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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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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CAMPUS EDITORS: ALYSON MALINGER & ASHLEIGH SHERMAN CAMPUS@IDSNEWS.COM
IU honored with diversity, inclusion award Insight Into Diversity magazine honored IU-Bloomington and IU-Purdue University Indianapolis with the 2015 Higher Education Excellence in Diversity Award, according to an IU press release. This is considered a national honor,
recognizing U.S. colleges and universities that demonstrate an outstanding commitment to diversity and inclusion. Both campuses will be featured, along with the other recipients, in the November 2015 issue of the magazine, according to the release.
BFC discusses new post tenure review policies By Laurel Demkovich lfdemkov@indiana.edu
TIANTIAN ZHANG | IDS
STUDENTS SWEETEN NEW YEAR Students line up to make their own candy apples during an event hosted in front of McNutt by IU Hillel on Tuesday evening. Carrie Seleman, president of the organization, said the purpose of the event is to celebrate the Jewish New Year and “give people some sweetness to start the new year with.”
La Casa celebrates heritage By Sarah Gardner gardnese@indiana.edu @sarahhhgardner
The Mathers Museum of World Cultureswas transformed into the setting for a celebration during a reception to kick off National Hispanic Heritage Month on Tuesday. The event, sponsored by La Casa Latino Cultural Center, featured food and live music. The reception was the first of many events to be sponsored by La Casa throughout the month. The City of Bloomington Commission of Hispanic and Latino Affairs, the Latino Programs and Outreach Division, IU’s Latino studies department, and the Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies also sponsor many of these events. “This event is a great way to let the community and IU students know that we’re going to be having a month full of celebration,” said Araceli Gomez, City of Bloomington Latino outreach coordinator. “There are a lot of contributing members in our community that are Latino and Hispanic, and we are celebrating them and our culture.” The performing band, called Juchari Sirankua, is a family from Chicago. They have been playing at events for the last five years, and they set the tone for the evening. Setting the tone is what this event is really all about, La Casa Director Lillian Casillas
said. “This month really puts a limelight on us that creates a positive image for the rest of the year,” Casillas said. Some of the individuals who contribute to the community were recognized at the reception, as the event was also a platform for the City of Bloomington Commission of Hispanic and Latino Affairs’ annual award ceremony. Four major awards were given. The Outstanding Latino Leader Award, given to an individual who serves as a role model within the Latino community, was presented to IU faculty member Raquel Anderson, who works in the speech pathology program. The Outstanding Community Organization Award was given to Volunteers in Medicine, a group that offers free medical services in Monroe and Brown counties to anyone in need, particularly underrepresented populations and those in poverty. The Latino Community Advocate Award was introduced as an honor given to someone who, while not Latino or Hispanic, advocates for the Latino community. The award was given to IU faculty member Dr. Ellen Vaughan, who works in the Ph.D. program in counseling psychology. The final awards were the Outstanding High School Senior Awards. Usually, one
RACHEL MEERT | IDS
Juchari Sirankua plays traditional music during the La Casa reception celebrating the start of National Hispanic Heritage Month on Tuesday afternoon at the Mathers Museum of World Cultures.
student is honored each year, said Israel Herrera, chair of the City of Bloomington Commission on Hispanic and Latino Affairs. This year, however, three students were honored. The students were Jose Adorno-Cancel, Juan Pablo Perez Soto and Ana Olavarrieta. All three students are seniors at Bloomington High School South. “We use this month to not only remember our culture and history, but also to recognize the movers and shakers who create a positive environment for the Latino community,” Casillas said during the presentation of awards. National Hispanic Heritage Month was started in 1968 by then-president Lyndon B. Johnson. It originally
lasted only a week, but it was extended to be a monthlong event during Ronald Reagan’s presidency. The month starts Sept. 15 and ends Oct. 15. Many future events focus on advocacy and activism. “We are celebrating our culture, but at the same time, we are advocating for a lot of things that the Latino community still needs,” Gomez said. Such future events include film showings, dinners, guest speakers and a soccer tournament. “We want people to look at the diversity of topics related to Latinos, to recognize that we are making contributions and to connect with people within the community,” Casillas said.
The Bloomington Faculty Council had their second meeting of the semester Tuesday. Although changes to the BFC bylaws and a presentation on the enrollment management report were also on the agenda, the majority of the meeting was spent discussing policies on post tenure review. The council discussed the proposed policies on faculty misconduct and faculty development. The proposals were created by a subcommittee last fall in an effort to revise previous policies regarding post tenure review. “You have a chance to put this into motion today,” BFC Faculty President Cassidy Sugimoto said. “Rather, (the post tenure policies) are being presented in the hopes that you will take them back to your constituencies, get to their responses and communicate that response back to the BFC.” Professor David Fisher, chair of the constitution and rules committee, led the discussion on these policies. “The policies I’m going to discuss are aimed at protecting tenure, protecting the integrity of the system that allows all forms of basic research to prosper and move forward,” Fisher said. Fisher said the current policy has been in place since 1999, adding that it was vague, especially in defining the possibilities of remediation instead of dismissal. The proposed policy changes more clearly distinguish misconduct from incompetence by creating two separate procedures for each. In misconduct cases, the major procedural change was limiting attorneys. In incompetence cases, however, the policy proposes reversing the tenure procedure by starting review at the local level. IU-Bloomington Provost Lauren Robel stressed the importance of separating the misconduct and incompetence policies. “I thought that that was the gist in where we were going with this review, and I think it would be a really good thing for faculty members on this campus if those two things were separated,” Robel said. “Misconduct is
pretty different from ‘I think you’re not doing the job you’re supposed to do as a tenure faculty member.’” Although the discussion was cut short, the BFC will continue discussing post tenure review policies, as well as the proposed faculty development policy at the next meeting. The first action item on the agenda was voting on two changes to the BFC bylaws. These changes focused on the representation of University Graduate School and the Creation, Reorganization, Elimination and Merger committee policy. The BFC voted unanimously to change the representation in the committee of the University Graduate School. The change adds the vice provost for graduate education and health services as a voting member in the BFC. After discussing specific points, the council voted on and passed the CREM policy, adding the CREM committee as a standing committee. The CREM committee will be in charge of creating, reorganizing, eliminating and merging academic units, including departments and schools. The meeting concluded with the enrollment management report. David Johnson, vice provost of enrollment management, gave the report that was a series of statistics and information about the new freshman class. The report included statistics on the diversity, talent and background of the new IU-Bloomington class. Among these statistics were record-breaking numbers, including the highest average GPA at 3.76, the highest average SAT/ACT score at 1218, the highest amount of underrepresented students at 1,185 and highest number of overall students enrolled at 7,875. Johnson discussed the goals the enrollment department has each season, including aiming diversity, helping students afford an IU education and bringing in international students. “These are complementary goals, but often they can be conflicting goals as well,” Johnson said. “So we have to work on balancing goals in the whole setting of enrollment.”
CORRECTION In the Tuesday edition of the IDS, a story in the region section should have referenced the Bleeding Heartland Roller Derby. The IDS regrets this error.
Apply to Peace Corps by Oct. 1
IUSA tackles campus parking tickets By Nyssa Kruse nakruse@indiana.edu | @nyssakruse
In two unanimous votes, the IU Student Association passed two resolutions during its first full congressional assembly of the semester Tuesday in Hodge Hall 103. One resolution appointed two members to open congressional positions. The resolution was amended during the meeting to appoint only the members who presented themselves at the assembly with the intention to vote to appoint the other people once they present themselves to the assembly. The other resolution passed was legislation drafted last year about parking ticket notification. The bill asks the Office of Parking Operations to send an email, text mes-
sage or voice mail when a ticket is issued. Currently, a physical ticket is the only notification given. If the offender is a student, the ticket is billed directly to their bursar after 10 days without payment, according to the Office of Parking Operations website. Maggie Oates, congresswomen for the School of Informatics and Computing and speaker of the house, said she wrote the resolution after she received billing for three tickets on her bursar for parking violations of which she was unaware. The tickets were issued to her because a car parked illegally had a fake permit with a number that matched her permit. “I wanted to prevent that from happening to others in the future, because, for me, it was like $150 I didn’t have suddenly appeared on my
bursar bill,” Oates said. “I want to make sure, especially for students that might not necessarily have that kind of cash on hand, that they can have a way to prevent this from happening.” The resolution now goes to the executive branch of IUSA. Oates said the branches will work together to carry out the resolution, as the executive branch has representatives on campus committees, including the parking operations committee. Their role will be to set up meetings with parking operations administrators to assess the resolution’s feasibility. It is possible the resolution’s requests will necessitate changes for the Office of Parking Operations in software or permissions to view some student records. Last week, IUSA congressional committees met to be-
gin work on other resolutions for the upcoming year. The education committee discussed making peer tutoring services available to students beyond the courses currently served, such as finite mathematics, and the student life committee mentioned a resolution from last year that would ask for staplers by every major printer on campus. Services for disabled students was a topic of concern for both the student relations committee and the oversight and reform committee. Heads of the environmental affairs committee discussed creating a resolution to find a use for food that is thrown out on campus. Oates mentioned near the meeting’s conclusion a new procedure wherein committee heads will now meet with IUSA executives weekly.
Event today: SPEA Room 200A, 4pm Contact ahamilton@peacecorps.gov for more info. Janica Kaneshiro Editor-in-Chief Suzanne Grossman Grace Palmieri Managing Editors
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REGION
EDITORS: ANNIE GARAU &CORA HENRY | REGION@IDSNEWS.COM
Counterfeit $20s circulate in Bloomington On Saturday, a family of three was charged with counterfeiting $20 bills. They were caught when a server at a Bloomington Steak ‘n Shake became suspicious after three customers ordered the same item and all attempted to pay with $20 bills, according
to a Bloomington Police Department press release. Officers found the family had been printing the fake bills in the hotel room where they were residing. The family has used the counterfeit bills for the past six weeks in Bloomington and Martinsville, Indiana.
Hoosier firefighters assist with wildfire season Kelly Obbie kobbie@indiana.edu | @keobbie
Indiana may be 2,000 miles from California, but that doesn’t stop in-state firefighters from flying across the country to help with wildfires out west. “Wildfires are occurring all over the place, and you never really hear about them,” said Jeremy Kolaks, a fuels technician for Hoosier National Forest. If the fires get big enough, firefighters must have what Kolaks calls an “extended attack,” and the fires begin to appear on the news. That’s when Kolaks said fires become projects. He said they can “go from something that would’ve been contained with 20 people (to) thousands of people.” “Even with there being lots of resources ... out West as a whole ... you just kind of run out of qualified trained people to do it,” Kolaks said. “If you think about the number of fire departments that are volunteer departments, they haven’t found a way to leave their real jobs ... they would have to take a vacation or work out a deal with their boss.” Indiana’s fire season is in the spring and fall,
Kolaks said, which leaves more time for firefighters in Indiana to help wherever they’re needed. “We look at the positions that are needed every day, and we see who is qualified,” Hoosier National Forest Public Affairs Officer Judi Perez said. Available firefighters are assigned and bags are packed, but traveling west isn’t exactly a California getaway. “Getting acclimated is a challenge, especially if they’re going to a place where there’s high elevation,” Perez said. Fire engine operator Paul Fountain said there are currently about nine firefighters from Hoosier National Forest out west. He said these firefighters go from working nine-hour shifts in Indiana to 12-15 hours a day for 14 days straight in the west, but Fountain said working extra hours and fighting fires on a new sleep schedule is no big deal. “(It’s) kind of second nature,” Fountain said. “You kind of flow right into it.” Of course, along with the new time zone and extra work comes the ultimate challenge: the fire. Fountain said one of their goals is to eliminate
fuels like brush and limbs. “The environment of the fire is dynamic; it changes constantly,” Fountain said. “You have to be on your toes ... you have to muddle through it and just fly by the seat of your pants. Things change so rapidly.” It’s also not as simple as a hose and a helmet. Kolaks said firefighters have to keep track of things like fuel, vehicles, food and shelter. “There’s a lot more that goes with it than putting the fire out,” Kolaks said. While some of our firefighters may be out west, that doesn’t stop the fires in Indiana. As fall approaches and western wildfires keep blazing, Indiana may have a strain on resources. Perez said fall and the beginning of hunting season means less rain and more campfires. She said they’d have to use whoever is left or bring in firefighters from other locations, and they may even have to institute a fire ban restricting all campfires. For now, Fountain said Hoosier National Forest employees will be out west for about three or four more weeks helping fellow firefighters and finishing in time to help at home.
KATELYN ROWE | IDS
Cindy Houston, a certified trainer in Applied Suicide Intervention SkillsTraining, explains how about 11 of 100,000 people commits suicide in the United States at a talk on Tuesday night at the Venue Fine Arts & Gifts. Houston went on to say that in Indiana the rate of suicide is slightly higher with 12 or 13 out of 100,000 committing suicide.
Therapist gives tips to prevent suicide By Cora Henry corahenr@indiana.edu
ANDREW WILLIAMS | IDS
Members of the city forum meet to discuss local politics.
Economic development, job creation discussed at forum By Javonte Anderson ja69@indiana.edu | @JavonteA
The panelists at Tuesday night’s economic development forum at the Monroe County Public Library were tasked with delivering a hypothetical two-minute elevator speech about economic development and climate in Bloomington. “Bloomington is absolutely anchored by Indiana University,” said Danise Alano-Martin, director of the Bloomington Department of Economic and Sustainable Development. “Our economic climate is anchored by Indiana University.” Alano-Martin also said IU allowed Bloomington to avoid some of the economic downturn that most of the country suffered in the most recent recession. The forum, titled “What Does Economic Development Mean in Bloomington,” was planned by the League of Women Voters and the Monroe County Public Library. Panelists discussed ideas for how best to pursue economic development and enhance quality of life for the entire Bloomington community. “The series of forums is intended to help voters make decisions in the upcoming city election by underscoring processes and perspectives driving economic development of the Bloomington community,” said Kate Cruikshank,
president of the League of Women Voters of Bloomington-Monroe County. The forum was an unscripted discussion guided by Bob Zaltsberg, editor at the Herald-Times. The panel was comprised of four distinguished members of the Bloomington community: Danise AlanoMartin; Jacqui Bauer, sustainability coordinator for the City of Bloomington; Lynn Coyne, president of the Bloomington Economic Development Corporation; and Richard Rampley of WorkOne South Central Indiana. “They were chosen because they represent a wide variety of thought in the community,” Zaltsberg said. They came from the workforce, government and economic development, private sector, and sustainability office for the city, he said. Within the scope of economic development, the panel discussed a variety of issues including sustainability, entrepreneurship, minimum wage and enhancing adult education to make workers more competitive in the labor force. “I want to tell everyone there are plenty of jobs,” Rampley said. “Almost all of those jobs require a lot of skills. So, do the people who are looking for those jobs have the skills that are necessary?” Rampley emphasized the importance of adult education in the region and the
need for workers to develop skills that will make them more competitive for higher paying jobs. Rampley highlighted a program that will provide adults an opportunity to earn certifications and make them more competitive in the labor force. “Work Indiana is a shortterm training program,” he said. “You can then take training in things such as CDL drivers, CNC machine operators, certified nursing aids — all of these are certifications that are available in a very short term.” Alano-Martin said the city has worked diligently to foster an environment to promote economic development. “From my perspective and the city administration’s perspective, we’ve worked very hard over the past dozen years to employ strategies and create new strategies that equate economic development with quality of life,” she said. In addition to the questions asked by Zaltsberg, the panel answered question posed to them by the audience. “With the upcoming elections we want to help voters have enough information to actually ask candidates hard questions,” Cruikshank said. “We hope this forum provides the community with more knowledge that will ultimately help them make more informed voting decisions.”
Nine audience members filled chairs in front of Clinic Services Therapist Cindy Houston in a lightand art-filled room at the Venue Fine Arts & Gifts. Houston wore a bright green lab coat with rolled up sleeves; colorful acrylic paintings of mountains and plants covered the walls. Suicide may seem like an unusual topic for such a cheery space, but the goal of Houston’s talk was for participants to learn to discuss suicide openly. “If you leave here with one thing today, leave with the message: We have to talk about it,” Houston said. Houston gave the talk at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Venue. Houston’s lecture was part of a series of talks for National Suicide Prevention Month. The therapist began by presenting the statistics. Nationally, 11 out of 100,000 Americans die by suicide per year, but in Indiana it’s higher — 12 or 13 out of 100,000. “It’s relevant, it’s our problem, it’s not just something out there,” she said. “Why is it so hard to talk about this? We can talk about war. We can talk about car accidents. We
can talk about HIV/AIDS.” Houston’s hands danced unhurriedly to the rhythm of her words as she calmly invited the room to consider why their culture so rarely discusses suicide. Audience members pointed to stigma and fear associated with it. “It feels politically incorrect somehow,” said audience member Michelle Martin-Coleman, who helped organize the talks and whose husband runs the Venue. Houston encouraged her listeners to be people the community can depend on to talk about suicide. The idea that discussing suicide will encourage others to do it is a myth, Houston said. She mentioned other myths as well — that people who talk about wanting to kill themselves aren’t serious about it, that when people start to come out of depression they are no longer at risk and that once a person has tried to kill themselves they will not try it again. “So, what do you want to do about this?” Houston asked. She presented a model called TALK, which stands for Talk, Ask, Listen and Keep safe. Houston assured her audience
that it was “simple, not a bunch of psychological gobbledygook.” Houston encouraged the audience members to look for calls for help from people who might be considering killing themselves. “You are more likely to run into someone who is suicidal than I am,” she said. “The front line is the general public.” Houston said the best way to raise the topic is to ask directly. Even if a person does not want to confide in you, asking lets him or her know you are not afraid to talk about suicide, she said. The final step of TALK, Keep safe, consists of coming up with a plan. For example, it might help to take the keys of someone who has said they will drive dangerously fast or request to keep the pills of someone who said they will overdose later. At that point, it’s all about helping them put off the decision to kill themselves and seek assistance. The police, family members and the emergency room are all good resources. When in doubt, Houston said, keep them talking. “Every moment that the person is with me, they are still alive,” Houston said.
5th Annual Patrick O’Mear a International Lecture
The Honor able
Jon M. Huntsman Jr.
Former Governor of Utah Former U.S. Ambassador to China
U.S. and China: Challenges and Opportunities September 16, 2015 4 p.m. Whittenberger Auditorium, Indiana Memorial Union IU Bloomington Free and open to the public. No tickets required. For more information on the lecture, contact the Office of the Vice President for International Affairs at ovpia@iu.edu or 812-855-5021.
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OPINION EDITOR: MADISON HOGAN | ASST: GREG GOTTFRIED OPINION@IDSNEWS.COM
You asked and we got it: the dislike button Ever wanted to tell people with one click that you aren’t voting for Trump or that you have a strong opposition towards black liquorice. Well get ready folks, because your dreams have finally come true: Facebook will start
work on developing a “dislike” button. Now, when your high school friends post some Buzzfeed skit, you can vehemently disagree with the topic instantly. This may cause a few more fights on Facebook, but at least we got what we wanted.
EDITORIAL BOARD
ILLUSTRATION BY KIRA BUSHMAN | IDS
All hail superfluous statues WE SAY: If you’re going to build a religious statue according to government legislation, you might as well build them all. We’ve all had those times when we wish government would really push for the unnecessary things we want. Like building the Death Star from “Star Wars” or national “Netflix and Chill Day.” But there are some requests that are just too excessive. The Satanic Temple formally requested authorization from the Arkansas Capitol Arts and Grounds Commission last week to erect a Baphomet statue next to the proposed and accepted statue of the Ten Commandments at the state capitol in Little Rock, Arkansas. Approved Arkansas
Senate Bill 939 allows a privately donated statue of the Ten Commandments to be placed on the grounds of the capitol. The purpose of this statue is to represent “an important component of the moral foundation of the laws and legal system of the United States of America and the state of Arkansas,” according to the bill. While this justification does not contain any religious rhetoric, we just can’t get over that the monument alone is religious rhetoric. Neither can Satanists, which is why they adopted similar language to justify the Baphomet statue.
The Satanic Temple claims its goat-headed statue is intended to memorialize “various historical witch hunts and homage to the persecuted free-thinkers and ‘heretics’ who helped inform American secular jurisprudence.” If Christians can justify the placement of a religious statue based on historical connection to U.S. and Arkansas law, the Satanic Temple can follow suit with an equal justification for the presence of their beliefs at the state capitol. The self proclaimed mission statement of the Satanic Temple is, “to encourage benevolence and empathy
among all people, reject tyrannical authority, advocate practical common sense and justice, and be directed by the human conscience to undertake noble pursuits guided by the individual will.” Given this eloquent definition of the beliefs, we believe the request to place the Baphomet statue on capitol grounds reflects an effort not only to have Satanic beliefs represented next to Christian beliefs, but also to demonstrate the problem of displaying a religious monument on government property at all. The Satanic Temple originally intended for
the Baphomet statue to be in Oklahoma, but the Oklahoma Supreme Court decided another Ten Commandments statue there was unconstitutional. After the Oklahoma Supreme Court ruling, we believe the same fate awaits the Arkansas statue if the state does not open Little Rock to monuments of other religions. In fact, atheist, vegan and Hindu groups have made similar efforts to the Satanists to have their beliefs represented on capitol grounds. Additionally, the Satanic Temple said “the state either allows for an open forum
available to private donors, or it does not. The legislature doesn’t need to approve our monument, as the approval of the Ten Commandments already established the parameters by which monuments are allowed on capitol grounds.” We think the Satanic Temple couldn’t have articulated the heart of the issue any more clearly. Either Arkansas allows the Baphomet statue and subsequent religious monuments to be placed near the Ten Commandments statue or Arkansas does not allow any religious statues in the capitol, regardless of historical justification.
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PEYTON’S PERSPECTIVE
Jordan River Forum
Matt McGorry’s essay on feminism identifies male efforts for equality
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Students should try living homeless for once The last few editions of the IDS have had articles on a perfect storm. This is referring to new students in overflowing housing and how the university is short nearly 300 beds. Bloomington has a perfect storm every year. When the Interfaith Winter Shelter, a shelter for the homeless,
closes, Bloomington is short nearly 200 beds. No one seems to be trying to find these unfortunate people beds, and they are forced to sleep in the gutters. Maybe if the new students were forced to sleep in the gutters, Bloomington would step into action and try to find a bed for everyone regardless of
one’s status as a student or not. The two homeless shelters in Bloomington offer 36 beds with no overflow housing leaving nearly 200 with no place to sleep. Robert Kimmel A homeless man in Bloomington
A SLICE OF SOMETHING REAL
Clerks around U.S. avoid same-sex marriages Although landmark Supreme Court case Obergefell vs. Hodges gave same-sex couples the legal right to marry across the U.S. in June of this year, the problem of clerks not issuing marriage licenses is occurring across the nation. Kim Davis has become famous for refusing to issue marriage licenses to samesex couples in Kentucky based upon her religious belief to obey “God’s authority.” Davis is by far the most vocal and defiant clerk refusing to administer licenses, but giving her all the media attention regarding a much larger movement is obscuring the real problem — whether or not religious objection to issuing marriage licenses is constitutional. This refusal of service by clerks all over the country, particularly in Alabama and North Carolina, has led to magistrates traveling to other counties in order to perform marriages.
Religious objection is causing other clerks to work more and longer hours, all on the taxpayer’s dime. Not only is this trend a misappropriation of government funds, it also means these clerks are breaking the law. Columbia Law School professor Katherine Franke told the Guardian that the actions of these states, “gives a special privilege to those that hold certain religious beliefs, which crosses the line into making someone’s personal religious belief part of the state’s public policy.” While I agree with Franke wholeheartedly, there should be a compromise for clerks who do not wish to burden their faith. A new state law in Utah gives hesitant clerks a better option than not doing their job. The religious objection law permits clerks to stop solemnizing (performing a ceremony) marriages but still requires them to issue marriage licenses. Ricky Hatch, a clerk in
Utah, said the law necessitates him to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples as a legal obligation but does allow him to abstain from officiating a ceremony he does not consciously advocate. Hatch said, “My decision does not prevent the marriage from taking place, but I am also not personally promoting the practice.” Franke said, “Religious liberty rights end up shifting a cost to other parties, whether it’s the public or other public officials — that’s gone too far.” Religious objection is allowing these clerks to free themselves of ethical turmoil, while simultaneously shifting the consequences to other clerks, taxpayers and same-sex couples. These clerks took an oath when they came into office swearing to serve all the public. It is not within the clerk’s discretion to decide who is included or excluded based upon their personal, moral or religious beliefs. It simply
Rachel Miller is a senior in art history and political science.
shouldn’t be this hard for same-sex couples to marry when same-sex marriage is now a constitutionally protected privilege. An opinion from the Ohio Supreme Court states, “A judge may not decline to perform all marriages in order to avoid marrying same-sex couples based on his or her personal, moral or religious beliefs.” I sincerely hope this issue is settled by the U.S. Supreme Court or by the supreme courts of each state wherein same-sex couples have such terrible access to marriage services. Personal, moral and religious beliefs should not allow certain groups of people to refuse to obey the law, especially when it comes to discriminating against an already ostracized class.
Peering through heart-shaped glasses is always seen, from the point of view of a male audience, but never herself seeing the onlooker. Other times the girls are portrayed as innocents being observed in pristine condition, and on some covers a silhouette of a man, supposedly Humbert, is seen interacting with the girl. Unlike the infamous narrative of Humbert and his step-daughter, few in the general public know the story behind the cover. Nabokov never wanted a girl on the cover of his masterpiece. In fact, he vehemently objected to it. According to the New Yorker, Nabokov wrote to his publisher, “Who would be capable of creating a romantic, delicately drawn, nonFreudian and non-juvenile, picture for Lolita (a dissolving remoteness, a soft American landscape, a nostalgic highway — that sort of thing)? There is one subject which I am emphatically opposed to: any kind of representation of a little girl.” This quote was published in a critical piece in the New Yorker about “Lolita” covers
in 2013, and yet, in 2015, we still see the same doe-like eyes staring intimately from bookshelves everywhere. If ignoring an artist’s wishes is unethical, creating illustrations they explicitly expressed not to represent their work is atrocious. But why should we care? Nabokov has long since been dead and buried, and even if “Lolita” made the cut for Time magazine’s “100 Best English-language novels,” people aren’t snagging copies like “Go Set a Watchman.” Discussion and reconstruction of “Lolita” covers is necessary because the sexualization of young girls is nothing to gloss over. Our community felt shock at the reveal of Jared Fogle’s pedophilia. Fogle plead guilty to possession of child pornography and engaging in sex with minors in August. When the public becomes immersed in stories like Fogle’s, the typical questions plague us. Was he always like this, could this have been prevented and — the million dollar question — why? We participate in discussions about rape culture,
Madison Hogan is a junior in journalism.
the harms of pornography and the subliminal messages in sexually suggestive commercial ads. But when it comes to discourse about intentional and unintentional sexualization of young girls, we fall before the finish line. Could a cover like those commonly featured on “Lolita” acted as a mental conduit for someone like Fogle? Are images like these conveying the idea to men that it’s acceptable, rational and even natural to find a prepubescent girl sexually appealing? I’m not saying that looking at a “Lolita” cover is going to cause sexual perversion and begin an epidemic of sex offenders. Even reading the novel itself is unlikely to account for such damage. However, culture saturated in “Lolita” covers and the belief that sexualizing a young girl is acceptable if she “looks old for her age” might. maehogan@indiana.edu
LETTER TO THE EDITOR POLICY The IDS encourages and accepts letters to be printed daily from IU students, faculty and staff and the public. Letters should not exceed 500 words and may be edited for length and style. Submissions must include the person’s name, address and telephone number for verification.
Peyton Hurst is a junior in journalism.
McGorry were to ask, “If not me, who? If not now, when?” which are indeed wise words to live by. After that moment, he said he felt some unrecognizable feeling inside him and some sort of shift. He then realized the feeling reminded him of falling in love. I’m with you on that one, Matt McGorry, because I think I’m falling in love too — with you. McGorry previously had been a pretty neutral guy who shied away from expressing his opinions on social issues. He feared the negative feedback he would receive from the public. His fear quickly dissipated, however, once he fell in love with feminism. McGorry said he decided it was time to speak up even though he knew it’d be easier to say nothing at all. McGorry also claimed feminism helped him become interested in other social issues as well, such as the Black Lives Matter movement. Being able to recognize your own privilege is important to understand the inequalities our society faces today and the people it affects. Gender inequality is a real issue and to pretend that it isn’t is just plain ignorance. I think if all men took a page from McGorry’s book and identified as feminist, our society would allow everyone to prosper. So, use your voice. Especially if you’re privileged, because if not you, then who? prhurst@indiana.edu
THE FITZ FILES
Sanders may feel the “Bern” if he doesn’t secure the black vote
rcm2@indiana.edu
IT’S A MAD MAD WORLD
“Don’t judge a book by it’s cover,” never meant as much as it does for Vladimir Nabokov’s “Lolita.” Whether you’ve seen Stanley Kubrick’s film adaptation, wondered about Lana Del Rey’s obsessive personalization of the novel or even just recognized the heartshaped sunglasses, you’ve probably heard a thing or two about “Lolita” and have made your own assumptions about the book. While the book itself poses questions about toxic relationships, the reliability of Humbert Humbert as a narrator and the mental psyche of a pedophile, what interests me is the exterior of “Lolita” — specifically, its cover. Walk into any bookstore in the U.S. and you’ll probably find a “Lolita” bound in a cover displaying a girl or even just parts of one. Over the years, we’ve seen many forms of Lolita on her cover. Sometimes these children — and they are always children — are sitting in sexually charged positions, staring seductively at an unseen audience. Like most women portrayed in art, here Lolita
Since its first utterance, the word “feminist” has been associated with bra-burning women and women who hate men. However, if you’re not ignorant, you know this is not the case. Feminism, according to Merriam-Webster, is simply “the belief that men and women should have equal rights and opportunities.” Nowhere in there does it say anything about bashing men or burning our undergarments. Because of the association, it’s very rare for a man to identify as a feminist, which makes male feminists like the unicorns of the Earth. However, “Orange is the New Black” star Matt McGorry is breaking the seal on men identifying as feminists. The show is already notably feminist, but now one of its male actors? Score. In McGorry’s “How Becoming a Feminist Felt Like Falling In Love” essay, McGorry wrote he came to his “awakening” after watching Emma Watson’s United Nations “He for She” speech. McGorry wrote, “I cried. And not just a little ... I had ‘all the feels.’” Apparently, McGorry had never been told not to cry. He writes, “My parents never told me to ‘man up:’ if anything, they taught me that expressing vulnerability is braver than putting on a stoic front.” Bravo, McGorry’s parents. McGorry’s parents also pushed him to ask himself how he could become a better person, which he said inevitably led him to his current path as much as Watson’s speech did. The words Watson spoke that really resonated with
Letters without those requirements will not be considered for publication. Letters can be mailed or dropped off at the IDS, 120 Ernie Pyle Hall, 940 E. Seventh St., Bloomington, Ind., 47405. Submissions can also be sent via e-mail to letters@idsnews. com. Questions can be directed to the IDS at 855-0760.
Indiana Daily Student, Est. 1867 Website: idsnews.com The opinions expressed by the editorial board do not necessarily represent the opinions of the IDS news staff, student body, faculty or staff members or the Board of Trustees. The editorial board comprises columnists contributing to the Opinion page and the Opinion editors.
Who knew a popular candidate running for president would be another old white guy? Self-described democratic socialist Bernie Sanders is polling ahead of Hillary Clinton in two early states in the Democratic contest. In New Hampshire, he leads Clinton by seven percentage points. In Iowa, the lead grows. Clinton, who was the presumed front-runner for the nomination, is now trailing Sanders by ten percent. Does Sanders have an actual chance to win the nomination? Or even the presidency? Or are these polls, which take place months before the actual contests in each state, just full of hot air? I believe a hardcore leftist with frizzy hair and big glasses has a chance, but Sanders’ campaign faces a significant problem before it can become a success. Sanders’ outreach with black voters needs an improvement. Only 23 percent of black voters see Sanders in a favorable light according to a Gallup poll, compared to an overwhelming 80 percent supporting Clinton. This voting block is a must-win for any candidate seeking the Democratic nomination. South Carolina, which is the third state to have a Democratic primary or caucus, has a largely black electorate that votes in the Democratic primary. Clinton is the undisputed leader there, taking 46 percent in a recent poll. Sanders barely even registers at second place. He currently has 23 percent in the polls, just one more percent than current vice president Joe Biden, who hasn’t even announced whether he will run for president or not.
Tristan Fitzpatrick is a junior in journalism and art history.
His problems with black voters came to a head in August when members of the Black Lives Matter movement interrupted a campaign rally in Seattle, preventing Sanders from speaking altogether. The protesters demanded Sanders do more to include issues like police brutality in his campaign platform. Many liberal commentators said the protesters were targeting the wrong candidate. Sanders has a consistent record of supporting civil rights and went to hear Martin Luther King’s speech during the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in 1963. However, voters are more concerned about what a candidate is going to do for them in the future. While a reliable record may be important, that may not be enough if a candidate can’t make any promises to give voters something they want if said candidate is elected into office. Since the protest, Sanders has made changes to his campaign. He appointed a black woman involved in activism named Symone Sanders to be his national press secretary. This month Bernie Sanders spoke to a crowd of 1,000 people at historically black Benedict College in Columbia, South Carolina, urging his audience to focus on the issues facing our country. If our country listens to its people as much as he does, then we might just focus on the issues and fix them too. ttfitzpa@indiana.edu
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ARTS EDITORS: CASSIE HEEKE & BRIDGET MURRAY | ARTS@IDSNEWS.COM
PHOTOS BY KATELYN ROWE | IDS
Martha Eason sings out her window in a dress rehearsal for “The Barber of Seville” Monday night. Martha Eason plays Rosina, a girl locked in a tower by Dr. Bartolo.
‘These people really know how to
bring it alive’ IU Opera opens season with Rossini’s comedic classic, connects audience to various cultures By Brooke McAfee bemcafee@indiana.edu | @bemcafee24601
Inside the Musical Arts Center, the orchestra for “The Barber of Seville” performed a lively overture. As the curtains opened on stage, they revealed a band of musicians gathered on a street in Seville, Spain, outside a house. Count Almaviva, played by Jacobs School of Music second-year master’s student Lucas Wassmer, stepped into focus as he began singing to the window of the woman he loves. Thus began the first full dress rehearsal for IU’s production of “The Barber of Seville” on Monday evening. The show opens the 2015-16 season of IU Opera & Ballet Theater at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Sept. 18. The show will run through Sept. 26. Single tickets for the opening performance are $25 for adults and $12 for students, and seating is general admission. “The Barber of Seville” is a comic opera by Gioacchino Rossini that premiered in 1816. The story is centered on the character Figaro, a barber who helps Count Almaviva rescue Rosina, the girl he loves, from the man who plans to marry her. “The Barber of Seville” is an “escape opera,” stage director Garnett Bruce said, and it involves Figaro using his wit to help humanity and save characters from predicaments. The production features two different casts who will alternate between shows.
Having two casts allows for two different interpretations of the show, Bruce said. Each singer can demonstrate his or her own characterizations. Bruce said “The Barber of Seville” is a well-known opera with music that even those who are unfamiliar with opera will be able to recognize because of its prevalence in popular culture. “Thanks to Bugs Bunny, we all know about Figaro,” he said. The audience should be prepared for performances to last about three hours, since operas use long musical themes throughout the show, Bruce said. He said the length allows audiences to connect with the music and the story. “Opera gives you the time to expand and to contemplate and to appreciate the beauty and the journey the character will make,” he said. Bruce said “The Barber of Seville” will appeal to audiences because of its comedic elements, as it is full of disguises and surprises. The element of contrast adds humor to the opera, Bruce said. Musical contrasts with low and high sounds and fast and slow speeds are particularly prevalent. Rossini took his music beyond the borders of classical music, Bruce said. “The Barber of Seville” features conductor Paul Nadler, who has conducted this piece all over the world, including at the Metropolitan Opera. “He’s able to shape us, lead us and give room for ideas to expand,” Nadler said.
Heeseung Chae, as Figaro, and Lucas Wassmer, as Count Almaviva, read through a letter that the count received from Rosina in the first act of “The Barber of Seville.”
Putting together a production of “The Barber of Seville” is like a meal that combines an old recipe that has worked for years and fresh ingredients, Bruce said. The recipe is Rossini’s famous opera, and the ingredients are the performers. “These people really know how to bring it alive,” Bruce said. Bruce said one of the most exciting parts is the magic of the ensemble, when the characters and the chorus sing together all at once. “When you’re an audience member at a Rossini opera, you sort of get caught up in the breathlessness of it, because you keep wondering if it’s going to fall apart,” Bruce said. “It’s like NASCAR — are we going to get into a car wreck? Are we driv-
THE BARBER OF SEVILLE 7:30 p.m., opens Sept. 18, the MAC ing too fast around the track?” One of the reasons the opera remains popular is because it relies on the ingenuity of the performers, he said. Bruce said it was a great joy to work with the students because they are encountering the material for the first time and bringing a youthful energy to the work. Connor Lidell, a first-year master’s student studying vocal performance in the music school, plays the character Don SEE BARBER, PAGE 9
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SPORTS
EDITORS: NICOLE KRASEAN & TAYLOR LEHMAN | SPORTS@IDSNEWS.COM
Hoosiers improve to tenth in the nation The IU men’s cross-country team moved up one spot in the national rankings this week, coming in at No. 10. The Hoosiers received 240 points, six behind ninth place Virginia. Colorado is No. 1.
The only Big Ten team ranked above IU is cross-country powerhouse Wisconsin, who is ranked No. 4. Michigan is ranked just below IU at No. 11, and Michigan State checks in at No. 28, giving the Big Ten four teams in the top 30.
TRACK AND FIELD
Former Hoosier competes with world’s best By Taylor Lehman trlehman@indiana.edu | @trlehman_IU
IU graduate Derek Drouin lined up at the edge of the tar, staring at the high jump pit waiting across the square. He was in Beijing competing in the International Association of Athletics Federations World Championships, and he hadn’t missed a jump through 2.33 meters until he missed all three at 2.36. However, Guowei Zhang of China and defending champion Bohdan Bondarenko of Ukraine missed as well, leaving the high jump world championship to a three-man jump-off. “At the end of the regular competition, I thought for sure that I was finished,” Drouin said. “I knew that I was tied for the lead, but I thought somebody after me was going to clear that bar.” Drouin, attempting his only opportunity to clear 2.34 meters in the jump-off, approached the pit with long strides, planted his right foot and curled himself above the bar, cementing his World Championships gold medal for Canada. “I really felt like I was the one to beat, that this was my championship to lose,” Drouin said. “I told myself so many times, ‘You can win this, you can win this,’ that when it finally happened, it was just a relief.” Since the IAAF World Championships were established in 1983, Canada had not won a gold medal in high jump, and no Hoosier had won an individual gold medal since 1956. With a personal record of 2.70 meters, Drouin had gone a month without jumping 2.30, he said, leading him to frustration and eagerness for the season to finish. Drouin earned bronze in the 2013 IAAF World Championships, when he lost to Bondarenko with a jump of 2.38 meters. He also won bronze in the 2012 London Olympics, where he finished in a three-way tie at 2.29 meters. “I think that, because I wasn’t just thrown into this atmosphere, it was a long one coming,” Drouin said about competing against the
IDS FILE PHOTO
Then-IU sophomore Derek Drouin competes in the high jump event at the 2010 NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championships. Drouin cleared 2.28 meters to earn the national title.
world’s best. “I competed in high school track, then college and finally on the world stage. Everything leading up to this has prepared me for worldclass competition, so when I finally got to this point it just seemed like the new, natural challenge that I was prepared to take on.” In his competitions, Drouin has traveled to Beijing, Moscow, Sydney and London, as well as other international cities. “My absolute favorite place that I’ve traveled to is definitely Sydney, Australia,” Drouin said. “I spent a month there earlier this year getting in some warm-weather training while it was still winter here, and it’s also where I kicked off my 2015 season.” Before his worldwide endeavors and his collection of colored medals blossomed, though, Drouin’s career began in Bloomington, in IU’s track and field program. * * * Drouin was at recess in elementary school in Corunna, Ontario, Canada, playing on jungle gyms with his friends, when the track coach spotted him and approached him
about track and field. “The track coach came up to me and told me that I was going to run track,” Drouin said. “So I did.” But it wasn’t until he reached St. Patrick’s Catholic High School that Drouin began taking the sport seriously. He was named track and field Most Valuable Player for St. Patrick’s every year 2005-08, and he earned two silver medals at the Canadian Junior National Championships. For his accolades, IU recruited him aggressively. “We didn’t see Olympic potential back when we recruited him,” IU Coach Ron Helmer said. “What we did see was his size and pure athletic ability. He also had the ability to rise to the occasion when under pressure.” Drouin proved the coaching staff right immediately, as he won the 2010 NCAA Indoor National Championship in the high jump with a clearance of 2.28 meters. He then went on to win the NCAA Outdoor National Championship with a jump of 2.26 meters, sweeping the championships in his freshman season. “When the lights are on, Derek competes,” Helmer
said. “That’s something that a lot of kids have trouble with, performing under pressure, but Derek didn’t, and that really changes the challenge when it comes to developing as an athlete.” Drouin went on to win the next indoor championship in 2011, with a jump of 2.33 meters, to claim his third straight championship. But midseason in 2011, Drouin’s sophomore season, he suffered a Lisfranc fracture in his foot, taking most of the year to recover. “I’d say his biggest challenge was recovering from the injury,” Helmer said. “Most athletes with high expectations find it to be debilitating, but he managed it really well and came out strong the next year.” Drouin finished second in his first championship attempt after his injury, but he competed in the 2012 London Olympics the same summer after the championship. Earning bronze in the Olympics, Drouin was ready to return home as a student at IU. “I’ve always been one to avoid the limelight whenever possible, so going back to class was a nice excuse to get
back into a normal, low-key routine,” Drouin said. Drouin returned to NCAA Track and Field the next season, winning indoor and outdoor championships as a decathlete his senior year. He also earned the 2013 Bowerman Award, which recognizes the best track and field athlete in the nation. “The time that stands out to me the most in Derek’s time here was the first National Championship he won after the injury,” Helmer said. “To be an elite athlete, you need to be a risk-taker, and it’s tough to be a risk-taker when you suffer a serious injury, but he did it. I feel that good things need to happen to good people.” Even though he has won Olympic and World Championship medals, Drouin still takes pride in his NCAA titles. “I don’t think winning any other accolade would ever diminish an NCAA title,” Drouin said. “It’s a feat that I’m still really proud of. So many of the faces you see at NCAA are the same faces in the finals and on the podium at the world championships two months later.” * * *
At practice Aug. 30, before the Hoosiers embarked on their long run for the week, the runners were sitting in the locker room on their phones. They were watching Drouin. The Olympian has not only gained the respect of his home country, but won the adoration of former IU teammates and those who have joined the program since. A banner with his picture and an image of the Bowerman trophy hangs above the entrance to Gladstein Fieldhouse, where the Hoosiers compete and practice in the indoor season. “When we started out here at IU, we were kind of lost,” senior decathlete Stephen Keller said, including his teammate senior decathlete Dylan Anderson. “We didn’t even know we needed a strong, focused mindset. But Derek, he was always in control and knew that what he was doing was right. He really took us under his wing.” Keller and Anderson, who both came into the program in 2013, Drouin’s senior season, practiced and competed with the Olympian in his final year in the program. Keller said he noticed no one is aware that they are standing, sitting or talking with a five-time NCAA Champion or a medal-bearing Olympian outside of the track and around people in public. “He is very, very humble,” Keller said. “He doesn’t like to talk about track unless he absolutely has to. He just talks about what’s up and what’s going on. I really look up to him for that.” Drouin continues to train in Bloomington when he’s not overseas or finding warmer climates to train, and he is slated to be a volunteer coach for the IU program, as he also continues to work on making the IU program better. “Track is just a sport, not my entire life,” Drouin said. “I’ve always said that the day that this starts to feel like a job or a responsibility is the day I’ll know it’s time to retire. So at the moment, this is just part of my life and something I’m still doing because of my love of the sport.”
NO PARKING TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE
Novak Djokovic returns a shot to Andreas Seppi during their thirdround match at the U.S. Open Championship at the Billie Jean King Tennis Center in Flushing Meadows in New York on Friday, Sept. 4, 2015.
ON GAME DAY
MIKE DROP
Vehicles not moved are subject to ticketing and towing.
Djokovic proves he is among the best ever
For more information, call 855-9848 or visit www.parking.indiana.edu
After the confetti cleared, Rod Laver Arena emptied and the lights went out, men’s tennis had two questions answered. Novak Djokovic was the champion of the 2015 U.S. Open, and Djokovic also dominates the game. When Roger Federer’s shot went long to end the U.S. Open Final on Sunday, Djokovic glanced over to his box with his finger pointed to his heart. He had become the eighth player in tennis history to win ten majors. But with Sunday’s victory over the all-time grand slam leader Roger Federer, new questions can now be asked. For example, can Djokovic actually catch Federer? We once thought Rafael Nadal was going to be the one to match Federer, after Nadal won his 14th grand slam at the 2014 French Open. Since then, Djokovic has practically run the table.
MICHAEL HERNANDEZ is a junior in journalism.
Djokovic had a recordbreaking year in 2011, finishing the season with three major titles, a 70-6 record and year-end No. 1 ranking. Tennis legend Pete Sampras called Djokovic’s 2011 campaign “the best he has ever seen in his lifetime.” This season, Djokovic is 63-5 with seven titles, including three grand slams. Djokovic has also joined Federer and Rod Laver as the only three men to reach all four grand slam finals in a single calendar season, and Djokovic beat Federer in the last three grand slams finals they have played. Shortly after Djokovic raised his U.S. Open trophy, former tennis star John McEnroe claimed Djokovic to be in the top six players ever to play the game of tennis. SEE DJOKOVIC, PAGE 9
GO HOOSIERS! All vehicles must be removed from the Athletic Department parking lots north of 17th Street by 6 p.m. on the the day before all home football games. Any vehicle, with or without a permit may park in any CH space from 5 p.m. Friday until 11 p.m. Sunday.
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» BARBER
Learning a whole opera is a long process because she has to sing in Italian, she said. Not only does she have to learn the correct pronunciations of every word, but she also has to know the translations so she understands the meaning of what she is singing. “Rossini is particularly challenging because it’s a lot of notes,” Dewey said. “It’s what he’s known for — lengthy phrases and really virtuosic singing.” Bruce said opera can become a melting pot because of the way it spreads across cultures. "‘Barber’ is technically a French story, set in Spain, written by an Italian, performed by Americans,” he said. “It speaks to a number of cultures in a number of ways by delighting the ear and the eye.”
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 6
Basilio in one of the casts of the opera. He said his character was a mercenary who sides with whichever character has the most money to pay him. Lidell said his favorite part about being in the opera was the immersive experience of performing in front of an audience. “There’s so much magic in storytelling that you only get on the opera stage,” he said. Monica Dewey, a master’s student in the music school, said she enjoyed performing with her colleagues. Everyone brings something to the table, she said, and they work with each other to see what works. Dewey plays the role of Rosina in one of the casts of the production.
» DJOKOVIC
improve his game, appearing in 15 of the last 20 grand slams finals dating back to 2011. Nadal has been dealing with knee injuries since 2014, and even though Federer still astonishes people with his intensity of play, he is still no match for Djokovic. If Djokovic can stay healthy and continue to play at the level he has been for the past five years, not only will he be the one to pass Federer for most all-time grand slams, but there will be no conversation anymore about who is the greatest tennis player of all-time. It’s always been Federer and Nadal, but as these two champions face the end of their careers and deserve to march into the history books, they can hear Djokovic’s footsteps behind them. And they’re louder than ever.
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 7 There’s no question that Federer and Nadal are two of the greatest players ever to pick up a racquet, but the game of tennis has never seen a player like Djokovic. His quickness, speed and ability to slide on the hard court allows him the opportunity to reach balls that no one else in the history of tennis has been able to reach. “He’s perfected his game on hard court, always been a great clay court player and is now consistent on grass,” Federer said in an interview with ESPN. “To say the least, it’s very impressive.” Not bad for a guy who use to retire from matches due to heat exhaustion. However, with new conditioning coaches and a drastic change in his diet, Djokovic has been able to
Horoscope Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a 9 — Get into an intensive learning phase today and tomorrow. Write your discoveries. Apply gleaned solutions to your home situation. Discipline with household and family issues bears fruit between now and 2017, with Saturn in Sagittarius. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is a 9 — Make money and pay bills over the next few days. Discipline with communications provides success, with Saturn in Sagittarius until 2017. Online promotions and community connections grow your
STUDENT SPOTLIGHT
Student uses art as a voice By Jordan Morgan jordmorg@indiana.edu | @jo_mo14
IU junior Jeron Braxton may be an informatics student, but he said he spent a lot of his time creating video games and animation, web designing and producing his own music. Braxton said he took some art classes but decided against art as his major. He felt he would be doing himself a disservice to get a degree in something he was already skilled in. Instead, he chose to learn something completely new. “Really, I just have a creative spirit,” Braxton said. “It doesn’t matter what I’m doing, it’s going to be great.” He said he has been interested in art and music his whole life. Braxton said his mother was really into photography and his dad was a musician, so music was always around as he was growing up. However, he said he didn’t start taking art seriously until his junior year of high school when he began producing music on his computer. Braxton then started learning to animate and became interested in visual arts. “I just need to create,” Braxton said. “It’s not really an option for me. It’s something I need to do every day, or it just doesn’t feel right.” In his time at IU, Braxton has created two video games, designed his own website and produced his own album. He is currently working on a third video game and his
To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. venture. Participate in conversations for possibility.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is a 9 — Enjoy a two-day self-confident phase, with the Moon in your sign. You’re even more powerful than usual. Persistence and determination earn growing financial reward, with Saturn back in Sagittarius (until 2017). Focus for profitable results. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is an 8 — Peace and quiet soothe your spirit today and tomorrow. You’re especially sensitive. Follow a personal
NON SEQUITUR
passion, with Saturn in Sagittarius until 12/19/17. Consider how to align your energies toward serving what and who you love.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is an 8 — Friends inspire creative collaborations. Hold parties and meetings today and tomorrow. With Saturn in Sagittarius (until 2017), shift plans to increase focus on activities that fulfill you mentally, physically and spiritually. Contribute for the common good. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is an 8 — Focus on your career today
WILEY
RACHEL MEERT | IDS
Junior Jeron Braxton said he uses art as a way of expressing his creative nature. Although he is an informatics major, Braxton is skilled in video game design, animation and producing his own music. “I just need to create,” he said. “It’s not really an option for me.”
first ever cartoon, which he said he wants to pitch to big television networks. Braxton’s album is called “Sjape,” and he released it on SoundCloud last August. Braxton said, when it comes to his music, he liked to experiment with different sounds he’s never heard and see what evokes emotion. “That’s the cool thing about sound — there is just so much,” Braxton said. “I feel like the sonic rainbow is infinite.” Braxton said the music always came first, and the lyrics followed. He said his overall message in his songs reflected life and the beauty around us because he thinks we often take for granted what surrounds us. and tomorrow. Assume authority, and keep your promises. Do your best on the test. Friends provide necessary connections, with Saturn in Sagittarius (until 2017). Participate in a community conversation.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is an 8 — Conditions are better for travel over the next two days. New opportunities present themselves. Plan a business trip. Professional expansion, with Saturn in Sagittarius (until 12/19/17), thrives with expanding territory. Take charge. Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 9 — Attend to finances today and tomorrow, under the Scorpio Moon. Study money, and review your resources. Indulge a passion. Enjoy
Crossword
IU sophomore and friend of Braxton’s, Carter Barrett, said Braxton is probably the most creative person she knows. Barrett said Braxton’s songs reflected his personality. “I see Jeron in his music and his art,” Barrett said. Braxton has multiple love songs on his album, which he said he wrote about the women he has been in love with and also for people who need some help putting their feelings into words. Every song has a different feeling, he said, but he said he wanted his listeners to feel what he feels. Braxton said some of his songs also touched on social issues and socioeconomic barriers. He said he wanted to be the an educational expansion phase (until 2017), as Saturn re-enters Sagittarius. Learn by going to the source.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 9 — Share the load today and tomorrow, but hold on to the responsibility. Work in partnership, for best results. Make long-term financial plans and investments, as Saturn re-enters Sagittarius (until 2017). Nurture your family’s business or garden. Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Today is an 8 — It’s getting busy today and tomorrow. Draw upon hidden resources as the pace quickens. Until 12/19/17 (with Saturn back in Sagittarius), partnership holds the key to success. Develop and nurture your relationships, friendships and love.
su do ku
ACROSS How to play: Fill in the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 grid contains the digits 1 through 9, without repeating a number in any one row, column or 3x3 grid.
© Puzzles by Pappocom
BEST IN SHOW
1 Respectful title 4 Gnocchi sauce 9 First occurrence 14 Keats’ “__ to a Nightingale” 15 Stay away from 16 With 61-Across, Sri Lankan product 17 Pool user’s unit 18 Sweet sherry, e.g. 20 “__ Road to Glory”: Arthur Ashe history 22 Lip 23 Unbeatable hand 27 Hat worn with a kilt 30 “Romeo and Juliet” city 31 Laundry slide 33 __ Spumante 36 Here, to Henri 37 Album array 38 It happens four times a year ... and also in this puzzle’s circles 41 Comes to the point? 42 Have title to 43 Long basket, in hoops lingo 44 Clear the board 45 Daze 47 Only article in a U.S. state
Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Today is a 7 — Today and tomorrow are reserved for fun. Go play. Love blossoms and feeds your spirit. Rejuvenate mind and body with exercise and interesting scenery. Balance is the key to excellence with Saturn in Sagittarius (until 2017). Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is an 8 — Home and family entertain you today and tomorrow. The gentle approach works best. Step up your game with Saturn in Sagittarius until 2017. Focus on passion projects and causes. You can achieve your aim. Play for love. © 2015 By Nancy Black Distributed by Tribune Media Services, INC. All Rights Reserved
L.A. Times Daily Crossword
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
Difficulty Rating:
voice for his generation and change the world through his success. “I just realized that I am human being on this earth, what do I want to do?” Braxton said. Although Braxton said many people thought it would be hard to be an artist, he said it would be harder for him not to be one. He said creating is how he self-actualizes, and the process is him using his mind, body and soul at their highest capacities. “I want to be one of the best artists in the world, and I know that I can be,” Braxton said. Sometimes it’s as simple as asking for what you want, he said.
capital name 48 Square-bodied family autos 52 Burlesque wraps 54 Dot on a map 55 Pre-holiday mall indulgence 61 See 16-Across 62 Parenthetical remark 63 Piece of cake 64 Tach reading 65 Package sealers 66 Decorative pitchers 67 Critter in Egyptian art
DOWN 1 Like some eclipses 2 One of three Hells Canyon states 3 Square things 4 Kayak mover 5 Night before 6 Distress signal 7 “Whether __ nobler ...”: Hamlet 8 Ukrainian port 9 Stops wavering 10 Dinnertime TV fare 11 Snow runner 12 Ages and ages 13 Place to start a hole 19 Cheer from the crowd
PHIL JULIANO BREWSTER ROCKIT: SPACE GUY!
21 Steep-sided valleys 24 Wendy’s side 25 Maniacal 26 Military outfit 27 Private instructor 28 Square things 29 Like many a dorm room 31 Half a dance 32 Party organizer 33 Did one’s part? 34 Admonishing response to “Mine!” 35 Spanish finger food 37 Tubular pasta 39 MBA hopeful’s test 40 Took a dip 45 Struggle 46 Old-time broadcasters 48 Crone 49 Extreme 50 Some execs 51 Passport image 52 __ one’s time: wait 53 Soda machine inserts 55 Nocturnal flier 56 NATO founding member 57 Chihuahua complaint 58 Handle without care? 59 Reuben bread 60 Slogan ending?
Look for the crossword daily in the comics section of the Indiana Daily Student. Find the solution for the daily crossword here. Answer to previous puzzle
TIM RICKARD
10
I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | W E D N E S D AY, S E P T. 1 6 , 2 0 1 5 | I D S N E W S . C O M
» RAPE
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IDS FILE PHOTO
Forward Ben Maurey signals to the referee after being tripped during IU's game against Notre Dame on Aug. 30 at Bill Armstrong Stadium. IU lost 1-0 after Notre Dame scored a point during the second overtime of the game.
» IUMS
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 midfielder Femi HollingerJanzen, aren’t discouraged by their misses from the spot. Rather, those two, along with others, are still wanting to take penalty kicks, despite IU only making one of its last four dating back to last season. “We have to decide if it’s the best one to take it, that’s our decision in the end,” Yeagley said. “But players
» DRUGS
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 individuals were from a range of locations in the area, with Johnson County at the epicenter. He said the yearlong pro-
» FOOD
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 and this is the place that they know they’re going to get fed. It’s kind of hard to see them come here and not enjoy their lunch like they used to.” The pasta is mushier now, Sayles said, and kids don’t like it anymore. Johnson said the whole grain cookies aren’t as popular, either. Kids aren’t happy about the potatoes. “The mashed potatoes are really struggling,” Johnson
wouldn’t listen. In a security video reviewed by IU Police Department officer Rebecca Schmuhl, Enochs is identified as leading the victim down a hallway in the first floor of the fraternity house. After trying a door that didn’t open, Enochs led the victim to a different room across the hall. The victim left this room alone 24 minutes later. The video shows the victim encountering two other fraternity members after leaving the room before entering a first floor bathroom. The IUPD officer said she didn’t see the victim enter a private room with anyone other than Enochs in the video. Friends of the victim found her in the bathroom and took an Uber back to their dorm, where a friend, concerned for the victim’s safety, called IUPD. On April 21, the victim identified Enochs in a photo line-up as resembling the man who raped her, according to the probable cause affidavit. Enochs’ alleged other victim reported being raped in her sorority, Delta Zeta, on Oct. 12, 2013. Enochs was the victim’s
date that night for an offcampus dance to be hosted by Delta Zeta and Delta Tau Delta. The victim didn’t consider him a friend prior to the dance, according to the probable cause affidavit. At about 5:30 p.m., the victim and friends began drinking Fireball whiskey at the Delta Zeta sorority house. The friends went to the Delta Tau Delta house with Enochs, where the victim said Enochs began acting “kind of sketchy,” according to the probable cause affidavit. The group returned to the Delta Zeta house, where Enochs and the victim, along with friends, went to the victim’s room to continue drinking. The victim doesn’t remember anything between 6:30 and 7:30 p.m., according to the probable cause affidavit; however, friends in the sorority’s courtyard witnessed Enochs and the victim having sex through a window. One friend made eye contact with Enochs, who then immediately closed the blinds of the window, according to her statement in the affidavit. The friend then went to the room to find the door locked. Thinking she may have misinterpreted what she saw, the friend returned outside.
The victim awoke in a different outfit from what she had been wearing previously in the evening, according to the affidavit. Around 7 p.m., Enochs sent the victim two texts reading, “I need to find my boxers,” and “This is so uncomfortable.” Upon awaking, the victim was very confused thinking the dance, for which the buses had already left, had not started yet and told people they were going to miss the bus. The victim later texted Enochs to find out what happened. Enochs said the victim had blacked out, so he returned to the “Delts” house. The victim reported the rape to IUPD on Oct. 21, 2013. She didn’t originally want to pursue a criminal investigation in the case. It wasn’t until after she learned of the April assault that she agreed to proceed with an investigation. According to the probable cause affidavit, the victim had a “really weird feeling,” that Enochs may have been involved in the other victim’s case. Enochs turned himself in Friday Sept. 11 according to the case summary. He paid the Monroe Corporate Surety Bond of $20,000 Enochs is scheduled to appear in court in November 10.
are still going up and saying, ‘I want it,’ and that shows a lot of courage. Because again, it’s not easy to be in that spot when you miss one.” Against Butler, scoring will be important, whether it be from the run of play, a penalty kick or any other type of dead ball situation because it will be a big game, Yeagley said. In recent years, the Hoosiers have struggled against Butler. In addition to last
season’s scoreless draw, IU lost two years ago in overtime, 3-2. There’s a familiarity between the teams, Yeagley said. Both teams draw from the same player pool, so it’s inevitable the opponents will know each other. But that’s not why the game Wednesday night is important, Yeagley said. “It’s just another really big game for us rather than any rivalry scenario,” he said.
cess to get to this point was slow, but the end result is satisfying. He attributed the 50-person bust to a lot of collaboration, and he said it’s an arduous and tedious process for confidential informants to get
to the point where they can make a bust. “We started off by getting low-level offenders, and we try to flip them on their suppliers,” Cooper said. “Once we flip them, we try to work our way up the chain to get to the
bigger drug dealers.” O’Sullivan said he felt encouraged this morning to see how team effort had culminated in success for the surrounding police departments and the prosecutor’s office. To him, standing in front of a
room with so many officers excited to work as a team was satisfying. But, however happy he was for the community Tuesday, O’Sullivan said he realized there is plenty more work to do.
“We’re not done. This is a continuous effort for all of us,” O’Sullivan said. “It’s an ongoing problem in our community and we expect to continue to do more investigations. “It’s a war on drugs.”
said. Families across the U.S. deal with food insecurity. Many can’t afford to pay the full price of a daily meal — that’s where free and reduced lunch options come in. Almost all public schools in the U.S. are part of the federally-funded National School Lunch Program, which allows them to serve free or reduced-price lunches to kids who qualify. The USDA reimburses schools for every meal, so they end up with
the same income — but that meal must be considered balanced. So, for children to receive a free lunch, they must fill their trays with a certain combination of items — including a fruit or vegetable. Despite challenges caused by the act, both Sayles and Johnson agreed it has made lunches healthier. A 2015 study by the University of Connecticut reported kids were throwing away less of their meals, and a study by the Harvard School of Public
Health reported in 2014 kids were eating 16 percent more vegetables and 23 percent more fruit at lunch. Johnson called the meals she serves well-balanced. “I think it’s pretty good,” she said. “I think we have good lunches.” Charlotte Fenstermaker, a sixth-grader at Fairview Elementary, said she likes eating lunch at school. She said she thinks it’s healthy, but her cousin, fellow sixth-grader Nicholas Houshour, said the
food isn’t always good — it depends on what the kitchen serves. But Fenstermaker didn’t have any complaints about the food — in fact, the whole grain spaghetti is one of her favorite meals. Her only suggestion to the kitchen is to serve slushies every day. Both students said they eat their vegetables and always clear their plates. Sayles said while she has noticed kids eating more fresh fruits and vegetables, she’s also seen more food go-
ing into the trash. “It breaks my heart, because you don’t want to waste food,” she said. “A lot of people, particularly children, they go hungry.” Sayles, Hill and Johnson agreed that Congress should lift the strict 100 percent whole grain requirement, and keep sodium levels where they are. “I would jump for joy if they said you don’t have to drop sodium anymore,” Sayles said.
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CYCLEFIT & CIRCUITSTRENGTH PUNCH CARD
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