WEDNESDAY, OCT. 22, 2014
IDS
‘M. Butterfly’ opens this weekend, page 7
INDIANA DAILY STUDENT | IDSNEWS.COM
MEN’S BASKETBALL
Faculty council amends speech policy
Yogi Ferrell
40% Evan Gordon
Will Sheehey
33%
33%
By Ashleigh Sherman aesherma@indiana.edu | @aesherma
Jeremy Hollowell
Troy Williams
2013-14 Last season, IU’s traditionally strong perimeter shooting struggled. The team ranked 172nd in the nation out of 351 teams in 3-point shooting.
22%
21%
SHARP SHOOTER Zeisloft tries to resurrect IU’s perimeter shooting By Sam Beishuizen sbeishui@indiana.edu | @Sam_Beishuizen
Sitting just six feet away from IU junior guard Kevin “Yogi” Ferrell, Illinois State transfer Nick Zeisloft had his attention stolen after overhearing a question posed to Ferrell at Big Ten Media Day. “Who is the best shooter on the team?” Ferrell was asked. Zeisloft paused midway through answering a question of his own. “Let’s see how he answers this real fast,” Zeisloft said, his full attention now on Ferrell. “Well, he got the last one,” Ferrell said, referencing a shooting contest the two had at practice. “The last three,” Zeisloft quickly corrects. “The last three.” Zeisloft, a redshirt junior, said he’s
always been a bit of a jump shot specialist. He said he never modeled his shot after anyone, but he’s modeled his work ethic off of premier shooters. Steve Novak and J.J. Redick are two he says play the game the right way. “It’s just constant work,” Zeisloft said. “A shooter never takes a day off. We definitely emphasize the 3-point shot at Indiana. I love to do that ... That’s going to be a big part of our game this year.” On a team desperate for 3-point shooting, Zeisloft wants to be the solution. On paper, the addition of Zeisloft means opponents will have to give more respect to the 3-point line, opening up the floor for guards to drive and create easy scoring opportunities. IU didn’t really have a 3-point
Nick Zeisloft
37% career
SEE ZEISLOFT, PAGE 6 COURTESY PHOTO
2012-13 During the 2012-13 season, the Hoosiers were one of the best shooting teams in the nation, ranking fourth in 3-point shooting. Yogi Ferrell
Will Sheehey
30%
35%
Victor Oladipo
Jordan Hulls
44%
44%
Players shooting 30 percent and above are red, and players shooting 29 percent and below are blue.
Christian Watford
48% GRAPHIC BY KATELYN ROWE | IDS
‘Dark Knight’ producer, IU alumnus to speak today By Alexis Daily aledaily@indiana.edu | @Alex_Daily1
Michael Uslan, IU alumnus and executive producer of the Batman “Dark Knight” trilogy, will speak today in the Indiana Memo- Michael rial Union Whitten- Uslan berger Auditorium at 7 p.m. The event is free and tickets are available in the Union Board office on the second floor of the student activities tower. Uslan, who will join the IU Media School as a professor of practice, will give a lecture and question and answer session about how IU shaped him, his career in the entertainment industry and the lessons he learned. He will also promote his new book, “The Boy Who Loved Batman: A Memoir.” “The culture at IU has always seemed to me to be one where we look out for our own,” Union Board
Director Kevin Kenes said. “The fact that Michael is such a high-profile producer, yet such a down-to-earth guy, really speaks volumes about the way IU shapes individuals.” Uslan received a bachelor’s degree in history from the College of Arts and Sciences in 1973, a Master of Science in urban education from the IU School of Education in 1975 and a Doctor of Jurisprudence degree from the IU Maurer School of Law in 1976. He developed the first accredited college course on comic books at IU in 1971. Uslan donated more than 30,000 comic books to the Lilly Library in 2001. He was inducted into the Maurer School’s Academy of Alumni Fellows in 2006 and received IU’s Distinguished Hoosier Award. “Michael Uslan has supported his alma mater in so many ways, and we’re thrilled that he now will share his expertise with the Media School,” said Lesa Hatley Major, SEE USLAN, PAGE 6
The Bloomington Faculty Council gave the Resolution of Academic Freedom a face lift at Tuesday’s meeting. Members of the BFC voted to amend the resolution’s last sentence. The resolution protects IU faculty’s freedom of expression, stating that, in public utterances, faculty are free from institutional control. However, the resolution also states that, in public utterances, faculty should avoid appearing as spokespeople for IU. Members of the BFC discussed the resolution in response to recent controversies limiting faculty’s freedom of expression at Chicago State University, Colorado State University and the University of Illinois, among others, Steve Sanders, associate professor of law, said. The email account of a faculty member at Colorado State University, for example, was suspended after said faculty member sent emails critical of recent firings, Sanders said. “Faculty governance and academic freedom is intertwined,” Sanders said. Rather than merely vote to reaffirm the resolution, members of the BFC instead voted to amend the resolution, tweaking the language and removing a sentence. In a 25 to 18 vote, members of the BFC opted to remove the last sentence: “The teacher or librarian should recognize that a professional position in the community involves the obligation to be accurate, to exercise appropriate restraint and to show respect for the right of others to express their views.” Certain members of the BFC felt the last sentence unnecessarily constrained faculty’s freedom of speech. Members of the BFC will vote to affirm the amended resolution during the Nov. 4 or Nov. 18 meeting, Jim Sherman, BFC president said. Additionally, David Johnson, vice provost for enrollment management, briefed members of the BFC on student recruitment and retention. A record 7,708 students make up this year’s class, compared to last year’s 7,604, Johnson said. Additionally, a record 1,042 underrepresented minorities SEE BFC, PAGE 6
ELECTIONS 2014
Indiana District 2 candidates hope to remedy budget problems By Emily Ernsberger emelerns@indiana.edu | @emilyernsberger
Though a year has passed since the federal government shutdown of 2013, the $17-trillion deficit is still a national issue which will affect the midterm elections in
two weeks. According to a recent Gallup poll, the budget ranks in the top10 issues Americans care about. The deficit will reach $21 trillion by 2019, according to estimates from the White House. Candidates for U.S.
Representative of Indiana’s second district consider the federal deficit to be a primary platform issue in their campaigns. Both candidates primarily favor spending cuts to certain departments to lower SEE DISTRICT 2, PAGE 6
MEN’S SOCCER
Hoosiers host No. 1 Fighting Irish tonight, page 11
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Nominations open for Catalyst Awards
CAMPUS
The IU Office of Sustainability is accepting nominations for the third year of Catalyst Awards. The Catalyst Awards program recognizes individuals and groups that have influenced
EDITORS: ANNA HYZY & KATHRINE SCHULZE | CAMPUS@IDSNEWS.COM
sustainability at IU, according to the University. Anyone can nominate anyone. Nominations are due by 11:59 p.m. Monday and can be submitted at sustain. indiana.edu.
Quarry retires, IU receives new supercomputer By Bridget Murray bridmurr@indiana.edu @bridget_murray
BEN MIKESELL | IDS
CAMPUS CAMPING Junior Jabari Adkins, president of the Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity, stands by the Sample Gates on Tuesday promoting awareness for homelessness in Bloomington. All of the donations throughout the night went to the Shalom Community Center.
100 new maple trees planted By Anna Hyzy akhyzy@indiana.edu | @annakhyzy
Work began at 7:30 a.m. with no chemicals, only hands. A team of approximately 40 people cleaned up and planted 100 trees in Dunn’s Woods on Tuesday. Mia Williams, the University landscape architect, said strong storms in the winter of 2011 disrupted the canopy of the woods. “That has encouraged a bunch of different types of plants that wouldn’t normally grow in a forest to grow and really cause problems,” she said. Without the use of chemicals, workers pulled invasive species from the ground Tuesday morning. The invasive plants the workers focused on removing included euonymus, Canadian thistle and pokeweed. Williams described euonymus as an evergreen plant that creeps along the ground and chokes out other plants on the ground plane. She said Canadian thistle is particularly hard to eradicate, given that even removing it from the ground disperses a great amount of seed. Pokeweed is the invasive species that Williams said is giving her the most trouble currently. “They’re just awful to deal with,” she said. She said the purple berries on pokeweed stain clothing. Past efforts to combat invasive species in the woods have been
considerably successful, Williams said. In the past, they have worked against tree of heaven and invasive honeysuckle. Williams said she was pleased to see that their presence was a lot less evident. She said a lot of the invasive species were able to proliferate because of the damaged canopy, which allows more light to hit the forest’s floor. She also said wildlife likely played a part in bringing the species into the woods. “Nature just finds a way,” she said. While she was working this morning, Williams said she saw probably 10 rabbits and two deer. The 100 trees planted were Herman Wells’ sugar maples. When construction of Hodge Hall began, a number of trees had to be removed, one of which was a sugar maple planted in remembrance of former IU President Herman B Wells. “It was a tragedy that we were gonna have to take this tree in order to have this building,” Williams said. She acknowledged that, as an academic institution, academic spaces are a priority at IU and there was no way around the construction of Hodge Hall. As a solution, the University took seed from that particular maple tree in order to create new trees with similar genetic characteristics. “We have 400 of these
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Campus Division worked in Dunn’s Woods on Tuesday to clean up the area and plant 100 new trees.
trees available to us and we purchased a hundred of them for this workday,” Williams said. Workers took approximately two hours Tuesday afternoon to plant the 100 trees. The trees were planted in areas of the woods that had been opened up by the storms in 2011 and the trees were planted in natural groups, Williams said. “They’re the ones that have little red ribbons on them,” she said. Williams estimated that the trees planted Tuesday are probably close to three feet tall and that
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approximately 75 percent of them would survive. Campus Division usually works on Dunn’s Woods once a year, but Williams said they will likely start working twice a year since there are measures they can also take in the spring to prevent weeds from even having a chance to set seed in the woods. She said when the University first started, there were no woods. She said the area used to be a grassy place with some trees. “That green space has always been part of campus,” she said.
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CORRECTION In a caption on Tuesday’s Region page, the director of the Civic Leaders Living-Learning Center should have been identified as Paul Helmke. The IDS regrets this error.
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Senior manager of highperformance computing David Hancock said at five years of age, the average life span of the supercomputer, Quarry is retiring. This makes way for a newer, faster supercomputing cluster to reside under the roof of the IU Data Center. Karst, the new supercomputer developed for IU, is a high throughput computer. Matt Link, director of research technology systems at University Information Technology Services, said this means Karst is able to do many small jobs quickly. Link said Karst operates by taking a larger problem and breaking it down into pieces that individual processors are assigned to resolve, similar to a processor on a regular computer. Processors are the computational “brains” in a computer, Link said. “(The processors) all work on it together,” Link said. “Then, when they all get their parts done, they gather back and you get a result.” This allows the supercomputer to solve problems at a faster rate than a normal computer with only a single processor. The supercomputer can perform simulations to abate the possible outcomes of a problem. This is especially helpful in research involving hard science, such as observing how two chemicals react. Researchers can simulate reactions using Karst to find which ones were active and focus on those. Link said the supercomputing technology at IU has minimized researchers’ processes from years to months. “Our job is supporting researchers and expediting their time to science,” he said. Hancock said the presence of Karst at IU is advantageous to researchers by providing a way to “leverage the investment” of a research grant. In applying for a grant, researchers at IU do not need to request funding for supercomputer time because that resource is already provided on campus. According to the IT News and Events website, researchers that used Quarry in their work altogether accumulated $365,419,648 total in grants.
Hancock predicted Karst would accumulate at least as many funds as Quarry, if not more. Anyone at IU is able to create an account on Karst by creating an IT account on www.kb.indiana.edu. “It’s really a push of ours to try to use these resources and make them available and productive for a wide audience,” Hancock said. Additionally, individual departments can purchase nodes within the system to access their own resources for research purposes. A node of Karst is equivalent to a server, and each node has two processors with eight cores each. Karst is equipped with 256 compute nodes and 16 dedicated data nodes, according to the UITS Knowledge Base website. Link said the supercomputer could perform text-based analysis as well, so it is not limited to hard science-based research. According to the IT News and Events website, the supercomputer Quarry has performed 6,362,872 jobs. Karst is four to five times more powerful than Quarry and is expected to do four to five times the capacity of work. The process of developing Karst for IU lasts six to 18 months. Hancock said this process includes allocating the funds for the new technology and composing internal proposals that state why the new technology is necessary. From there, the team sends a request for proposals to vendors and conducts meetings with the respondents to eventually decide what kind of system is needed. As the senior manager, Hancock spearheaded the proposal-writing process. Link’s role involves the operation of Karst, ensuring the supercomputer works properly and that it will aptly replace Quarry. After the installation, Link said the vendor runs stability and performance testing. Once the system is through testing and accepted, the research technology division will build the applications from Quarry on Karst so that “when Karst goes online, it’ll be ready to go,” Link said. As of Oct. 21, IBM, the vendor of Karst, is just finishing stability testing. Karst is set to go online in November.
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Newsroom: 812-855-0760 Business Office: 812-855-0763 Fax: 812-855-8009 The Indiana Daily Student and idsnews.com publish weekdays during fall and spring semesters, except exam periods and University breaks. From May-July, it publishes Monday and Thursday. Part of IU Student Media, the IDS is a self-supporting auxiliary University enterprise. Founded on Feb. 22, 1867, the IDS is chartered by the IU Board of Trustees, with the editor-in-chief as final content authority. The IDS welcomes reader feedback, letters to the editor and online comments. Advertising policies are available on the current rate card. Readers are entitled to single copies. Taking multiple copies may constitute theft of IU property, subject to prosecution. Paid subscriptions are entered through third-class postage (USPS No. 261960) at Bloomington, IN 47405.
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REGION
EDITORS: HOLLY HAYS & ANICKA SLACHTA | REGION@IDSNEWS.COM
Hoosier National Forest prescribes burns Hoosier National Forest staff announced nine possible prescribed burns planned for this fall, totaling 1,736 acres. Prescribed burning is meant to restore forest communities by improving tree
regeneration or increasing native grasses and keeping the area open for wildlife. The burns could occur between late October and mid-May. The plan is to burn 2,000 acres between fall and spring.
Event to promote health education By Tori Fater vrfater@indiana.edu | @vrfater
LIONEL LIM | IDS
Postcards, quilts and fashion from the 1960s on display at the Psychedelic Parlor installation. The display will run from Oct. 3 to Nov. 14 at the Farmer House Museum.
Museum explores ’60s history By Holly Hays hvhays@indiana.edu | @hollyvhays
In a museum that typically is set as if it were in the 1930s or 1940s, a collection of art from the 1960s might seem out of place. But for Emily Purcell, director of the Farmer House Museum, the art signifies more than a juxtaposition of the decades. “The 1960s are still an inspiration for music and art today,” she said. “It’s sort of a foundational decade.” The installation, called “Psychedelic Parlor,” is a collection of 1960s artifacts and artwork, including books and tie-dye quilts. At the center of the exhibition is a collection of about 40 post cards from local artist BJ Hale, who was part of con-
cert promoter Bill Graham’s mailing list from about 1968 to 1971. Purcell said the post cards are miniature versions of concert posters, including posters from performances by groups such as the Grateful Dead, the Birds, Santana and Janis Joplin. Purcell said, to go along with the art, she has put together a slideshow of music that plays throughout the parlor, a soundtrack to accompany the installation. The Farmer House Museum was founded in the late 1990s after Ed and Mary Ellen Farmer left their property and possessions to the community, according to the museum’s website. The house was built in the late 1860s, and it is one of
two homes from that decade left in Bloomington, Purcell said. Mary Ellen, who died in 1999, was involved in the establishment of the Monroe County History Society. She wanted to leave the home as a museum of living local history. “They first tried donating it to the city itself, and then they tried donating it to the historical society, but neither wanted to take on a whole other building,” Purcell said. The museum is operated by a nonprofit board. While the museum has other sources of income, such as renting out parking, donations and funds from the board are the primary funding source. The museum is open Tuesday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Admission
is free to the public with donations encouraged, Purcell said. The “Psychedelic Parlor” installation has no confirmed end date, but will be taken down sometime in mid-November for the museum’s Christmas show, she said. Other exhibitions currently on display at the museum include art by Don Geyra, a permanent display of World War II art and a pottery exhibit. Purcell said the installation in the parlor should resonate with younger and older generations alike within the community. “There’s a living memory of the 1960s, but it’s still so far back in time, too, that there’s a lot that people can learn about it,” she said.
An event Thursday aims to educate Monroe County residents about upcoming open enrollment for the Indiana Health Insurance Marketplace. The City of Bloomington and several local organizations will sponsor the event, called “From Coverage to Care.” It will take place from 1 to 2:30 p.m. at the Banneker Community Center at 930 W. Seventh St. in Bloomington, according to the city. Nancy Woolery, health projects coordinator for the City of Bloomington, said the city has sponsored similar events since before the first open enrollment for Affordable Care Act coverage. “This is an event where we’re just trying to educate people, from basic health care terminology to how to choose a health plan, what they need to know for open enrollment 2015,” Woolery said. “There’s been some changes that people need to know about.” That includes an increased number of insurance carriers participating in Monroe County, she said, which means more competition and hopefully lower prices. People can learn more about their options at the event, whether they’re already enrolled or enrolling for the first time. “They can automatically re-enroll, but that means they’ll have their same plan, pay the same premiums,” Woolery said. “We’re tell-
ing people, even if you’re planning on re-enrolling, you shouldn’t do so until you see the new plans we have on the market in Monroe County.” Helping others enroll for coverage requires certification from the state. Woolery is a certified Indiana navigator, someone who helps enroll people in the Health Insurance Marketplace and estimates there are about 15 navigators in Monroe County. IU Health also employs certified navigators, she said. United Way of Monroe County, a co-sponsor of the event, is providing funds for 14 more navigators to train and become certified. IU Health Individual Solutions, CoverMonroe and Premier Healthcare will also co-sponsor the event, according to the release. Speakers at the event will talk about terminology, plans offered in the county and understanding insurance benefits. Woolery said if Monroe County residents can’t make it to the event and need help enrolling, they can contact her. There will be other events scheduled around the county, as well, she said. “We’ve been having a lot of sessions over at the Monroe County Library where people can come listen to the health insurance carriers that are in Monroe County,” Woolery said. “We’ve been getting a very good response, but we would really like to do more because there are some changes we probably don’t know about yet.”
American Legion Post 18 to host Stand Down event for aiding homeless veterans From IDS reports
The American Legion Post 18 in Bloomington will host a Stand Down event in partnership with the Department of Veterans Affairs from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Thursday. Stand Down events are part of the VA’s effort to provide services to
homeless veterans, according to a press release from the VA. The events typically last one to three days and provide services such as food, shelter, health screenings, VA and Social Security benefits counseling and referrals to other services. Proof of veteran status is required to enter the event,
meaning veterans must bring their discharge information, DD214 paperwork, or their VA-issued identification card. Registration is also required for participation. Those needing help requesting their DD214 may contact Larry Squires at 812-349-4406. Registration begins at 10
a.m. at the front entrance to the American Legion Post 18 at 1800 W. Third St. Free services during Bloomington’s Stand Down event include health screenings, job consultation, VA benefit information and the opportunity to receive an Indiana identification card with proper documents.
RECREATIONAL SPORTS
Post 18 will provide lunch to participating veterans and their families starting at 11:30 a.m. Water, tea and coffee will be available throughout the event. The first Stand Down event was organized in 1988 by a group of Vietnam veterans in San Diego and has since grown, reaching more
than 200,000 veterans and their families between 1994 and 2000. The VA committed $800 million in 2011 to strengthen programs that aim to prevent homelessness among veterans through the Homeless Veterans Initiative. Holly Hays
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Your day, your way. Your calendar of events on campus and around town.. idsnews.com/happenings
Oct. 24 Noon
Lecture: Açaí From Local to Global (Mathers Museum of World Cultures)
Oct 24 4:00 pm
Lecture: Local-Sustainable Foods- Moving Beyond the Low-Hanging Fruit (Collins LLC)
Oct 24 5:00 pm
Demonstration: Street Food Culture: Philippines (Asian Culture Center); RSVP to acc@indiana.edu
Oct 26 7:00 pm
Lecture: Bananaland (Fine Arts Auditorium), part of the Fair Trade Film Series
Oct 27 4:30 pm
Discussion: Hot Buttered Soul: The Role of Foodways & Music-making in Building & Sustaining African American Communities (Grand Hall, Neal-Marshall Black Culture Ctr )
All events are free and open to the public unless otherwise noted.
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There’s always a way to break the ice
OPINION
EDITORS: LEXIA BANKS & EMMA WENNINGER | OPINION@IDSNEWS.COM
WHIZZES AND BANGS
While President Obama was casting his vote at the Chicago midterm elections, Mike Jones, who was voting alongside his girlfriend Aia Cooper, said, “Mr. President, don’t touch my girlfriend now,” as Obama stepped into the
booth next to Cooper. While not the expected thing to hear, Obama handled it well. “You know, I wasn’t really planning on it,” he said.
IDS EDITORIAL BOARD
MIND THE GAP
Get out while you still can
More is more TRACY JOHNSON is a senior in journalism.
Hollywood has an interesting take on the curvy woman. The curvy woman is always the funny one. Or the dramatic one. Or some other extreme character trope. She is never, or at least not often, a serious character with a serious purpose in the movie’s plot. It seems that Hollywood gets caught up in the image of the woman’s body and cannot see beyond it. And women with bigger or curvier bodies are seen as eccentricities, thus their characters are eccentric. Hollywood allows a curvy body to define the character. These funny, dramatic, sensational women are always kept at a distance. They are never allowed to be desirable. They are never given any sex appeal, and they are never shown actively participating in finding love. When thinking of this issue, two examples come to mind. Melissa McCarthy and Rebel Wilson are both wildly popular with audiences. Their movies regularly and consistently fill movie house seats. Both of these women have enough talent to fill an ocean — or maybe two — and they are both curvaceous and beautiful. McCarthy and Wilson have both starred in gutbusting comedic roles. They appeal to all age ranges. But though these roles have made them famous and popular, they have done nothing to portray their bodies in a positive manner. They are cast and costumed as women who are undesirable, rather than the beautiful women they are. The beauty ideals that have been set in place by society emphasize glamour and the wretched thigh gap. The vision of beauty is so narrow that there is no room to accommodate a beauty that comes in a different kind of package. These bigger women are shut off from Hollywood because their bodies are not aligned with the beauty ideals that have been set for them by the remainder of the world. They are forced to find another way to make it in the Hollywood industry. Big women have to cultivate new talents in order to find their way in Hollywood. These women cannot rely upon their looks and their bodies to help get them where they want to go. They have to work harder than everyone else at mastering skills that make them an asset to the film industry, rather than making them a liability. Big women are forced to find alternatives to the sexy seductress roles and settle for roles in which their bodies are shamed and presented as undesirable. They are forced to be more in order to achieve even a fraction of the success that women who fall easily within society’s image of beauty achieve. It’s high time we reevaluate what it means to be beautiful within our popular culture and within our own lives. Less is not more. More is more. johnstra@indiana.edu
CASEY FARRINGTON is a senior in political science.
ILLUSTRATION BY ROSE HARDING | IDS
Finding balance WE SAY: Do have healthy fear, don’t panic You most likely have heard about Ebola from every form of media that exists. This virus is discussed on the radio, television and social media. The prevalence of media coverage has caused an unhealthy type of chaos. Because of the constant media coverage, people seem to react in two completely different ways. Some say the media is blowing it out of proportion while others say the virus is going to wipe out humankind. There needs to be a balanced reaction to Ebola. By saying the media is simply blowing up the issue into more than it actually is, we are discounting the significance of the virus. People who take this approach decide not to take any precaution at all. This may lead to careless behavior that would make someone more susceptible to Ebola if it did end
up spreading throughout America. However, being consumed by the media coverage and becoming terrified of a pandemic also puts us in danger. We could take the media too seriously and let it interfere with our daily lives and responsibilities. This stress may also lower someone’s immune system, which could heighten the susceptibility to illnesses, including Ebola under the right — and unfortunate — circumstances. A healthy way to approach this virus is to find a good balance between concern and leniency. We need to take some precautions against this deadly virus while not letting our concern consume our lives. Our government and health facilities also need to find a healthy balance. It was revealed by two Texas nurses
who cared for an Ebola victim that the hospital they worked for failed to provide medical uniforms that sufficiently covered and protected the medical workers. This shows Ebola was not taken seriously enough to prevent the spread of the virus. In addition to this, we need to offer West Africa more assistance. Our government was fully aware of Ebola’s prevalence in West Africa early on. No action was taken to prevent the spread, and now it has come to America. If we want to protect our country from potential epidemics and pandemics, we need to take some sort of action to prevent a virus from spreading in the first place. From this point forward, we all need to find a middle ground between concern and leniency in order to protect ourselves.
BANK ON IT
Not another Ferguson More than 300 people showed up to discuss the edgy relationship between Indianapolis citizens and the city police force at a forum Monday night at Martin University, the Indianapolis Star reported. Attendees tried to answer one crucial question: “Is Indy a Ferguson waiting to happen?” The quick answer is no. If we look at Ferguson, Mo., as a comparison, we should never see the Indiana capital go up in flames — at least not in terms of political riots and police brutality. Alien invasion is completely out of our hands. Ferguson began to crumble in August when officer Darren Wilson shot Michael Brown, an unarmed black 18-yearold. Specifics of the incident are still blurry. Some say Wilson shot in self-defense, and some say Brown was surrendering when he was killed. Either way, a teenager lost his life, and the city reacted with marches and mass looting. This resulted in a militarized police force driving tanks through the city streets, throwing tear gas at crowds and shooting citizens with rubber bullets.
It’s easy to imagine why residents of Indianapolis are concerned about the future of their city. In June, Johnson County Sheriff Doug Cox acquired an MRAP, a bulletproof military tank, from military surplus supplies. Johnson County was just one of eight counties in Indiana to receive an MRAP. After seeing how Ferguson police acted with this type of equipment after the death of Michael Brown, Indianapolis residents’ fears and concerns are valid and justifiable. Especially when, as it was revealed at the forum, there is already a lack of trust between the police force and the citizens in Indianapolis. And it all came down to race. As the Indianapolis Star’s Robert King pointed out, the majority of the forum’s attendees were black. One woman at the forum was quoted saying, “We don’t tell our black sons the same things that white women tell their sons.” Black people don’t feel protected by the police. They feel targeted. Too many stereotypes
cloud the judgment of people not of color. They see a black boy walking down a street with baggy pants and gold chains around his neck and think “drug dealer” or “gangster” — he’s off to cause trouble, whereas the white boy walking on the other side of the street is likely just going to a friend’s house. The Michael Brown case didn’t help anything, nor did the death of 18-year-old Vonderrit Deondre Myers or 16-year-old Kimani Gray or 19-year-olds Kendrec McDade and Timothy Stansbury Jr. All but one of these young men were unarmed at the time at their deaths, all at the hands of police officers. It was a similar situation that prompted riots in France in 2005. This trend is what causes distrust between citizens and the police. The police are supposed to protect us, but as instances such as these shootings continue, we have to wonder who protects us from them. Indianapolis doesn’t have to be the next Ferguson. We
LEXIA BANKS is a junior in journalism.
have a chance to fix our capital before disaster strikes. We need to build a better relationship between citizens and the police, not just in Indianapolis but in cities throughout the state. Police need more training and they need to be evaluated. A racist person has no place in the police force. If they can’t think and treat everyone equally, they cannot possibly protect everyone equally. Citizens need to understand that in the face of tragedy, looting and rioting is not the right response. You can be angry. You can be sad. But tearing your city apart solves nothing. It’s been almost two months, and Ferguson is still in pieces. If we put effort into changing both sides, there should never be another Ferguson. lnbanks@indiana.edu
LETTER TO THE EDITOR POLICY The IDS encourages and accepts letters to be printed daily from IU students, faculty and staff and the public. Letters should not exceed 350 words and may be edited for length and style. Submissions must include the person’s name, address and telephone number for verification.
Letters without those requirements will not be considered for publication. Letters can be mailed or dropped off at the IDS, 120 Ernie Pyle Hall, 940 E. Seventh St., Bloomington, Ind., 47405. Submissions can also be sent via e-mail to letters@idsnews. com. Questions can be directed to the IDS at 855-0760.
Indiana Daily Student, Est. 1867 Website: idsnews.com The opinions expressed by the editorial board do not necessarily represent the opinions of the IDS news staff, student body, faculty or staff members or the Board of Trustees. The editorial board comprises columnists contributing to the Opinion page and the Opinion editors.
I’m enrolled at IUBloomington, but I’m not just an IU student. In my almost 3 1/2 years here, I’ve been a student of Shanghai, China, and Tokyo and Kyoto, Japan. Your collegiate years are one of the few times in your life someone will pay for you to go somewhere. Even if you can’t find free money such as grants and scholarships, student loans can often be applied to summers or semesters away. Think about that. You can borrow money to travel. Barring excessive credit card debt, that’s not really a possibility post-graduation. Once you enter the real world, semesters will be replaced with almost endless blocks of work. Paid travel opportunities will be limited to employer needs. You’ll be lucky if you get a real vacation your first year, let alone if you can get enough money together to go somewhere. Clearly, the time is now. Get out while you still can. Many Hoosiers have. IU ranked fifth in the nation last year for the number of students going abroad. Still, the ranking is less impressive when you look at the numbers. In 2012, 2,328 IU-Bloomington students went abroad. That’s about 6 percent of our undergraduate student population. Nationwide, international travel rates are similarly dismal. Only onethird of American citizens have a passport, according to some estimates. Even fewer actually use them. Rates of international travel wouldn’t matter so much were it not 2014. We wear clothes made in Vietnam, Bangledesh and Indonesia. We watch Japanese anime and South Korean soap operas. We might talk to someone in India when our cable stops working. We drop bombs on the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria. We conduct drone strikes in Yemen and Pakistan. Children from Latin America are flooding our borders as refugees. Ebola, a virus primarily infecting those in West Africa, is causing global panic. We have troops and medical personnel there to help stem the outbreak. Today in class you’ll probably listen to a lecture given by a foreign professor with international students sitting next to you taking notes. We need to understand the world outside our own borders and our place in it. The way we live our lives affects how people we’ve never met halfway around the world live theirs and vice versa. We need to know what it feels like to be an outsider. That vulnerability makes you stronger and more empathetic to the immigrants you’ll inevitably interact with at home. We need to learn how to communicate with people who speak different languages, use different body language and have different cultural practices. After all, it’s impossible that you will live and work in a bubble where intelligent and empathetic communication doesn’t matter. Staying home is comfortable, but who ever made memories playing it safe? casefarr@indiana.edu
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Jordan River Forum
AN EMMA DILEMMA
Taylor Swift still has some growing to do Taylor Swift is calling the media out for sexism, and while I agree with her general message, I don’t think she specifically is right in this case. Swift said on the Australian radio station 2DayFM that she was sick and tired of being called out for writing about her past relationships and ex-boyfriends, because no one says that about Bruno Mars or Ed Sheeran, both of whom have famous songs about an ex. She said it was sexist and offensive to constantly be criticized about her love life, the love life that she has made so public. I understand and fully support her message. We shouldn’t be calling female artists out for things their male counterparts get away with, and we shouldn’t be slut-shaming female artists for discussing past relationships. Here’s the thing, though. Taylor Swift’s music isn’t anything ground-breaking, it’s just passive-aggressive, and often inappropriate. She blatantly calls out ex-boyfriends, making it obvious who they are and what they did. When performing “We Are Never Getting Back Together” at the 2013 Grammy’s, she affected a bad London accent to call out her ex, Harry Styles, who is from the United Kingdom. Styles was sitting in the audience, and the awkwardness was painful to watch. In one of the songs on an earlier album, she names past boyfriends, people who aren’t necessarily famous but are now openly criticized. It’s a cheap way to get back at someone for participating in and terminating what should have been a private relationship. She did not suffer from domestic abuse or sexual violence. She’s just mad that they broke up. That’s not grounds to publicly shame someone. It is wrong of her to profit off an ex-boyfriend and exploit the emotions of the men she entered into consensual, private unions with. It’s childish, and frankly, annoying. No one cares as much about another person’s love life as Taylor Swift apparently thinks people do. Moreover, I have a serious issue with the fact that she slut-shames and criticizes other women in her songs, operating on unoriginal Disney-movie tropes about the mean popular girl who wears short shorts and gets boyfriends because she bullies them. Other female artists have successfully used their love
EMMA WENNINGER is a junior in English.
lives as subject matter in their work. It’s compelling and honest, and in no way does it sound like an angry 14-year-old who’s mad because Johnny was talking to Suzy by the lockers. That’s why I’ve never liked Swift’s music, and have a hard time enjoying her presence in the media. Not because she’s bubble-gum and mainstream, but because the content of her songs are immature and demeaning, and she seems to be using the music industry as her personal vengeance machine. So while I agree with her points, I don’t necessarily think she can be upset that people are criticizing a part of her life she has made so incredibly public. I like that Swift has started to push back against sexism. After Emma Watson’s U.N. speech, Swift came out in full support for equality of women. In an interview with Tout Le Monde En Parle, Swift referred to a 2012 interview in which she said she did not believe that she was feminist, refuting her own points. In the 2012 interview she, like many who say they are not feminist, said she thought feminism was too strong of a word, and that she believed in equality rather than the domination of women. She laughed at herself, and claimed now to be a steadfast believer after learning about and understanding the cause. I love that an artist is willing to be so public about a change of beliefs and admit they were wrong before. I like that she wants to educate and empower women. But Swift has made a name for herself with her passive-aggressive music and middle school antics, and I have yet to see her come out with a song or work that is as mature and meaningful as something produced by those same male artists she claims get passed over. If we’re comparing apples and oranges, Bruno Mars and Ed Sheeran are simply better writers, gender aside. I want more female artists and actresses demonstrating what it means to be feminist. I want them calling out sexism, teaching young girls how to stand up for themselves and give women from all walks of life a voice. But I also want them to grow up. ewenning@indiana.edu
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Let’s keep the conversation about equality open Emma Watson was right to point out the bad reputation/connotation of feminism. She was also right to invite men into the conversation. Unfortunately, it took a downward turn from there since Ms. Watson and the #heforshe organization tried to control the conversation making it again about female empowerment when it should be about equality. Feminism is defined as “the advocacy of women’s rights on the grounds of political, social and economic equality to men.” Right there in the definition is the problem. It separates women from men and sets up the further illusion that power is something women have to take from men. But Ms. Watson was right in suggesting that our power as people is in working with each other, not against
each other. There is no doubt that there are all sort of issues of equality still alive in our country today, gender equality included. These social issues still grind away at the potential for all of our people, especially those of us about to leave college for the first time and those of us who forwent college, as well. But you cannot create equity by applying wild swings in power. We cannot lift ourselves up by bringing others down, or we’ll soon be fighting each other at the bottom of the barrel. I’m all for redefining feminism, but a good number of active vocal members in the feminist community are not. If redefinition is your goal, then it is imperative that fellow feminists weed out this pollution from their ranks.
If that task seems too impossible, I suggest dropping feminism all together for a word/idea/movement that already is defined as how more feminists wish feminism was. That word is egalitarianism. Egalitarian doctrines maintain that all humans are equal in fundamental worth or social status. It’s an all-encompassing doctrine that states we all deserve equal opportunity, responsibility and consideration in all aspects of life. It’s here and ready to go. It needs no re-branding or redefining. It just needs some publicity. #MeforEveryone Ken Poirier Senior in Computer Science kpoirier@indiana.edu
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Leave Obama alone In his recent Rolling Stone cover story (“In Defense of Obama,” October 8), Nobel Prize-winning economist, peak liberal and New York Times commentator Paul Krugman lays out what he believes is a qualified defense of Barack Obama’s presidency: A sycophantic love letter from a man who surely must know better but either has chosen to ignore six years of war, economic pain and social tension, or simply doesn’t care. “Despite bitter opposition, despite having come close to self-inflicted disaster, Obama has emerged as one of the most consequential and, yes, successful presidents in American history,” Krugman writes. His evidence? Health reform doesn’t suck nearly as much as it might, economic reform didn’t cripple nearly as many big cities as predicted, and most bafflingly, the Obama administration’s environmental policy is, in Krugman’s opinion, doing just fine and dandy, thank you very much. Never mind that Detroit lies in ruins; that healthcare reform provides a larger conduit for profits and unfair advantages for health insurance companies and pharmaceutical companies than at any point under the previous “free market” system; that one of Obama’s main environmental goals is construction of the
Keystone XL pipeline, intentionally holding the ecosystem of the entire Midwestern United States hostage so that TransCanada can make money on the dirtiest form of fossil fuel known to humanity. This is to say nothing of the Obama administration’s deleterious foreign policy; a domestic surveillance program that disregards every privacy law up to and including the constitutional ban on unwarranted search and seizure; a militaryto-police equipment pipeline that gives local law enforcement the illusion of greater power and impunity to do worse and worse things to individuals. Let’s not forget that it’s the Obama administration’s Justice Department that spied on the Associated Press. It’s the Obama administration that killed Anwar and Abdulrahman al-Awlaki with drones. Chelsea Manning languishes in prison for leaking information to Wikileaks under the Obama administration’s watch. Krugman believes the president has “(changed) the country for the better,” despite bitter opposition from the GOP in Congress and people from the left, right and center on the outside. Krugman believes the supposedly positive incremental changes the president has made are better than nothing.
“No president gets to do everything his supporters expected him to,” he writes. Reading Krugman’s assessment of the Obama presidency, one must assume that the president’s hands are tied on some issues, that he sometimes necessarily stands by, helpless to do anything while the machinery of the state churns onward, unrelenting. But the policies the Obama administration has carried out have not passed under his nose unnoticed. He is not ignorant of some of the most egregious civil liberties violations his government has perpetrated. It is true the president is merely one man, but he is a man who stands atop a structure that relies on violence and pain to continue its existence, and he took the position knowing full well that that was the case. The incremental, superficial change that Krugman lauds is just new window dressing on a house awaiting demolition. To be clear: There is nothing good about the Obama presidency, or any presidency, for that matter. It is the office itself that poisons who might have otherwise been decent people. Trevor Hultner Smash Walls Radio
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Open competition as ‘Competition Law’ A recent story in the Wall Street Journal highlights the “growing roster of countries” that now want a say in the world’s major corporate mergers. Given the interconnectedness of today’s global economy, it is no wonder that more than 100 international jurisdictions now claim antitrust authority to examine deals, all “embracing different approaches for evaluating whether a merger might harm consumers.” The best, surest way to prevent monopoly (the ostensible goal of antitrust law, also called “competition law”), isn’t instituting new arbitrary rules and regulations, but rather allowing anyone to engage in any peaceful, voluntary enterprise she wishes. The constant threat of new competitors is the single most effective check on the commercial power of incumbent corporate giants. Since these incumbents are more entrenched and closer to lawmakers and regulators, relying on legal and regulatory instruments instead of open competition simply creates opportunities for the corruption and abuse that come with “regulatory capture.” Lobbying pressure groups have the access and the resources to tailor public policy to their private ends. Antitrust law is just one instance of
attempted economic planning, based on all of the same fallacies that underpin other centralized economic controls. Efforts to determine or predict which mergers and acquisitions will harm the competitive environment assume that we know far more about the overall economy than we ever could. They represent what Friedrich Hayek famously called The Fatal Conceit. Hayek understood that markets made up of freely trading and interacting individuals are the only way to organize and coordinate the profusion of dispersed knowledge we call “the economy.” And just as we don’t and in fact couldn’t know all that is necessary to plan an economy, neither can we predict the consequences of, for instance, allowing some mergers but not others. Still, market anarchists are critical of corporate power as anyone else on the political left. We too believe that something must be done to remedy the exploitative dominance of big business – but both theory and observation have taught us that the state is the disease, not the remedy. It is in fact state-granted privilege that gives today’s corporate powerhouses their chokehold on economic relations. Once the state’s coercive, criminal
privileges are removed from the economic system, there will be no need for “competition laws” designed to prevent any one market actor from growing too large and powerful. Such laws appear desirable only where special regulatory and licensure barriers have already made competition itself illegal, advantaging favored groups. Rather than adding new layers of mindless and arbitrary rules — to be administered by lawyers and bureaucrats — market anarchists propose that we actually try the free competition we’ve heard so much about. Political and economic power need one another; in truth, it is probably a mistake even to consider them as separate and distinct phenomena, for historically they have always been thoroughly entwined. Today’s massive multinational corporations are very much the products of state power, the successors of the “mercantile system” criticized by Adam Smith. To rein in their power, we need only allow full, genuine competition. The freest possible system would also be the fairest, obviating the need for antitrust law. David D’Amato Center for a Stateless Society
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PHOTOS BY RACHEL MEERT | IDS
Members of the Bloomington Faculty Council meet for their biweekly discussion Tuesday in the Georgian Room at the Indiana Memorial Union.
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CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 enrolled, including a 7-percent increase in the AfricanAmerican population and 10-percent increase in the Hispanic population, marking the first time more than 1,000 underrepresented minorities have enrolled. Fifty-seven percent of students are in-state domestic, 34 percent are out-of-state domestic and 9 percent are international, compared to last year’s 58 percent, 34 percent and 8 percent, respectively. Seven-hundred eleven international students represent 41 countries and six continents while domestic students come from 47 of 50 states, plus the District of Columbia, and from 89 of 92 Indiana counties. Neither Idaho, Montana or North Dakota, nor Warren, Fulton
or Pulaski counties are represented. Martin McCrory, associate vice president for academic support and retention and vice provost for educational inclusion and diversity, also briefed members of the BFC on student recruitment and retention, with a focus on underrepresented student recruitment and retention. McCrory emphasized the role of the Groups Scholars, Hudson and Holland and 21st Century Scholars programs in recruiting and retaining underrepresented students, addressing attempts to make eligible students more aware of the 21st Century Scholars program. Finally, Claude Clegg, associate vice provost for faculty development and diversity, briefly informed members of the BFC about faculty recruitment and retention.
The Bloomington Faculty Council amended the Resolution of Academic Freedom during their meeting.
the debt. R e p . Jackie Walorski (RDistrict 2), who serves on the Joe Bock (D) House budget committee, has not specified where she would like to see Jackie s p e n d i n g Walorski (R) cuts. W a l orski voted against the House resolution that ended the government shutdown last fall. “However, without any spending cuts or budget reforms aimed at getting our fiscal house in order, I could not support this plan,” Walorski said in a statement Oct. 17, 2013, following the vote. Walorski’s first sponsored bill was a proposal to add a balanced budget amendment to the U.S. Constitution. It has not gone past committee. Democratic challenger Joe Bock has stated on his website that possible ways to lower the deficit include eliminating tax loopholes and allowing the federal government to set prices for Medicaid users’ drugs. Bock has criticized Walorski for her vote against the resolution that ended the government shutdown, as well as for taking pay during the shutdown. “The people of northern Indiana deserve better,” Bock said in a release on his website Oct. 1. The midterm election is Nov. 4. This story is part of a weekly series profiling members of the U.S. Congress and their opposing candidates for the midterm election Nov. 4. Candidates from each Indiana district will be interviewed on a rolling basis.
RECREATIONAL SPORTS
BEN MIKESELL | IDS
Junior transfer Nick Zeisloft answers questions from media at Big Ten Media Day last Thursday in Chicago. Zeisloft transferred to IU from Illinois State.
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specialist like Zeisloft last year. Ferrell was responsible for taking exactly half of IU’s 3-point shots last season, something IU Coach Tom Crean said will likely not be the case this season. Zeisloft will have a say in that change. He shot 36 percent from beyond the arc and 90 percent from the freethrow line last season. In the Hoosiers’ five-game tour in Canada, the 6-foot4 guard averaged 8.8 points per game and connected on 11-of-20 from behind the arc. Although he’s the secondnewest addition to IU, Zeisloft is the eldest player at 21 years old and turning 22 in December. A former Illinois State captain, Zeisloft made a point to step into a leadership position on an IU team that has no seniors from his first day on campus. “When Nick had his visit
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associate dean of the Media School. “His students not only will benefit from his range of talents in media production, but they surely will be influenced by the
and was able to work out with us, you knew right then that he was a leader,” sophomore guard Stan Robinson said. “He came in and didn’t take a backseat to nobody. Things he knew, he was telling us and helping us out, and that was just on his visit.” At practice, he leads drill lines to set an example for his teammates while also being vocal when he thinks his teammates can play better. During an open practice last week, there was a moment where Zeisloft was concerned about his scrimmage team’s mindset, so he acted on it. He huddled the team together and told them to stick to the game plan, just as he did as a captain at Illinois State. That’s exactly why Crean said he brought Zeisloft in. “He brings a wealth of experience to us, but he brings a tremendous competitiveness and that tenaciousness that we talk about and the energy we need, not to mention
a high skill level, especially shooting the ball,” Crean said. “I think he’s going to be a leader. I think he’s got confidence.” Crean has stressed leadership in practice. He’ll sometimes point to one player and tell them they’re in charge of a huddle. Zeisloft said he feels comfortable in that role. He’s taking it seriously knowing players are already looking up to him. Representing IU at Big Ten Media Day, Zeisloft said there’s still a long way to go for IU, but he aims to help the Hoosiers along the way. He said he didn’t come to IU expecting to just be a jumpshooter. He wants to be a leader. “We’ve got a long way,” Zeisloft said. “It’s a long process. March is a long ways away and that’s when you’ve got to be playing your best basketball. It’s going to be a process, and you’ve got to take care of the process every single day.”
tenacity he showed in pursuing his own goals as an IU student and as a fledgling producer with big dreams.” Austin Schulman, a senior majoring in telecommunications and marketing, said it will be an incredible experience for students to
hear from such an influential alumnus. “Michael, as a whole, represents a person who followed his dreams, worked hard and never gave up, which is a really important message many students can learn from,” he said.
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Living a dream By Alison Graham | akgraham@indiana.edu | @AlisonGraham218
When audiences enter the Wells-Metz Theatre opening night, they’ll see a completely empty stage. The set design is surprisingly minimal for a play set in 28 different locations, but the cast, crew and director of “M. Butterfly” wanted to keep things simple. “When you walk in, you just see a bare floor,” Director Murray McGibbon said. “When you leave you think, ‘Wow. I’ve been transported.’” Audiences can journey to France and China during “M. Butterfly,” which opens 7:30 p.m. Friday.
Performances will also be at 7:30 p.m. Saturday and Oct. 28-31 and at 2 and 7:30 p.m. Nov. 1 at the Wells-Metz Theatre. “M. Butterfly” tells the story of French diplomat Rene Gallimard, who falls in love with Chinese opera star Song Liling. “It’s really a desperately tragic love story, but there’s a lot of humor in the play as well,” McGibbon said. The play begins in Gallimard’s prison cell and starts at the end of the story, working its way through the main character’s memories, McGibbon said. “M. Butterfly” is set in the imagination and memory of Gallimard. “It becomes a fascinating, yet difficult story to tell,” McGibbon said. “It’s not linear. That’s what appeals to me about it. How do you stage a man’s thoughts and what’s going on in his brain physically onstage for an audience?” Actor Nate Braga plays one of the main characters, Song Liling, in IU’s production. Braga was asked to perform in the play at IU after Jonathan Michaelsen, director of the Department of Theatre, Drama and Contemporary Dance saw the same performance at the Court Theater in Chicago. “I initially didn’t want to do it again,” Braga said. “But my manager said it would be an opportunity for a great acting challenge, and she was right.” Braga said that working with a new cast and new set has given him even more experience. “I had a set way of doing things before, but it’s a completely new show,” he said. Braga said that adjusting to his new coworkers and reacting to what his costar, Chris Handley, does on stage is a rewarding part of the performance. Although he has performed “M. Butterfly” many times before, Braga continues to work to make sure the piece is different and fresh each time, he said. Performing the play in a new and exciting way hasn’t been the only challenge for the cast and crew. Scenic designer Bridgette Dreher has worked to design a set in an “in-theround” fashion. “In-the-round” means audience members are seated around the entire stage. “There’s no place to hide,” McGibbon said. “The action is very close to the audience. The stage and the auditorium almost become one.” With central staging, actors and designers were forced to get creative with theatrics. Dreher said the biggest challenge is to allow for dynamic action on a stage with no platforms or levels. This required all of the design elements to be in the air and fly SEE M. BUTTERFLY PAGE 8 Left Nathaniel Braga plays Song Liling in “M. Butterfly.”
WENSI WANG | IDS
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Former local artist still influences community By Rachel Lieberman rdlieber@indiana.edu | @rachelliebs
From spending her honeymoon living on a school bus exploring the West, to working on a Canadian alpaca farm, to being a florist, artist and illustrator, Katie Vernon’s unusual experiences with nature have provided her with plenty of inspiration. Vernon formerly resided in Bloomington but moved away with her family this past summer for her husband’s job at the University of Wisconsin Madison. While they may have left Bloomington, she said her family still appreciates all it has to offer. “There’s not even an Indian restaurant here,” she said with a laugh. “We love Fourth Street, and we really miss the people, too.” Despite her leaving Bloomington, Vernon’s work has a lasting presence in the city. She designed the logo for a local shop in the downtown area called Gather, which sells independent and handmade goods. Talia Halliday is the owner of Gather
and has worked with Vernon on multiple occasions. “She’s just such a pleasure to work with. She’s a hugely popular artist in this town,” Halliday said. “A lot of people come in specifically to find her work. A lot of people also recognize our logo.” Vernon’s art has not only been featured locally, but it was also featured on an episode of HGTV’s “Secrets From a Stylist.” “It was my two seconds of fame,” she said. “It was so exciting. There’s an overabundance of people showing their work online, so it’s really exciting and encouraging when someone does actually find you and wants your work.” That was not the only time Vernon’s work has been viewed by a mass audience. She also designed art cards for the furniture company IKEA. “I had friends texting me photos of my cards in different IKEA (stores) around the country,” she said. “It’s weird to think of how many cards were made and how many people got to see them.”
She may have started locally, but being featured by both IKEA and HGTV has given Vernon the exposure she said she is very thankful for. “I’ve been really fortunate to have this exposure,” she said. “Part of me doesn’t even know how all this happened.” While nature may have a strong influence on her work, Vernon said she also draws inspiration from her 2-and-a-half-year-old daughter, Juniper — or Juni for short — whom she and her husband hope to bring on their adventures once she gets older. When she is not spending time with her husband and Juni, Vernon is busy working on her art and illustrations. Growing up with a grandfather as an architect and a mother who had a knack for crafting, Vernon said art has always played a significant role in her life. “We had full range to just be creative. It was a really great way to grow up, and it just kind of stuck with me. I’ve always wanted to be an artist,” she said.
Actors perform in competition Oct. 31 From IDS reports
The 2014 Ike and Julie Arnove PlayOffs will push nine teams of playwrights, directors and actors to the limit. All teams will have 24 hours to create, rehearse and act out a seven- to 10-minute play live on stage at the Bloomington Playwrights Project. Participants will attend a press conference at 6:30 p.m. Oct. 31, where they will be grouped into teams. Each team comprises one playwright, one director and three actors. The entire event is based on the baseball World Series. The playwright will be
called the “manager,” the director is the “coach” and the actors are “players.” “After the draft, the first pitch will be thrown out,” according to a BPP press release. The “pitch” will contain a theme, prop and a line of dialogue that are required to be used in the work. Official performances will run at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 1 and 2. Tickets cost $15 and are available at the BuskirkChumley Theater box office or at the door of the BPP the night of the performances. All proceeds will benefit the BPP. This is the PlayOff ’s 13th year, according to the release. Attendees decide
who wins by voting for their favorite play and actor. Since the event is a fundraiser, teams and the participating artists have to raise money to get their “team on the field” and improve their “draft ranking.” The more money they raise, the better their chances are for winning the PlayOffs or an MVP award, according to the BPP website. As of yesterday, BPP has raised $16,297, according to their donation website. Their goal amount is $21,000. Donors can designate their donation for a specific play’s team. Audrey Perkins
Save the Date: Nov. 5 SC&I Graduate Programs Open House
COURTESY PHOTO
Katie Vernon worked as an artist and illustrator in Bloomington before moving to Wisconsin.
Novelists celebrate book launch at Runcible Spoon By Gracia Troyano gtroyano@indiana.edu
Patricia Henley and Elizabeth Stuckey-French wanted to write a book about a girl who knew how to follow her instincts. The result is the new young adult novel, “Where Wicked Starts,” released this September. The novel, which is about a group of kids’ efforts to rescue a young girl they suspect is being held captive, is meant to inspire girls to follow their intuition, Henley said. To celebrate the release, Henley and Stuckey-French will have a book launch from 7 to 9 p.m. today at the Runcible Spoon. Henley credits John Grisham’s book, “Theodore Boone, Kid Lawyer,” as inspiration for their story. “I loved how empowering it was,” Henley said in an email. “The kid in that story just goes ahead and tries
to solve the mystery in this small town. And he does. I wanted to do that for girl characters.” The choice of genre was deliberate. “Being a teenager is such a wild ride, which makes it potent subject matter for fiction,” Stuckey-French said in an email. “Also, adults have their own problems and don’t pay enough attention to what teenagers are going through. We wanted to write about basically good kids getting in over their heads, and basically good parents who are distracted.” Henley said she also wanted to write a mystery so that it would have a strong plot line “to pull the reader through the book.” At times, Henley said, the process of writing a book can be exhausting. “The first 50 pages are like falling in love,” Henley said. “It’s fairly easy. The middle is like crawling across a desert. A writer friend of mine once
said that as you get close to the end you’re like a horse getting close to the barn.” As far as developing the story line and mechanics of the book, Stuckley-French said “it’s a lot of time spent in your head, with your characters, trying things out, putting down words you later have to change.” Though both authors have written previous works alone, they agreed that coauthoring lowers the stress that normally comes with writing a book. “It’s much more fun, and the burden isn’t all on you,” Henley said. “We were able to brainstorm the plot together.” For writers hoping to get published, Henley said practice and craft mastery is vital. “As with any art, most writers spend many years practicing writing without publishing,” she said. “You gradually gain mastery and, if you’re lucky, someone will want to publish your book.”
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WENSI WANG | IDS
Nathaniel Braga, left, who plays Song Liling in “M. Butterfly,” and Chris J. Handley, who plays Rene Gallimard, perform during a dress rehearsal at the Wells-Metz Theatre.
» M. BUTTERFLY
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 7 in and out of the stage area. The Wells-Metz Theatre is not set up for flying elements in an in-the-round setting, so designers had to create their own system to fly the set pieces in and out. In addition, the designers had to pay specific attention to sightlines which required them to move around the auditorium and see the show from every perspective. The flying elements could not obstruct audience members’ views and, with two balconies, it was difficult to make sure the view from every side was the same. Dreher researched Chinese architecture and design before embarking on the design process. She noticed the heavy use of screens and geometric patterns in Chinese culture. To incorporate those cultural decorations, Dreher used a screen as part of the prison cell. It can fly up and down to be used whenever the scene reverts to the present day.
“It’s like a jigsaw puzzle,” McGibbon said. “We give 80 percent of the pieces to the audience and they need to use their imaginations to fill in the rest.” The prison cell is largely Dreher’s favorite part of the show. In the final scene, a light bulb comes down from the ceiling and then the cage is lowered down to the stage. As the cage is lowered, a shadow is put on the ceiling and then moves over the audience in a dramatic motion, Dreher said. “It’s very pretty and incredibly moving,” she said. The beauty of the entire piece is what originally attracted Dreher to about “M. Butterfly.” As part of her scenic design MFA program, she is assigned one to two shows per year. However, Dreher requested to work on this particular play because she had read it years ago in an introductory theater class. “I thought it was beautiful,” she said. “I liked the questions that it brought up about culture and identity. It was a
chance to work on something impactful.” “M. Butterfly” explores a variety of themes, including gender and racial identity and the Western perspective on Asian cultures. “One of the good things about theater is that it presents stories that influence how we see other people,” Dreher said. “It shows how we view others and how we perceive people from other cultures and other races.” Braga said the play is anything but normal and requires audience members to be completely engaged with the challenging subject matter. “I hope the audience relates with these characters,” Braga said. “They’re so human. You get to see these flawed characters and feel for them. That’s what’s so brilliant about it.” Single tickets are $25 for general admission, $15 for students and $20 for senior citizens. Tickets can be purchased at the IU Auditorium box office or online at indiana.edu/~thtr.
I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | W E D N E S D AY, O C T. 2 2 , 2 0 1 4 | I D S N E W S . C O M
SPORTS
EDITORS: SAM BEISHUIZEN & GRACE PALMIERI | SPORTS@IDSNEWS.COM
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Former Hoosier Watford waived by Celtics The Boston Celtics waived former IU forward Christian Watford on Tuesday, according to a tweet sent by the Boston Globe’s Gary Wasburn. Boston signed Watford in late August before
waiving him Sept. 26. The next day, the Celtics signed Watford to a new contract. Watford played in three preseason games for Boston, averaging just 2.3 minutes per game. He was a combined 0-for-3 from the field.
THE SPORTS S’TORI
The Heisman Trophy selection process is biased The more I think about the Heisman Trophy, the more it upsets me. For those not familiar with it, the Heisman Trophy is awarded to the best player in college football. Fifty-four former Heisman Trophy winners, 840 members of the media and a fan are appointed to find and vote for that player. But I’ll let you in on a secret. What the selection process really entails is 54 former Heisman winners and 840 members of the media cherry-picking from the nation’s best teams. What results are some of the top players, sure, but the best, year in and year out? I’d be hard-pressed to agree. Let’s walk through the selection process for the average Heisman voter. Quarterback is the obvious choice. It’s easy to spot the man at the helm of an undefeated team. He’s the focus of nearly every offensive camera shot. He has the most TV airtime. But are voters — members of the media, for goodness sake — really so nearsighted? If we go by the numbers, they are. Of Odds Shark’s top 15 candidates, 10 are quarterbacks. And of those quarterbacks, nine play for AP Poll Top 25 teams. The only exception is Kenny Hill of Texas A&M, a school that ranked sixth in the country just three weeks ago. Connor Halliday of Washington State University isn’t listed in the odds. Yet earlier in the season, he
TORI ZIEGE is a sophomore in journalism.
broke the all-time Football Bowl Subdivision record for single-game passing yards. He also leads the nation in total yards and touchdowns. I interviewed Goshen news reporter and IU alumnus Robby Howard last week on my radio show. When asked about Coleman’s Heisman chances, Howard said that on this IU football team, Coleman didn’t stand a chance. Maybe on another team, but not this one. Howard is right, and MCT CAMPUS IDS FILE PHOTO that’s what frustrates me. Wisconsin running back Melvin Gordon is third on ESPN’s Heisman IU running back Tevin Coleman is the nation’s leading rusher. He has 1,129 yards rushing and 11 touchdowns this season. Running backs Melvin Watch List. Gordon has 13 scores on 1,046 yards rushing this year. Gordon of Wisconsin and Ameer Abdullah of Nebraska are listed at 11-2 and 25-1, respectively, on Odds Shark. IU’s Tevin Coleman does not appear in the Week 8 odds, nor has he ever appeared in the odds, despite leading the nation in rushing yards and yards per attempt. Like Howard, Odds Shark’s predictions are not inaccurate. They simply reflect the present mindset of Heisman voters. These voters, and by extension, the Heisman Trophy, do not deliver on their promise. Their selection process is incredibly biased and stilted by notoriety, popularity and media attention. What’s more, “the pursuit of excellence with” — key word — “integrity” is all but MCT CAMPUS
SEE HEISMAN, PAGE 11
Mississippi State quarterback Dak Prescott is the at the top of ESPN’s Heisman Watch List.
MCT CAMPUS
Oregon quarterback Marcus Mariota is second on ESPN’s Heisman Watch List. Mariota has 19 touchdowns this season.
FOOTBALL
Coleman making his case for the Heisman By Sam Beishuizen sbeishui@indiana.edu @Sam_Beishuizen
IU junior running back Tevin Coleman didn’t react much when a reporter brought up his Heisman Trophy chances. Just past the midway point in the season, Coleman has established himself among the nation’s leading rushers. His name has started to be thrown around in various news outlets’ Heisman talks. Although he’s not listed on ESPN’s official Heisman Watch, he did receive one fifth-place vote. But soft-spoken Coleman’s emotions have been kept in check, even after being asked about it again after IU’s 56-17 loss to Michigan State. “If I get it, I get it,” Coleman said. “If I don’t, I don’t. I mean, it’s a real blessing to be in that award (consideration).” Coleman is statistically one of the nation’s elite. He just doesn’t play for an elite team. As it stands, IU is 3-4 and won’t have junior quarterback Nate Sudfeld available the rest of the season. The only player to ever win the Heisman off of a losing team was Notre Dame quarterback Paul Hornung in 1956. The Irish went 2-8 that season, beating only IU and North Carolina. Coleman’s 1,192 rushing yards leads the nation. He’s also added 11 touchdowns. His per-carry average of 8.8 is on pace to shatter Nebraska’s Mike Rozier’s current record of 7.8 yards per carry. With five games left to play, Coleman is 11th in IU’s all-time single-season rushing list. He’s only 613 yards from matching Vaughn Dunbar’s record of 1,805 yards. As the Heisman committee writes, the Heisman is
s u o l u T O Fab AIR
F G N I S 14 0 U 2 HOF A L L THE
e v a S ! e t a D the
BEN MIKESELL | IDS
Junior running back Tevin Coleman breaks off a run during IU’s game against Maryland on Sept. 27 at Memorial Stadium.
designed to “recognize the outstanding college football player whose performance best exhibits the pursuit of excellence with integrity.” Translation: the award is designed to go to the best player in the country, not the best player on the best team. In 1989, IU’s Anthony Thompson finished second in the Heisman race on a 5-6 IU team behind Houston quarterback Andre Ware, who was the first black quarterback to claim the Heisman trophy. Fans, 54 previous Heisman winners and 840 members of the media vote to determine the Heisman winner. Each voter gets three votes for first, second and third place. Because IU isn’t routinely on national networks such as ESPN, those 895 voters likely won’t see every IU game unless they happen to have Big Ten Network. IU’s most recent 56-17 loss to Michigan State was broadcast on ESPN. In that IU loss, Coleman accounted for 62 percent of IU’s yards. Coleman finished with 132 rushing yards on just 15 carries, becoming the first opposing player to rush for more than 100 yards against the Spartans this season. Coincidentally, that was a disappointing game by Coleman’s standards. He’s averag-
ing 170 yards per game. His effort was slightly more impressive considering the Spartans were honest about stacking the box and trying to limit Coleman with true freshman quarterback Zander Diamont, who was making his college debut. Coleman also opened the field for IU senior Shane Wynn on a reverse that went for 75 yards and a touchdown. “Everybody followed Tevin,” Wynn said. “He just tossed the ball back to me and I just ran.” With IU still rediscovering its offensive identity with a new quarterback, Coleman will likely continue to be tested with Penn State and Michigan next on the schedule, two schools that happen to be first and second in rushing defense in the Big Ten. Penn State’s 61 rushing yards per game allowed is best in the nation. With that in mind, IU Coach Kevin Wilson said these next few games will test Coleman as teams continue to plan their game around him. “There’s some really good run defenses, and we are going to be limited because of (our) quarterback,” Wilson said. “But it’s going to take a team effort for him to keep doing what he’s doing.”
NOV. 5 IMU idsnews.com/housingfair Many housing options in one convenient location INDIANA DAILY STUDENT
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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | W E D N E S D AY, O C T. 2 2 , 2 0 1 4 | I D S N E W S . C O M To place an ad: go online, call 812-855-0763 or stop by Ernie Pyle Hall 120 from 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Monday - Friday.
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Paid Marketing Intern Position Progressive Real Estate Start Up in Bloomington seeking digitally savvy intern to help create and execute top to bottom sales and marketing plan. fpkerker@gmail.com
www.rozananta.com or https://500px.com/rozananta
Call/email to schedule a session: (714) 422-6116
or rozananta@hotmail.com
Ride Exchange OFFER: Ride Btown to Chicago, 10/30 after 7 pm., split gas. 224-795-3463
Call 333-0995 to set up a showing omegabloomington.com
www.burnhamrentals.com.
812-339-8300 Close to campus & town. Three 4 BR, 2 BA house. One 3 BR, 2 BA house. 812.360.4517
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LEASING
2015! 5-10 BR
HOUSES
20th & Dunn
STUDIO-2 BR APARTMENTS The Mercury 212 N. Morton
414 N. Grant & 323 S. Jordan
HOUSING
!!2015: 5,4,3 BR houses. W/D, A/C, D/W. Near Campus. 812-325-7888
3, 4, & 5 BR on campus. All amenities incl. 331-7797 Elkinspropertiesrent.com
bestrentsrdw@yahoo.com
2 BR, 1 BA. Campus Court near stadium . $745/mo. Avail. winter break-July. 424.256.6748
Apt. Unfurnished !!!3, 4 & 5 BEDS.!!! Avail. Aug., 2015. Downtown & Campus. Call or text: 312-919-5993.
!!UNIVERSITY VILLAGE Leasing for 2015-2016: 220 E. 19th Street, 5 BR., 3 BA. 1315 N. Lincoln Street, 5 BR., 3 BA. 1316 N. Lincoln Street, 5 BR., 3 BA. 216 E. 19th Street, 5 BR., 2 BA. 219 E. 19th Street, 4 BR., 2 BA. 1309 N. Lincoln Street, 3 BR., 2 BA. LiveByTheStadium.com
5 BR, 2.5 BA apt. Avail. for Fall, 2015. Call Mackie Properties: 812-287-8036
**Avail. for Aug., 2015. Nice 3 or 5 BR houses!** 307 &307.5 E. 16th. Newly remodeled. Applns. incl. Close to campus. No pets. 824-2727
5, 4, & 3 BEDS. Avail. Aug., 2015. Downtown & Campus. Call or text: 917-903-3642.
1 blk. South: 5 BR, 2 BA, AC, W/D, D/W, parking, $450/mo. ea. Also, 1 blk. North: 4 BR, AC, W/D, D/W, $450/mo. ea.
Avail. Aug., 2015. 3, 4 & 5 BEDS. Downtown & Campus. Call or text: 202-725-6104.
3, 4, & 5 BR houses for rent. Close to campus. Avail. Aug., 2015. Call 812-327-7859.
Avail. now. 1 BR, A/C, laundry. 15th & Dunn. $480 + utils. Also rooms sharing 4 BR house, $450/$350 utils. includ. 812.320.3063/325.9926
5 BR, 3 BA luxury student home. Custom built home w/ decks. 536 S. Lincoln St. Please call Atlantis Properties at: 8123846918.
455 465
32” Audio sound bar. Remote & cords incl. $100. East side of Bloomington. 812-219-0750
Selling: Heater. $35. Winter is coming and you might need a good heater. This Honeywell cool touch digital ceramic heater (Oscillate) is best for you. gaoxiao@umail.iu.edu
Furniture Selling: Office Chair-Very nice white leather. $275, OBO. 812-630-2288
Yamaha C-40 nylonstring classical guitar w/gig bag. $95. 812.929.8996
Misc. for Sale Black diamond ring for sale, 4.53 total carats. $4,000,obo. 812-325-4482 Cool-daddy deep fryer. We purchased it at $50 but rarely use it. $25. gaoxiao@indiana.edu
Hardly used treadmill: Reebok Intermix acoustic 2.0, $200. 812-855-5083
445
We are moving out and want to sell two vacuums. They are functional. The large one needs a new bag. Small-$8, large-$15. gaoxiao@umail.iu.edu
812-339-8777
Pets AKC Shiba Inu puppies for sale! 2 males, 2 females. Call/text: 812-630-7352.
450
STUDIOS - 5 BEDS TenthAndCollege.com
Motorcycles 2008 HD Streetglide. 9600 Miles. Bought new in 2008 from Bloomington HD store in 2008. $14,8000. Loaded, Pearl Black, has 2 inch drop seat for a shorter rider and front has been lowered by 1 inch. Different muffler but have stock one. All the rest original. Call between 5 and 8:30 pm. Contact Andy at 812-325-3976.
Bicycles
Selling: Racor Pro PLB2R Two-Bike Gravity Freestanding Bike Stand, $10. Text (812) 391-4959
Instruments
Selling: Keyboard and/or Guitar amp. I believe the keyboard is the LK-220 model of Casio. Comes w/ stand & power supply. Asking $90 for it, but is neg. Guitar amp model is GX-15. It’s 30 watts. zackworcel@gmail.com
bestrentsrdw@yahoo.com
POOL • CLUBHOUSE • HUGE FITNESS CENTER • 24 HR STUDY • BALCONIES W/D IN ALL UNITS • SECURE ENTRY • ON-SITE MANAGEMENT • 1:1 BED TO BATH
Selling: 2007 Cadillac CTS. 109k, 3.6 liter V6, power sunroof, power seats, heated seats, tire pressure monitoring system, leather seats, Sirius radio, AT,AC,PDL,PM, CC, Tilt, PDL, PW. Runs great! Fun car to drive! $8900 seanhamm@indiana.edu
stevenbangs01@gmail.com
I can fix broken or shattered screens for an Iphone 5, 5c and 5S all for $60 no matter what service or carrier the phone is for. Please call, text or email. 317-6567630, chfrance@iu.edu
Automobiles I have a 2004 Chevy Cavalier and the back brake pads really need replaced. I’m a mommyto-be so it would have to be someone with experience and knowledge of how to change them. $50. gcorbray@iu.edu
Electronics
Hand-made grass shoes. Different sizes, very comfortable. $1/pair or $10/15 pairs. gaoxiao@indiana.edu
CAMPUS
TRANSPORTATION
21” iMac w/ wired apple keyboard & numeric key pad & magic mouse.
!!!! Need a place to Rent?
812-334-8200
www.costleycompany.com
Plato’s Closet pays cash on the spot for trendy, gently used clothing. 1145 S. College Mall Rd. 812-333-4442
MERCHANDISE
Houses
Office 2620 N. Walnut
Apartment Furnished 1 blk. South. 4 BR, 2 BA, A/C, W/D, D/W, parking. We pay H2O and heat. $450/mo. ea.
Condos & Townhouses
rentbloomington.net
3 BR, 1209 N. Grant. Near Stadium, avail. Jan. & Aug., 2015. $1050 for 3; $750 for 2. C/A D/W, on-site laundry. Costley & Co. Rental Management. 812-330-7509
Rooms/Roommates 1 BR avail. in 5 BR house. 820 N Dunn. $440 plus utils. Newly renovated. 406-250-5362
Available 2015-2016
4 BR TWNHS. Close to campus & Stadium. Garage, W/D, pool. Avail. Aug., 2015. 812-334-2646
STUDIO-1 BR APARTMENTS
OLYPROP.com
339-2859
Gently used Claiborne outwear jacket. Very warm & comfortable. Asking nly $20. Size: Medium (but feels more like a Large) 812-336-4959
THE BEST! Location, style, size & charm! 3-8 BR. 812-334-0094
(812)
3, 4, & 5 BR on campus. All amenities incl. 331-7797 Elkinspropertiesrent.com
STUDIO- 2 BR APARTMENTS
110.5 E. 6th St.
1-5 bedrooms by stadium, law school & downtown
Clothing
Brand NEW w/ Tags: Carhartt IU Ripstop Active Jacket Attached Hood. Perfect for Tailgating, Game Day, or other outdoor activities in those not-so-perfect-weather days. Size: Large. Over $100 at store. Asking only $75. (812) 336-4959
Large 1 & 2 BR. Close to Campus & Stadium. Avail. Aug., 2015. 812-334-2646
4 BR
HOUSES
Now Renting August, 2015 HPIU.COM Houses and apartments. 1-6 bedrooms. Close to Campus. 812-333-4748 No pets please.
Tickets for Sale
2 color run tickets (10/25, Sat.) Those who missed the deadline for early bird purchase, here’s your chance. They can’t be sold separately, please hit me up if you’re interested! $60 for two tickets. 812-318-2469
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3, 4 & 5 BEDS. Avail. Aug., 2015. Downtown & Campus. Call or text: 312-805-0284.
Found FOUND: Green Korean passport outside College Mall, TGIFridays. It has been delivered to guest services of College Mall. kimswans@indiana.edu
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Professional guitar lessons. Guitar Techniques: Lead guitar, Rhythm guitar, Classical , Performance, Improvisation, Jamming Skills, Reading Music, Music Theory, Scales and Exercises. Styles: Rock, Blues, Folk, Classical and Latin Guitar All ages, including kids, and all levels of study from beginner to advanced. Rates: $20/45 minutes class or $100/month, in which we will meet once a week and material will be provided. Hurry up!! limited space. lcordova@indiana.edu
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We are looking for first and second language speakers of Azerbaijani, Dari, Estonian, Finnish, Hungarian, Kazakh, Kurmanji, Kyrgyz, Mongolian, Pashto, Persian, Tajiki, Tatar, Turkmen, Uyghur, Uzbek or other Central Eurasian languages to participate in a linguistic experiment. All learners of these languages, regardless of their proficiency level in the language (beginner, intermediate, advanced), as well as native speakers, are invited to participate. Participants will receive compensation of $30 for their time. If you are interested, please e-mail me for further information: ayter@iu.edu
AVAILABLE NOW! 4 BR, 2 BA. house close to campus. $1600/mo. No utils. incl. No Pets.
430
Seeking EGG DONOR. Age 18-26, Caucasian, brown hair, high cheekbones & forehead, Central/Southern European ethnicity,5’6+, good personal & family health history, blood type 0/A. Compensation & travel expenses paid. Please apply: www.bhed.com
P
The Redmen 116.5 N. Walnut
305
Professional guitar lessons. Welcoming students of all ages and levels of study. Rates: $20 per 45 min. class or $100 course per mon. We’ll meet once a week, material provided. Hurry up!! limited space. Email: lcordova@indiana.edu
Internet & Water included
415
NEED MONEY? SAVE A LIFE. Schedule a plasma donation. New donors receive $140 in just three donations. Call 812-334-1405 or visit biolifeplasma.com to download a coupon and make an appointment.
NOW OFFERING! Roza Nanta Photography LLC., professional photography services: weddings, fraternities, sororities,events, students. See work:
1-4 Bedroom Apartments A/C, D/W, W/D
Downtown & Campus. 3, 4 & 5 BEDS. Avail. Aug., 2015. Call or text: 847-636-9194.
OLYMPUS
FOR FALL
Looking for tailgate space for upcoming road trips to U of Michigan or Rutgers? Check out GreenDotParking.com the largest private party exchange for parking right near the stadium.
Avail. Aug., 2015. 2 and 3 BR homes WITH ALL UTILS. INCLUDED. www.IUrent.com 812.360.2628
2-8 Bedroom Houses A/C, D/W, W/D
420
Dental assistant. Part-time. No experience necessary. 332-2000
Harp student in master level at Jacobs School of Music. If you are interested in learning harp please contact me. If you are looking to have a harp play in your event, please contact me as well. Also piano minor, can teach piano class. $40/ class. 410-736-2956
Apartments & Houses Downtown and Close to Campus
435
English & FrenchTutoring Here! Contact: spellard@indiana.edu Price negotiable.
Now Leasing for Fall 2015
General Employment
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535 & 539 S Washington St. Both 3 BR, 2 BA w/ adjoining decks in between. Call Atlantis Properties to schedule your tour! 812-384-6918
515
1 BR avail. immediately. $475 includes all utils. www.elkinsapts.com (812)339-2859
Houses
520
Apt. Unfurnished
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Textbooks Selling: Pysch 5th Ed. I want this book gone and I’m willing to negotiate! sroinila@umail.iu.edu
SERVICES English Tutor April Van Dyke Writing, proofreading, editing. Also: Reading & English conversation for ESL (English as a second Language) students. I have over 30 years of tutoring experience and a degree in English Literature. Email me at: avandyketutor5@yahoo.com
$15/hr. I look forward to helping you. MMUNITY BELONGING SPIRITUAL SACRI MILY MUSIC SONG HYMNS BIBLE AFTER HRUTI TIPITAKA ANALECTS OF CONFUCIO TE CHING VEDAS DIVINE PRINCIPLE UR NETICS SHINTO SCIENTOLOGY JUDAISM VENTIST SPIRITUALITY ENLIGHTENMENT YANG AHIMSA SHAMANISM NIRVANA SI ORSHIP SOUL PANENTHEISM REINCARNA ESSING CREATION PILGRIMAGE COSMOL GOD DHARMA MEDITATION GURU I CHIN EACE SEVEN VIRTUES DIVINE INTERVENT CHR BUD WICC
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MEN’S SOCCER
No. 8 IU set to play No. 1 Notre Dame tonight By Michael Hughes michhugh@indiana.edu @MichaelHughes94
IU won the College Cup in 2012. Notre Dame won the College Cup in 2013. So far in 2014, both teams are playing like they might win it again. The No. 8 Hoosiers (8-23) and No. 1 Irish (8-3-2) face off Wednesday at Bill Armstrong Stadium. “The Notre Dame versus Indiana match is always big,” IU senior Patrick Doody said. “Wednesday is important for a lot of reasons.” IU and Notre Dame have played each other every year in the regular season since 2003, but IU hasn’t won since 2009. IU has lost three times and tied once against Notre Dame since then. IU did defeat Notre Dame in the 2012 NCAA Championship round of 16 on its way to the national title. “If we had to pick a rival, I would say it’s them besides a few Big Ten schools,” Doody said. Both teams have several similarities. In addition to their near-identical records,
» HEISMAN
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 9 non-existent and at the very least compromised given the track records of recent recipients. The Heisman ballot is the
Horoscope Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is a 9 — You feel energized and confident. Make the changes you want. Check to make sure all the jobs still need to be done. Encourage feedback from folks involved. Mull it over before you respond. Expect your mate to be outspoken. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is an 8 — Complete a financial transaction with attention and care, or risk fireworks. Don’t force things to fit. Use your most creative logic. You win the prize by taking it slow. Get quiet and thoughtful.
both teams are close in goals scored and goals allowed. Notre Dame has scored once more than IU but has also allowed an extra goal. Both sides use their outside backs aggressively going forward, something IU Coach Todd Yeagley said he thinks will be a key factor in the match. “They’re very aggressive with their outside backs,” Yeagley said. “The communication of our wide backs and wide midfielders is going to be crucial in how to solve their backs flying forward.” Notre Dame senior Luke Mishu has tallied three assists this season from the right back position while sophomore Brandon Aubrey and graduate student Andrew O’Malley have each scored once from central defense. IU senior Patrick Doody has scored two goals this season while tallying three assists from his left back position, sophomore Billy McConnell has tallied two assists from his right back position and freshman Grant Lillard has scored twice from
central defense. Despite their similarities defensively, the teams’ attacks starkly contrast. IU plays in a 4-2-3-1 formation, meaning junior forward Andrew Oliver plays alone up top while three attacking midfielders alternate in providing support. Notre Dame plays a 4-4-2, meaning it has two forwards with four midfielders supplying them. “Their striker pair does a good job of playing within the lines,” Yeagley said. “They play with two, but one plays underneath so our center backs have to be really good in solving that with Lax and Matt.” Playing within the lines refers to Notre Dame strikers allowing the midfielders to provide service to them and not retreating into the midfield to receive the ball directly from the defense. This allows Notre Dame to maintain a solid shape and keep its spacing consistent throughout the match. Notre Dame’s leading scorer is junior forward Patrick Hodan, who has scored six times this season in
college equivalent of homecoming court: Heisman Trophy winners are queens, not valedictorians. That is not to detract from any of the previous winners’ accomplishments. Many deserved the
highest accolade in college football, but others benefit more from their circumstance than they do their actual skillset. When I see players such as Johnny Manziel and Jameis Winston hoisting up
To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is a 9 — Listen to suggestions about your private life, politely. Stand up for yourself, when appropriate. Resolve old issues. You are at your most persuasive. Conditions could shift, so take care. Find out what’s really wanted, and hammer out details. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is a 9 — Have faith, and keep in action. Don’t get stopped by confusion. Review your map, and take small steps to a rise in professional status. Piece together
BREWSTER ROCKIT: SPACE GUY!
a persuasive puzzle. Handle your side of the bargain. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is a 9 — Travel locally rather than long-distance, if you can. You don’t need to go far for what you need. Chaos could disrupt things. A brilliant insight could temporarily blind you. The best things in life are still free. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is a 9 — Review the numbers, and file papers. Handle short-term tasks and urgencies. Don’t take on
TIM RICKARD
LUKE SCHRAM | IDS
Femi Hollinger-Janzen celebrates his goal with teammate Tanner Thompson in a loss to Maryland on Sunday at Bill Armstrong Stadium. The Hoosiers play against in-state foe Notre Dame tonight.
addition to two assists. Those types of numbers would suggest Notre Dame’s attack centers around Hodan. But Hodan has only started five of Notre Dame’s 13 matches this season. He has come off the bench and played more than 60 minutes in each of Notre
Dame’s last six matches. IU has played against teams with consistent scoring off the bench before. It has played against teams that are aggressive with their outside backs, and it has played teams of Notre Dame’s quality before. That’s why the team isn’t
intimidated. “We respect the fact that they’re a good team, they’re well-organized and whatnot,” IU senior Dylan Lax said. “But we feel the same way about ourselves. We’ve played against really good teams already this year, so we’ll be ready.”
the bronze-cast Ed Smithinspired trophy, the grandeur of the Heisman fades a little more. If voters continue down this path, it might fade entirely. Tevin Coleman may play
for a team with only three wins. But he brings hope to a program where it would otherwise be desolate. The Heisman belongs to outstanding individuals — in every sense of the word. It’s time for voters to start
raising their standards and expanding their view. If they did, Coleman is nothing short of a legitimate contender. That’s a big if.
more than you can handle. Watch out for conflicting orders. Don’t forget an important engagement. Share the status with your partner.
out with friends.
Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 9 — Think, and decide what you truly want. Avoid distractions to craft your message. Speak with passion. Honor and appreciate your partner. Wait for results. Focus on short-term goals, mundane chores and routines. Let a false friend go. Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 9 — Postpone your shopping trip. Focus on immediate priorities. Let others know what you need. Provide motivation. They come around eventually. Choose staying home with a loved one over going
Crossword
Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Today is a 9 — You’re especially creative. Your partner demands attention. Even a disagreement can inspire imagination. Serenity could get disrupted... wait until the dust clears to check the score. Write your report and craft your handiwork. Use your special tools. Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Today is an 8 — A clash between work and travel requires your attention. Work out the kinks before proceeding. Pay any leftover bills. Let your work worries fade away. Meditate on music or peaceful sounds. Lounge and relax at home. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
su do ku
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
NON SEQUITUR
1 Snoop’s former “surname” 5 Sinatra’s “The Lady Is a __” 10 Fine 14 Polynesian capital 15 __ roll 16 Hard-to-explain feeling 17 Bird between the partridge and French hen 19 Exile isle 20 In dreamland 21 Smashes to smithereens 23 Pique condition? 25 Univ. aides 26 Jamaican music 29 Species of falcon also called an American kestrel 35 Boot parts 37 __-Ball: arcade game 38 “I’m not kidding!” 39 Dreads sporter 41 What’s always in poetry? 42 “__ So Vain”: Carly Simon hit 43 Sci-fi regular 44 Optic layer 46 Feds under Ness 47 Epic novel symbolized by
is a 9 — Talk about freedom and justice. Keep digging, and post about breaking news. Pay off bills. Don’t speculate with love or money. Share your affections with someone beloved. Let them know how you feel. Relax and enjoy. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a 9 — Compromise is required to work out a deal. Listen to your inner voice first, and observe the situation. Don’t fall for an emotional outburst. Evaluate your partner’s suggestion. Creative work pays well. Follow up talk with action. © 2014 By Nancy Black Distributed by Tribune Media Services, INC. All Rights Reserved
L.A. Times Daily Crossword
JEFF HARRIS
GREEN APPLES
vziege@indiana.edu
the ends of 17- and 29-Across 50 Future 32-Down: Abbr. 51 “Go for the Goal” author Hamm 52 Sales rep’s tool 54 Gym gear 59 Musical ineptitude 63 1998 Sarah McLachlan hit 64 Author of 47- Across 66 Witty remark 67 Pasty 68 Italian volcano 69 Egyptian symbol of life 70 Garden path piece 71 After-school mall frequenter
DOWN
12 First name in advice 13 Votes for 18 Eyepiece piece 22 Lion-colored 24 Start, as a new hobby 26 Camel’s undoing 27 Tree-dwelling marsupial 28 Pantheon led by Odin 30 Superman player 31 Enjoy again, as a cherished book 32 Ones who no longer have class? 33 Cable installer, at times 34 Wails 36 Post-workout relaxation spot 40 Musical set in an orphanage 45 Salon solvent 48 Texas city that spans five counties 49 Oscar winner Jannings 53 Start 54 __ California 55 Yemen port city 56 Put on the line 57 For fear that 58 Artsy Manhattan district 60 Cigar butt? 61 Primo 62 Meg of “Sleepless in Seattle” 65 Down-for-thecount count
Look for the crossword daily in the comics section of the Indiana Daily Student. Find the solution for the daily crossword here.
Answer to previous puzzle
1 Crunched stuff 2 Magnum __ 3 Lass 4 “Pirates of Silicon Valley” figure 5 Knight crew? 6 Bit of fishing tackle 7 Give __ to: okay 8 Relocate 9 Magic word 10 Miss, as an intended target 11 Roughly 2.2 pounds, briefly
WILEY
Your comic here. The Indiana Daily Student is accepting applications for student comic strip artists to be published in this space. Email five samples of your work and a brief description of your idea to adviser@idsnews.com.
Deadline is Friday, Oct. 31.
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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | W E D N E S D AY, O C T. 2 2 , 2 0 1 4 | I D S N E W S . C O M
CHILLIN’ IN CHILE
Learning Chilean history teaches a new world perspective One of the reasons I chose to study abroad was to have the opportunity to look at the world from a new perspective. I wanted to look at the world from a place other than the United States. Through my years in elementary school, middle school and high school, I grew up taking history classes that placed the United States and all its actions on a pedestal. I never really thought much about it. I was so proud of my country and all it did for the world. Growing up in a military family didn’t help my proud attitude, either. My military father could do no wrong in my eyes. Neither could my country. A coup d’état occurred in Chile in 1973, and a military general by the name of Augusto Pinochet took power. The effects of his rule continue to resonate throughout the country to this day. The bloody takeover resulted in thousands of deaths, disappearances and arrests. Pinochet, a dictator, ruled with ruthless authority, and countless people suffered for it. And this semester was the first time I heard about it. What astounds me most, aside from never hearing about this coup, is the U.S. aided in creating the conditions for the coup and immediately recognized and supported the junta government that was subsequently established. Former President Salvador Allende, the president who was overthrown in the coup, was everything U.S. President Richard Nixon was threatened by at that time. Allende was a socialist. The U.S. feared an “irreversible Marxist regime” would take hold in Chile, according to Kristian Gustafson in an article on the CIA’s website. It’s hard for me to understand this situation, growing
MAKENZIE HOLLAND is a senior in journalism and international studies.
up as I have in such awe of my country. How could my country assist and support the establishment of such a cruel, vicious government? It has taken me years to acknowledge my country isn’t perfect and even longer to acknowledge my dad and our military aren’t perfect. I don’t claim to have any sort of solution or mindblowing ideas on how to deal with world issues and threats, but I do know this: I see continued suffering in Chile. I see it on the faces of Chileans who speak about their missing loved ones, their fight for justice and their many unanswered questions. I’ve seen it in the memorials dedicated to those who disappeared during and after the coup. One such memorial is located at the Cementerio General de Chile, one of the largest cemeteries in Latin America, home to more than 2 million burials. I heard it in the words of Victor Jara, songs I heard watching the musical “Victor Sin Victor Jara,” created based on his works. Jara was a Chilean songwriter and political activist who was arrested, tortured and murdered in 1973. His songs have become a symbol of the struggle for answers to the numerous violations of human rights that occurred during and after the coup and the ongoing search for justice for the victims of Pinochet’s regime. I saw it on the face of Juan Guzman, the first judge to prosecute Pinochet on human rights charges. He stood at the front of my class. As he was telling us about charging Pinochet, and about later dropping
PHOTOS BY MAKENZIE HOLLAND | IDS
Cementerio General de Santiago, established in 1821 following Chile’s independence, is one of Latin America’s largest cemeteries, home to 2 million burials.
the charges, he looked at us and smiled a sad, tired smile. “I saw a sick old man and I couldn’t do it.” Pinochet died Dec. 10, 2006, without ever being charged for the crimes he was accused of. I know my country aided in creating this suffering in Chile. It just goes to show nothing is perfect, and there are always consequences to actions. Sometimes they can be as severe as in Chile’s case. What I have learned is I need to be more aware. Though I can be told to look at something a certain way, nothing is ever really as it seems. There are always two sides to every story. makholla@indiana.edu
The cemetery is the final resting place of several influential people of Chile, including former President Salvador Allende.
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