Monday, April 11, 2016

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Protest calls for Pence to resign

Monday, April 11, 2016

IDS Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com

INVESTIGATIONS CAMPUS SAFETY

By Erica Gibson ecgibson5@gmail.com | @erica_clare05

In the

DARK

Light should be a source of safety in times of danger, but the 56 blue light emergency phones on the IU campus are just a distraction for police and a plaything for students. IU continues to install new blue lights with every new construction. Parts 2 and 3 of this series will be published April 12 and 13.

By Nyssa Kruse nakruse@indiana.edu | @NyssaKruse

F

acing the red Woodburn clock, a campus tour guide last month began his safety spiel. To reassure anxious parents, he described the layers of campus safety measures. He introduced the various state and local police forces, the Safety Escort program and mentioned city and campus buses as safety features. “Anything I’m forgetting?” he asked his fellow guide. “We also have the blue lights,” she said. “But I don’t think they’ve ever been used in an emergency.” She wasn’t wrong — in the last six months, the IU Police Department responded to seven complaints of suspicious people or vehicles, 88 complaints of harassment or intimidation, 54 assaults, four forcible fondlings and five rapes. Not once did victims use a blue light emergency phone to report the crimes. The proper use of a blue light is to hit its red button when in an emergency. This activates a strobe light to draw attention to the area and dials 911 to IUPD. The University spends between $12,000 and $15,000 annually to maintain the lights. A new light costs about $4,200 to purchase, according to cost estimates from the manufacturer. “If we get a call from one of those phones, whether or not someone was on the other end talking, we send an officer to check on that,” IUPD Captain Andy Stephenson said. “If you hit that emergency button, it’s a serious thing for us. We treat that as an emergency situation.” When blue lights are hit, IUPD patrol officers drive to the location, canvas the area and consistently find nothing. This

happens almost every day. In this charade, time is wasted on a campus where four to six officers typically share responsibility for more than 48,000 students. Or, at least, the students who live on campus, because IUPD’s main jurisdiction is bounded by 17th Street, Indiana Avenue, Third Street and the bypass. In the last 10 years, IUPD has received more than 4,600 calls from blue lights. In the collective memory of veteran IUPD officers, there have only been four legitimate calls from the phones in the past 20 years.

INDIANAPOLIS — An American Sign Language translator in all black stood on the statehouse steps in Indianapolis, placed the palm of her right hand on her stomach and covered it with her left hand. She slid her right hand from beneath the left and pushed it outward. Birth. Then the translator put her palm on her stomach, formed a fist and then extended her fingers out in a downward motion. Abortion. Women held 97 signs bearing the names of every Indiana legislator who voted in favor of the controversial, comprehensive abortion bill House Enrolled Act 1337. To the far left, mitten-covered hands held a sign with one of Bloomington’s representatives. Rep. Jeff Ellington, D-Bloomington, was the only Bloomington legislator to vote in favor of the bill. On Saturday, more than 1,000 people gathered on the statehouse lawn to protest Ellington — and every other Indiana politician who supported HEA 1337 — as part of the Rally for Women’s Rights. The bill, passed by the legislature March 11 and signed into law by Gov. Mike Pence on March 24, enacted several measures to restrict access to abortion through all stages of pregnancy. Under HEA 1337, women must attend an ultrasound screening 18 hours before procedure and listen to the fetal heartbeat. Abortion providers are required to cremate or bury fetal remains from both abortions SEE RALLY PAGE 5

HISTORY The first blue lights were installed by 1989 at a time when the IU Office of Women’s Affairs wanted more safety features on campus. This coincided with a push by Women’s Affairs for more public telephones and more publicity for the Women’s Wheels program, now called Safety Escort. Almost 15 years later, IU’s student government questioned the usefulness of the blue lights. On the day the Crimson ticket took office in 2003, executives passed a resolution asking the IU Commission on Personal Safety to perform a detailed study on the maintenance, response time and overall dependability of the blue emergency lights. The study was never executed, Jonathan Deck, then-IU Student Association safety director, said last month. He said he can’t remember why. Today, students don’t think about them, even in situations when they could be used. SEE BLUE LIGHTS, PAGE 6

Breakdown of investment in blue light emergency phones, 2011-15 $51,235.90 Labor

$22,899.77 Equipment

Each light costs $4,200 to construct SOURCE IU Building Systems; Ramtel Corporation GRAPHIC BY EMILY ABSHIRE | IDS

PHOTO BY NOBLE GUYON | IDS

BASEBALL

Hoosiers pick up 1st sweep of season against Boilermakers By Zain Pyarali zpyarali@indiana.edu | @ZainPyarali

In a rivalry, almost anything can happen. IU picked up its first series sweep of the season against Purdue this weekend. Rain, hail and heavy winds in game one finished off by a two-hour rain delay and an improbable comeback in game three has the Hoosiers at a season-best four games over .500. In game one, an explosive seven-run third inning capped off by a bases-clearing 3-RBI double from sophomore outfielder Logan Sowers gave IU a commanding 8-1 lead. Senior starting pitcher Kyle Hart struggled on the hill after allowing just one run through his first four innings. The usually steady senior was touched for four runs in the fifth. “I thought he competed,” IU Coach Chris Lemonis said. “He got in that one inning and faced two really good hitters and he got beat by them a little bit, but I thought he was good.” The bullpen was steady in game two after senior starting pitcher Caleb Baragar tossed five scoreless innings with seven strikeouts to begin SEE BASEBALL, PAGE 6

Venue change doesn’t deter festival turnout for Culture Shock By TJ Jaeger TJaeger@indiana.edu | @TJ_Jaeger

What was meant to be an openair music festival turned into an indoor, all-day concert. Due to unseasonably cold weather, WIUX moved its 30th annual Culture Shock to Rhino’s Youth Center, the largest all-ages venue in town. But even Rhino’s wasn’t big enough to hold the festival, which is typically held in Dunn Meadow. Toward the end of the evening, WIUX volunteers turned fans away due to a full 400-capacity venue. Those who got in ranged from festival first-timers to season show-goers. Volunteers arrived early to set up

Weather’s effect on business, page 5 Photo gallery, page 9 The change of venue and the chilly temperatures brought fewer people to the festival, vendors said. Read the full story online at idsnews.com tables, tents and audio equipment. Due to the size of Rhino’s, most of the tables were set up in the parking lot, which required a team of volunteers to sport windbreakers. One volunteer was Mike Higgins, SEE CULTURE SHOCK, PAGE 6 Brenda’s Friend performs for a crowd during Culture Shock on Saturday at Rhino’s All Ages Club.

VICTOR GAN | IDS


Indiana Daily Student

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CAMPUS

Monday, April 11, 2016 idsnews.com

Editors Carley Lanich & Taylor Telford campus@idsnews.com

Event draws questions of vetting of speakers By Sarah Gardner gardnese@indiana.edu @sarahhhgardner

Rhonda Patterson, founder of Unslaved, a movement to promote awareness of human trafficking victims, spoke at the Indiana Memorial Union to a crowd of about 100 students March 30. The next day, Tracy McDaniel, the founder of Restored, a separate but similar organization that provides services to human trafficking victims, called the Indiana Daily Student with concerns that Patterson did not have permission to use the names and stories of victims in her presentation. McDaniel, who works with the state attorney general’s office, said she recognized the name of a girl from one of her cases. She said Patterson needed a written release to use that name. “If someone is going to come talk to a huge group of students about such a sensitive issue, I would like to know how they were vetted,” McDaniel said. Most of the organizations involved in bringing this speaker to IU focused on funding the event. There are a lot of costs associated with having an event and bringing an individual to the Union, said Megan Yoder, vice

president of programming for Net Impact, a student organization that helped sponsor Patterson’s talk. Net Impact, Union Board and Kelley Student Government were among the organizations that sponsored Patterson’s talk. But the original plan came from Jordan Austin, a senior who met Patterson at a convention in Indianapolis and invited her to speak at IU. “Pretty frequently we have students come to us wanting to bring a particular speaker to campus,” said Charlie Schraw, a member of Union Board who was involved in Patterson’s presentation. “We sometimes try to make the event a partnership between ourselves and them and support what they’re trying to do.” Union Board contributes funds for hotel costs and helps with logistics, such as finding tables and chairs, dayof-event setup and marketing for many of the functions that students ask for help with, Schraw said. “Vetting and background checks are definitely something we consider important,” Schraw said. “It’s just not necessarily our job. This event would most likely have happened even without our help. We had assumed there was a vetting process before it got to us.”

Kelley Student Government also mainly operates as a funding board, said Jack Pastuovic, a member of the student government body’s funding committee. “We’re a funding body, so we let the students pitch the events to us, and from their presentation we decide whether or not we want to fund it,” Pastuovic said. “We basically let them tell us why the event has merit. All of the research is done on the student-organization side.” The research does not always need to be rigorous, Yoder said. In the past, Net Impact has brought executives from Eli Lilly and Company to speak. Most of its speakers have been invited on the basis of professional achievements, Yoder said. “We do some LinkedIn profile vetting but not for any criminal background because there has been no need to,” Yoder said. “It’s more on professional background, and we just speak to them about their history.” This process gave only a limited understanding of Patterson’s background, McDaniel said. Austin, Net Impact, Kelley Student Government and Union Board were all unaware of any discrepancies in the event before McDaniel’s complaint. “The biggest problem is

ANDREW WILLIAMS | IDS

Rhonda Patterson, president and founder of UnSlaved Clothing Store in Fort Wayne, tells the story of a young Indiana girl being sold into human trafficking by her sister to pay off drug debt March 30 at the Indiana Memorial Union’s Frangipani Room. Patterson aims to bring attention to the growing issue of human trafficking by telling the various stories of Indiana human trafficking victims.

the sharing of a juvenile’s name, even a first name, without a written release,” McDaniel said of Patterson’s presentation. “You have to be careful of re-exploiting these victims.” Austin said she believed Patterson did have a written release to use the stories of individuals in her talk. Patterson said a written release was not legally needed because only a first name

was used. “I set up to meet with the victim and her mother, and we talked for two and a half hours,” Patterson said. “She couldn’t come to my presentation herself, but I had permission from the whole family to share her story.” The planning, funding and vetting for this event were done entirely by students. In the case of Patterson’s talk, the Indiana attorney

general’s office was concerned with how that could have happened and whether that was common for IU events, McDaniel said. She added the attorney general’s office would be willing to help with sensitive or controversial issues. “If you’re going to bring in someone you don’t know much about, you should have them officially vetted,” McDaniel said.

4 to be honored as Provost Professors IFC committee From IDS reports

John Louis Lucaites will receive the 2016 Tracy M. Sonneborn Award, an award given for outstanding research and creative teaching. After receiving this honor, Lucaites will present the annual Sonneborn Lecture this fall, according to an IU press release. The Sonneborn Tracy M. Sonneborn award and lecture are named after Tracy M. Sonneborn, a late IU biologist and geneticist known for his teaching. Lucaites is an English professor and associate dean for the arts and humanities and undergraduate education in the College of Arts and Sciences. He proposed and chaired the college’s Themester program for the 2010-11 school year, called “Making War, Making Peace.” Lucaites has directed 26 dissertations to completion, has served on eight dissertation committees and has chaired another six of these committees, according to the release. He has also co-authored the book “No Caption Needed: Iconic Photographs, Public Culture, and Liberal Democracy,” which was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize.

He is also co-author of the books, “Crafting Equality: America’s Anglo-African Word,” and “The Public Image: Photography and Civic Spectatorship,” which will be released later this year. No Caption Needed, a blog Lucaites co-hosts, focuses on the relationship between public culture and photography. Lucaites and three other IU-Bloomington faculty members will be honored as Provost Professors at the fall Sonneborn lecture. “It will be a pleasure to honor John Lucaites, Michael Adams, Jane Adams, Jane McLeod and Gregory Waller on behalf of the entire campus,” Provost Lauren Robel said in the release. “All are renowned scholars in their respective fields, as well as venerable teachers and mentors. They exemplify all that is great about our faculty.” Provost Professors are faculty designated positions for those who have achieved local, national and international distinction in research and teaching. Originally created in 1996, the position was once called Chancellor’s Professor. The Sonneborn Award carries a $3,500 cash award and $1,000 grant to support a student’s research or creative activity, according to the release. Provost Professors receive a $5,000 grant for a project demonstrating how teaching and research reinforce

one another, in addition to an annual $2,500 award given for three years. Adams, a historian of English words and language, is a lexicographer and has a strong interest in slang and jargon, especially in the language of television and invented languages, according to the release. Adams has created and taught graduate courses in literature and lexicography, as well as undergraduate courses about both slang and aspects of popular culture. As an editor of the Journal of the Dictionary Society of North America for several years, Adams has worked on dictionary projects and is currently writing two books entitled “Dictionary of American English” and “The Server’s Lexicon.” Adams has also authored three other books, including “From Elvish to Klingon,” which is the first academic survey of invented language, according to the release. His book, “In Praise of Poetry,” will be published this summer. McLeod, a mentor and teacher of medical sociology, sociology of mental health and research methods, focuses her work in the exploration of social disparities in the mental and physical health of children, as well as stress models for mental health research. McLeod has co-edited the

volumes “Mental Health, Social Mirror” and “Handbook of the Social Psychology of Inequality,” used for graduate courses, and has been published in the American Sociological Review, American Journal of Sociology and Social Forces. She has received the Leonard I. Pearlin Award for Distinguished Contributions to the Sociological Student of Mental Health from the American Sociological Association, according to the release. As a teacher and film historian, Waller chaired IU’s Department of Communication and Culture from 2003 to 2010 and the director search committee for the IU Cinema, as well as a faculty advisory board that vets programming ideas. Waller helped plan renovation to the IU Cinema and has written two books, including the Pulitzer Prize-winning “Main Street Amusements: Movie and Commercial Entertainment in a Southern City, 1896-1930.” “Professors Lucaites, Adams, McLead and Waller have demonstrated an extraordinary commitment to excellence in teaching and research,” Vice Provost for Faculty and Academic Affairs Eliza Pavalko said in the release. “They are truly deserving of this recognition.” Carley Lanich

IU biologist to lead study on evolutionary biology From IDS reports

An IU biologist received a $1.25 million award to help lead the world’s biggest coordinated project studying evolutionary biology. The grant to Armin Moczek, a professor in the Department of Biology, and colleagues at IU is part of an $8.7 million award from the John Templeton Foundation, according to an IU press release. IU’s team will lead three of 22 projects that include almost 50 scientists at eight institutions in the United States, Great Britain and Sweden. The collaboration marks an international effort to revise the theory of evolutionary biology under a new framework called extended evolutionary synthesis. The grant was inspired by two articles co-authored by Moczek and other international leaders in the field of evolutionary biology. The papers, which outline mechanisms that motivate evolutionary changes in organisms over time, explained that the theory of evolutionary biology should expand to include these new mechanisms.

“We’re excited for this opportunity to systematically carry out empirical research related to this new framework,” Moczek said in the release. “This generous support will allow us to test the assumptions and predictions of this unique conceptual framework in a way that cannot be accomplished by a single person or team, but rather requires coordinated effort by diverse researchers across multiple disciplines.” Scott Gilbert, an expert on evolutionary development at Swarthmore College, said the cooperative effort and research is essential to making progress with this area of study. “Recent studies, such as those in Armin’s laboratory, have shown that the environment can provide signals that help direct the development of organisms, and that the organisms provide signals that can modify their environment,” Gilbert said in the release. “The question isn’t whether this occurs but rather whether these factors are critical in evolution. To study that, one needs multiple interacting groups of scientists.” Moczek and his

colleague’s framework focuses on the idea that different organisms aren’t programmed by genomes but develop progressively. They assert that living things evolve and thus modify their environments, changing the ecosystem along with themselves. The framework views how organisms’ develop influences evolution, and allows inheritance to occur through non-genetic means such as symbionts, learning or culture, as well as genetics. The research does not argue that traditional evolutionary understandings are wrong, but are currently incomplete and must be adapted to gain a fuller understanding of how the evolutionary process occurs. At IU, Moczek and colleagues will lead three projects. The first will examine the evolutionary significance of developmental plasticity — an organism’s capacity to modify development in response to environmental conditions — in horned beetles. Moczek has worked with horned beetles in pioneering research in the field. The second, also led by Moczek, will use horned

beetles to explore the role of environment-modifying behaviors, such as constructing nests, and microbial symbionts, such as the gut bacteria that parents pass along to their offspring, on adaptive evolution. The third, led by Michael Wade, IU distinguished professor in the Department of Biology, in collaboration with Moczek, will develop theoretical models to explore the evolutionary dynamics between various species and their environments. These models will then be put to the test using horned beetles, their bacterial microbiome and symbiotic nematode worms. The other institutions supported by the foundation grant are Clark University, the Santa Fe Institute and Stanford University in the United States; Cambridge University, the University of Southampton and the University of St. Andrews in Great Britain; and the University of Lund in Sweden. Research on the project will coincide with the start of support from the grant in September. Taylor Telford

plans to improve mental health By Austin Faulds afaulds@indiana.edu | @a_faulds9615

In its first major event, the Interfraternity Council Mental Health Committee discussed plans to increase its presence on campus and increase awareness of resources available to students struggling with mental health concerns. On Friday, students gathered at Hodge Hall to discuss pressing issues for students struggling with mental health issues. The Mental Health Committee is an organization of brothers from various chapters who wish to bring the community together to discuss mental health issues, said Pablo Gallo, resources chair for the Mental Health Committee. “We stand together to eliminate the many stigmas surrounding mental health and make all members of this community feel comfortable discussing these issues,” Gallo said. The purpose of the event was to raise awareness for mental health problems within the greek community and student body as a whole, said Andrew Haffner, the committee’s director. One topic that was discussed at the event was stigmas associated with mental illness, particularly for men. Men suffering from mental illness sometimes shield their feelings through physical and verbal abuse toward others to preserve their masculinity, said Hunter Leum, a committee member. “Some say it’s not manly to share you have depression, but that’s not the case,” Leum said. “The most manly thing you can do is to talk to others and get some help.”

Leum said he understands this on a personal level. His father committed suicide after struggling with depression. Leum said he noticed a significant change in his father’s behavior in the last year of his life. Leum said he encourages others with depression to seek out help for their struggles. Those who seek help from the Mental Health Committee for their struggles with depression or other mental health issues won’t be victimized, regardless of gender, Haffner said. “It’s not a problem when a 20-year-old man cries,” Haffner said. “It’s not a problem when you reach out for help. That’s what we’re there for.” Another common problem faced by those with mental health issues is substance abuse, said Andrew Gjertsen, a committee member. Alcohol, cocaine, Xanax, vyvanse, Adderall and heroin are among the drugs often abused by those with mental issues in order to cope with their illnesses, Gjertsen said. Haffner said he is proposing new ideas to put in effect through the committee for next semester. One way he plans on doing this is by improving the mental health chair position featured in a few chapters on campus. Haffner said he wants there to be a mental health chair in every chapter soon. He said he would also like there to be more training for that position. Training to be a mental health chair would involve learning to recognize signs of SEE COMMITTEE, PAGE 3

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REAL wins elections in preliminary results IU Student Association 2016 vote totals

By Laurel Demkovich lfdemkov@indiana.edu @laureldemkovich

REAL for IUSA has won the IU Student Association elections with 2,806 votes based on preliminary results reported by the IUSA Elections Commission on Friday. Accelerate IUSA received 1,477 votes and RISE for IUSA received 2,040 votes. In total, 6,448 students voted. REAL President Sara Zaheer said when she heard the results she was so thrilled to see how happy everyone was. What Zaheer enjoyed about this campaign was seeing how students could come together and work to make the campus a better place. “I am so happy with every single person that put so much work into this campaign and worked endlessly and tirelessly,” Zaheer said. Although these early results show REAL winning, that could change based on complaints and vote deductions. All tickets had until 8 p.m. Friday to submit final complaints. The election commission has spent the weekend going over all complaints. If the commission decides to accept a complaint,

These are the total votes cast for each platform in the 2016 IUSA preliminary elections. 2,806

2,040 1,477

ACCELERATE IUSA VICTOR GAN | IDS

Senior Adam Kehoe manages a voting station for the IUSA elections Wednesday at the Indiana Memorial Union. The IUSA elections took place April 6 and 7.

RISE for IUSA REAL for IUSA

they then compared and decided any vote deduction based on infractions from previous years. If the infraction was more severe than any in the past, the commission held a public hearing to decide what percentage of votes a ticket will be deducted.

All complaints and written decisions will be available to the public on a bulletin board outside the IUSA Office within 24 hours of a public hearing, according to the election code. If any tickets would like to file an appeal after a complaint decision, they have

until Monday afternoon to do so. During the last two hectic days, Election Commission Chairman Adam Kehoe said he was very pleased by the ticket’s efforts in campaigning and sharing what IUSA is with the student body.

“I’m pleased with the turnout and all three tickets’ quality of platforms and policies,” Kehoe said. “It was a great two days and really cool to see students turn out.” The election commission will take the weekend to review all complaints and

SOURCE IUSA Elections Commission GRAPHIC BY EMILY ABSHIRE | IDS

appeals. Although there is no exact timeline set, the final results will most likely be decided by Tuesday or Wednesday, Kehoe said.

Panel speaks about underage drinking, drunken driving By Sarah Gardner gardnese@indiana.edu @sarahhhgardner

Girls Inc. participant Sabrina Gasana said she didn’t know Bailey Miller well. But when she heard Miller died in a car accident caused by a drunk driver earlier this year, she said she knew she could still do something about it. Gasana, 16, and several of her friends organized a presentation on underage drinking and drunken driving Friday in honor of Miller, who was also a Girls Inc. participant. A board with Miller’s name and a picture of her

» COMMITTEE

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2 various mental health issues, such as depression, substance abuse, eating disorders, stress and anxiety, Gallo said. Education on all the resources available to stu-

favorite pink cowboy boots sat in the corner of the Girls Inc. gymnasium where the panelists spoke. “When we found out about Bailey, we knew we wanted to make drinking and driving the topic of our panel,” Gasana said. “When you live in a college town, you almost get desensitized to the drunk driving accidents and underage drinking, but we wanted to try to make an impact.” The students organized the panel as part of Leading and Education Across Domains, a youth alcohol and drug prevention program. IU Police Department

Sgt. Rebecca Schmuhl, Ivy Tech Community College student Emylee Huard, Mothers Against Drunk Driving victim services specialist Lael Hill and LEAD director Eric Evans spoke on the panel. “Drivers under 21 make up about 10 percent of the driving population but account for 20 percent of all drunk driving accidents,” said Huard, who studies addiction. “It’s a consequence a lot of high school and college students don’t think about when they decide to drink.” Hearing of a drunk driving accident is no longer a surprise to those living in

a college town, Schmuhl said. She said she wishes students would recognize the science of what alcohol does to the body regardless of whether they are of legal drinking age. “Even if you’re of legal age or even if your blood alcohol content is below the legal limit, your coordination is off, your eyesight and hearing don’t function as well, and you just can’t focus your attention on multiple tasks at once,” Schmuhl said. “Science is science. You’re putting yourself at risk.” Schmuhl also reminded the audience of the Indiana

Lifeline Law, IU’s rules on student drinking and the required online safety class for IU freshmen. About 30 people attended the panel. Most were parents, and some brought their children with them. Bloomington resident Kim Cox said she thought the information was important for her 14-year-old daughter, Destiny, to hear. “I’ve heard most of this stuff before, but I still think the subject is important,” Destiny said. “When you see people driving badly on the weekends, you sometimes wonder if they’re sober. I think it’s better to learn that it’s a

problem out there sooner rather than later.” Students who knew Miller have been finding ways like this panel to honor her memory since her death, Gasana said. Miller’s high school’s volleyball team made shirts with her name on it, and the LEAD program plans to find other ways to remember her as well, Gasana said. “It was so weird to see her running around here and then find out she was dead,” Gasana said. “It could have been any of us standing here right now. I want my friends to be safe, and so I’m glad we could try to teach people about this.”

dents on campus would also be in the training, Gallo said. Two good sources of help for those facing mental health issues are OASIS and Crimson CORPS, said Emma Hughes, the mental health director for Culture

of Care. OASIS is a drug and alcohol information center on campus, Hughes said. Crimson CORPS is a campus organization for faculty and students. Hughes said every student has two free counseling ses-

sions available to them every semester through Counseling and Psychological Services. The Mental Health Committee hopes to work with the Panhellenic Association and organizations like Culture of Care in the future on projects for mental health awareness,

Gallo said. “In this way, we can all come together and work to address our common goals,” Gallo said. Although the Mental Health Committee is only composed of members of IFC, Gallo said it is the goal of the

committee to help the entire IU community. “Whether you like it or not, IFC is moving towards the immediate community, not just the greek system,” Haffner said. “We’re all in this together.”

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OPINION

Monday, April 11, 2016 idsnews.com

EDITORIAL BOARD

Editors Hussain Ather & Jordan Riley opinion@idsnews.com

WHO’S SANE

Neuroscience testifies

ILLUSTRATION BY EMILY TATUM | IDS

Free speech under fire WE SAY: Protect free speech, not hate speech The presidential debate has taken a new format — sidewalk chalk. Across the nation, universities have engaged a new freedom of speech debate on chalk messages scribbled across campuses. Messages on the University of Illinois’s quad read “They have to go back #Trump,” “Build the Wall” and “Trump Deportation Force.” These messages have brought forth issues of free speech and hate speech. The messages occurred during the same time a Knight Foundation and Newseum Institute study found 78 percent of college students believe campuses should expose students to all types of speech and viewpoints. However, the same study found students “believe colleges should be allowed to establish policies restricting language and behavior that are intentionally offensive to

certain groups, but not the expression of political views that may upset or offend members of certain groups.” We believe free speech on campuses must be encouraged to create the educational debates to question and defend values. The key is to differentiate free speech from hate speech. It’s difficult to evaluate when free speech crosses the chalked line to hate speech. This is not a question of sensitivity of generations. The debate needs personal responsibility and a willingness to entertain opposing beliefs in a mature manner. Every person is entitled to their own beliefs. However, that freedom of speech crosses over to hate speech when the objective of the message is not expression but inflammation. According to the Knight Foundation, 22 percent of college students “believe

colleges should create a positive learning environment for all students that would be achieved in part by prohibiting certain speech or the expression of views that are offensive or biased against certain groups of people.” While this ideal environment would create fewer arguments, it’s a direct stifling of first amendment rights. Restricting students’ abilities to express themselves leads to emotional turmoil. According to psychologist Barton Goldsmith of psychologytoday.com, “when you express how you really feel (in an important matter) , problems get solved, relationship issues get resolved and life is easier.” Self-expression such as students’ chalking “Trump 2016” across campuses like Emory and University of Tennessee at Chattanooga enables students to identify and address upcoming issues in

their communities. The key to these debates is self-filtering, which requires students to bring forth their opinions and emotions in an accurate way without being rude or threatening. Sixty-nine percent of surveyed students believe colleges should be allowed to establish policies that restrict slurs and other language that are intentionally offensive. Yet a 72-percent majority of students reject the idea that colleges should be able to restrict expressing political views. Surprisingly, Republicans, Democrats and Independents are about equally likely to oppose limits on offensive political speech (75 percent, 72 percent and 73 percent respectively). No matter if you’re Feeling the Bern or hoping to Make America Great Again, there’s a sidewalk square open for a respectful debate.

A TECH PERSPECTIVE

Healthcare security needs to shape up All around the United States, hospitals now face increasingly more attacks on technology infrastructure. On March 31, Californiabased Alvarado Hospital Medical Center reported a “malware disruption.” Kentucky-based Methodist Hospital stated March 22 it was operating in an “internal state of emergency” after attackers locked all the hospital data on its network. On Feb. 5, Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center reported a crippling attack. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office for Civil Rights shows more than 60 health care institutions have been hacked in 2016. OCR reported more than 111 million records were stolen in 253 incidents in 2015. Most were done through ransomware attacks. Ransomware encrypts all of the files on a system and typically blackmails the user to have the files

unencrypted. Hospitals are especially vulnerable targets because they are more willing to pay for the data than most other institutions. Hospitals can’t afford to have their systems offline for even a day because of the risk to people’s health. Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center willingly paid a $17,000 ransom in order to receive access to their own internal computer systems. Like all blackmail, attackers will focus their attention on those most willing to pay, which increases the risk for other health care institutions. The attacks directly affect all of us locally as well. At the end of March, King’s Daughters’ Health in Madison, Indiana, shut down all of its computers after ransomware was on the internal system. Additionally, Blue Cross and Anthem, insurance

providers for faculty at IU, reported extensive data breaches in 2015 that affected tens of millions of people. The International Data Corporation Health Insight Group predicts one in three Americans will have his or her information stolen through a health care data breach this year. This includes name, family relations, home address, date of birth, social security number, financial records and medical records. On the black market, this information is pure gold and contributes to identity theft. It’s time for health care institutions to beef up their technology security protocols or at least start by creating one. To start, our personal data needs to be encrypted so even if our information is stolen, the encryption will mean it’s useless to the thief. Secondly, health care officials need security training.

SAMAAN SHAHSAVAR is a freshman in informatics.

This would include learning not to click on malicious emails, not plugging in random USBs and not leaving their computers in the open. Finally, hospitals need to create more robust security systems. A simple username and password shouldn’t be the only thing blocking a single person from a cache of medical records. Databases should be monitored for intrusions. A new security policy would cost money, but health care institutions need to treat the IT department as a serious consideration in creating annual budgets. Our medical records are prime information that requires actual protection. sshahsav@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.

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.

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.

It’s like a scene from a “Looney Tunes” cartoon. A train, moments away from killing five people strapped to the tracks, speeds past your eyes. You have the opportunity to pull a lever that will switch the train to another track where the train would only kill one person. In the trolley problem, what do you do? Research evidence suggests the intricate wiring of our brain can tell us more about what we’d choose more than we might think. However, we shouldn’t let this scientific understanding of the brain upend the place of philosophy, especially when it comes to legal matters. If you choose to pull the lever and kill only one person, you might think, as a human being, it’s your duty to maximize benefit for the greatest number of people, which is known as utilitarianism. Making a decision based on its specific outcome is consequentialism. Or you might choose not to pull the lever. Your actions aren’t doing any harm in deciding who should have to die. Acting according to rules is a deontological approach. The question might show how we think about morals. A recent study at Harvard University shows people react differently through different versions of the problem. In the trolley problem, pulling the lever would kill only one person as a side effect of the decision, but, in a variation of the problem in which you can push one person in front of a train in order to save the lives of five people, your action is a means to an end. Through a combination of research in neuroimaging and behavioral studies, psychologist and philosopher Joshua Greene showed people react more negatively to killing one person as a means to an end rather than as a side effect of a

HUSSAIN ATHER is a junior in physics and philosophy.

decision. This distinction means our notions of responsibility, consent and other ideas might be governed by science more than we think. In questions of discontinuing life-sustaining care if a patient is going to continue to suffer or in determining the fate of a murderer who suffers from a psychiatric disorder, we can see how it would play a role. Aaron Krumins at ExtremeTech said the gap between science and the legal system will continue to grow and some neuroscientists like David Eagleman work to reform the legal system to remain up-to-date with neuroscience research. However, as 18th-century German philosopher Immanuel Kant said, studying concepts of the mind without empirical science is empty and studying science without philosophy is blind. The trolley problem shows the philosophical theories such as consequentialism and deontology that can’t be separated from science. For this reason, we mustn’t let our understanding of neuroscience entirely govern what we know about human rationality and responsibility, especially when it comes to the role they play in the legal system. As Kathinka Evers, a philosopher who studies the ethical questions raised by neuroscience, said, “philosophy and the neurosciences collaborate in a very fruitful manner.” We need to recognize neuroscience and philosophy go hand-in-hand. However, if you choose to ignore the work of philosophers in understanding the brain, I’d be the last one to pull the lever on you. sather@indiana.edu @SHussainAther

RILED UP

Sexism in politics As the Indiana primary gets closer, the decision about who to vote for becomes more and more crucial. For the Democratic race, Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton have the party so polarized everyone has an opinion and every delegate counts. A Hart Research Associates survey found 7 percent of Sanders voters could see themselves voting for Trump and 8 percent gave him a positive likeability rating. These numbers are small, but they are still baffling to me. I believe there are a lot of valid and unavoidable reasons not to vote for Clinton, and I don’t plan to. However, there are also some completely invalid reasons to vote against Clinton — namely, that she is a woman. Political science professor Dan Cassino of Fairleigh Dickinson University conducted a survey that asked American men about their spouse’s income and whether they preferred Clinton to Trump. Half of the survey pool was asked whether their spouse made more money than them before being asked about their political preferences, and half were asked at the end of the survey. Cassino found the majority of American men said they preferred Trump to Clinton only when the men were asked about their spouse’s income before they were asked about candidate preference. Cassino attributed this to “the threat to gender roles.” Men preferred Trump only after they were reminded of the threat to societal norms Clinton as president would supposedly represent. For some, this survey shows the subconscious desire to adhere to misogynistic societal expectations is prevalent in voting behavior, and that is unacceptable. It also questions other conclusions the public has drawn about Clinton and whether they have sexist undertones. One of the biggest reasons people dislike Clinton is that she lies.

JORDAN RILEY is a senior in comparative literature.

This is and has always been a huge character flaw for most politicians, but it’s a criticism that has stuck to Clinton more firmly than her opposers. Women being depicted as liars who can’t be trusted is so prevalent in our society it almost isn’t worth explaining. The clichés of the femme fatale to the biblical vilification of Eve to the harmful stereotype of false rape victims are the most easily identifiable examples of this ludicrous assumption about women. Its prevalence in this election can’t be denied when you look at the facts. According to the PulitzerPrize-winning organization Politifact, 50 percent of Clinton’s fact-checked statements are “True” and “Mostly True,” while only 14 percent are “False” and “Pants on Fire,” the lowest fact-check rating. Compare this to President Obama, who ranks at 48 percent and 14 percent, respectively, or Sanders, at 49 percent and 15 percent, respectively. Ted Cruz’s statements are 22 percent “True” and “Mostly True” and 38 percent “False” and “Pants on Fire,” which is pretty bad but still better than Trump. Trunp’s statements have been ruled 8 percent “True” and “Mostly True” and 60 percent “False” and “Pants on Fire.” So if you are thinking of dumping the Democratic party for Trump because you can’t stand Clinton’s lies, maybe you should take a closer look at your own gender bias. There are a lot of valid reasons not to vote for Clinton, and I support anyone who expresses them. I don’t support thinly veiled sexism or stereotypes about women in power. And I don’t support anyone voting for Trump. jordrile@indiana.edu @RiledpIDS


Indiana Daily Student

REGION

Monday, April 11, 2016 idsnews.com

Editors Alexa Chryssovergis & Lindsay Moore region@idsnews.com

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Bloomington has annual craft beer festival By Melanie Metzman mmetzman@indiana.edu @melanie_metzman

Three thousand people were crowded in Woolery Mill, a historic limestone mill, for the Bloomington Craft Beer Festival on Saturday. This was the sixth annual festival put on by the Brewers of Indiana Guild. The festival featured craft beers from more than 50 Indiana breweries and food from six local restaurants. More than 2,600 tickets were sold. “It exposes people to a lot of local beers, breweries and music,” said David Elyea, gate captain at the Indiana Craft Beer Festival. “It’s all about sharing the love of craft beer.” Andrew Melvin, an IU alumnus who now lives in Indianapolis, said he likes going to festivals like this to find new breweries. The festival is one of three annual fundraisers for the Brewers of Indiana Guild, which legislatively promotes Indiana’s small breweries. “Buying a ticket for this event goes directly to the efforts to support our brewers,” said Tristan Schmid, communications director for the Brewers of Indiana Guild. The guild has lobbied

» RALLY

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

and miscarriages. HEA 1337 requires women seeking abortions to acknowledge “human physical life begins when a human ovum is fertilized by a human sperm.” At the rally, Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky CEO and President Betty Cockrum disagreed. Surrounded by “Fire Pence” signs and the names of men and women who hope to defund her organization, Cockrum stood in the center of the Statehouse steps. “It is fact that a fertilized egg is not a pregnancy until it implants in the uterine wall,” Cockrum said to the crowd. Christian speaker Sue Ellen Braunlin said law should be rooted in fact, not religion. Braunlin, who represented the Indiana Religious Coalition for Reproductive Justice, said the law reflected the religious beliefs of the lawmakers who created it at the expense of everyone else. Rabbi Paula Winnig said Jews differ from Christians on abortion. “Life for Jews begins when a fetus comes to life outside the womb,” she said. “This law is an infringement on my rights as a Jew and as a woman.” On the outskirts of the rally, a few dozen counterprotesters held signs quoting the Bible. “God hates the hands that spill innocent blood. Proverbs 6:17.” Amidst talk of hellfire and baby killing, rally attendees blocked the pro-life posters

for laws such as permitting growler sales on Sunday at breweries and increasing barrelage limits from 30,000 to 90,000, which allows the breweries to produce and sell more beer in Indiana, Schmid said. Previously, if a brewery produced more than 30,000 barrels, it would have to sell its extra barrels out of state. Passing this law allows Indiana breweries to sell more beer in Indiana, he said. The Brewers of Indiana Guild has also made the Drink Indiana Beer app and will release its first Indiana Craft Beer Guide next month. Unlike many beer festivals, particularly ones out of state, the Indiana Craft Beer Festival is not for profit, Schmid said. This is the second year in a row the festival has featured solely Indiana breweries. “This is really a grassroots effort to make the beer that so many people are enjoying today,” Schmid said. “If you have a local brewery you enjoy going to, by coming to this festival you are helping ensure that these breweries continue to thrive.” Billy Perkins, a sales representative with Tin Man Brewing Company in Evansville, Indiana, said they love other with their own signs. “I am being forcibly prevented from my right to free movement,” said one prolife protester through his megaphone. Under HEA 1337, it is illegal for women to seek abortions based on the fetus’ sex, race or possible genetic abnormality or disability. Braunlin condemned those who supported this provision of identifying as pro-life. “This bill protects fetuses with disabilities in a familiar way,” Braunlin said. “It forces them to be born and abandons them after birth.” Cara Roellgen spoke to the large crowd about her own abortion. Though Roellgen’s pregnancy was not unwanted, she chose not to carry it to term after it was diagnosed with anencephaly. Anencephalic babies are born without brains and die moments after birth. Though Roellgen’s abortion was a legal procedure, she had difficulty obtaining insurance coverage. She was told her abortion could cost between $10,000 and $20,000. “I can’t believe she had to go through this,” an audience member said. Roellgen said if she would have sought her abortion this July instead of last September, it would not have been covered by insurance and could possibly violate HEA 1337’s disability clause. “I never thought that I would be in a position to need an abortion myself, and I thought that I would never seek that as an option,” Roellgen said. “Thankfully, it was covered because my doctor had the freedom to state

YULIN YU | IDS

Magan Harris, left, and Whitey Miller drink beer during the sixth annual Bloomington Craft Beer Festival, put on by the Brewers of Indiana Guild at Woolery Mill. Participants tasted hundreds of local and regional draft beers.

Indiana breweries and craft beer, so coming to the event is a pleasure. Craft beer breaks people out of their comfort zone, said Dayna Serbon, an outside sales representative with Saint Joseph Brewery. The local breweries do a lot to support the community, in writing exactly why I was having the procedure. If HEA 1337 is allowed to go into law this summer, women and their doctors won’t have the freedom to discuss all their options anymore.” Rally organizer Anette Siegel Grossman said she asked Roellgen to speak after Grossman read a post Roellgen put on the rally Facebook page. Grossman said many of the other speakers were people she’d worked with at previous rallies for social justice. The Rally for Women’s Rights is the third protest Grossman has organized, and she said it’s the largest by far. IU junior Colton Shaeffer said IU students could benefit from participating in grassroots movements like the rally. “There’s a lot of Internet activism in Bloomington, but sometimes it’s better to get on the ground,” Shaeffer said. Shaeffer and several other protestors marched from the Statehouse lawn to the circle after the rally ended. They walked through downtown Indianapolis and waved at cars, pedestrians and patrons of a mobile cycling bar. They chanted, “My body, my choice,” and, “We will not go back.” The rest of the crowd cleared, but the Statehouse lawn was littered with evidence of their presence. Bernie pins, Hillary stickers, “Fire Mike Pence” signs. “It shows we must get out and vote,” Grossman said. “It’s not just Pence. There’s 97 people sitting in cushy jobs just because people don’t vote against them.”

so a percentage of profits go to Lotus Arts and Education Foundation, the charitable partner of the festival, said Doug Eibling, a member of the Lotus board of directors. All funds go to art and music educational outreach programs at 20 regional elementary schools, Eibling said.

“We’re trying to build the passion and break down barriers at an earlier age to make the world a smaller place,” Eibling said. “In the world we live in today, we need more understanding and less fear of cultures that are different than ours.” Boiled down, the event is

all about the community with local charities, beer and music, Schmid said. “This isn’t a generic festival,” Elyea said. “If we plopped you down here, you’d be able to tell from the local music and breweries that you’re in Bloomington, and that’s what is so great about it.”

Weather, relocation affects business at Culture Shock By Cody Thompson Comthomp@indiana.edu @CodyMichael3

With his thick dreadlocks hanging over his head, Luri Santos sat behind his stall containing Brazilian ice pops in the parking lot of Rhino’s All Ages Club. Despite completely selling out last year, there was no one in line for Rasta Pops at this year’s Culture Shock. Culture Shock took place at Rhino’s instead of the typical Dunn Meadow location because of the cold weather. A decrease in attendance of the annual free concert put on by WIUX resulted from the move to Rhino’s, which is far from IU’s campus, along with the cold weather. “We were hoping for good weather, but, unfortunately, this weather is not so great for popsicles,” Santos said. Jodie Lawrence, WIUX committee member, said the radio station has this event because it brings together many people from town and campus and a lot of local music. She said she was expecting more vendors to be present at the event, specifically King Dough and Rainbow Bakery. Many vendors were still present, including Plato’s Closet, Inali Henna and the American Sign Language Club at IU. “I love the event,” said Halli Baumann, owner of Inali Henna. “It’s a great combination of the local and student population coming

together with music. The vendors are always having fun. It’s a great event overall for Bloomington.” Brazilian ice pops and henna tattoos were not the only products being sold by vendors in the parking lot outside of Rhino’s. Plato’s Closet was another business seeking to advertise to the attendees at Culture Shock. Fewer people showed up to Culture Shock in general, said Mary Jackson, IU junior and Plato’s Closet employee. But many people still stopped by the Plato’s Closet booth, she said. She said this event is one that draws in the company’s target buyers. “It’s our demographic,” Jackson said. “It’s just that a lot of college students are coming here and a lot of people that would be interested in unique styles and looking different.” Directly across from Plato’s Closet was the American Sign Language Club at IU. Many attendees were gathered watching members of the organization use sign language. The organization sold cookies, cupcakes, pastries and hot chocolate donated from Kroger. The funds went toward sponsoring a child to attend the Indiana Deaf Camp this summer. Taylor Mccart, an IU senior and president of the club, said the club’s goals are to provide students with additional ASL practice and to raise awareness of deaf culture in the

community. “I’ve been to the event before, and it has just been fun every time we’ve gone,” Mccart said. “It’s a great way to spread the word about this new club we have going on.” The organization provided ear plugs and balloons so people could experience the concert like a deaf person might by inserting the ear plugs and holding the balloon to one’s chest, amplifying the vibrations. Brian Berger, WIUX chief engineer, said a few vendors dropped last minute because of the change from Dunn Meadow to Rhino’s. It was going to get cold at night, and the radio station didn’t want to make the bands play in 30-degree weather, he said. “It’s not as central to campus, so it is a little more difficult, and a little more difficult for some of the vendors to maneuver, but most are pretty cool with the change and stuck with it, which is awesome,” Berger said. Culture Shock is advertised as a free concert, but the vendors are an equally important part of the event, Berger said. “Culture Shock is a lot more than just music,” Berger said. “It’s promoting a lot of local Bloomington things ... People who come get to experience the culture of Bloomington, not just through the music, but through the food and other things the booths offer.”

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Public Opinion after Obergefell What Americans Believe about the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, Marriage Equality, and Same-Sex Parenting

3-4:30 PM Monday, April 18, 2016 Indiana University Cinema, 1213 E. 7th Street Reception follows in Social Science Research Commons, Woodburn Hall 200

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» BLUE LIGHTS

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 Just this semester, on the east side of the Student Recreational Sports Center, a male student reported he was approached by a 6-foot-tall black man in the early hours of a February morning. The man asked the 19-year-old if he had any money and patted him down, according to an IUPD report. Finding nothing, the man stabbed him in the abdomen and fled, according to the report. The student ran. He wasn’t thinking about the cellphone in his pocket. He wasn’t thinking about his surroundings. He wasn’t thinking about much at all, besides getting to safety. He was not thinking about the blue lights. Instead, the student arrived at his dorm in the central neighborhood and asked a friend to take him to

» CULTURE SHOCK CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

a sophomore WIUX member. Higgins arrived early with several other volunteers to do the grunt work, but he also had other projects to attend to throughout the day. He was in charge of conducting video interviews at the back of Rhino’s, where it was slightly quieter. He and other blog members scouted for enthusiastic festival-goers who would tell them about their experiences and hopes for future Culture Shock festivals. However, working for the blog wasn’t the only reason Higgins wanted to do these interviews, he said. After this semester, Higgins will be replacing WIUX Special Events Director Ben Wittkugel and will be in charge of booking and running the 2017 Culture Shock. With a binder full of booking tips and protocol in hand, Higgins said he will begin sending out emails to national bands this summer. After finishing his videos, Higgins found time to sneak to the front row and watch his friends in

the hospital. LACK OF KNOWLEDGE IU’s enrollment website is inaccurate about the number of phones. IUPD dispatchers inconsistently log the calls and sometimes file them as 911 calls, not blue light calls, Stephenson said. Administrators admit to having little knowledge about the blue lights. There are no evaluations of which phones are most used, only anecdotal evidence, and there have been no formal comparisons by IU of the phone locations to crime maps. The only people with detailed knowledge of the phones are those who maintain them once a month and the IUPD officers, such as officer Brandon Koppelmann, who deal with them every day. One night this semester, Brownies in Cinema, a local psych-rock band. After listening to a song or two, Higgins was off again to follow Wittkugel, catch up with friends visiting from out of town and fit in more video interviews. Despite having occasional free time, he said he was on duty most of the day. “We’re just making sure nothing burns to the ground,” he said. Early in the day, dozens of early-arrivers wandered around the Rhino’s parking lot and impatiently waited for the volunteers to finish their prep and open the doors. Sitting in a circle with one of his many groups of friends was Elijah Heath, a sophomore who had never experienced Culture Shock. “Last year I couldn’t make it because I was invited to a girl’s formal, and I didn’t even notice the day,” he said. “I regret it.” Heath expressed his interest in several local bands, as well as touring indie-folk group Whitney. Even in between bands, Heath and some close friends jumped up and down in the

Koppelmann stood in the squad room at IUPD’s station. It was almost midnight. He wasn’t quite halfway through his 12-hour patrol shift, but he’d just finished a Monster and needed to stop. During the break, he chatted with other officers. “Bet you the one on Sixth and Dunn goes off,” an officer perched on a table said. The others nodded and chuckled in agreement — it’s common knowledge at IUPD that the blue light located there is pressed most. The speculation is that it’s mostly hit by drunk people walking home from bars as a joke. “I was working days last week, though, and the one behind Simon biology got hit twice,” the same perched officer said. “Both times, I heard people laughing. Wonder who that was.” Standard procedure dictates an officer must report to any blue light that is pressed. Most days on the job, officers

Response to blue lights in past 6 months Each circle represents 2 responses

Harassment or intimidation Assaults

Complaints of suspicious people Rapes Forcible fondlings NO USE OF BLUE LIGHT EMERGENCY PHONES SOURCE: IUPD daily crime log GRAPHIC BY EMILY ABSHIRE | IDS

can sacrifice a few minutes to do this. Many weekends, officers deal with students binge drinking and drunkenly walking across campus and passing out. They still make time to respond to blue light antics.

However, during Little 500, the danger increases. As people swarm IU’s campus, dozens of calls come into IUPD dispatch, including ones from blue lights. One Little 500, while Stephenson was a sergeant, there were just too many calls.

He chose to instruct officers that unless someone on the other end of the line actually reports a crime, they should disregard all blue light calls. That weekend, with a 99.9 percent false-call record, the blue lights were just a distraction.

» BASEBALL

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VICTOR GAN | IDS

Kylee Kimbrough, the drummer for the band Dasher, performs during Culture Shock on Saturday at Rhino’s All Ages Club.

parking lot as a WIUX DJ blared dance music. Nine bands were on the bill, but Dasher was an anomaly — the noise outfit was one of the only punk bands on the lineup. Before they played, Garcia and Magilla danced by their merchandise table as

the Underhills played. Dasher was scheduled to play next. “I can’t wait to play right after them,” Magilla said. “I wonder how the crowd will react.” As Kimbrough screamed into the microphone for sound-check, families with

young kids swiftly exited. Those in the front row covered their ears as Garcia’s feedback-heavy guitar shrieked and Magilla’s distorted bass boomed. “How was my bass tone?” Magilla said. “I couldn’t hear myself at first, but I think it leveled out.”

the game. But after Purdue tied the game at two, freshman third baseman Luke Miller then came in clutch in the bottom of the sixth with a two-out RBI single. Junior reliever Thomas Belcher tossed 2.1 scoreless innings for his third save of the season. In the series finale, a nearly two-hour rain delay halted the game in the top of the seventh with Purdue leading 5-1. With two outs in the bottom of the seventh, Sowers got the momentum going for IU with a triple. What followed was five runs with two outs to give IU the lead. Purdue responded with one run of its own in the top of the eighth to tie the game before Sowers came to the plate. He took a 3-0 fastball over the left center wall for his sixth home run this season. “Lemo said before we got out here that you can’t hit a five-run home run, just try to put something in the opposite field gap,” Sowers said. “The sweep is huge, momentumwise, knowing we can do this three days in a row.”

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Senior Katelyn Conenna swings at a pitch during a game against Penn State University. The Hoosiers lost 15-7 Saturday at Andy Mohr Field.

IU avoids sweep in Sunday finale against Penn State By Jake Thomer jjthomer@indiana.edu | @Jake_The_Thomer

IU struggled through the first two games of its series with Penn State this weekend before breaking out in the finale to salvage a win. Penn State (19-17, 8-3 in the Big Ten) used its high-powered offense to overwhelm IU (22-16, 5-6) in the first two games before the Hoosiers turned to an unlikely source of composure and leadership in the circle. The Hoosiers led early in Friday’s opener, courtesy of three hits in the bottom of the second that put IU up 2-0 through three innings. But IU could only add one more run, and Penn State’s bats exploded in the fourth and continued rolling the rest of the way. Penn State collected 11 hits and all 13 of its runs from the fourth through seventh innings and ultimately won 13-3. On Saturday, Penn State and IU combined for 27 hits in a marathon three-hour game. IU fell behind 2-0 early, but a three-run homer from senior Katelyn Conenna claimed the lead for the Hoosiers in the bottom of the first. The Nittany Lions scored the

next five runs before the Hoosiers got two more back on a pair of RBI singles in the fourth inning. Penn State’s offense was too much to overcome in the end, as the Nittany Lions scored in all but one inning of the game and came away with a 15-7 win. Freshmen pitchers Tara Trainer and Josie Wood manned the circle for almost the entirety of the first two games, combining to allow 20 earned runs. Sophomore pitcher Emily Kirk entered to record IU’s last out Saturday, and IU Coach Michelle Gardner liked what she saw enough to hand Kirk the start Sunday. “The other two got hit hard, and I just felt like Emily was going to keep the ball down better than those guys,” Gardner said. “We needed to give them a different look and that was the look I wanted to give them.” In what was just her third start of the season, Kirk delivered. The Texan allowed two quick runs in the first inning on four hits before settling in the rest of the way. Iu’s offense had its biggest game of the weekend as Kirk coasted through the game while posting zeroes across the scoreboard.

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2 0 0 4 5 11 10 1 W: Emily Kirk (1-0) L: Marlaina Laubach (7-8)

Led by junior infielder CaraMia Tsirigos, who went 3-3 with an RBI and a run scored, the Hoosiers broke out in the fifth and sixth innings. The game was tied 2-2 in the fifth when IU scored four runs on three hits and a plethora of miscues by Penn State. In the top of the sixth, the Hoosiers had another rally going when sophomore infielder Taylor Uden came up to the plate with two runners on and IU leading 8-2. Uden promptly smacked one over the left field wall to give IU a mercy-rule 11-2 victory. It was IU’s second mercy-rule win of the season and the fourth time the Hoosiers have posted a double-digit run total. The IU victory was Kirk’s first career win, which she said was unbelievable. “It’s just a great feeling,” Kirk said. “I had the support of my teammates behind me, and that was awesome, that helps.”

Kirk finished the day having thrown all six innings while giving up seven hits and striking out three. She lowered her season ERA to 4.67 with the complete game. Both Gardner and Kirk credited the offense with providing a comfortable cushion for Kirk to pitch in the game’s final innings. Conenna, who hit the three-run homer, sophomore Rebecca Blitz and freshman Sarah Galovich led IU in hits during the weekend, as each collected four throughout the series. IU will get a break in the Big Ten schedule this week when they play host to Louisville (25-9, 10-4 in the ACC) on Tuesday. Gardner said she hopes the manner in which IU won Sunday will give them a boost when they play Louisville. “That wasn’t just a win, that was a walkoff, and there’s a difference,” Gardner said. “Yes, we got beat the last two days, but we really found a way to absolutely get it done with


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Monday, April 11, 2016 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com

BASEBALL

BASKETBALL

Niego looks at new schools From IDS reports

PHOTOS BY MICHAEL WILLIAMS | IDS

The Hoosiers celebrate Logan Sowers’ solo home run on Sunday at Bart Kaufman Field. After a nearly 2 hour rain delay, IU overcame a 4 run deficit to win 7-6 and sweep their series against Purdue.

Kyle Hart plays centerfield in Sunday’s win By Michael Hughes michhugh@indiana.edu @MichaelHughes94

He was just trying to find his glove and get on the field. Sophomore outfielder Laren Eustace had to leave the game because of a hamstring injury, and the Hoosiers needed a new center fielder. So IU Coach Chris Lemonis turned to senior starting pitcher Kyle Hart, who made two catches in the final two innings of IU’s 7-6 win to help the Hoosiers sweep Purdue. “I didn’t even know where I was playing, I just grabbed my glove,” Hart said. “I didn’t even know which glove to grab. I thought I was getting a first baseman’s mitt or something.” Hart has never played a game in center field in his five-year IU career. What he has done was shag balls in batting practice every day. He’s even in center field running down fly balls on the day he’s supposed to pitch. So before he started IU’s 10-9 win Friday, before he watched IU win 3-2 Saturday and again Sunday, Hart was in center field preparing for the improbable. Before every game, Hart is preparing for the chance he plays in the outfield that day. “He takes reps out there all day in practice,” sophomore outfielder Logan Sowers said. “He was even taking fly balls with us before the game so he was ready. That was something he’s been wanting to do, so I’m happy for him.” He said he jokes with Lemonis that a situation will come where he will need to play the field. On Sunday, that happened, and he played the field well.

Freshman guard Harrison Niego informed the IU coaching staff Friday he will look to a Division I basketball program that will award him a scholarship rather than play another season at IU. “Coming to IU and being part of the program has been one of the best experiences of my life,” Niego said in a press release. “After much thought, I have decided to look for opportunities that will allow me to have an expanded role on the court and one that will also pay for my education.” A walk-on freshman, he was forced into major minutes this season after injuries to sophomore guards James Blackmon Jr. and Robert Johnson. He played in 25 games off the bench and averaged 4.4 minutes a game. In a 113-69 win against Illinois on Jan. 19, Niego scored three points, had two assists, a rebound and two steals. Niego will have to sit out one year at whatever school he transfers to, per NCAA regulations. “We will miss Harrison, but I understand and we will support him fully and completely,” IU Coach Tom Crean said. “In our minds, he will always be part of our Hoosier family. He did everything that we had asked of him and more. He got better and made us better.” Michael Hughes

GOLF

He caught the first ball hit at him in the eighth inning, a line drive that required Hart to take a few steps in and to his left, with a little help from junior outfielder Craig Dedelow. “I kind of knew it was one of those balls that was right at me, and thankfully it was,” Hart said. “Craig was hollering at me. I told him before, ‘You have to tell me exactly where to be.’” The second ball hit at Hart was more difficult. It was also more important. With one out in the ninth, Kyle Wood was at the plate. He already had a home run Friday and an RBI single Sunday. Then, he drove a ball deep to center field. Hart handled it like someone who plays every day in center field. He broke back toward the fence tracking the ball before

reaching up for a running, over-the-shoulder catch for the second out of the inning. “The biggest difficulty I think is it’s getting darker, and the rain is kind of coming in sideways and hitting you in the face,” Hart said. “It’s just a tough time to play outfield honestly. It’s not like BP when it’s 3:00 in the afternoon and you can see everything. There’s actually runners on base.” Had the ball got down, Wood most likely would have ended up on second. If he had scored, the game would have been tied. Hart would have been due up fifth for the Hoosiers in the bottom of the ninth. Don’t worry, that’s where Lemonis draws the line. “He wouldn’t have hit,” Lemonis said. “Don’t worry about that.”

IU ties with Ball State in Hoosier Collegiate By Josh Eastern jeastern@indiana.edu | @JoshEastern

PHOTOS BY MICHAEL WILLIAMS | IDS

Top Pitcher Kyle Hart, playing center field late Sunday night, runs toward making the second out of the 9th inning. Hart played center field for the first time in his career after sophomore outfielder Laren Eustace’s hamstring injury.

The Hoosiers not only had to battle the other competitors but also the elements during a shortened Hoosier Collegiate at Otter Creek Golf Course in Columbus, Indiana, over the weekend. The Hoosiers tied for sixth place with Ball State at 14-over par for the weekend. That put them 12 strokes behind the co-champions Miami of Ohio and Purdue who tied at the top at two strokes over par for the tournament. With cold temperatures in the 30s and wind gusts getting up to about 15 mph

Bottom Senior pitcher Thomas Belcher celebrates the last out Sunday win.

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Indiana Daily Student

ARTS

Monday, April 11, 2016 idsnews.com

Editors Jack Evans & Brooke McAfee arts@idsnews.com

CULTURE SHOCK

9

‘Halpern and Johnson’ will come in May From IDS reports

WIUX’s annual free, all-ages music festival was forced indoors by weather, but it was still filled with bands, fans and vendors.

The Jewish Theatre of Bloomington will offer a production of the drama “Halpern and Johnson” next month, the company announced in a press release Thursday. The play follows the interactions of the two titular men, who meet at the funeral of a woman they both loved — the wife of Halpern, who is Jewish, and the first love of Johnson, who is not. It’s adapted from the 1983 HBO television movie “Mr. Halpern and Mr. Johnson,” which starred Jackie Gleason and Laurence Olivier.

“Halpern and Johnson” explores “how long-held beliefs about a person can turn out to be false,” according to the press release. It was first adapted for the stage in Israel in 1995 and has been performed across the globe since, according to the press release. The Jewish Theatre’s production will be helmed by Kate Horwitz, a second-year master of fine arts student in IU’s Department of Theatre, Drama and Contemporary Dance. Local actors Ken Farrell and Gerry Pauwels will play the leads. Jack Evans

IU Auditorium to present musical based on movie From IDS reports

VICTOR GAN| IDS

William McHenry, center, sells souvenirs during Culture Shock on Saturday at Rhino’s All Ages Club.

The IU Auditorium will present the musical “Once” at 8 p.m. April 19 and April 20. “Once” is an adaptation of the 2007 film of the same title. The film was written and directed by John Carney and starred musicians Glen Hansard and Markéta Irglová. The musical includes a score by Hansard and Irglová, whose song “Falling Slowly” won an Academy Award in 2008 for Best Original Song. The film soundtrack was also nominated for a Grammy Award. “Once” is about a Dublin street musician and a young woman who becomes interested and involved in his music. As their relationship progresses, “their unlikely connection turns out to be deeper and more complex than your everyday romance,” according to the musical’s website. After Broadway success, the show began touring North America in 2013. The original Broadway

‘ONCE’ Tickets $21-49 students, $39-65 public 8p.m. April 19-20, IU Auditorium production of the show won eight Tony awards in 2012, including Best Musical, beating out “Leap of Faith,” “Newsies” and “Nice Work if You Can Get It.” That production’s lead actor, Steve Kazee, also took the award for Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical. Its 11 total nominations and eight wins were the most of any play or musical in the 2012 Tonys. In 2013, the Broadway production also won a Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album. It has been praised for “redefining what it means to be a Broadway musical,” according to the IU Auditorium website. Tickets range from $39 to $65 for general admission and from $21 to $44 for students. Brooke McAfee

VICTOR GAN | IDS

Spissy band member Aaron Denton performs during Culture Shock.

VICTOR GAN | IDS

Spissy band member David Woodruff performs during Culture Shock on Saturday at Rhino’s All Ages Club.

VICTOR GAN | IDS

Senior Taylor Mccart gives an introduction about Bloomington American Sign Language club during Culture Shock.

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STELLA DEVINA | IDS

Tasha Parson, left, and Mary Grace Jackson from Plato’s Closet display a booth during Culture Shock.


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2001 Honda CVR SUV. Only 95k mi., clean title. $4900. yz87@indiana.edu

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Mopeds

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Suzuki GW250 Inazuma Motorcycle. $3700. Jacket, helmet, & gloves incl. rnourie@indiana.edu

Xbox 360 Bundle. 60GB. Excellent cond. + games & 2 controllers. $200. hhallida@indiana.edu

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Apple AirPort Express Router (Like New) $80, neg. jfsohn@indiana.edu

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The IDS advertising dept is seeking a motivated, organized and friendly individual to fill an Advertising Coordinators position. This position requires no sales but will work with area businesses to develop creative content and assist the advertising director in tracking ads.

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MERCHANDISE

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To place an ad: go oline, call 812-855-0763 or stop by Ernie Pyle Hall 120 from 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Monday - Friday. Full advertising policies are available online. idsnews.com/classifieds

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11

Monday, April 11, 2016 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com

Fundraiser transforms trash into fashion By Maia Rabenold mrabenol@indiana.edu | @maialyra

Dad jeans turned into a skirt, and a business suit and old newspapers transformed into ball gowns. With pieces made of 90 percent recycled materials or trash, every outfit was different. This year’s Trashion Refashion Show, which took place Sunday at the BuskirkChumley Theater, was the primary annual fundraiser for the Center for Sustainable Living. Bloomington designers submitted looks created with long-abandoned garments or found garbage. This variety is the reason why Jeanne Leimkuhler decided to make the show a noncompetitive event when she originated it seven years ago. “Everything is so unique that it’s hard to compare them, so I didn’t think there should be a winner,” Leimkuhler said. “Everyone is involved and is appreciative of what they did, and it creates this really collaborative atmosphere. Everyone has a great time. There’s no vying for the best thing.” Leimkuhler made a mermaid outfit out of scales cut from blue and green threering binder covers for this year’s show. She started the show for the Center for Sustainable Living when she was working as their treasurer. “I was looking for a signature fundraiser for the Center for Sustainable Living, something that would be entertaining as well as educational

about environmental issues,” Leimkuhler said. The show has always been inclusive, Leimkuhler said. Anyone of any age or gender can enter their designs, and a committee goes through a jury process to decide which designs go into the runway show. “There are people who have been in the show every year since it began,” Leimkuhler said. “What the show does is it pulls people in who don’t necessarily consider themselves artists or designers, but when they see the concept of using recycled materials to make something, they just get inspired by it.” In 2009, the first year of the show, Leimkuhler brought in designers from IU’s fashion design program and from her own pool of friends. That year there were about 40 designs, with a lot of designers submitting up to three outfits. On Sunday, there were 74 looks spending less than a minute each on the runway. Half of the designs were refashion, meaning they were restyled old outfits, and half were trashion, meaning the designers went dumpster diving for their materials. Two of these designers were local artists Danielle Urschel and Jennifer Deam. They found a deflated air mattress, an old boot and shoe, playground underlay and drum heads and turned them into two outfits inspired by Dante’s “Inferno” and 1930s Italian fascism. “I do more of the nuts and bolts, and Jennifer does the

Horoscope Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 6 — Avoid controversy and drama today. Get into a writing or research project, somewhere peaceful. File and organize documents. Play music to stimulate creativity. Realize practical plans, step by step. Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is an 8 — Reach for low-hanging fruit. There’s a profitable opportunity for one who’s willing to go for it. Get support from your team if you need. Closely monitor the budget. Pool resources for

STELLA DEVINA | IDS

Carley Robertson wears the “Mobo Bride” design during “Trashion Refashion” on Sunday at Buskirk-Chumley Theater.

sewing part,” Urschel said. “We get together in the winter. It’s a good project for wintertime when it’s cold out. We meet and do some sketches, get our pile of junk together and try to figure out a design.” One of their outfits represents the first level of hell, Urschel said, while the other is a dominatrix outfit complete with whip. One of the hats to go with the costumes has a quote from “Inferno” screen printed onto it: “Abandon all hope, ye who enter here.” A screen printed eye to represent surveillance and a skull tie together

vor private settings, over public. Someone who needs your attention could disrupt your schedule. Delegate non-essential tasks, and find out what they want.

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

Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Today is an 8 — Provide leadership. Harness extra energy in pursuit of a personal dream. Test the limits of your idea. Learn from natural observation. Consider design, style and image. Envision getting what you want. Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Today is a 5 — Keep a low profile. Something you try doesn’t work. Modify old rules for new circumstances. Private work in a peace-

ful setting soothes. Look at the bigger picture, considering logic as well as emotion.

Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 6 — Get team feedback before launching an effort. Little mistakes can have big consequences. Accept constructive criticism and make recommended corrections. You’re gaining points with someone you admire. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a 6 — New professional opportunities and ideas percolate. Fa-

BLISS

the image of the Inferno, Urschel said. IU freshman Eliza Becker made use of a material easily found on campus — the Indiana Daily Student. Becker made a ball gown completely out of the Feb. 19 edition, tearing it into strips for the full skirt and pleating it into fans for the bodice. Bits of stories, headlines and pictures can still be seen scattered throughout. “To me, it was such a beautiful dress,” Becker said. “I felt like this one day, February 19, was such a beautiful day because I could make it into

HARRY BLISS

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is a 7 — An outing or adventure calls, even if it’s just downtown. News affects your decisions. Take time to assimilate it before reacting. Consider the consequences of your plan. Make advance reservations. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is a 6 — Play together without taking risks, financial or otherwise. Pay bills and basic expenses. Give away stuff you no longer need and free space. Save

Crossword

this dress.” The title of her dress, “Everyday Beauty,” reflects her thoughts that it was just a regular day, but it was beautiful, Becker said. She first made it as a project for her fundamental 3-D art class, but her professor urged her to contact a textiles professor, who encouraged her to enter it in the runway show. She learned about the show the day of the deadline, but she emailed in her submission the same day and was accepted. It’s a fun way to promote her work while also promoting sustainability in

Bloomington, Becker said. The goal of the show is to make people think more creatively about what they throw away, Leimkuhler said. There are always ways to repurpose materials that would otherwise be categorized as junk. “All of the stuff that we just discard and don’t even think about goes into a landfill or ends up in the ocean,” Leimkuhler said. “It doesn’t really go away. It always goes somewhere. This is about looking closer at those materials and either finding ways to not use them to start with or finding ways to reuse them.”

money and pack a picnic rather than eating out.

Today is a 6 — Invite friends ove and get sucked into a fascinating game. Relax and play together. Don’t fall for a trick. Cutting corners costs you. Keep your objective in mind. Discover hidden treasure.

Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is a 7 — Compromise with your partner on a creative project. Make adjustments. Give and take. Don’t evade the tough questions. Reaffirm a commitment. Collaborate on practical details and share the winnings. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is an 8 — There’s extra work available, if you can take it. Speed up the tempo. Get advice, but make your own decisions. Keep your wits about you. Ride out the storm. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) —

The IDS is accepting applications for student comic strips for the spring 2016 semester. Email five samples and a brief description of your idea to adviser@indiana.edu by April 25. Submissions will be reviewed and selections will be made by the editor-in-chief. Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis

su do ku

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

© Puzzles by Pappocom

NON SEQUITUR

1 Spaghetti or ziti 6 In different places 11 What a steamroller steamrolls 14 Moral standard 15 Capital of Yemen 16 Thrilla in Manila winner 17 Understand, finally 19 Caboodle go-with 20 Bill at the bar 21 Tehran native 22 German auto engineer Karl 23 Zone out 27 Mined rock 28 Ticklish Muppet 29 Boom’s opposite 32 ID card feature 35 Point de __: opinion, in Paris 38 Revival leader’s query ... and hint to the starts of 17-, 23-, 49and 60-Across 42 Corp. ladder leader 43 En __: as a group 44 Spoken 45 WWII female enlistee 47 Org. with a “100 Greatest Movie Quotes of All Time” list 49 Photographer’s instruction 56 Had a bawl

© 2016 By Nancy Black Distributed by Tribune Media Services, INC.All RightsReserved

L.A. Times Daily Crossword

Publish your comic on this page.

ACROSS

Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is a 5 — Make your home more comfortable. Plan and plot. Put it on paper first, before you commit funds. Make sure your family is on board with the idea. Bribe them with something delicious.

57 Track jockey, e.g. 58 Building wing 59 Swiss peak 60 “Didn’t think I could do it, did ya?!” 63 Under the weather 64 Speck in the ocean 65 Beethoven’s “Für __” 66 Lao-__: Taoism founder 67 Heart rate 68 Thin coins

DOWN 1 Ones who won’t leave you alone 2 Really bugged 3 Biblical queen’s land 4 Little songbird 5 More sore 6 Lion of Narnia 7 Sherwin-Williams product 8 Cardio procedure 9 Word of support 10 Skin art, briefly 11 Seek shelter 12 Flared skirt 13 Big name in hotels and crackers 18 Buffalo’s lake 22 Emeril catchword 24 __ de boeuf: French roast 25 Alien-seeking org.

WILEY BREWSTER ROCKIT: SPACE GUY!

26 Underhanded plan 29 Secretly keep in the email loop, briefly 30 Abu Dhabi’s fed. 31 Suspected McIntosh relative with pure white flesh 32 TD’s six 33 Gives birth to 34 What borrowers do 36 __ Today 37 Subj. for some green-card holders 39 Former auto financing co. 40 A pop 41 Roulette color 46 Verizon rival 47 Aid in a felony 48 Solidified, as plans, with “up” 49 H.G. who wrote “The War of the Worlds” 50 Internet forum troublemaker 51 Backpacking outings 52 Online social appointment 53 Jeans material 54 Admission of defeat 55 Cary of “Glory” 56 Cool one’s heels 60 One of a kissing pair 61 Buckeyes’ sch. 62 Yale Blue wearer

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


12

Monday, April 11, 2016 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com

MEN’S TENNIS

IU men’s tennis dominates in pair of victories Sunday By Lionel Lim lalimwei@indiana.edu

IU won two of its three games this weekend, beating No. 33 Penn State 4-0 and Butler 7-0. The Hoosiers opened their triple-header weekend with a 4-0 loss to No. 5 Ohio State on Friday, but bounced back to beat both Penn State and Butler on Sunday. The Buckeyes got the doubles point when the pair of Martin Joyce and Mikael Torpegaard beat seniors Sam Monette and Daniel Bednarczyk 6-3 at No. 1 doubles. Hunter Tubert and Ralf Steinbach also beat senior Chris Essick and junior Stefan Lugonjic 6-3 at No. 2 doubles. Ohio State then had victories in No. 2, No. 4 and No. 5 singles. Sophomore Raheel Manji who played No. 2 Torpegaard in No. 1 singles won the first set 7-6. Torpegaard came into the match with a 17-0 record in dual match play. Manji then dropped the second set 6-3, but the match was unfinished. “We talked a lot about how disciplined Ohio State was when we played them,” IU Coach Jeremy Wurtzman said. “They didn’t really over hit and we need to learn from that and do the same thing especially on the bigger points. We have to be

» GOLF

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 8 in the area all weekend long, the tournament was shortened to 36 holes with 18 holes being played Saturday and the same being done Sunday. “It was the second week in a row we battled the weather, so it’s kind of what we do,” IU Coach Mike Mayer said. “With playing with it last week, we felt like we had some advantage. Tough weather, we have to

consistently disciplined.” IU won the doubles points against Penn State when Manji and freshman Afonso Salgado beat Constant De La Bassetiere and Matt Galush 6-2 at No. 3 doubles and Monnette and Bednarczyk beat Christian Lutschaunig and David Kohan 6-2 at No.1 doubles. The Hoosiers then chalked up five out of six first set victories in the singles. Monette, who had not played over the last weekend, got the Hoosiers their second point when he defeated Leonardo Stakhovsky 6-3, 6-2 in No. 1 singles. Salgado then scored the third point when he beat Ben Lieb 7-5, 6-4 in No. 6 singles. “It feels good, it’s a really stressful week because though it wasn’t a major injury it was a little bug in the bottom of my back,” Monette said. “It’s definitely good to be back on the court.” Junior Matthew McCoy then put his hand up to signal towards the stands and the sidelines when his shot ricocheted off the net and bounced onto his opponent’s side of the court to give him the match point. McCoy then got the clincher when his opponent, Tomas Hanzlik, over hit his shot. The Bloomington native beat his opponent 6-3, 6-4. play in it and continue to get better.” As for the Hoosiers on the course, they posted a team score of 295 on both Saturday and Sunday. They battled through cold and blustery conditions, which left them in fourth place out of 14 teams heading into Sunday’s final round. They were just four shots off the leader in the Purdue Boilermakers. “We got a solid performance from a lot of guys,”

LIONEL LIM | IDS

Junior Matthew McCoy shows his emotions after winning his match against Washington’s Gal Hakak on Feb. 6 at the IU Tennis Center. McCoy beat Hakak 3-6, 6-2, 6-4.

“I don’t think it’s a bad season overall,” Monette said. “Today we were tougher and it proves that we’ve still got time and get even tougher for the bigger teams that ahead of us.” IU also got the doubles points against Butler in Sun-

day evening’s match. The Hoosiers then had first set victories in all of their six matches to be them in a dominant position. The Hoosiers then finished all six of their games in straight sets to give them a 7-0 victory over the Bulldogs.

Wurtzman said after the Penn State game that he hopes the Penn State game can spur the Hoosiers on to a good run to the end of the season. “We’ve been waiting for this part of the season. We know that we were going to play a tough part of the

season to start and this would lead us into this later part of the season,” Wurtzman said. “We would have wanted to win some of those matches, but you know it is what it is and our mindsets are still hungry and motivated to win and I guess it’s a great start to the end of the season.”

Mayer said. “We got a nice performance from Andrew Havill in the first round and a nice effort from Max Kollin in the second round, but we need more than that.” Max Kollin had the low team score for the round Sunday at 1-under par following a 3-over round Saturday. Individually, he tied for 13th place, which is the best of his career at a tournament not played at the IU Golf Course. “I just kind of stayed in

there,” Kollin said. “I had a couple three putts, but I rolled it really well, and that’s what you got to do out there with the tough conditions.” During Saturday’s first round, it was Havill who had the low round shooting an even 72. His tied for 13th finish is his second straight top 15 finish and the fourth top 15 finish of his career. Coach Mayer said it was a course the team knew fairly well.

“I think we knew it well,” Mayer said. “The challenge was the wind and the cold. That being said, we handled it pretty well, but we needed to handle it really well.” Aside from Kollin, none of the other team golfers shot under par Sunday. Jake Brown and Andrew Havill shot 2-over par while Keegan Vea shot 4-over and Brendon Doyle shot 5-over par. “We’re still looking for someone to really emerge,” Mayer said. “We got solid

play, but we need more.” Next week the Hoosiers will head up to West Lafayette, Indiana, to compete in the Boilermaker Collegiate. Kollin said there are some things he can take into next weekend. “I think there’s definitely some momentum coming into the next week,” Kollin said. “Just working on my short putting and gaining more momentum on those will definitely help. I’m feeling very confident in all parts of my game.”

Career Development Center 4

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STUDENT EMPLOYMENT AWARENESS WEEK 18

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Events all week! April 11 - 15 Mayoral 2016 SUMMER JOBS FAIR Student Proclamation by Tuesday, April 12 Recognition Day John Hamilton 1-4 PM, Alumni Hall Wednesday, April 13 Monday, April 11

STUDENT EMPLOYMENT CELEBRATION Thursday, April 14 12-2 PM, Frangipani Room

Employer Appreciation Day Friday, April 15

FOR MORE INFORMATION VISIT:

cdc.indiana.edu


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