Wednesday, Sept. 16, 2015

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WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 16, 2015

IDS

‘Barber’ takes the stage, page 6

INDIANA DAILY STUDENT | IDSNEWS.COM

Former student faces charges of rape

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3147 mg sodium USDA entree item sodium limit as required by the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act

480 mg sodium 1/4 teaspoon of salt

575 mg sodium

By Carley Lanich clanich@indiana.edu | @carleylanich

A former IU student has been charged with two counts of rape in two separate instances. John Phillip Enochs, 21, was charged with rape as a Level 3 Felony and rape as a Class B Felony, according to a Monroe County Court Case Summary. Enochs was an IU business student at the time of the alleged rapes, University spokesperson Mark Land said in an e-mail. He was a brother of Delta Tau Delta fraternity at the time of both alleged rapes, his lawyer, Katharine Liell, said. Enochs allegedly raped the victim by force in his first charge of rape, while in the second charge of rape Enochs allegedly assaulted the victim without her knowledge, according to a Monroe County Court document. On April 11, 2015, one of the victims attended a party at the Delta Tau Delta fraternity house. She was drinking prior to the incident, according to a Monroe County Court probable cause affidavit. After hanging out with friends in the courtyard of the fraternity, she entered the house looking for a bathroom. The next thing she remembered was being in a private room with an unknown man who was trying to have sex with her. The victim repeatedly tried pushing the man away, saying “no” several times. According to the affidavit, the victim told friends she kept saying “no” and trying to leave, but the man

Required taste Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act limits school lunch options By Emily Beck emebeck@indiana.edu | @emebeck1

Making lunch for thousands of students is hard enough for Hattie Johnson, the director of nutrition services for Monroe County School Corporation, and as Congress looks to reauthorize school lunch programs this month, she said she hopes they won’t take away her alreadyempty salt shaker. The Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010 is up for its five-year review. Indiana’s food service workers have a few changes in mind to make better-tasting food. The act, which has been in place since 2012, mandates low sodium and 100 percent whole grains and has caused headaches for Monroe County School Corporation employees such as Johnson. She’s responsible for ensuring more than 11,000 students are fed according to Department of Agriculture regulations. Abiding by these laws has made the past three years challenging, she said. While she acknowledged some of the changes

are “common sense,” Johnson said a few alterations are necessary. “There are some things I think are personally over the top,” she said. “I think it does warrant some tweaking.” The act also mandates sugar cuts, more guarded calorie intake by grade level and a fruit or vegetable on every plate. Johnson said the portion sizes are adequate, but both she and Lindsey Hill, director of nutrition services at South Madison Community School Corporation, said sodium reductions have cut out flavor. “Some things naturally have sodium in it. That’s where your flavor is going to come from,” Johnson said. Under the Act, schools are required to move to even lower salt levels as time goes on. Hill called that unrealistic. “It would be nearly impossible to meet these numbers,” Hill said, adding that they don’t align with science. Johnson said some salt-stripped foods are lacking, causing kids to avoid them. If further cuts are made, she said, “everything’s going to be totally flavorless.”

Hill said if it were up to her, sodium levels would stay put, and schools would be required to serve 50 percent whole grain products rather than 100 percent. That rule reduced the options school cafeterias had and made it harder for them to serve food kids want to eat. Few products that met the standards were available in mass quantities from manufacturers and quality suffered, she said. “(Manufacturers) rushed to make products that were compliant, and they’re not the best possible,” she said. Kay Sayles, the kitchen manager at Fairview Elementary School, said she wants to give kids the best food possible. It hurts when she sees them throwing away what she serves she said. About 90 percent of Fairview students qualify for free or reduced lunch, and Sayles said for some of them, this might be the last meal of the day they receive. “You want to see the kids eat,” she said. “They depend on us to feed them, SEE FOOD, PAGE 10

SEE RAPE, PAGE 10

MEN’S SOCCER

50 warrants issued Hoosiers confident in offense for drug dealing in heading into game with Bulldogs central Indiana

By Michael Hughes

michhugh@indiana.edu | @MichaelHughes94

By Alexa Chryssovergis aachryss@indiana.edu | @achryssovergis

IU Coach Todd Yeagley said he isn’t concerned. Not with the loss Sunday at Penn State, not with the meager five goals his team has managed to score in five games and not with the recent string of Hoosiers missing penalty kicks. In the lead-up to IU’s (3-2) match Wednesday at Butler (3-0-1), with whom IU tied 0-0 last year, Yeagley said he wasn’t troubled by IU’s struggles around the net. “It just kind of comes in waves, so it’s no worry,” Yeagley said. “The bigger worry would be if we’re not getting there and we’re stalling initially in our attack, then we have some other problems to look at.” The Hoosiers have outshot their opponents 77-32 this year but have only outscored them 5-3. Yeagley said he credited some of the disparity between shots and goals to bad luck. He also credited the lack of goal-scoring to a lack of aggressiveness by the Hoosiers, both when they shoot and when they don’t. Sometimes IU needs to be more aggressive with its shots, Yeagley said. Instead of sending a shot toward the center of the goal, aim for the corner. Other times, IU tries to string together six or seven pass sequences

HAIL

to the ALE

IDS FILE PHOTO

Junior defender Phil Fives fights for possession of the ball during IU’s game against Notre Dame on Aug. 30 at Bill Armstrong Stadium. IU lost 1-0 after Notre Dame scored a goal during the second overtime of the game.

before a goal. In some instances, the Hoosiers just need to shoot, he said. Junior forward Tanner Thompson’s lack of goal scoring has been a matter of bad luck, Yeagley said. A few different bounces off the post or defender trying to deflect shots and Thompson could have a handful of goals already. Instead, he has just one from a penalty kick, which remains IU’s only penalty conversion out of three on the season. “It’d be a different story, and we’d be talking about how Tanner is off to

a really good start,” Yeagley said. “If he’s not getting the opportunities, it’s a different story.” But Thompson is getting the opportunities. He’s just not fully capitalizing on the positions he’s getting to inside and around the box. Two of these opportunities have come from the penalty spot, one of which he finished and one of which was saved. But Thompson, along with senior SEE IUMS, PAGE 10

In the Franklin City Police Department, on large beige boards next to a whiteboard, 50 faces were taped up on rows of paper — suspects in a recent drug bust. On the whiteboard, their names were written in black ink. Some names were crossed out in red, with red declarations next to them — Leffler, A: Arrested. Shapinsky, A: Scott County Jail. Fowler, K: DEAD. In the bottom right corner of the whiteboard was a fraction: 30/50. Thirty is the approximate number of arrests that were made this morning by several local departments, including the Johnson County Prosecutor’s Office, the Johnson County Sheriff ’s Department, the Franklin Police Department, the Indiana State Police and the U.S. Marshals Service, according to a press release. Teams of officers are still attempting to serve the rest of 50 arrest warrants on suspected drug dealers. All but one were felony charges, said FPD Chief of Police Timothy O’Sullivan. O’Sullivan said he estimated

250 officers and 20 canines assisted in making the arrests this morning. These arrests have come as a result of nearly a year of investigations by undercover narcotics officers and others at the FPD and Johnson County Prosecutor’s Office. O’Sullivan said he expected all 50 of the suspects to be arrested shortly, with about 20 still outstanding as of mid-afternoon Tuesday. “I would guess we’ll have most of (the arrests) done by tonight,” O’Sullivan said Tuesday. “The ones we don’t get, we’ll catch them later, at traffic stops or that sort of thing. It’s not if, it’s just when, for the last ones.” Suspects were charged with dealing a plethora of drugs, including methamphetamine, heroin, marijuana, controlled substances and synthetic drugs. O’Sullivan said there wasn’t necessarily a connection between any of the suspects, but he said once the teams get to a point where there are several potential cases at the same time, they try to issue arrests at the same time. Brad Cooper, the Johnson County prosecutor, said the 50

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SEE DRUGS, PAGE 10


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