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Infant deaths differ for races By Taylor Telford ttelford@umail.iu.edu | @ttelford1883
Seven out of every thousand infants born in Indiana will not live to see their first birthday. Indiana ranks among the worst in the country in infant mortality rates, according to statistics from the Indiana Department of Health. Not only is the state above the national average for infant deaths, but it also has higher rates of pre-term births and prenatal smoking and a lower rate of pregnant women who receive prenatal care in the first trimester. These problems are rampant in Indiana, but not across the entire population, said Dr. Jen Walthall, deputy health commissioner for the Indiana State Health Department. “What we see in Indiana is that we can really do well ensuring prenatal care and healthy births in a select group of women,” Walthall said. “Our infant mortality rate in white women is much better than the national average.” However, Indiana’s black infant mortality rate is 2.6 times higher than the white infant mortality rate — more than 15 deaths for every thousand live births. Diseases that can lead to preterm labor, such as diabetes and hypertension, are more common among black women and contribute to the high black infant mortality rate. The Hispanic rate is also higher than the white rate, though the black rate is by far the worst, Walthall said. Lack of access to healthcare is a huge barrier for black and Hispanic populations. The gap in mortality rates between whites and minorities is an example of a health disparity. These are defined as “preventable differences in the burden of disease, injury, violence or opportunities to achieve optimal health that are experienced by socially disadvantaged populations,” according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. All of Indiana’s infant mortality problems are anchored in health disparity, Walthall said. “We have a huge health disparity gap to the point that if we could fix
PHOTOS BY CASSIE HEEKE | IDS
Ann Marie Theis (left) and Billie Bruley play Rosalinda and Eisenstein respectively in IU Opera’s “Die Fledermaus.” The operetta opens at 7:30 p.m. Friday at the Musical Arts Center.
The languages of laughter Jacobs to present updated version of operetta ‘Die Fledermaus’ By Brooke McAfee bemcafee@indiana.edu | @bemcafee24601
An ornate hotel lobby occupied the stage of the Musical Arts Center Thursday evening. Characters, entered and exited through the hotel doors and interacted without dialogue. They crossed the stage while the orchestra played during the dress rehearsal of Johann Strauss Jr.’s operetta “Die Fledermaus.” The Jacobs School of Music’s production is set in Imperial Hotel in Vienna in the 1920s, where a masquerade brings the main characters together in a comedy full of deception, disguise and revenge. “Die Fledermaus” opens at 7:30 p.m. today and runs November 14, 19 and 20 in the MAC. The story centers around Dr. Falke, also known as Dr. Fledermaus, who takes revenge on his friend Gabriel von Eisenstein for playing a humiliating practical joke on Falke two years earlier. It also involves Eisenstein’s wife, Rosalinda, her former lover,
Andres Acosta and Ann Marie Theis play Alfred and Rosalinda in “Die Fledermaus.” The operetta opens at 7:30 p.m. today at the Musical Arts Center.
Alfred, and their maid, Adele, who interact in various subplots. This is a relatively new production, said stage director Robin Guarino — the original operetta premiered in 1874, but this is an updated version. It
DIE FLEDERMAUS Student tickets $12 Adult tickets $25 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Thursday and Friday, the MAC
SEE OPERETTA, PAGE 6
SEE MORTALITY, PAGE 6
FOOTBALL
Controversial film screening gets mixed IU plays No. 14 Michigan in final reviews from viewers 2015 game in Memorial Stadium By Taylor Lehman
By Julie Masterson julmaste@Indiana.edu
Although much has changed since its premiere in 1915, the debate surrounding D.W. Griffith’s “The Birth of a Nation” remains heated as ever. Sponsored by the Black Film Center/Archive in partnership with the Media School and the IU Cinema, “From Cinematic Past to Fast Forward Present: D.W. Griffith’s ‘The Birth of a Nation’ — A Centennial Symposium” is a two-day symposium centered on the film. “This is not a celebration,” said Michael Martin, director of IU’s Black Film Center/Archive, in a recent press release. “The film is not being shown for entertainment purposes but rather as an educational tool that both reflects on the past and resonates today in regard to race relations.” The event was designed to explore the film’s legacy as well as its relevance in contemporary culture. Seth Mutchler, a house manager at the IU Cinema, was responsible for coordinating the event. Mutchler said while the film’s content is racist, misogynistic and generally difficult to digest, looking at the ugliest moments of the past is what being part of a
responsible history is all about. “It would be very convenient to brush this movie under the rug and to forget that it exists, but I think that it is very important to examine this film and to look at its cultural and historical and social impact,” Mutchler said. While he said the value of showing the movie in isolation would be questionable, Mutchler said the additional platforms for discussion included in the symposium provided audience members with important contextual information. “This film is very troubled,” Mutchler said. “There are a lot of issues and things we don’t want to talk about, but we have to talk about because if you don’t look at history, you’re doomed to repeat it.” Brenda Amwayi, a senior public management student and member of the African Student Association, did not share Mutchler’s views on the film. “This film doesn’t educate students on what it means to be African American, nor does it resonate with the problems we are having in universities, police brutality and the prison system,” Amwayi said. “A conversation needs to happen, but this is not the right educational tool.” SEE CINEMA, PAGE 6
trlehman@indiana.edu | @trlehman_IDS
In a conference chock-full of nationally ranked defenses like Iowa, Ohio State and Penn State — all teams that IU has played — IU football plays the toughest one Saturday. No. 14 Michigan comes to Bloomington allowing opponents to score just 11.9 points per game this season. IU has scored fewer than 12 points once this season, and that was against the No. 5 scoring defense Penn State. Against the Big Ten’s third-best defense, Ohio State, and fourthbest defense, Iowa, IU put 27 points on the scoreboard. This is the team’s last chance to defeat a top-25 team at home this season, as Saturday will be Senior Day for the Hoosiers. “Michigan is playing very, very good football,” IU Coach Kevin Wilson said. “We’re going to have to find all three phases to contribute against what is a really, really good football team.” One phase of the game that will require emphasis from the Hoosiers is rushing offense, where Michigan has allowed a conference low 80.6 yards per game, while IU averages 185.8 rushing yards per game. In games without junior running back Jordan Howard IU averages 121 rushing yards per game,
HALEY WARD | IDS
Quarterback Nate Sudfeld hands off the ball to Jordan Howard during the game against Iowa on Saturday at Memorial Stadium. The Hoosiers lost, 35-27.
but with Howard the Hoosiers average 161.3 in conference games. Coming off a game against No. 5 Iowa where he rushed for 174 yards and two touchdowns of 29 and 37 yards, Howard has looked as healthy as he has all season after his ankle injury and reassumes his role of powering through top defenses in the country. “But we’ve got to find a way to do it,” Wilson said about running the ball. “If you get one-dimensional against a great football team, it’s going to be tough. Last
IU (4-5) vs. Michigan (7-2) 3:30 p.m. Nov. 14 Memorial Stadium week, our run game was decent against a good Iowa run defense, but our pass game was not quite up to snuff.” Senior quarterback Nate Sudfeld will not only play the last game of his career at Memorial Stadium, but he will also start against Michigan for the first time — a Jim SEE MICHIGAN, PAGE 6
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CAMPUS EDITORS: ALYSON MALINGER & ASHLEIGH SHERMAN CAMPUS@IDSNEWS.COM
IU to launch Make Innovate Learn Lab The School of Education is opening the Make Innovate Learn Lab, a creative space for tinkering, crafting, prototyping and exploring creative solutions to educational problems. The school will formally launch the lab
with a ribbon-cutting ceremony from 4 to 6 p.m. Monday, Nov. 16, beginning in the Wright Education Building’s atrium, according to an IU press release. Tours, presentations and a Q&A session will take place after the launch.
Civic Leaders to screen “Living for 32” documentary By Carley Lanich clanich@indiana.edu | @carleylanich
COURTESY PHOTO
IU President Michael McRobbie speaks during an opening for the IU Europe Gateway last week in Berlin. The gateway will allow IU students greater opportunities in Europe.
New IU office opens in Berlin By Laurel Demkovich lfdemkov@indiana.edu @LaurelDemkovich
After attending ribboncutting ceremonies, inaugurations and openings, IU President Michael McRobbie’s five-day trip to Berlin ended last week. While in Berlin, McRobbie inaugurated the IU Europe Gateway, the third facility of its kind after the establishment of similar offices in New Delhi and Beijing. It will allow students and faculty to have greater access to opportunities in Europe, McRobbie said at a ceremony to officially open the gateway. Although McRobbie’s trip to Berlin has ended, the work with the gateway has only begun. “The idea is that we are supporting and facilitating activities that are generated by IU faculty,” said Andrea Adam Moore, director of the IU Europe Gateway. “We are not creating events or programs for Indiana University. We want faculty and students ... to come up with ideas that we then can support.”
Moore said she hopes the office will to be a gateway into Europe for IU students and faculty so those who want to come through the office have a one-stop shop where they can get information and assistance. The gateway will also allow students and other members of the University based in Europe to connect with IU. Moore said she is there to make connections with local partners, including universities in Germany and Europe, museums, art institutions and schools. She works with these partners so they can work with IU faculty on their ideas. Some ideas include working with the Jacobs School of Music and local music schools to allow students to perform in Berlin, having an economics conference and creating internships in Europe. Hannah Buxbaum, IU law professor, is the academic director of the Europe Gateway. She has been working closely with Moore to develop the programs for the gateway. Basing the Gateway of-
fice in Berlin means IU is able to build on some very strong existing partnerships in Germany, Buxbaum said. “We have long-standing relationships with both the Free University and the Humboldt University in Berlin, as well as with a number of other German universities,” Buxbaum added. Moore said she hopes the office will give German partners a closer connection to IU and expand relationships and partnerships with German universities. “We hope it will be more Indiana students coming to Berlin and Germany and Europe in the future,” Moore said. “And that is something that’s important to our German partners here.” More faculty and research collaboration will be going on between German scientists and scholars and IU faculty, she added. The gateway’s office will be located in the Global Institute-Berlin of the Council on International Educational Exchange, which opened Nov. 4. It is located in Berlin’s Kreuzberg dis-
trict. “The central location will make it easy to work with all of our partners in other countries throughout Europe,” Buxbaum said. Having the office in the CIEE will also allow the gateway to host short-term trips and conferences in its office suite as well as large, long-term programs using the CIEE’s event space, Moore said. “They have really stateof-the-art technology there, too, for us to use,” she added. Growing up in Germany and living in the United States for ten years, Moore said she noticed many German students have only heard of Ivy League universities or schools along the coasts. Moore said she hopes her office can work to increase the number of German students studying at IU. “We hope that Indiana University will be better known in Germany and in Europe,” she said. “Very few people have ever heard of Indiana University, and that we want to change.”
Patten lecturer examines status quo By Carley Lanich clanich@indiana.edu | @carleylanich
Using diagrams of handdrawn mazes and wired circuit boards, Nancy Folbre related the interaction of societal factors such as race, gender and identity in various neoclassical and Marxist theories, challenging the status quo of academic thought on societal influences in power structures. It was all part of Folbre’s second lecture this week in the Patten Foundation’s 2015-16 Patten Lecture Series. Folbre, a professor emerita of economics and director of the Political Economy Research Institute’s Program on Gender and Care Work at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, also lectured Tuesday evening. She met throughout the last two days with honors and gender studies students as part of the Patten Foundation’s programming. The foundation seeks to connect distinguished lecturers with the IU community for a number of days rather than just speaking at one lecture. Folbre said her meetings with IU students, faculty and staff brought “terrific intellectual engagement.” In her talk, “The Political Economy of Patriarchal Systems,” in President’s
Hall on Thursday evening, Folbre emphasized the economic intersection in gender structures in modern society. “Feminist theory has gone through a serious phase of self-interrogation and intellectual searching about the importance of the importance of this inconsistency,” Folbre said, referencing basic models’ accounting for only one personal identity. Senior Sarah Clark, who attended the talk after hearing about it in her gender studies class, said Folbre’s model was aone she had never seen in her classes. “In class we always talk about intersectionality,” Clark said. “Her representation of intersectionality is very different than what I’ve seen before. You always see the bubble charts that are overlapping, but you never see the dynamics of it and how there’s social hierarchies in between social groups themselves.” In her talk, Folbre analyzed how multiple identity factors contribute to social inequality and social groupings. She provided an overview of systemic political economies, discussed constraints of societal agencies and dissected the role of reproduction in a feminist theory, all via her own distinct approach to explaining how varying factors
KATELYN ROWE | IDS
Economist Nancy Folbre explains where individuals get power by comparing it to batteries and wires during a lecture titled “The Political Economy of Patriarchal Systems” Thursday night.
influence different power structures. Believing basic tri-structured models, like bubble charts, do not go far enough to explain the complexity of racial, gender and economic influences on an average person’s struggle for power, Folbre presented her own model in response to the traditional academic models being studied. Drawing influence from electronic circuit boards, Folbre’s model showed connected pathways representing the reliance of other people on groups formed by societal classes to achieve greater representation in society. Folbre said in order to address such complex issues of inequality as represented in her model, scholars must look to where societal identities are first
formed, reproduction. She said people are born into some specific identities such as races and gender without having a choice, which leads to inherent advantages and disadvantages throughout life. Folbre’s talk culminated in a relation of societal roles, gender specifically, to economic structures, drawing examples from female presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Carly Fiorina. She said she believed class and gender differences in such cases can be viewed in a very nondimensional way. “That’s exactly what I’m trying to challenge with this theoretical framework,” Folbre said. “This discussion is to offer a way of developing the economic dimensions of intersectionality in a more assertive way.”
For nine and a half minutes, Colin Goddard and his classmates hid under desks during their morning French class at Virginia Tech. Goddard was shot four times during the Virginia Tech shooting April 16, 2007, that took the lives of 32 students. He was one of seven survivors from his intermediate French class. Years later, as he researched the issue, Goddard said he was shocked to learn criminal background checks were not required on every gun purchase in the U.S. Since then, Goddard has made gun violence prevention advocacy his life’s work. He first joined the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence after being hired by IU professor and Civic Leaders Living Learning Center Director Paul Helmke, who at the time was also working at the Brady Campaign. Helmke and the IU Civic Leaders LLC, along with Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America, are now bringing Goddard to Bloomington for a screening of “Living for 32,” a documentary based on Goddard’s experiences and advocacy. “Part of what I try to do with the Civic Leaders Center is to inspire students to get involved with whatever their issue is,” Helmke said. “I think Colin is a great example of how an individual can go out there and try to make a difference with issues.” The documentary being shown at the BuskirkChumley Theater at 3 p.m. Sunday will be followed by a discussion with Goddard, who is now a senior policy advocate for Everytown For Gun Safety, an organization that promotes an end to gun violence and safer communities. Helmke will introduce Goddard after the screening for the discussion and a question-and-answer session. Rachel Guglielmo said she hopes Goddard’s talk can help inform Bloomington residents and inspire them to take action. “Colin is an example,” Guglielmo said. “He’s a living example of someone who is doing something about this, trying to prevent it from happening in the future.” Goddard said he considers himself lucky. “I did nothing different than everyone else in that classroom,” Goddard said. “We didn’t really have anywhere to go. We just tried to jump underneath the desks that were there. I was just one of the incredibly lucky people to have been shot four times but survive.” Students in other classrooms barricaded doors and looked to windows for escape. Some made the jump, breaking legs and ankles as they fell on the hard concrete two stories below. Goddard said he’s glad he didn’t make that jump. Instead, he hid in his classroom through nearly 10
“Part of what I try to do with the Civic Leaders Center is to inspire students to get involved with whatever their issue is.” Paul Helmke, Civic Leaders Living Learning Center director
“LIVING FOR 32” Free and Unticketed 3 p.m. Sunday Buskirk-Chumley Theater
minutes of constant gunfire. Goddard said it felt like hours. “It was the most terrifying experience I’ve ever had,” he said. After the shooting, Goddard spent six days in the hospital and weeks recovering physically, mentally and emotionally. Only one of the bullets that hit Goddard struck bone and shattered. The other three still remain in his body, two in his hips and one above his left knee. He has a titanium rod in the bone of his left leg. He went through physical therapy to learn how to walk again and group therapy with survivors from his class who could relate to what had happened. “I think because the physical recovery went really well, my mental and emotional recovery followed,” Goddard said. However, upon returning to classes, Goddard said he was a more jumpy person. Slamming doors and loud noises startled Goddard and other survivors in his classes. Goddard entered college as an ROTC cadet studying physics before withdrawing from ROTC and changing his focus to international studies before the shooting. When Goddard graduated a year after the shooting, he was unsure of what he wanted to do. It wasn’t until the shootings at the American Civic Association immigration center in Binghamton, New York, on April 3, 2009 — the first live coverage of a mass shooting he had followed since Virginia Tech — that Goddard felt drawn to action. As he watched images of police cars and ambulances, yellow tape, candles and crying, Goddard said he thought of the 13 families that were then beginning day one of coping with their tragedy. Feeling hopeless and tired of seeing media and politicians “mostly talking in circles,” Goddard said he became increasingly interested in gun violence prevention. “When you have any sort of traumatic experience that comes out of left field and turns everything upside down, you try to answer why did this happen,” Goddard said. “And when I realized that the person who committed this horrible crime killed himself in front of my classroom, I realized we’ll never really know why.”
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New policies posed on IU greek system By Sarah Gardner gardnese@indiana.edu @sarahhhgardner
The Office of the Provost, Office of Student Life and Learning and Dean of Students Office are in the process of implementing a new set of policies for selfgoverning student organizations, including one that would allow the IU Police Department to enter houses at any time. The policy contains an addendum specific to greek life on IU’s campus, outlining clearer guidelines and regulations for sororities and fraternities. The new policies were mentioned at the Oct. 20 Bloominton Faculty Council meeting under the Presiding Officer’s Report made by Provost Lauren Robel. IU-Bloomington campus is piloting the new policies, with intentions of their expansion to all eight IU campuses, Steve Veldkamp, assistant dean of students, said. They are in review during the current academic year in order to allow for feedback and discussion on their effectiveness, according to the policy. “At this point, there have been a lot of conversations with the administration, undergraduates, alumni and representatives from national offices for the last two years,” Harold “Pete” Goldsmith, dean of students, said. “This is an attempt to clarify and redefine our relationship with student organizations.” The student organization policy outlines the definitions and benefits of selfgoverning student organizations, University student organizations and nonregistered student organizations. It serves as a formal recognition of the independent relationship between student organizations and IU, according to the policy.
The fraternity and sorority addendum, which was developed between IU administration and legal counsel, contains stricter policies on safety, education and advising. Social events at greek houses have more requirements, including registration with the Dean of Students Office 10 days in advance of the event. The addendum also requires documentation of programs on membership, risk management, academics and standards from each sorority and fraternity. Requirements for fraternity and sorority advisors are made clear as well. Housed greek organizations are given further policies to follow in the addendum. Each housed fraternity and sorority must have a live-in house director, hired by the organization’s housing corporation. Restrictions on alcohol in houses are also outlined. Housed fraternities and sororities must also agree to allow IU officials and police officers to enter and inspect any and all areas of the house at any time. “Greek student organizations operate under special circumstances,” Goldsmith said. “This policy is looking to improve the quality of greek life on campus in general.” The fraternity and sorority addendum is also part of the implementation of the Vision for the Ideal Fraternity and Sorority Community, or VIFSC, an effort led by the Office of the Provost and the Dean of Students Office. The addendum and the VIFSC have been in planning since January, Veldkamp said. According to the document, the VIFSC focuses on the four goals of being purpose-driven, maintaining high standards, promoting diversity and inclusion and improving health and safety. The document also highlights positive steps be-
“At this point, there have been a lot of conversations with the administration, undergraduates, alumni and representatives from national offices for the last two years. This is an attempt to clarify and redefine our relationship with student organizations.” Harold “Pete” Goldsmith, Dean of Students
ing taken by greek organizations, including philanthropy work and academic achievement, while also pointing out areas in need of improvement, such as student accountability and a lack of adequate on-campus training programs. “We intend that their living environments will be safer and healthier, that they will contribute positively to a student’s undergraduate experience and that they will have more of an educational and learning role as well as a social role,” Goldsmith said. The student organization policy and its fraternity and sorority addendum are in the process of being introduced currently. Implementation dates for the rest of the goals of VIFSC have not yet been determined. “Some things are still in the works right now,” said Brian Singer, vice president of communications for the Interfraternity Council. “It’s difficult to say right now how greek life will be affected.” The other greek councils affected by the new addendum, the Panhellenic Association, the National Panhellenic Council and the Multicultural Greek Council, declined to comment.
WENQING YAN | IDS
LOCALIZING THE WORLD Senior linguistics student Ding Ding gets a Turkish meatball from Turkish Student Association volunteer Trenton Fulton during the IU World Fare on Thursday evening at Almuni Hall. During the event, 17 of IU’s international student groups handed out samples of authentic international foods.
Adaptive management is failing according to paper From IDS reports
Natural resource agencies have advertised an approach known as adaptive management to adjust and refine their management plans in the face of uncertainties caused by climate change and the functioning of complex ecosystems. In a paper co-written by Robert L. Fischman, the Richard S. Melvin professor of law in the IU Maurer School of Law, the common calculations apply adaptive management in ways that nevertheless fail to promote learning. The approach is called “AM Lite,” according to an IU press release. “Everyone agrees adaptive management is the right thing to do, and the agencies all make express promises to do it,” Fischman said in the release. “Our study shows there is a troubling gap between the theory and the practice.” The paper, “Judging Adaptive Management Practices of U.S. Agencies,” is being published by the journal
“Conservation Biology” and is now available online. Fischman’s co-author is J.B. Ruhl, the David Daniels Allen distinguished chair of law at Vanderbilt University. Adaptive management is an approach to managing natural resources that incorporates monitoring of the consequences of decisions and methods for adjusting a management plan as it continues to be implemented, according to the release. Managers ideally create experiments that reveal whether decisions are effective, Fischman said in the release. Such plans also include provisions for monitoring, clear thresholds for deciding when management should change and detailed provisions for how it will change. Managers often implement “passive” forms of adaptive management that allow them to learn whether their management plans are succeeding and to make changes if they are not. Often, the study finds, agencies settle for “AM Lite” approaches
that short-circuit the managers’ ability to learn as they go, according to the release. The paper cites several examples in which judges overturned resource management decisions because of flawed approaches to management. In one, a judge rejected a plan for managing California central valley irrigation systems because it didn’t specify thresholds to trigger additional protections if an endangered fish’s habitat declined too much, according to the release. While resource managers could do a better job with adaptive management, Fischman and Ruhl suggest revising statutes and administrative law to provide better guidance and clarity. “We think adaptive management is not more expensive,” Fischman said in the release. “But it does require a steady stream of funding for monitoring, which is not how agency funding typically works.” Alyson Malinger
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IKEA announces store opening in Indiana IKEA is coming to Indiana. The Swedish furniture retail store announced Tuesday it will build a 296,000-square-foot store in Fishers, Indiana. The store will likely hire about 250 employees, and it will open in fall of 2017.
Indiana’s social media feeds have buzzed with excitement since the announcement. Sean Copeland, the host of B105.7, tweeted, “At the press conference, the @FishersIN mayor should just say #IKEA, drop the mic, and walk off the stage.”
Environmental council to address sustainablity goals By Emily Beck emebeck@indiana.edu
The Hoosier Environmental Council will have its eighth annual Greening the Statehouse event this Saturday at the University of Indianapolis. Attendees will hear panel discussions about environmental issues affecting Indiana, receive breakfast and lunch and have opportunities to meet HEC’s Indiana sponsors, such as the Sierra Club Hoosier Chapter and the Indiana Recycling Coalition. “This is the largest sustainability gathering in the state,” said Amanda Shepherd, the HEC’s senior outreach associate. “Our main goal ... is to get more Hoosiers engaged and informed and energized for the 2016 Indiana General Assembly.” Registration will open at 9 a.m. in the Schwitzer Student Center, and panel discussions will begin at 10 a.m. They will occur throughout the day and cover topics concerning climate action, the ways sustainability can benefit economies and the effects of food systems on water quality. Lisa Evans of Earthjustice, a nonprofit environmental law organization, will give the keynote address about water quality and coal ash sludge lagoons. The HEC expects half of its audience to be college students, Shepherd said. She sent information about Greening the Statehouse to universities throughout Indiana in an attempt to garner interest and draw in more students. “I think we need to get more college students involved, get them more active,” she said. “They’re the voice of the future.” One panel will discuss how sustainability affects economies and business. Mark Fisher, the vice president of the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce, said he’ll focus his discussion on placemaking, or how to construct and design a community that promotes greater mobility, encourages higher design standards and provides better access to jobs, healthcare and education.
“I think we need to get more college students involved, get them more active. They’re the voice of the future.” Amanda Shepherd, Hoosier Environmental Council’s senior outreach associate
Fisher said when businesses such as professional service firms engage in sustainable practices, they reap various benefits. “It’s a marketing tool for them,” he said. Fisher added being green helps businesses engage with their employees and clients. Placemaking efforts include creating a more walkable community through green transportation infrastructure. Fisher named the Indianapolis Cultural Trail as an example of an alternative way to get around the city, particularly downtown. Fisher said he will also talk about the different ways sustainability can enhance a community, and how it “create(s) a sense of pride.” Arvid Olson, a board member of the Greater Lafayette Commerce, will join him on the panel. Shepherd said Greening the Statehouse isn’t just about getting informed — it’s also meant for networking. During the conference, most of the HEC’s business and nonprofit sponsors will be present. She said students could make connections that could potentially earn them internships or jobs. Shepherd said she’ll present short training segments to inform attendees about how they can contact speakers and get involved with the event through social media. The conference will also serve as a meeting spot for the key people in Indiana’s environmental field to gather and talk about their projects and plans for the upcoming year. Shepherd said everyone is invited to the event. “It’s geared toward anyone interested in environmental policy and getting engaged and involved at the state level in environmental issues,” she said.
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Members of Bloomington’s law enforcement community respond to questions from the community Thursday. The Safe and Civil City Program initiated a forum between police officers and civilians as a chance to foster trust.
Police, sheriff discuss changes By Lyndsay Jones jonesly@indiana.edu | @lyndsayjonesy
Bloomington law enforcement officials met at City Hall on Thursday to hear public comments and announce various improvements made in their departments. In January, the Safe and Civil City Program initiated a forum that would encourage trust between police officers and civilians. During that meeting, questions were often heated and the audience seemed generally skeptical. Thursday’s audience appeared more at ease and asked questions that were general in nature. Bloomington Police Department Chief of Police Mike Diekhoff, Monroe County Sheriff Brad Swain, IU Police Department Chief of Police Laury Flint and Captain Ruben Martè from the Indiana State Police made up the panel. Assistant professor of criminal justice Akwasi Owusu-Bempah moderated the discussion. “Since you were last
here on January 22, have you made any changes in your departments?” Owusu-Bemapah said. Martè and Flint said they had changed and implemented new diversity training within their police academies. Swain said the Monroe County Jail was working on a mental health unit. “We’re trying to change the perception of police with younger people,” Diekhoff said. “We held a week-long academy to introduce kids into police. We had about 45 kids in that program.” The changes in police training weren’t just necessary because law enforcement officers are under scrutiny but because the number of people looking to pursue careers in law enforcement is dropping, the officers said. “Law enforcement is under the microscope,” Diekhoff said. “When you’re looking to hire people, they’re not interested in facing that kind of criticism.” Martè said the state police were dealing with a lack of applicants as well. “The numbers are just not
what they were,” Martè said. “What’s the solution? We just don’t know.” Maqubè Reese, an academic advisor from IU, told the officers that students frequently asked her if she knew how they should respond if there was a gunman on campus. “Would we be prepared for something like that? Would we be ready?” Resse said. “I don’t want to tell them, ‘look for an alert.’” “There was actually a discussion about doing drills in classrooms so they would know what to do were that to happen,” Diekhoff said. “But I don’t work with IU, so I can’t tell you exactly what they would do.” Flint declined to explain further but said there were emergency plans in place. “Definitely we will take care of an active shooter on campus,” Flint said. One audience member asked the officers if they believed IU students were treated differently from homeless people who committed similar offenses. Diekhoff and Laruy said
they disagreed. “We probably arrest more IU students than homeless people,” Diekhoff said. Cornelius Wright, chair of the Commission of the Status of Black Males, said he believed some of the public’s frustration with law enforcement was a byproduct of police officers’ not being held accountable for their actions. Martè agreed but said the Indiana State Police Department had a formal “peer-topeer” system where officers could quietly report misconduct they observed. “We have officers in jail for doing things they shouldn’t have done,” Martè said. Diekhoff said while BPD has no formal system, he too had officers fired for misconduct reported by other officers. The law enforcement officials said they recognized the need for accountability and a change in tactics but also were frustrated with the negative attention. “When our officers do a good job, no one hears about it,” Martè said.
Representative explains legislature By Cora Henry corahenry@indiana.edu | @corahenry
Rep. Matt Pierce, DBloomington, explained why voters should consider the effect their votes will have on the state legislature as a whole. “People always pride themselves on voting for the person, not the party,” Pierce said. “They don’t think of the grand scheme of how this will affect the legislature.” Pierce spoke Thursday night at the Monroe County Library as part of the Be a Voter Discussion Series organized by the library and the League of Women Voters. The talk was titled “How the Legislature Really Works and What They Didn’t Teach You in Civics Class.” In the 2016 elections, Indiana voters will choose representatives for the Indiana State Senate and House of Representatives. Organizers of the Be a Voter series said they hope the talks will help prepare Indiana residents for the elections. Kate Cruikshank, president of the League of Women Voters, said the series aims to lessen confusion about
the state legislature. She said often when Pierce speaks at monthly legislative updates sponsored by the League of Women Voters, he usually ends up explaining how the system works rather than delving into current topics. “We’re trying to give people tools to ask candidates really hard questions,” she said. “We’ve got to hold people accountable.” Pierce explained how the party affiliation of a representative affects how the whole system functions. He said the most important day for the legislature is when the Republicans and Democrats meet separately to decide on their leaders. Whichever party has more elected representatives will get to choose the speaker of the house. “It’s hard to underestimate the power the speaker of the house has,” Pierce said. He explained the speaker chooses the chairs of committees and what bills go to what committee. Pierce said there are currently a large number of subcommittees in the Indiana Senate, and he said that could be because the speaker is try-
KATELYN ROWE I IDS
Rep. Matt Pierce, D-Bloomington, explains how the state legislature works during a lecture Thursday night at Monroe County Public Library.
ing to keep the Republican supermajority happy by assigning many of them to chairman positions. “It’s kind of fun to be a chairman because you have some power and people come begging you for stuff,” Pierce said. The chairmen are “dictators” of their committees, Pierce said. They choose what bills the committee hears and whether or not amendments may be added to the bills. The bills that go to the floor of the General Assembly to become laws depend on the deci-
sions of the chairmen, who are appointed by the speaker, whom the party in the majority chooses. Pierce said the public can track the movement of bills through the Indiana General Assembly’s website. When committees hear bills, members of the public may come to the meeting and present their arguments for three to five minutes. “The good news is anybody can show up and very easily testify,” Pierce said. “The bad news is you better hone your elevator speech.”
Mayor-elect Hamilton’s transition committee formed By Anne Halliwell ahalliwe@indiana.edu @Anne_Halliwell
Mayor-elect John Hamilton announced the formation of a Transition Advisory Committee made of Bloomington residents who will help him early in his career as city mayor. Mary Catherine Carmichael, who leads the staff for the transition, said Hamilton’s campaign is glad to work with an experienced group of Bloomington residents. “Really, we tried to pick as
diverse a group as we could,” Carmichael said. Carmichael said the committee includes representatives from IU and Ivy Tech, large and small employers, labor representatives, nonprofits, and current and former government workers. The committee drew from residents with extensive experience in their separate fields, Carmichael said. Former mayor Tomi Allison and current Department of History Chairman Eric Sandweiss are the committee’s co-chairs.
“We’re lucky that we live in a community with smart people, and we want to take advantage,” Carmichael said. The committee will advise Hamilton about actions like filling gaps in staffing, making appointments to committees, task forces and increasing government transparency, according to a press release from the Hamilton campaign. Carmichael said the terms for members of some governmental boards and commissions end Dec. 31, so the committee will try to anticipate any members’ stepping down
and be ready with suggestions for potential replacements. The advisory committee will complete its work by Dec. 31, right before Hamilton steps into the mayor’s office. “Our goal is to have a good idea of who is available and appropriate to step into those roles — especially the mayoral appointments — by the end of the year,” Carmichael said. A committee will meet Friday afternoon from 3 to 5 p.m. to set the goals from which the advisory committee will work for the next month and a half, Carmichael said.
Connect with members of many diverse faiths at idsnews.com/religious Paid Advertising
Baptist (Great Commission) fx church 812-606-4588
fxchurch.com • @fxchurch on twitter Sunday: 10:10 a.m. at Bloomington Playwrights Project, 107 W. Ninth St. f x c h u r c h is foot of the cross, a place where all generations meet to GO KNO SHO GRO in relationship to God and others. Enjoy a casual theater environment with live acoustic music and real-life talks. Street and garage parking is free on Sundays. f x c h u r c h, the cause and fx. Mat Shockney, Lead Pastor mat.shockney@fxchurch.com Trevor Kirtman, Student Pastor trevor.kirtman@fxchurch.com
Independent Baptist Lifeway Baptist Church 7821 W. State Road 46 812-876-6072 • lifewaybaptistchurch.org
College & Career Age Sunday School Class: 9 a.m. Sunday
Sunday Worship: 10 a.m. & 6 p.m. Wednesday Night Bible Study: 7 p.m. Thursday Campus Bible Study: 7 p.m. * Free transportation provided. Please call if you need a ride to church. Lifeway Baptist Church exists to bring glory to God by making disciples, maturing believers and multiplying ministry. Matthew 28:19-20
Campus Meeting: Barnabas Society Thursdays at 7 - 8 p.m., Cedar Hall Every other Thursday starting Sept. 3 - Dec. 3 You will be our honored guest! You will find our services to be uplifting and full of practical teaching and preaching by Pastor Steve VonBokern, as well as dynamic, God-honoring music. Steve VonBokern, Senior Pastor Rosh Dhanawade, IU Coordinator 302-561-0108, rdhanawa@indiana.edu
Southern Baptist Convention
Episcopal (Anglican) Canterbury House Episcopal (Anglican) Campus Ministry at IU 719 E. Seventh St. 812-334-7971 • 812-361-7954
Redeemer
indiana.edu/~canterby canterby@indiana.edu • Facebook
Community Church
Sacramental Schedule: Weekly services Sundays: Holy Eucharist with hymns, followed by dinner 4 p.m. at Canterbury House
Sunday: 11 a.m.
Wednesdays: Evening Prayer & Bible Study at 5:30 p.m. at Canterbury House
Redeemer is a gospel-centered community on mission. Our vision is to see the gospel of Jesus Christ transform everything: our lives, our church, our city, and our world. We want to be instruments of gospel change in Bloomington and beyond.
Thursdays: Evening Prayer & Holy Eucharist at 5:15 p.m. at Trinity Church (111 S. Grant St.) Episcopal (Anglican) Campus Ministry is a safe, welcoming and inclusive Christian community; it is an inter-generational nesting place for all who pass through the halls of Indiana University. All people are welcome. All people get to participate. There are no barriers to faith or participation. There are no constraints — gender, sexual orientation, ethnicity, country of origin, disability or ability, weak or strong. In the end, it’s all about God’s love for us and this world.
Chris Jones, Lead Pastor
Sunday: 10:45 a.m. & 7 p.m. Wednesday Bible Study: 7 p.m. Come just as you are, as BBC welcomes you to join us for Sunday morning worship, as we seek to grow together to learn and live the Word. Come praise, proclaim, and pray with us during our Sunday evening Synergy Service. Need ride? Phone us! Don Pierce, Pastor
Christian Highland Village Church of Christ 4000 W. Third St. 812-332-8685 • highlandvillage@juno.com
Sunday: Bible Study, 9:30 a.m. Worship, 10:25 a.m., 6 p.m. Wednesday: Bible Study, 7 p.m. *On the second Sunday of each month services are at 10:25 a.m. & 1 p.m. A place where the pure Gospel is preached. Where a dedicated body of people assemble to worship, and where souls are devoted to the Lord and His word. Phil Spaulding and Mark Stauffer, Elders Justin Johnston and Roy Wever, Deacons
Christian (Disciples of Christ) First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) 205 E. Kirkwood Ave. 812-332-4459 • fccbloomington.org
Sunday: 8:30 a.m. & 11 a.m. As God has welcomed us, we welcome you. With all our differences – in age, ability and physical condition, in race, cultural background and economic status, in sexual orientation, gender identity and family structure – God has received each one with loving kindness, patience and joy. All that we are together and all that we hope to be is made more perfect as the richness of varied lives meets the mystery of God’s unifying Spirit, and we become the Body of Christ. Helen Hempfling, Pastor
Christian Science Christian Science Church
Please join us for these programs at Canterbury House
Mondays and Wednesday: 2 – 4 p.m. Open House with coffee bar & snacks
Tuesdays: 5:30 p.m. Bible study and discussion Second Sunday of every Month: 6 – 8 p.m. Film Series and Food
Non-Denominational
Orthodox Christian
City Church For All Nations
All Saints Orthodox Christian Church
1200 N. Russell Rd. 812-336-5958 • citychurchfamily.org
Twitter • @ourcitychurch Facebook • City Church For All Nations
Additional opportunities will be available for service projects, social gatherings, Bible study and retreats. Spiritual direction and pastoral counselling are available by contacting the chaplain.
Saturday: 5:30 p.m. Sunday: 9:30 a.m. & 11:30 a.m.
Chaplain’s Office Hours: Tuesday & Wednesday: 3 - 5 p.m. Friday: 11 a.m. - 2 p.m.
Saturday: 5:30 p.m. Sunday: 9 a.m., 10:30 a.m. & noon
Counseling available by appointment Mother Linda C. Johnson+, University Chaplain Evan Fencl, Outreach Coordinator Victoria Laskey, Community Development Intern Samuel Young, Interfaith Linkage Coordinator
Lutheran (ELCA) Lutheran Campus Ministry at IU Rose House 314 S. Rose Ave. 812-333-2474 • lcmiu.org
Facebook • @RoseHouseIU Sunday Worship: 8:30 a.m. & 11 a.m. at St. Thomas Lutheran Church. Wednesday: “Table Talk” Dinner & Spiritual Growth, 6 p.m. at Rose House. Rose House is home to those seeking a welcoming, inclusive Christian community. All students are invited to our campus center for spiritual (and physical!) nourishment 24/7. Rose House is an intentionally safe space to reflect on and live out your faith through study, discussions, retreats, service, and more! Jeff Schacht, Campus Minister Rev. Kelli Skram, Campus Pastor
Starting Sept. 13:
At City Church we are a movement of all races and backgrounds, coming together to love people, build family, lead to destiny. Join us at one of our weekend worship experiences! David, Pastor Sumer Norris, Pastor
University Lutheran Church & Student Center 607 E. Seventh St. (Corner of 7th & Fess) 812-336-5387 • indianalutheran.com
facebook.com/ULutheranIU @ULutheranIU on twitter Service Hours: Sunday: Bible Class, 9:15 a.m. Divine Service, 10:30 a.m. & 7 p.m. The Best Meal You'll Have All Week, 6 p.m. Tuesday & Friday: Service of Morning Prayer, 8 a.m. Wednesday: Second Best Meal, 6 p.m. Midweek Service, 7 p.m. LCMS U Bible study, 7:30 p.m. Thursday: Graduate Study/Fellowship, 7 p.m. Pizza Talk in rotating campus living areas, 9 p.m. University Lutheran Church (U.Lu) is the home LCMS U at Indiana, the campus ministry of the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod. Students, on-campus location, and our Student Center create a hub for daily, genuine Christ-centered community that receives God's gifts of life, salvation, and the forgiveness of sins through Jesus Christ.
time4thinkers.com csmonitor.com bloomingtonchristianscience.com
Mennonite Mennonite Fellowship of Bloomington
Noëlle Lindstrom, IU Christian Science Organization Liaison brownno@indiana.edu
Interdenominational Cru 900 E. Seventh St., Rm 776 812-320-3710 • iucru.com
Facebook: Cru at Indiana University Twitter: @iucru Thursday: 8:30 p.m., usually Woodburn 100 Cru is an international, interdenominational Christian organization. We are focused on helping to build spiritual movements everywhere, so that everyone knows someone who follows Jesus. We offer a large weekly group meeting, bible studies, events, out reaches, discipleship, retreats, prayer, and worship. Cru – caring community passionate about connecting people to Jesus Christ. Tony Hagerman, Megan York, Mark Johnson
For membership in the Religious Directory please contact us at ads@idsnews.com. The deadline for next Friday's Directory is 5 p.m. Tuesday.
503 S. High St. 812-332-0502
eccbloomington.org • cxiu.org Sundays: Service: 9:30 a.m. & 11 a.m. Connexion: 6 p.m. Join with students from all areas of campus at ECC on Sundays at 6 p.m. for Connexion — a Non-denominational service just for students, featuring worship, teaching, and a free dinner. We strive to support, encourage, and build up students in Christian faith during their time at IU and we'd love to get to know you! Josiah Leuenberger, Director of University Ministries Bob Whitaker, Senior Pastor Dan Waugh, Pastor of Adult Ministries
The Life Church
Rev. Richard Woelmer, Campus Pastor
Stressed about classes, relationships, life? The heart of Christian Science is Love. Feel and understand God's goodness.
Connexion / Evangelical Community Church
Lutheran (LCMS)
2425 E. Third St. 812-332-0536
Sunday: 10 a.m. Wednesday: 7 p.m.
redeemerbloomington.org facebook.com/RedeemerBtown @RedeemerBtown on twitter
Opportunities for Fellowship
Bloomington Baptist Church 111 S. Kimble Dr. 812-332-5817 • bbcin.org
600 W. Sixth St. 812-269-8975
2420 E. Third St. 812-339-4456 bloomingtonmenno.org • Facebook
Sunday: 5 p.m. A welcoming, inclusive congregation providing a place of healing and hope as we journey together in the Spirit of Christ. Gathering for worship Sundays 5 p.m. in the Roger Williams room, First United Church. As people of God's peace, we seek to embody the Kingdom of God. Ross Martinie Eiler rossmartinieeiler@gmail.com
Non-Denominational Sacred Heart Church 410 W. Kirkwood Ave. 812-272-6494
sacredheartbloomington.com facebook.com/sacredheartbloomington sacredheartbtown@gmail.com Sunday: 10:30 a.m. Wednesday: 6 p.m. potluck dinner We are a community of misfits that welcome all to join us. If you don't go to church, have left the church, or thinking of leaving the church come pay us a visit. We are a simple church that desires to Act Justly, Love Mercy, and Walk Humbly. Brandon Shurr, Pastor Jessica Shurr, Pastor
3575 N. Prow Rd. 812-339-5433
lifeministries.org Sunday: 10 a.m. Wednesday: 6:45 p.m. * Free transportation provided. Please call if you need a ride to church. The Life Church is a multi-cultural, multigenerational, gathering of believers who seek to show Gods love through discipleship. We welcome everyone with open arms. Mike & Detra Carter, Pastors
Redeemer Community Church 600 W. Sixth St. 812-269-8975
redeemerbloomington.org facebook.com/RedeemerBtown @RedeemerBtown on twitter Sunday: 11 a.m. Redeemer is a gospel-centered community on mission. Our vision is to see the gospel of Jesus Christ transform everything: our lives, our church, our city, and our world. We want to be instruments of gospel change in Bloomington and beyond. Chris Jones, Lead Pastor
The Salvation Army 111 N. Rogers St. 812-336-4310 • bloomingtonsa.org
Facebook: The Salvation Army Bloomington Indiana Twitter: @SABtown & @SABtownStore
6004 S. Fairfax Rd. 812-824-3600
allsaintsbloomington.org Wednesday: Vespers 6 p.m. Saturday: Great Vespers 5 p.m. Sunday: Matins 8:50 a.m. Divine Liturgy: 10 a.m. A parish of the Antiochian Archdiocese of North America – our parish welcomes Orthodox Christians from all jurisdictions around the globe and all Christians of Protestant and Catholic backgrounds as well as seekers of the ancient church. We are a caring and welcoming family following our Lord Jesus Christ. Rev. Fr. Peter Jon Gillquist, Pastor Rev. Lawrence Baldwin, Deacon Marcia Baldwin, Secretary
Presbyterian (USA) First Presbyterian Church 221 E. Sixth St. (Sixth and Lincoln) 812-332-1514 • fpcbloomington.org
Facebook • @1stPresBtown Sunday: 9 a.m. & 11 a.m. Worship Serivces We are a community of seekers and disciples in Christ committed to hospitality and outreach for all God’s children. Come join us for meaningful worship, thoughtful spiritual study and stimulating fellowship. Ukirk at IU is a Presbyterian Church for all students. Contact Mihee Kim-Kort at miheekk@gmail.com Andrew Kort, Pastor Katherine Strand, Music Director Christopher Young, Organist
Roman Catholic St. Paul Catholic Center 1413 E. 17th St. 812-339-5561 • hoosiercatholic.org
Facebook: Hoosier Catholic Students at St. Paul Newman Center Weekend Mass Times Saturday: 4:30 p.m. Sunday: 8:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 5:30 p.m., 9 p.m. Spanish Mass Sunday, 12:30 p.m. Korean Mass 1st & 3rd Saturdays, 6 p.m.
Weekday Mass Times Monday - Thurday: 7:20 a.m. Monday, Wednesday, Friday: 5:15 p.m.
Individual Reconciliation Monday - Friday: 4 - 5 p.m. We welcome all; We form Catholics in their faith, We nurture leaders with Christian values; We promote social outreach and justice, We reflect the face of Christ at Indiana University. Fr. John Meany, O.P., Pastor Fr. Jude McPeak, O.P., Campus Minister Fr. Raymond-Marie Bryce, O.P., Associate Pastor
United Methodist Open Hearts * Open Minds * Open Doors
St. Mark’s United Methodist Church 100 N. State Rd. 46 Bypass 812-332-5788
stmarksbloomington.org
Sunday: Sunday School for All Ages, 10 a.m. Coffee fellowship, 10:30 a.m. Worship Service, 11:00 a.m. We are a multi-generational congregation that offers both contemporary and traditional worship. We live our our mission: "To preach the Gospel of Jesus Christ and meet human needs in His name without discrimination." Everyone is welcome at The Salvation Army. Lt. Sharyn Tennyson, Pastor/Corps Officer
Sunday Schedule 9:30-10:30 a.m.: Breakfast 9:15-10:15 a.m.: Adult Sunday School Classes 9:30-10:15 a.m.: Celebration! Children’s & Family Worship 10:30-11:30 a.m.: Sanctuary Worship 10:30-11:30 a.m.: Children & Youth Sunday School Classes Evening Worship every 2nd Sunday @ 6 p.m. Jimmy Moore, Pastor Mary Beth Morgan, Pastor
Vineyard Community Church
The Open Door
2375 S. Walnut St. 812-336-4602
Burskirk Chumley Theater 114 E. Kirkwood Ave. 812-332-0223
bloomingtonvineyard.com Facebook: Vineyard Community Church Bloomigton, Indiana @BtownVineyard on twitter Sunday: 10 a.m.
opendoorfumc.org Facebook • fumcbopendoor Sunday: 11:15 a.m. @ the Buskirk Chumley Theater Wednesday: 7:30 p.m. @ Bloomington Sandwhich Co (118 E. Kirkwood) for Jubilee College Ministry
Haven't been to church lately? Now is a great time to get re-connected! Vineyard is part of an international association of churches dedicated to reaching communities with biblical messages in a relaxed, contemporary setting. We offer Sundays at 10 a.m. We have small groups that meet during the week, too. Call for more information, or check out our website. We are located on S Walnut St. behind T&T Pet Supply, look for the silo on our building. Dress is casual.
The Open Door is an alternative worship experience of the First United Methodist Church, and is located in the iconic Buskirk-Chumley Theater. The Open Door is about hospitality, worship, and service. We are truly open to all. We are passionate about Christ centered worship. We love to serve the Bloomington community.
David G. Schunk, Senior Pastor Tom Rude, Associate Pastor D.A. Schunk, Youth Pastor Lisa Schunk, Children’s Ministry Director
Mark Fenstermacher, Lead Pastor Stacee Fischer Gehring, Associate Pastor Travis Jeffords, Worship Leader Sarah Sparks-Franklin, College Ministry
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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | F R I D AY, N O V. 1 3 , 2 0 1 5 | I D S N E W S . C O M
» MICHIGAN
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 Harbaugh-coached defense. The last time Sudfeld played the Wolverines was 2013, when he backed up former Hoosier quarterback Tre Roberson and went 8-of-19 for 122 yards with a touchdown and an interception. But 2015’s Michigan passing defense is ranked second in the conference. It has intercepted 8 passes and forced a conferencelow 46.9 percent completion rate. Sudfeld struggled against Iowa last week, as he passed for just 180 yards and went 16-of-37 passing. Iowa’s passing defense is ranked just seventh in the conference. “I thought we beat ourselves,” Sudfeld said about IU’s game against Iowa. “They were a very good de-
» MORTALITY
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
that we could solve that problem entirely,” Walthall said. “Your outcome should not be based on who you are or where you live.” Sen. Robin Kelly, D-Illinois, released a report this year on health disparities in America and said this is a national issue at the center of the health crisis. “We are still a nation where minorities are less likely to get the preventive care needed to stay healthy, less likely to receive quality care and more likely to face poorer health outcomes,” Kelly said in the report. Minorities often feel unsupported in many facets of life, especially health, said Jane Walter, El Centro Comunal Latino programs and IMCH health coordinator. “People who are minorities often find themselves living in the shadows, and if you’re living in the shadows, you’re not getting what not you need from your community,” Walter said. More than 50 percent of the infant deaths in Indiana are a result of prenatal complications. These deaths are preventable, Walthall said, and they represent instances where women did not have access to the care they needed. Solving the health disparity problem means taking existing programs that work well and expanding them to underserved areas, Walthall said. The Baby & Me
fense, very sound. I thought we kind of shot ourselves in the foot too much and didn’t play to the level that we know we can.” Wilson said the team wants to win every game, but Saturday — Senior Day — he wants to win even more because he has seen the seniors in all four years of their careers and has had to rely on them several times throughout his tenure with the program. He said former Hoosier receiver Shane Wynn is still around the program as he comes to select games during the season, and Wilson recently received a text message from former IU safety Mark Murphy. “There’s so much football to play,” Wilson said. “Not all teary-eyed and emotional. Getting to the point where it’s kind of neat now. I know they’re always going to be around, always welcome.” Tobacco Free program, which helps expectant mothers quit smoking, and the Nurse Family Partnership, which assigns nurses to first-time mothers and has them visit through the child’s second birthday, are examples of programs the state is planning to expand. The adoption of the Healthy Indiana Plan 2.0 earlier this year means pregnant women have presumptive eligibility and are covered for the duration of their pregnancy and a certain time after the birth of their child. Walthall said she thinks there are many expectant mothers who are not aware of this. Lack of insurance and awareness of available resources in minority communities is a huge part of the problem. To combat this, Walthall said the state wants to create an app or web portal that could show uninsured women all the places they can receive care in their area. Better information campaigns could help too, Walthall said. Many of the infant deaths are a result of unsafe sleep, categorized as Sudden Unexplained Infant Deaths. Better education on safe sleep practice could greatly reduce SUID. Overall, Walthall said the infant mortality rate problem is not a simple one but the key factor is recognizing that it is fixable. “All of these deaths are tragedies, and many are avoidable,” Walthall said. “We need to focus on the ones that we can have some action in.”
CASSIE HEEKE | IDS
Actors in IU Opera’s “Die Fledermaus” perform in a dress rehearsal Thursday evening. The operetta opens at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the Musical Arts Center.
» OPERETTA
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 highlights the role of women during the time period between the World Wars. The story is witty and ironic, Guarino said. “It hones in on this situation of women and what the possibilities are for them as individuals,” Guarino said. “It’s right when things are about to explode out into the Roaring Twenties, so you feel that the world is not what it once was, yet the opportunities for women are still very limited.” Bille Bruley, a secondyear graduate student in the music school who plays the
» CINEMA
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 Amwayi said considering the constant brutality, degradation and demonization of African Americans in the media, screening a movie such as “Birth of a Nation” does little more than reiterate the presence of an obvious problem. While addressing the harsh realities of history
role of Eisenstein in one of the casts, said the operetta is more accessible because it combines English dialogue with German singing. However, he said he wants to make sure the audience easily understands the story and its humor while the cast is singing. “We have supertitles above the stage of the English translations of what we’re saying, but you do not want your audience to be glued to that,” Bruley said. “Music, no matter what the language is, should be able to convey a story to your audience.” Bruley said his character is a notorious ladies’ man and a charmer who is used
to getting his way. He said the operetta is both challenging and rewarding and he enjoys interacting with the cast on the stage. First-year master’s student Rebekah Howell plays the role of Adele in one cast. Her character is a spunky chambermaid who aspires to be an actress. “She gets to be sassy and fabulous,” Howell said. Howell said it has been exciting to work with the artistic team. Conductor Arthur Fagen said the experience of working on the production has been gratifying. The plot is entertaining because of the disguises and mistaken
identities and he finds Strauss’ music to be elegant and beautiful, he said. “It can be exciting, but it can also have a touch of melancholy,” Fagen said. “It encompasses a lot in a fairly light genre.” Guarino said the music, which is filled with Viennese waltzes, requires an amazing sense of style to give it the spirit and effervescence it needs. That means the musicians have to pay close attention to details and give a nuanced and clear performance, Guarino said. “You can’t overplay it,” Guarino said. “It takes a very light touch.”
is a necessary part of developing more cohesive race relations, Amwayi said she would like to see more discussion about the positive aspects of African Americans. Discussions should be focused specifically on history and culture, Amwayi said. Amwayi said there are more effective ways to have a conversation, such as
more concentrated reflection on the problems African Americans face in society today. By only discussing the victimization and subjugation of black people, Amwayi said Americans — of all races and ethnic backgrounds — are left with a limited understanding of what it means to be African American. Amwayi said a good
alternative would be to show content that would challenge people’s preconceived ideas of African Americans. “We don’t talk enough about our accomplishments.” Amwayi said. “Considering how far we have come as a race and all of the achievements that have been made along the way, there is plenty to talk about.”
Bachelor of Social Work Degree Information Sessions TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 17TH IMU PERSIMMON ROOM 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM OR 5:45 PM - 6:45 PM
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A Bachelor of Social Work degree offers tremendous flexibility in career op ons as well as the opportunity to earn a graduate degree in as li le as 1 year!
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TAKING IT FROM THE TOP MEN’S BASKETBALL
IU continues to construct starting lineup in seasonn opener By Michael Hughes michhugh@indiana.edu | @MichaelHughes94
As the Hoosiers prepare for the regular season, improvements are still being made — both on Assembly Hall and with the team. When IU takes the court Friday at Assembly Hall against Eastern Illinois, it will still be working on improving certain facets of its game. “I think our guys are excited, but at the same time they know they have to get a lot better, and the film shows that,” IU Coach Tom Crean said. “The bottom line is we can improve a lot of the controllables.” Those “controllables” Crean mentioned include crashing the boards for rebounds, getting back on defense to stop the break, awareness of where the ball is and anticipating screens on the defensive end. Crean said he wants his team to be more creative on offense or play what he calls random basketball. That means constant movement of the basketball and making the Hoosiers’ fast break offense look a lot like their motion offense. “Our fast break is like our motion offense when we’ve got it going because we have so many players who can play different places,” Crean said. “What we’ve got to do is continue to make a quick pass with a lot of movement. That just keeps the
game moving.” While the Hoosiers are still improving their play on the court, some players are just trying to improve to stay on the court for longer periods of time. That isn’t due to stretches of bad play, rather overall health and trying to get back in the flow of the game. In Monday’s 73-62 victory in the exhibition game against Bellarmine, freshman center Thomas Bryant played limited minutes, not because he wasn’t playing well, but because he still isn’t up to the level Crean wants him to be at after missing some time from a minor foot injury in the preseason. After missing multiple practices, Crean limited Bryant’s minutes, as he said he felt he wasn’t prepared for Bellarmine’s moves. Part of the limitation means Crean is still not set on any particular starting lineup. After starting all but one game last season, sophomore guard Robert Johnson came off the bench in both of IU’s exhibitions. Nothing’s different for him, Johnson said. He’s still trying to improve his game just like every other player and still trying to win. Coming off the bench does not affect the way he plays. “It’s just the beginning, so you try not to get caught up in who’s starting and things like that,” Johnson said.
IU (0-0) vs. Eastern Illinois (0-0) 7 p.m. Nov. 13 Assembly Hall
“Just for me, I try to come in and do the same things ngs I was doing when I was starting. Give energy, play defense, look forr opportunities to score and things likee that.” The same goes for senior guard Nick Zeisloft, another player on the bench in the he two-guard IU starting lineup eup it used in the exhibition season. He’s still trying ying to play well oncee he gets in the game, me, same as if he were a starter. Most of all,, both are excited to startt the season, a season that will have higher expectaxpectations than their ir first in Bloomington. ington. “It’s alwayss fun to go out and play with those type of expectations ations and have something ng to live up to,” Johnson said. aid.
Four-star forward De’Ron Davis commits to Hoosiers siers From IDS reports
IU earned a commitment from four-star power forward De’Ron Davis on Thursday evening. Davis, a 6-foot-10, 235-pound senior in high school, also signed his National Letter of Intent Thursday. The Aurora, Colorado, native is ranked as the No. 38 prospect in the
2016 recruiting class, according to 247Sports’ composite rankings. He chose IU instead of Mississippi State. “First off, Tom Crean has been there since my eighth-grade year so I was able to build a good connection with him,” Davis said at his announcement. “When I took my visit, just the family atmosphere I’ve seen at Indiana and how they compete
every day in practice and get each other better.” Davis is the he third player to commit to IU’s 20166 recruiting class, as he joins Crown Point, oint, Indiana, shooting guard Grant Gelon and Huntington Prep, West Virginia, combo guard Curtis Jones. Andy Wittry
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
IU opens season with WNIT game against Tennessee see State By Taylor Lehman trlehman@indiana.edu | @trlehman_IDS
After routing Slippery Rock 98-33 in its only exhibition game of the preseason, IU women’s basketball opens its regular season versus Tennessee State at noon Friday in Assembly Hall. Not only will the game open the Hoosiers’ season, but it will also open the Women’s National Invitation Tournament, something IU Coach Teri Moren said is a blessing for the team. “It’s nice to have a team like Tennessee State coming in here — a team that just came off an NCAA tournament,” Moren said. “Playing an NCAA opponent is important and exciting because that’s what we aspire to do.” After a 15-16 season last year, IU failed to make the NCAA tournament, but Tennessee State, which finished 18-13 and won the Ohio Va l -
ley
Tyra Buss, sophomore Guard
Conference tournament in 2014-15, went to the tournament and lost to Kentucky in the first round. Moren said during the offseason, the Hoosiers made their schedule more challenging in 201516 to push the athletes to make the NCAA tournament. Playing Tennessee State will give them a feel of where they stand as a team sooner rather than later so they can fix their mistakes. One mistake Moren said she wanted to fix after the exhibition win Sunday was the balance on inside and outside shooting. She said players needed to watch when and where they took shots because, even though the Hoosiers run a fast-paced offense, Moren still wants to find points in the paint. Passing to the post was a point of emphasis in practice for IU, as Moren and assistant coach Todd Starkey challenged the women to pass crisply around the top of the key and stressed sharp cuts on off-the-ball screens. “We’ve been especially working on post-entry passes,” sophomore guard Tyra Buss said. “We need to get the ball to the post a lot more. We’ve got Kym (Royster) and B (Amanda Cahill) down there working their tails off, so we need to get the ball into them more.” Moren said she wants the ball to run through sophomore forward Cahill’s hands on most possessions this season, which did not happen as often as the coaching staff would have liked Sunday. Out of eight shots in the post, Cahill connected on four of them, while junior forward Alexis Gassion hit five of nine on the inside. IU grabbed 18 offensive rebounds against Slippery Rock. While Tennessee State has size in the post, Moren said IU will need freshman forward Kym Royster to step up more than she did in the
IU (0-0) vs. Tennessee State (0-0) 12 p.m. Nov. 13 Assembly Hall
exhibition, as Moren said offensive rebounds will be a focus for Tennessee State. “I thought Kym, in particular, looked like a high schooler,” Moren said. “We’ve kind of told her, ‘It’s time to put your big-girl pants on, this is college basketball.’ You’re going to have to play at a whole other level. Your mindset, your aggression. All of that is different.” Moren said the coaching staff is simplifying the concepts for the freshman, though, whom they’ve told to think about three things: running the floor, rebounding and setting screens. Simplifying the concepts into three simple rules will help ease Royster into the atmosphere of college basketball, Moren said, since women are equal in athleticism now. With the Hoosiers’ lack of depth on the inside, Royster will see the floor, but that’s the case for all the Hoosiers, Moren said. How many minutes they will see is dependent on how they play. That’s where the team will miss sophomore guard Jess Walter. Moren said the guard will be unavailable for Friday with her concussion-like symptoms after a hit to the jaw in practice, but Moren said she hopes Walter will be available in a few days for practice and IU’s next game. “They’re a good team,” Buss said. “I think that it’ll be a good game for us. We just need to come out strong. It’s our season opener so of course we’ll be excited and ready to play Friday.”
Kevin “Yogi” Ferrell, senior Guard
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OPINION EDITOR: MADISON HOGAN | ASST: GREG GOTTFRIED OPINION@IDSNEWS.COM
OUT OF THE WOODS
If this Vine gets enough loops, let’s prank Jeb Vic Berger has pulled one of the best pranks during this presidential race since Deez Nuts. Berger, a comedian, said that if a manipulated vine of Jeb Bush got over 1 million views, he would get a neck tattoo reading “Jeb 4 Prez.” The bet went viral and even Jeb’s campaign
encouraged the idea. But Berger faked the tattoo and later had a friend, posing as his father, scold the campaign and claimed on Twitter that Berger had mental health issues. Jeb stopped commenting, but Berger might never stop trolling.
EDITORIAL BOARD
Whites are responsible for white supremacy Nobody likes the Ku Klux Klan. Maybe that’s why Anonymous decided to expose public figures active in it. But the biggest factor keeping white supremacy firmly in place is not even on Anonymous’s radar. It’s ordinary, everyday white people. White anti-racist activist and author Tim Wise has suggested that the form of racism most commonly encountered in the United States today is an insidious, hard-to-spot variety he calls “Racism 2.0.” Unlike the blatant “Racism 1.0” of the Jim Crow era, Racism 2.0 tries to pretend it isn’t racist. Sometimes it even fools itself. A study published in 2011 found that white respondents believed anti-white bias was more prevalent than bias against black people. But it isn’t white people who were the targets of the Charleston shootings in June of this year — the deadliest hate crime in South Carolina’s history, according to the Post and Courier. In school, when we are taught about Martin Luther King, Jr. and the civil rights movement, the struggle for racial justice in this country is presented as complete. Black people and other people of color fought for and won their rights against those mean, racist white people of the past, and now everything is OK. But everything is not OK, and the fight for racial justice is not over. Police killings of unarmed black civilians, attacks on black school children such as the one caught on video in South Carolina and the recent death threats against black students at the University of Missouri show that racism is still thriving in our country. In the midst of all this racism, where are the racists? No one wants to be called a racist or to think of themselves as such. But Americans’ fear of being considered racist is, paradoxically, preventing us from achieving the goal of racial justice. Though the vast
Miriam J. Woods is a graduate student.
majority of white people don’t consciously harbor racist attitudes, the Implicit Association Test developed by Project Implicit (take it online at https:// implicit.harvard.edu/implicit/iatdetails.html) shows that white people in every U.S. state demonstrate what is known as unconscious or implicit racial bias. In other words, we might be racist without even being consciously aware of it. However, the absolute horror of being called racist prevents most of us from examining our own biases, which is the only way to change or eliminate them. This is perhaps why white people often stridently deny the very existence of white supremacy, anti-black bias and the continued existence of structural racism. Our refusal to acknowledge our role in white supremacy is what prevents us from dismantling it. All white people in the U.S. participate in white supremacy, even if just as beneficiaries of white privilege. Think of white privilege as automatic deposits into your bank account — money you never worked for, earned or asked for. White people can’t just make these deposits stop, but we can choose how to use that money—either to benefit ourselves or to help others. When people of color speak about the racism they experience, they are too often dismissed by white people. White people should never try to speak for people of color, but we do have a moral responsibility to speak out against racism. White supremacy is not people of color’s problem to solve because they didn’t start it. It’s up to white people to fix it. woodsmj@indiana.edu @miriamjwoods
THE SCIENCE GUY
A look at synesthesia We all perceive the world differently. When some of us listen to a song in a minor key we call it dark blue, or we might associate the word “bouba” as round and curvy. But for a few of us, our senses are knit together much closer. Those with synesthesia, a neurological phenomena in which the stimulation of senses can lead to the stimulation of others, see the world differently. Colors can invoke sounds, letters might appear as certain hues or numbers might have specific arrangements in space. But some have argued there is something deeper at play than just associations between different sensations. Danko Nikolic, professor of neuroscience at the MaxPlanck Institute for Brain Research, would say the simple correlation between letters and colors for a synesthete misses the mark. Our brain does not translate a letter into a color, but rather translates a specific meaning of a letter into a sensation of color. There is an idea we associate with a happy song that causes us to describe it as “red” or “yellow.” In this way, Nikolic re-brands synesthesia as “ideasthesia.” Ideasthesia, writes Keith Hillman of stresstips.com, tells us “it is not the perception that causes the experience of color but rather the meaning that we assign to that perception — the concept.” It’s not just the relationships between sensations. We have specific meanings and ideas that we associate with specific senses, including tastes, sounds and colors. On a broader scope, if we associate semantic meanings with what we perceive, then maybe we can understand how our brain reacts
Hussain Ather is a junior in physics and philosophy.
to ideas themselves, and in turn, understand the biological basis of perception. In addition, we perceive meaning and ideas far too complex to be explained by a neuroscientific understanding of the brain. For example, when we perceive the beauty of art, “neuroscience methods do not easily grasp these complex aspects of the richly textured meaning of art,” writes Anjan Chatterjee of the-scientist.com. Regardless, we might be coming close to the understanding of certain ideas because, as scientists Tomohiro Ishizu and Semir Zeki from the University College London have found in their study, when we see something beautiful various parts of the brain, including the ventral striatum, are triggered. This could explain the biological basis of how we perceive beauty, and in similar ways, we could find a biological basis for how we perceive the world. But we shouldn’t get carried away with our understandings of the mind. There’s still a great deal of disagreement on these topics among neuroscientists, philosophers and everyone in between. Perhaps synesthetes have insights into the way our minds work. From neurochemical signals to paint on a canvas, the union of our senses tell us about ourselves. The next time you listen to jazz music, the Blues might be something more than just a feeling. sather@indiana.edu @SHussainAther
ILLUSTRATION BY MERCER T. SUPPIGER | IDS
Robots are taking over WE SAY: Google feature leaves out human aura These days we are obsessed with technology that offers a stress-free, onestop-shop experience. In fact, advancements are constantly being made on things that are already innovations in and of themselves. Products and services that were once novelties in their functionality are now almost expected. “What do you mean, I have to pour a scoop of grounds in a filter and then put it in a coffee maker?” implores the Keurig dependent. “How am I supposed to know it’s your birthday if you don’t put it on Facebook?” inquires your so-called friend. Now there is one less thing you have to worry about: responding to emails. Google will be launching Smart Reply — a service that
scans your emails and then suggests responses — in the very near future. Unlike the predictive texting feature on many smartphones, Smart Reply scans the whole email instead of just a few words. That way, it can offer you more broad, human-like responses. To recreate a human response, a machine like Smart Reply needs to learn, for lack of a better way to put it. According to the New Yorker, Smart Reply gains more knowledge about you and about your typical responses via an “artificial neural network” that discovers your patterns of communication. For many, being reduced to an algorithmic pattern would be a little offensive. Do we really say “okey dokey” that often?
However, Smart Reply is truly polite and sincere. It learns from your communication throughout time. It would make a great romantic partner. There is something inherently creepy about a machine reading and responding to your messages for you, though. In true dystopian fashion, it turns email — an already rather stale form of interaction — into a cold husk of an experience. If Smart Reply is ready and willing to do all our reading, thinking and typing for us, what are we left to do? Should we continue to shrug off our interpersonal relations in favor of spending hours thinking of a good Instagram caption? The new Gmail feature strips what personality was left from digital communication and replaces it
with computer-generated human mimicry. This kind of service and any kind of reliance on it are a broader picture of what is happening with its users. They are using technology to the take place of common decency. Really, who is too busy to respond to a simple email? It is easy for us to write back by ourselves. Yet we introduce new ways for us to circumnavigate the small tasks that make us human. We need to stop creating and using forms of technology that create bigger wedges between us as people just for the sake of its being cool, new or cutting edge. With every step we take into the technology sector, we come closer to being outsmarted, or at least outempathized, by our own creations.
KARL’S CORNER
Immerse yourself in cultures other than your own It’s no secret that I love food. I am never not hungry, which is both a blessing and a curse. When it comes to Mexican food, even if guacamole is extra, there’s nothing stopping me from practically licking the bottom of my burrito bowl. At school, I tend to indulge in Chipotle more than one should admit. I think this is true for most people — when you and your friends can’t decide where to get food, you always end up in the long, winding line that almost always snakes its way out to Kirkwood Avenue. We love it and all of its caloric glory. However, as most know by now, I haven’t had Chipotle for quite a while since I’ve been studying abroad. This week I went to the city of lights, love and happygo-lucky shitting pigeons — Paris. I’ve been once before — well, if visiting when I was 5 years old counts
as “before.” All I recall is getting trampled by a frenzy of sweaty tourists on their way to see the Mona Lisa and the aforementioned pigeons that had quite a ball leaving a present on my Disneyland Paris shirt under the Eiffel Tower. Now, as an educated 20-year-old lady, I figured I was much more equipped to explore the city sans bird poop. Let me begin by saying Paris is phenomenal — it is the pièce de résistance of European cities. My dream is to become a cheese connoisseur — Is a cheese sommelier a thing? — who always has a crisp baguette in her bag and rides the Paris metro to a high-class wine tasting where she will wear a fedora without looking like a Depression-era gangster. Specific, I know, but you have to have goals in life, right? Regardless if this dream comes true or not, I thought I’d try to lead the lifestyle of this elusive cool girl
during my stay in Paris. It went quite well — I ate a cheese plate under the Eiffel Tower, had a Croque Madame and indulged in a few too many macaroons from Ladurée. Everything was going swimmingly until I saw my friends’ gleeful expressions when they saw Chipotle nestled on a Parisian street full of little bakeries and cafes. “We have to go,” they said. “I miss it soo bad,” they said. “No, no, no, no, no,” my internal monologue said. How, in this land full of sublime pâtisseries and escargot, could someone be craving Chipotle? Something, which, by the way, was reported to have E. coli only a few weeks prior. I opted out of this excursion and bought a banana and Nutella crêpe on the street. It was delectable in all of its messy goodness. American imperialism has made its claim to fame by curing a palatable
Jessica Karl is a junior in English.
homesickness with fast food. The world, once full of niche markets and specific food, is now one big melting pot of cuisines, both local and global. Starbucks has stores in more than 65 international locations. The spread of culture is, in theory, a great thing for people experiencing it for the first time — like Parisians trying Chipotle. However, when it detracts from our ability to immerse ourselves in other cultures, it can be seen as a setback. If we take the time to enjoy the cuisine of where we are, maybe, just maybe, that burrito bowl in America will be even more tasty than it was in Paris. jlkarl@indiana.edu @jkarl26
LETTER TO THE EDITOR POLICY The IDS encourages and accepts letters to be printed daily from IU students, faculty and staff and the public. Letters should not exceed 500 words and may be edited for length and style. Submissions must include the person’s name, address and telephone number for verification.
Letters without those requirements will not be considered for publication. Letters can be mailed or dropped off at the IDS, 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.
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ARTS
EDITORS: CASSIE HEEKE & BRIDGET MURRAY | ARTS@IDSNEWS.COM
Ladies First a Capella to perform Saturday IU’s female a capella group Ladies First will perform their Fall Concert 7 p.m. Saturday at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater. The group has been performing throughout the state and country since 1999. Tickets are $10 for adults and $7 for
children and are available at the Buskirk-Chumley Box Office or online at buskirkchumley.org. Students can purchase tickets for $7 with a student ID. Seating is general admission. Doors open at 6:30 p.m.
One-man play to portray human connection By Maia Rabenold mrabenol@indiana.edu | @maialyra
Instead of storing her excess possessions in an unused closet or attic, Barbra Streisand made her basement into a fake shopping mall. The place is the basis of Jonathan Tolins’ off-Broadway one man play “Buyer & Cellar.” Tolins’ story is based on his imagined scenario that Streisand could have hired an actor to pose as a worker in a mall where she is the only customer. The actor is played by New York-based Remy Germinario in Cardinal Stage Company’s production of the show. The play opens tonight at 7:30 p.m. at the Ivy Tech Waldron Firebay. “There have been oneman shows for centuries, but the fact that it’s about Barbra Streisand’s basement, there really hasn’t been anything like this in the modern theater scene,” Germinario said. “It’s just my cup of tea.” Artistic director of the Cardinal Stage Company and director of the show Randy White said he knew Germinario was right for the role as soon as he saw a video clip of his acting.
‘BUYER & CELLAR’ Tickets $23.95-26.96 Opens 7:30 p.m. Saturday Runs through Nov. 22 “He’s got the right sensibility for the show,” White said. Germinario’s character begins by describing Streisand’s interior decorating book “My Passion for Design,” in which she discusses her very real shopping-mall-turned basement. His character speaks directly to the audience, makes eye contact and responds to audience comments. When a woman mentioned one of her relatives lives where his character lives, he immediately walked to her and made brief improvisational small talk before jumping back to the script. “The thing that I really wanted was an actor who could have the right bite and acid and yet be warm and welcoming,” White said. “You get this sense that you are being told this story by a great raconteur, somebody who loves to tell stories and give you the dish.” The single room onstage filled with Germinario’s energy, movement and multiple character voices throughout
COURTESY PHOTO
Remy Germinario acts in Cardinal Stage Company’s production of “Buyer & Cellar” which opens Friday. In the show, Germinario’s character acts as a hired actor posing as a worker in Barbra Streisand’s basement mall where she is the only customer.
the show. At one point, he switched places onstage to simulate a conversation with Streisand in which she haggles with him on the selling price of her own possessions. “It all runs in this froth
and wonderful light comedic sensibility, but underneath there’s some deeper questions about how we exist in the world with other people and the desperate need to connect,” White said.
Germinario’s character is hired to make the mall feel as authentic as possible to Barbra, but despite her celebrity status, she hires him to keep her company. “Ultimately the show is
about human connection and what it means to be a person and take agency in your life,” Germinario said. “With the quirky elements of it all, there’s a lot of heart in this show as well.”
Infinity Girl to perform Sunday, tour behind ‘Harm’ By Jack Evans jackevan@umail.iu.edu | @JackHEvans
At the end of 2012, indie rock band Infinity Girl released an EP called “Just like Lovers.” The record’s reverbheavy guitars and dreamy vocals placed it in the category of shoegaze, an indie rock subgenre that had its dominant period in the early 1990s. In August, Infinity Girl released “Harm,” its second fulllength album and first release since “Just like Lovers.” The band will play a show at 7 p.m. Sunday at the Brick House. A month after “Just like Lovers” came out, drummer Sebastian Modak left the country for a Fulbright Fellowship in Botswana, where he worked on a video project on hip-hop and social change. In the 11 months he was gone, shoegaze started to see something of a revival, with genre luminaries My
Bloody Valentine releasing its first album in two decades and young bands like Cloakroom, Pity Sex and Nothing gaining traction. Shoegaze’s popularity has continued to surge in the indie world, but guitarist/vocalist Nolan Eley said “Harm” came out of an effort to dial down on some tendencies typical of the genre — he wanted to avoid covering guitars in reverb and delay as a crutch, for example. “It was cool to see if we could make a big-sounding record without that stuff,” he said. And though Modak, 27, said avoiding the “classic shoegaze sound” does distinguish Infinity Girl from bands with pedal board dependencies, putting that effort into “Harm” was mostly about progressing as a band. As such, Eley, 25, said he allowed himself some mo-
ments of that reverb/delay indulgence while writing, but those moments were in service of the songs. He said he drew even more from post-punk and hardcore than on previous records, but the album’s darkness was a product of his headspace around the time he moved to New York City. “Moving to a new place — New York especially — as a young adult carries with it a lot of adjusting,” he said. “For me, it’s so weird how alienated or alone you can feel surrounded by so many people.” Eley said he doesn’t view his lyrics on “Harm” as explicitly pessimistic. They just happen to focus on attacking the negatives in his life as opposed to praising the positives, he said. Modak also contributes lyrics to Infinity Girl, and he said his writing falls under the same banner, often concern-
INFINITY GIRL 7 p.m. Sunday The Brick House, 422 S. Grant St. ing what he lacks emotionally or psychologically. He said his uncertainty in his path post-Botswana colored both his lyrics and drumming on “Harm.” “I had my plan for the fellowship in Botswana and it ended, and I had no idea what I was going to do,” he said. “I channeled that into the lyrics and the playing on the record too. There’s a lot of release.” Now, the members of Infinity Girl all live in New York City — bassist Mitchell Stewart moved to the city shortly before Eley and guitarist/vocalist Kyle Oppenheimer did. Modak joined them after his fellowship ended, though he said they all moved for career or personal reasons, not just
COURTESY PHOTO
The indie-pop group Infinity Girl will continue its tour by performing Sunday at the Brick House. Their second album, “Harm,” was released in August.
for the band. Eley said he anticipates a much smoother process for the next Infinity Girl album than the writing and recording that yielded “Harm.” In fact, they’ve already got about 20 songs written, which they’ll narrow down for a record in the near future, he said. But even though there’s
still work to be done, Modak said one thing is clear: each member is in a different headspace than he was two years ago. Eley described it as “more optimistic, more romantic.” “It’s definitely moving beyond that (darkness),” he said. “It’s a little happier. We’re in a better place.”
Music summit provides opportunities to network By Jack Evans jackevan@indiana.edu | @JackHEvans
The Music Industry Networking Club and Live from Bloomington will copresent the first Bloomington Music Summit at 3 p.m. Saturday in the Frangipani Room of the Indiana Memorial Union. The summit is a networking event and professional workshop for students studying music, business, marketing and journalism to make connections in Bloomington’s music scene. It will include three panels at 3:30, 4:30 and 6:30 p.m., a dinner at 5:30 p.m. and a keynote address from NUVO Newsweekly Senior Editor Katherine Coplen at 7:30 p.m. The panels will include appearances from professionals from across the music industry, Live from Bloomington Director Astrid Mejia said, such as lawyers, producers and videographers in addition to Artists & Repertoire and management representatives. Bloomington-based record labels including Secretly Canadian and Winspear will be represented. Representatives from local venues including the Bluebird Nightclub and the Buskirk-Chumley Theater will also be present. Mejia said the event, which is targeted at students, came out of ques-
tions she often gets from other students interested in the music industry. “A lot of the emails I get are ‘Who should I be listening to?’ and ‘How do I get into the industry?’” she said. “I thought it would be good to have a networking event.” Live from Bloomington is part of Union Board, and Mejia said the Board on the whole helped expand the event to include a wider range of industry professionals in the program. She said they picked panelists to reach potentially interested but underreached demographics of students. They wanted to appeal to graduate students, for example, by bringing in entertainment lawyer Josh Love. Mejia also said there was an effort to include local and regional participants and representatives from smaller operations. “We feel like the people who (usually) come here to speak are at big labels, but we wanted to show there’s other stuff you can do, too,” she said. The summit will also dedicate specific times, including the dinner, for networking opportunities. Mejia said she’s learned from experience not only how valuable a networking skill is but also how intricate it can be. “I always thought I was really good at networking, but you have to be specific
BLOOMINGTON MUSIC SUMMIT 3 p.m. Saturday, IMU to every person,” she said. “People have to be very comfortable.” Dan Coleman, who runs the Bloomington-based Spirit of ’68 Promotions and will speak on a panel, said networking can be a first step toward the best way to understand the music industry: hands-on involvement. Coleman also said he hopes he can help people understand working in the music industry isn’t easy or strictly fun. Although it requires a strong stomach, he said there’s also a learning curve. “I guess the biggest thing is to not be afraid to say no,” he said. “When you first get started, there’s an inkling to take everything you can ... You can have some filter in this.” Mejia said she hopes the event changes the way interested students look at both their careers and their local music industry offerings. “I hope that they learn there’s more to the music industry than there seems and that it could inspire them to further their careers, and also to see all the great things in Bloomington,” she said. Check-in for the Bloomington Music Summit goes from 3 to 5 p.m.
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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | F R I D AY, N O V. 1 3 , 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.
CLASSIFIEDS
Full advertising policies are available online.
Apply in person at: Ernie Pyle Hall,RM 120. Email: rhartwel@indiana.com
for a complete job description. EOE
339-2859 Available 2016-2017
Campus Walk Apts. Close to Campus, 2 BR avail. Call for special. Utils. incl. & free prkg. 812-332-1509 Cwalk@crerentals.com
Stadium Crossing 2, 3, & 4 BR Great Location Pet Friendly!
310
HOUSING
Cedar Creek
Apt. Unfurnished
2 BR 1.5 Bath Outdoor Pool Cat Friendly!
Burnham Rentals
APARTMENT & HOUSE LEASING SINCE 1942
444 E. Third St. Suite 1
burnhamrentals.com
812-339-8300 !!NOW LEASING!! August ‘16 - ‘17. Omega Properties 812-333-0995 omegabloomington.com
1, 2, & 3 BR Individual Baths Covered Patios
LIVE
BY THE
TADIUM. S812.334.0333
COM
For 2015- 2016 **1 blk. S. of Campus*** 3, 4, 5 BR apts. All utils. pd. except elec. AC, W/D, D/W, trash, prkg. incl. $465/mo. each. bestrentsrdw@yahoo.com
SKILLS NOW HIRING Advertising Account Executives
Applicants must own a reliable vehicle, must be able to work through August 2016 and work a minimum of 15 hours per week (no weekends or evenings). Sales experience is preferred but not required. All majors are accepted.
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Houses & apts. for Aug., 2016. 2-8 BR, great locations. 812-330-1501 www.gtrentalgroup.com
430 435
Red tea kettle, $5. ggervase@indiana.edu
Pets Bailey is a 9 year old beagle with lots of love left to give. Free to good home. mbkern@indiana.edu
Sublet Condos/Twnhs.
Puppies for sale to good home. $230, neg. 812-679-1535 mabrym@indiana.edu
Sublet Houses
Selling 10 week old Pomeranian Poodle w/ crate and toys. $500,neg. sgelwan@indiana.edu Young tabby kitten. Spayed w/ rabies shot. Rehoming fee of $45. Please text 502-649-1139.
Computers Power Mac G5. $200. Monitor: 17” Studio/ Cinema Display. $150. steterre@indiana.edu
Pre-Nursing, Nursing School, NCLEX textbook bundle. $60. mwehmer@umail.iu.edu
Electronics
‘09 refurbished MacBook Pro. Excellent cond. w/keyboard protector+hard shell case. $380. fbaskin@iu.edu
128 GB iPad Mini 3 w/ screen protector, leather case, & keyboard. $450, neg. tuengo@indiana.edu
Textbooks
For sale: The Praxis PLT Textbook, Grades K-6. Incl. 2 full length exams & other guides. $20. 812-834-5144
MERCHANDISE
Selling unopened clicker. $20. 224-360-7122 bcdelane@indiana.edu The Vision of the Firm. ISBN: 978-0-314-28649-9 $45 ajpereir@indiana.edu
Apple AirPort Express Router (Like New) $80 neg. jfsohn@indiana.edu
Clothing Officially licensed, IU Basketball Candystripe Warmups. Youth large. $60. jfmurphy@iu.edu
AT&T 4G LTE mobile Wi-Fi hotspot. $45 hz8@indiana.edu
www.costleycompany.com
Close to campus, nice. 4 BR, 2 BA. 810 N. Washington D/W, W/D incl. 360-4517. www.rentdowntown.biz
Plastic storage cart w/ 4 drawers. Dimensions: W22”xD14”xH16”. $15. stadano@indiana.edu
Room avail. in 3 BR house. 5 blks. from Campus. Incl. kitchen & W/D. sigalmt@gmail.com
2, 3, 4, & 5 BR houses avail. for Aug., 2016. All with A/C, W/D, D/W & close to Campus. Call 812-327-3238 or 812-332-5971.
Avail. spring sem. Jan., 2016. 3 BR, 2.5 BA. Stadium Crossing, privately owned. $850/mo + utils. 812-606-4170
RIGHT HERE ON CAMPUS.
Oversized Bean Bag Chair. $50 OBO. mihahn@indiana.edu
3 BR/1.5 bath townhome, $997/mo. Utils. included. 903-283-4188 petejess@indiana.edu
2 - 3 BR Houses. Close to Campus. Available August, 2016. 812-336-6246
Avail. Aug. ‘16. 3 BR for 3 people max. Beautifully deco. home w/ ALL utils. incl. in package deal. www.iurent.com 812-360-2628
YOU NEED
Stop by Ernie Pyle Hall 120 for more details or email advertise@idsnews.com.
SUBLET - 3 BR & 4 BR apt. Jan. thru May. Close to campus, NS, no pets, quiet, lease, pest free. 812-336-6898
Nintendo Wii w/5 games. $60, obo. Text: 812-583-7621.
August, 2016: Large 3 BR homes, $1,325/mo. www.deckardhomes.com 812-825-5579
DEVELOP THE
Miscellaneous craft supplies. $20, obo. lbraeker@indiana.edu
Studio apt. Great dwntwn. location. $480+elec. Avail. immediately. 812-585-0816
*Sign before new 2016 rates take effect!* Leasing for August-2016! Great properties, great locations, at great prices! Near IU Campus or catch the bus. Mention this ad to qualify for last year’s rental rate! www.deckardhomes.com or 812-825-5579.
4 BR: 428 E. 2nd St., $1,995. - 5 BR: 223 S. Bryan, $2,250. Available in August, 2016. 812-336-6246
Like New! 10 lrg. & 5 sm. curling shells. DVD, book & styling comb incl., $16, neg. ngutermu@indiana.edu
Jan. - July, 2016. 2 BR, 2 BA apt at Scholar’s Quad. $527.50/person. hsessler@indiana.edu
*Close to campus, clean. 301 E 12th St. 3BR, 2BA. www.rentdowntown.biz
goodrents.homestead.com
EVGA 970 + Backplate. $300. Will entertain trades for Xbox One + games. cleisrin@indiana.edu
2 BR/2 BA apt. avail. now until 7/31/16. Bonus: 1/2 deposit and water paid. $849/mo. 317-840-8374.
**Avail. for Aug., 2016. Nice 3 or 5 BR house!** 307 & 307.5 E. 16th. Newly remodeled. Appliances incl. Close to campus. No pets. 812-824-2727
3 BR, 2 BA. A/C, W/D, D/W. 801 W. 11th St. for Aug., ‘16. $975/mo. No pets. Off street prkg., 317-490-3101
Computer chair & 39” TV for sale. $30 & $120 OBO. dtrinh@indiana.edu
1BR in 2 BR/1 BA unfurn. apt. $347.50/mo. + utils. Female only. Avail. spring sem. aeluna@indiana.edu
www.costleycompany.com
Varsity Court
Black Bontrager Solstice helmet. $29. sancnath@indiana.edu
1 BR, off campus, avail. Jan. Prkg., A/C, H2O incl. $610/mo. (neg.) + dep. 812-333-9579, code LH8.
bestrentsrdw@yahoo.com
(812)
Sublet Apt. Unfurn.
445
1-5 bedrooms by stadium, law school & downtown
***For 2015- 2016*** ***1 blk. S. of Campus** 5 BR, 3 BA, W/D, D/W, A/C, trash, parking, $465/mo. each plus utils.
Misc. for Sale Barely used rice cooker, $15. 812-360-2741, langchen@indiana.edu
450
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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310
www.costleycompany.com
Piano for sale. Lovely Kawai in excellent cond. $2990, obo. jwitzke@indiana.edu
1 BR apt. Quiet, off Campus. $679/mo. Water incl. 812-322-7490
bestrentsrdw@yahoo.com
NO WEEKENDS!
Seeking students with good organization, time management, and communication skills to work in advertising sales. Previous sales experience preferred but not required. Must own reliable transportation and be able to work through August, 2016.
325
*** For 2015-2016 *** 1 blk. North of Campus. 4 BR, 2 BA, A/C, D/W, W/D, dining rm. & liv. rm., micro. $465/mo. each.
Chinese Guzheng w/ two red wood stands. $150. yinywei@umail.iu.edu 812-272-7159.
1 BR apt. 3 min. from campus. $573/mo.+ dep. A/C, parking, W/D, free utils. grad-apt-413@outlook.com
!!NOW LEASING!! August ‘16 - ‘17. Omega Properties 812-333-0995 omegabloomington.com !!UNIVERSITY VILLAGE Leasing for 2016-2017: 218 E.19th St., 4 BR, 2 BA. 1316 N. Lincoln St., 5 BR, 3 BA. 305 E 19th St., 5 BR, 3 BA. 220 E. 19th Street., 5 BR, 3 BA. 1315 N. Lincoln St., 5 BR, 3 BA. LiveByTheStadium.com
Casio keyboard LK-55, $150. Keyboard stand, $10. hwangw@indiana.edu
465
Real-world Experience.
!!2016: 5,4,3 BR houses. W/D, A/C, D/W. Near Campus. 812-325-7888
1 BR w/ private bath in 3 BR apt. Avail. Spring, 2016. Rent neg. Parking pass incl. 732-245-8002
TI-84 plus, silver edition, calculator for sale. Used one semester only. $50. 812-834-5144
TRANSPORTATION 505
Call 333-0995 omegabloomington.com
1 bedroom apts. Close to Campus. Available August, 2016. 812-336-6246
Flexibility with class schedule.
Autism therapist, 1-1. Training prov. 333-1568 cluocluo@gmail.com
SAVE A LIFE. Schedule a plasma donation. New donors receive $150 in three donations. In November, all donors receive up to $70 each week. Call 812-334-1405 or visit biolifeplasma.com to download a coupon & make an appointment.
1-4 BR Apts. A/C, D/W, W/D Internet & Water included
15 hours per week.
All Majors Accepted.
CAREGIVERS NEEDED Care for the elderly in their homes by providing companionship, homemaking & personal care. Experience preferred but training is provided. Must be avail. holidays. Contact us at: 812.330.3771 or at eldercc.net.
2-6 BR Houses A/C, D/W, W/D
rentbloomington.net
Beautiful guitar - Oscar Schmidt OG2CE. Perfect condition. $150. kmohdali@indiana.edu
Seeking fem. to sublet 4 BR apt. Indiv. BR. & bathroom, lg. closet, furn. stishman@umail.iu.edu
350
** Mononucleosis study needs patients just diagnosed. $200-$500, or refer a qualified patient for $100. Call 800-510-4003 or visit www.accessclinical.com for more information.
Downtown and Close to Campus
!!!! Need a place to Rent?
355
The IDS is accepting applications for Advertising Account Executives to start Fall, 2015.
General Employment
Now Leasing for Fall 2016
Houses
Instruments
1 BR apt. $495/mo. Located at 800 N. Grant St. Some furniture incl. 812-716-0355
Fem. rmmte. 2 BR apt. all utils. except elec. W/D, cable/wifi incl. $629/mo. 317-777-1965
410
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EMPLOYMENT
BROWNSTONE ERRACE. T812.332.3609
Sublet Apt. Furnished
1 BR, female pref. Campus Corner Apts. $395/mo. Utils. incl. IUBsublet@gmail.com
415
www.lizdomhopetoadopt.com
Cat Friendly!
420
ADOPT: The stork didn’t call, we hope you will. Happily married, loving, educated, traveled, family oriented couple wishes to adopt newborn. Dominick & Liz: 1-877-274-4824.
*Sign before new 2016 rates take effect!* Leasing for August-2016! Great properties, great locations, at great prices! Near IU Campus or catch the bus. Mention this ad to qualify for last year’s rental rate! www.deckardhomes.com or 812-825-5579.
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Adoption
The Content Evaluator is responsible for reviewing manuscripts for compliance w/company content guidelines (libel/copyright/etc). In addition, the evaluator would compose emails communicating what adjustments can or can’t be made to the reviewed manuscripts in order for them to adhere to content guidelines both internally or externally to clients. College Degree is preferred. Spanish Speaking & Experience in Journalism or Editing is a plus, along with any deadline-oriented work experience. Must have a working knowledge in Microsoft Office Suite and Email. Apply today at www.authorsolutions.com
Large 1 & 2 BR. Close to Campus & Stadium. Avail. Now! 812-334-2646
COM
Apt. Unfurnished
10
105
ANNOUNCEMENTS
General Employment
Apt. Unfurnished
14th and Dunn St. 1, 2, 3 BR Flats & Townhomes w/ Pool
ONLINE POSTING: All classified line ads are posted online at idsnews.com/classifieds at no additional charge.
P R O P E R T I E S
PAYMENT: All advertising is done on a cash in advance basis unless credit has been established. The IDS accepts Visa, MasterCard, Discover, American Express, cash, check or money order.
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REFUNDS: If you cancel your ad before the final run date, the IDS will refund the difference in price. A minimum of one day will be charged.
COPY ERRORS: The IDS must be notified of errors before 3 p.m. the date of the first publication of your ad. The IDS is only responsible for errors published on the first insertion date. The IDS will rerun your ad 1 day when notified before 3 p.m. of the first insertion date.
O M E G A
HOUSING ADS: All advertised housing is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act. Refer to idsnews.com for more info.
COPY CHANGES: Ad copy can be changed at no additional charge when the same number of lines are maintained. If the total number of lines changes, a new ad will be started at the first day rate.
ELKINS APARTMENTS
AD ACCEPTANCE: All advertising is subject to approval by the IDS.
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CLASSIFIEDS ADVERTISING POLICIES
340
idsnews.com/classifieds
Furniture
New football shaped headboard, full bed. Hardware incl. $200.00, obo. shawnd2@hotmail.com Walnut refinished full size bed w/ frame. $150. Trunk w/ tray inside. $50 kobannon@indiana.edu White side chair-$20. Queen Anne chair-$25. Large green recliner-$35. 812-824-4074, mkankrom@bluemarble.net
Automobiles
2005 Jaguar X-Type, 2nd owner, $12,500, obo. For further details please contact: brood@alumni.iu.edu 2007 Hummer H3, 69000 miles. $14,00,0 neg. houli@indiana.edu 2009 Nissan Murano. 134K mi. 3.5L V6 engine. $10,750 yerbas@indiana.edu HONDA ACCORD, 2012. Available DEC., 2015. $14,000. 812-9649465. jtarifin@indiana.edu
3 BED 1 1/2 BATH TOWNHOME 1209 Grant by the stadium off-street parking • laundry room facilities • Flexible leasing starting Spring 2016 •
EOE
Now Renting 2016-2017 HPIU.COM Houses and apartments. 1-3 bedrooms. Close to Campus. 812-333-4748 No pets please.
•
Costley & Company Rental Management, Inc.
812-330-7509
$600 - $1050 monthly
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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | F R I D AY, N O V. 1 3 , 2 0 1 5 | I D S N E W S . C O M
MEN’S SOCCER
VOLLEYBALL
Hoosiers prepare for semis By Lionel Lim lalimwei@indiana.edu | @lionelimwx
Hoosiers play host to Spartans By Courtney Robb crobb@indiana.edu | @CourttyKayy
IU men’s soccer will travel to Columbus, Ohio, on Friday to face Maryland in the semi-finals of the Big Ten Tournament. The Hoosiers are looking for a win against the Terrapins as they aim to play in the championship game Sunday. “It will be a big confidence booster going into the NCAA Tournament if we can win this,” freshman defender Andrew Gutman said. Maryland is a familiar foe for IU, as the Terrapins beat the Hoosiers 2-1 in last year’s tournament. The Hoosiers have also not beaten the Terrapins in their last three matches, but every opponent is equally important to IU Coach Todd Yeagley. “Really, it’s just anyone that’s in our way,” Yeagley said. “I don’t necessarily feel that beating Maryland would be any sweeter.” The Hoosiers have scored nine goals and only conceded two in their last fives games. Their record is 9-1-1 throughout the last 11 games. “We had a little bump in the beginning and middle of the season,” Gutman said. “Bounces just weren’t going our way, but we were still playing well. I mean, 9-1-1 in the past 11 games — so I think we are really hitting stride, and we are going to be dangerous in
IDS FILE PHOTO
Senior midfielder Matt Foldesy moves the ball up the field. The Hoosiers defeated the Badgers 1-0 on Saturday night.
the next couple of weeks.” For some players, this weekend represents an opportunity to win their first tournament as a Hoosier, but it is also the last chance for players like senior forward Femi Hollinger-Janzen to add another Big Ten Tournament medal to their trophy cabinets. Yeagley said the team has a good mix of experience and hunger. “There’s a good combination of some youth and some experience,” Yeagley said. “We will rely on the older guys to help the
Horoscope Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is a 9 — Good things come through communicating with your social networks. Encourage feedback to see your blind spots. Back up your words of love with action. Pour your energy into creating something beautiful. Accept advice from loved ones (especially children). Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is a 9 — Friends open unseen doors. Your team is especially hot. Keep everyone in communication to harness flourishing creativity. Put physical energy into a job you care about deeply for powerful results. Money saved is money
young guys to keep them composed and give them that confidence to start the game.” Maryland adopts a high pressure game and force opponents into mistakes. The Terrapins also have a fluid forward line and players who perform well with interchanging positions. However, Yeagley said he feels the Hoosiers will be fine as long as they do not dally on the ball in dangerous areas. “They press as much as we do — not all the time,
advantage. An older female shares a new trick. Buy tickets, or make reservations, if work and your partner agree. Let joy and abundance win.
To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. earned. Party later.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is a 7 — Important people are watching. New contacts increase your influence. Provide excellent work, and ask for what you need. Maintain discretion. Devote energy toward a matter of the heart for abundant reward. Love keeps you on the right path.
Travels, transportation and shipping flow with ease. Hold yourself to high standards. Angels guide you.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is
an 8 — Allow abundance in. Pay attention to all offers. You’re gaining skills and confidence. Creative breakthroughs spark when you mix love into your work. Learn and teach. Bring your vision into practical reality. Make a romantic connection.
an 8 — Get help building your dream. The action is behind the scenes. Stick to practical moves. Friends share options. Go farther than ever before.
Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 9 — You hear about a lucky break. Partner with a gracious person to take
WILEY
NON SEQUITUR
but when they do it’s really good,” Yeagley said. “They don’t let you get comfortable, so we have to be ready to not be lured into playing in certain areas and getting casual with the ball.” Beyond that, IU is focusing on being confident in preparation for Friday. “This weekend is going to be huge for our team,” Hollinger-Janzen said. “We are fighting for a championship each game, and we are going into every game ready to play and be confident in ourselves.”
Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is an 8 — Find balance and harmony. Make your life more comfortable. Travel for pleasure. You’re gaining maturity as well as knowledge. Smart investments now can increase your security. Follow your passion with discipline. Your wit and effort makes the difference.
Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Today is a 9 — Communications channels are wide open. Accept more responsibilities. Writing, recording and publishing thrive. Keep others on track. Create (and appreciate) works of beauty. Participate in a bigger conversation. Trust old love.
Crossword
Two weeks, three locations, five matches and five chances for a win are all that’s left in the 2015 regular season for IU volleyball. After finding its fourth regular-season win against Rutgers, IU wants more, junior setter Megan Tallman said. The next step in finding another win begins when IU welcomes Michigan State to Bloomington at 7 p.m. Saturday. “I think we play really well at home,” IU assistant coach Paul Koncir said. “To have them come to Bloomington is the best possible case for us. We’re going to have to be very inspired. It’s not going to come to us and wins aren’t just going to happen we’re going to make it happen.” Much like the Hoosiers, the Spartans have been struggling both at home and on the road with six consecutive losses against Big Ten opponents such as Nebraska, Wisconsin, Minnesota and Illinois. A losing streak like that can either work in favor of or against the Hoosiers come Saturday night. “Sometimes that motivates them even more to find a win,” Tallman said. “Michigan State is going to come out really hard against us. So it depends on how we come out and it’s about everyone striving for a win.”
Listen to what your grandmother says.
Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Today is an 8 — Look to the future. Keep family first. Look at what needs to change. Home investments pay off. Find an excellent deal in a fixer-upper. Creativity is required. Transform a mess into beauty. Create peace. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is an 8 — Your investigation leads to unexpected benefits. The more you learn, the more confident you become. Listen to your dreams. Use what you’re discovering. Get the best quality materials you can afford. Apply discipline for love and nothing can stop you. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a 7 — Your connections have wisdom and
su do ku
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
BEST IN SHOW
1 Set into motion 8 Golf alternative, briefly 15 Red bowlful 16 __ Itzá: Mayan ruins 17 Classic leading man who moonlighted at a pharmacy? 19 Second of 24 20 L.A. Kings’ org. 21 Management 22 Fiji’s region 25 Pulitzer-winning writer who moonlighted in a nightly news studio? 32 Saying that often goes without saying 33 Breaks down 34 One with a handbook 36 Tony winner Huffman 37 Bolshoi outfit 38 Kitchen bar 39 “I’d strike the sun if it insulted me” speaker 43 Folklore threats 44 Actor who moonlighted in a brass band? 47 Makes complementary (to) 48 “Here Come the __”: 1945 college comedy
experience. Reach out and let people know what you need. An older person comes up with the answer. Collaborate for a cause that’s close to your heart. Feminine details make the difference.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is an 8 — Talk about what you love to grow it. Put together a good team. Read voraciously, and share your discoveries generously. Provide substance, not just symbolism. Listen to a female’s advice. Clean up and lend a helping hand.
© 2015 By Nancy Black Distributed by Tribune Media Services, INC. All Rights Reserved
L.A. Times Daily Crossword
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
ACROSS
Even though Michigan State has had recent struggles, they’ve been able to obtain six wins during this season, with one of those wins being against IU in the season opener. “You win some, you lose some,” Koncir said. “Overall we’re in different phases of development. They’re riding that successful tradition and we’re currently building a tradition.” Looking at some of the team’s toughest losses, IU has shown some strengths against Michigan State. When IU was shut out in three sets at Wisconsin, it had a .047 hitting percentage in comparison to Michigan State’s .012 hitting percentage. The two teams had the same number of kills in their matches against Wisconsin. IU had a total of 25 kills whereas Michigan State had 24, but both teams had 84 team attempts. “We talked about that we’re going to have to play extremely tough and extremely inspired,” Tallman said. “It’s about going all out having that emotion and passion. It’s going to be important to really fight for those wins.” As a team that will be losing six of its players to graduation, IU wants to play as much volleyball with the seniors as possible while bringing home more wins to display the work they put into practice week in and week out.
52 Actor Stephen 53 18-Down competitor 57 English author who moonlighted at LensCrafters? 61 Enhances in the kitchen 62 “That’s my recommendation” 63 Reply to “That’s enough!” 64 Pool workers
DOWN 1 Rhyme scheme in many sonnets 2 Bear up 3 Moderate pace 4 Open org. 5 “__ du lieber!” 6 From that place 7 Rembrandt and Picasso, at times 8 Obsolescent family room fixture 9 Justification 10 Puzzle sometimes framed 11 Hose shade 12 Southeast Asian language 13 Garden party protection 14 Garden party intruders 18 53-Across competitor 22 Resistance unit
PHIL JULIANO BREWSTER ROCKIT: SPACE GUY!
23 Collar 24 A-listers 25 City SSW of Dallas 26 Praise to the heavens 27 To help, to Henri 28 Piece of toast? 29 Expenditure 30 Activity of great interest? 31 __ One: vodka brand 35 Scam 39 Proper 40 In a lather, with “up” 41 Words with take or lose 42 Fund-raiser 43 Like “fain”: Abbr. 45 Poe of the Baltimore Ravens, for one 46 Certain agent’s area 48 Mozart title starter 49 General Motors subsidiary 50 Substitute in a list 51 Ph.D. hurdle 53 Both, at the start 54 Contests 55 Smithsonian, e.g.: Abbr. 56 PD ranks 58 Italian diminutive suffix 59 Venom transmitter 60 Arguable ability
Look for the crossword daily in the comics section of the Indiana Daily Student. Find the solution for the daily crossword here. Answer to previous puzzle
TIM RICKARD