsite programming. At both gardens, MHC volunteers encounter a variety of issues — accessibility, environmental and financial problems. The Banneker Green Thumbs Garden was yielding less and less produce because of a large tree’s shade. The Crestmont Community Garden has an invasive bindweed problem taking over most of the space, and the garden’s location made it difficult for people to reach. Surveys from the neighborhood reported people
didn’t feel safe going there at night. “We were putting a lot of resources into something that wasn’t meeting the needs of the community,” Amanda Nickey, MHC president and CEO, said. “We really want to be a response to the need.” Nickey said MHC will reevaluate how it can help the Crestmont neighborhood in the future. Leslie Brinson, facility and program coordinator at the Banneker Center, said MHC volunteers will still teach education classes at the Green Thumbs Garden. Now MHC plans to put more energy into what it’s doing within its own walls. After moving to its new space in June 2013, the pantry saw an increase in onsite activity. Before, the organization had 1,000 square feet to its name — there was no
space for classes or gardening. That’s why MHC chose to steward community gardens, Nickey said. Doing so contributed to one of their main missions: increasing access to healthy food. Now, however, the organization has about 4,000 square feet to work with. In addition to the pantry, it has outdoor gardens, classrooms, a kitchen, a seed library and a tool share program. Close to 4,000 patrons come through the pantry each week, Nickey said. MHC has an operating budget of less than $400,000 per year to serve them. “For us, it makes the most sense to focus our incredibly limited resources onsite,” Nickey said. “We see a lot more engagement here.” Crestmont Garden will be reverted back to green space, said Robin Hobson,
community garden program manager for the City Parks and Recreation Department. The Banneker Green Thumbs Garden will continue to exist. The Banneker Center is currently discussing forming a partnership with the Near West Side Neighborhood Association. If that goes through, Brinson said the association would take charge of maintaining the garden and finding volunteers to help. Brinson said there’s no hostility between MHC and the gardens. She called the organization “a great partner.” “This is not a negative ... we aren’t angry,” she said. “They have to do what’s right for Mother Hubbard’s Cupboard.” Nickey said the decision to move on was hard. “There were a lot of tears on our end,” she said.
Teal pumpkins help kids with allergies By Alex Long longsc@indiana.edu
Food Allergy Research and Education launched a campaign last year called the Teal Pumpkin Project to cater to the needs of children with food allergies on Halloween. According to FARE’s website, the Teal Pumpkin Project encourages communities to provide non-food alternatives to Halloween treats that have nuts, gluten and other allergens to make celebrations safer and more enjoyable. Families can identify houses that adhere to those alternatives by looking for teal-painted pumpkins sitting outside of houses.
This year, the Bloomington Parents of Children Having Allergies decided to make the project known throughout the Monroe County area. Nicole Van Sant, a member of the PoCHA , said planning for the project began at the beginning of its October meeting. “As part of our October meeting, we decorated teal pumpkins to use to support the national campaign,” Van Sant said. “As a support group that is registered through Food Allergy Research and Education, we receive newsletters and information in regards to campaigns, food allergy walks and other ideas that may help include and educate
throughout the community.” Van Sant said having a child with allergies requires certain precautions when attending Halloween festivities, such as trick-or-treating at the houses of close friends and families and putting together a bag of candy that is safe for her child. “As a parent of a child with food allergies, we have to tackle issues on a daily basis to allow our children to still be included — but safely included — in everyday activities that children love,” Van Sant said. Families can participate in the Teal Pumpkin Project by replacing treats that can be harmful — treats with nuts, gluten, or dairy — with substitutes such as stickers,
rings, bubbles, mini slinkies and stencils. PoCHA spreads awareness about the project by sharing the idea with friends, families and others in surrounding neighborhoods, as well as helping supporters find painting supplies. “Just yesterday I shared my can of teal spray paint with a close friend so she could paint her teal pumpkin to set out on Halloween and share non-food treats with children in her neighborhood,” Van Sant said. There are also posters available to print on www. foodallergy.org that can be set out with the teal pumpkin to help spread awareness about food allergies.
Unconventional voices will condemn gun violence in two regional movie screenings in late October and November. A conservative Evangelical minister preaches about the growing number of deaths in the first movie, and a former hunter and gun owner advocates regulation in the second. “The Armor of Light,” will premiere Oct. 30 at select theaters such as Evansville’s AMC 16, according to Moms Demand Action’s Indiana Facebook page. “The Armor of Light” will examine gun violence through a “moral lens” instead of a political one, according to the website, and its subjects work to find common ground even though their political beliefs differ. Abigail Disney said she looked hard for someone on the far right of the political field who saw contradiction in conservative evangelical attitudes toward guns, according to her director’s statement. “In short, I wanted to know how a person could be both ‘pro-life’ and ‘pro-gun,’” Disney wrote. “The Armor of Light” offers free tickets to National Rifle Association members on its webpage. On Nov. 15, Moms Demand Action will co-sponsor “Living for 32” at Bloomington’s Buskirk-Chumley Theater. A film about the victims of the Virginia Tech shooting in 2007, it profiles one survivor, Colin Goddard, who worked as a gun violence prevention activist on the Brady Campaign. Goddard will speak at the event, as will Paul Helmke, former president of the Brady
Campaign and IU’s Civic Leaders Center director. Susan Sandberg, who announced the Nov. 15 “Living for 32” screening at last week’s common council meeting, said she supports Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in its goal of regulating gun access. “You’re not going to stop all kinds of mindless violence, but you can certainly cut down on it with some regulation,” Sandberg said. “No way should people who are unstable or criminally inclined have access to guns.” Sandberg said her position in the IU School of Public and Environmental Affairs allowed her to meet Goddard when he spoke with students in IU’s Civic Leaders group last year, when “Living for 32” was screened. “(The movie) is very moving in and of itself,” Sandberg said. “His story is very powerful as a survivor of the Virginia Tech gun massacre.” Sandberg called Goddard an atypical advocate for gun regulation. His family owned guns and hunted. “I think more people might listen to him than would otherwise,” Sandberg said. “I think sometimes the most powerful speakers for gun safety are gun owners — responsible gun owners.” Sandberg said Goddard’s position may also convince those who argue in favor of arming students on campuses. At her second viewing of “Living for 32,” Sandberg said she hopes to see more people interested in gun regulation before another attack or fatal shooting. “As someone whose job it is to make sure our community is safe and civil ... I can’t imagine what it will take to get our country to address gun violence,” Sandberg said.
KATELYN ROWE | IDS
BEGINNERS LEARN BLUES DANCING Josh Davis leads a dance class in blues dancing Tuesday night at Player’s Pub. Davis has taught the class for about a year now.
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OPINION EDITOR: MADISON HOGAN | ASST: GREG GOTTFRIED OPINION@IDSNEWS.COM
Bacon causes cancer, but, really, who cares? By now, you’ve heard the disastrous news: processed meats like bacon and hot dogs cause the big C. The World Health Organization has classified processed meats as a type 1 carcinogen, the same category that contains the deadly
tobacco, according to Wired. Eating two slices of that pig flab can increase your risk of colorectal cancer by a shocking 18 percent. But we’re not gonna stop eating processed meat. Live and let die, friends.
EDITORIAL BOARD
ILLUSTRATION BY KIRA BUSHMAN | IDS
Bored of Benghazi WE SAY: GOP won’t be able to keep up this witch hunt for much longer Who knew hours of questioning in the drab chambers of the United States House of Representatives could capture so much attention? Former Secretary of State and current presidential candidate Hillary Clinton appeared before the Select Committee on Benghazi last Thursday to discuss — yet again — if she had been involved in the attack on the U.S. diplomatic outpost in Benghazi, Libya, on Sept. 11, 2012. The attack resulted in the deaths of U.S. ambassador J. Christopher Stevens and three other Americans. The select committee has now been the eighth
congressional committee to investigate the attack on the outpost, according to NBC News, and Clinton has now been testifying on the attack for more than two years. What have these committees accomplished in all that time? And what is the point of the most recent select committee — composed mostly of Republicans — in questioning Clinton? The Editorial Board feels the committee is a distraction meant to damage Clinton’s credibility as a candidate for president. The evidence the committee acts as a sideshow is pretty convincing when Republicans admit it to be as
much. House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, for example, went on Fox News and said the committee is damaging Clinton’s poll numbers in the race for president. Air Force Reserve Maj. Bradley Podliska, a former Republican investigator on the committee, recently accused the committee of being politically motivated in its investigation, according to Politico magazine. It’s disappointing that a piece of political theater is the most effective thing congressional Republicans can find to do with their time. Clinton testified for more
than eight hours during the questioning, as Republicans continually claimed she denied security requests and she originally blamed the cause of the attacks on an anti-Muslim video instead of labelling the attack an act of terrorism. Besides the uncovering of a private e-mail server Clinton used while she was secretary of state, no other lapse in judgment was uncovered by the committee or the seven ones that preceded it. Some have claimed officials in Benghazi repeatedly requested for additional security forces in the outpost following the deposition
of Moammar Qaddafi as dictator of the country. However, the House Intelligence Committee, in the course of its own comprehensive two-year investigation into the attack, cleared both Clinton and President Obama of any wrongdoing, according to NBC News. Clinton’s role in stating whether the attack was an act of terrorism or not is also contested, as United Nations Ambassador Susan Rice was the major figure who appeared in interviews saying the attack was the result of an anti-Muslim video and was not an act of terrorism, according to the Wall Street Journal.
The Editorial Board argues that the Select Committee on Benghazi is merely a tool of political fearmongering Republicans are exploiting for political gain as the race to the White House continues. According to the New York Times, in one of Clinton’s statements to the committee, she said “I’ve lost more sleep than all of you put together. I have been racking my brain about what more could have been done or should have been done.” If the numerous committees investigating Benghazi have proven anything, it’s that this statement might hold merit.
THE FITZ FILES
STEVEN’S CONSERVATIVE CORNER
We’re still at war in Afghanistan
Reinvest in the crossroads of America
Sometimes it’s easy to forget that we are a nation at war. The conflict in Afghanistan seldom makes the news. Compared to the uprising of ISIS, the conflict in Syria and reactions to President Obama’s deal with Iran involving nuclear weapons, the war in Afghanistan was in the backseat of foreign policy news for a rare moment in its 14-year duration. That changed, however, when President Obama announced Oct. 15 that U.S. troops would remain in Afghanistan until early 2017 to continue training Afghani troops in their fight against alQaida, according to the New York Times. Whoever is elected president in 2017 will be the one to deal with the conflict in Afghanistan. That means we will have been at war in the Middle East under the leadership of not one, not two, but three different presidents. Not since the war in Vietnam have we seen so many lives, so much effort and so much time poured into one region of the world. To make matters worse, the Taliban controls about one fifth of Afghanistan, according to the New York Times. The terrorists our nation has been fighting since Sept. 11, 2001, still have a considerable presence in Afghanistan.
I’m not certain how much longer they’re planning on keeping their stay. The situation in Afghanistan, coupled with a wide variety of factors, makes me long for the Obama we saw campaigning for president in 2008. During that election cycle, we saw a man with real promise make claims a lot of us wanted to hear. Those claims included the closing of America’s controversial detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, the end of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and a call for a new era of international cooperation. After eight years, what is the state of our world and America’s place in it? Guantanamo Bay is still open in Cuba. While there is no U.S. troop presence in Iraq, ISIS’s attacks do not paint a rosy picture in the country for years to come. The war in Afghanistan continues. International cooperation looks difficult to achieve when the relationship we have with Russia, the world’s other super power, closely resembles the relationship we had with the country when it was named the Soviet Union. This isn’t to say that Obama’s foreign policy record has been all bad. He was responsible for the death of Osama bin Laden, the most hated man in the free world, in 2011.
Tristan Fitzpatrick is a junior in journalism and history.
His commitment to ridding our world of nuclear weapons is also admirable. In addition to the deal with Iran, he has made commitments with at least 48 different nations to reduce their stockpiles of nuclear weapons, according to Foreign Policy magazine. Too often, however, his tenure has been marred by stumbles, controversy and lapses in judgment. Who will represent America in this murky geopolitical minefield? Who is best equipped to extract our country from the tangled webs not only Obama, but also his predecessor have put us in? Like an effective diplomat, they must see two sides to everything. They must have confidence, but more importantly, they must know the point where their ambition meets reality. We are still a nation at war. I can only hope our next leader, whoever they are, can find a way to end our rocky, unstable, almost decade-and-ahalf marriage to the Middle East. ttfitzpa@indiana.edu @tfitzwrites
The state motto of Indiana is “the Crossroads of America.” In Indiana today, the road system is currently in a tough position. Right now, the funding gap stands at $1 billion just to maintain state and local roads, according to the Indiana Association of County Commissioners. A key detail the fund neglects is the pressing need for improvements on the current road system. That represents a major issue for the Indiana state legislature. What can they do in order to close the gap and ensure the state’s roads are maintained and improved? Gov. Mike Pence introduced his 21st Century Crossroads proposal Oct. 13, which would produce the $1 billion needed without raising taxes. The proposal also plans to repair 16,000 miles of state highways and 5,200 bridges over the next 15 years, according to an Indiana Department of Transportation press release. The press release also stated the program would add to the $3.2 billion the Department of Transportation planned to spend over the next 5 years. Funding for the plan would come from several places. The state budget
reserves more than $2 billion, and $241 million of the budget would be drawn from the reserve, according to the press release. Then $450 million would come from state budget appropriations by accumulating $150 million per year from 2018-20. Indiana’s AAA finance rating will further add approximately $240 million to the mix. The remaining $50 million will come from the 2006 Major Moves program implemented by Mitch Daniels. In addition, national research shows every dollar used for preventative road maintenance could save $6 to $14 in the future. I believe this will be great for our state. These repairs are necessary to ensure that our state’s infrastructure will be maintained. Above all, this proposition would help enhance the Indiana economy. With manufacturing as a key industry in Indiana, construction companies will gain new state contracts, thus requiring them to hire more workers. All of this will occur while Indiana maintains and improves its infrastructure. To add to these benefits, the plan wouldn’t affect the Indiana budget at all. The $1 billion needed to
Steven Aranyi is a junior in history.
maintain the roads would be harvested without destroying the state’s finances. In terms of business and manufacturing, renovated roads would be great for business. With $221,877,814,000 of manufacturing shipments going through Indiana in 2007, according to the government census, Indiana is a nerve center for commerce and shipping alike. The proposal would ensure that Indiana and its residents retain jobs and economic importance in the coming years. Although Gov. Pence has come under fire for the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, this proposition could represent a major success for his administration. The 21st Century Crossroads proposal has the potential to fix the ailing condition of Indiana’s state and local roads while not driving the state’s budget into the ground. Road funding has been a headache for the state legislature, but I fully support Pence’s plan of action. I hope the state legislature makes the right decision and supports it, too. staranyi@indiana.edu
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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | W E D N E S D AY, O C T. 2 8 , 2 0 1 5 | I D S N E W S . C O M
A SLICE OF SOMETHING REAL
Jordan River Forum
Houstonians use fear to sway votes on Prop. One
ILLUSTRATION BY MORGAN ANDERSON | IDS
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
I love my hijab and Bloomington, too Greetings of peace. Muslim Bloomington residents know the actions of one young man do not reflect the beliefs and actions of all people who have similar identity characteristics — race, gender, etc. We know that it does not reflect upon his religious affiliation. Thinking that way would be despicable stereotyping and could lead to even more fear, hatred and finally, violent acts. How outrageous would stereotyping be when we are friends, neighbors and colleagues? I was asked to write about what “hijab” means to me. It is the majority opinion that modest behavior and dress for men and women have been revealed
in our scripture as modesty is a virtue of a believer. Some say it helps women avoid sexual objectification as we are recognized as human in a non-physical manner. Ironically, it now seems to cause women to be objectified politically — as some see hijab-wearing women as a walking threat to politics and feminism. Quite the contrary, a piece of cloth cannot be so powerful as to threaten or oppress. But mindsets can threaten and oppress us. To understand someone’s mindset, we would need to sit down with a cup of tea and let down our guards – something we Muslims would love to do with any sincere soul.
I personally love my hijab because it is beautiful. Adding a colorful frame of texture to my face everyday covers up bad hair days, and it is part of my spiritual life. On my best days, it complements my outfit and on my worst days it has helped me dry off my wet toddler who jumped into a mud puddle. On my superwoman days, I have even used it as tool to deliver a baby. I would love for you to see Muslim women as human beings, and not as objects of madness in the world. It’s a clothing accessory which signifies modesty, but the truth is modesty in our character is more important. Other important virtues are kindness and
respect. Everyone deserves that kind of treatment regardless of the presence of a headscarf. Although sometimes I am frightened to do so, I must wear my hijab because of my religious conviction, those bad hair days and because I love it. And we must be neighbors to each other in our friendly little town because we all love Bloomington. There is one instance in which I would take off my hijab for you — if you were sinking into quicksand or otherwise needed my help, I would unravel my hijab and throw it out to you, helping to reel you back in. Enabah Laracuente IU Alumna
IT’S A MAD MAD WORLD
After the student denied requests by the administrator and Deputy Fields to get up, she was met with physical violence. The unidentified student and Niya Kenny, a student who stood up and objected to the assault, were arrested, according to the New York Times. A federal investigation is also in the works and Deputy Fields has been suspended without pay since Monday, according to CNN. The video is shocking enough to make your jaw drop. To the naysayers of police brutality and modern racism, I say watch this video and try to argue in favor of Deputy Fields — you just can’t. When would any force like what Deputy Fields demonstrated in these videos be necessary? What’s next, you beat up kids wander the halls during class or throws a paper airplane? God forbid you ever be truant. I really don’t care that this student wasn’t doing what she was told. Kids who’ve done far worse have been treated better and have gone to school without fear of being physically assaulted by those in charge of protecting them. Niya Kenny’s mother said it perfectly when she told this to WLTX: “But looking at the video, who was really disturbing schools? Was it my daughter or the officer who came into the classroom and did that to the young girl?”
Yes, the classroom should be void of distractions so students can learn. But violence, intimidation and fear certainly have no place in schools either, especially perpetrated by officials. A simple solution the officials could have come to would have been to call the student’s parents. No physical harm, no involving other students in the classroom and no demonstrating police brutality at its finest. But it looks like Deputy Fields and the rest of the administration present didn’t think that far ahead. If you think this is a result of one bad officer picking on bunch of kids, you really need to reevaluate the current racial climate in this country. The New York Times reported on a study by the Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights in 2014, which found students of color were suspended more often than their white peers. Black students in particular were met with suspension or expulsion three times more than white students. According to the Richland School District Two, where Spring Valley High School is located, 77 percent of one-time suspensions during the 2011-2012 school year were of black students, though they only comprise 59 percent of students in the county. But please, give me more excuses and explanations of why this isn’t a problem.
Madison Hogan is a junior in journalism.
I have shied away from making such a pubic claim about police brutality because my uncle is a police officer — a black police officer, no less. After joining him on a ride-along during my freshman year at IU, I witnessed first hand how complex and taxing work as law enforcement can be, and that was just one day. I’m immensely proud of my uncle and the commitment he’s made to his community and our country. However, this isn’t the time for the argument “not all cops.” We know that not all cops act like this. The problem is too many do. We’ve witnessed too many Mike Browns, too many Sandra Blands and too many Freddie Grays. And we’ve listened to far too many excuses by deniers that these are “individual circumstances.” Our children shouldn’t fear their neighborhoods, their schools and their homes. The video from the assault at Spring Valley High School is shocking, but sadly, it’s not surprising. How many more will it take for you to wake up, America? maehogan@indiana.edu @madisonhogan
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.
Rachel Miller is a senior in art history and political science.
upsettingly real. To call a transgender women a man is incredibly insulting. They have worked hard to overcome obstacles to discover their true identity. Also, to claim transgender women are using a female guise to help them go into women’s restrooms, showers and locker rooms so they can sexually violate other women is simply ridiculous. Such assumptions demonstrate just how deep the transphobia runs. Houston removed language from the equal protection ordinance last year that required Houston business owners to allow transgender persons to use bathrooms that correspond to their gender identities after many protests. The fight over transgender rights went all the way to the Texas Supreme Court, which told the city it either has to repeal the ordinance or vote on the issue. To date, there is no evidence of a transgender woman trying to assault women in Houston bathrooms, according to the Guardian. The entire “bathroom predator” argument surrounding the vote on Proposition 1 is fueled by nothing more than pure ignorance and an extreme fear of people who are different. Here’s the thing, Houstonians: transgender identity has nothing to do with you, and it’s certainly not a threat to the unfortunate gendered use of bathrooms. The religious freedom argument against Proposition 1 is one thing, but the “bathroom predator” argument is blatant fear-mongering, pure discrimination and should be rejected as reasoning to vote against the proposition. rcm2@indiana.edu @RachelCMiller1
PEYTON’S PERSPECTIVE
Assault at a high school reflects police brutality High school is a place to master the Pythagorean theorem, make memories with friends at a homecoming game, attend prom and maybe play a prank or two. But high school — or anywhere, for that matter — certainly isn’t the place where you should get flipped out of your desk and thrown to the floor by a school resource officer. That’s exactly what happened to a student attending her math class at Spring Valley High School in South Carolina, and I, like the rest of the country, am sick over it. Videos, filmed by students, of the altercation between a black female student and a white school resource officer, Deputy Ben Fields, went viral Monday with the hashtag #AssaultAtSpringValleyHigh. In the videos, Deputy Fields asks the student to leave and then grabs her by the throat, flipping her and her desk onto the floor, throwing her across the ground and detaining her. To say he used excessive force is a blatant understatement. This grown man assaulted a teenage girl. You can see students hunched over their desks, lowering their heads and trying to make themselves smaller out of fear. According to the Inquisitr, the student was told to leave the classroom after having her laptop and phone out. When she refused, an administrator and Deputy Fields were called.
Should the city of Houston keep its equal rights ordinance? Believe it or not, this is a real question being asked of Houstonians leading up to the Nov. 3 mayoral election, according to the Guardian. It sounds like a no-brainer for the city to keep the equal protection ordinance, but apparently the issue is not so simple for Houston. The ordinance, No. 2014530, or Proposition 1, as it’s known, “prohibits discrimination in city employment and city services, city contracts, public accommodations, private employment and housing,” according to the Guardian. Although the ordinance would seem entirely devoid of reasoning for debate, prohibiting discrimination of gender identity has incited a battle over the ordinance possibly violating religious freedom and aiding sexual predators. The religious freedom argument is fairly ubiquitous for Christians who feel like their values are being discriminated against, but their claiming the equal protection ordinance helps sexual predators violate people seems pointed. You guessed it. The controversy is pointed directly at transgender people, specifically transgender women. Proposition 1 has been portrayed to the public as a law that has one purpose: to allow for transgender women to enter women’s restrooms and locker rooms. While the law would allow transgender women to use restrooms of their identifying gender without discrimination, it is not the focal point of the law. Adversaries of Proposition 1, such as former Houston Astros player Lance Berkman, claim Proposition 1 “will allow troubled men who claim to be women to enter women’s bathrooms, showers and locker rooms,” according to a “Campaign for Houston” YouTube video. Wow, the ignorance is
Letters without those requirements will not be considered for publication. Letters can be mailed or dropped off at the IDS, 120 Ernie Pyle Hall, 940 E. Seventh St., Bloomington, Ind., 47405. Submissions can also be sent via e-mail to letters@idsnews. com. Questions can be directed to the IDS at 855-0760.
Indiana Daily Student, Est. 1867 Website: idsnews.com The opinions expressed by the editorial board do not necessarily represent the opinions of the IDS news staff, student body, faculty or staff members or the Board of Trustees. The editorial board comprises columnists contributing to the Opinion page and the Opinion editors.
We’re promoting pedophile culture We’ve coined some new buzzwords and terms recently, like cultural appropriation and rape culture, but even more recently we’ve noticed the phrase “pedophile culture.” Todd Nickerson wrote a column for salon.com titled “I’m a pedophile, but not a monster” in September, and in it he discusses his sexual attraction to children and his unwillingness to act on it. The first thing that comes to mind when I hear “pedophile” is the word “sick.” The person is mentally ill, and these sexual urges he has for children are sickening. I’m going to assume anyone who’s not a pedophile would think the same. Nickerson explains in his article why he shouldn’t be condemned a monster because he would never harm a child. He even writes that pedophiles like him who neither molest nor want to molest children might get even more upset than “non-pedophiles” when reading about cases of sexual abuse involving children. He asks for understanding and support for “non-offending pedophiles” like him who love children and would never want to hurt them. But what’s even more disturbing in Nickerson’s column than coming out as a pedophile is an entry where he admits to spending a good duration identifying as a “pro-contacter” — a pedophile who believes sex with children should be legal and ethical. Even more disturbing is his question about whether he could marry an adult in the future despite being a pedophile. He asks, “Can I ever love and want her as much as I do a child?” Not only are some of these pedophiles sexually attracted to children, but some aren’t even capable of being attracted to adults. You know, people their own age. In one of the many responding articles to Nickerson, Alicen Grey raises many
Peyton Hurst is a junior in journalism.
exceptional points in her article, “You’ve heard of rape culture, but have you heard of pedophile culture?” at feministcurrent.com. Her article sheds light on the dark fact that, while pedophilia might seem taboo and massively hated, that it is actually not the case. Grey writes that “pedophilia is actually rewarded and celebrated” in our culture. Grey supports this argument rather accurately, defining it as “pedophile culture,” with examples like Pornhub’s top category’s being “Teen.” Grey also mentions the rise in labiaplasty and hymenoplasty, procedures that reduce women’s labia and reverse women’s vaginas to “virgin-like tightness.” I’d say all of these are a pretty strong indicator of our society’s sexual desire for pre-pubescent women. She concludes in her article that Nickerson’s plea for our support and understanding isn’t support but our submission, which I wholeheartedly agree with. Women are constantly dominated by the patriarchal society we live in and aiding Nickerson would only be supporting it. However, paraphilic disorders, which pedophilia is categorized as by the American Psychiatric Association, is so stigmatized in our society that I can’t help but to wonder if we should totally condemn these “non-offending pedophiles.” If people like Nickerson are supposedly unwilling to act on their desires and asking for our help so as not to offend, then shouldn’t we help them? And to be clear, I don’t believe in support their desires, but I believe we should help them change. If not for them, then for the innocent children. prhurst@indiana.edu @IDSPeyton
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ARTS
EDITORS: CASSIE HEEKE & BRIDGET MURRAY | ARTS@IDSNEWS.COM
Magic in the details Craftsman discusses creating wizard wands By Sanya Ali siali@indiana.edu | @siali13
C
huck Baker does not call himself an artist. Though he said he has worked with his hands since the second grade in the workshop at his family home, Baker said the label of artisan is one of the highest compliments one can give anyone who works in a creative medium. Baker, a wood and tin craftsman from Hope, Indiana, spoke at the Venue Fine Art & Gifts on Tuesday night. He highlighted his philosophies as an artist, the journey to construct each of his wizard wands and the history behind his life as a craftsman. Dave Colman, curator of the Venue, said he finds the wizard wands to be incredibly creative in terms of design and material used. “I’m sure he spends an inordinate amount of time just assembling the unusual materials that go into them,” Colman said. “It taps into the ‘Harry Potter’ craze, but there’s something more about them that makes them appealing — the obvious care and intricacy of the wood he uses.” Baker spoke about material sourcing during his talk for an intimate group as the rain poured outside the gallery.
He said the wands are made of a combination of wood from trees that nurture wildlife, such as fruitbearing trees. Other materials include stone, shell, horn and animal bone. Each piece takes at least an hour to assemble, Baker said. The process is one of feeling the materials and deciding in the moment what will go together, starting with the handle. “They’re always natural materials — the texture and feel of the wood dictates what pieces I want to put together,” Baker said. “I like to make them out of two parts put together, I like to join them with brass. In an homage to the ‘Harry Potter’ books, they always have a feather hidden at their core.” The wizard and the artist are connected in a powerful sense, Baker said. “What do wizards do? Wizards are really wise people who use their powers to order their universe for the better,” Baker said. “What do artists do? Artists are really perceptive people who, in small ways or large, order their universe so other people perceive the change.” Baker’s knowledge of how materials should feel in the finished wand comes from his days at IU. “I am a very tactile person,” Baker said. “When I was here at IU, I was on the fencing team. When I pick something up that is to be pointed, I expect that thing to go exactly where I want. I put these things together as if they were swords or daggers.” The finished wands are spray lacquered and sold across the country. Baker said he has made 400 to 500 wands in the course of his career — some to sell, some to give to children of friends. Baker said he receives calls from across the country from recipients of his crafted wizard wands. The Venue is currently displaying a variety of the distinctive wooden wands. Baker said his work gives him what his long career in law never could — the opportunity to enjoy himself every day.
“ M y hobbies turned themselves, inadvertently, into a livelihood,” Baker said. “If I planned this, I would have botched it because I have a track record of planning things, forcing them into corners they don’t want to go into, and it never has worked well for me. I ended up being placed by some unseen hand into a position where I can have fun every day.” In terms of artist versus artisan, Baker said the difference lies in what the work they do sets out to accomplish. While artists can often change hearts and minds, Baker said his work serves a practical purpose. “I know at this advanced number of years that I am an accomplished craftsman,” Baker said. “If I hear just a few notes of Mozart, my mood is changed by it. I am moved profoundly by music. I can’t tell you that any chandelier I made ever did that.” Colman said, despite Baker’s contradictions, he considers the wizard wands and Baker’s other work well within the realm of art. The meticulous nature of Baker’s work in such pieces as his tin sculpture also show great attention to detail and craftsmanship, Colman said. “He’s someone who will grab onto something and raise it to a new level of quality,” Colman said. “You just don’t see that in the ordinary, if there is such a thing as an ‘ordinary wand.’ Those are not ordinary wands.”
More coverage online Visit idsnews.com to watch a video of Baker discussing how he makes his wizard wands.
PHOTOS BY KATELYN ROWE | IDS
Left Wands made by Charles Baker are on display in the Venue for purchase. Baker talked about the wands and how he got started as a craftsman in a talk Tuesday night at the Venue. Right Charles Baker, the wizard wand maker, speaks about how he got started as a craftsman during his talk Tuesday night at the Venue.
Self-taught dancer aspires to teach others By Jordan Morgan jordmorg@indiana.edu | @Jo_Mo14
After watching the movie “Stomp the Yard” his junior year of high school, IU senior Brandon Broadus decided he wanted to dance. Inspired by dancers like Michael Jackson and WildaBeast Adams, Broadus looked up different YouTube videos and taught himself the dances. To this day, he said he has never taken a professional dance class. “The funny thing about me is that I have zero rhythm, so I just taught myself,” Broadus said. Broadus said he started by making YouTube videos of himself dancing just for fun before starting to take it more seriously when he was a senior in high school. Once he got to IU,
Broadus auditioned for Essence Dance Team and danced with them for about a year and a half, he said. A sports management and marketing major with a minor in business, Broadus decided he wanted to venture out and do his own thing by teaching dance classes at IU. Broadus said he is not an IU Recreational Sports employee, so his classes are completely free. His dance classes range from beginner to moderate experience levels, and he describes his style of dance as contemporary hip-hop. Broadus said his ultimate goal is to open up his own dance studio and teach little kids how to dance. “When it comes to teaching little kids how to dance, I think it’s really cool just to see a part of you in someone else,” Broadus said.
Although he loves teaching dance, Broadus said performing is his favorite part. He said he realized how much he loved to dance when he first started performing. “When I’m up there, it’s just kind of exhilarating,” Broadus said. Broadus is often booked to perform at events for student organizations on campus. He was even asked to perform at the IU Dance Marathon last year. Right now his goal is to help fraternities choreograph their serenades at least once, he said. Broadus creates original choreography in his head. He said he has to get obsessed with a song and listen to it about 30 times a day while paying attention to all the little beats and clicks because those are the basis for
his moves. “If I am not dancing, I am still thinking about it in my head,” Broadus said. He also said he can occasionally be found twitching randomly in class because he is thinking of a dance move or routine. Dance isn’t the only form of art Broadus takes part in. He said he likes to consider himself a jack-of-all-trades because he has also taught himself to play the piano and the guitar. “I would call myself an artist at heart,” Broadus said. Everything he does in terms of art is for himself so he can appreciate it. He said he is a low-key person, so he doesn’t try to show the whole world what he can do. Instead, Broadus uses dance as a way to relieve stress and get rid of any bad feelings.
RACHEL MEERT | IDS
Brandon Broadus, an IU senior, teaches a range of dance classes for beginners and moderate dance levels. Broadus is a self-taught dancer and has never taken a professional class.
Broadus will graduate from IU this May and said he hopes to move to Los Angeles or Chicago to get involved with the dance community there. “I feel like everybody has
their thing, but not many people get to realize what that is, but now I think I’ve found my thing,” Broadus said. “Now that I’ve realized that, I plan to stick with it as long as I can.”
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SPORTS
EDITORS: NICOLE KRASEAN & TAYLOR LEHMAN | SPORTS@IDSNEWS.COM
IU defensive end added to award watch list Through eight games, Mangieri already has a career-high seven sacks, leading the Hoosiers and tying for 10th nationally in 2015, as he nears the IU single-season record of 10.5. Mangieri also owns the active team lead for sacks, with 12.
IU senior defensive end Nick Mangieri has been added to the Ted Hendricks Award Watch List, the Ted Hendricks Foundation announced Tuesday evening. The award honors the nation’s top defensive end.
VOLLEYBALL
WOMEN’S SOCCER
Injury delays freshman’s 1st starts of career By Teddy Bailey eebailey@indiana.edu @TheTeddyBailey
NOBLE GUYON | IDS
Junior setter Megan Tallman (9) and senior blocker Awele Nwaeze (20) block a spike from an Illinois player. The Hoosiers fell to the Fighting Illini 3-0 Friday at University Gym.
IU prepares for road battle By Courtney Robb crobb@indiana.edu | @CourttyKayy
Following a victorious weekend at home, IU volleyball must prepare for traveling, as it’ll compete at Minnesota on Wednesday evening. Minnesota (17-3) is expected to be a challenging opponent for IU as they are currently in first place in the Big Ten. “We need to keep the mentality going,” IU Coach Sherry Dunbar-Kruzan said. “We have to keep improving daily. I think the teams in the Big Ten right now who continue to improve are going to have chances at the end
conference. “Everybody faces that challenge,” Dunbar-Kruzan said. “I think we’ll have a great game plan.” As the challenge of playing the Golden Gophers quickly approaches, the Hoosiers are preparing their focus to continue improving in practices on the details they’ve stressed throughout the season. “We need to make sure that we’re ready to go,” senior middle blocker Awele Nwaeze said. “I feel like we’re having a little more structure to practice individually as players by focusing on the details and having our cap-
to rattle off some wins, so we want to be one of those teams who never gets stagnant. We want to look at our goals and stay on those goals.” The Hoosiers had a short turnaround time this week with one long day of practice Monday and a shorter day of practice Tuesday. Monday’s practice focused on technique and targeted practicing aggressive serving. Tuesday’s practice was followed by film study and scouting to gear them up for the challenging mid-week matchup. Dunbar-Kruzan said it comes with the territory of competing in the Big Ten
tains lead.” A key factor in playing a top ranked team like Minnesota is the confidence IU decides to bring Wednesday night. Nwaeze and Dunbar-Kruzan said the team’s improvements and the recent win against Northwestern have helped to bring the team’s confidence back. “I think it will help a lot,” Nwaeze said. “Especially with how we’ve been working in practice, it just helps solidify that what we do in practice does matter, and what we do in practice carries into the games so that we can beat good teams.”
MEN’S GOLF
Hoosiers finish 10th at Quail Valley By Seth Tow stow@indiana.edu @Ready_Seth_Go_
IU men’s golf entered the Quail Valley Invitational in Vero Beach, Florida, hoping to put its rough outing at Crooked Stick behind them with a well-rounded tournament of limited mistakes. Instead, the Hoosiers fly back from the Sunshine State with scattered blunders. “Overall, we just made too many big numbers,” IU Coach Mike Mayer said. “I told the team going into the tournament it’s tough to play on the water, and we tried to do that too much. Too many balls in the water, too many big numbers.” IU finished 10th out of 15 teams and 40 strokes behind the teams tied for first place — North Texas and Michigan State. The Hoosiers’ score of 299 in the first round had them tied for last place with
Quail Valley. Senior Max Kollin tied for 41st, which is his highest placement on the leaderboard this season. Also, his overall score of 223 was one stroke off of his best performance of the season. Junior Andrew Havill tied for 61st, posting a 227 total. Sophomore Brendon Doyle tied for 65th and was just one stroke behind Havill. “We’re still looking for that guy to really step up and take control of this team,” Mayer said. “We’ve got a lot of people capable, but as of yet, nobody really ready to take charge.” After a promising effort at the Windon Memorial in Chicago, this makes two discouraging tournaments in a row for IU. Mayer said the mistakes made at Crooked Stick were different from those made at Quail Valley, but they’re mistakes nonetheless. He said Crooked Stick was a much tougher golf course
West Virginia. “We have to be a little more aggressive coming out, and that was part of our gameplan this tournament,” Mayer said. “But it’s hard to be aggressive when you’re hitting the ball in the water.” The only Hoosier to get off to a good start at Quail Valley was freshman Jake Brown, who posted a 72 in the first and second rounds Monday, which tied him for 18th place heading into the final round Tuesday. However, Brown shot a 77 in his final round to drop him into a tie for 34th place. “We got off to a bad start and had some hiccups,” junior Keegan Vea said. “We want to start getting off to better starts so we can start contending and have a little bit more fun on the final day.” Vea, like Brown, also finished in a tie for 34th place with a score of 221, which was the highest finish for IU at
than Quail Valley. “But one thing that’s similar is that somehow we keep making big numbers,” Mayer said. “We have to — when we make a mistake — not make it be so penal or dramatic, and that is something we continue to do and have to continue to work on.” The Hoosiers have one tournament remaining in the fall season, the Ka’anapali Collegiate Classic in Maui, Hawaii. The team will be looking for a result closer to resembling the Windon Memorial, as opposed to a result resembling Crooked Stick or Quail Valley, to send them into the offseason. “We need a good finish in Hawaii to help our confidence as a team,” Vea said. “Hopefully we can get off to a good start and be in contention heading into the final round because that’s our overall goal. We want to be right there and have a chance.”
Freshman defender Justine Lynn always said she dreamt of putting on a college soccer jersey and playing for a school like IU. For Lynn, a Michigan native, that dream had to wait a mere 10 games. Her delayed start to an already promising career was due, not to talent, but injury. A minor foot injury had snowballed into a stress fracture, which caused the first-year player to sit out more than half of her first season at IU. “It really sucked,” Lynn said. “All my life I’ve been waiting to come play in college, and then I couldn’t play for the first six weeks. It started in the summer. I thought it was just shin splints during conditioning, and then during preseason it got progressively worse.” Although she wasn’t able to play during her team’s non-conference season, Lynn said she learned a lot at the start of her career. The Hoosiers were tested from the start with No. 13 Virginia Tech before playing five consecutive road games. Lynn’s return came on the road against Wisconsin after IU had tied both Illinois and Northwestern at home to open its Big Ten slate. In a 3-0 loss, Lynn was able to come off the bench and put a shot on goal. More importantly, it marked the anticipated start to her career in Bloomington. “It was awesome,” Lynn said. “I was so excited. I definitely wasn’t in the greatest shape, but it was so nice being on the field, having the jersey on and being a part of it rather than sitting on the sideline.” Since the Wisconsin game, Lynn has started all six games, including playing every minute of last weekend’s 110-minute draw with Maryland. While grateful for the opportunity, Lynn said it’s been a challenge to keep up with her fitness without re-aggravating her injury. “It’s definitely hard,” Lynn said. “In practice, I’m still trying to get my fitness up. I’ve been in the weight
room and have been doing the bike, but I can’t run because I don’t want to make it worse. I wear a boot when I walk around campus just in case. It gets sore sometimes, but it’s been good in games.” IU Coach Amy Berbary has thrown Lynn into the fire of a Hoosier backline that has dealt with a flurry of shots over the past few games. Lynn has solidified a place on the IU defense along with junior captain Marissa Borschke, senior Annelie Leitner and sophomore Emily Basten. “Playing in the backline is such a big responsibility,” Lynn said. “If you stop running for one second, you’re going to get beat, and you’re going to get scored on. You don’t really get many mistakes, and when you do, you usually get punished for them. Marissa, Annelie and Emily are all so good, and it’s great to know that I have them behind me.” Berbary, who has had to deal with a plethora of injuries and inexperience this season, said she could not be more impressed with how her newfound starting defender has handled the beginning of her carer. “She handled it like an absolute professional,” Berbary said. “It’s unbelievable. I’ve never seen, in all the years that I’ve been coaching, a freshman to sit there for 10 games and jump in like that. She looks like a true upperclassman, and I am so thrilled for her and really excited for her potential.” Lynn has a proven track record through her club experience with the Michigan Hawks, a club that she chose to play for full-time after just one season of high school soccer. The 5-foot-2 stalwart has also played for the Olympic development team, but, according to Berbary, she had some doubts of her talent when it came to IU. “She loves soccer,” Berbary said. “I’ve seen Justine play through the Olympic development program and her club team. We had to tell her that she was good enough, and I think that’s she’s proven that to herself. She didn’t need to prove anything to us.”
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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | W E D N E S D AY, O C T. 2 8 , 2 0 1 5 | I D S N E W S . C O M To place an ad: go online, call 812-855-0763 or stop by Ernie Pyle Hall 120 from 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Monday - Friday.
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Bloomingfoods Cooperative Grocery wishes to hire a new general manager for its 3 retail stores & commissary. Full advertisement can be found at: http://www. bloomingfoods.coop/ wp-content/uploads/ 2014/08/FINALad.pdf
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1BR in 2 BR/1 BA unfurn. apt. $347.50/mo. + utils. Female only. Avail. spring sem. aeluna@indiana.edu
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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | W E D N E S D AY, O C T. 2 8 , 2 0 1 5 | I D S N E W S . C O M
» BORN
taking turns. Bob and Donna are retired. They have seven children and 13 grandchildren. They worry about young people today. They say their morals are loose: they don’t know God, they don’t know life begins at conception. Bob and Donna know. They pray to end the laws that allow Planned Parenthood to give abortions. They pray God forgives the women who take their babies’ lives. Humming motorcycles and squealing brakes obscure Bob and Donna’s prayers.
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
us. A college student in a vintage sweater rushes past. She walked 20 minutes from Collins Living-Learning Center. She does not want anyone’s prayers; she just wants to check in her for her appointment. It’s not for an abortion. Hail Mary, full of grace. The Lord is with thee. Blessed art thou amongst women, and blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus. Chelsey McNeil, 31, holds a 40 Days for Life sign as her husband looks after their two children, ages 4 and 5. Chelsey said her children are a blessing. Before she gave birth to Conrad, the 5-yearold, she had several miscarriages, including one late in her pregnancy. “I don’t understand why anyone would choose to go through that,” she said. A fire truck speeds down College Avenue. Conrad clasps his hands and prays. “Dear God,” Conrad says, but his words are drowned out by the siren. “What did you pray for?” Chelsey says. “I prayed for the fire truck to arrive on time and for everyone to be safe and for no one to be hurt.”
* * * O my Jesus, forgive us of our sins. Save us from the fires of hell. The year before Roe v. Wade, a 22-year-old Jane found an ad in an underground newspaper for a clinic that provided resources for women who want to end their pregnancies. She paid cash, and they gave her plane tickets to Buffalo, New York, where abortion was legal. Jane’s boyfriend went with her to her appointment. It was in a strip mall, but it was so early in the morning that all the shops were closed. She descended a flight of stairs and walked down a long, dark hallway to a nearly empty office. A doctor greeted her. He was an old man with white hair. There was no preparation. There were almost no words. “This is going to hurt a bit,” the doctor said. He used a suction machine. It hurt.
* * * Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for us sinners. Jane was raised Christian in Illinois and attended a Lutheran teaching college. During her third year, she dropped out and ran away with the pastor’s son. It was the ‘70s. Jane and her boyfriend lived in a commune and protested the Vietnam War. She was a feminist and believed in owning her body. She got pregnant out of wedlock.
* * * Hail Holy Queen, Mother of Mercy, our Life, our Sweetness, and our hope. To thee we cry, poor banished children of Eve. The waiting room of Planned Parenthood in Bloomington is quiet. A young woman wearing a silver cross necklace walks to a table covered in pamphlets and condoms. She examines a female condom and picks up a pamphlet called “Human Sexuality.” There’s a posterboard on the table covered in pink
* * * Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit. From 6 to 7 p.m., Bob and Donna Zapfe sit in lawn chairs and pray the rosary out loud,
Horoscope Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is an 8 — Transform an obligation into an opportunity by looking at it from a different vantage point. Expand your territory. Travel and adventure suit your mood. Take your show on the road. Avoid impulsive spending. Leave your money stashed.
10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. financial foundations.
leaks. Favor someone you trust. Choose love over money.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is a 7 — Your partner’s energy affects your moods. You’re in the eye of the storm. Pass up a crazy proposition. Don’t gamble now, or bankroll a gambler. Focus on fun and romance instead. Remind family to lighten up. Pamper each other.
is a 9 — Values are tested. Controversy arises. The truth gets revealed. Postpone expansion for now. Don’t hurry on a decision. Read the materials closely first. Focus on work, and plug financial
Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 6 — Finish home preparations. Let go of ideals and standards and cut stress. Slow down or risk breaking something.
is an 8 — Negotiate to refine the plan. Make inroads quietly. Get terms in writing. Adapt to new requirements. You may not agree on everything. If you start to lose it, take a time out. Leave harsh words unspoken.
WILEY
NON SEQUITUR
RACHEL MEERT | IDS
Freshman forward Cassidy Blacha dribbles around defenders during the game against Ohio State on Sunday afternoon at Bill Armstrong Stadium. The Hoosiers lost to the Buckeyes 2-1.
» SENIORS
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 guys were in their second semester of their freshman year, so it’s been pretty amazing to see them grow up, and they have turned into some great women and done such a great job for us.” The Hoosier seniors said they can take solace in what they have accomplished on the field and more. “It’s pretty bittersweet,” IU senior midfielder Kailee Feinstein said. “It feels great to know that I have grown up as a player and as a person in these past four years, so I’m ending on definitely a high note.”
» SCORE
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 Colnot is the principal conductor of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s MusicNOW series and the principal conductor of the Civic Orchestra of Chicago. He has taught at Columbia College, DePaul University and the University of Chicago. The idea for the project came from both Fleezanis and Colnot during a dinner in Chicago and Fleeza-
Don’t get pushy. Forgive others their trespasses. Make a long-distance call and accept charges. Enjoy time together.
To get the advantage, check the day’s rating:
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is a 7 — Share feelings with your partner. Work out spending priorities, and manage your accounts. Hold out for what you really want. You’re pushed to grow. A difficult but exciting moment forces you to make a decision. Lay
thank-you notes. Each contains a scribbled message of support. Most are political, some are personal. “You guys are the only reason I had medical care as a woman without insurance,” one reads. “And this went far beyond unplanned pregnancies. Planned Parenthood has been awesome for just my standard wellness and prevention care, too!” O clement, O loving, O sweet Virgin Mary. Pray for us O Holy Mother of God. Jane collapsed in the airport on the way home from her abortion. She told no one about the procedure. A year later, Jane became pregnant again. She chose to have the child, a girl named Amber. She married her boyfriend. Jane started working in the local schools; her husband started drinking. After nine years, Jane divorced him and remarried. Since then, she’s worked as an obstetric nurse, a school nurse, and as a nurse for children who have special needs. She now has two grown sons, one in the air force and another studying medicine. Both join Jane at her protests. Amber takes after her mother. She’s an artist and free spirit out in North Dakota. After graduating from IU, Amber hitchhiked all over the country. She followed the Grateful Dead on tours, just as Jane did. Amber is pro-choice. Jane didn’t tell her mother about her procedure until 2010. After her confession, the two visited the Memorial for the Unborn in Chattanooga, Tennessee. Jane purchased a nameplate for her aborted child and named the baby after her grandmothers. Juliana Victoria if the child had been a girl, Julian Victor for a boy. It’s 11 p.m., the end of Jane Miller’s shift. She picks up her sign and climbs into her grey Chevy. The front license plate reads, “PROLIFE2THEMAX.” Jane will be back next Wednesday. She’ll bring her blue rosary and walk around the clinic and pray for God’s mercy.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 7 — Postpone travel and expansion if you can. Crowds and traffic can be expected. Stick to safe bets. Resist temptation to spend impulsively. Stifle aggressive reactions and cool down. Relax into a creative project. Save money and hassle. Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Today is a 7 — Enjoy frugality. Don’t let a loved one talk you into spending too much. Whatever you might save on an impulsive purchase isn’t worth the stress or potential for argument. Review your budget instead. Come up with creative
Crossword
One IU senior, goalkeeper Sarah Stone, has kept IU in games. She has posted six shutouts in 2015. Despite the lack of scoring this season, Stone’s performances in goal have kept her team in games. Entering Wednesday’s game, IU senior midfielder Jessie Bujouves has 12 goals and seven assists in her career. Bujouves, IU’s leading scorer in 2015, has registered four goals this season, including IU’s lone goal against Michigan St. on Wednesday. The senior midfielder will look to continue her attacking mentality in her final game as a Hoosier. IU had a captain who
played every minute for the Hoosiers in 2015. Senior defender Emily Basten found the field in her first and last year on campus after transferring from Central Michigan. Basten has led the defense despite adjusting to a new program in one season. On defense, she has played long minutes for the Hoosiers and was an integral part of six shutouts this season. “She has been such an impact to this program in more ways than I could ever express or she’ll ever know,” Berbary said. “I know the season didn’t pan out as we thought, but I couldn’t imagine the season without her.”
nis implemented it, Colnot said in an email. Colnot is the perfect colleague for this project, and he helps the orchestra to understand the design of the piece, Fleezanis said. “He gives them the tools to listen to what they need to listen to,” Fleezanis said. “He’s eager to learn and eager to be a collaborative partner in this project.” Fleezanis said the symphony is incredibly significant because it is like “a continuation of
Beethoven.” Brahms’ symphony has a sentiment that is poetic and deeply intimate, she said. Fleezanis said the orchestra’s exposure to the background of the symphony is gratifying both musically and technically, and the orchestra performs it with confidence. “They will have much more to bring to the piece,” Fleezanis said. “The orchestra has grown tremendously from this.”
solutions.
Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Today is a 9 — Your planning pays off, when you adapt gracefully to a surprise. Priorities change, and require your attention unexpectedly. Don’t fund a fantasy. Stick to concrete goals. Don’t spend more than you can afford. Revise for new circumstances. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 5 — Nurture your roots. Feel your power rise. Finances seem in a state of flux. Make backup plans. Avoid arguments by appreciating what others provide. Don’t take anyone for granted. Take advantage of creative potential. Slow down and recharge batteries.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
su do ku
ACROSS
Difficulty Rating: How to play: Fill in the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 grid contains the digits 1 through 9, without repeating a number in any one row, column or 3x3 grid.
© Puzzles by Pappocom
1 Political statistician Silver 5 Sell for 9 Learn 13 Lacking company 15 “__ way!” 16 Indian mausoleum city 17 Dodge Chargers, e.g. 19 Doesn’t keep 20 Rescue squad pro 21 Gerald of Tara 22 Vision-related 23 Take __ the waist 25 Hyundai’s home 27 House of Henry VIII 29 Camera named for a Greek goddess 30 One of the Canaries: Abbr. 31 Cyber Monday events 33 Previously 34 Backs (out) 35 Warm underwear 38 Edges 41 Notre Dame’s Parseghian 42 Had a bug 45 Dashboard Confessional rock genre 46 Painter’s deg. 47 Root beer brand
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is a 7 — Professional opportunities require attention to take advantage. The competition is fierce, but you have a good chance. Put new skills into practice. Dress well and smile. Hold your temper, even if someone loses theirs. Don’t take it personally.
© 2015 By Nancy Black Distributed by Tribune Media Services, INC. All Rights Reserved
L.A. Times Daily Crossword
JEFF HARRIS
GREEN APPLES
7 — Changes occur at the top. Career demands interfere with private time. Postpone family time for now. A potential danger requires your attention. Don’t gamble; do more testing. Ask expert friends for advice. Get your community involved.
49 Easter season feast 54 1492 caravel 55 “Peace out, Pablo!” 56 Like ham in some omelets 58 Little one 59 Future flower 60 Shindig by the shore, and a hint to the starts of 17-, 25-, 35- and 49-Across 62 Run out of steam 63 Smallest of the litter 64 Derisive look 65 Rose support 66 Rich rocks 67 Root beer brand
DOWN 1 “Whatever you want” 2 Fund-raising target 3 Food truck order 4 Wedding RSVP card, e.g. 5 Chocoholic’s favorite tree? 6 Hokkaido seaport 7 Battlefield board game 8 Prof’s aides 9 Marx playing with strings 10 Narcissistic indulgence 11 Most pretentious 12 Imps 14 Gp. with the album “Secret
Messages” 18 Uncertain responses 22 Signs off on 24 Trucker’s expense 26 To-do 28 Stutz contemporary 32 Huge mess 33 1977 Steely Dan album 34 Country singer K.T. 36 Awesome quality, as of mountains 37 Bethesda-based medical research org. 38 Lunches and brunches 39 Cry of success 40 “Tartuffe” playwright 43 Horn of Africa nation 44 Signified 46 Submissions to eds. 48 Nymph chasers 50 Data transmitter 51 “Cheers” waitress 52 Savings and checking: Abbr. 53 Slangy affirmative 57 Around-the-horn MLB plays 60 Good bud 61 “Wait, there’s more”
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
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