Thursday, March 5, 2020 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
IDS Da'Quincy Pittman missed two months of his sophomore year when he was shot six times. Last week he went back to his school, where four other students have been shot in the last year.
Live Learn and
By Caroline Anders anders6@iu.edu | @clineands
INDIANAPOLIS – The boy is 15 years old and full of metal. Bullet fragments are stuck in his arms, his leg, his side. A rod runs through his leg, and a plate and screws hold his arm together. Da’Quincy Pittman limps into school on a rainy Monday morning in late February. It’s his first day back in nearly two months, and his clothes hang differently than they did before. After five surgeries, a stay in the ICU and weeks of rehab, he’s down maybe 20 pounds. In the center of his forehead dangles a twist of hair, adorned with three beads: red, clear, red. Since that night, he’s called them his lucky beads. He arrived after the morning rush, bleary-eyed but still careful to hold the door for his mother. The school’s chief of staff hurries over, already crying. They flit around him – the principal, the chief of staff, his mom. “Quincy,” one says. “I’m going to get you a schedule, OK?” “Did you have any breakfast today?” He shakes his head. “Can you hold a pencil yet?” He nods. Da’Quincy is one of about 480 middle
and high schoolers at his school on the far east side of Indianapolis. The teachers and staff hug and feed and clothe their students, but they can’t always keep them safe. Da’Quincy is one of five who has been shot in the last year. * * * On the night of Dec. 29, three men jumped Da’Quincy and a friend in the parking lot of an apartment complex. They threw open the doors of the car he was sitting in, shot him six times and stole the Jordans off his feet. Indianapolis’ death toll is soaring. Over the last decade, the number of homicides climbed nearly 80%. A 2016 study found that Indiana had the highest rate of black homicide victims in the nation. By mid-February of this year, the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department had investigated 31 homicides, nearly double the 16 investigated by the same date in 2019. Da’Quincy’s school, the James and Rosemary Phalen Leadership Academy, charters buses to drop off students at their doors when after-school activities end. A fiveminute walk to the bus stop isn’t worth the risk. One student gets picked up at his door because his bus stop is on the corner where
his mother was shot and killed. Gwendolyn Hardiman, the school’s chief of staff, has been in education for 38 years. She wears fashionable glasses and long, intricately done nails. The students call her Grandma. “Soon as you hear it on TV you wonder, ‘Is it one of ours?’” she says. Phalen is a public charter that opened nearly three years ago when teachers at other far east side schools got fed up with the fistfights and failings. Nicole Fama, Phalen’s 41-year-old principal and regional director, was the principal of PLA at 93, a school under the Phalen umbrella that was getting tired of sending its students to underperforming high schools. Phalen Leadership Academies founder and CEO Earl Phalen heard about School 93’s troubles and asked Fama what was keeping her up at night. She told him she just wanted the kids to have a safe place to go after middle school. Phalen bought a trashed, abandoned school and got to work. The James and Rosemary Phalen Leadership Academy became one of 20 Phalen Leadership Academies around the nation, including five in Indianapolis. The first year, it only offered seventh and eighth grade. Then ninth, then 10th. The plan is to expand each year to cover all of high school. Da’Quincy will be in Phalen’s
NOBLE GUYON | IDS
Da’Quincy Pittman copies down notes in geometry class. He learned how to find the volume of a sphere before heading back to the principal's office to rest. The nerves in his foot were aching, as they often do.
first graduating class. The school sits off of 42nd Street and Mitthoeffer Road, surrounded by a clump of gas stations and roads clotted with potholes. Grandma doesn’t stop at those stations, but she still makes sure her car never gets all the way to empty so she doesn’t have to stand outside too long. Phalen is a structured place. Administrators and teachers always refer to students as scholars. The kids sometimes call Fama things like Ops and Federal because she doesn't mess around. She keeps a baggie of drugstore drug tests in her desk. But Phalen is also a home. Some of the students call Fama Mom. There are washers and dryers for those who don’t have running water. Deans drive students to get haircuts. Grandma keeps a pack of mini deodorants under her desk for when the boys get musty. It’s a place where the principal takes care of bullet wounds. Fama keeps her “doctor’s bag” — a Saks
Coffee shop, seafood restaurant opening this year in Bloomington By Ty Vinson vinsonjo@iu.edu | @ty_vinson_
FILE PHOTO BY RACHEL MEERT | IDS
Actress and LGBTQ advocate Laverne Cox speaks Jan. 1, 2015, at the IU Auditorium. Cox will speak at 7 p.m. March 28 in the IU Auditorium as part of the IU Arts and Humanities Council's Indiana Remixed Festival.
New date announced for Laverne Cox talk at IU Auditorium By Helen Rummel hrummel@iu.edu
Actress and LGBTQ advocate Laverne Cox will speak at 7 p.m. March 28 at the IU Auditorium after her original Feb. 13 appearance was postponed. The former IU student's event,
part of the IU Arts and Humanities Council's Indiana Remixed Festival, was delayed Feb. 4 because of a scheduling conflict. Tickets obtained for the original Feb. 13 event will be accepted, while new tickets for the event can be acquired online. Tickets are free with a limit of four per transaction.
Restaurants and businesses have been opening in Bloomington faster than people can keep track. It’s even hard for the Chamber of Commerce to keep track of all the places opening around the city. “They’re opening like crazy,” said Tammy Clarke, director of member services. Bret Pafford Jr. is a managing partner through ReVv and Strum Hospitality, the company that owns the newly-opened Village Pub in the old Princess Theater on Walnut Street. It’s the first of a few modern restaurants Pafford plans to open in Bloomington. Over the next several months, Pafford plans to open four new locations in one building that will be located at 217 W. Sixth St., between Social Cantina and Janko’s Little Zagreb. The first will be a coffee and gelato shop called Brilliant Coffee Company. Pafford said the
company plans to make its own gelato every day with healthy ingredients and no preservatives. He said he feels like this kind of business is what’s missing in the downtown area, because it’s right off the B-Line Trail and provides a breaking point for those using the trail. “People are creatures of routine,” Pafford said. “You have to have places for them to want to go.” Brilliant Coffee Company will serve coffee and gelato in different forms, including some spiked with alcohol for those over 21. Pafford said there will be a soft opening at the end of March and a grand opening in early April. Soon after the opening of Brilliant Coffee Company, Pafford and his company plan to open a lunch-time restaurant called Nourish Bar in the same building. It will only serve gluten free foods. “It’s kind of your late-lunch SEE BUSINESS, PAGE 6
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Wrongful death suit filed in Purva Sethi's death By Kyra Miller kymill@iu.edu | @kyra_ky94
The family of 25-year-old IU law student Purva Sethi is suing for Sethi's Feb. 8 death, claiming it as a wrongful death, according to a press release from Greene and Shultz Trial Lawyers. Sethi’s parents Sanjay and Neelam Sethi made her fiance Jordan Saner the personal representative of her estate, according to the release. Sethi was killed while crossing inside a crosswalk at South Washington and East Third streets, four blocks away from campus. Mark Sproat was driving an SUV that evening and failed to yield to Sethi when he made a right turn, according to the release. The lawsuit accuses Sproat of negligence. Saner asked the court to determine a monetary award during the trial to pay for medical, funeral, burial and court expenses, according to the release.
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BFC discusses coronavirus By Lily Wray lgwray@iu.edu | @lilywray_
The Bloomington Faculty Council discussed how IU is handling the global coronavirus outbreak at its Tuesday meeting. The council also addressed IU’s sustainability plan and how to consider non-tenure-track faculty for promotions. IU’S RESPONSE TO CORONAVIRUS Vice President of Academic Affairs John Applegate and Superintendent for Public Safety Benjamin Hunter spoke to the council about how IU is handling coronavirus. There are no confirmed cases in Indiana, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. There are no restrictions on where people can travel within the United States. Applegate said IU’s top priority is the health and safety of students and faculty on all IU campuses, the continuity of academics and research and making sure students graduate on time. “If there is a significant instance of coronavirus on one of our campuses, it will likely be very disruptive,” Applegate said. “There is simply no way around it.” IU is trying to keep the virus out of campuses, but that won’t last, Applegate said. The university is working on how to limit the effect of the virus. IU has restricted travel to Iran, Italy, China, Japan
By Ty Vinson vinsonjo@iu.edu | @ty_vinson_
ELLE KREAMER | IDS
The Bloomington Faculty Council convenes March 3 in Presidents Hall. The council discussed issues such as travel restrictions and sharing information about the coronavirus outbreak.
and South Korea. It is also requiring self-quarantines for people returning from those countries. Applegate said students should watch travel restrictions as spring break approaches and take into consideration that they may not be able to come back. He said there is no plan in place if students aren’t able to come back. IU has resources for teachers at keepteaching.iu.edu that provide ways for teachers to teach while students are at home if the university were to close. According to Inside Higher Ed, Lake Washington Institute of Technology in Washington state was closed Monday and Tuesday after a nursing professor and 16 students went to a nursing facility last week where
two coronavirus cases were reported. Other West Coast colleges have canceled academic events, quarantined students exposed to the virus and recalled students and faculty from countries with high levels of transmission, according to the article. More information about the virus is available here. SUSTAINABILITY AT IU Faculty president Diane Henshel presented a proposed resolution to set goals for IU-Bloomington’s sustainability. Proposed goals in the resolution include creating a campus-specific climate action plan by 2025, prioritizing the sustainability plan and climate change action plan and making IU a carbon-neutral campus by 2040.
BFC will go into more detail and vote on this resolution during the next meeting. PROMOTION OF NON-TENURE-TRACK FACULTY Council members discussed which types of evaluations are best for determining the promotion of non-tenuretrack faculty instructional ranks. IU currently requires six letters of recommendation to be considered for promotion. Council members considered lowering the number of letters required or getting rid of the requirement to be considered for promotion. Council members said the discussion will continue into the next meeting. The council’s next meeting is scheduled for April 7 in the Radio/TV building.
Women in law speak about struggles By Ben Price beprice@iu.edu | @bbenpprice54
Four women in the law field spoke to members of an IU pre-law fraternity Tuesday at the Indiana Memorial Union about their experiences and struggles through law school and their careers. The fraternity, Phi Alpha Delta, coordinated the event because women can feel underrepresented in a lot of fields, secretary on the fraternity’s executive board Claribell Quinones said. She said the event was meant to make women in law more visible and show that women can be successful in the field. The women spoke about their careers, their struggles with working in law as women and advice they would give themselves and future generations of law students. “I would tell myself that you are not your success or lack thereof,” president of the Feminist Law Forum at IU Julie Baffoe said. “That doesn’t define who you are and neither does any failure.” Baffoe said one of Femi-
Road through Lower Cascades Park to be closed
nist Law Forum’s goals is to advocate against sexism in the legal profession. Director of the low-income taxpayer clinic at Indiana Legal Services Karen Ward said she felt like people didn’t take her as seriously in the early stages of her career. “Some people had condescending attitudes,” Ward said. “That’s not everybody, but it is kind of frustrating. The best way that I found to counteract it is to just be better at your job.” Social chair of IU’s Women’s Law Caucus Melanie Magdun said the law caucus is meant to connect women to other women in law. She said the group also fundraises for Middle Way House, which benefits survivors of domestic abuse. Magdun said she and her group encourage women to speak up. She said when women get a job, they are sometimes still in a predominantly male work environment, so their voices need to be heard. Christina Clark, vice president and associate general
JOY BURTON | IDS
Julie Baffoe, president of the Feminist Law Forum at IU, speaks at an event about women in law March 3 in the Oak Room in the Indiana Memorial Union. The event was presented by Phi Alpha Delta as part of Women’s History Month.
counsel at Strada Education Network spoke about what working for a nonprofit organization means to her. Strada Education Network improves access to college and helps students finish their education, according to its website. “Instead of how much money, you ask how many people will this help,” Clark said. “You’re trying to make the world a better place, and that feels good — it makes you want to keep going
back.” Shefali Prabhakar, a freshman in Phi Alpha Delta, said she enjoyed the panel because the women were able to talk freely about their experiences and true thoughts about the profession. “I see more events like this panel, having women talk about how they tackle that stigma of being the minority in the room,” Prabhakar said. “It’s really amazing to hear them.”
There’s only one park in Bloomington that has a road running directly through it, but starting March 13, vehicles will no longer be able to access a section of Old State Road 37 North that runs through Lower Cascades Park. The Bloomington Board of Public Works unanimously approved a sixmonth pilot study at its Tuesday meeting that involves converting Old State Road 37 North through Lower Cascades Park to a pedestrian and bicycleonly trail. The road will be converted into a trail from the Rogers Group quarry entrance to the north side of the playground. The project will begin March 13 and end Sept. 30. There will be a kickoff event March 28 at the park, involving a 100-meter kids’ dash and a one-mile run/ walk for all ages, according to a press release from the City of Bloomington. Paula McDevitt, director of Bloomington Parks and Recreation, said the pilot study comes after improvements were made to the park in 2018, such as additional trails. The department then began looking at how else they could make the park better. The closure will connect the trails at Lower Cascades Park to Miller Showers Park, which is between North Walnut Street and College Avenue. People who went to Lower Cascades Park were surveyed last March to find out how they use the park and how they get there. The survey was evenly split between people who drove there and people who biked, ran or walked. The survey didn’t include information about people’s opinions about turning the road into a pedestrian and bicycle-only trail, and McDevitt said the department wanted to use this pilot study to get that information. McDevitt said the temporary change is meant to create an experience people haven’t had before in the park. “It’s a way to encourage people to use the park in a different way,” she said. McDevitt said drivers often use the road as an alternate route to avoid traf-
fic on North Walnut Street. A study conducted in May 2018 found the average daily traffic was 942 cars and the mean speed was 29 mph. The posted speed in the park is 20 mph. A few Bloomington residents expressed their agreement with the pilot study. Mark Stosberg, member of the Bicycle and Pedestrian Safety Commission, said he’s glad the road is being changed so he and his children can use it without having to deal with cars while they’re walking or biking. “I think this will be a great asset that will make for a safe and enjoyable experience,” Stosberg said. The board and members of the public expressed concerns about North Walnut Street not having sufficient sidewalks for people to use to get to the parks. Beth Rosenbarger, planning services manager in Planning and Transportation, said there aren’t any numbers on how many people walk and bike to the park, but she understands North Walnut Street needs fixed so people can get to the park safely. “The situation and infrastructure could be improved,” Rosenbarger said. “I think it’s something we need to continue to look at.” There will be signs posted around the park to help people navigate where they can park their car. Parking lots will be at both ends of Lower Cascades Park and there will be spaces to parallel park. Barriers at both ends of the park will keep vehicles from driving through. The parking lot near the waterfall shelter past the drivethrough creek crossing will no longer be accessible by car, but the parking lots on both ends of the playground will still be open. QR codes will be posted at the ends of the park as well so people can take a survey on how they feel about the road closure. The survey will also be available at the park’s website, and McDevitt said people can call with concerns. McDevitt said she is unsure whether or not the road will continue to be blocked for vehicles after September and that it will depend on visitors’ feedback.
Professor finds Facebook security issues By Shelby Anderson anderssk@iu.edu | @ShelbyA04288075
Luyi Xing, an assistant professor in the Luddy School of Informatics, Computing, and Engineering, earned an award from Facebook after discovering security holes in apps that allowed third-party vendors to gain access to people’s Facebook logins. His research has affected an estimated 9.5 million users, according to an IU press release. Xing won a $30,000 award from Facebook through the Bug Bounty program, IU announced in early February.
The program awards people for finding security holes that companies security teams may have missed. His Facebook research was inspired by the Cambridge Analytica Facebook scandal, in which the data analytics firm harvested the data of up to 87 million people without their consent. Xing has been working at IU since June 2018 and independently searching for security holes for companies since 2011, when he began his Ph.D. program at IU. “Our research is to protect real world users,” Xing said.
Through his research, he discovered that software development kits owned by other third-party service vendors could steal data from the software development kits belonging to Facebook. Apps have software development kits which allow them to have functions such as logging into external websites using a Facebook account. The kits are created by vendors that do not own the app. After Xing made this discovery, he notified the app developers so they could fix the issues. Sometimes these solutions can be as simple
RAEGAN WALSH | IDS
Assistant professor of computer science, Luyi Xing, poses for a headshot March 2 in the Luddy School of Informatics, Computing, and Engineering. The $30,000 Xing was awarded as part of Facebook’s Bug Bounty program will go toward supporting Ph.D. students in security and privacy research.
as removing the problematic SDKs from the app, but this is only possible when the function SDK provides is not necessary for the app to continue to work, Xing said. Xing said he wanted the money that he received from the award to go back into his research and supporting research assistants. Yue Xiao, a Ph.D. student who worked as a research assistant with Xing on this project said the hardest part of the research was the amount of data, as Xiao and Xing went through many apps that each had their own SDKs, said She said she learned many technical skills through this research that she will use in her future career in cyber security, such as program analysis tools and natural language processes, which involves coding and allows computers to understand human languages. “I’m really proud that the research found helpful information for the users,” Xiao said. Yuzhen Ye, the interim chair of computer science at the school, said this type of work is becoming increasingly important as security problems become more serious. “It really demonstrates what impact faculty research can have on the real world,” Ye said.
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Paula McDevitt, director of Bloomington Parks and Recreation, discusses a proposal for a six-month pilot study related to converting part of Old State Road 37 North to a pedestrian and bikeonly trail March 3 at City Hall. The proposal was passed unanimously by the Bloomington Board of Public Works. Lydia Gerike Editor-in-Chief Caroline Anders & Emily Isaacman Managing Editors
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Kelley MBAs STEMcertified By Kyra Miller kymill@iu.edu | @kyra_ky94
Beginning this semester, the Kelley School of Business will give STEM certifications to those graduating with a Masters of Business Administration in accounting, business analytics, finance, marketing or supply chain and operations, according to an IU press release. MBAs with majors in those areas of study will include the science, technology, engineering and math certification, according to the release. A growing number of companies are requiring MBAs to have an understanding of STEM disciplines, according to the business school’s Graduate Career Services office. Since 1990, employment in STEM occupations has grown 80% and STEM jobsoutpace overall job growth in the United States, according to a 2018 Pew Research Center report. “This designation for our program enables us to more accurately reflect the quantitative nature of our curriculum today and demonstrates how Kelley always adjusts to meet the needs of students, which it frequently has done over its 100-year history,” Idalene Kesner, dean of the business school, said in the release. “The curriculum at Kelley has evolved to ensure that our students are ready for digitization, artificial intelligence, robotics and data analytics required in 21st-century jobs,” Ash Soni, executive associate dean for academic programs, said in the release. “Our employers appreciate that the STEM designation makes it easier for them to recruit the students who have completed this coursework and are the most prepared to perform in these roles.” In 2019, the business school’s MBA program was ranked 36th in the world and 27th in the U.S. by the Economist. “More than ever, we’re producing graduates who can focus on driving datadriven business decisions, solutions and operational insights,” Kyle Cattani, MBA program chair, said in the release. “We believe this reflects what we do well.”
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Dean of the Kelley School of Business Idie Kesner poses for a headshot. The Kelley School of Business will give STEM certificates to those graduating with certain Masters of Business Administration degrees according to an IU press release.
FEB. 28, 29 MAR. 6, 7 7:30 PM Musical Arts Center Bursar billing and group sales available!
Purchase tickets at 812-855-7433 or operaballet.indiana.edu
Local women to be honored for work By Nick Telman ntelman@iu.edu | @telmonster_11
Bloomington will honor five local women for their service to the Bloomington community in honor of Women’s History month in March, according to a press release from the city. The city of Bloomington Commission on the Status of Women has organized an event series to celebrate Women’s History Month. The theme of the first event date is “Valiant Women of the Vote,” celebrating the centennial of women’s suffrage. The commission gives awards annually to women for their work in women’s issues, diversity and inclusion. It will present the Woman of the Year Award, Toby Strout Lifetime Contribution Award, Emerging Leader Award and Young Woman of the Year Award. The Woman of the Year and Toby Strout Lifetime Contribution awards will be presented at the Women’s History Month luncheon at 12:15 p.m. March 25 at the Monroe Convention Center. Tickets are $25 per person and must be purchased online before March 23. The Emerging Leader and the Young Woman of the Year awards will be presented at the Women’s Leadership Development event at 10:30 a.m. March 28 at City Hall. This event will be free and open to the public. Woman of the Year awards: Jessika Hane and Tashera Perry The Woman of the Year Award recognizes women who improved the quality of life for other women through inspiration, community service or external professional accomplishments, Bloomington spokesperson Yael Ksander said in an email. The recipient should also be a positive role model for women in the community. Jessika Hane, adjunct instructor at the IU O’Neill
School of Public and Environmental Affairs, will receive the Woman of the Year Award for her work with multiple nonprofits. Hane served as the marketing committee chair and board president for Cardinal Stage Company, a professional theater company in Bloomington. Hane was a scholarship chair for the Community Foundation of Bloomington and Monroe County. While working with the foundation, Hane co-chaired the Thrive By Five endowment initiative, a program to help fund early childhood education. Hane said she works to encourage women to stand up and give back to their communities. “I think it’s absolutely all of our times to raise our hands and say yes to things we’re excited about supporting and excited about doing and that’s why I do it, because I want to show other people that if you have a passion for volunteering, that if you have a passion for helping others, that you shouldn’t hold back” Hane said. “You should do as much as you can.” Hane said she was surprised to receive the award. “I never thought I would get an award like this when there are always amazing women in our community who are doing so much good work,” Hane said. “I was so surprised and pleased and it’s a big honor.” The other recipient of the Woman of the Year Award, Dr. Tashera Perry, will receive it for her work on women’s health.Perry is a staff physician and adjunct clinical assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology for the IU School of Medicine and the Medical Science Program, according to the release. Perry also serves as a fellow for the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, member of the American Medical Association, the Indiana State Medical Society and is an ISMA Alternative Delegate for the
Monroe County Owen County Medical Society. Toby Strout Lifetime Contribution Award: Beth Lodge-Rigal This award recognizes women whose work has advanced the status of women through leadership and service, according to the city’s website. The award will go to Beth Lodge-Rigal for her work with Women Writing for (a) Change, a creative writing program for women. Lodge-Rigal established the Bloomington-affiliate of the program in 2004 and has also facilitated writing circles, outreach, retreats and directing programs at the Bloomington school. The most rewarding part of her work was receiving feedback from participants in her classes, Lodge-Rigal said. At the end of her sessions, writers would put feedback on index cards to give to her. “I remember one time early on there were three different cards in one of those classes that we read out loud and they all said this is way more than just a writing class,” she said. “This sounds kind of silly but it was like getting to hear back from people who were doing this that there was more going on than just writing creative nonfiction.” She said she was pleasantly surprised to receive the award. “It definitely feels like some kind of validation of this work,” Lodge-Rigal said. “I mean mostly I feel like I’ve been doing this very much under the radar. It’s one step at a time, building the community from the inside out with Women Writing for (a) Change.” Emerging Leader Award: Shatoyia Moss The Emerging Leader Award acknowledges a woman who has a relatively short history of achievements but has had an effect on the com-
munity and demonstrated enthusiasm, according the city’s website. Shatoyia Moss, the city’s safety director, will receive the Emerging Leader Award for her work in issues related to diversity and inclusion. Moss started the inaugural Black Girl Summit that took place in November 2019, a convention for middle and high school-aged women that featured workshops to empower women of color. Moss works as a mentor to three young women and is also the chairwoman of Delta Sigma Theta’s Delta Gems program, according to the release. The Delta Gems program provides framework and resources for African American women to plan and develop their careers, according to the Delta Gems website. Moss did not reply for comment. Young Woman of the Year Award: Solveig Hicks The award recognizes a woman between the ages of 11 and 18 who has made a positive change in women’s and girl’s issues in the community, according to the release. Solveig Hicks is a junior at Bloomington North High School. She is the president of the Young Democrats club and founded the school’s chapter of the National Organization for Women. In 2019, she organized a North-South High School reproductive rights rally and in 2017, spearheaded a Tri-North Middle School protest of the school’s dress code. Hicks said although she’s proud of the work she’s done, there is still a long way to go. “I’m receiving this award, but I know that in my lifetime, I’ll still be subject to discrimination,” Hicks said. “But that also empowers me to keep fighting to end that.” COURTESY PHOTOS
From top Jessika Hane, Dr. Tashera Perry, Beth Lodge-Rigal, Shatoyia Moss and Solveig Hicks
Disability institute incorporates research center By Luzane Draughon luzdraug@iu.edu | @luzdraughon
The Indiana Institute on Disability and Community incorporated the IU Eppley Institute for Parks and Public Lands, IU announced in a Feb. 25 press release. The IIDC is comprised of six research centers, and the Eppley Institute, which is housed by the School of Public Health, is the seventh. IIDC’s core focus is to do research to make communities more accessible to people with disabilities, IIDC director Derek Nord said. The Eppley Institute seeks to make parks accessible to everyone. “There is a lot of overlap in our missions,” Nord said. The IIDC wanted to incorporate the Eppley Institute to reach communities in parks and recreation that they hadn’t yet, he said. Nord said the inclusion of the Eppley Institute will lead to collaborative work between the two institutes. Nord said the team at the Eppley Institute will contin-
ue to implement its projects, including consultation with park services and addressing accessibility concerns. “All people have the right to live, recreate and be fully included in their community,” Nord said in the release. “One’s disability status should not dictate these outcomes.” The incorporation of the Eppley Institute will provide more job and research opportunities to the IU community, Nord said. The IIDC trains undergraduate and graduate students to work for the Eppley Institute as research assistants. Eppley Institute executive director Stephen Wolter said the IIDC and Eppley joining together gives the Eppley Institute the ability to work across IU’s campus, rather than only in the School of Public Health. He said it’s powerful to work with different disciplines and students. “Our mission and values dovetail with the work of the IIDC,” Wolter said in the release. “The projects
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Director of Indiana Institute on Disability and Community Derek Nord poses for a headshot. The IIDC is expanding to include the Eppley Institute for Parks and Public Lands as its seventh research center this summer.
conducted by Eppley have had significant impacts to community health, quality of place and experiences for all peoples.” IU interim vice provost for research Jeff Zaleski said the Eppley Institute’s parks and recreation resources and local volunteers will help the IIDC as well.
The IIDC is one of 21 research centers, institutes and museums the IU-B Office of the Vice Provost oversees, Zaleski said. The IIDC is one of the broadest centers, and he said it’s an example of how to do community-based research in Indiana schools. “The IIDC is a leader in
interdisciplinary, applied research that advances change in the state and country,” Zaleski said in the release. “Together, the Indiana Institute and programs at Eppley will be even better positioned to create new opportunities for sharing of ideas and innovations that benefit everyone.”
SPEAKER SERIES Prepare to be challenged and inspired.
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March 6
5 p.m. Presidents Hall
Bill Whitaker
Correspondent, “60 Minutes” Cosponsors: Center on Representative Government, Office of the Vice President for Government Relations and Economic Engagement
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U.S. President Donald Trump tours the Viral Pathogenesis Laboratory on March 3 at National Institutes of Health Vaccine Research Center in Bethesda, Maryland.
Coronavirus death toll climbs to 9 in US KIRKLAND, Wash. — As three more deaths in the United States were linked to the coronavirus Tuesday, the World Health Organization said the mortality rate for the virus has increased to 3.4% as the illness continues its global spread. Public health officials confirmed a nursing home patient in Washington state was admitted to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle on Feb. 24 and died two days later. The patient, a 54-yearold man who had underlying medical conditions, was transported from Life Care Center of Kirkland and died days before several other patients at the nursing home were linked to the coronavirus, hospital spokeswoman Susan Gregg said. The Seattle and King County Public Health Department on Tuesday reported two additional deaths from the COVID-19 disease, bringing the King County total to eight. The other person who died was from Snohomish County, health officials said. A North Carolina resident who visited the Kirkland facility has since tested positive for the virus, becoming that state’s first case of COVID-19, Gov. Roy Cooper announced Tuesday. Health department officials in North Carolina are working to identify anyone else who may have come in contact with the individual. “I know that people are worried about this virus and I want to assure North Carolinians our state is prepared,” Cooper said in a statement, noting that the person represents an isolated case. The increased global mortality rate — which includes more than 3,000 deaths — is more than double the mortality rate of the flu, which is less than 1%. WHO Director Tedros Adha-
nom Ghebreyesus said that’s because COVID-19 is a new disease and no one has built up an immunity to it. In announcing the increase, Tedros reiterated the WHO’s belief that containment of the illness is still possible. “We don’t even talk about containment for seasonal flu,” Tedros said. “It’s just not possible, but it’s possible for COVID-19.” Officials say they’ve learned the coronavirus is less transmissible than the flu, which is often spread by infected people without symptoms. That doesn’t seem to be the case for COVID-19, he said. “There are not yet any vaccines or therapeutics, which is why we must do everything we can to contain it.” Mike Ryan, who runs the agency’s emergencies program, pushed back against officials who want to “wave the white flag” and surrender to the disease’s hold. China took drastic steps to fight the virus, he said, and case numbers are now on the decline there. Countries like China and South Korea “implemented very, very strong measures that have affected their own economies and their own societies,” Ryan said. “It’s really a duty of others to use the time that has been bought. “That is not a reverse you can achieve with influenza. If that is a failure, we’ll have slowed down the virus.” There can be a big benefit in slowing the virus’ arrival in a country for a few months, Ryan said. Many countries, including the U.S., are in the middle of flu season, so large numbers of coronavirus cases would overwhelm the health system. In Italy, COVID-19 patients and flu patients are already stretching hospitals
and health care facilities, he said. Tedros said he’s concerned by shortages of masks, gowns and other equipment needed by health care workers to stop the spread of disease “caused by rising demands and hoarding and misuse.” “We can’t stop COVID-19 without protecting our health workers,” said Tedros, noting that prices of surgical masks have increased sixfold. Current information suggests that most COVID-19 cases are mild, said Dr. Nancy Messonnier, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s director of the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases. According to a report out of China, the most serious illnesses occur in 16% of cases, she said, and older people and those with underlying health conditions are twice as likely to develop serious outcomes. Speaking during a media briefing Tuesday, Messonnier said cases similar to those reported abroad are now appearing in the United States. The CDC is relying on local health clinicians to determine testing needs. In addition to CDC test kits, commercial manufacturers overseen by the Food and Drug Administration are providing tests directly to states. These types of tests are typically what are on the front lines in the United States, Messonnier said. As of Monday evening, 60 cases of coronavirus had been diagnosed in the U.S. plus an additional 45 people who were passengers aboard the Diamond Princess cruise ship in Japan and were repatriated to America. That puts the total at around 105 cases, according to the CDC. The West Coast continues to bear the brunt of the ill-
nesses in the U.S., with the focus on Northern California and Washington. At least five Northern California counties reported new cases of COVID-19 on Monday, bringing the total in California to nearly 50. Though the flurry of positive test results in recent days does signal that the virus is circulating within the U.S., experts advised the public to avoid reading too much into those numbers. Until late last week, federal officials were not allowing widespread testing for the virus, so many people who were already sick are only now being diagnosed, said Harvard epidemiology professor Marc Lipsitch. “Some of the numbers are changing because new things are happening, but a lot of the numbers are changing because we’re discovering things that have already happened,” Lipsitch said in a forum Monday hosted by Harvard’s public health school. “It’s really important to distinguish ‘Oh, goodness, there’s a new cluster’ from ‘Oh, goodness, we just discovered that there’s a cluster that’s been there for some time.’ ” As the virus spreads, officials are trying to push back against Asian American bias and misinformation surrounding the outbreak. Amid signs that some are staying away from Chinatowns and other Asian communities in the U.S., Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., sharply criticized the xenophobia that has been displayed toward ethnic communities. “We’ve also seen a rise in racism toward Asian Americans because the virus is associated with China,” she said. “This is unconscionable, and it’s not the American way. People of all ages, races and ethnicities are sus-
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ceptible to this disease. Bigotry toward any one group for a virus they have nothing to do with makes no sense.” Several areas in California have declared local emergencies amid the outbreak. Sonoma County on Monday issued a declaration after announcing two people had been diagnosed with the virus. One infected person returned from a cruise to Mexico 10 days ago and is now hospitalized, but the case “is a cause for concern,” said county health officer Dr. Celeste Philip. Declaring a state of emergency will allow the county to respond properly to the outbreak as well as “work in tandem with our cities and healthcare providers to ensure we are prepared to combat an outbreak of COVID-19 in our communities,” Philip said in a statement. Meanwhile, two new COVID-19 cases were reported in Santa Clara County, bringing its total to nine, the most of any California county. Both individuals are under home isolation, officials said. Many initial reports of COVID-19 have been in health care workers, who are among the most likely to encounter sick patients. Hundreds of health care workers in California have already been asked to stay home due to contact with patients diagnosed with the disease over the last few weeks. On Monday, Placer County reported a confirmed case of COVID-19 in a health care worker at NorthBay VacaValley Hospital in Vacaville, where a COVID-19 patient had been admitted. County spokeswoman Katie Combs Prichard said that the medical worker, who lives in Placer County, came into contact with that patient and was likely infected by her. Conferences in the state
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and elsewhere are being canceled or scaled back amid fears of the virus, but the WHO’s Ryan said decisions to cancel mass gatherings, including sporting events, should be determined by a country’s leadership, based on how severe the outbreak is in their region. Officials recently had a call with the International Olympic Committee to discuss the Summer Olympics scheduled in Tokyo and decided to continue monitoring the situation, with three months given before a decision must be made. “I have confidence in Japan that there will be hopefully progress,” Tedros said. “Deciding now could be too early.” President Donald Trump said Tuesday during a speech to the National Association of Counties’ legislative conference in Washington that he expects Congress will pass a special funding bill providing $8.5 billion — far more than he requested — to fight the spread of the illness in the United States. “It just shows you what can happen — six weeks ago, eight weeks ago, you never heard of this. All of a sudden, it’s got the world aflutter,” Trump said, noting later while leaving the White House to visit the National Institutes of Health that he is looking at further international travel restrictions involving Italy, Japan and South Korea but will not limit domestic travel. (Times staff writer Noah Bierman contributed to this report from Washington, D.C. Staff writer Read reported from Kirkland. Staff writers Shalby and Karlamangla reported from Los Angeles.) By Richard Read, Soumya Karlamangla and Colleen Shalby Los Angeles Times
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ARTS
Thursday, March 5, 2020 idsnews.com
Editors Kevin Chrisco and Madi Smalstig arts@idsnews.com
5
Student rapper films ‘Next Up’ music video By Hannah Johnson hanjohn@iu.edu | @hannah_dailey1
Luxury cars. Designer clothes. An entourage. The only thing missing from IU senior and rapper Agboola Bankole-Hameed’s music video shoot Friday was a glamorous location like New York or L.A., but he doesn’t think you’ll be able to tell the difference. The music video was for “Next Up,” Bankole-Hameed’s song, which comes out March 20. Filmed in different spots around Bloomington, the video, which is set to come out about a week after the song drops, is lavish enough to compete with the videos of distinguished rappers, Bankole-Hameed said. “It’s the craziest shit I’ve ever seen,” BankoleHameed, whose rap name is AG Bankrolls, said. “I’ve seen Drake’s videos, and they don’t hold a candle to this.” When senior BankoleHameed met Sam Koch in his freshman year business presentations class, there was no way of knowing that in three years, the two would be working on a song and music video together. When Koch introduced BankoleHameed to IU wide receiver Jacolby Hewitt, who also raps on the song, they began freestyling about climbing their way to the top. Within one recording session, “Next Up” was born. “Next Up” is about breaking out onto the music scene and gaining success, which Bankole-Hameed said is reflected in the extravagant, Fast and Furious style of the video. “It’s about our hunger for more,” Bankole-Hameed said. “We want the recognition for the work we’re putting in.” Koch, a senior studying marketing and minoring in arts management, produced “Next Up” and was the creative director for the shoot. He said the video, which is
COURTESY PHOTO
Members of a local Bloomington rap group film its music video Feb. 27 in the Jordan Avenue parking garage. The music video was for IU senior and rapper Agboola Bankole-Hameed’s song “Next Up,” which comes out March 20.
set to be released about a week after the song, is diverse because of all of the different people involved, many of whom were Chinese international students. “All different personalities, backgrounds and races just came together,” Koch said. “That’s what music’s about, bringing people together.” Koch said the video was a community effort, with volunteers bringing their
luxury Mercedes and BMWs and their Off-White and Balenciaga hoodies to be used for the day. As the creative director, Koch was in charge of choosing the filming locations and creating the concept for the video, but the thing he said he’s most proud of is that every person who worked on the project contributed something special. “Everybody sprinkled in a little bit of their magic into
INDIANA DAILY STUDENT 150 Years of Headlines, Deadlines and Bylines
the video,” Koch said. Sophomore Joseph Nieto, who filmed and directed the video, said there was no written script for what happened in front of the camera. Once they arrived on location, Nieto said he and his team would spontaneously decide on the angles, lighting and setup. “Everything just felt organic,” Nieto said. “The energy was just natural, it didn’t feel like we were forc-
ing anything.” Nieto, who is studying sports media, is editing the video as well. He hasn’t finished the video yet, but he said he hopes to give it a Cole Bennett-esque trippiness by adding fast cuts, color changes and possibly animation. “My artistic vision is to make people feel that fastpaced energy I felt when I was shooting it,” Nieto said. Although the song and
video won’t drop for a few weeks, Bankole-Hameed said he’s already eager to start working on other projects. The message of “Next Up” is to keep hustling, which he plans on doing until he makes a name for himself. “The whole concept was we’re coming for everybody,” Bankole-Hameed said. “We’re next up. When we come, it’s going to take them by storm.”
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Thursday, March 5, 2020 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
PHOTOS BY NOBLE GUYON | IDS
Left Da’Quincy Pittman smiles while walking to class on his first day back. He doesn’t want to leave Indianapolis, despite the violence. “I gotta stay,” he said. “Too much love, family here.” Top Right Da’Quincy Pittman, 15, waits for his schedule Feb. 24, his first day back to school since being shot six times in December. “It just hits me sometimes,” he said. “It haunts me.” Bottom Right Nicole Fama, principal of James and Rosemary Phalen Leadership Academy, looks at one of Da’Quincy Pittman’s scars on the forearm doctors sliced open to dig out a bullet. Pittman endured five surgeries and weeks of rehab.
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CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 Fifth Avenue bag that carries a jumble of gauze and ointments — in her desk for when bandages need changed. She doesn’t have any medical training, so she tries to imitate what the wrapping looked like when she first saw it. She’s gotten pretty good. “When I went to school, school was school,” Grandma says. “But this is everything.” Phalen’s teachers and administrators have to be nurses, mental health experts, confidants and parents. “You slide in academics — if you can,” Grandma says. * * * Da’Quincy’s mom is a nursing assistant, but she’d never taken care of a fresh gunshot wound until her son was full of them. Shirley Collins, 38, has five sons, and she wants them to stay in the house. “I really can’t trust the world,” she says. “I don’t want to let my kids out of my sight.” But Da’Quincy has been asking to go back to school, and she thinks he’s ready. Fama isn’t so sure. A Barack Obama campaign poster and a portrait of Michelle look down from the wall in her office as Da’Quincy explains that he left his arm brace and some of his medicine at home. His mom says he won’t take his vitamins or drink his Ensure. She says he doesn't like physical therapy because his therapist is a man who won’t let him get away with anything. Grandma is back in the office, pears and carton of milk in hand. She’s beside herself. “You can’t lose ground!” Months ago, Da’Quincy was a star wide receiver on the football team. He’s adamant that he’ll play again, anywhere
that will let him, but the adults aren’t convinced. He might have to coach. Now Fama and Grandma spoon-feed him applesauce. He doesn’t argue. He wanders down the hall to his first class, escorted by a friend and looking a little dazed as he navigates a rush of handshakes and hugs. He tries not to think about the shooting, but sometimes he can’t help it. It gnaws at him. It makes him look over his shoulder. A girl runs up squealing and squeezes him too hard. A teacher chides, “Honey, don’t do that to him!” In the hall, he runs into Mudder, who was shot just a month before he was. Mudder grins at him, the hard lump of a bullet still lodged between his eyes. Hero’s welcome over, it’s time for geometry. * * * Almost every student at Phalen knows someone who’s been shot. They hear gunfire as often as thunder. Taevion, 14, lives at Carriage House, an apartment complex about half a mile from the school, where four young adults were killed a few weeks ago. That night, she rolled out of bed and dropped to the ground. She drops to the ground about three times a week. She rearranged her room a long time ago so her feet would face the window — so she wouldn’t be shot in the head. When she hears gunshots, she texts everyone who lives around her “You cool?” or “You straight?” If they don’t respond, she knocks on their doors. Rashad, 12, knows to turn off all the lights and TVs when he hears shots and hide in his room with his little sister. When one boy on the basketball team heard gunshots, he lay on top of his grand-
mother to protect her. A group of students were shot at as they walked home from drama practice. A different group was shot at leaving a basketball game. One boy used to stay up all night because he was scared. He’d sleep at school. Nevaeh’s mom was shot with an AK-47 when she was pregnant with her. And what does the 13-year-old think when she hears gunshots? “I know somebody finna die. ‘Cause it’s the usual stuff.” Mudder was riding in a car when he was shot. Da’Quincy was sitting in one. Another Phalen scholar was at a party. A fourth was in his dad’s front yard. The fifth was on his front porch. "I keep screaming,” Fama says. “I'm waiting for people to be outraged, and no one is.” When Mudder was shot on Thanksgiving Day, students started calling and texting her. She rushed to the hospital and held his hand. The students looked at her like she should be able to fix it. To fix any of it. “We feed them. We clothe them. We take them places. We pay for things for them,” she said later. “And so when something bad happens, you know, it's an instinct to run to your parents. I was in tears. I was like, ‘What did you think I could do?’ “I could do a lot, but I can't stop a bullet.” * * * Da’Quincy’s biggest fear was always being shot, but he didn’t think it would actually happen. He doesn’t like needles and couldn't imagine bullets. He thought he would focus on football and school, and his life would be smooth. On the night of Dec. 29, he was sitting in a car with a friend, talking on the phone with some girls, when he saw
three men walking up and felt something wasn’t right. “Lock the doors,” he said, but the men were already climbing in. They demanded everything he had. He told them the truth: He didn’t have anything but his shoes. “You think I’m playin’?” one asked. They shot him six times. No one has been arrested. Da’Quincy remembers a woman trying to get him to drink bottles of water as they waited for help. He remembers not knowing where the blood was coming from, but knowing his hoodie was drenched. He didn’t realize how many times he’d been hit until the paramedics cut his clothes off in the ambulance and he saw the holes. When his mother saw him on the hospital bed, she passed out. “I’m sorry,” he told her. “I’m sorry.” He remembers being hooked up to all the machines. He remembers being calm. He thought of the bullet rooted in Mudder’s forehead. He remembers not crying. “I swear to God, I didn’t think I was going to make it.” He came to school a few weeks after the shooting because he wanted to talk to the football team. Before, he was an athlete. Sitting in front of them in his Pac-Man pajamas, he told them he couldn’t lift a spoon to his mouth. He couldn’t wipe himself. He had a message for them. “This ain’t what we need to go through,” he said. “Stay in the house where you safe.” * * * Phalen is supposed to expand to offer 11th grade next year, but that project is nearing a standstill. At least $1.2 million is needed just to open the doors in the fall. One Monday afternoon,
Fama launches into a series of tense meetings about how they’re going to make that happen. They have no idea. “We’ve had our backs against the wall before,” Grandma reminds her. “We’ll just wait and see what happens.” But Fama’s tired. A dog park in Broad Ripple just got a $600,000 facelift. The City of Carmel took out loans to help fund a luxury hotel project that's now more than $18 million over budget. Some kids at Phalen are going home to places where the lights being on isn’t a given. They’re begging for more after-school activities to stay where it’s safe for just a little while longer. But until the renovations are done, Phalen is out of space. A boy came in earlier that morning and asked Fama’s dad, Coach, for something dry to wear. He had missed the bus and walked an hour to school so his mom wouldn’t whoop him. He was drenched. Coach dutifully put his clothes in the dryer and found him a sweatshirt. Fama doesn’t have the $3.5 million she needs to build her scholars a gym, and she doesn’t know where she’s going to get it. “You take better care of dogs than you do children on the east side,” she says. But she’s talking to herself. * * * Mr. Dwenger launches into his lesson on finding the volume of a sphere. Da’Quincy puts his head in his hands. The student sitting behind him answers every question. Da’Quincy plays with his shoelaces and picks at his lip. His foot, full of nerves still fried from when the bullet shattered his femur, is aching. An announcement over the loudspeaker reminds everyone tomorrow is school pic-
ture day. Da’Quincy makes it 18 minutes into geometry. He limps back to Fama’s office, calculator in his back pocket, and doesn’t stop to talk to anyone this time. He’s so irritated with how much his foot aches, he can’t think about anything else. He opens Fama’s door. “Already, my sweetheart?” she asks. He spends the rest of the morning with the nurse, lying with his knees tucked to his chest, knit blanket pulled over his head, curtain drawn around him. The signs on the wall tell him he’s brave and tough and important, and remind him to stay hydrated and wash his hands. He tries to go to the bathroom, but he feels like his body is shutting down. He collapses to the floor. He has to be helped back to bed, and he’s mad. He wants to be able to do things himself. Da’Quincy knows he’s pushed it too far today, but he assures the nurse he feels OK now. She calls Mom anyway. “It might just be too much for him to be here today,” she says quietly. When Mom arrives, they settle Da’Quincy into a wheelchair and help him into her minivan. He promises he’s going to take his iron pills and be back tomorrow. Sometimes he thinks people assume he's going to fall and crash. But he’s determined not to. “I feel like they don’t understand that I want better than what most people expect,” he says. He prays he’ll make it. He prays for better days. He trusts God’s plan for him. This week, despite six gunshots, five surgeries and weeks spent relearning how to be a teenager, the boy who hates needles but is full of metal turned 16.
Julia J. Mueller
IZZY MYSZAK | IDS
A set of buildings are pictured at 217 W. Sixth St., between Social Cantina and Janko’s Little Zagreb. Over the next several months, Bret Pafford Jr., a managing partner through ReVv and Strum Hospitality, plans to open four new restaurants in this area.
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CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 destination geared toward people who appreciate health foods,” Pafford said. The restaurant will serve items such as salads, flat breads and soups. ReVv and Strum Hospitality plans to open the restaurant around the middle of the summer. “It’ll be the place to go for nourishment,” he said. Pafford plans to roll out a
market, catering restaurant and service called Capisce Market this summer as well. To top it all off, Pafford and his company plan to open a high-end seafood restaurant and oyster bar called Top Bar. He said seafood will be flown in from all over the world and the wine and cocktail list will be extensive. “It’s primarily about being over the top,” Pafford said. There will be a dance
floor and dueling grand pianos as well, all on the top floor of the building the other restaurants will be in. Top Bar will overlook City Hall and the Bloomington Community Farmers’ Market, Pafford said. The bar will have an open sky concept with awnings and heaters for bad weather, so it can stay open year-round. Top Bar is slated to open in late summer before students are back in Bloomington. MC Webb, who handles
marketing for the restaurants, is a recent IU graduate. She runs the restaurants' social media accounts, including Village Pub, and said she’s looking forward to continuing her work in Bloomington with these new developments. Webb said she doesn't think Bloomington has anything like Top Bar or Brilliant Coffee Company. “I think this is exactly what Bloomington needs,” Webb said.
Julia is a Certified Clinical Hypnotherapist and Best Selling Author. She specializes in teaching individuals, through the use of relaxation techniques, to achieve the following goals: Manage stress and anxiety. Eliminate distractions and focus to improve test taking and study skills. Achieve behavioral changes to eliminate addictions, smoke cessation, weight loss and a plethora of other goals to improve health, life and well being. Ask about Julia’s powerful custom audios to use as successful lifelong tools! Office hours: By Appointment Executive Park North 2620 North Walnut St., Suite 700 941-730-3965 AMindandBodyConnection.com
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Indiana Daily Student
SPORTS
Thursday, March 5, 2020 idsnews.com
Editor Phillip Steinmetz sports@idsnews.com
7
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
CLAIRE LIVINGSTON | IDS
Sophomore Grace Berger is introduced as part of the starting lineup Feb. 27 in Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall. Berger averages 13.3 points and 5.2 rebounds per game.
Grace Berger has become a leading voice for IU By Sam Bodnar sbodnar@iu.edu | @sgbod13
The rhythm of her dribbling was the heartbeat of the Berger household. When the sun was out, Grace Berger played one-on-one against her older sister Abby in the driveway. Late at night, Grace practiced her ball handling inside the garage below her sister’s room. Abby counted each bounce of
the ball instead of counting sheep. With every dribble, Grace envisioned her dream of playing Division I basketball. “When I first picked up a basketball, I just fell in love with it,” Grace said. Grace, 20, is a sophomore and starting guard for IU women’s basketball. Since coming off the bench in most games her freshman year, she has become a cornerstone of the Hoosiers’ offense. She averages 13.3
CLAIRE LIVINGSTON | IDS
Top Sophomore Grace Berger passes the ball while under the basket Feb. 27 in Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall. Berger grew up studying game film with her dad and strategizing how to improve her playmaking decisions. COLIN KULPA | IDS
Middle Freshman Grace Waggoner talks to sophomore Grace Berger on Jan. 27 in Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall. Berger’s work on the court and in the weight room prepared her to be one of the Hoosier’s starting five. Bottom Sophomore Grace Berger drives to the basket Dec. 11 against Butler University in Hinkle Fieldhouse in Indianapolis. Berger achieved her first career double-double Jan. 27 against Minnesota.
points and 5.1 rebounds while playing 34.2 minutes per game. Before she entered Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall, Grace said a conversation with her Amateur Athletic Union coach Tim Barnett alerted her to the possibility of never reaching her goal. Before she started high school, Barnett told her that her quiet demeanor hindered her leadership abilities. If she wanted to have success in high school and achieve her dreams of playing at the Division I level, she would need to become more vocal and grow in her confidence as a leader. The opportunity to pursue her passion in a leadership role came in her freshman year at Sacred Heart Academy in Louisville, Kentucky. Although Grace was just a freshman, her veteran teammates looked up to her. When teammates had rough days or needed encouragement, Grace was the first to text them after practices or pull them aside for a conversation. Sacred Heart head coach Donna Moir said Grace’s pride in caring for her teammates and becoming a better leader was infectious. Grace also grew by studying film from games with her dad, the person she shares the deepest love of basketball with. “He’s always been such a good dad to me, and he puts an emphasis on how I could separate myself by my actions and lead by my actions,” Grace said. While rewatching different plays, the two strategized on how Grace could improve her playmaking decisions. This enabled her to use these lessons as opportunities to see the floor differently and get her teammates more involved on the offense. “They were always on a different level of conversation than I was,” Abby said. “I understand basketball, but it’s a whole new level with them.” Grace’s dad also took her to watch women’s basketball games during high school at the University of Louisville. After the games, Grace walked onto the court and spoke with players such as Shoni Schimmel. The post-game conversations gave Grace the chance to ask ques-
tions about how to become a better leader and competitor. With motivation from her father and her favorite players, Grace formed a deeper bond with her teammates and in her junior year led the Valkyries to their seventh district championship. “You knew she’d be a D1 athlete before she ever walked into Sacred Heart,” Moir said. “When she said something, you knew to pay attention.” Grace earned recognition in 2018 as a finalist for Kentucky Miss Basketball and a five-star ranking by ESPN. She committed to IU in her junior year after meeting head coach Teri Moren. “Coach Moren constantly talked about the future of the program and where she wanted to take it, the vision she had for it and the part that she thought I could play in that,” Grace said.
“When I first picked up a basketball, I just fell in love with it.” Grace Berger, IU women’s basketball starting guard
IU had just won the 2018 NIT tournament and lost its all-time leading scorer in Tyra Buss when Grace arrived on campus. As the coaching staff reconfigured its plans for the season, Grace needed time getting comfortable and familiar with a new role on her new team. Her signature pull-up jumpshot and flashy dribbling were helpful components of the IU offense her freshman year. But with many voices on the 2018-19 Hoosier roster, Grace said she was passive and shied away from being the vocal leader that she was at Sacred Heart. Although Grace would need a full year to gain the confidence she has now, like most freshmen, the guard took advantage of the moments to listen when she wasn’t speaking. Grace observed the communication and embraced the encouragement coming from veterans like IU alumna Kym Royster. Royster remembered what it was like to be a freshman away from home and reminded Grace about the importance of communication and leading by example. Grace said Royster would text after tough practices, a reminder of what she used to do at Sacred Heart. The former Hoosier also motivated Grace to shoot with confidence and become a contributor that the team needed. She was determined to use those observations for her benefit. In the final five games of her freshman season, Grace nearly doubled her scoring average. She felt confident to shoot more, which helped the Hoosier offense in her first tournament appearance. Grace was one of the top scorers in IU’s second-round loss to the University of Oregon in the 2019 NCAA tournament. She played 23 minutes off the bench, scoring 11 points and finishing with four rebounds. The thrill of the tournament experience, combined with a desire
to contribute more to the team, motivated Grace to train over the summer. “It was hard for me last year because I couldn’t help my team succeed,” Grace said. “There were times where they needed me to come off the bench, and I wasn’t necessarily ready to do that. So that pushed me to want to work harder during the off-season.” Grace shot thousands of 3-pointers and worked on her ball handling in the summer months. Moir said she received thank you texts from IU assistant coach Rhet Wierzba who was helping the rising sophomore. With five freshmen arriving the fall of 2019, Grace’s work on the court and in the weight room prepared her to join junior guard Ali Patberg as a starter in the backcourt. Her highest-scoring game of the season and first career double-double cameJan. 27 against Minnesota. IU shot just 33% in the opening quarter and needed someone to step up. Grace turned the game around. The sophomore scored the final 10 points of the second quarter and IU’s first eight of the third. This prompted Minnesota head coach Lindsay Whalen to yell “Get her!” whenever the ball touched Grace’s fingertips. A road game against Nebraska on Feb. 9 marked the first time in her career when Grace had the chance to win the game for IU. She had missed 10 shots that night, some contested and some open layups. Her hands turned red from hitting them in frustration, but in spite of her shooting struggles, the starters and coaches cheered her on. The game was tied with just 38 seconds remaining. The Hoosiers needed a basket, and they looked to Grace. Freshman forward Jorie Allen and junior guard Keyanna Warthen shouted “she can’t guard you” when Grace got the ball off the inbound. The sophomore leaned into her teammates’ trust. “When you hear that from your peers, it doesn’t matter what I say,” Moren said. “What matters is what her teammates think of her.” Crossing the ball from her left to right hand, Grace drove toward the right side of the basket, dribbled past two defenders and finished with a reverse layup. Her teammates went from sitting on the edge of their seats to high- fiving their star guard who had given IU the lead and seconds later, the win. Grace embraces her dad and Abby when they walk onto the court. Her dad comes to every home game, and Abby comes to most. They used to watch Grace ask collegiate athletes for autographs and leadership advice. Now, she’s given the Sharpie and offers words of wisdom for younger basketball players. “It’s easy for me to give them advice because it doesn’t feel like that long ago that I was that little girl going up to players after the game and just admiring their every move,” Grace said. “I realize how big of an impact I can have on them. It’s really special to me and something I take really seriously.”
Indiana Daily Student
8
SPORTS
Thursday, March 5, 2020 idsnews.com
Editors D.J. Fezler and Grace Ybarra sports@idsnews.com
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
IU looks ahead to Big Ten Tournament matchups By Will Trubshaw wtrubsha@iu.edu | @Willtrubs
No. 20 IU women’s basketball finished its best regular season in program history Sunday with a 78-60 win over Michigan. Now the team will turn its focus to the Big Ten Tournament, where it will begin play at 2:30 Friday. The Hoosiers are the fourth seed and earned a double bye due to their 13 Big Ten wins this season. IU’s 23 wins are the most it has ever had entering postseason tournament play, and ties the most ever in program history. The team has also spent a program best 17 straight weeks in the AP Top 25. The Hoosiers never once dropped out of the top 25 and reached as high as No.12. But in the postseason, records and rankings don’t matter all that much since every game is a single elimination. That’s where upsets can come into play. The team’s No. 4 ranking in the tournament means it will have to wait a couple days before it knows who it’s playing Friday afternoon. Until then, here’s what the Hoosiers will need to do to make their way through the Big Ten Tournament and win the championship for the first time since 2002. IU’s history in the Big Ten Tournament Historically, the Hoosiers haven’t had a great deal of
success in the Big Ten Tournament, with a record 17-26 in 25 previous tournament appearances. Including the title run in 2002, IU has won multiple games in the tournament only three times. The Hoosiers have not won more than one game since 2006. IU has won each of its last two tournament opening games. A win Friday would put the Hoosiers into the semifinals. Quarterfinal matchup IU’s first game of the tournament will be against the winner of the Wisconsin and Rutgers or Illinois matchup Thursday. Illinois and Wisconsin play at noon Wednesday to determine who plays Rutgers on Thursday. IU went 3-0 against Illinois and Wisconsin this season. Rutgers finished with an 11-7 conference record, right behind IU for fifth in the Big Ten. IU came out on top in the lone meeting between the two schools this season. The Hoosiers won 66-56 at the RAC in Piscataway, New Jersey, on New Year’s Eve. Junior guard Jaelynn Penn led IU offensively with 14 points, while Rutgers junior guard Arella Guirantes led all scorers with 23 points. Semifinal matchup If IU wins its quarterfinal game Friday, it will go on to play the winner of Michigan State and Maryland or Purdue at 6:30 p.m. Saturday.
CLAIRE LIVINGSTON | IDS
Junior Jaelynn Penn attempts a shot Feb. 27 in Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall. IU will compete in the Big Ten Championships at 2:30 p.m. March 6 in Indianapolis.
The Hoosiers would most likely play Maryland on Saturday, barring a major upset. The Terrapins are No. 6 in the country and won 14 straight games to finish off the regular season as co-Big Ten champion with Northwestern. Maryland is the favorite to win the Big Ten tournament this year. Maryland won both meetings against IU in the
regular season — a 76-62 win at home and a 79-69 win at Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall two weeks later. Sophomore guard Grace Berger, who was just named to the coaches’ All-Big Ten First team, led IU with 21 points in the first game. Junior guard Ali Patberg, a consensus All-Big Ten First teamer, scored 16 in the second meeting. If these two teams meet
in the semifinal, it would be the first time since the Terrapins joined the Big Ten that they face off against each other in the tournament. Final matchup If IU wins in the semifinal, it would most likely play either Northwestern or Iowa in the final — the tournament’s two and three seeds respectively. The Wildcats had their best year in 30 years, and the
BASEBALL
Hawkeyes are looking to repeat as tournament champs. IU lost against both teams this year, including a double-overtime thriller at Iowa and a heartbreaking loss at home against Northwestern. If IU wins out in the tournament, there is a chance it could reclaim a top-four seed and home court advantage for the first round of the NCAA Tournament.
MEN’S TENNIS
IU remains undefeated at home with two weekend wins By Joshua Manes jamanes@iu.edu | @TheManesEvent
ALEX DERYN | IDS
Then-senior catcher Ryan Fineman prepares to high-five senior utility Matt Lloyd on May 16, 2019, at Bart Kaufman Field. IU won two of its three games during the Keith Leclair Classic this weekend in Greenville, North Carolina.
IU loses to Ole Miss 9-5 on Sunday By Sarah Kress sekress@iu.edu | @sarakress4
IU baseball lost its final game this weekend in the Keith LeClair Classic in Greenville, North Carolina, ending a six-game winning streak it secured after the first two games. The team went 2-1 in the tournament. It beat No. 17 East Carolina University 11-5 on Friday and High Point University 5-1 on Saturday. It then lost to No. 13 University of Mississippi 9-5 on Sunday, bringing the team’s record to 6-3 for the season. The Hoosiers had a slow start offensively Sunday. They didn’t get a hit until the fourth inning, when the Hoosiers hit a pair of solo home runs by sophomore outfielder Grant Richardson and senior infielder Jordan Fucci. Ole Miss started out strong during the game with a two-run home run from junior infielder Tyler Keenan in the first inning. It had two other two-run home runs in the game, one from freshman catcher Hayden Dunhurst in the fourth inning and one from sophomore infielder Kevin Graham in the seventh. The Hoosiers managed to tie the score 5-5 in the sixth inning. Richardson and junior outfielder Elijah
ALEX DERYN | IDS
Then-sophomore left-handed pitcher Tommy Sommer pitches the ball against the University of Louisville on May 14, 2019, at Bart Kaufman Field. IU lost to Ole Miss 9-5 Sunday.
Dunham both hit singles, and senior catcher Collin Hopkins was hit by a pitch, loading the bases. The Rebels’ redshirt freshman pitcher Logan Savell then walked freshman outfielder Hunter Jessee, which allowed Richardson to score. Junior infielder Cooper Trinkle hit a two-runs-batted-in double to tie the score. Ole Miss scored four runs in the seventh inning, and IU was unable to gain back the deficit. The Hoosiers had a runner on third in both the seventh and the eighth innings but couldn’t bring either one home. IU stranded eight runners on base during the game.
Junior pitcher Tommy Sommer pitched a careerhigh number of innings with eight and two-thirds innings Saturday against High Point, coming one out away from pitching a full game. Sommer was taken out in the ninth inning when the bases were loaded with the tying run at the plate. Junior pitcher Connor Manous relieved him and struck out the final batter to secure the win for IU. Sommer only allowed five hits in the eight and two-thirds innings he pitched, and he struck out five batters. He led the team with a defense that shut down
most of High Point’s attempts to score. The Hoosiers’ defense was not as strong in their first game of the weekend. Three of East Carolina’s five runs were unearned, and a fourth was scored on a wild pitch. The team’s win over East Carolina was largely due to its hitting ability. IU had 15 hits and caused East Carolina to use eight pitchers. The Hoosiers started the game hitting strong when Fucci hit a double that allowed Dunham and Richardson to score. Richardson hit a two-run home run in the third inning. The game remained close until IU pulled away at the end. Fucci hit another RBI double in the seventh inning, and junior infielder Drew Ashley hit a threerun home run in the eighth, bringing the score to its final 11-5. Senior pitcher Braden Scott also helped IU beat East Carolina. He came in for starting pitcher sophomore Gabe Bierman in the fifth inning and pitched four innings without allowing a run. He struck out seven of the 15 batters he faced. IU played Purdue at 3:05 p.m. Wednesday at Bart Kaufman Field for its first home game of the season.
In a two-match weekend, IU men’s tennis remained undefeated at home while picking up its first win against a ranked opponent this year. A 7-0 win against Drake University on Friday was followed up by a 5-2 victory over No. 25 Dartmouth College on Saturday. The Hoosiers lost to both schools the previous two seasons. Now 8-3, IU has won its last five matches. The Hoosiers came in at No. 49 in the country this week on the Intercollegiate Tennis Association’s rankings, their first appearance on the rankings this season. IU faced three ranked opponents earlier in the season, losses to No. 4 University of Texas at Austin, No. 31 Middle Tennessee State University and No. 39 Vanderbilt University. “I’m a big, big believer in confidence,” Wurtzman said. “And I think just winning a few matches in a row like we did, even though it was some tight matches and some tight 4-3s, I think it gave us more confidence.” The weekend started smoothly for the Hoosiers against a struggling Bulldogs squad. Drake came to Bloomington 3-12, but Wurtzman said Drake’s poor record wasn’t his focus. Rather, Wurtzman said he focused on the strong opponents the Bulldogs have faced. “You can kind of think that the more matches they
get under their belt, either win or lose, the more experience they get, and then that can turn into some wins,” Wurtzman said. Junior Andrew Redding clinched the match for IU at 4-0 while all seven points were played out. He defeated Matija Matic in straight sets 6-1, 7-6 (7-5). Redding trailed 5-1 in the tiebreak but fired off six straight points to finish the match. “I just really wanted to get it done in two sets, and I just really focused and got really serious about it, didn’t want to give him any free chances,” Redding said. “So I just stayed focused and played point by point and was able to bring it back at the end there.” IU has gotten off to quick starts during its five-match win streak. The match against Dartmouth marked the sixth competition in a row IU has won the doubles point, but it had to work a little harder for it Saturday. Two matches went 7-5 in the Hoosiers’ favor after dropping the first doubles match 6-3. “Today was a good example of it getting a little bit closer,” Wurtzman said. “And I think that it is really good that it got close, but we’re still able to pull out the match.” Freshman Luka Vukovic sealed the win for IU. This is the first match Vukovic has had the chance to finish off for the Hoosiers. “That was a good feeling,” Vukovic said. “It was nice to kind of get the win for the team.”
JOY BURTON | IDS
Freshman Luka Vukovic runs toward the back of the court in a match against Dartmouth College on Feb. 29 at IU Tennis Center. IU defeated Dartmouth 5-2.
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Non-Denominational Sherwood Oaks Christian Church
United Methodist Open Hearts, Open Minds, Open Doors
St. Mark’s United Methodist Church
2700 E. Rogers Rd. 812-334-0206
Traditional: 8 a.m. Contemporary: 9:30 a.m. & 11 a.m. Being in Bloomington, we love our college students, and think they are a great addition to the Sherwood Oaks Family. Whether an undergraduate or graduate student... from in-state, out of state, to our international community... Come join us as we strive to love God and love others better.
smumc.church Sunday Morning Schedule
9:00: Breakfast 9:15: Adult Sunday School Classes 10:30: Sanctuary Worship 10:30: Children & Youth Sunday School Classes An inclusive community bringing Christ-like love, healing and hope to all. Jimmy Moore, Pastor Mary Beth Morgan, Pastor
Ben Geiger, College Minister
Connexion / Evangelical Community Church 503 S. High St. 812-332-0502
eccbloomington.org • cnxn.life Facebook: Connexion ECC Instagram: cnxn.life Sunday Service: 9:30 a.m. & 11 a.m. Connexion: Sundays, 6 p.m. Connexion is the university ministry of ECC. We’re all about connecting students to the church in order to grow together in our faith. We meet weekly for worship, teaching, and fellowship as well as periodically for service projects, social events and more. College is hard, don't do it alone! Bob Whitaker, Senior Pastor Adam deWeber, Worship Pastor Dan Waugh, Pastor of Adult Ministries
First Methodist 219 E. Fourth St. 812-332-6396
fumcb.org jubileebloomington.org Instagram: jubileebloomington Fall Hours: 8:45 a.m. & 10 a.m. @ Fourth St. Sanctuary (Classic), 11:15 a.m. The Open Door @ Buskirk (Contemporary) Summer Hours: 9:30 a.m. @ Fourth St. Sanctuary (Classic), 11:15 The Open Door @ Buskirk (Contemporary) Wednesday: 7:30 p.m., Jubilee @ First Methodist Jubilee is a supportive and accepting community for college students and young adults from all backgrounds looking to grow in their faith and do life together. Meet every Wednesday night and also have small groups, hangouts, mission trips, events, service projects and more. Many attend the contemporary Open Door service on Sunday mornings. Lisa Schubert Nowling, Lead Pastor Markus Dickinson, Campus Director
High Rock Church 3124 Canterbury Ct. 812-323-3333
highrock-church.com Facebook: highrockchurch Instagram: highrockbtown
Cooperative Baptist University Baptist Church ubcbloomington.org facebook.com/ubc.bloomington #ITSYOURCHURCHTOO
Sunday: 11 a.m. We are a Bible-based, non-denominational Christian church. We are multi-ethnic and multi-generational, made up of students and professionals, singles, married couples, and families. Our Sunday service is casual and friendly with meaningful worship music, applicable teaching from the Bible, and a fun kids program. Scott Joseph, Lead Pastor
3740 E. Third St. 812-339-1404
Sunday Worship: 10:45 a.m. Meals & Other Activities: see our social media Come visit the most refreshing church in town. We love all students but especially reach out to LGBTQ+ students and allies longing for a college church where you are loved, welcomed and affirmed without fear of judgment or discrimination. You love the Lord already — now come love us too. Free coffee and wifi.
Episcopal (Anglican) Canterbury House Episcopal (Anglican) Campus Ministry at IU 719 E. Seventh St. 812-334-7971 • 812-361-7954
indiana.edu/~canterby canterby@indiana.edu • facebook.com/ecmatiu 812-361-7954
Sacramental Schedule: Weekly services Sundays: 4 p.m. Holy Eucharist with hymns
followed by dinner at Canterbury House
Tuesdays: 6 p.m. Bible Study at Canterbury House 1st & 3rd Wednesdays: 7 p.m. Music & Prayers at Canterbury House Episcopal (Anglican) Campus Ministry is a safe and welcoming home for all people. We are a blend of young and old, women and men, gay and straight, ethnicities from different cultures and countries, students, faculty, staff and friends. The worshipping congregation is the Canterbury Fellowship. The mission of the Fellowship is to restore all people to unity with God and each other in Christ. We pray, worship and proclaim the Gospel. We also promote justice, equality, inclusion, peace, love critical thinking and acting as agents of change in our world. Mother Linda C. Johnson+, University Chaplain Josefina Carcamo, Program Coordinator Ricardo Bello Gomez, Communications Coordinator Corrine Miller, Ben Kelly, Student Interns Rex Hinkle, Luiz Lopes, Nathan Stang, Music Ministers Jody Hays, Senior Sacristan Crystal DeCell, Webmaster
Mennonite Mennonite Fellowship of Bloomington 2420 E. Third St. 812-646-2441 bloomingtonmenno.org • Facebook
Sunday: 5 p.m. A welcoming, inclusive congregation providing a place of healing and hope as we journey together in the Spirit of Christ. Gathering for worship Sundays 5 p.m. in the Roger Williams room, First United Church. As people of God's peace, we seek to embody the Kingdom of God. John Sauder mfbjohn@gmail.com
Bloomington Korean Baptist Church
100 N. State Rd. 46 Bypass 812-332-5788
socc.org/cya facebook.com/socc.cya Twitter: @socc_cya Instagram: socc_cya
Rev. Annette Hill Briggs, Pastor Rob Drummond, Music Minister
5019 N. Lakeview Dr. 812-327-7428 mybkbc.org facebook.com/mybkbc/ Sunday: 10:30 a.m. Friday: 7 p.m. Saturday: 6 a.m.
Disciples of Christ First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) 205 E. Kirkwood Ave. (corner of Kirkwood and Washington) 812-332-4459 • fccbloomington.org
Sunday Worship: 10 a.m. Jazz Vespers: 6:30 p.m. on first Friday of each month As God has welcomed us, we welcome you. With all our differences – in age, ability and physical condition, in race, cultural background and economic status, in sexual orientation, gender identity and family structure – God has received each one with loving kindness, patience and joy. All that we are together and all that we hope to be is made more perfect as the richness of varied lives meets the mystery of God’s unifying Spirit, and we become the Body of Christ. Helen Hempfling, Pastor
Wesleyan (Nazarene, Free Methodist) Central Wesleyan Church 518 W. Fourth St. 812-336-4041
4thstwesleyanchurch.org Facebook: Central Wesleyan Church of Bloomington, Indiana Sunday School: 10 a.m. Sunday Worship: 11 a.m. Evening Worship: 6 p.m. Wednesday Worship: 6 p.m. First Friday: 6 p.m. (Celebrate Knowing Jesus, open mic service)
Inter-Denominational Redeemer Community Church 111 S. Kimble Dr. 812-269-8975
redeemerbloomington.org facebook.com/RedeemerBtown @RedeemerBtown on Instagram Sunday: 9 a.m. & 11 a.m. Redeemer is a gospel-centered community on mission. Our vision is to see the gospel of Jesus Christ transform everything: our lives, our church, our city, and our world. We want to be instruments of gospel change in Bloomington and beyond. Chris Jones, Lead Pastor
Nazarene First Church of the Nazarene 700 W. Howe St. (across from the Building Trades Park) 812-332-2461 • www.b1naz.org
Email: bloomingtonfirst@icloud.com Sunday Worship: 10:30 a.m. Sunday Small Groups : 9:30 a.m., 4:30 p.m. & 6 p.m. We are Wesleyan in our beliefs, and welcome all to worship with us. We are dedicated to training others through discipleship as well as ministering through small groups. We welcome all races and cultures and would love to get to know you. Dr James Hicks, Lead Pastor
Independent Baptist Lifeway Baptist Church 7821 W. State Road 46 812-876-6072 • lifewaybaptistchurch.org Facebook • LifewayEllettsville
College & Career Sunday Meeting: 9 a.m. Sunday
Sunday Worship: 10 a.m. & 6 p.m. Wednesday Night Bible Study: 7 p.m. Lifeway Baptist Church exists to bring glory to God by making disciples, maturing believers and multiplying ministry. Matthew 28:19-20
Barnabas Christian Ministry Small Groups: Cedar Hall 2nd Floor Common Area, 7 - 8 p.m., meetings start Thursday, Sept. 5. We will meet every other Thursday during the school year. Steven VonBokern, Senior Pastor Rosh Dhanawade, IU Coordinator 302-561-0108, barnabas@indiana.edu barnabas.so.indiana.edu * Free transportation provided. Please call if you need a ride to church.
You've ended your search for a friendly and loving church. We are a bible believing holiness group similar to Nazarene and Free Methodist, and welcome all races and cultures. We would love for you to share your talents and abilities with us. Come fellowship and worship with us. Michael Magruder, Pastor Joe Shelton, Church Secretary
Quaker Bloomington Religious Society of Friends 3820 Moores Pike (West of Smith Rd.) 812-336-4581
bloomingtonfriendsmeeting.org Facebook: Bloomington Friends Meeting Sunday Worship: 10:30 a.m. Hymn Singing: 9:50 to 10:20 a.m. Our unprogrammed religious services consist of silent, centering worship interspersed with spoken messages that arise from deeply felt inspiration. We are an inclusive community, a result of avoiding creeds, so we enjoy a rich diversity of belief. We are actively involved in peace action, social justice causes, and environmental concerns. *Child Care and First Day School provided Christine Carver, Meeting Clerk
Lutheran (LCMS) University Lutheran Church & Student Center 607 E. Seventh St. (Corner of 7th & Fess) 812-336-5387 • indianalutheran.com
facebook.com/ULutheranIU @uluindiana on Instagram Sunday: Bible Class, 9:15 a.m. Divine Service, 10:30 a.m. The Best Meal You'll Have All Week, 6 p.m. Tuesday & Friday: Service of Morning Prayer, 8 a.m. Wednesday: Second Best Meal, 6 p.m. Midweek Service, 7 p.m. LCMS U Student Fellowship, 7:30 p.m. Thursday: Graduate/Career Study & Fellowship, 7 p.m. University Lutheran Church is the home of LCMS U at Indiana. Students, on-campus location, and our Student Center create a hub for genuine Christ-centered community that receives God's gifts of life, salvation and the forgiveness of sins through Jesus Christ. Sola Cafe is open 9-5 every weekday for coffee and a place to study. "We Witness, We Serve, We Love." Rev. Richard Woelmer, Campus Pastor
Praise the Lord! Do you need a True Friend? Come and worship the almighty God together with us on Sunday, Fellowship included. We are a Korean community seeking God and serving people. Students and newcomers are especially welcome. Jason Pak
Catholic St. Paul Catholic Center 1413 E. 17th St. 812-339-5561 • hoosiercatholic.org
Facebook: Hoosiercatholic Twitter: @hoosiercatholic Weekend Mass Times Saturday Vigil: 4:30 p.m. Sunday: 8:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 12:30 p.m. (Spanish), 5:30 p.m., 9 p.m. (During Academic Year) Korean Mass 1st & 3rd Saturdays, 6 p.m.
Weekday Mass Times Monday - Saturday: 12:15 p.m. Monday, Wednesday, Friday: 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, Thursday: 9 p.m. St. Paul Catholic Center is a diverse community rooted in the saving compassion of Jesus Christ, energized by His Sacraments, and nourished by the liturgical life of His Church. Rev. Patrick Hyde, O.P., Administrator and Director of Campus Ministry Rev. Dennis Woerter, O.P. Associate Pastor Rev. Reginald Wolford, O.P., Associate Pastor
Unitarian Universalist Unitarian Universalist Church of Bloomington 2120 N. Fee Lane 812-332-3695
www.uublomington.org www.facebook.com/uubloomington Sundays: 9:15 a.m. & 11:15 a.m. We are a dynamic congregation working towards a more just world through social justice. We draw inspiration from world religions and diverse spiritual traditions. Our vision is "Seeking the Spirit, Building Community, Changing the World." A LGBTQA+ Welcoming Congregation and a certified Green Sanctuary. Reverend Mary Ann Macklin, Senior Minister
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints Latter-day Saint Student Association (L.D.S.S.A) 333 S. Highland Ave. 812-334-3432
studentview.Ids.org/Home. aspx/Home/60431 Facebook: Bloomington Institute and YSA Society lds.org Monday - Friday: 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. We have an Institute of Religion adjacent to campus at 333 S. Highland Ave. (behind T.I.S. bookstore). We offer a variety of religious classes and activities. We strive to create an atmosphere where college students and local young single adults can come to play games, relax, study, and associate with others who value spirituality. Sunday worship services for young single students are held at 2411 E. Second St. a 11:30 a.m. We invite all to discover more about Jesus Christ from both ancient scripture and from modern prophets of God. During the week join us at the institute, and on Sunday at the Young Single Adult Church. Robert Tibbs, Institute Director
Southern Baptist Bloomington Korean Baptist Church 5019 N. Lakeview Dr. 812-327-7428
mybkbc.org facebook.com/mybkbc/ Sunday: 10:30 a.m. Friday: 7 p.m. Saturday: 6 a.m. Praise the Lord! Do you need a True Friend? Come and worship the almighty God together with us on Sunday, Fellowship included. We are a Korean community seeking God and serving people. Students and newcomers are especially welcome.
Jason Pak
Indiana Daily Student
10
OPINION
Thursday, March 5, 2020 idsnews.com
POLITICAL POWERS
Editors Abby Malala and Tom Sweeney opinion@idsnews.com
HILLS TO DIE ON
Women in Indiana’s history are overlooked. Here are a few. Kaitlyn Radde, she/her is a sophomore in political science
Here at IU, and in society more broadly, we are surrounded by the legacies of men. IU has never had a woman president, and Indiana has never had a woman governor nor a woman U.S. senator. It is a shame and a disservice that women’s history is not a larger part of education in the U.S., especially given how many women overcame the systemic obstacles to make a difference without any formal channels of power available to them. March is Women’s History Month — the perfect time to learn about the Hoosier women whose shoulders we stand on. ILLUSTRATION BY MADELYN POWERS | IDS
ON BOARD WITH JACOB
Don’t let the state cut public transit funding Jacob deCastro, he/him is a junior in journalism.
By all measures, IndyGo, Indianapolis’ public transportation operator, is on the rise. Ridership is up 8% yearover-year, IndyGo announced last week. The Red Line, the country’s first all-electric bus rapid transit line, opened in September, and planning on two more BRT lines is underway. So it’s only fitting that the Indiana Senate wants to stop IndyGo’s momentum by cutting funding. This isn’t funding allocated by the state, either. This is funding that nearly 60% of Marion County taxpayers said “yes” to when they voted in 2016 to support a 0.25% income tax increase for improving public transit. State Sen. Aaron Freeman, R-Indianapolis, authored an amendment to H.B. 1279 — a bill that has nothing to do with Indianapolis — that would let the state take 10% of IndyGo’s income tax revenue unless it can pay for at least 10% of annual expenses with privately raised funds. The Senate passed the amendment Thursday. Freeman argues that IndyGo should have seen this coming. Legislation passed in 2014 requires counties that raise income taxes for public transit to also set up nonprofits to raise private funds, with
JACOB DECASTRO | IDS
An IndyGo Red Line bus arrives at 54th Street and College Avenue. The Indiana State Senate voted Feb. 27 on an amendment that would cut IndyGo funding if it cannot raise money from private funds.
the goal of privately funding 10% of expenses. The new bill would penalize Marion County for not meeting the goal. In fact, IndyGo did see this coming. The Indianapolis Public Transportation Foundation incorporated in 2018 and received nonprofit status last summer. The foundation is on its way to start raising funds to comply with the law. But it shouldn’t have to. We don’t require the Indiana Department of Transportation to set up a foundation to raise private funds to repair highways, so why do we expect IndyGo to? The state isn’t allocating money to IndyGo that it would’ve otherwise spent on other projects because of the transit referendum. It is dedicated transit tax dollars that people in Indianapolis voted
for. By taking away money from IndyGo, Indianapolis City-County Councillor Ali Brown argues that the state would be disproportionately harming vulnerable Indianapolis residents. “It’s an attack on people of color, it’s an attack on lowincome communities. It’s an attack on our most vulnerable populations in the county,” Brown said. “The state needs to leave us alone and let us govern because we know what’s better for Indianapolis.” The Indiana General Assembly believes in limited government — until it doesn’t. The state prohibits local governments from regulating guns or setting a local minimum wage. City governments can’t force landlords to accept public housing vouchers or
ban plastic bags. And now, state lawmakers want to cut funding for a service taxpayers want. This couldn’t have come at a worse time for IndyGo. Planners are working on a new grid-based route system to increase service. IndyGo is also finalizing routes for bus rapid transit lines to connect the airport to the east suburb of Cumberland and the northeast suburb of Lawrence to downtown. “IndyGo has already made changes to the network to increase service and plans for future capital projects with a goal of a 70% increase in service,” IndyGo spokesperson Faith Chadwick said in a statement. “The amendment, as it’s written today, would jeopardize IndyGo’s ability to implement the plan voters supported, and the additional service IndyGo has already introduced.” So what’s next for the amendment? The bill has not passed out of the Indiana Senate yet. It will first need to pass the Senate before going back to the House for approval of the amendments. “Call your senators, don’t stop calling your senators. Send them an email,” Brown said. “Just keep calling them, telling them that Indianapolis knows what’s best.” jdecastr@indiana.edu
ALLYSON’S ANGLE
Indiana legislators shouldn’t criminalize panhandling Allyson McBride, she/her is a sophomore in English and political science.
A bill that would essentially prohibit panhandling in downtown Indianapolis is advancing in the Statehouse. It’s illegal to panhandle by bus stops, restaurants’ sidewalk dining areas and cars parked or stopped on public streets. An Indiana House committee amended Senate bill 335, passed by the Senate last month, to increase the distance of panhandling from within 20 feet of a bank or an ATM to 50 feet, the Indianapolis Star reported Sunday. The amendment also extends the restriction to public monuments and locations where “financial transactions” occur, including businesses, restaurants, public parking garages and parking meters. The amended bill would violate free speech and make the lives of the extremely poor more difficult. The House amendment should be reversed because people experiencing homelessness have a legal right to ask for assistance in public spaces. The bill must be finalized before the Indiana General Assembly’s legislative session ends on March 14. This amendment will not stop homelessness, but hide it. Think of how many parking meters are around Bloomington. Panhandlers would be completely pushed
out of highly trafficked areas such as Kirkwood. Homelessness has been a significant issue for supporters of the bill in Indianapolis. Representatives from the Indy Chamber, Visit Indy, Hilton Indianapolis and Downtown Indy voiced their support for the amendment in a hearing Thursday, according to RTV6 Indianapolis. More than $242 million from 52 conventions have been either put at risk or lost since 2012 because of panhandling and homelessness, according to estimates by Visit Indy in an Indianapolis Star article. Indy Chamber general counsel Tim Brown told RTV6 Indianapolis that he was worried about aggressive and threatening panhandlers. However, it is already illegal for panhandlers to use communication to make an individual feel unsafe or compelled to donate and follow or touch an individual without their consent. This amendment doesn’t target threatening panhandlers. It targets all panhandlers. “It’s insincere because its masking as some sort of regulation, but it’s actually a complete prohibition, given how broad it applies to prohibit panhandling within 50 feet of parking meters,” Ken Falk, the legal director of ACLU of Indiana, told RTV6 Indianapolis.
The amendment was modeled after a 2011 ordinance in San Antonio, Texas, that prohibited panhandling within 50 feet of parking meters, ATMs, banks and entrances and exits of restaurants. The proposed Indiana law would add public monuments and entrances and exits of businesses to the list. By making the limitations so strict, this amendment serves as a broad prohibition of panhandling. This is not only morally questionable, but also unconstitutional. “It’s a blatantly unconstitutional attack on free speech,” Katie Blair, director of advocacy and public policy for the ACLU of Indiana, told the Indianapolis Star. A 2015 U.S. Supreme Court decision about free speech was used to strike down a panhandling ban in Springfield, Illinois, and could also be used to overturn this amendment if it passes. The bill is also unnecessarily restrictive to people experiencing homelessness. A 2017 study by IU’s Public Policy Institute found that 96% of surveyed panhandlers in Indianapolis were experiencing homelessness. Health issues, disability, lack of identification and criminal history are some of the barriers to employment that the panhandlers listed. Downtown panhandlers make less than $20 a day on average, and 86% of panhandlers use
that money to buy food. Homelessness and panhandling will not be solved by making downtown offlimits. The amendment only pushes homeless people out of sight. Indianapolis attempted to get to the root of the problem in 2018 by initiating a plan to end homelessness in the city by 2023 through creating more housing units and resources for people experiencing homelessness. Last May, the city began to pay homeless people for performing beautification services, such as picking up litter, on the sidewalks where they would otherwise be panhandling. These are the kinds of initiatives that will create meaningful change and help raise the homeless population of Indianapolis out of poverty. More effort should be put into supporting these programs instead of restricting the rights of people experiencing homelessness. Treating people experiencing homelessness with dignity and offering them a real alternative to panhandling will do more to address the city’s problems than any restrictions would. Thinking about people who panhandle as liabilities for businesses instead of human beings who have rights and need help is not going to help anyone. allymcbr@iu.edu
Elinor Ostrom One of the few women whose name appears around campus is Nobel Prize winner Elinor Ostrom, who was a political science professor at IU from 1965-1991 and remained involved with IU until 2009. She won the Nobel Prize in economics in 2009 as a political scientist for her book “Governing the Commons,” and she is the first and only woman to have won the prize. Her book refuted the economic idea of the “tragedy of the commons,” or the idea that areas without formal ownership will be overconsumed and exploited because of individual selfinterest and demonstrated that public spaces can be successfully managed without central authorities or privatization. The evidence she marshaled and the influence of this work cannot be overstated. She showed that human beings are able to self-govern and effectively manage resources without authority, public or private. Her research taught us not only about economics but about human nature, and more Hoosiers and Americans should be familiar with her work. The Henry County Female Anti-Slavery Society HCFASS was a group of Indiana women, largely Quakers, who were committed to the end of slavery. Although women did not have the right to vote, they were determined to use their privilege as free, white women to help others become free, as exemplified by many of their statements. This group of women was committed to activism and human rights in a time when it was uncomfortable and dangerous for anyone, especially women, to do so. They made bold statements about the role of women and women’s agency in public spaces, and showed that even with little or no access to formalized power, courage matters. The work of women abolitionists should be celebrated more broadly, not
just because of the justice of their cause but also because of the courage and cleverness it took to advance a cause without formal power. Lillian Thomas Fox Lillian Thomas Fox was a black journalist who became the first black writer for a white newspaper in Indiana. Hired in 1900 by the Indianapolis News, she used her column to showcase the lives of black Indianapolis residents. As her career progressed, she traveled to cover national issues and advocate for economic independence for African Americans, and many historians credit her as integral in building a bridge between the white and black communities of Indianapolis. Fox was also an activist. In 1903, she teamed up with Indianapolis’s first black woman physician, Beulah Wright Porter, to found the Indianapolis Women’s Improvement Club. At a time when health care was just as racially separate and unequal as everything else, her organizing via this club and others helped improve the health and lives of countless black Hoosiers and raise awareness about the issues they faced. Her journalism and activism lifted the voices of marginalized groups, especially women of color, in a time when that was desperately needed. She should be a central figure in Indiana history, and we should carry her example with us through Women’s History Month and through our lives. Eleanor Barker Eleanor Barker was a leading suffragist in Indiana and an early pioneer for women in the legal profession. She had leading roles in many pro-women’s suffrage groups and was influential in bringing the victory of women’s suffrage about. As a lawyer, she fought for women’s rights outside of suffrage as well. For example, she worked to get protection for women workers under Indiana’s industrial bureau and was successful in limiting working hours. She also fought to maintain fair prices during World War I to protect families from wartime inflation. By the time Barker died in 1971, she had lived a full life of fighting for the rights of women Hoosiers. Women aspiring to be lawyers should look up to her and keep her example of activism and progress in mind. There are countless women not on this list. I encourage you to take this as a starting point and use Women’s History Month to learn more about the women who made our lives, careers and social realities possible. kradde@iu.edu
IDS FILE PHOTO BY RYAN DORGAN | IDS
Elinor Ostrom listens to a question at a press conference Oct. 12, 2009, in Bloomington. Ostrom became the first woman to be awarded the Nobel prize for economics that day.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR POLICY The IDS encourages and accepts letters to be printed from IU students, faculty and staff and the public. Letters should not exceed 400 words and may be edited for length and style. Submissions must include the person’s name, address and telephone number for verification.
Letters without those requirements will not be considered for publication. Letters can be mailed or dropped off at the IDS, 6011 E. Kirkwood Ave. Bloomington, IN 47405. Send submissions via email to letters@idsnews.com. Call the IDS with questions at 812-855-5899.
SPORTS
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Monday, March 5, 2020 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
TAKE IT LIKE A FAN
Top prospect Joe Burrow could be the magic pill for the Cincinnati Bengals Bradley Hohulin is a freshman in sports media.
Do you suffer from perennial disappointment? Do you feel like a visitor in your nearly empty home Paul Brown Stadium? Do you spend your nights gingerly stroking a Ken Anderson trading card from the mid-’70s? If you answered yes to any of these questions, you may be a fan of the Cincinnati Bengals. Bengals loyalism affects thousands throughout southwest Ohio every day. All too often, the harsh December winter strips morale from these poor men and women, replacing it with questionable hires and empty promises. But that masochistic cycle of false optimism and crushing reality need not continue. For a beautiful black and orange tomorrow, talk to your general manager about drafting Joe Burrow today. In a landscape of generational talents, Burrow stands as the premiere quarterback prospect. With active ingredients like pocket presence and deep ball accuracy, he can
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE
Former Louisiana State University football quarterback Joe Burrow throws the ball.
grant relief to your festering sore of a franchise in no time. Burrow has been proven to increase explosivity and boost scoring efficiency in chronically fatigued offenses. Even Louisiana State University, a program that for a decade seemed to deny the existence of the forward pass, was given new life by Burrow. Through 15 trials with the Tigers, Burrow’s production
was unrivaled, outperforming other leading market competitors Tua Tagovailoa and Jalen Hurts. Burrow has shown the ability to rejuvenate one’s career. Just ask LSU head coach Ed Orgeron, who was once marred by the reputation of a commander who couldn’t contend with the big dogs in his conference. “I remember sitting on the
sofa at my house watching SEC games, going ‘I know I can compete with these guys given the right place,’” he said. That place was Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Though Orgeron’s tenure once involved annual embarrassment by the University of Alabama, a steady dose of Burrow propelled him to 2019’s Associated Press Coach of the Year award.
While a self-professed weakness for calorie-laden Cajun delicacies could eventually yield concerns for Orgeron, the health of his team is unquestionable. “We wouldn’t be here without Joe Burrow,” Orgeron said. Burrow is most potent when administered alongside a revolutionary offensive tactician such as passing coordinator Joe Brady. A roster rich in NFL-caliber wideouts is also likely to enhance Burrow’s efficacy. Side effects of consuming Burrow include adrenaline spikes and raised heart rate from circus-act throws and mind-boggling athletic feats. Loss of sleep may occur on Sunday and Monday nights when the Bengals are inevitably placed in an overhyped prime time matchup which they stand no chance of winning. Exercise caution when obsessively combing through your Burrow-led fantasy football lineup, as repeated scrolling can contribute to carpal tunnel syndrome. Those who choose Burrow might develop bloated, unre-
alistic hopes. Consult your front office immediately if you experience an unprecedented dropoff in quarterback rating or a disruption of locker room chemistry, as these are clear signs of a draft bust. Burrow is not intended for use in conjunction with an inadequate coaching staff. He is not a substitute for a complete offensive line nor an actual game plan. After taking Burrow, wait at least eight games before operating with heavy expectations. Failure to do so will worsen the risk of letdown and heartbreak. Stop living with ineptitude on the sidelines and mediocrity on the field. It is time to reclaim from the Cleveland Browns the coveted next-tolast spot in the AFC North. With Burrow on your depth chart, a blowout loss in the first round of the playoffs is just a few seasons away. Joe Burrow. Because if not him, “who dey” think will make the Bengals remotely watchable? bhohulin@iu.edu
TABLE TENNIS
Freshman brothers fail to make US Olympic team By Tyler Tachman
able to earn a spot on the U.S. Olympic table tennis team for the second consecutive time. Sharon finished fifth, leaving him out of the top two rankings needed to make the squad. A 16-player field split
ttachman@iu.edu | @Tyler_T15
IU freshmen Sharon and Gal Alguetti fell short of their Olympic aspirations in Santa Monica, California, this weekend. The brothers were un-
Horoscope Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) Today is a 7 — Stay close to home. Avoid overdoing it with crowds, distraction or noise. Misunderstandings come easily. Focus on practical professional priorities and get quietly productive. Aries (March 21-April 19) Today is a 7 — Balance social and private time or risk burnout. Handle practical matters first. Avoid controversy or noise. Focus on your work and then recharge.
into two separate groups made up the first round of the event. The top four from each respective division moved on to the second and final round. Gal was eliminated from contention following the
To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. Taurus (April 20-May 20) Today is an 8 — Network and connect for social and professional benefit. Hold onto what you have. You may need to navigate bureaucratic hurdles to advance your exploration.
Cancer (June 21-July 22) Today is an 8 — Research purchases for best quality and value. Priorities could change. Slow down to avoid costly mistakes. Simplify. Prioritize and strategize with your partner and family.
Gemini (May 21-June 20) Today is a 9 — Keep to a realistic budget with travel and study plans. It could get more expensive than anticipated. Consider potential expenses in advance. Review the numbers.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) Today is a 7 — Take a break to consider the road ahead. Talk things over with a partner. Prioritize health and wellness. Take a walk. Rest and recharge.
BLISS
HARRY BLISS
first stage, after he recorded a 3-4 mark in group one. Sharon advanced to the second round robin group after holding a 4-3 record. In the second stage, with eight total competitors left, the players with the best two records would seize the two
open spots to represent the U.S. in Tokyo this summer. If the brothers had made the team in 2016, they would have been the youngest U.S. Olympic athletes since Michael Phelps. Sharon was close to making the official roster in 2016 too,
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today is an 8 — Collaborate with physical labor. Romantic obstacles and challenges require attention. Choose private over public engagements. Listen and learn. Handle obligations, duties and responsibilities.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Today is a 9 — Talk about a dreamy destination. Plan and prepare before launching. Make sure practical details are managed. Last-minute changes can get expensive. Plot your course.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Today is an 8 — It's possible to mix business and pleasure. Can you work from home? Find a creative way to handle family responsibilities and make your professional deadlines.
Crossword
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Today is an 8 — More is better, if it's income. Contribute to a shared financial venture. Work with a perfectionist. Manage budget shortfalls with communication. Determine priorities.
taking fourth place. Sharon and Gal led the IU table tennis club to an Upper Midwest Divisional Tournament title in late January. They are both currently studying in the Kelley School of Business. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Today is an 8 — Practice makes perfect. Put in the extra work. Do more research before launch. An obstacle or barrier requires a workaround solution. Wait until you're ready. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Today is an 8 — Relax and wait for better conditions for important conversations or actions. Have fun and enjoy peaceful activities. Make romantic plans. Keep things light.
© 2020 By Nancy Black Distributed by Tribune Media Services, INC. All Rights Reserved
L.A. Times Daily Crossword 13 18 22 25 26 29 30 31 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 43 44 45 46
Publish your comic on this page.
47 48 52 55 56
The IDS is accepting applications for student comic strips for the spring & summer 2020 semesters. Email five samples and a brief description of your idea to adviser@indiana.edu by March 31. Submissions will be reviewed and selections will be made by the editor-in-chief.
su do ku
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
ACROSS
Difficulty Rating: How to play: Fill in the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 grid contains the digits 1 through 9, without repeating a number in any one row, column or 3x3 grid.
Answer to previous puzzle
© Puzzles by Pappocom
BREWSTER ROCKIT: SPACE GUY!
1 4 10 14 15 16 17 19 20 21 23 24 25 27 28 32 33 34
40 41 42 49 50
__ Plaines: Chicago suburb J. Edgar Hoover Building org. Catch Suffix with hero Sea between Greece and Turkey Dutch South African They're ominous Decent-sized lot "No more, thanks" End of many long weekends: Abbr. Ad __ committee Many a "Twilight" character Gulf State native That, in Oaxaca They're luminous Word in a January song Wood strip Song first sung by Ethel Waters at Harlem's Cotton Club ... and a hint to four other long answers Flat-bottomed boat "Sesame Street" pal of Zoe They're clamorous "Jingle Bells" contraction Last Supper question
51 "Ivy and __": kid-lit series by Annie Barrows 53 Infamous Amin 54 More than unfriendly 55 Breed of sheep 57 Astrological transition point 59 They're ruinous 62 Wasatch Mountains resort 63 "Twilight" vampire 64 Suffix with Brooklyn 65 For fear that 66 Trounces 67 Some NFL blockers
DOWN
58 60 61
Like some concrete Big ape Bird's beak Sole Corn Belt region Guffaw syllable Rum __ Tugger: "Cats" role __Kosh B'gosh Bus kiosk posting Ones seeing things Dominate K-12, in education Latin lover's word Parking violation risk Showing no emotion 502, in old Rome Steer clear of Saudi Arabian capital Iberian river to the Mediterranean Carl with nine Emmys Most sensible Snoops (around) Car sticker no. Postings at an airline gate, for short Vanna's partner __ Jima Quick flight
Answer to previous puzzle
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
Finished a job Dental layer Composer Rachmaninoff Food truck fare Believed Swelled head Pot-au-__: French stew Outlaw Happy way to break out Abbr. in an unfilled TV slot New __, NY: home of Iona College 12 Ford's first minivan
TIM RICKARD
1
HOUSING
General Employment
Grant Properties
3-4 BR at 9th/Grant near Kelley, Kirkwd, dwntwn. DW/WD. $1725-2000. Aug 2020. 812-333-9579
1, 2, 3, 4 & 5 Bedroom
426 E. 10th St. COMPLETE REMODEL!! 5 BR, 5 BA house, W/D, D/W, AC in unit, centrally located, 5 parking spots incl. $4,400/mo. 706 N. Washington St. FULL KITCHEN REMODEL! 5 BR. 4 BA, house, W/D, D/W, AC in unit, centrally located, beautiful back porch, 2 parking spots incl. $4,100/mo.
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Call 812-333-9579 leasinginfo@grantprops.com grantprops.com
Apt. Unfurnished 2 BR/1 BA next to Inform/Kelley. $1375. Aug 2020. Prkg & Laund. 812333-9579 or
omegaproperties@gmail.com
leasinginfo@grantprops.com
Apartment w/ hardwood floors, lots natural light and storage. Stone patio w/ sweet landscaped yard. Avail. March 14 July 23. $965/mo. + $65/mo. for heat. 208-290-8117
3 BR/1 BA at 9th/Grant. DW/WD. $1575. Aug., 2020. 812-333-9579 leasinginfo@grantprops.com
cryofthechildren@gmail.com
Beautiful Downtown apts. for rent. 2 BR, 1.5 BA. Starting at $1500.00. Please call: 812-333-0995. Nantucket Island, MA Summer Help Wanted: Landscape / Irrigation positions for 2020 season. Landscape or trade related experience helpful but not necessary. A willingness to learn and a good work ethic required. Housing available. Excellent wages and rewarding work environment. Call Mark at (508) 228-2745 for more info.
Large 1/2 BR apts. & townhouses avail. Summer & Fall, 2020! Close to Campus & Stadium. 812-334-2646 Luxury 2 BR/2.5 BA twnhs near dwntwn/Kelley. DW/WD/cov. Prkg. $1750- Aug 2020. 812333-9579 or 325
leasinginfo@grantprops.com
Wanted: Part-time help for spring clean up. Yardwork, odd jobs. Starting at $12/hr. Call after 10 a.m. 812-606-7935
Houses 1314 N. Lincoln Street 5 BR, 2 BA, 2 levels. Varsity Properties. livebythestadium.com 1315 N. Lincoln Street 5 BR, 3 BA, 2 levels. Varsity Properties. livebythestadium.com
42” granite table top, stainless steel parsons base, $400. jkolesky@iu.edu
Galanz retro, light blue, mini fridge in good cond. $85 - rpioveza@iu.edu
Almost brand new fullsize futon mattress (brown, 8-in. thickness). ibanka@iu.edu
Rice Cooker/Steamer/ Slow Cooker, great condition, $30. emjohns@iu.edu
Full size box spring, perfect condition, $100. cracrave@indiana.edu
Alienware 17 gaming laptop & charger. $690 or neg. xz57@iu.edu
Ikea desk lamp, good condition, $10. most@iu.edu iPad 32GB and Apple Pencil, $250, obo. floresru@iu.edu
450
ICORE Marketing Book $15, good cond. aadhawan@iu.edu
Math M118 Book Finite Mathematics $35 Each or Neg. xz57@iu.edu
Clothing Under Armour Coat, size 2X, never been worn. jkutche@indiana.edu
Twin mattress and box spring, good cond. $350, obo. gnkhacha@iu.edu (317) 671-6090
Beats Solo Wireless 3 headphones, $165. spabla@iu.edu
Eufy RoboVac 11+ robotic vacuum, good condition, $100. amkoop@indiana.edu
Brand new “Intermediate Algebra” book by Lynn Marecek. $40. ksstern@iu.edu
Studded blue leather task/desk chair with wheels, $30. amkoop@indiana.edu
Electronics
Brand new PS4 1TB with 3 games, $200. xingl@iu.edu
Aspekte B2 German book & workbook for Ger G330. Good cond. $20. tkadelak@iu.edu
Refurbished Grandfather Clock, $600, obo. amkoop@indiana.edu
Fire Emblem Fates Azura cosplay costume, $80. ani@iu.edu
Brand new MiniLab Music Device, $75, obo. tjarrell@iu.edu
Ancient Greece textbook, for intro level Greek culture class, good cond. $12. whitekn@iu.edu
Memory Foam Mattress with gel (Full XL), $100. vinitab@iu.edu
Costumes
Textbooks
Furniture
Dirt Devil Simpli-Stik vacuum cleaner, $10. pw7@indiana.edu
GoPro HERO5 Session and accessories. $100. grigutis@iu.edu
Awesome, totally remodeled, brand new condition: 3 BR, 2 BA, w/basement. Close to Campus, grocery stores, restaurants, bars & night life, w/ exercise path. New everything inside & out. Great kitchen and bathrooms: tiled showers, new applns., flooring, windows, doors, insulation, lots of offstreet private parking. Bus stop out right out front. Purchase Price @ $247,750. with immediate equity. Rent two bedrooms to others and let them pay your mortgage or as a rental available TODAY @ $1,800. per month. Call Jimmy: 812-350-7340.
TCL 32S327 32-Inch 1080p Roku Smart LED TV (2018 Model), $150, obo. bwerle@iu.edu
Sunbeam 0.9 cu ft 900 watt Microwave, $49. sseputro@iu.edu
leasinginfo@grantprops.com
Outstanding locations near campus at great prices Leasing now 2020-21
Cry of the Children, Inc. Youth Group wanting volunteers to make a difference in young peoples lives by leading a Step Team, Drill Team, Choir or any special gift of interest for young folks. Also need grant writer. Mrs. Boddie 812-361-4059
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252 N. Walnut 3 BR, 2.5 BA apartment. Ready for an immediate move-in, $2550.00. Please call:812-333-0995
Salvatore Ferragamo black/gold sunglasses. Never worn. $100. saihaque@iu.edu
465
220
Work Study
TC Electronics Ditto Looper Effects Pedal w/ac pwr adapter, $125. jbarbry@indiana.edu
Appliances Dirt Devil 3-in-1 vacuum, $10. pw7@indiana.edu
Philips LED light bulbs (4 pack), new, $8. yiju@iu.edu
Sony WH-1000XM3 wireless, noise canceling headset, $280. ag32@iu.edu
MERCHANDISE
219 E. 8th St. - Ideal for group of 9. 3 separate units/leases: (1) 2-BR Carriage House, LR, full bath. (2) Main House (5 tenants), LR, 2 baths. (3) Basement unit (2 tenants), full bath. All w/equipped kitchens, private backyard, close to Campus. Avail. Aug., 2020. Contact Dan (812) 339-6148 or damiller@homefinder.org.
Food service assistant job. Must be punctual and reliable! $12/hr. chabad@indiana.edu
Valparaiso, Indiana Children’s Camp Lawrence looking for counselors & lifeguards, 6 wks 219-736-8931 or email: nwicyo@comcast.net
Assistant/General Helper needed. Part time. 10 to 12 hours a week (flexible schedule). Clean 1 bedroom apt., errands, laundry, light ironing and cooking, maintain storage unit & other general duties. Must be punctual, reliable, honest & hard working. Submit resume & phone number to Lynique@aol.com
2019 N. Dunn Street. Pet friendly, 3 BR, 2 BA, 1 level. Varsity Properties. livebythestadium.com
Samsung 27’’ curved gaming monitor - good condition. $225,obo. mamurley@iu.edu
Sublease avail. Great location, 1212 North Grant, May 1-Aug. 1.1 BR $500/mo. (317)503-4075
2 BR Bungalow for rent at 212 E. 15th St. 2 blks. from Stadium, A/C, W/D, nice front porch, cherry tree, private. $1100/mo., no pets. Avail. now or for next year Call 812-339-6479 or Text 812-272-1209.
North Face backpack, never been used, $95. jkutche@indiana.edu
Wood armoire, good condition. Missing bottom drawer. $50. bmmcswai@indiana.edu
Misc. for Sale
TRANSPORTATION 515
240
210
EMPLOYMENT
1395 N. Lincoln Street 5 BR, 2.5 BA, 3 levels. Varsity Properties. livebythestadium.com
New Ted Baker tri-fold wallet, $30. yiju@iu.edu
Rechargeable Bluetooth Keyboard (for Mac), lightly used, $18. dahrendt@iu.edu
12 pc. dinnerware set w/ 4 dinner & salad plates, bowls, & silverware. $15. yafwang@hotmail.com 2 curtain panels w/ rods sets: $15. pw7@indiana.edu Brooks Bedlam womens running shoes. Size 8.5. Lightly used. $75. vnoquez@iu.edu
Motorcycles Red 1986 Honda Magna 750 motorcycle. Has 24,000mi. $2,100. dusnyder@indiana.edu
“Rachael Ray 50” book. $10, brand new. dsmittal@iu.edu 520
Red knit hat w/pom pom. Lost at Assembly Hall. Reward! 812-339-5717
1316 N. Lincoln Street 5 BR, 3 BA, 2 levels. Varsity Properties. livebythestadium.com
Hands-On Machine Learningwith Scikit-Learn and TensorFlow, $25. sialsaff@iu.edu
Razer gaming mouse with green light. $15. gmariano@iu.edu
420
125
Lost
Sublet Apt. Unfurn.
Misc. for Sale Columbia women’s size 8.5 medium hiking boots. Brand new. 2 styles, $45 each. 812-322-0808
Pioneer DJ controller & Odyssey case. Great cond. $1,200. bralord@iu.edu
1 BR, 1 BA, for sublease. Available April 2 or 3rd. Nice big eat in kit. Cable ready, pool, sundeck, courtyard dog park. Close to IU Campus, College Mall, restaurants and so much more. Call Jenny at 812-339-0951 leasing manager or myself at 812-606-9642.
Houses
Electronics Nintendo Switch Lite w/ games, original box, and charger. jwelford@iu.edu
435
The Original, a new concept from Big Woods Restaurant Group, is seeking experienced industry professionals to help craft an elevated dining experience for our guests in the artists’ colony of Brown County, Indiana. The Original will serve guests ages 21-andolder and feature a menu of next-level Midwestern comfort foods complemented by cocktails designed with locally-crafted Hard Truth Distilling Co. spirits and beer by Brown County’s Quaff ON! Brewing Co. Seeking experienced candidates for all front of house and back of house positions (Servers, Bartenders, Hosts, Line Cooks and Prep Cooks). Apply at any Big Woods location or email: hr@quaffon.com
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Camp Staff
Restaurant & Bar
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Houses HPIU.com Houses and apt. 1-4 BR. Close to campus. 812-333-4748 No pets please.
405
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Thursday, March 5, 2020 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
MEN’S BASKETBALL
IU falls to Illinois 67-66 to end road schedule By Phillip Steinmetz psteinme@iu.edu | @PhillipHoosier
CLAIRE LIVINGSTON | IDS
Senior Brenna Wise and junior Keyanna Warthen make the sign of the cross before their match Feb. 27 in Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall. Wise did this motion while being announced before every game this season.
No. 22 IU beats Michigan in final game of regular season By Will Trubshaw wtrubsha@iu.edu | @Willtrubs
No. 22 IU women’s basketball finished the regular season on a high note at the Crisler Center in Ann Arbor, Michigan. IU defeated Michigan 78-60 on Sunday to put the finishing touches on a historic regular season. IU set program records with 23 regular season wins and 17 weeks spent in the AP Top 25. The Hoosiers were ranked every week of the season. From an upset over nowNo. 1 University of South Carolina at the Paradise Jam in November to a program-record 13 conference wins, IU finished the season much the way it began — balanced scoring on offense and lockdown defense that turned a three point lead to a 20-point lead in the second half. IU had seven players score at least once and four different players in double digits Sunday, led by junior guard Ali Patberg’s 21 points. It was the fourth-straight game in which Patberg scored over 20 points. She scored 16 of her 21 points in the second half. Michigan started the game out 5-6 from the field, but IU used an 11-0 run to finish the first quarter up 19-16. The Wolverines kept it close in the sec-
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Junior Jaelynn Penn attempts a shot Feb. 27 in Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall. IU defeated Michigan on March 1 in Ann Arbor, Michigan, 78-60.
78-60 ond quarter, trading buckets with the Hoosiers, but sophomore forward Aleksa Gulbe’s nine first-half points led a balanced offense. Out of halftime, the Hoosiers took over and outscored the Wolverines 22-12 in the third quarter. Patberg had 10 of the 22 points, and junior guard Jaelynn Penn hit two of IU’s three 3-pointers in the quarter. Sophomore guard Grace Berger and freshman forward
Mackenzie Holmes joined Patberg and Penn with doubledigit points in the fourth quarter. IU held Michigan to 30% from the field in the second half, forcing 11 turnovers and seven steals in the final 20 minutes of play. The win was IU’s third in a row. The past three wins for IU have all been convincing double-digit victories, won in much the same fashion as early season wins over South Carolina, the University of Florida and Michigan State. After enduring a three-game losing streak in the middle of their Big
Ten schedule, the Hoosiers did not lose consecutive games the rest of the season. The Hoosiers have just postseason basketball left on the schedule. They begin postseason play in the Big Ten Tournament on Friday afternoon at Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis. IU has the potential to make a deep tournament run with a talented squad that has exceeded expectations and records all season. A three-game win streak may signal that IU is playing its best basketball at the right time.
66-67 in a game. When Green converted an and-one layup with 9:27 remaining, he gave IU a twopoint lead. This also snapped a streak of 20 straight missed twopoint field goal attempts for
Green. The basket was his first made non-3-point field goal in the month of February. But the field goal from Green was the last points IU would score for a while. Illinois went on a 7-0 run over a span of roughly three minutes to retake the lead. Cockburn dominated the second half for the Fighting
By Sam Bodnar sbodnar@iu.edu | @sgbod13
COLIN KULPA | IDS
Junior Ali Patberg points at an open area on the court Feb. 27 in Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall. Patberg led the Hoosiers to victory over the Wolverines on March 1 with 21 points.
through back-and-forth passing that left Michigan on its toes and unable to stop IU’s offense. Penn found Patberg for an open shot behind the arc. Then on the other end, Patberg blocked a Michigan layup, secured the rebound and passed the ball to Penn for an open jump shot eight seconds later. After a couple minutes, Patberg’s passing increased the pace of the offense and put Gulbe back to work beneath the basket. With the shot clock winding down, Patberg crossed over her defender and found Gulbe for an easy finish. Following a Michigan basket, Patberg ran it up the floor, passed the ball through a defender and Gulbe scored again.
The Wolverines’ senior guard Akienreh Johnson tried keeping up with the Hoosiers with quick baskets, but Patberg was quicker. Patberg sprinted down the middle of the court and hit a floating jump shot. Minutes later, she collected another steal and found Penn on the right side in transition. Michigan had a combined 11 minutes without a field goal in the first half. And Patberg had six of IU’s eight assists that kept the program ahead 34-31 at the half. IU’s offense pulled away in the third quarter, and once again, Patberg supervised the floor. She made a tough layup and drew a foul on the right side of the basket and completed a 3-point play with a free throw. As the third quarter de-
veloped, Patberg directed her guards to cut through the paint and hit catch-andshoot jump shots that padded IU’s lead. Patberg and the Hoosier defense cut off passes intended for the Wolverines’ post players and turned those defensive stops into points on the other end of the floor. IU held Michigan to 34% shooting on the afternoon in Michigan and got one final nudge from its point guard in the fourth quarter. The junior added more shots of her own, beating defenders off the dribble and taking advantage of mismatches created by her ball handling. She finished with 21 points, seven assists, three steals, three rebounds and two blocks in her 33 minutes inside Crisler Center.
IU’s loss against Illinois feels worse than others this season Caleb Coffman is a junior in sports media.
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Sophomore guard Rob Phinisee’s eyes widened in shock while lying on the ground and staring at the referee, who motioned that Illinois called a timeout. He looked around at the other officials and the IU bench before putting his hands on his head in disbelief. At the very least, Phinisee was looking for a jump ball or a foul to send him to the free-throw line with a chance to tie the game. Instead, he saw another opportunity for a signature road win pass the Hoosiers by as they choked in a 67-66 loss. The team played its best road game of the season and still couldn’t get it done. This defeat feels different than most of the other 10 on the season. If anything, IU head coach Archie Miller and the players showed the same pain they felt after falling to Maryland at home Jan. 26. Unlike so many of IU’s other road games, the team didn’t fail to perform. Instead, it failed to close. “Wednesday, we didn’t execute at all,” Miller said. “Today we executed better, and I thought we got some better play out of guys.” At a glance, the Hoosiers did everything they needed to secure the win, almost guaranteeing them a firstround bye in the Big Ten Tournament and being a certified lock for the NCAA Tournament. Now, the pressure of winning the final two home games of the season hangs over the team’s head. IU had four players score in double-figures. The team only committed 10 turnovers and shot 50% from beyond the 3-point line. Most impressively, the Hoosiers outrebounded the Fighting Illini — who entered the game with the fifth-best rebounding margin in the country — by eight and grabbed 12 offensive boards. The Hoosiers have done everything Miller has asked of them since being called
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Junior guard Aljami Durham plays defense March 1 against Illinois sophomore guard Ayo Dosunmu. Durham was Indiana’s top scorer with 13 points in the 67-66 loss to Illinois at the State Farm Center.
CALEB’S CORNER
Ali Patberg leads Hoosiers to road win Junior guard Ali Patberg broke Michigan’s zone defense and disrupted its offense Sunday in a 78-60 victory for No. 22 IU women’s basketball. “I thought Ali Patberg remained aggressive like she has been,” IU head coach Teri Moren said. “When she’s aggressive, as I’ve said, everybody around her is more confident.” With her team down six early in the first quarter, Patberg drew extra defenders while driving to the basket and passed it out to senior forward Brenna Wise for a 3-pointer. Patberg stole the ball on the next play and helped her defense keep Michigan scoreless for the remainder of the opening quarter. While the Wolverines struggled to score, Patberg continued to find open teammates. After IU took its first lead of the game, Patberg weaved through the zone, brought a Michigan forward close to the basket and found sophomore forward Aleksa Gulbe for a 3-pointer. The Wolverines tried running a fastbreak on the other end of the floor, but Patberg read the offense. Patberg ran toward Michigan’s freshman guard Maddie Nolan and contested her corner 3-pointer with 1:31 left in the first quarter. IU had a 15-6 run by the end of the quarter, and its star point guard took command of the game in the second quarter. Patberg worked with junior guard Jaelynn Penn
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. – IU men’s basketball came up short late in a 67-66 loss to Illinois on Sunday afternoon to wrap up its road schedule. The loss puts IU at 18-11 overall and 8-10 in Big Ten play. The Hoosiers are now on a twogame losing streak since the win over then-No. 9 Penn State. IU was close with Illinois throughout the first half. Senior guard Devonte Green had a pair of 3-pointers, while freshman forward Trayce JacksonDavis controlled the paint with 10 points and five rebounds. The Hoosiers took advantage on the glass with six offensive rebounds to give themselves extra possessions. Four of Jackson-Davis’ five rebounds came on the offensive end. He helped limit Illinois freshman center Kofi Cockburn to only two rebounds in the first 20 minutes. After IU and Illinois were tied at 36 apiece at halftime, IU head coach Archie Miller made a change. For the first time this season, he put a different starting lineup on the court to start the second half. Sophomore forward Race Thompson started in place of junior center Joey Brunk, next to Jackson-Davis. Thompson only had two points in the game but was tasked with defending Cockburn as well. He also had a pair of offensive rebounds. But it was redshirt freshman guard Jerome Hunter who gave the Hoosiers the lead in the second half after they allowed the Fighting Illini to go on a run. Hunter hit back-to-back 3-pointers in opposite corners to give IU the one-point lead. It was the first time since Feb. 8 against Purdue that Hunter made more than one 3-pointer
out after being embarrassed by Michigan on the road. The team’s energy level hasn’t wavered, and it has fought hard in every game since. “You have to have an attitude that, quite frankly, you just don’t give a shit about nothing,” Miller said. “You go into the game, and it’s about competing. It’s about playing as hard as you possibly can and finding a
way in these environments to get it into the last 12, eight and four and then find a way to win.” On one hand, it’s a confidence booster for IU to know it can compete against a competitive team on the road, but it also has to be demoralizing. What more can the Hoosiers do on the road to push them over the finish line? IU desperately wants to prove that it is a team that demands respect on the road, but every time it has a chance to earn it, it can’t close the deal. “Now we go home, and everything has to be erased from your memory,” Miller said. “You’re on to the next one, which in all reality is the last gasp of air — so to speak — on the regular season.” calcoffm@iu.edu
Illini after only scoring three points to go with two rebounds in the first 20 minutes. He finished the game with 15 points and five rebounds. A 3-pointer by junior guard Al Durham pulled IU within two points before Illinois sophomore guard Ayu Dosunmu made one of his own on the following possession. It gave
Illinois a five-point lead with 1:27 remaining. Sophomore guard Rob Phinisee then had a 3-pointer himself to make it a two-point game. After Jackson-Davis missed a pair of free throws with 13 seconds left, Phinisee grabbed the offensive rebound to give IU an opportunity to tie or take the lead. That was until he tripped,
and Illinois was able to steal the ball from him to put the game to rest. Jackson-Davis finished with 12 points and 12 rebounds, while Durham led IU with 13 points. The next game for IU will be Wednesday against Minnesota at home. The Hoosiers won the first matchup Feb. 19 on the road by 12 points.
Jackson-Davis battles Kofi Cockburn in loss
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By Matt Cohen mdc1@iu.edu | @Matt_Cohen_
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — They had seemingly alternated Big Ten Freshman of the Week awards for weeks. But Sunday afternoon during a 67-66 win for Illino Illinois, IU freshman forward Trayce Jackson-Davis and Illinois ffreshCockburn fiman center Kofi Cockbu nally met in person. person. Either one or both of Jackson-Davis and Cockburn have been named Big Ten Freshman Fresh of the Week in 11 out of tthe 16 weeks this season. Cockburn Cock leads Jackson-Davis with won seven awards compared tto the Hoosier freshman’s five. ve. battle of “I thought it was a bat not just two of the best freshf man in the Big Ten, but b in all the country,” Illinois head coach Brad Underwood said. s IU head coach Archie M Miller season has said throughout the se he needs Jackson-Davis to produce on the road the same sam way he does at home. The typical ty performances that have ffueled Jackson-Davis’ own F Freshcampaign man of the Year cam have been inconsistent o on the road. He had a dominant game against Minnesota on Fe Feb. 19 but struggled mightily against ag Michigan on Feb. 16. 16. In the first half against Illinois, Jackson-Davis had 10 points and fiv five rebounds, four fou of which were wer ofWhen fensive. W IU fed the th ball through Jackson-Davis — son-Davi whether that
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Freshman forward Trayce Jackson-Davis goes up for a shot against Illinois sophomore forward Giorgi Bezhanishvili. Jackson-Davis scored 12 points and totaled 12 rebounds in Indiana’s 67-66 loss to Illinois on March 1 at State Farm Center.
be his scoring or passing — the offense had rhythm. It was why IU was tied at 36 with Illinois at halftime. Underwood said he thought Jackson-Davis won the first half battle against Cockburn. “I guess you shouldn’t call him a freshman anymore,” Underwood said of Jackson-Davis. “He’s a veteran now.” Underwood said he thought his players defended all of IU’s first shots well, but Jackson-Davis created so many second-chance opportunities. Jackson-Davis had an athletic advantage against the bulkier Cockburn, and he was able to win offensively as a result. Cockburn allowed Jackson-Davis to catch the ball deep into the post where scoring a basket became easy. “Trayce has got great length,” Underwood said. “He’s got unbelievable anticipation. I enjoy watching him play, especially on the glass because he’s got an innate ability to find the ball.” At halftime, Underwood made an adjustment, one that led to Cockburn taking over in the second half. Underwood said he knew IU lacked a reliable 3-point shooter, and he saw the advantages Jackson-Davis had over Cockburn offensively. Cockburn said he was told to keep one foot in the paint at all times in the second half, allowing for more space on the perimeter. Underwood put sophomore forward Giorgi Bezhanishvili on Jackson-Davis in the second
ALEXIS OSER | IDS
Junior forward Justin Smith goes up for a basket against Illinois sophomore guard Ayo Dosunmu. Illinois defeated IU 67-66 March 1 at State Farm Center in Champaign, Illinois.
half. Bezhanishvili cut off Jackson-Davis from being in a good spot to catch the ball and prevented the Hoosier freshman to two points in the second half. Jackson-Davis finished with 12 points and 12 rebounds, his 10th double-double of the season. Seven of his 12 rebounds were offensive. While Underwood thought Jackson-Davis won the first half, Cockburn won the second. He took over the game. “I’m really proud of Kofi because he was not very good in the first half. We challenged him in the second half,” Underwood said. “With the game in the balance, we kept going to him.” Cockburn had six blocks, a career high. After he switched off Jackson-Davis, and the Hoosier freshman being pushed out of the lane, Cockburn was ready to adjust and block his shots. Cockburn became a dominant force at the rim that caused IU to rely more on perimeter shooting than it would have liked. Offensively, the Illinois freshman consistently had his way against IU’s defense. Cockburn scored 12 points in the second half. He finished the game 7-10 from the free-throw, and Underwood talked about Cockburn’s willingness to use his size to get there. “He’s all of 7-foot-2,” Jackson-Davis said. “He’s a load to handle, and he got the best of us today.” Jackson-Davis won the first half, Cockburn won the second and Illinois won the game as a result. Both players had a chance to separate themselves as the leader for Big Ten Freshman of the Year. Neither of them did, and that shows just how productive and valuable they’ve both been.
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