Thursday, November 29, 2018

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Thursday, Nov. 29, 2018 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com

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Iconic IDS movie Brett Becker once had a less than quarry 10 percent chance of living. filled Now he's back at IU. By Caroline Anders

anders6@iu.edu | @clineands

ALEX DERYN | IDS

“At this point, I’m happy it happened to me. I lived like I was at the end of my life. Now I saw the end of my life, and I don’t want to go back there.” Brett Becker, IU recreational therapy major

By Lexi Haskell ldhaskel@iu.edu | @lexi_haskell

Brett Becker was moving too fast. The 19-year-old experienced skier came to a stop halfway down the ski hill, a sure sign of too much speed. After regaining his composure, Brett continued down the hill, picking up speed and soaring off a jump. His dad, Bryan, knew as soon as Brett took off that something was wrong. His son flailed in the air and overshot the landing by ten feet. Bryan ripped off his skis and started running up the hill. By the time Bryan got to his son, Brett was lying unconscious in the snow. His face was blue, and his heart stopped. Bryan started CPR. Ski Patrol showed up a few minutes later. *

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When Brett’s mother, Peggy, got the call Jan. 4, 2016, that her son’s ski trip with his dad, uncle and two cousins went awry, she was taking down Christmas decorations at their home in Libertyville, Illinois. She was told her son was alive in the hospital in Wausau, Wisconsin, but in a coma. Brett had hit his head during the fall, resulting in a brain injury. He wasn’t breathing, but one of the ski patrol volun-

teers, a respiratory therapist, had saved his life by putting a tube down Brett’s throat to help him. Hooked up to beeping monitors and fighting for his life, Brett hardly resembled the boy he was before. In high school, he wrestled and played lacrosse and football. His first semester at IU, finished just a month before the accident, Brett took 18 credit hours and earned a 4.0 GPA. When Peggy arrived at the hospital, Brett was still in a coma. The doctors told Peggy and Bryan that their son had a diffuse axonal injury. It’s similar to shaken baby syndrome and basically means his brain had been jostled around his skull. Brett’s sister Megan was preparing for recruitment for Alpha Chi Omega, her sorority at Butler University, when she heard Brett was hurt. She was on the road in 15 minutes. At home, Megan met up with her twin, Haley, and the two flew up to Wausau on a private plane. Megan only packed a pair of jeans and a sweatshirt for the trip and Haley packed jawbreakers and an adult coloring book. Brett’s girlfriend, Maddie Anderson, and two best friends, Mac Copeland and John Quigley, also drove up to Wausau. It would be more than three months un-

til Peggy and her family returned home. *

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After a week, Brett was transferred to Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago. Dr. David Ripley, who focuses on brain injury medicine and rehabilitation from the Shirley Ryan AbilityLab – formerly the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago – visited Brett there. He chose Brett be part of the AMiCouS program, one of the only programs in the United States that works to actively treat patients in minimally conscious or vegetative states. On Feb. 4, 2016, exactly one month after the accident, Brett woke up from his coma and entered into a minimally conscious state. During this time, Peggy said Brett’s movements were involuntary. If someone spoke, he would look in their direction. But he couldn’t hold his own head up. Brett was still silent. They knew he had damaged the language part of his brain, and as time went on, they became more sure that he had aphasia, a language disorder that makes communication difficult. SEE BECKER, PAGE 6

In one scene in the iconic Little 500-based movie “Breaking Away,” four young men lay on a slab of limestone, sunning themselves. As working-class locals, they were called the “Cutters” for the years their families spent working in the stone industry. The first man leaps off the slab. He dives into the clear blue water below. The shot shifts as another group arrives, this one of IU students. One young man executes an impressive flip off a high cliff. The Sanders Quarry they’re swimming in, known locally as Rooftop, sits 3.5 miles south of Bloomington. Rooftop today is no longer the idyllic scene from the 1979 movie. It was recently filled in, following years of safety concerns. It’s unclear when exactly the quarry was filled or who was contracted to do the job, but one thing is certain — the days of Rooftop swan dives and sunbathing are over. Though it has become a symbol of Bloomington and a highly sought after hangout, Rooftop is privately owned. Monroe County Sheriff Brad Swain said that’s where much of the trouble starts. The same things that made the quarry so inviting — no lifeguards, swimming all day and the freedom to lug a cooler of beer along with you — make it dangerous. In fact, swimming in the Sanders Quarry is trespassing. Beyond that minor offense, Swain said the quarry also provided a huge opportunity for serious injuries. “We’ve always had people that would drown from jumping and colliding with a rock on the way down,” he said. Three people have died jumping from the quarry’s 65-foot ledges over the past 25 years, Swain said. For this reason and more, the sheriff said it would have been attractive to the land’s insurance carriers to have the iconic place filled in. Yaël Ksander, a spokesperson from the mayor’s office, agreed. “Of course Sanders Quarry is outside of Bloomington city limits but a big part of the lore of our area and beloved to us all!” she wrote in an email. “Clearly the liability was just too much for the owners to continue to shoulder.” Swain said it’s also difficult for law enforcement to get equipment to the quarries when someone’s in danger. The amount of people who park nearby and trespass through homeowners' yards is also high, he said. There's also the issue of the frequent incidents of petty theft from cars. SEE QUARRY, PAGE 6

Chimes of Christmas to ring in holiday season Dec. 1 By Robert Mack rsmack@iu.edu

The Grammy-nominated Singing Hoosiers will present “Chimes of Christmas” at 2 and 7:30 p.m. Dec. 1 at the IU Auditorium. The annual holiday-themed attraction features 84 members of the Singing Hoosiers, a Jacobs-based group directed by Chris Albanese and made up of 84 students. The show will include Christmas classics, Christmas carols, the "Christmas on Broadway Medley" and Hanukkah-themed songs such as “Funky Dreidl.” As with years prior, the group will be joined by Hooshir, IU’s Jewish a capella group, the IU Horn Choir and the IU Children’s Choir. The Singing Hoosiers have been rehearsing the show every weekday since October when their Fall Concert wrapped. “It been a little hectic, and I think we started off a little stressed, maybe worried that we wouldn’t get it done in time since it’s less time than past

years,” said Ella Clary, a senior majoring in environmental and sustainability studies. “But we’ve actually come a long way with the amount of work we’ve had.” While evening rehearsals in the week leading up to the concert can be long, lasting for at least four hours, Anna Bruggenschmidt, the Singing Hoosier’s administrative manager, said she looks forward to the performance. “It’s really the most rewarding part,” said Bruggenschmidt, a junior majoring in elementary education. “It takes a lot of perseverance to learn songs — especially the more difficult ones — and practice them over and over and get notes wrong, get words wrong. But when we reach this point it feels good to see the big picture.” Clary joined Singing Hoosiers as a sophomore and said she’ll be sad to perform her last Christmas show with group. “It’s usually the sweet moments that make me tear up,” Clary said. SEE CHIMES, PAGE 6

IDS FILE PHOTO

Members of the Singing Hoosiers rehearse for their Chimes of Christmas performance Dec. 3, 2015, at the IU Auditorium. The Grammy-nominated Singing Hoosiers will present “Chimes of Christmas” at 2 and 7:30 p.m. Dec. 1 at the IU Auditorium.

SATURDAY!

DEC 1

Featuringg the Grammy-nominated y


Indiana Daily Student

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NEWS

Thursday, Nov. 29, 2018 idsnews.com

Editors Jaden Amos, Lydia Gerike and Peter Talbot news@idsnews.com

City could have cold winter, or maybe not By Alex Hardgrave ahardgra@iu.edu | @a_hardgrave

Students not only had to brave the first day back from break but also the cold Monday. Pompom hats and puff coats were seen everywhere. People packed onto buses, hoping to avoid a long walk in the cold wind. As the day went on, the sky grayed and left a dusting of snow flurries on buildings and benches. Senior Allie O'Rourke is used to the cold weather from growing up in Indiana but said the sudden change in temperature was still unpleasant. “It’s shocking when you change from warmer to cold weather, regardless of where you are,” she said. The Farmer’s Almanac is predicting a very cold winter for the Midwest. Its website listing Indiana in the “biting cold, snowy” category. Its long-range forecast also predicts above normal precipitation, possibly meaning lots of snow. According to the Farmer’s Almanac, the harsh winter is expected to persist for a while, and there is going to be a late start to spring weather. Though the Farmer’s Almanac and the weather outside might say differently, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association is predicting a mild winter for the country. In an Oct. 18 press release, NOAA said they predict a mild winter for much

of the United States. However, the document is unclear if it will truly be a warmer winter for Bloomington. “The Southeast, Tennessee Valley, Ohio Valley and Mid-Atlantic all have equal chances for below, near or above average temperatures,” the article said. NOAA predicts average to possibly drier conditions for the Northern Ohio Valley area. So far, Bloomington has already seen low temperatures and a skiff of snow, causing students to brace for a cold winter. “Compared to what we have seen recently, this is a few days of cold weather that is unusual for November,” atmospheric science professor Cody Kirkpatrick said. He said Monday was an especially rare phenomenon as the temperature dropped about 10 degrees as the day went on due to the cold air blowing in. Usually the temperature rises during the day. He said the average daytime temperature for November in Bloomington is 50 degrees, while the average nighttime temperature is 32 degrees. The next couple days, the low temperatures are going to be around 15 degrees. This is caused by a mass of cold air coming down from Canada, Kirkpatrick said. He said a warm front from the south is coming by the end of the week. This back and forth in temperatures in

ALEX DERYN | IDS

IU student orientation leaders give campus tours to high school students in front of the Fine Arts building. The tour group wore warmer clothing due to the outdoor temperatures being in the 30s and 40s.

Bloomington is typical because of our latitude. Freshman Claire Squire, who is from Marietta, Georgia, said she is not used to the

cold weather. “It was different because I’ve never seen snow in November before,” Squire said. “It snows about once or twice

a year where I’m from.” She said the possibility of cold weather was a drawback for her when making her college decision but is ex-

cited for the new experience. She would really like to go sledding during the winter season if she can find somewhere hilly enough.

David Rubenstein to speak at winter commencement By Sofia Godinez sgodinez@iu.edu | @xsofiag

HALEY KLEZMER | IDS

IU students Emma Schuster and Adam Diersing walk through Dunn’s Woods on Nov. 26.

Climate change to affect economy By Emily Isaacman eisaacma@iu.edu | @emilyisaacman

A federal report on climate change released last week identified human activities as exclusively responsible for warming temperatures over the past century. The Fourth National Climate Assessment documented effects on the environment, human health and the economy that are only expected to worsen if humans don’t take action to adapt and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. While scientists have long expected grave effects of climate change, the report confirms that the changes are actually being seen, said Paul Staten, a professor in the earth and atmospheric sciences department. “We’re seeing the beginning of it,” Staten said. “If we act now, we can prevent it from getting much, much worse.” When breaking down effects by region, the report stated the Midwest will experience greater increases to warm-season temperatures than any other region. These temperatures and increases in rainfall could cause agricultural productivity in the Midwest to revert to levels seen in the

1980s. More than 300 experts contributed to the second installment of the Fourth National Climate Assessment, which the U.S. Global Change Research Program is mandated to produce for Congress and the president at least every four years. It synthesized a huge volume of research on the effects, risks and adaptations associated with observed and predicted changes in the climate. The observed warming trend can only be attributed to greenhouse gas emissions, according to the report. In fact, the authors wrote global climate would have slightly cooled over the last 50 years if human activities had not been involved. Poor air quality, increased pollen and heat-related diseases could spread through the Midwest by mid-century. By the same point, the Purdue-led Indiana Climate Change Impacts Assessment predicted Indiana’s average temperature will warm five to six degrees. Future summers in Indiana could look like those of Mississippi and Arkansas, while winters will be milder like those in Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Maryland. People across the country will experience greater

health risks, especially in vulnerable communities, according to the national report. The report painted a grim future with substantial losses to the national economy and dangers to human health through the 21st century. Most economic sectors will face negative consequences from climate change by the end of the century, and some could lose up to hundreds of billions of dollars per year. Since 2015, weather and climate disasters have cost the U.S. almost $400 billion, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The volume joins other recent compilations of studies on the effects of climate change, including one by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change published last month. Locally, the Purdue-led group released the first in a series of reports last spring to focus on the statewide effects. There is no guarantee these reports will spur action, but Staten said their publication is necessary. “Without understanding science and the facts, why would anybody do anything?” Staten said Federal action to prevent climate change is unlikely

under the current political atmosphere. When asked about the assessment Monday, President Donald Trump told reporters he did not believe it. However, cities and states around the country are taking action on their own. A multidisciplinary team of researchers at IU’s Environmental Resilience Institute funded through a Grand Challenge grant are preparing research projects and tools to help communities across the state adapt. While actions to reduce greenhouse gas emissions are generally increasing, the report said the scale of adaptation efforts are not at the level necessary to avoid significant damages. Actions related to climate change can be reactive, in response to existing challenges, or proactive, to prevent climate change itself. Fortunately, there is much that can be done, Staten said. Many sectors of the economy can reduce their impacts of greenhouse gas emissions at costs smaller than the long-term costs of climate change, Staten said. Some sectors already have means of doing this. “The worst can be prevented still,” Staten said. “But we do need to act quickly.”

David M. Rubenstein, co-founder and co-executive chairman of the private equity firm, the Carlyle Group, was announced as the 2018 winter commencement speaker. The ceremony will be 10 a.m. Dec.15 in Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall. Rubenstein is a Duke University graduate and received his law degree from the University of Chicago Law School. After graduating, Rubenstein practiced law before serving as chief counsel to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee's Subcommittee on Constitutional Amendments in 1975. During the Jimmy Carter administration, Rubenstein was deputy assistant to the president for domestic policy and practiced law in Washington. Rubenstein is the chairman of the boards of trustees of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, the Smithsonian Institution and the Council on Foreign Relations. He is also the recipient of the Carnegie Medal of Philanthropy and is the host of “The David Rubenstein Show: Peer-to-Peer

COURTESY PHOTO

David M. Rubenstein, cofounder and co-executive chairman of the private equity firm, the Carlyle Group, was announced as the 2018 winter commencement speaker. The ceremony will be 10 a.m. Dec.15 in Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall.

Conversations” on Bloomberg TV and PBS. During the ceremony, IU President Michael McRobbie will deliver an honorary degree to Charles MacKay, distinguished general director of the Santa Fe Opera. McRobbie will also present the University Medal to Lee Hamilton, professor of practice in the School of Public and Environmental Affairs and founder of the Center on Congress at IU. A total of 1,912 students will graduate, with the oldest graduate being 62 and the youngest being 20.

CORRECTION In a Nov. 26 print edition of the IDS, an editorial inaccurately stated that Nevada vetoed the construction of the Yucca Mountain Nuclear Waste Repository because of disapproval and fear from people living in the area. The people of Nye County, Nevada, actually are among those who actively support this repository. The veto stemmed from tourism and political reasons from those outside of Nye County. The IDS regrets this error.

Nyssa Kruse Editor-in-Chief Emily Abshire and Matt Rasnic Creative Directors

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The Indiana Daily Student publishes Mondays and Thursdays throughout the year while University classes are in session. Part of IU Student Media, the IDS is a self-supporting auxiliary University enterprise. Founded on Feb. 22, 1867, the IDS is chartered by the IU Board of Trustees, with the editor-in-chief as final content authority. The IDS welcomes reader feedback, letters to the editor and online comments. Advertising policies are availale on the current rate card. Readers are entitled to single copies. Taking multiple copies may constitute theft of IU property, subject to prosecution. Paid subscriptions are entered through third-class postage (USPS No. 261960) at Bloomington, IN 47405.

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Thursday, Nov. 29, 2018 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com

Indiana could pass hate crime laws next year By Jesse Naranjo jlnaranj@iu.edu | @jesselnaranjo

Indiana state senate Republicans ensured last January that the state would remain without hate crimes legislation. This may change when the state legislature reconvenes for the 2019 session. Earlier this year, Republican lawmakers said they could not reach agreement during private meetings about the language of the bill, which was authored by legislators from the same party. It was the newest attempt in recent years by the GOP-majority legislature to pass similar laws. However, at least two legislators have already announced their intentions to file hate crime legislation in the upcoming session. State Rep. Tony Cook, R-Cicero, said Tuesday he intended to file legislation which treats offenses committed on the basis of the perpetrators' bias against victims' perceived or actual characteristics as hate crimes. Those characteristics include gender identity, race, religion, sexual orientation and disability status, but also include law enforcement and members of the military. "The increase in these crimes of hate in our communities, across the state and throughout the nation indicates that now is the time to act, and provide judges and prosecutors with more clarity in sentencing,” Cook said in a statement. One of last year's failed

senate bill authors announced earlier this month he had recently filed a bill with similar provisions. The Nov. 9 announcement from State Sen. Mike Bohacek, R-Michiana Shores, came less than two weeks after 11 people were killed in a shooting at the Tree of Life Congregation Synagogue in Pittsburgh. Bohacek said the killings demonstrated a need for state bias-motivated crime laws. “Right now, Indiana is one of only five states without a bias or hate crime statute, and I am hopeful this legislation would help prevent hate crimes in our state and ensure the safety of all Hoosiers,” Bohacek said in a statement. David Sklar, director of government affairs for the Indianapolis Jewish Community Relations Council, said the organization has pushed for hate crime legislation for almost five years, but he is more confident about a bill being passed in the upcoming session. The Indianapolis JCRC handles public affairs and community relations on behalf of the greater Jewish community in the state. They also work to build consensus across ethnic and religious groups. Sklar attributed his confidence to support from the governor and a more widespread understanding for what he said was a need for the legislation. Though his organization has helped draft legislation, he said it is unclear which of the hand-

MATT BEGALA | IDS

Protesters march Nov. 11 toward the steps of IU Auditorium during a march against hate.

ful of potential bills would ultimately pass. “We did have some support of businesses last year," Sklar added. "But I think the support from the business community is almost universal this year." He noted the push for hate crimes statutes has come from both sides of the aisle. Indiana Democrats identified passing these laws as a priority for the upcoming session, and Republican Gov. Eric Holcomb announced in July that hate

crime legislation was on his agenda for the 2019 session. “No law can stop evil, but we should be clear that our state stands with the victims and their voices will not be silenced,” Holcomb said in a statement. “For that reason it is my intent that we get something done this next legislative session, so Indiana can be 1 of 46 states with hate crimes legislation — and not 1 of 5 states without it.” The four states which join Indiana in not having hate crime statutes are Arkansas,

Georgia, South Carolina and Wyoming. The governor said he would be meeting with lawmakers, legal experts and corporate leaders to build on consensus on the topic. Holcomb’s statement came after anti-Semitic vandalism was discovered at a synagogue in Carmel, Indiana. A 20-year-old Cloverdale, Indiana, man was charged the following month with conspiracy to violate civil rights, a federal offense, in connection to the incident.

The bill considered last session, Senate Bill 418, would have made a “bias motivated crime” an aggravating circumstance. This would have applied to sentencing of perpetrators who injured others or damaged property because of the perceived or actual color, religion, disability, national origin, ethnicity, race, religion, gender identity or sexual orientation of the injured person or of the owner or occupant of the affected property,” according to the last version of the bill.

Law enforcement reacts to new hate crimes statistics By Joe Schroeder joemschr@iu.edu | @joemschroeder

Indiana law enforcement agencies received 78 reports of a hate crime last year, 10 of which were handled by Bloomington Police Department. Local law enforcement is working to combat these crimes. Although Indiana is one of only five states that doesn’t have any hate crime legislation, the state requires the Bloomington and IU Police departments to report them. A hate crime is defined by Indiana as an offense where a person has knowingly selected another person or property to damage based on color, creed, disability, national origin, race, religion or sexual orientation. IUPD’s Capt. Craig Munroe said the department reports hate crimes if bias is the crime’s motivation. If the suspect of the crime was

KATELYN HAAS | IDS

The side of St. David's Episcopal Church in Bean Blossom, Indiana, was graffitied with a swastika in November 2016. Indiana law enforcement agencies received 78 reports of a hate crime last year, 10 of which were handled by Bloomington Police Department.

pushed to do so by bigotry or bias towards a certain group. Cops use clues and evidence from the crime scene and look into suspects’ criminal history to see if there is bias in their motivation. “If I put a swastika on the wall of a white supremacist’s house, it would not be a hate crime because there

is no bias,” Munroe said. Campus police go through diversity training before becoming officers, Munroe said, and hate crimes are constantly evolving. In 2013, the FBI added gender and gender identity to its list of groups affected by hate crimes. A main goal for officers handling these crimes is to

find the motivation. “It is important that we are able to recognize but also understand these crimes, that we can work to prevent them,” BPD Capt. Steve Kellams said. BPD has aimed for greater transparency by partnering with the Police Data Initiative, a group of law enforcement agencies and researchers that collect and publish police data. This transparency is important to the department because it builds trust and accountability, Kellams said. In addition to publishing hate crime statistics through PDI and the internet, BPD also sends them to the FBI through their Uniform Crime Reporting Program. The FBI recently published updated statistics, showing reported hate crimes up by more than 1,000 in 2017 versus the year before. However, there

were approximately 1,000 additional police agencies reporting this year. “As cops we take these crimes very seriously,” Munroe said. “They have to be handled with care and attention.” The FBI reported an increase in U.S. hate crimes from 2014-2017. This year, BPD has had five reported hate crimes according to the City of Bloomington’s website. Two of the reports were for assaults by white men, one anti-Jewish and one antiblack. Despite Indiana not having any hate crime legislation, Kellams said citizens can’t ignore them because of their effect on the community. “Reporting these crimes allows Bloomington to stay informed,” Kellams said “It gives people a better understanding of what is going on around them.”

2017 hate crimes handled by Bloomington police

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Anti-black Anti-Arab Anti-LGBT Anti-Semitic Anti-other

SOURCE BLOOMINGTON DATABASE GRAPHIC BY SAM SZEWCZYK | IDS

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SPORTS

Thursday, Nov. 29, 2018 idsnews.com

Editors Cameron Drummond, Stefan Krajisnik and Dylan Wallace sports@idsnews.com

MEN’S BASKETBALL

Concentration collapses during loss to Duke By Cameron Drummond

90-69

cpdrummo@iu.edu | @cdrummond97

DURHAM, N.C. — Archie Miller tried every possible way to revitalize his group of players Tuesday night. There were moments when Miller hiked up his gray, checkered pants, and adjusted his black belt, as if to signal there was work to be done on the court at Cameron Indoor Stadium. During other segments of IU’s 90-69 blowout loss to No. 3 Duke, the second-year IU head coach placed his right knee on the hardwood court and pointed, at first patiently, then aggressively, as the IU offense repeatedly misfired. Miller did it all. His right arm spun like a pinwheel as he motioned for junior guard Devonte Green to advance the ball past the half court line during the first half. He snapped his arm forcefully midway through the opening period after sophomore guard Al Durham’s errant pass went down as one of 13 first-half turnovers that contributed to the Hoosiers’ 24-point halftime deficit. Regardless of his body movement, Miller’s face bore the same look of exasperation throughout the contest. “We have to do a much better job, especially in the first half, when our staff isn’t in front of the bench where guys know what’s going on,” Miller said. “That comes back on me.” Despite his best attempts to communicate his offensive wishes across the court and through a wall of sound from the crowd during Tuesday’s first half, Miller received precious little in terms of a reward. IU made 11 of its 33 shots during the first 20 minutes, two fewer than the number

ANNA TIPLICK | IDS

IU Coach Archie Miller yells at the team during IU’s game against Duke on Nov. 27 in the Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, North Carolina. Duke defeated IU, 90-69.

of turnovers it committed. Whether it was open threepointers missed by Green and freshman guard Romeo Langford, or any of the five first-half takeaways the Blue Devils had against sophomore forward Justin Smith, most Hoosier offensive sequences ended with Miller shaking his head in disgust. “It was just a lack of concentration,” senior forward Juwan Morgan said. “I think we let the crowd get to us.” No series of plays better encapsulated Miller’s attitude in the first half, and for the game in general, than

those with three minutes remaining before the break. Senior forward Evan Fitzner scored what would be his final points of the night, as well as his fourth threepointer of the first half, with 3:11 to go, cutting the Duke lead to 12 points. Following the basket, Miller screamed “there we go” and turned quickly back to the IU bench to set up his team’s defense. Just 19 seconds later, Miller stared sullenly at the ground after Duke freshman forward RJ Barrett rattled in a three-pointer of his own. Fitzner’s basket represent-

ed the closest the Hoosiers would come to tying the game from that point on, as the Blue Devils opened up a lead as large as 27 points in the second half thanks to sizeable advantages in points off turnovers and fastbreak points. “They do have an unbelievable coach,” Miller said. “They have an unbelievable team on most nights you have to go up against, and that’s what we dealt with tonight.” As Miller continued to fidget with his hands and clothing in the second half,

a period during which the Hoosiers were much more competitive, his counterpart made his lone dramatic action of the night. Duke Coach Mike Krzyzewski, without much flair and while still placidly observing from his seat on the Blue Devil bench, removed his suit jacket. The understated gesture communicated Krzyzewski’s anger with the energy level of his team, Duke fans and even the school pep band, in contrast to the more demonstrative steps taken by Miller. “I said ‘let’s go, man.’ Let’s

try to do something,” Krzyzewski said. “I can’t do a cartwheel or stand on my head. The main activity I can do is take off my jacket, which I know I’m not a pretty sight to look at, but at least the emotion of it may have helped a little bit.” The Hoosiers outscored the Blue Devils 40-37 in the second period, but the buckets came too infrequently to matter to the game’s outcome. Only twice in the second half did IU score at least six consecutive points without an answer from the home team. Whether it was IU’s improved second-half showing or his coming to terms with the end result, Miller was a relaxed figure at the end of the game. He slumped down on one end of the scorer’s table, with his left leg bent at the knee and a calm frown displayed on his face. Moving down the IU bench, players conveyed their emotions in varying ways. Junior forward De’Ron Davis was deep in conversation with senior guard Quentin Taylor, speaking and pointing while counting off things using his fingers. Fitzner took long breaths and glanced at the overhead scoreboard which explained how and why IU lost the game. Langford sat in the middle, a towel draped over his head. “We just got to go from top to bottom, evaluate each other, look each other in the eyes,” Morgan said. “See if we’re really playing for each other, if we have that trust on both sides of the ball.”

MEN’S BASKETBALL

ON THE BALL WITH DWALL

IU failed to prove itself on the court at Duke

No assistance needed, Trevor Swartz has got men’s soccer covered

Murphy Wheeler is a senior in sports media.

The excuses need to be thrown out the window. Now. The inordinate amount of injuries the IU basketball team has suffered as of late has been a crutch for the Hoosiers to fall back on in their recent struggles against Arkansas, University of Texas at Arlington and University of California at Davis. But after being drubbed 90-69 by No. 3 Duke on Tuesday night, they showed that excuse never had much merit. Sloppy play and careless passing have been the bane of IU’s existence during this tumultuous stretch and when they ran into an opponent like Duke, who is obviously in a different class than IU is right now, those sins exposed themselves. These have been problems all season, but they were just too obvious to ignore Tuesday. IU finished with 20 turnovers, and Duke turned those into 24 points. This isn’t to say injuries haven’t been a factor at all, but they haven’t been the crux either. It’s tiresome to hear it being labeled as such. Besides, IU squashed the metaphorical injury bug as the two main sidelined players, senior Zach McRoberts and junior Devonte Green, were back against Duke. For two players whose availability looked to be a determining factor in whether IU could truly compete with the Blue Devils, neither made much of a difference. Guys have played effectively while injured before, let alone after sitting out four games. But that’s enough about injuries. Again, the excuses need to absolutely, 100 percent be kaput by now. The tentativeness on offense, the baffling decisionmaking and the inconsistencies on defense are what

Dylan Wallace is a junior in journalism.

ANNA TIPLICK | IDS

Freshman Duke University forward Zion Williamson, left, gets the ball away from senior Juwan Morgan, right, to score Nov. 27 in the Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, North Carolina.

need to be talked about. That’s been the ugly truth hidden in the shadows the last few games. Senior Juwan Morgan has come out and been critical of himself and his teammates for those kinds of shortcomings, which is commendable from a leadership standpoint but even for somebody as productive as him, Tuesday’s game was a bad one. Early foul trouble marred his first half yet again and once again showed that, much like last season, the Hoosiers often looked lost without him on the court. But that wasn’t supposed to be the case this year. Not with exciting freshmen like Romeo Langford and Robert Phinisee and the improvement of sophomores like Justin Smith and Al Durham. Yet those players’ effort and production at Duke were nowhere close to what was expected of them, es-

pecially for such a highlevel opponent. The real burning question that needs to be answered from Tuesday to truly measure where IU is at this juncture in the season is this: Was Duke just that good, or is IU just that far behind? It’s probably a little bit of both. Duke is undeniably an amazing conglomeration of talent put together to take the college basketball scene by storm and steamroll opponents that aren’t ready to handle and compete against their athleticism and depth like IU was. But the Blue Devils have shown weakness at points this season, and that’s why it’s concerning for IU. This isn’t meant to be a freak-out session or an overreaction to one game still early in the year, and we’re definitely not going to start questioning Coach Archie Miller’s job just yet.

In fact, we’re thankfully still light years away from that. There’s a lot of season left and plenty of time to improve. But Tuesday wasn’t about a win. Duke hasn’t lost a home non-conference game in 18 years, so let’s not kid ourselves too much. A victory was never much in the cards. What makes IU’s performance so disappointing was that this was supposed to be the game they proved themselves. This was where they were supposed to show their potential, exhibit the ability to play with the best teams in the country and they failed to do so. They failed to even come close. The honest truth is the only thing they proved is that they are still much further behind than most of us thought. jonmwhee@iu.edu

Practice makes perfect. It’s one of the oldest and most overused clichés, but for IU senior Trevor Swartz, that cliché has resonated true. At the end of a typical IU practice, you’ll see Swartz sending corners in to senior Andrew Gutman. Earlier this season, after one practice, Swartz sent in a corner to Gutman and he missed his shot. “One more,” Gutman said. A short kick from Swartz ensued, perhaps fatigued from the practice, but this time he was insistent for another one. “My bad,” Swartz replied “I’ll get the next one.” One more turns into two more, four more, five more and so on. It’s not that Swartz can’t send a ball in that Gutman can’t finish off. It’s about getting the timing and placing down perfectly. If they can pinpoint it, with no one on the field and an empty net, they can find the opening with 10 defenders around and an opposing keeper lurking. Swartz has been credited with an assist on four of Gutman’s 11 goals this season. The most recent was in IU’s second round matchup of the NCAA Tournament against UConn where Gutman made the run to the far post and Swartz found his head for the goal. “This kid makes me stay 30 minutes after practice and kick it to his head all day,” Swartz said about Gutman following the win. He jokes about it, but those extra 30 minutes and extra kicks Swartz puts in is a big part of the success he’s had this season. Swartz has 15 assists this season, which is third place all-time in IU history for most assists in a single season. His two-assist performance Nov. 25 against Air Force pushed him past his head coach, Todd Yeagley, and two other

Hoosiers who had 14. After he got the second assist, Swartz ran over to Yeagley, pointed at him and said, “I got it coach.” “I’m glad he was focused on the game and not beating my assist record,” Yeagley said jokingly. “I was pretty happy. I told him it was coming.” Yeagley couldn’t help but smile as Swartz ran over to him after the assist. After the game, Swartz said he just gave Yeagley a hug. “I’ll rub it in later,” Swartz said. All season, the team prided itself on the ability to create chances off restarts. Seven of Swartz’s assists this season have come off corner kicks and three have been off free kicks. That leaves five assists from him that haven’t been from a restart. The team has deemed sophomore Spencer Glass to have the best left foot in the country, but the left foot of Swartz is right there as one of the best in the country. The Hoosiers have scored six goals in the two NCAA Tournament games this season and Swartz assisted on five of them. From Aug. 26 to Sept. 16, Swartz had an assist in every game, a stretch of six straight. In the last five games he’s registered an assist, he has accumulated two or more. That streak started on Sept. 11 when he had two against Notre Dame, which is IU’s next opponent in the elite eight at 7 p.m. Friday night in Bill Armstrong Stadium. Swartz will look to continue to set up his teammates with perfection, studying the team’s defense and finding the areas that he can exploit. Yeagley said no one pays better attention to detail than Swartz, and that right now, he’s at the top of his game. “I’m probably in the best form,” Swartz said. Perfect timing. dswallac@iu.edu


SPORTS

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Thursday, Nov. 29, 2018 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com

Documentary considers Knight’s legacy By Ben Portnoy bmportno@iu.edu | bportnoy15

As Robert Abbott sifted through documents and phone numbers, the work of renowned Washington Post reporters Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward echoed throughout his office. Abbott, then a producer for CNN, was in the thick of his investigation into player mistreatment allegations against IU head basketball coach Bob Knight. For inspiration, he left Alan Paluka’s masterpiece, “All the President’s Men,” playing incessantly on a big screen TV for weeks to serve as the subconscious background noise to his endeavor. “It reminded me of all the times I picked up the phone and people wanted to hang it up, and I just wanted to buy time,” Abbott said. “I just wanted to keep them on there for 30 seconds, then two minutes, then all of a sudden it was two hours and they had told me everything.” Monday night, alongside ESPN Films vice president and executive producer John Dahl, Abbott screened his own journalistic feature, ESPN 30 for 30 documentary “The Last Days of Knight,” to nearly 200 students and faculty members in the Franklin Hall Commons. The film delves into the complex legacy left by Bob Knight and the scandal that tarnished his exit from IU through the eyes of Abbott’s original reporting from the late 1990s and early 2000s. Throughout the months that Abbott tracked this tale, he uncovered the grander societal issues of a misguided individual’s inability to adapt, the abuse of power and the systematic ineptitude that allowed rampant mistreatment to flourish. “It was the most difficult thing I’ve ever done because for 30-something years, I’ve always been behind the scenes, coaching the tal-

ALEX DERYN | IDS

Director Robert Abbott, left, and executive producer John Dahl, right, talk to students Nov. 26 in the Franklin Hall Commons after a screening of their film “Last Days of Knight.”

ent, coaching the person, or going and doing all the interviews and piecing it together” Abbott, who narrated and directed the film, said. “But you never hear my voice. You never hear my name.” Dahl initially conceptualized the piece. He and Abbott had been friends for 30 years, dating back to their time as production assistants at CNN Sports. After pitching what became the ESPN film “Catholics vs. Convicts,” Abbott was named an executive producer for the project. At first, he was perturbed about losing directorship of his own idea. But Dahl insisted they needed someone closer to the story in order to tell it right. He also noted Abbott had his own saga to detail. “It was a lot asking a person who reported, produced a story to now direct it them-

selves and narrate it themselves,” Dahl said. “But he made it work.” Buried in the basement of Abbott’s home is a plastic, off-navy blue bin. Inside are countless notebooks, recordings and other mementos from his investigation into Knight. Inside this bin was his story. “I just sat down with a blank legal pad and starting writing moments that I remembered and moments that I thought showed an audience what a journalist really does,” Abbott said. “And that became the spine of the film.” For longtime Hoosiers, Knight remains a legend. His dismissal from the program persists as a controversial talking point from Valparaiso, Indiana, to New Albany, Indiana. But Knight’s misdeeds were far from the initial premise for Abbott’s story.

Steve Robinson, CNN’s managing editor and Abbott’s boss at the time, charged his reporter with discovering why prized prep stars Jason Collier, Neil Reed and Luke Recker had left the program in recent years. Robinson and Abbott expected a story on AAU basketball, the exposure high school phenoms had begun to receive and how the youth couldn’t handle the demands of an old-time ball coach like Knight. That narrative quickly shifted. As Abbott arrived in Bloomington, a handful of calls led him to believe this story was far more than just prima donna high schoolers. In an hour and a half chat with Reed, the former IU guard alleged widespread mental and physical abuse by Knight, including being choked by his former coach at practice.

“I remember flying into Bloomington, looking out the window as we’re landing, wondering if he was telling me the truth,” Abbott said. Though the story centered on Reed’s incident with Knight, among a few other episodes, Abbott’s film paints a larger reality of the coach’s far-reaching power. In a state comprised of thousands of rural agrarians and little in the way of major cities, Knight’s hard-nosed approach became a symbol for the working class citizens of the Hoosier state. It’s through this lens that viewers can understand the responses to the allegations holistically. When Reed went public with his charge that Knight had choked him, critics were swift to dismiss his claims. Former IU student Kent

Harvey’s revelation that Knight had grabbed and berated him outside Assembly Hall, which violated the zero-tolerance policy IU President Myles Brand had bestowed upon the coach after the Reed allegations, led students to erupt into a frenzied riot. The story also mentions an instance in which Knight purportedly demanded Brand leave Assembly Hall. “There’s no one necessarily to blame,” Abbott said. “It happens in baby steps. You may have three different presidents over someone’s tenure. You may have four different athletic directors. And if each person lets a little thing go by after years and years of that, you can never go back.” Perched on the steps of Assembly Hall soon after Knight’s firing had been made public, Abbott sat pondering who the Hoosiers’ next coach would be. Then former IU Vice President Terry Clapacs approached him. “He walked up to me and said, ‘Did you ever think this was going to happen?’ and I go, ‘I had no idea,’” Abbott said. “And he goes, ‘Neither did I.’” Months of reporting had brought to light the dark and troubling side of a statewide icon. But as was the case with Woodward and Bernstein, Abbott never sought to “get” Knight or receive acclaim for his work. Rather, he was just doing his job. “If you ever take a step back and say, ‘Oh, this is gonna be big, this is going to do this,’ you’re going to make a mistake,” Abott said. “Trust me. Don’t do it. Just keep reporting and keep reporting and keep reporting, and then 18 years later, do a film on it, and then you can look back.” “The Last Days of Knight” has been available on ESPN+ since April, but a wider ESPN premiere is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Thursday.

VOLLEYBALL

Middle blocker named to All-Big Ten Second Team By Stefan Krajisnik stefkraj@iu.edu | @skrajisnik3

IU volleyball junior middle blocker Deyshia Lofton was named to the All-Big Ten Second Team, according to an IU athletics release. Lofton is the only Hoo-

sier to pick up recognition from the conference and is the first since former middle blocker Jazzmine McDonald was an honorable mention in 2016. Lofton finished the season ninth in the Big Ten in hitting percentage and 11th in blocks. She also set ca-

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reer highs in both categories along with kills as she had 281. This season, Lofton moved into fourth on the IU all-time career solo blocks list with 305. She had 11 matches with five or more blocks. Last season, IU’s total

blocking ranked 277th in the NCAA, but this year Lofton led the way as her team ranked 15th. After a year in which IU had 188 total blocks and 45 solo blocks, the team had 309 total and 115 solo this year. IU Coach Steve Aird has

pointed out Lofton’s potential throughout the season, and has said that she can reach even higher goals with the right motivation. “Deyshia has All-American talent, and she needs an All-American motor,” Aird said after the team’s win against Rutgers on Oct.

13. “I’ve trained some of the best middles and some AllAmerican players, but the one common denominator is they go hard every day. That’s something I’m hoping she learns.” Sophomore Kamryn Malloy was selected as IU’s Sportsmanship Honoree.


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Thursday, Nov. 29, 2018 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com

» BECKER

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 But because Brett was lefthanded, they were optimistic. Left-handed people use both sides of their brain more than right-handed people, so they usually suffer from less severe versions of aphasia, Peggy said the doctors told her. One day, when they visited Brett in February, Copeland and Anderson were sitting in his room while Peggy and Bryan went out to eat. Anderson knew Brett wanted to speak. Whenever she talked to him, he’d purse his lips and lean his head toward her. But Anderson knew she had to be patient. She had to let him speak when he was ready. Anderson leaned over her boyfriend and whispered “Brett, say hi.” Brett opened his mouth, as if trying to speak. But nothing came out. Anderson kept whispering. “Hi, Brett.” “Hi, Brett.” “Hi, Brett,” Brett eventually breathed out. It was the first time he’d spoken in over a month. Eventually, Brett dove into music therapy, relearning to speak singing “Roadhouse Blues” by the Doors. *

*

*

Exactly two months after the accident, Brett came out of his minimally conscious state and entered post-traumatic amnesia. He had no memory of what happened, who he was or where he was. Brett didn’t know how to read, write or eat. He didn’t know what a number was. The doctors had to put a mesh barrier around Brett’s bed because if he woke up in the middle of the night, he would forget he didn’t know how to walk. “I can’t believe we had to put our kid in a cage,” Peggy said. Shirley Ryan AbilityLab used a therapy dog named Georgia to work on Brett’s memory. The therapists would tell him facts about the dog, such as that she was from Alabama and was trained in a prison.

» QUARRY

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 Though Rooftop was made famous by the Little 500 film, it was a popular hangout well before its release. Swain said the picture of just a few people swimming on a clear day like the one depicted in “Breaking Away” isn’t accurate. “If you watch the movie, it’s about five people,” he

An hour later, they’d ask him to recite those facts. He could never remember until a few months later when, out of the blue, Brett asked his mom about the therapy dog, Georgia, from Alabama who was trained in a prison. *

*

*

A couple weeks after he woke up from his state of minimal consciousness, Brett went home to Libertyville. Friends had taken the Christmas decorations down, but there were still dishes in the sink and Brett’s folded laundry in the laundry room. “Everything was the same,” Peggy said. “But my world was different.” The Beckers put an intercom system in their house and kept walkie talkies with them. Brett couldn’t be left home alone and had to call if he needed anything, even to go to the bathroom in the middle of the night. “But I was the happiest clam alive,” he said. Brett’s memories began coming back to him in dreams. He would wake up in the middle of the night and call his parents on the intercom, asking them if something was just a dream or a memory. Usually, it was a memory. Brett had two goals at this point in his recovery: to run and to go back to IU. Brett began rehabilitation six hours a day, five days a week at the Shirley Ryan AbilityLab’s Wheeling DayRehab Center. Every day, his physical therapist Kyle Koselke put Brett through exercises to work on his strength, balance and symmetry of walking. Even when he was in pain, Koselke said Brett would often go up and congratulate other patients on their rehabilitation achievements. “He was the most smiley patient I’ve ever worked with,” Koselke said. In August 2016, Brett ran for the first time in eight months. Along with therapy, Brett began taking a few classes at the College of Lake County, a local community college, in fall 2016 in hope of returning to IU when he was ready. said. “Just picture that with about 100 — that was more commonplace.” The sheriff, who grew up swimming in Monroe County’s quarries, said he remembers days where hundreds of people would gather at the various quarries across the county. “It was just part of what you did to fill a summer day,” he said. “Its popularity preceded the movie.”

Slowly but surely, he gained independence. *

*

*

Now 22, Brett has been back at IU for three semesters. He has changed his major to recreational therapy and will graduate only one semester late because of AP credits and his community college classes. Brett’s life is very structured. When he relearned how to take care of himself and cook, among other things, the therapists would number the steps of each process. He still follows these steps religiously. Brett lives off-campus, and while he sometimes takes the bus, he prefers to walk to class. He gets to the Student Recreational Sports Center early each morning and works out, focusing on cardio. Although he relearned to run, Brett’s gait is still awkward from the accident, so he can’t use the treadmill. Instead, he runs outside or uses the elliptical, stair stepper or stationary bike. “Working out lets my brain take a break,” Brett said. After the gym, Brett makes his protein shake and takes a nap before class. He is taking nine credit hours this semester and is moving to 12 in the spring. Since the accident, Brett’s social life has changed. Over the past few months, Brett and Anderson’s relationship has gradually become more like best friends than a couple. Last month, they broke up. Brett’s brain injury also won’t let him have a typical “college” experience because he can’t drink and party like his peers. A couple weeks ago, his family came to visit and they went to the Bluebird. While his family drank, Brett had a Coke. “My alcohol now is caffeine,” Brett said. That’s part of the reason Brett loves spending his afternoons in the coffee shop at Goodbody Eatery dining hall. Since the accident, he gets tired easier and relies on iced coffee to get him through the day. When Brett walks in the

» CHIMES

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 Clary said one of her favorite pieces is the show finale “White Christmas.” Bruggenschmidt said her favorite song was “In the Bleak Midwinter.” “There’s something about the harmonies and the softness of the middle of this piece,” Bruggenschmidt said. “I tend to really enjoy some

COURTESY PHOTOS

Left A month after his ski accident, Brett Becker was in a minimally conscious state. During this stage, his movements were involuntary and he struggled to hold his head up independently, his mom Peggy said. Bottom Brett Becker, front, runs for the first time in August of 2016 with his dad, Bryan. Becker wrestled, played football and lacrosse in high school, so running was one of his goals during rehabilitation.

shop, the baristas call out his name. “I’m friends with everyone,” he said. Three years ago, Brett’s whole life changed in a matter of seconds. He went from a pre-med student to having 10 percent chance of living at all.

His recovery inspired him to change his major to recreational therapy, the field that helped give him back his life. Brett will finish classes at IU in May, and will hopefully get an internship. After that internship, he’ll be able to graduate.

The third anniversary of Brett’s accident, or of Brett 2.0 as Brett says, is coming up. “At this point, I’m happy it happened to me,” Brett said. “I lived like I was at the end of my life. Now I saw the end of my life, and I don’t want to go back there.”

of the more choral pieces just because of how tender the harmonies can sound together.” Like many students who join Singing Hoosiers, sophomore Alex Dlugosz, who majors in psychology, said he enjoyed theater and choir in high school. When he got college, he wanted to find a way to continue being involved in music. He found his answer from a tweet posted by

the group enticing interested singers to audition. “I can’t imagine college without being a part of this group,” Dlugosz said. Clary said the show is a way an audience of all ages can get in the holiday spirit. “It’s kind of going back to the movie ‘Elf’: ‘the best way to spread Christmas cheer is to sing loud for all to hear,’” she said. “We’ve definitely got that at ‘Chimes,’ whether that

be Christmas music, Hanukkah music or just some goodspirited, winter-feeling music that doesn’t even have to be holiday related.” Dlugosz agreed that the show was a perfect was to kick off the holidays. “It’s just a positive atmosphere and a really welcoming one,” he said. “It’s a pretty good feeling to know I’m a part of creating that and giving that to people.”

Morton Row Brand New! 4 Bed/2.5 Bath

Public Health Lecture Series RYAN WHITE AND WILLIAM L. YARBER LECTURE & AWARDING OF THE RYAN WHITE DISTINGUISHED LEADERSHIP AWARD

Turning the tide of the HIV Tsunami:

BLOOMINGTON’S BEER AUTHORITY 80 Beers 120 Whiskeys Whiskey Flights

Reducing HIV risk among young adults

Life in the big city

Special guest Jeanne White Ginder, mother of Ryan White, will present the Ryan White Distinguished Leadership Award

thursday

3

$

Cocktails: Martinis, Long Islands, Cosmopolitans, Manhattans

Gina Wingood and Ralph DiClemente will receive the Ryan White Distinguished Leadership Award and discuss how they have been engaged in combating HIV over the past 30 years and highlight their HIV risk reduction prevention interventions for young adults during that time. This event is free and open to the public. Smart casual dress is recommended.

Register online by December 3, at bit.ly/2A8cVI7

Dec. 6, 2018 6 p.m. Dinner provided

Indiana Memorial Union Tudor Room reception to follow

$2.50

Bottles of Bud & Bud light

Available July 2019! Call 812-333-0995

Your day, your way.

the weekend FRI & SAT

5

$

Smirnoff Vodka Doubles

$2.50

Miller Lite Longnecks Gina Wingood, ScD, MPH, (Columbia University) is a distinguished researcher and academic leader

crazyhorseindiana.com

reduce health disparities in HIV, especially among African-American women. Ralph DiClemente,

336-8877

PhD, (New York University) works with interventions to reduce the risk of HIV/STD among vulnerable populations, and developing implementation science interventions to enhance the uptake, adoption and sustainability of HIV/STD prevention programs.

214 W. Kirkwood

Your calendar of events on campus and around town. idsnews.com/happenings


7

Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com | Thursday, Nov. 29, 2018

SPORTS Editors Cameron Drummond, Stefan Krajisnik and Dylan Wallace sports@idsnews.com

Gutman looks toward final goal of season PHOTO COURTESY OF CRAIG BISACRE

Senior defender Andrew Gutman juggles with the ball while at Bill Armstrong Stadium. Gutman, along with sophomore goalkeeper Trey Muse, were recently named as a semifinalist for the MAC Hermann Trophy, which is awarded to the top NCAA Division I college soccer players.

By Dylan Wallace dswallac@iu.edu | @Dwall_1

Laura Gutman asked when this story would come out. Nothing out of the ordinary — just a mom asking when an article about one of her kids would be available for her to read. The expected release date was the week after IU students returned from Thanksgiving break. That is, if the IU men’s soccer team advanced past the third round of the NCAA Tournament. “We never say if,” Laura Gutman said five days before the Hoosiers’ first NCAA Tournament match. “We always say when.” Her expectations are the same as those of her youngest son, senior Andrew Gutman. The expectation is to win. * * * Andrew Gutman’s dad was a baseball coach, and his mom’s side was big into hockey. There wasn’t much soccer influence to go around at his house in Hinsdale, Illinois. His parents first got him involved in soccer when he was in kindergarten because his older sister, Jaclyn, and older brother, Phillip, also started playing. He was playing with the local American Youth Soccer Organization, or AYSO. In the summer, Andrew Gutman would wake up, grab a soccer ball and play in his backyard. His mom remembers calling her son in from outside when it was time for dinner because he was too busy fiddling a soccer ball with his feet. “He always loved being outside and having a soccer ball at his foot,” Laura Gutman said. “He and his brother always had one of those little soccer balls in the house. I’d tell them to take it outside because I didn’t want them to ruin my furniture.” She wanted her son to be involved in other sports as well. So, he played basketball and baseball and had success in both. No matter if he were in basketball season or baseball season, Andrew Gutman would still find time to grab a soccer ball and practice. On the soccer field, he is mobile and uses his speed and athleticism to elude defenders and cre-

ate scoring opportunities for his team. Soccer is a non-static sport in the first place but watching Andrew Gutman play is like watching an animal stalk its prey and attack — with the prey being the ball, of course. That’s why in the eighth grade, his interest in baseball slowly decreased. Despite being a solid player, there was too much standing around for his liking. As for basketball, he said, “I was OK, but I couldn’t really shoot.” That’s quite the opposite for soccer. In high school, he played for Hinsdale Central High School for just his freshmen season before committing fully to the U17/18 Chicago Fire Academy. “He felt his development would be better if he stepped away from school and put 100 percent into the Chicago Fire,” Laura Gutman said. “I think he was a little surprised at the time when he tried out for the Chicago Fire that he actually made it, so he knew he had to put the work in.” Andrew Gutman enjoys the process of getting better. He echoed the sentiments of Philadelphia 76er Joel Embiid’s infamous phrase, “Trust the process.” He worked restlessly, and the result paid off. When he thought about playing soccer in college, he only thought about IU. The Gutman family has a lineage of former Hoosiers with his grandparents, aunts, uncles and brother, so he was very familiar with the limestone buildings on campus and, more importantly, the tradition of excellence IU’s soccer program has established.

The only problem was the name Andrew Gutman wasn’t mentioned much in the 2015 recruiting class. He reached out to Coach Todd Yeagley one weekend when he was coming down to visit his brother and asked if they could meet up and chat. Expecting a simple conversation, Yeagley sent an itinerary for his recruiting visit as a response instead. The rest was history. Andrew Gutman was going to be

a Hoosier. * * * Andrew Gutman doesn’t have to be here right now. Through his first three years at IU, the Hoosier defender has ridden a steady increase of productivity on the field. If he had wanted to, he could have left for the MLS SuperDraft after last season, and he would be playing in the pros right now. But, leaving Philadelphia last year without a National Championship left him with an empty void. It was a feeling he couldn’t end his career on. “I didn’t really want to be on a team that kind of had like — I don’t want to say losing mentality, but like the program has been so successful in many ways, and I just wanted to add to that,” Andrew Gutman said. “Coach took a chance on me to bring me here, and I just wanted to give back to the program.” IU’s heralded star enjoys hanging out with his friends, skiing and waterboarding on family vacations and plenty of other things besides soccer, but right now, there’s no, “What is Andrew Gutman like outside of soccer?” He takes care of his body everyday — making the right deci

sion on what foods to eat and getting enough sleep — so he can be at his best when he takes the field for 90 minutes. His focus isn’t on his future professional career. It’s on the now, and he believes his leadership has taken a giant step from previous years to now. That’s why when he was sidelined to an ankle injury against Penn State on Sept. 30, he was anxious sitting on the bench, wanting so badly for Yeagley to give him the signal to enter the game. Luckily for Yeagley, the team was playing well enough that he could be cautious with him, so Andrew Gutman coached and cheered his teammates on from the sidelines. It’s the only game he has missed this season. In the 21 games played, he has 11 goals and eight assists. A defender is leading this uber-talented Hoosier team in scoring. In the preseason, he was ranked as the second-best player in the nation. Now, he’s a semifinalist for the MAC Hermann Trophy, which is the most prestigious individual award in college soccer. But, what he’s most proud of is his team going 8-0 in conference play and being the first ever team to finish with an 8-0 record in the Big Ten. He’s proud to say he and his teammates are 2018 Big Ten regular season champions. He’s proud to say they’re 2018 Big Ten Tournament champions. There’s one more thing he wants to be proud to call himself, and that’s not MAC Hermann Trophy winner. It’s National Champion. The team is one win away from advancing to the College Cup and just three wins away from claiming the program’s ninth National Championship. The sun is setting on Andrew Gutman’s career at IU, but he’s

only focused on getting his team to the promised land. The College Cup is played in Santa Barbara, California, and the sun sets in the west. PHOTO BY CLAIRE LIVINGSTON | IDS


Indiana Daily Student

8

ARTS

Thursday, Nov. 29, 2018 idsnews.com

Editors Lauren Fazekas and Hannah Reed arts@idsnews.com

CALIE'S CALL

Why you should be listening to Palace before finals begin Calie Schepp is a junior in journalism.

MOVIE STILLS DATABASE

“Broken Flowers” was released in 2005. Filmmaker Sara Driver worked on the crew for the movie.

Filmmaker to visit IU Cinema By Sarah Lloyd sadlloyd@iu.edu | @sxrxh99

Sara Driver is a filmmaker who tells her stories in ways that many people believe to be new and different. She said her movies often reference folk tales and mythology from other parts of the world and balance the rigidity of a normal storyline with the flow of poetry and art. “Sara Driver’s fictional films assuredly walk the line of magical realism — grounded, with the confidence to take us, as viewers, anywhere,” Jon Vickers, director of IU Cinema, said in an email. Driver's film, “Boom for Real: The Late Teenage Years of Jean-Michel Basquiat,” will be shown at 7 p.m. Nov. 29 at the IU Cinema. Driver will be present for screenings of films and an on-stage interview 7 p.m. Nov. 30 at the IU Cinema. The documentary follows American artist Basquiat in the years before his fame. He was born in New York and is Puerto Rican

and Haitian descent. His art style started with graffiti and morphed into NeoExpressionism, according to his website. The film is free to attend but ticketed. Driver is scheduled to be present during the screening of her film.

“Sara Driver’s fictional films assuredly walk the line of magical realism — grounded, with the confidence to take us, as viewers, anywhere.” Jon Vickers, director of IU Cinema

Driver will be interviewed at 7 p.m. Nov. 30 in the IU Cinema for the Jorgensen Guest Filmmaker Series. Joan Hawkins, associate professor in the cinema and media studies program, will conduct the interview. The event is free to attend. “I’ve always admired her films,” Hawkins said in

an email. “She is radically uncompromising in her vision and uses technology — particularly retro technology — in totally unique and innovative ways. All while making really entertaining, interesting, and fun stories.” The 1986 film “Sleepwalk” will be shown at 10 p.m. Nov. 30 in the IU Cinema as well. Directed by Driver, the film features a woman that is hired to translate an aged Chinese manuscript. The character begins to realize as she is working on the manuscript that she has awakened ancient powers that begin to take control of her life. The movie will be shown on 35mm film and will be free but ticketed. Driver is expected to be present at the film screening. Two more films directed by Driver will be shown at the IU Cinema this weekend, but Driver will not be present for them. The film “You Are Not I,” based on a short story by Paul Bowles, is scheduled for 4 p.m. Dec. 1 at the cinema.

The 1983 film features a woman escaping from a mental hospital. The second film, “When Pigs Fly," a comedy that is based around a jazz musician and his haunted house, will be screened at 1 p.m. Dec. 2 at the cinema. Both films are free to attend but ticketed.

“I think that’s how movies come together: you see something, or you read a story, and suddenly you see the whole thing. It’s almost like you dream a film before you make it.” Sara Driver, filmmaker

“I think that’s how movies come together: you see something, or you read a story, and suddenly you see the whole thing,” Driver said in an interview with Little White Lies. “It’s almost like you dream a film before you make it.”

Getting back into the swing of a school schedule calls for some good studying music and, while there are plenty of artists who can help get your creative juices flowing, Palace is one to check out to help in the coming weeks as students gear up for finals. Pairing ethereal vocals and sprawling melodies, the band's music transcends what the alternative genre has become — repetitive and sometimes boring. It creates the perfect music the study to, and is a fantastic band to help listeners get back into school after a week-long, pie-filled break. The group knows how to make simple sound intriguing, pairing things such as guitar and drums with the perfect placement of treble. The band started out in London and has been doing shows around the UK and Ireland. The group consists of front man Leo Wyndham, drummer Matt Hodges and guitarist Rupert Turner. Their 2014 EP “Lost in the Night” is breathtaking. The titular track, just like most of their music, is sanguine and airy. When listening to the EP, you’ll feel like you’ve gone into a meditative state, because its songs repeat melodic hums and bells effortlessly. “I Want What You Got” drips with cool as guitar strums narrate a story of longing and jealousy. The song ends in a triumphant harmony that gives chills every time. I’d be lying if I said I didn’t feel emotional every time I listen to Palace. Its music has a lasting, somewhat indescribable effect on me. It’s intense and visceral and creates a feeling that could be

compared to attending a great concert or eating your favorite meal. Each time I listen, I question how a group that makes music this good could still be as small scale as they are, but that’s possibly part of their appeal. Palace is like an excellent secret, which makes listening to them all the more personal and fun, like you’re in on something exclusive. I have strong memories of a trip to Europe in which I only listened to their album “So Long Forever.” Now every time I listen to it I have flashbacks of lush rolling hills and vineyards in Tuscany passing my car window as “Live Well” played through my headphones. I love that the band's songs get progressively more complex as you listen. Once you hit the bridge in almost all of the tracks, the slow guitar gets faster and the soft drums get harder. The melodies mix into a cocktail of harmonies, cooing and repeating with fervor. “Bitter,” a track originally featured on the group's “Lost in the Night” was remastered and re-released on their album “So Long Forever.” Different notes in the chorus add more to this song, which was already a fantastic breakup ballad. The bridge and ending of the song would be perfect for a movie montage of a couple falling in and out of love. Palace is just one of many hidden gem alternative groups, but it stands out because of its simplicity. The group knows how to build up a melody with guitar and drums alone, which gives listeners a lot to love. crschepp@iu.edu

Exhibit opens in Grunwald Gallery By Lauren Fazekas lfazekas@iu.edu

The Grunwald Gallery opened the BFA Thesis Exhibition Tuesday, an exhibit that will stay open until Dec. 8, according to the School of Art, Architecture and Design’s website. The show features works by students graduating with SOAAD’s Bachelor of Fine Arts degree. Each piece of work features student’s artwork from different disciplines within the studio. Projects in digital art, ceramics, graphic design, metalsmithing and

painting are a few of the areas within the degree that are being shown, according to SOAAD’s website. The 14 students exhibiting their artwork participate in the planning of their shows and the installation of their pieces in order to gain professional experience in a gallery. There will be an awards ceremony for the thesis show at 5 p.m. Dec. 7 followed by a reception in the Grunwald Gallery from 6 to 8 p.m. More information can be found online at SOAAD’s website.

EMILY ECKELBARGER | IDS

Then-junior Nicolas Martinez enters the Grunwald Gallery of Art, a gallery on the second floor of the Fine Arts Building that features art by professionals and students.

FRONTIER RECORDS

Palace is a Swedish melodic rock band founded by lead singer and multi-instrumentalist Michael Palace.

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Methodist

Non-Denominational

First United Methodist Church - Jubilee

Sherwood Oaks Christian Church

219 E. Fourth St. 812-332-6396

2700 E. Rogers Rd. 812-334-0206

fumcb.org Facebook: jubileebloomington.org Instagram: jubileebloomington Email: jubilee@fumcb.org

socc.org/cya facebook.com/socc.cya Twitter: @socc_cya Instagram: socc_cya

Contemporary: 9:30 a.m. & 11 a.m.

Wednesday: 7:30 p.m. @ Bloomington Sandwhich Company (118 E. Kirkwood Ave.)

Being in Bloomington, we love our college students, and think they are a great addition to the Sherwood Oaks Family. Wether an undergraduate or graduate student... from in-state, out of state, to our international community... Come join us as we strive to love God and love others better. Jeremy Earle, College Minister

Mark Fenstermacher, Lead Pastor Markus Dickinson, Campus Director

Connexion / Evangelical Community Church

Inter-Denominational

eccbloomington.org • cxiu.org Facebook: Connexion ECC Twitter: @connexionecc

111 S. Kimble Dr. 812-269-8975

Sunday: 9 a.m. & 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

Sunday Service: 9:30 a.m. & 11 a.m. Connexion: Sundays, 6 p.m. Connexion is the university ministry of ECC. We’re all about connecting students to the church in order to grow together in our faith. We meet weekly for worship, teaching, and fellowship as well as periodically for service projects, social events and more. Bob Whitaker, Senior Pastor Dan Waugh, Pastor of Adult Ministries

Nazarene

The Salvation Army

First Church of the Nazarene 700 W. Howe St. (across from the Building Trades Park) 812-332-2461 • www.b1naz.org bfcn@sbcglobal.net Sunday Worship: 10:30 a.m. Sunday Small Groups : 9:30 a.m., 4 p.m. & 6 p.m.

111 N. Rogers St. 812-336-4310 • bloomingtonsa.org

Sunday: Sunday School, 10 a.m. Worship Service, 11:00 a.m. Bible Study, 3 p.m. The Salvation Army, an international movement, is an evangelical part of the Universal Christian Church. Its message is based on the Bible. Its ministry is motivated by the love of God. Its mission is to preach the gospel of Jesus Christ and meet human needs in His name without discrimination.

Mennonite Mennonite Fellowship of Bloomington 2420 E. Third St. 812-646-2441 bloomingtonmenno.org • Facebook

Gordon Hoag, Captain Cindy Hoag, Captain

City Church For All Nations 1200 N. Russell Rd. 812-336-5958

citychurchbloomington.org Instagram • Twitter • Facebook @citychurchbtown

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. John Sauder mfbjohn@gmail.com

Saturday: 5:30 p.m. Sunday: 9:30 a.m., 11 a.m. & 12:30 p.m. We are a movement of all races and backgrounds, coming together to love people, build family, and lead to destiny. Join us at one of our weekend worship experiences, and visit our young adults ministry, 1Life at 7 p.m. on Mondays. David Norris, Pastor Sumer Norris, Pastor

Episcopal (Anglican) Canterbury House Episcopal (Anglican) Campus Ministry at IU 719 E. Seventh St. 812-334-7971 • 812-361-7954

Open Hearts, Open Minds, Open Doors

St. Mark’s United Methodist Church 100 N. State Rd. 46 Bypass 812-332-5788

Sacramental Schedule: Weekly services Sundays: Holy Eucharist with hymns, followed by

smumc.church

dinner 4 p.m. at Canterbury House

2nd & 4th Wednesdays: 7 p.m. Taizé Chants & Prayers at Canterbury House

Sunday Morning Schedule 9:00: Breakfast 9:15: Adult Sunday School Classes 10:30: Sanctuary Worship 10:30: Children & Youth Sunday School Classes

Episcopal (Anglican) Campus Ministry is a safe and welcoming home for all people. We are a blend of young and old, women and men, gay and straight, ethnicities from different cultures and countries, students, faculty, staff and friends. The worshipping congregation is the Canterbury Fellowship. The mission of the Fellowship is to restore all people to unity with God and each other in Christ. We pray, worship and proclaim the Gospel. We also promote justice, equality, inclusion, peace, love critical thinking and acting as agents of change in our world.

An inclusive community bringing Christ-like love, healing and hope to all.

Mother Linda C. Johnson+, University Chaplain Ricardo Bello Gomez, Communications Director Josefina Carcamo, Latino/a and Community Outreach Intern Rex Hinkle, Luiz Lopes, Nathan Stang, Music Ministers

7821 W. State Road 46 812-876-6072 • lifewaybaptistchurch.org Facebook • LifewayEllettsville

Jimmy Moore, Pastor Mary Beth Morgan, Pastor

Independent Baptist Lifeway Baptist Church

College & Career Sunday Meeting: 9 a.m. Sunday

Sunday Worship: 10 a.m. & 6 p.m. Wednesday Night Bible Study: 7 p.m.

PC (USA) United Presbyterian Church 1701 E. Second St. 812-332-1850 • upcbloomington.org

Email: upcbloomington@gmail.com Sunday: Pastor's Class: 8:45 a.m. Worship: 10 a.m. Fellowship: 11 a.m.

Tuesday: Bible Study: 12:15 p.m. Book Study/Discussion: 6 p.m. We are a diverse, inclusive people of God. Social justice, a welcoming spirit and focusing on Christ are integral to our congregation. We are students and non-students, native and non-native English speakers, young and old, who come together to worship in the name of Christ and to enjoy fellowship. John Napoli, Pastor Melanie Mathis-McBride, Education Director

Fr. Patrick Hyde, O.P. Associate Pastor & Campus Minister

St. Paul Catholic Center is a diverse community rooted in the saving compassion of Jesus Christ, energized by His Sacraments, and nourished by the liturgical life of His Church.

Fr. Joseph Minuth, O.P., Associate Pastor

Christian (Disciples of Christ)

Presbyterian (USA)

First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)

First Presbyterian Church

205 E. Kirkwood Ave. 812-332-4459 • fccbloomington.org

Sunday: 10 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

Lifeway Baptist Church exists to bring glory to God by making disciples, maturing believers and multiplying ministry. Matthew 28:19-20

Barnabas Christian Ministry Small Groups: Cedar Hall 2nd Floor Common Area, 7 - 8 p.m., meetings start Thursday, Sept. 6. We will meet every other Thursday during the school year.

Callout Meeting: Aug. 30, IMU Redbud Room Steven VonBokern, Senior Pastor Rosh Dhanawade, IU Coordinator 302-561-0108, barnabas@indiana.edu barnabas.so.indiana.edu * Free transportation provided. Please call if you need a ride to church.

221 E. Sixth St. (Sixth and Lincoln) 812-332-1514 • fpcbloomington.org

Worship Times: Sunday: 9 a.m., 11 a.m.

Christian Ed: Sunday: 9:50 - 10:45 a.m.

Summer Worship Times: Sunday: 10 a.m. 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 affiliated group open to all students. Andrew Kort, Pastor Kim Adams, Associate Pastor Grant Farmer, Interim Music Director Christopher Young, Organist

Orthodox Christian All Saints Orthodox Christian Church 6004 S. Fairfax Rd. 812-824-3600

www.allsaintsbloomington.org Email:frpeterjon@allsaintsbloomington.org Wednesday: Vespers 6 p.m. Saturday: Great Vespers 5 p.m. Sunday: Matins 9 a.m. Divine Liturgy 10 a.m. Come experience the sacred rhythm and rituals of the timeless Christian faith, a faith with a future, yet ancient and tested. Living the traditional worship of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit; as a sacred community of people striving to manifest the kingdom, on earth as it is in heaven. We, together with the saints throughout history, learn to live the love and compassion of Christ. Come and see, and put your roots down deep. Rev. Fr. Peter Jon Gillquist, Pastor Howard & Rhonda Webb, College Coordinators Church Van Pickup on Sundays - Call 314-681-8893

Cooperative Baptist

Catholic St. Paul Catholic Center 1413 E. 17th St. 812-339-5561 • hoosiercatholic.org

Facebook: Hoosiercatholic Twitter: @hoosiercatholic Weekend Mass Times Saturday Vigil: 4:30 p.m. Sunday: 8:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 12:30 p.m. (Spanish), 5:30 p.m., 9 p.m. (During Academic Year) Korean Mass 1st & 3rd Saturdays, 6 p.m.

Weekday Mass Times Monday - Saturday: 12:15 p.m. Monday, Wednesday, Friday: 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, Thursday: 9 p.m. St. Paul Catholic Center is a diverse community rooted in the saving compassion of Jesus Christ, energized by His Sacraments, and nourished by the liturgical life of His Church. Fr. John Meany, O.P., Pastor Fr. Patrick Hyde, O.P. Associate Pastor & Campus Minister Fr. Joseph Minuth, O.P., Associate Pastor

University Baptist Church 3740 E. Third St. 812-339-1404

Unitarian Universalist

ubcbloomington.org facebook.com/ubcbloomington

Unitarian Universalist Church of Bloomington

United Methodist

indiana.edu/~canterby canterby@indiana.edu • facebook.com/ecmatiu

Tuesdays: 6 p.m. Bible Study at Canterbury House

Fr. John Meany, O.P., Pastor

Facebook: SABloomington Twitter: @SABtown

Thursday: We are Wesleyan in our beliefs, and welcome all to worship with us. We are dedicated to training others through discipleship as well as ministering through small groups. We welcome all races and cultures and would love to get to know you. Dr James Hicks, Lead Pastor

1413 E. 17th St. 812-339-5561 • hoosiercatholic.org Facebook: Hoosiercatholic Twitter: @hoosiercatholic

Weekday Mass Times Monday - Saturday: 12:15 p.m. Monday, Wednesday, Friday: 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, Thursday: 9 p.m.

503 S. High St. 812-332-0502

Redeemer Community Church redeemerbloomington.org facebook.com/RedeemerBtown @RedeemerBtown on Twitter & Instagram

Weekend Mass Times Saturday Vigil: 4:30 p.m. Sunday: 8:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 12:30 p.m. (Spanish), 5:30 p.m., 9 p.m. (During Academic Year) Korean Mass 1st & 3rd Saturdays, 6 p.m.

Traditional: 8 a.m.

Sunday: The Open Door, 11:15 a.m. @ The Buskirk-Chumley Theater (114 E. Kirkwood Ave.)

Jubilee is a supportive and accepting community for college students and young adults from all backgrounds looking to grow in their faith and do life together. Meet every Wednesday night for opportunities through small groups, hangouts, mission trips, events, service projects, and more. Many attend the contemporary Open Door service.

St. Paul Catholic Center

Sunday: 9:30 a.m. (Bible study) 10:45 a.m. (worship) If you are exploring faith, looking for a church home, or returning after time away, Welcome! We aim to be a safe place to "sort it out" for those who are questioning, and a place to pray, grow, and serve for followers of Jesus. All are welcome - yes, LBGTQ too. Rev. Annette Hill Briggs, Pastor Rob Drummond, Music Minister

Lutheran (LCMS) University Lutheran Church & Student Center 607 E. Seventh St. (Corner of 7th & Fess) 812-336-5387 • indianalutheran.com

facebook.com/ULutheranIU @ULutheranIU on twitter Sunday: Bible Class, 9:15 a.m. Divine Service, 10:30 a.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 Student Fellowship, 7:30 p.m. Thursday: Graduate Study/Fellowship, 7 p.m. University Lutheran Church (U.Lu) is the home of 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. Rev. Richard Woelmer, Campus Pastor

2120 N. Fee Lane 812-332-3695

www.uublomington.org www.facebook.com/uubloomington Sundays: 9:15 a.m. & 11:15 a.m. We are a dynamic congregation working towards a more just world through social justice. We draw inspiration from world religions and diverse spiritual traditions. Our vision is "Seeking the Spirit, Building Community, Changing the World." A LGBTQA+ Welcoming Congregation and a certified Green Sanctuary. Reverend Mary Ann Macklin, Senior Minister Reverend Scott McNeill, Associate Minister

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints Latter-day Saint Student Association (L.D.S.S.A) 333 S. Highland Ave. 812-334-3432

studentview.Ids.org/Home. aspx/Home/60431 Facebook: Bloomington Institute and YSA Society lds.org Monday - Friday: 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. We have an Institute of Religion adjacent to campus at 333 S. Highland Ave. (behind T.I.S. bookstore). We offer a variety of religious classes and activities. We strive to create an atmosphere where college students and local young single adults can come to play games, relax, study, and associate with others who value spirituality. Sunday worship services for young single students are held at 2411 E. Second St. a 11:30 a.m. We invite all to discover more about Jesus Christ from both ancient scripture and from modern prophets of God. During the week join us at the institute, and on Sunday at the Young Single Adult Church. Robert Tibbs, Institute Director


Indiana Daily Student

10

OPINION

Thursday, Nov. 29, 2018 idsnews.com

Editors Emma Getz and Ethan Smith opinion@idsnews.com

EDITORIAL BOARD

Museums should return stolen artifacts to owners French president Emmanuel Macron in March ordered the return of 26 stolen artifacts to the nation of Benin, which was a colony of France when the artifacts were taken from the palace of the ruler at the time. The artifacts will be placed in national museums of Benin. This should be celebrated, and other countries should follow France’s example. It is unjust that a country doesn’t have its own historical artifacts because it was invaded by colonists looking to exploit and pillage. This is especially true now that many of these countries have regained their independence. It is morally wrong to withhold artifacts from the country that they originated from, where they hold far more significant cultural and historical value Earlier this year, the British Museum returned eight stolen artifacts to Iraq but have not even come close to returning the rest of its looted materials. It has ancient sculptures from Nigeria, but instead of returning them, the museum has only offered to loan them to the country, which is frankly condescending. Some recognizable examples of priceless artifacts at museums that have yet to be returned to their home countries include the Ro-

ILLUSTRATION BY MADELYN POWERS | IDS

setta Stone from Egypt, the Koh-i-Noor Diamond from India and the Old Fisherman sculpture from Turkey. There are no plans for the return of these objects, despite repeated efforts from the home countries. The effects of the imperialist era are still being felt

today, and returning artifacts grants more goodwill than withholding them. We will never truly move on unless past misdeeds are rectified and forgiven, and returning these artifacts is one step toward paying the reparations owed. Stealing artifacts might be a minor

offense compared to what most colonists did to their colonies, but it is one offense that is easy to fix. No museum stands to lose anything by giving its stolen artifacts back. Of course, museums are a wonderful educational resource and a great way to learn

about other cultures, but the brief joy of, for example, an American museum-goer is often nowhere near the value these artifacts can hold to the heirs in their original countries. Some exhibits are lost, but the moral integrity gained is insurmountable.

Also, museums in colonist countries have enough of their own historical artifacts to display, not to mention those from other countries that are received legally. European or American museums don’t have the right to hold the primary sources of another nation’s history. That is a privilege, given with explicit permission from that country as an act of trust and international cooperation. Stolen artifacts put on display disrespect that kind of cooperation which the international community should strive for. Colonialism was an era of unjust atrocities and horrendous exploitation. Previously colonized nations still feel the effects of past colonial exploits. It is up to those colonists to determine their future relationships with their ex-colonies. Decisions that might seem trivial to some, like giving back stolen artifacts, are in fact vital to how the world will interact with each other in 50 years. International relations can be improved or further destroyed depending on small actions like this. Forgiveness and reconciliation is possible if a country takes the right steps and holds itself accountable for its actions.

HENLEY’S HOT TAKE

US actions toward asylum seekers at the border are cruel and inexcusable Carson Henley is a sophomore in media.

The border between the United States and Mexico has been in a state of chaos. Migrant caravans seeking asylum in the U.S. are being forced to wait in Mexico before they can even begin applying for asylum. America’s actions in this situation are vile and despicable. Words cannot describe how utterly disgusting this is. As an American, I feel an immense shame. The Trump administration has introduced changes such as “metering,” which limits how many individuals can apply for asylum each day. A federal judge ruled that migrants must be considered for asylum regardless of how they gained entry to the U.S., despite Trump’s efforts to force asylum seekers to enter through “ports of entry.” Border agents used tear gas Sunday to regain control after some migrants threw stones at the agents. The gas did not only affect those individuals throwing stones, though. Children were present,

although this did not seem to stop the border patrol. Chilling images have circulated on the internet of young children crying and in pain. It has become easy to blame our president. And he is no doubt to blame. But he is not alone in his guilt. We cannot be complicit. We cannot feel rage as we read headlines, only to turn around and let this roll off of our backs. News cycles are fast. Our attention spans are short. Forgetting the truth is easy. Reality is not. The Auschwitz Memorial tweeted Monday, “When we look at Auschwitz we see the end of the process. It’s important to remember that the Holocaust actually did not start from gas chambers. This hatred gradually developed from words, stereotypes & prejudice through legal exclusion, dehumanisation & escalating violence.” We must be calling our representatives and donating to legal funds. We must calmly have the difficult conversations we do not want to have. Our circles make up the public opinion.

We cannot shy away from talking about it. We must help those who need it to open their eyes and their hearts. We are not exempt. We must look at ourselves honestly. Attitudes add up. One person’s quiet racism contributes to a culture that allows this to happen, that excuses it or celebrates it. If you tell me you think people should take care of themselves, I want you to look at your life and really think about how much taking care of yourself you’ve had to do. I want you to think about how much society has taken care of you. I want you to think about what taking care of yourself means to a Honduran migrant seeking asylum. She has fled her home and come all the way to the U.S. border seeking safety because months of waiting and paperwork and hoops to jump through and the xenophobia that will greet her in the U.S. are better than what she’s leaving behind. She could not be doing more to take care of herself. The Statue of Liberty reads,

TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

The Statue of Liberty in New York City.

“Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, The wretched refuse of your teeming shore. Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,

POLITICAL POWERS

I lift my lamp beside the golden door!” America should welcome refugees with open arms. If you call yourself a patriot, but think sending away migrants is the right thing to

do, you are not a patriot. If you are xenophobic, racist and prejudiced under the guise of patriotism, you undermine all that America stands for. cehenley@iu.edu

HOT TAKES Each week, our writers have thoughts and opinions that never make it to columnhood. Read on for our columnists’ hot takes. Ethan Smith Black licorice, fig newtons and ginger snaps are among the best snacks. Anne Anderson Voting for horrendous politicians under “fiscal conservatism” is just a fancy way of saying you value money more than human rights. Matthew Waterman I don't know what I am supposed to do with my life now that the Eminem vs. Machine Gun Kelly feud has died down.

ILLUSTRATION BY MADELYN POWERS | IDS

Alvaro Michael Birthday resolutions make more sense than New Year's resolutions.

Jack Palmer The Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade’s balloons had way too many recent icons this year. Carson Henley Movies that don't pass the Bechdel Test are boring. Elsbeth Sanders The bakery cases at vegan restaurants always have better options than the cases in regular restaurants. Emily Shaffer Pumpkin rolls are the best holiday desserts. Emma Getz Ethan Hawke's performance in "First Reformed" is not only his best performance to date, even with his strong repertoire of great but underrated films, but it is the best of all leading actor performances this year.

A NOTE FROM THE EDITORIAL BOARD The Editorial Board is made up of the Opinion section editors and columnists. Each editorial topic is selected and discussed by the Board until we reach a consensus, and a member of the board volunteers to write the article.

The opinions expressed by the Editorial Board do not necessarily represent the opinions of the IDS news staff, student body, faculty or staff members or the Board of Trustees.

FALL 2018 EDITORIAL BOARD Anne Anderson, Tejus Arora, Ezra Engels, Julian Epp, Emma Getz, Carson Henley, Alvaro Michael, Jack Palmer, Madelyn Powers, Elsbeth Sanders, Ethan Smith, Matthew Waterman

LETTER TO THE EDITOR POLICY The IDS encourages and accepts letters to be printed from IU students, faculty and staff and the public. Letters should not exceed 350 words and may be edited for length and style. Submissions must include the person’s name, address and telephone number for verification.

Letters without those requirements will not be considered for publication. Letters can be mailed or dropped off at the IDS, 6011 E. Kirkwood Ave. Bloomington, IN 47405. Send submissions via e-mail to letters@idsnews.com. Call the IDS with questions at 812-855-0760.


ARTS

11

Thursday, Nov. 29, 2018 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com

CULTURAL COMMENTS

Vietnam Veterans Memorial allows us to harness the art of remembering Christine Fernando is a junior in journalism and sociology.

of the 58,307 U.S. military personnel who died in the war. The idea was simple. We walk along the walls, reading the names of the dead etched into marble. We feel the weight of each name and their combined power. We are left with our thoughts and memories. But her vision was met with skepticism and anger from those who wanted a more traditional memorial, one adorned with patriotic emblems of eagles or flags. The documentary “Maya Lin: A Strong Clear Vision” told the story of the memorial’s design process, and in it, one war veteran, a cynic of the plan, called the memorial “insulting” and “a black scar.” The memorial was more than drab bronze statues hoisting American flags into the air. Without the typical triumphant allegories and a red-white-and-blue, patriotic dog and pony show, the Vietnam Veterans Memorial tells stories in a direct way that doesn’t coddle us but captures the grief-stricken, contradictory feelings Americans harbored toward the war. As people touch, mourn and leave offerings of flowers beside the names of loved ones, the wall shifted memory from the war to its victims. A simple, stripped-down list depicts individuals, not a generalized image of a soldier carrying a flag. As a result, grieving became personal and the deaths became singular stories that

The idea of public art as memorials and commemoration is nothing new. There are the heads of obas, rulers of the kingdom of Benin in what is now Nigeria, that began commemorating leaders in the year 1300. There is the Jing gui, a bronze bowl honoring a young archer in China 3,000 years ago. And of course, statues of pharaohs in ancient Egypt. Since then, constellations of memorials to human triumph and suffering have popped up around the world. But while the famous memorials of ancient times often commemorated individuals, most modern memorials I can think of today — the Marine Corps War Memorial, the World War II memorial, the Monument to the Great Fire of London — focused less on the individual. Perhaps the most famous memorial of all, the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, opened 36 years ago this month. Designed by Maya Lin, a then-unknown architect, the monument managed to both commemorate an entire war and to accomplish something that to me is what makes memorials art: capturing memories and individual stories. Combining minimalism and earth art, the Vietnam Veterans Memorial is made up of two wedges of black granite walls that are inscribed with the names

Horoscope

called us to remember, not just the war, but each life lost. This individualization of memorials reminds me of the monuments, from the Royal Artillery Memorial and the Monument to the Great Fire of London, that I saw last summer while in London. Each monument carried haunting memories and loomed, tall and overwhelmingly large, over surrounding streets. Maybe it’s because this history is not mine and I can’t connect to it in the way Londoners would, but despite how long I spent circling them, my mind always wandered to “OK, what next?” or to the cute cafe down the street. That experience contrasted with the afternoon I spent exploring Postman’s Park in London, where I perused countless plaques commemorating ordinary people who died saving the lives of others. By reading the plaques of what I later learned was called the Memorial to Heroic Self-Sacrifice, I learned about a woman who died after giving her life belt to another passenger of a sinking ship, a daughter of a bricklayer who died saving three children from a burning house and a man who saved a woman from suicide before being run over by a train in her place. As I scribbled down some of the text into my notebook, pored over and engaged with each story, it made me a bit emotional in a way the other monuments

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

Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is an 8 — Work definitely takes priority. Someone important is paying attention. Resolve breakdowns without losing your cool. Reinforce structural elements. You can find the funding.

Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is an 8 — Join forces with another for funding. Changes necessitate budget revisions. Anticipate a disagreement, and avoid financial discussions. Don't dig into savings on a whim.

Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 7 — Don't push yourself too hard. Demand for your attention may be high. Make time to strengthen foundational structures. Focus on basics, self-care and rest.

Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is an 8 — Make travel or educational plans. Keep your objective in mind. Check reservations, and schedule carefully. Tempers may be short. Rest and consider the view.

Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is a 7 — An obstacle challenges your partnership. Proceed with caution. It's not a good time to gamble. Avoid arguments. Listen without interrupting. Offer respectful kindness.

Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 7 — Romance competes with miscommunication or mistakes for your attention. Postpone and delegate. Family comes first. Misunderstandings could disrupt things. Patience and humor help.

BLISS

HARRY BLISS

TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

People pay their respects on the wall of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial on Nov. 10, 2014, in Washington, D.C., on the eve of Veterans Day. More than 58,000 names of U.S. military members who died in the Vietnam War are engraved on the wall.

that focused on patriotic symbols over individual stories did not. And a collection of plaques in a park became my favorite memorial I saw in London. This concept of turning memorials into mournful reflections on individual stories, rather than a patriotic encounter, can also be seen in the Oklahoma City National Memorial, which sets aside a sculpture of an empty chair for each victim of the Alfred P. Murrah Building bombing. There’s also the AIDS Memorial Quilt, a Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Today is a 6 — Take care of practical and pragmatic details at home. Make repairs to support structures. Stay patient with miscommunications. Listen more than you speak. Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Today is an 8 — Help others see the big picture. Distractions and disruptions abound. Silly disagreements waste time if you indulge them. Otherwise, clarify and explain patiently.

traveling memorial made up of more than 48,000 panels commemorating the lives of people who have died of AIDS. Being in the field I am, I often compare things to journalism, where we choose one person or just a handful to represent a larger story. We include details and anecdotes, telling the story of an individual that reflects the story of many — something that’s almost always more moving than speaking in generalities or cliched symbols. Maybe it’s the same thing Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is an 8 — The profit potential is high despite obstacles, delays or misunderstandings. New developments could change the assignment. Don't offer to pay for everything. Simplify financial plans. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a 9 — As you gain strength, you gain options. Let go of a preconception, and keep your attitude positive. Stick to practical solutions, and follow rules scrupulously.

with the memorials that commemorate individuals. Memorials connect us to the past, encouraging us to remember and respect those who have died. Good memorials and good art outlast, sparking conversation so that memories are kept alive after the memorialized event fades into history books. Sometimes the horrors of war and tragedy seem to get further and further away as years pass, but individual stories are always visceral. ctfernan@iu.edu Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is a 6 — Complete projects, and clean up. Avoid travel or fuss. Keep a low profile. Nostalgic reflection reminds you how far you've come. Plan what's next. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is a 7 — Group efforts get farther than solo. Get feedback from your community. Don't believe everything you hear, though. Take it with a grain of salt.

© 2018 By Nancy Black Distributed by Tribune Media Services, INC. All Rights Reserved

Crossword

L.A. Times Daily Crossword 10 11 12 15 17 21 23 24 25 27 28 32 34 35 36 38 40 44

Publish your comic on this page. The IDS is accepting applications for student comic strips for the spring 2019 semester. Email five samples and a brief description of your idea to adviser@indiana.edu by Dec. 10. Submissions will be reviewed and selections will be made by the editor-in-chief.

su do ku

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis

ACROSS

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

Answer to previous puzzle

1 4 9 13 14 15

16 18 19 20 22 23 24 26 29 30 31 33 37 39 41 42

Goat quote Monorail users Driving range instructors Central cooling systs. Kick She converted to Judaism after marrying her comedy partner Study of a portentous woodchuck? Opposition group Submits returns online Prevents legally Hoppy brew, for short Study of tears? Humanities maj. Dash gauge Slovenia neighbor, to the IOC Player of The Bride in “Kill Bill” films, familiarly Made a blunder Take suddenly Small store Fuzzy fruit Exercise in a studio Android operating system named for a cookie

43 Trusty mount 45 Shaving cream type 46 “American Experience” network 49 Bart’s bus driver 50 Draw upon 51 Study of common articles? 55 That woman 57 Echo Dot-waking words 58 Cornell’s home 61 Others, in Cuba 62 Study of hiking choices? 65 Tells all 66 “At the Movies” co-host 67 Shepherd’s pie piece 68 Craftsy website 69 Brother in Roman lore 70 Give a darn

47 48 51 52 53 54 56 58 59 60 63 64

7:11, e.g. Circular gasket Impertinent The Masters, e.g. Carmex target MoMA location Puppy plaything Heavyweight fight? “Rubáiyát” poet First rescue boat Football Hall of Famer Carter Count calories Officers who follow their own code Many months Christian of “The Big Short” Study of lids and caps? Matching group Throw back some Absolut, say Sanctify Chi __ “All __ in favor ... ” Bandleader’s cue Works for Rubbernecker Evil film computer Thing Dead-end sign word Screenwriter James Wartime prez Veer off course

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

DOWN 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

It may have an “X” Physical discomfort “Whatever!” “Missed your chance!” Romeo or Juliet “A Sorta Fairytale” singer Tori New car stat More timid Study of literary tools?

© Puzzles by Pappocom

BREWSTER ROCKIT: SPACE GUY!

TIM RICKARD


Indiana Daily Student

1, 2, 3, 4 & 5 Bedroom Outstanding locations near campus at great prices Leasing now 2019-2020

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leasinginfo@grantprops.com

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465

7.5’ artificial Christmas tree with ornaments. Stand incl. $50, neg. choimoon@indiana.edu

Sublet Houses

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Adidas Alphabounce, mens running shoe, size 12, blue. Unused. $50. skaluva@iu.edu

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EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY

Misc. for Sale

2006 Mercedes Benz E350. 118K miles, clean title, great cond. $4,300, neg. xiakong@iu.edu

Ray Bans for sale, round lenses with gold frame. $80, obo. samklemz@indiana.edu

Sublet Rooms/Rmmte. 2 BR, 1.5 BA. 3712 W. Parkview Dr. Westside, off Kinser Pk. $1150/mo. 812-798-1421

Selling 3 steel boned corsets, light wear, great cond. $50 each. ahemsath@indiana.edu

2006 Nissan Murano 4WD SL, 142K mi, clean title, good cond. $5,600. wang12@iu.edu

Tom Ford designer sunglasses, worn once for modeling shoot. $85. rnourie@indiana.edu

2012 Range Rover Evoque. 37.5K miles, clean title. $23,000 neg. shaomao@indiana.edu

MERCHANDISE

***Now leasing 19-20*** HPIU.COM Houses & apts. 1-7 bedrooms. Close to Campus. 812-333-4748 No pets please. **Avail. August 108 S. Clark 2408 E. 4th Street 313 N. Clark All utils. included. www.iurent.com 812-360-2628

*Leasing for Aug. 2019.* 307 & 307.5 E. 16th. Close to campus, very nice 3 BR, 2 BA ($1200) or 5 BR, 3 BA ($2000) houses. All applns. incl. Lawn care & snow removal incl. Priv. prkg. No pets. 812-824-2727 1-5 BR. Close to Campus. Avail. immediately. Call: 812-339-2859. 3 BR/1 BA downtown loft style, parking incl. WD/DW. Aug., 2019. 812-333-9579 or leasinginfo@grantprops.com

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Computers 13”, 2-in-1 Dell laptop, great cond. New battery, i5, 8GB RAM. $600. bikhan@iu.edu

LiveByTheStadium.com 1355 N. Lincoln Street 5 BR, 2 BA LiveByTheStadium.com 1365 N. Lincoln Street 5 BR, 2.5 BA

HP Pavilion 15.6” laptop, good condition, no charger incl. $200, neg. robskend@indiana.edu

O M E G A P R O P E R T I E S

Lenovo Edge 15 laptop. Some damage to hinges. $400 neg. junhoffm@indiana.edu

Now Leasing Fall 2018-19 1-4 Bedroom Apartments 2-5 Bedroom Houses Call 333-0995

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LiveByTheStadium.com 2017 N. Dunn Street 4 BR, 2 BA LiveByTheStadium.com 301 E. 19th Street 5 BR, 2 BA

Yakima roof rack and canoe kit, good cond. $150.00. Call 812-332-7561.

Appliances Honeywell humidifier, great condition. Originally $40, now $15. jiampang@indiana.edu

Automobiles

12 pc. dinnerware set w/ 4 dinner & salad plates, bowls, & silverware. $15. yafwang@hotmail.com

1 BR in 3 BR apt. Rent & water: $710 mo. Lease now through July. megbball25@gmail.com

1 – 5 Bed Apts/Houses

Houses

HOUSING Apt. Unfurnished

PAVILION

TRANSPORTATION

2014 Ford Fusion Hybrid. 107k mi. 44/41 mpg. in city/highway. $11,970. abbsmile@iu.edu

Textbooks ‘Microsoft Excel- Data Analysis and Business Modeling’ book. $80 neg. suke@iu.edu

BMW 335xi, 103K mi., clean title, all wheel drive. Need to sell this week. $7,995. kishah@iu.edu

“Industrial Organization”. 5 edition. Almost new. $30. skaluva@iu.edu “International Economics”. 6th Edition. Almost new. $20. skaluva@iu.edu “Law & Economics”. 6th Edition. Never opened. $40. skaluva@iu.edu

520

EMPLOYMENT

DeArmond M55 Electric Guitar from 1999. Great condition. $149, obo. nabreu@iu.edu

juliemcqueen13@gmail.com

AVAILABLE NOW 3 BR/1.5 BA spacious twnhs. Located 6 blks. to Kelley. Avail. Aug., 2019. 812-333-9579 or

Conn Acoustic Guitar, in good cond. Hardly played. $70, OBO. annlbloo@indiana.edu

450

Found: Black Havoc FS HYPER Bike just south of campus. 812-856-3783

Help wanted cataloging and appraising 19th & 20th century books. Preferably library science student. $15/hr., offsite, flexible scheduling. 812-322-9854 hagrid78@yahoo.com

props.com

Instruments

Sublet Apt. Furnished Avail. now through July, 2019 at Reserve on Third. 1 BR, priv. BA in furn. 2 BR, 2 BA apt. $645/mo. incl. internet, water, W/D, shuttle. Will pay 1st mo. rent+ fees.

5 BR house on Hunter Ave near Optometry. Aug. 2019. 812-3339579 or leasinginfo@grant-

355

115

3 BR/1.5 BA large twnhs, next to Informatics/Bus, avail. Aug., 2019. 812-333-9579 or

Found

Direct Support Professionals and Compass Residential & Consulting - Direct Care Staff needed. Bloomington area sites. Need all shifts. Pay $10.50-12.75/hr. Can work around student schedules. www.compassrc.com charles.walker@ compassrc.com. 317-407-4582

Large room and private bath in 3 BR furnished house. 3 blocks to Music School. $595/mo. Call: 740-591-6425.

Call Today 812-333-9579 GrantProps.com

Limited horse boarding avail. $100/mo. 812-876-5573

Aver’s Pizza Now Hiring. Bloomington’s Original Gourmet Pizza To Go, Since 1995. Managers, Servers, Delivery Driver, Cooks & Dishwashers. Apply Online: averspizza.wyckwyre.com

4 BR/2 BA, remodled kitchen w/ stainless steel appl. Off-street parking, W/D provided. Avail. Jan. 6 mo. or longer lease avail. $2000 per month + utils. 812-325-0848

Women’s green winter parka. Brand new, size medium. $30 neg. gyaford@iu.edu

Full size mattress, memory foam, very good cond. $80. jingy@indiana.edu

leasinginfo@grantprops.com

360

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Grant Properties

Nike Vapor Untouchable Pro men’s football cleats. Size 8, Never worn. $40. s.e.mosier1@gmail.com

Folding chairs and table. $40 for table, $15 per chair. $60 together. keconsta@indiana.edu

2090 sq. ft. shared, 1 BR + living room, garage avail. $450/mo. Grad student pref. 812-327-1210

4 BR house, located at corner of 9th & Grant. Avail. Aug., 2019. 812-333-9579 or

405

110

Announcements

Houses

Furniture Dark brown couch, good condition. $200. zkhamis@indiana.edu

1 block S of campus on Atwater. $600 mo. Wifi + utils. included. Now avail. Aug., ‘19. 812-361-6154

Clothing NEW Decode 1.8 evening dress, size 0, never worn. $55. eunjbang@iu.edu

505

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ANNOUNCEMENTS

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

430

2 BR/2 BA luxury twnhs. Located near Ed & Music. Avail. Aug., 2019. 812-333-9579 or

leasinginfo@grantprops.com

Electronics Samyang 12mm f/2.0 ultra wide angle lens Sony E-mount. $150. maruwill@iu.edu

435

Apt. Unfurnished

Rooms/Roommates 1 blk south of campus 1 to 5 bdrms in 5 bd/2ba hse.Avail Jan-Aug19. Parking/laundry, Utilities incl. 812-333-9579 or

340

PAYMENT: All advertising is done on a cash in advance basis unless credit has been established. The IDS accepts Visa, MasterCard, Discover, American Express, cash, check or money order.

310

REFUNDS: If you cancel your ad before the final run date, the IDS will refund the difference in price. A minimum of one day will be charged.

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

410

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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.

325

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CLASSIFIEDS ADVERTISING POLICIES

415

CLASSIFIEDS

Thursday, Nov. 29, 2018 idsnews.com

Bicycles Adult bike, good cond., works well. New tires. $60. acelik@iu.edu

ELKINS

Macbook Pro 13’’ w/ custom 8 GB and 3 charger cables. $700, neg. omalek@indiana.edu 415

12

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

APARTMENTS

Electronics

NOW LEASING

Dell P190ST Monitor Has 2 USB ports - VGA Port. $20 neg. skaluva@iu.edu

FOR 2019 1, 2, 3, 4 & 5 BR Houses, Townhouses and Apartments

Lenovo Yoga laptop, perfect condition. Touch screen, can be folded. $750. joserang@iu.edu PS4 500G, comes with controller, charging stand, games. $250, obo. ksmcvoy@iu.edu

Quality campus locations

ELKINS APARTMENTS

339-2859 www.elkinsapts.com

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