Friday, March 25, 2016

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Body of toddler found

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By Samantha Schmidt schmisam@indiana.edu | @schmidtsam7

JAMES BENEDICT | IDS

Freshman center Thomas Bryant, senior guard Yogi Ferrell and senior guard Nick Zeisloft laugh while answering questions during the post-practice press conference Thursday at the Wells Fargo Center. On Friday, the Hoosiers will play the Tarheels in the Sweet 16 round of the NCAA Tournament.

BATTERED, NOT BROKEN Hoosiers still recovering as Sweet 16 matchup with North Carolina looms By Michael Hughes michhugh@indiana.edu | @MichaelHughes94

PHILADELPHIA — IU won against Kentucky in the second round of the NCAA Tournament, but the Hoosiers arrived at the Sweet 16 in Philadelphia a battered team. Sophomore guard Robert Johnson re-injured his left ankle and missed the second half against Kentucky, freshman forward Juwan Morgan’s shoulder popped out of its socket again, and junior forward Collin Hartman has been battling a wrist injury since the Big Ten Tournament loss against Michigan on March 11. But ahead of IU’s game against North Carolina on Friday, all three appear relatively healthy.

“If it’s up to me, I’m definitely going to play, but I think it’ll be a game-time decision based on how the coaches and trainers feel.” Robert Johnson, sophomore guard

“If it’s up to me, I’m definitely going to play, but I think it’ll be a game-time decision based on how the coaches and trainers feel,” Johnson said. Johnson said his ankle felt normal against Kentucky up until the time he reaggravated his ankle sprain. Since then, he’s been rehabilitating his ankle two or three times a day, he said, and he has been a limited participant in IU practices.

NO. 5 IU (27-7) vs. No. 1 North Carolina (30-6) 9:57 p.m. Friday, Philadelphia

SEE SHAYLYN, PAGE 7 In a toned-down practice Thursday that was open to the public, Johnson participated fully while wearing a brace on his left ankle. The practice didn’t include any live action, however, which is the area Johnson has been sitting out as a precautionary measure. The brace is also new for Johnson. He didn’t wear it in the first two rounds of the tournament or during the week of practice leading up to them. This week, athletic trainer Tim Garl recommended he try a brace. SEE HOOSIERS, PAGE 6

mrabenol@indiana.edu | @maialyra

Mauricio Miranda wanted to challenge himself when he started to write his thesis for his third year in the master of fine arts playwriting program at IU. He knew he wanted to write about two things: the Peruvian conflict in the early 1990s and the Occupy Wall Street movement in New York City in 2011. At first, he didn’t think there was a connection, but he found a way to combine the two in “Occupants,” which is one of two new plays to be performed this weekend in IU Theatre’s “At First Sight,” which features new plays written by students. “They were two different plays in my head,” Miranda said. “Then at one point, I thought, ‘What if a person from the civil war in Peru became a war refugee in Manhattan?’ The timeline was perfect.” The timeline mirrors his own life. He grew up in Lima, Peru, during its civil war, moved to the United States at age 18 and lived in Hamilton Heights in Manhattan during the Oc-

Sarah Gardner

Erica Gibson

YULIN YU | IDS

Rebecca Dwoskin, left, practices during a rehearsal of “At First Sight” on Monday evening at the Wells-Metz Theatre. “At First Night” is a play about Peruvian-American and the Occupy Wallstreet movement, directed by M.F.A candidates David Koté and Katie Horwitz. The show will open Friday.

to support herself and her mother, who locks all eight locks in her apartment at the stroke of midnight, whether her daughter has come home or not. “It’s a very interesting story about two women trying to find themselves and who they are,” di-

rector Katie Horwitz said. “Alma is very interesting because she’s from a world that most of us have never experienced and couldn’t possibly imagine. We watch her journey from SEE FIRST SIGHT, PAGE 6

IU student arrested on drug charges by IUPD undercover cops From IDS reports

IU freshman Nathan Kolodziej, 19, was arrested March 21 after several purchases of drugs by undercover IU Police Department cadets. According to the probable cause affidavit filed March 22, Kolodziej has been charged with at least eight felony counts, including three counts of dealing in cocaine, two counts of dealing in psilocybin mushrooms, one count of dealing in LSD, one count of dealing in MDMA and one count of dealing in Alprazolam, which is sold as Xanax.

IUPD first began making undercover purchases of drugs from Kolodziej on Feb. 11, IUPD detective Dave Hannum said in the affidavit. On that date, an IUPD cadet purchased one plastic bag of mushrooms weighing 4.6 grams from Kolodziej at Ashton Center. A plastic bag of mushrooms weighing 4.63 grams was purchased from Kolodziej by IUPD cadets Feb. 24 at Fountain Park Apartments. The undercover cadets also purchased four plastic bags, each containing one blotter square, or hit, of LSD, and one plastic bag weighing .034 grams containing four capsules sold

as Molly or MDMA. An IUPD cadet purchased two plastic bags of cocaine weighing 2.69 grams combined from Kolodziej on Feb. 26 in front of Fountain Park Apartments. Two IUPD cadets purchased two bags of cocaine, weighing a total of 2.61 grams, and two bags containing four Xanax tablets each from Kolodziej on March 9 in the Teter Quad circle. On March 21, IUPD officers arrested Kolodziej after two undercover IUPD cadets purchased two grams of cocaine from him. Kolodziej’s backpack, which was

From IDS reports

searched upon his arrest, contained five bags of cocaine, weighing a total of six grams, 152 blotter squares of LSD, 64 Vyvanse capsules, 12 bags of THC wax and one large square of THC wax, according to the affidavit. A search warrant was obtained and served later that day, and IUPD officers found seven bags of marijuana, 94 THC suckers, four Xanax tablets, some paraphernalia and $9,100 in cash in Kolodziej’s room in Ashton Center, Hannum said in the affidavit.

AT FIRST SIGHT Tickets $15-25 2 p.m. April 2 the Wells-Metz Theatre cupy movement. Miranda did not know much about the civil war while it was happening around him, he said. He was only about 8 years old, and his parents did not tell him what was going on. Even though the main conflict occurred in the Andes, he said he remembers acts of terrorism that spread to the capital in the form of citywide blackouts. “There was this collective concern that people didn’t speak about,” Miranda said. “It was like in ‘Harry Potter,’ you can’t say the name Voldemort. You can’t say the Shining Path in front of kids, because they would start asking questions. You don’t want them to know there are big bad guys in the Sierra out to get them.” In the play, Alma is a Peruvian woman living in Manhattan who is so emotionally traumatized from the civil war she cannot leave her apartment. Her daughter Gabi must work

Abortion bill passed by Pence Gov. Mike Pence signed a bill into law Thursday that imposes additional restrictions on abortions. House Enrolled Act 1337 prohibits women from seeking abortions based on race, gender and possible fetal abnormalities. Indiana is the second state in the nation after North Dakota to impose such restrictions. The new law also requires a woman to view an ultrasound of the fetus and hear its heartbeat 18 hours before she can obtain the procedure. “By enacting this legislation, we take an important step in protecting the unborn, while still providing an exception for the life of the mother,” Pence said in a press release. “I sign this legislation with a prayer that God would continue to bless these precious children, mothers and families.” While supporters of the measure say the bill will be used to prevent abortions based on disabilities like Down syndrome, pro-abortion rights advocates say the bill’s language is vague enough to prohibit abortions of fetuses that cannot survive past birth. “Throughout my public career, I have stood for the sanctity of life,” Pence said in a press release. “HEA 1337 is a comprehensive pro-life measure that affirms the value of all human life, which is why I signed it into law today.” In addition to limiting the reasons for which women can seek abortions, the new law criminalizes the transfer of fetal tissue and requires abortion providers to bury or cremate all fetal remains. Before the law’s passage, fetal tissue disposal was regulated by the same laws as other types of medical waste. “I believe that a society can be judged by how it deals with its most vulnerable — the aged, the infirm, the disabled and the unborn,” Pence said in a press release.

Playwright draws on war, Occupy movement By Maia Rabenold

SPENCER, Ind. — At about 8 p.m. Tuesday, Tamara Morgan put her 1-year-old granddaughter to sleep in her crib in the corner of the living room, just like any other night. Several hours later, she checked on the blonde-haired, blue-eyed toddler, Shaylyn Michelle Kay Ammerman. “She was sleeping, peacefully like she always does,” Morgan said. But when Morgan woke up at 7:30 a.m., Shaylyn was gone. “Nothing in the house was disturbed,” Morgan said. “No note. Nothing.” After two days of searching for Shaylyn, investigators found a body matching her description at about 6 p.m. Thursday, Indiana State Police confirmed. The body was located on private property in a remote area near the banks of the White River, northeast of Gosport, Indiana. An autopsy has been scheduled for Friday. Police arrested Spencer resident Kyle Parker, 22, and took him into custody on Thursday night in connection to Shaylyn’s disappearance. Parker was one of two acquaintances at the family’s house on the 400 block of West Jefferson Street the night Shaylyn went missing,


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CAMPUS

EDITORS: CARLEY LANICH & TAYLOR TELFORD | CAMPUS@IDSNEWS.COM

Mammone to speak on fascisms in Europe Andrea Mammone of the University London will speak today about struggles in European political progress. The lecture, titled “Is Europe Moving Rightward?,” is sponsored by the Department of History, the Department of French and

Italian, and the Borns Jewish Studies Program. Mammone’s lecture will explain the endurance of the heirs of neo-fascism in modern European politics. The lecture will be 4-5 p.m. in the Indiana Memorial Union Dogwood Room.

SPEA celebrates top graduate school ranking By Eman Mozaffar emozaffa@indiana.edu @emanmozaffar

The School of Public and Environmental Affairs should take a moment to celebrate its No. 1 ranking, but the school shouldn’t and won’t treat it as a final destination, graduate student Dan Esposito said. The U.S. News & World Report’s Best Graduate Schools rankings placed SPEA’s graduate program in public affairs at the top this March. Students, faculty and staff gathered in the SPEA Atrium for a reception service to celebrate the school’s accomplishments. SPEA specializations in environmental policy and management, nonprofit management, and public finance and budgeting also received No. 1 rankings. In addition, the public management and administration program was placed in the top three. “With this news, we’re in a good position to attract a lot of people to our programs,” Esposito said. “Combined with the internal changes our school is going through, along with what our school has to offer, we are experiencing progress.” Rankings are determined by surveys sent out to all 272 public affairs schools in the country, said Jim Hanchett, director of marketing and communications at SPEA. He said the surveys are filled out by deans and program directors in the universities and returned to the U.S. News & World Report for evaluation.

DEONNA WEATHERLY | IDS

Michael McGuire, left, executive associate dean, RJ Woodridge, director of the Undergraduate Programs Office, Michele Sassano, assistant director of Admissions and Student Services, Megan Siehl, director of Graduate Student Services, and Dan Esposito, student and president of the Graduate Student Association talk Thursday at the SPEA Tavis Smiley Atrium. Administrators gathered in the atrium to celebrate SPEA being the No. 1 ranking graduate program in the country.

Esposito said he chose SPEA because of its strong, flexible programs. He said SPEA’s high ranking was an important factor in choosing the school, but the reason behind the ranking was an added incentive. “The multiple programs here work well together,”

Esposito said. “I’m able to combine my interests and become a more research-oriented student, collaborating with faculty who act as mentors and push students to become involved.” After submitting a paper for class, Esposito said one of his professors saw something

promising in his report, and has worked with other professor to publish an analysis of risks associated with natural gas and renewable resources. “The professors and students care about making a difference,” Esposito said. “We don’t wait until we get the degree to start initiatives and

Campus lacks accessibility, usability By Lanie Maresh emaresh@indiana.edu | @lanie_maresh

Rolling up to the Ashton-Mottier building’s only accessible entrance in her power wheelchair, IU professor Susan Seizer said she felt awkward coming into work each day. She could only access the one wing of the building where her office was located, isolating her from the rest of her colleagues. Faculty meetings posed a major inconvenience because she had to go outside the building and around to a back door in order to attend them. Ashton-Mottier proved to be one of the buildings on the IU campus she would never forget because of its lack of accessibility since she started teaching at IU in 2006. Luckily, the building was set to be demolished at the end of the school year, and her colleagues were considerate of the situation. “It was kind of like the consciousness was changing,” Seizer said. “I was separated from my colleagues, but they knew that it was going to be temporary. They were letting the administration know that if they hired this person, they can’t ask me to work in an inaccessible building.” For years, advocates for those with disabilities have had complaints about IU’s accessibility. A look around the campus even to the untrained eye can be daunting: from steep stairs in Ballantine Hall to hills like those near the Herman B Wells Library. In fact, in the past five years IU’s enrollment has shown only 43 out of the 42,588 students have a “permanent mobility impairment,” according the Disability Services for Students records. The Americans with Disabilities Act passed in 1990 set specific standards to make public buildings accessible for those with physical disabilities. There have been changes on campus since then, but there are still obstacles, especially with older buildings needing modifications. But there are challenges to prioritizing accessibility on campus. Many accessibility issues are less obvious than steep inclines. It often

takes a real person experiencing difficulties to bring awareness to these lesserknown obstacles. Additionally, some real accessibility impediments are not covered by the ADA. * * * During her first day using crutches on campus, Keira Kroin wobbled to the front entrance of Woodburn Hall for her anatomy class. The junior maneuvered her crutches up the three cement stairs and waited outside the doors for a rush of students to clear before steering through the set of wooden doors by herself.

With long flights of stairs and heavy doors, 75-yearold Woodburn Hall, like many older buildings on campus, was not designed with the physically impaired in mind. Now, the IU Architect’s Office is responsible for going back to these older buildings and making changes in accordance with the 2012 Americans with Disabilities guidelines for accessibility. That means installing automatic doors with buttons, high-low water fountains for those in wheelchairs, and even incorporating fire alarm systems that have horns and strobes to assist the hearing impaired.

Undergrads by the numbers 11%

89%

Undergraduates with disabilities Undergraduates without disabilities SOURCE USC UNDERGRADUATE STUDENT GOVERNMENT GRAPHIC BY HARLEY WILTSEY | IDS

Once inside, she pulled herself up four more stairs and had to stop to catch her breath. She continued down six more steps to room 100 as she clung to her crutches while trying to wrestle open another wooden door. She hastened down the ramp in the lecture hall to the first row and plopped into her seat, out of breath. Kroin said she felt everything went wrong in her first week using crutches on campus, a result of an injury in an intense game of powder puff football. “Initially, I was very negative and upset, but now I just chuckle,” Kroin said. “Now my eyes are definitely open to what people with permanent disabilities have to go through on campus.”

Dave Walter, the associate university architect of the IU Architect’s Office, is in charge of making sure the University is up to code. Current projects include installing automatic doors in Jordan Hall and the Chemistry Building. “Every project we do here, whether it’s reconstruction or renovation, usually has a component that considers providing accessibility for everyone,” Walter said. “It’s ingrained into the work I do that I don’t even think about it anymore.” Many older buildings are renovated to keep up to code. However, the buildings on the Old Crescent from Franklin Hall to Lindley Hall are on the National Register of Historic Places.

Those buildings technically don’t have to follow the ADA standards of accessibility. One example is Owen Hall’s large flight of stairs by the south door. Walter said in an effort to maintain the balance between historical preservation and accessibility, they installed an elevator and automatic door at the north end of the building. “So when you get into historic preservation, there are challenges, but we’re able to achieve accessibility at another main entrance,” Walter said. * * * One spring afternoon in 2012, Seizer came into work fed up. She’d ask Associate Dean of Faculty Tom Gieryn to go on a walk with her outside the Classroom Office Building. As they headed down Third Street, Gieryn noticed how awful the construction of the sidewalk was. He watched as Seizer tried to tackle big bumps, height differentials and sections where there wasn’t any concrete left. There was no way for her to get from her office to the street corner. Gieryn took out his cell phone started taking photos of the sidewalk. That very day he brought the photos to the Physical Plant to repair the sidewalk. “I thought his taking photos and sending them immediately was wonderful,” Seizer said. “I basically think that all that needs to happen for most people is to take a walk with a person in a wheelchair for them to realize immediately that there are many ridiculous physical barriers to accessibility in our built environment.” While walkers can just hop over cracks and bumps, wheelchair users are forced to deal with the bumpy ride or find another route. Michelle Cook, an accessibility specialist for the National Center on Accessibility, said a bumpy but still useable sidewalk is outside the parameters of accessibility standards. She explained sidewalks invaded by thick tree roots that create a two-inch barrier would be a bigger priority to repair than cracks creating a SEE DISABILITY, PAGE 3

research that can be carried through to help our community and the world.” SPEA graduate student Alexis Cureton serves as the new member development chair for the International Public Affairs Association. He said he believes SPEA’s promotion of support and ser-

vice, along with its constant goal of advancement, gave the school its top ranking. “I believe this is just the beginning,” Cureton said. “SPEA will continue building its internal structure, which will allow for further expansion in regards to recruitment, funding, resources and impact.”

Tickets to share platforms in IUSA debate Monday By Laurel Demkovich lfdemkov@indiana.edu @laureldemkovich

During the IU Student Association election debate, tickets will discuss their platforms, including their stances on diversity and inclusion, safety and well-being, and student life. “We’re just hoping to give the tickets a platform to talk about their current initiatives, the issues they think are important to campus, why they feel they represent the student body,” Commissioner Catherine Xu said. The debate, which will be 7 p.m. Monday in Alumni Hall, is put on by the election commission. Made up of 10 members, the election commission is responsible for running a fair election by making sure all rules are upheld by all candidates. The debate serves as a way for students to be more aware of who’s running and what their stances are, said Savannah Wormley, the commission’s head of marketing. “It’s important for students to hear the different perspectives so they have a better idea of who to vote for,” Wormley said. A major change to this year’s debate is the moderator. In previous years, Bloomington Mayor Mark Kruzan moderated the debate. This year, however, the moderator will be School of Public and Environmen-

tal Affairs professor Paul Helmke, who served as student body president when he was a student at IU. “I think it will add an interesting twist to the debate,” Wormley said. Students can also submit their own questions for the debate. If interested, students can submit a question through the election commission’s Facebook page or through their email iusaelectioncommission@gmail.com. It’s imperative for the commission to hear the student voice and to have questions from all over campus, not just the small body of the commission, Wormley said. “We want it to be a more representative thing to let tickets know this is what your student body cares about,” Xu said. The debate will run similarly to local or national debates, Wormley said. Every ticket will have five minutes to make an opening statement. From there the moderator will ask six questions, either written by the commission beforehand or sent in by students. Tickets will rotate on who speaks first for each question. They will each have two minutes to answer the questions, with three minutes at the end for a conversation among tickets. Tickets will then have five minutes to make a closing statement. “The debate mimics what SEE DEBATE, PAGE 3

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» DISABILITY

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2 quarter-inch barrier. “You really have to look at the severity of the issue and how far out it’s no longer in compliance in the standards to see what type of priority that creates,” Cook said. The ADA standards state there only needs to be one accessible pathway from each building. So some of the sidewalks don’t have to be repaired if there is another accessible route, which might have been the case for Seizer outside her office building. “It’s not an ideal situation, but if there’s a safe manner to get around the barrier, then it is still considered accessible,” Cook said.

stuck halfway up the lift because the door would get stuck at the bottom, and she would have to wait for someone at the bottom of the lift to slam the door shut before she could move again.

“I basically think that all that needs to happen for most people is to take a walk with a person in a wheelchair for them to realize immediately that there are many ridiculous physical barriers to accessibility in our built environment.” Susan Seizer, IU professor

* * * Seizer always dreads going to Swain East to teach. She remembers getting stuck in the smaller lifts that were used to transport people up a few steps within the building. She called them “horse lifts” because of how old and unreliable they are. She remembers getting

“Swain East is terrible,” Seizer said. “It’s supposed to work, but I always get stuck in that thing.” What Seizer experiences on a regular basis with these lifts is an example of lack of maintenance of accessible equipment. Elevators and lifts in every building are not

only a national requirement of Chapter 1 in the ADA standards, but so is regular maintenance of accessible equipment. But the problem remains that there is no provision in the ADA that says how often or how much these elevators have to be checked. In order to manage the upkeep of accessible equipment on the IU campus, Walter said each building has a business manager in charge of checking the elevators and small lifts within their building monthly.

Disability by the numbers on the IU campus Number of students on the IU-Bloomington campus with a permanent disability impairment for the 2015-16 school year.

Each circle represents 1 student

Each circle represents 10 students

* * * While IU is making the necessary changes to meet ADA standards on accessibility, many schools and places around the United States are focusing more on universal design. This architectural principle incorporates accessible designs that eliminate any physical barriers within an area so it can be used by a wide range of people, according to the National Center on Accessibility website. While IU has not yet fully committed to constructing future buildings using only

SOURCE DISABILITY SERVICES FOR STUDENTS GRAPHIC BY LANIE MARESH | IDS

principles of universal design, some of the new buildings have components of these principles. Walter said some of these features can be found in the new Global and International Studies Building constructed in 2015. They include doors with lever handles instead of knobs and faucets in the restrooms that can be used by those with no hands at all, according to Walter. The IUB Accessibility Committee, a

committee created through the IU provost’s office, was formed to bring together different units from around campus to solve accessibility issues on campus. Sherril York, committee member and executive director of the National Center on Accessibility, envisions that the soon-to-be-built amphitheater on campus will be entirely universal. York said the difference between legally accessible and universal design is instead of just having a few

wheelchair-accessible seats in the front or back of a theater, every single seat would be able to be used by everyone no matter what their physical disability may be. “It’s the minimum requirement that means there’s going to be a number of people who don’t have the same choices as everybody else,” York said. “Whereas with universal design, you’re trying to eliminate as many barriers as possible and therefore more people have more choices.”

Diversity video contest open By Austin Faulds afaulds@indiana.edu @a_faulds9615

STELLA DEVINA | IDS

DANCE IT OUT Students and faculty from the College of Arts and Sciences take part in a flash mob dance for Eurasian countries Thursday afternoon at the School of Global and International Studies.

Law and business students offer free tax return advice By Courtney Pories cpories@indiana.edu @courtneypories

The IU IRS Volunteer Income Tax Assistance Program helps hundreds of local taxpayers file state and federal tax returns every year. The program is run by students from IU’s Maurer School of Law and the Kelley School of Business, according to an IU press release, and clinics have been running three times per week in various locations on campus since Feb. 9. This year’s clinics end March 26. Assistance is aimed at helping local taxpayers whose annual income is less than $54,000 or if they are elderly, have a disability or limited English proficiency. IU students and Bloomington residents alike have attended these sessions and received their free assistance during the past two months, according to the press release. Jeremy Munza currently serves as a VITA student coordinator after previously being a quality reviewer and regular volunteer. He is one of many volunteers which he said come from Maurer, Kelley and a variety of undergraduate majors. As a second-year law student, Munza said he has always been interested in doing tax law and this program was a great opportunity to start practicing. After participating in the program last year, Munza says he is impressed with this year’s turnout. “We’ve been really busy,” Munza said. “We have had some really great support from our quality reviewers, had really great volunteers and we’ve gotten a lot accomplished. With 589 paper returns and 120 e-files we have, in total, completed 89 more returns than last year.” Munza said the schools collaborate with United Way

to provide promotional materials to encourage volunteers to participate and also resources for the program such as instruction manuals, printer ink and paper. To volunteer, Munza said students are required to take four official exams provided by the IRS. Two regard ethics and how to converse appropriately with taxpayers during the help sessions, one is a basic exam that tests knowledge on tax topics and a final exam tests knowledge of tax forms for international students. Once these tests and trainings are complete, Munza said volunteers may begin working and receiving volunteer hours toward their degree. When a taxpayer arrives at the session, they are met by a reviewer who talks through their documents with them and discusses their tax returns while filling out forms. Next, they meet with a quality reviewer who goes through any errors that were made and checks to make sure all of the information is correct. Then the returns are printed, filed and mailed if doing paper returnsor filed online if completing an e-filer. The entire process can take anywhere from an hour to three hours, depending on the complexity of a taxpayer’s forms and the level of attendance, Munza said. Munza said he is excited for the program to keep continuing and bring in new volunteers and leadership. “We are really, really thankful to have the resources and volunteers that we have,” he said. “We’re really happy to have such great participation and we’re thankful for a lot of the taxpayers that really seem happy with our services. We hope that we can continue doing a great job for them.”

IU undergraduates are currently able to share their creativity and perceptions of campus diversity through a video contest through the Asian Cultural Center at IU. The center is trying to promote multicultural and diversity awareness on campus, Asian Cultural Center program associate Sarah Stamey said. “We’re committed to building an inclusive support community that celebrates diversity that advocates for students’ needs and concerns,” Stamey said. Receiving input on how students feel about diversity on campus was very important to those involved with the conference, said Luis Hernández, a coordinator for the conference and contest. “We want to hear from all groups who in one way or another feel underrepresented

» DEBATE

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happens on the national level, not done in a joking way,” Wormley said. “It’s important to have something like this at the collegiate level.” With this also being

on campus,” Hernández said. The video for the contest has to answer the question “How do you see diversity on campus?” in 60 seconds or fewer, Stamey said. She said the answer can be as specific or abstract as the submitter prefers. This contest is through a Asian-Pacific American Faculty and Staff Council conference, which takes place every two years at IU, Stamey said. This conference and the contest are a part of the Asian-Pacific Island Heritage Month celebration at IU. While this annual observance is actually in May, it’s celebrated a month earlier on campus because the spring term ends the first week of May, Stamey said. The deadline for the contest is midnight April 3. The conference will be April 6. The video contest this year was included as a response from students who wanted to be more involved with the conference,

Stamey said. Along with the contest, Stamey said students will be represented at the conference by having their own panel discussion, where they will discuss cultural diversity on campus. There will be two other panel discussions along with this one featuring similar topics. Because the video is only 60 seconds or less and will be shot by a student, Stamey said judges will base decisions on content more than technical aspects. She said participants don’t have to feel obligated to shoot expensively and can use an iPhone to record the video. “We don’t want to define what this video is supposed to say,” Hernández said. “We want to get the students’ perspectives of what diversity means to them.” Once finished with the video, Stamey said participants need to upload the video on YouTube and fill out an online form in order

to be eligible for the contest. The contest will be judged by faculty and staff, Stamey said. Winners will receive $500, $250 and $100 for first, second and third places respectively. This money is provided through sponsorship by the Office of the Vice President for Diversity, Equity and Multicultural Affairs. The Asian Culture Center will be creating a video series that may use entries submitted for this contest. Hernández said this may help promote awareness of those who are misrepresented on campus. Hernández said he would like to see a similar contest happen once or multiple times each year in the future. “We were hoping this could continue on as a mode of communication for this discussion,” Hernández said. “We know this is not going to end the issues, but this can get the discussion started.”

a presidential election year, Xu said people are more involved with the student government elections. “I think people are more politically hyped overall, so they might be more interested, more invested in their student government

elections,” Xu said. The commission hopes the debate will make more students more aware of how they feel about each ticket. “Hopefully it can start more open conversation about this election and issues overall on campus,” Xu said.

Wormley said she hopes after the debates, the tickets will be excited about the upcoming April 6-7 election. “I also hope it encourages people to vote,” Wormley said. “Voter turnout is really important to everyone on the commission.”

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EDITORS: ALEXA CHRYSSOVERGIS & LINDSAY MOORE | REGION@IDSNEWS.COM

Arrest made for ‘02 abuse From IDS reports

Bloomington police arrested Roger Staggs Jr. on two counts of child molestation Wednesday. Staggs, 35, was arrested as a result of a Bloomington Police Department investigation that began last year, BPD Sgt. Joe Crider said. In June 2015, BPD started an investigation after two sisters, now 23 and 26, reported they were molested by Staggs in the summer of 2002, according to the police report. During that summer, the women, then 10 and 13, lived with their mother on Bloomington’s west side. Their mother was in a relationship with Staggs’ father, according to the report. Staggs, who was 22 at the time, often stayed the night at the house where the alleged victims lived with their mother. According to the report, the women alleged Staggs inappropriately touched the girls and had sexual relations with them. During the course of BPD’s investigation, detectives gathered enough evidence to arrest Staggs on two counts of child molestation, Sgt. Crider said. He was arrested at the BPD headquarters and is being held at the Monroe County Jail. Staggs’ current permanent address is in Spencer, Indiana. Both women made the report in June 2015, Crider said. Hannah Alani

Former park employee to serve prison time A former Bloomington Parks Department office manager was sentenced to 24 months in federal prison for embezzlement and fraud, United States Attorney Josh Minkler announced Wednesday. Judith Seigle, 52, was responsible

for maintaining the books for the Parks Department and the Bloomington Community Parks and Recreation Foundation. For more than 13 years she misused $430,000 in funds for personal use, according to a press release.

Foreign residents value city diversity By Cody Thompson comthomp@indiana.edu @CodyMichael3

James Jackson and Elira Kadriu, two Bloomington residents who have traveled to the city from their homes abroad, said they think Bloomington is a diverse place. However, Bloomington’s population is 83 percent white, according to data from the 2010 United States census. The minority population includes 4.6 percent AfricanAmerican, 8 percent Asian and 3.5 percent Hispanic or Latino. Fourth Street is home to ethnic restaurants that offer authentic foods from around the world. IU had 8,798 international students were enrolled during the fall 2015 semester. Jackson, 27, was born in Egypt. His first language was Arabic, but he moved to the U.S. when he was young and lost his accent over time. He said Bloomington has a fairly rich blend of people and cultures. Jackson has lived in Bloomington for about a year because his father and stepfather either are or have previously been professors at IU. “Bloomington has got sort of a different feel to it, sort of like a San Francisco-of-Indiana type of feel, so I stuck around,” Jackson said. Jackson received a degree in sociology from the University of Michigan and is studying for his LSAT before going to law school. Although he said he thinks the city is diverse, he also has experienced discrimination since he’s been here. “There’s a lot of micro-

ANDREW WILLIAMS | IDS

Waitress Elira Spaho reflects on her experiences since arriving in Bloomington three months ago Thursday afternoon. Spaho states differences from her native country of Albania in maters such as the legal drinking age, the tipping of waitresses, and outside degrees not being recognized in the states.

aggressions,” he said. “I don’t like that overly sensitivesounding collegiate term, but it is what it is. As far as this overt, blatant Jim Crow-style stuff, no, but as far as the sort of the hidden, subtle blended structural biases, definitely.” The number of discrimination complaints has decreased through the years, Director of the City of Bloomington Human Rights Commission Barbara McKinney said. She said she noticed the trend after she started working there in 1989. “We don’t get a huge number,” she said. “When I first started here, we got 20 or so a year, and now it’s usually 10 or fewer a year.”

Bloomington’s being further south would lead people to assume residents would be racist, Jackson said. But after observing, he found that was not the case. “There’s more blending going on here,” Jackson said. “So, like, in Michigan there’s pockets of white and black people, whereas here there doesn’t seem to be a concentration of black folks, per se, it’s more just peppered among the population.” Kadriu, 25, came to the U.S. three months ago from Albania, where she received a master’s degree in journalism. Kadriu likes that people in Bloomington are very international, she said.

“I don’t feel, like, strange,” Kadriu said. “It’s comfortable. They are just very kind all of the time, always asking questions about Europe.” Kadriu said she is considering looking for an internship. She said she came to Bloomington because her best friend moved here with her family four years ago and always urged Kadriu to come. She is struggling with transferring her credits to American universities. “I want to be content with people and practice English more,” Kadriu said. “This is a normal conversation and is good, but if I want to work as a journalist, it will be a little bit harder because they

have a high level of journalist language. I’m trying now by reading everyday articles.” Bloomington tries to make everyone feel comfortable by being as welcoming as possible, McKinney said. The commission McKinney directs investigates complaints of discrimination and seeks to resolve matters in ways that keep discrimination from recurring, McKinney said. “I think Bloomington is a special place in Indiana because we are a more diverse community than a lot of communities,” McKinney said. “We want to be welcoming, we want that diverse population here.”

Poet uses family history as inspiration By Cody Thompson comthomp@indiana.edu @CodyMichael3

ANDREW WILLIAMS | IDS

WONDER PETS Bloomington families watch as a live demonstration is given on how a possum manages to play dead during WildCare Inc’s “Science Live: Smart Animals” on Thursday evening at Wonderlab. The event aimed to teach children about intelligent animals in nature and explain what gives them their wits.

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His introduction said he was so assimilated he did not have the ability to use chopsticks. A small audience gathered to hear John Hawn and Eric Rensberger read their poetry in the Bloomingfoods’ sunlit patio room Thursday night. Hawn, known by his pseudonym JL Kato, never knew his biological parents. He was adopted in 1956, at age 2, by an American serviceman and his wife. Hawn has some theories about the identity of his biological parents, some of which have made their way into his poetry. Before his hair was gray, he had red whiskers. He outlines his theory of being the illegitimate child of another American serviceman and a Japanese woman in his poem “Evidence of Red Hair.” “When I ran into it, I was naïve to think I knew what poetry was,” Hawn said. Hawn has been writing poetry since high school, but his teacher said he would never develop it until he had leisure time, he said. He attended IU and received a degree in journalism. He began writing in earnest in 1999 after being mostly self-taught and working as a copy editor at the Indianapolis Star, he said. He has written more than one hundred poems. Hawn learned from poets in Indy and Bloomington he considered better than him, such as Richard Pflum, Ste-

YULIN YU | IDS

John Hawn, president of Brick Street Poetry and poetry editor of Flying Island, reads his poem “Ghost Songs” during a poetry reading at Bloomingfoods. “Ghost Songs” was inspired from a song that Kato's mother used to sing.

phen Roberts, Doris Lynch and Roger Pfingston. While he didn’t know him personally, Hawn said Etheridge Knight was a major influence in his writing. “After I immersed myself around poets, I learned that I did know it, and to this day, because I’m not trained in the academia, I do stumble sometimes, but this is where I rely on a strong writer’s group,” Hawn said. Hawn lives in Beech Grove, Indiana. He has four grown daughters, who are the subject of a humorous poem he wrote about the four of them sharing one mirror. He has four siblings with whom he has said he is estranged. In his poem “Mi-

yoko’s Ashes,” he describes his siblings arguing over his mother’s ashes, dividing her up between them. One of his poems, “Ghost Songs,” referenced a song his mother used to sing, “The Tennessee Walts,” which Hawn sang before the audience. “When I first started reading at open mics, I was terrified of public speaking,” he said. “The paper would literally shake in my hand, but with the help of the poetry community I learned to relax and be a performer.” Hawn’s personal favorite poem is “Festival of Dolls,” which is about the experiences of his mother and is the most requested poem for him

to read. Hawn also has a book titled “Shadows Set in Concrete” named after the effect of the shadows ingrained on the walls after the nuclear bombs were dropped on Japan. Hawn performs these types of readings about 12 times a month, he said. He has performed in front of empty rooms with no one but the host of the venue, but he has also performed at places such as Indiana State University in front of a lecture hall full of people. “It gives me a chance to hear from poets I normally don’t get to hear,” Hawn said. “It gives me a chance to connect to poets in other communities.”

BLOOMINGTON BLOTTER

A full patio set was stolen from the East side Kroger From IDS reports

From a bizarre public intoxication arrest to a full patio set being stolen, a few odd and unexpected crimes were reported to the Bloomington Police Department this week. All of the following accounts were collected from BPD:

Public intoxication Officers responded to the outside area of a bar Sunday, where a woman was so intoxicated she laid on the hood of the police squad car. She was arrested for public intoxication. Moped, chain theft A 56-year-old

man

reported Wednesday his moped had been stolen. He told officers he had left it chained to a fence. The chain was also stolen, according to reports. Lawn chair theft Police officers responded to reports of theft and shoplifting at the east side

Kroger on Wednesday after a full patio set, including a seat cushion, patio chair and a third unidentified item, were shoplifted from Kroger. It was reported Thursday the full patio set had actually been recovered and the theft of the other items has been documented.


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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | F R I D AY, M A R C H 2 5 , 2 0 1 6 | I D S N E W S . C O M

Twitter AI becomes Nazi Sexbot in 24 hours

OPINION

Microsoft created an AI model after a teenage girl and uploaded her to Twitter. The AI was programmed to learn from and adapt to the messages she received. The AI’s Twitter was deleted after one day because she began to tweet inappropriately.

EDITORS: HUSSAIN ATHER & JORDAN RILEY | OPINION@IDSNEWS.COM

She called users “Daddy” and talking about how “Hitler did nothing wrong.” Microsoft reminds us all to consider the trolls and sexual deviants who populate the Internet before allowing unsuspecting innocents to learn their social cues from it.

KARL’S CORNER

The nitty gritty truth about being a writer

ILLUSTRATION BY MERCER T. SUPPIGER | IDS

EDITORIAL BOARD

Background checks of police WE SAY: They should have been doing this all along The National Decertification Index is, surprisingly, not widely used. The index contains the names of all police officers who have been decertified in their jurisdiction for offenses such as insubordination or misconduct. Unfortunately, not every state records the names of these officers, and often the officers on the list can easily be rehired onto the police force as long as it is not in the same jurisdiction. Following the death of unarmed teen Mike Brown at the hands of police officer Darren Wilson, the federal government wants to require the Ferguson, Missouri, police department to check the index before they make new

hires. This way, in theory, they won’t be hiring a police officer onto the force who was previously stripped of their certification for, say, unnecessary use of lethal force. This news confuses the Editorial Board. Not because it doesn’t make sense to run a check on a new law enforcement hire, but because it absolutely does make sense. Our confusion stems from the fact that this practice was not required before and at every police department in the country. The problem with the National Decertification Index is it is not exactly national at all. NBC News reported only 39 states have police jurisdictions that collect and record

the information of officers who have been decertified. It seems one of the only things standing in the way of national mandated use of the index is the difficulty securing outside funding to support it. But it would be very easy to argue public safety and adequate law enforcement are worth the splurge. Another argument against the utilization of the index when hiring new officers is the index may become a kind of blacklist for cops. There is a similar index for doctors who have committed malpractice, and there have not been instances of blacklisting in the medical community. Both of these drawbacks

cannot outweigh the importance of public safety and the vitality of transparency in the police force, especially in today’s political climate. People in a community have a right to be protected by safe, capable law enforcement officers. And if they are not, they should at least have the right to know the police department is monitoring decertifications. By not enforcing the use of this index, we are promoting a lackadaisical hiring process for people who are entrusted with our safety. The judicial system has a lot of problems to be fixed, but mandating a check on new police hires could at least prevent more problems in the future.

“Oh, you’re an English major. So do you want to be a teacher or something?” This is the question I always receive when I reveal I actively choose to bury my face in novels and literary criticism all day. The answer is no, I don’t want to be surrounded by sticky fingers and pep rallies for the rest of my life. Instead my response is, “I want to be a writer.” This is a very allusive answer because we, as human beings, are all writers. We are constantly writing the subject lines in our emails, texting “I love you” to those we care for and tweeting underhanded jabs at snarky politicians. I think writing is an important skill to acquire. It doesn’t just sit in a garage like those vintage automobiles people only drive on Sundays. It gets taken out for a spin daily, rain or shine. And arguably, the best thing about being a writer is you’re able to express your ideas in a creative manner. In the eyes of its readers, writing can be right, wrong, weird, crazy, absurd, questionable, thought-provoking or all of the above. It’s all subjective, and that’s where things get dicey. Personally, I enjoy editorial freedom — the ability to say things I want when I want with the semi-important licensed authority of an almost-baccalaureate student. This is why I enjoy writing for the Indiana Daily Student opinion section. I have my own voice. Maybe I talk a little bit too much about silly things like the Kardashian-Jenners or weekly doses of millennial technology, but those are the things that interest me. And if they interest you, then we match, and it wasn’t on Tinder.

JESSICA KARL is a junior in English.

Although being a writer comes with a few triumphs, it also has its many flounders. While the stereotype of the parched alcoholic writing poetic prose through the early hours of dawn isn’t exactly true, I find all writers become slightly manic due to copious amounts of lukewarm coffee and whatever snack has become a vice over the years. For me, it’s Cheez-Its. The key to being your best authorial self is to edit, edit, edit. Many times I have lacked this tenacity and have sent in my work unedited, where “public affairs” takes an inappropriate “pubic” turn. Don’t be that guy. Another thing I’ve learned through writing at the IDS is the editors are not going to be as nice as your mother. They won’t make your eggs just the way you like them or drive you to school as your own personal chauffeur. Instead, they will coerce you into using fewer commas, more sources and language with less frivolity. Criticism is good for your bones. It’s like whole milk but for grown-ups — don’t drink it because you have to, drink it because it will make you better. Lastly, if something gets edited in a way you don’t enjoy, then deal with it. Deadlines are more sensitive than sunburned skin after spring break. Next time, apply some sunscreen and read over your work five more times. It makes a world of a difference. jlkarl@indiana.edu @jkarl26

A GRAIN OF SALT

QUEER ART VIBES

Comb jelly exposes evolutionary step

Addressing the politics of video art

I’m guessing you have never stopped to think about how cool it is that you have a butthole, but it is one of the most important developments to ever happen in the evolution of animals. Before butts came to be, animals used one hole for both eating and defecating. Most animals with multipurpose mouths went extinct eons ago. Creatures with a more efficient through-gut, just like our own, out-competed them. A through-gut provides two major advantages over a primitive one-orifice gut. The first is an animal can eat while digesting. The other, perhaps more obvious one, is it removes the risk of contaminating your mouth with fecal matter. One clade of animals has survived, and even thrived, despite not having a butt. This clade of animals, known to biologists as cnidarians, includes simple, soft-bodied creatures such as sea anemones and jellyfish. Another clade of animals that evolved before the cnidarians was also thought, until recently, to have a single-orifice gut. These animals, known as comb jellies, or ctenophores, closely resemble jellyfish, but only superficially. Genetic tests have shown comb jellies originated early in the evolution of animals,

even before other simple creatures with one opening to their digestive tract. In 1880 a German scientist noticed comb jellies have a pair of pores opposite their mouth, but he had also observed comb jellies defecating from their mouths — an observation also made by scientists in 1997. In order to demonstrate without a doubt whether the comb jellies’ mysterious pores are involved in digestion, a team of researchers made a high-tech video of the animals eating, digesting and doing their business. Like many of their jellylike relatives, comb jellies are transparent and the workings of the insides can be easily observed. Researchers at the University of Miami took advantage of this by feeding the jellies zebrafish and crustaceans that were genetically engineered to glow red. They could then watch as the glowing food particles traveled through the comb jellies’ gut. What they saw was astonishing. Food passed straight through the comb jelly and exited through the mysterious pores at the far end. The researchers took their movies to the annual Ctenopolooza, conference for comb jelly biologists, and shocked their audience. While watching poop

JAY KECHE is a graduate student.

exit a comb jelly’s butt may not sound very exciting, this finding completely shatters the current understanding of animal evolution. Until now, it was thought the through-gut developed once, sometime after Ctenophores and Cnidarians showed up to the evolutionary scene. Now, evolutionary biologists have presented two competing hypotheses: the first is the through-gut evolved not once, but twice in the evolution of animals. The other is it still evolved once, but eons earlier than expected, and jellyfish and sea anemones lost this trait later on. Evolutionary biologists sometimes try to force a ladder-like view onto the tree of life, wherein new and improved innovations come into being one-by-one. These fascinating new results challenge that view and remind us of evolution’s ability to reinvent life over and over again. Next time you sit down on the john, take a moment to appreciate the fact that we take care of business in the most efficient way biology could offer. jaykgold@indiana.edu @JayKeche

The exhibition of video art has always been an issue fraught with questions. Often artists are forced to ask themselves how to screen videos that don’t fall under traditional theatrical formats. In museum formats, people will often walk by video art in favor of staring at something they can consume immediately. In these settings, video art is often shown on loop on television screens or video monitors. Occasionally seating areas will be placed around the video. Most of the videos are experimental, nonlinear or circuital in nature. Video art is often seen as the off-the-rails daughter of art house cinema which is essentially work that has been described as having a stylistic authorship by the filmmaker and often is linked to independent and foreign cinemas. Often those who want control of their work are classified in this manner. There are those who weave between the two — such as David Lynch, Matthew Barney or Miranda July — choosing different types of video productions and exhibitions for different projects. However, most of these folks, with a few exceptions continue to make features and rarely return to video art. When making films, I often begin by pondering how

and where I want the film to be seen. Where something is shown and who will see it has a dramatic effect on its cultural production. Films that go to film festivals, not to mention multiplex films, are very different from video art. Most artists chose one or the other — commercial work or exhibition work. However, there are numerous collections that represent and collect video art, such as Vtape and VDB. These online and physical databases exist to allow for rentals and for cinemas to license screenings of video art. Some of their artists, such as Midi Onodera, Barbara Hammer or Richard Fung, have both features and video art in their oeuvres, but most only have short works. Often video artists are artists who are typically marginalized, like queer and racial minorities or intersections of multiple minority identities. In one interview in 2014 for the New Yorker, acclaimed video artist Ryan Trecartin discusses how he originally saw his works as being in festivals, not even realizing museums showed films. This obviously presents a problem of class in video art and raises the questions of who gets to see museum films and whether these

JOSHUA BYRON a sophomore in cinema studies and production.

avant-garde films are less accessible. Where films are shown also introduces questions of class, form and democracy. Who gets to have their films shown where? Genre becomes the biggest factor in exhibition format. If your film is “hard to get” it is less likely to even be exhibited in places where it would find a wider audience. While there are always intersections and people of different class, gender, race, sexual identity and other identities can see different kinds of work, genre still decides what amount of access different folks get to the work. YouTube and other platforms on the Internet offer an entirely new circumspect way to get work out into the world. In some ways it inundates the market, and in some ways it allows for more people to be represented. Many newer artists, such as Molly Soda, Steve Roggenbuck, Petra Cortright and I, chose to release our work on YouTube in favor of a specific and broader audience allowing multiple types of folks to interact with their art and as a way to have more control of their content. jkrathwo@umail.iu.edu @lordjoshuabyron

LETTER TO THE EDITOR POLICY The IDS encourages and accepts letters to be printed daily from IU students, faculty and staff and the public. Letters should not exceed 500 words and may be edited for length and style. Submissions must include the person’s name, address and telephone number for verification.

Letters without those requirements will not be considered for publication. Letters can be mailed or dropped off at the IDS, 120 Ernie Pyle Hall, 940 E. Seventh St., Bloomington, Ind., 47405. Submissions can also be sent via e-mail to letters@idsnews.com. Questions can be directed to the IDS at 855-0760.

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.


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YULIN YU | IDS

Tara Chiusano practices her role, Alma, during a rehearsal Monday at the Wells-Metz Theatre. “At Frist Sight” is directed by M.F.A candidates David Koté and Katie Horwitz. The show will open Friday.

» FIRST SIGHT

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

SAMANTHA SCHMIDT | IDS

Shaylyn Ammerman's grandmother, Tamara Morgan, displays the fliers she was posting around Spencer on Thursday morning. One-year-old Shaylyn had been missing since early Wednesday morning, but a body believed to be Shalyn was found Wednesday night.

» SHAYLYN

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 Morgan said. Parker was watching a movie and drinking with Shaylyn’s uncle, Adam Ammerman, after Shaylyn fell asleep, Morgan said. Officials are still investigating other persons of interest in connection to the case, ISP spokesperson Sgt. Curt Durnil said. “This case is just getting started,” Durnil said. By Thursday afternoon, officials had interviewed up to 10 persons of interest in connection to Shaylyn’s disappearance, Durnil said. After Shaylyn had been gone for more than 24 hours, investigators grew “very concerned,” Durnil said. “Somebody coming in and taking a child and completely disappearing,” Durnil said. “I can’t remember a time when this happened.” The FBI assisted the ISP in the investigation, FBI spokesperson Wendy Osborne said. Search-and-rescue teams used air support, sonar equipment and cadaver dogs in their search for Shaylyn’s body, Durnil said. Heavy rain and brief lightning slowed down search teams slightly

Thursday morning but did not stop them, Durnil said. Morgan’s house on West Jefferson Street was still blocked off by officials Thursday morning. Two police cars were parked in front of the white house where Shaylyn lived every other week with her father, Justin Ammerman. The family was told to stay out of the house while authorities investigated the scene. Morgan and Ammerman, along with Morgan’s other son, Adam Ammerman and her husband, Daniel Morgan, spent the night at Morgan’s mother’s apartment across town. Officials picked up Justin and Adam Ammerman on Thursday and took them to Indianapolis to administer a polygraph test, Morgan said. Police also obtained and investigated their cellphones. Huddled in the apartment, Morgan, her husband and her mother answered constant phone calls and watched the news on television, hoping to hear any new information about the search. “It’s just frustrating,” Morgan said. “There’s nothing anybody can do besides just wait.” On the night Shaylyn went missing, the front door was left unlocked, like

usual, Morgan said. “I grew up in this town,” Morgan said. “We sleep with our doors unlocked and windows open. You didn’t have to worry.” In addition to Parker, Justin Ammerman’s exgirlfriend, Kelly Rogers, appeared to have come into the home sometime after 4 a.m. Wednesday and placed some newspapers on the kitchen counter before leaving, Morgan said. Rogers had been living at the house since she and Justin Ammerman broke up, Morgan said, but the family hadn’t seen her since Sunday. Police confirmed Thursday that neither Parker nor Rogers had Shaylyn in their possession. “Our hearts sank to the lowest depths you could think of,” Morgan said. Across Owen County and the surrounding area, hundreds of friends, family members and complete strangers offered to help in the search for Shaylyn. One of the friends who reached out to the family included Frederic Lieber, an IU professor in the Counseling & Educational Psychology department. Lieber has known Shaylyn’s father, Justin

Ammerman, for more than 20 years. They first met when Lieber began volunteering as a tutor in Justin’s fourth grade class. “Now I’m kind of a surrogate member of the family,” Lieber said. Lieber even had lunch with Ammerman, Morgan and Shaylyn on Tuesday. It seemed that Shaylyn had learned to walk fairly quickly, Lieber said. She was a bright, talkative and eager little girl, Lieber said. The next day, several of the family members called him to fill him in on the news of her disappearance. “I ached for the family,” Lieber said. “I offered any help that I could provide.” Feeling desperate for answers, Morgan posted fliers around Spencer Thursday morning, despite downpouring rain. Shaylyn would dance any time music came on and cry any time Morgan left the room, Morgan said. “She’s a grandma’s girl,” Morgan said. Shaylyn’s mother, Jessica Mae Stewart, posted a status on Facebook at about 9 p.m. Thursday after hearing the news that a body had been found. “My babygirl Shaylyn is gone,” Stewart wrote.

WIN TICKETS

someone who is afraid into someone who makes a choice to rise up.” Gabi, who comes from this household of fear, has made the choice to not be afraid of anything, Horwitz said. She is a self-proclaimed fighter who kickboxes in her spare time. However, she also needs to find her place in the world, Horwitz said. When Gabi becomes accidentally involved in the Occupy movement, she begins to find her purpose, Miranda said. Her whole life, she has felt caged inside her mother’s apartment, unable to go out and experience her sexuality or her identity as a first-generation Peruvian American. “No matter what’s happening onstage, we always have the movement churning underneath,” said Ashley Dillard, who plays Gabi’s love interest, Sienna. “That is great theater, that is what people want to come see. They want to see the underdog fight. We see Gabi fighting to keep her place in the world and not be kept

“No matter what’s happening onstage, we always have the movement churning undeneath. That is great theater, that is what people want to come see.” Ashley Dillard, Gabi in “At First Sight”

down.” This fight for identity will especially resonate with a college-aged audience, because college is where sense of self is molded, Dillard said. Gabi is 19 in the play, and she goes through many of the same struggles college students go through when creating their own views of the world around them. The relatability of the play is in large part due to the way Miranda chose to write it, Dillard said. “He writes the underbelly,” Dillard said. “He writes the people who are being oppressed, for the people who don’t normally have a voice. That’s what I want to watch — people who don’t normally have a voice, because it’s interesting to hear what they have to say.”

JAMES BENEDICT | IDS

Sophomore guard James Blackmon Jr. ices his leg during locker room interviews Thursday at the Wells Fargo Center. Blackmon, who injured his knee in December, practiced Thursday but will not play in Friday’s Sweet 16 game against No. 1 North Carolina.

» HOOSIERS

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 “I’ve been wearing it for two or three days now,” Johnson said. “Tim wanted me to try and see how it would feel and if it would help.” Both Hartman and Morgan also participated in practice, and both are expected to play Friday night. Morgan said he was 100 percent going to play, even with the risk of his shoulder popping out for a fourth time this season. Morgan said he doesn’t try to let the threat of an injury change how he plays, which may be the reason he can’t keep his shoulder in place. “I just don’t think about it,” Morgan said. “That’s probably why it comes out so much, because I’m not really conscious of it.” Hartman once again wore a brace on his right wrist, but unlike in the practice leading up to the first two rounds, he participated in every drill Thursday. Last week, Hartman was

limited to drills that ended in a layup. He still didn’t shoot any 3-pointers during practice Thursday, but he was consistently shooting and making a variety of jump shots from inside the 3-point arc. He also said his wrist is improving every day because he’s getting treatment every day. His treatment, combined with Johnson’s two to three rehab sessions a day and Morgan’s treatment, including the stitches he required after cutting his head during practice Tuesday, has kept Garl and the rest of the training staff busy. It even left Hartman questioning whether Garl and team doctors Steve Ahlfeld and Lawrence Rink have gotten much sleep during the past couple weeks. “Timmy G. and Dr. Ahlfeld and Dr. Rink have their hands full definitely,” Hartman said. “Those guys do a great job of getting us ready and keeping us in the game.”

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WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW FOR

QUALIFICATIONS Race favorites, past winners look to get poles By Andrew Hussey aphussey@indiana.edu

Hundreds of IU students will flock to Bill Armstrong Stadium on Saturday to watch Little 500 teams compete to make the field for next month’s races. After months of training, 42 men’s teams and 35 women’s teams will attempt to qualify for the 33-team Little 500 fields. Only the fastest 33 teams qualify for their respective race, leaving 11 teams outside the final field — nine men’s and two women’s teams. Each team will ride four consecutive laps, with four different riders completing each lap. The first rider gets a warmup lap and, once he or she crosses the start/finish line, the official timing begins. Every rider must exchange his or her bike to the next rider in a 32-foot gap around the start/finish line. “What separates the top teams from the other teams is their exchanges,” Little 500 Race Director Jordan Bailey said. “Most teams can ride fast, but a clean and fast exchange is the separating factor.” For the men, last year’s top qualifying time was 2:23.100 by Wright Quad. The cutoff time last year was 2:34.060. Reigning champion Sigma Phi Epsilon has qualified in the top four each of the last two years and returns three of its four riders. The rookie to watch out for on their team is junior Pete Arnold. Sig Ep defeated the Black Key Bulls last year by 0.024 seconds in an intense sprint to the finish. The Black Key Bulls are another favorite to take the top qualifying spot. The Black Key Bulls won the men’s race in 2014. Xavier Martinez, a state finalist runner in high school, joins the team and is another rookie to pay attention to. Sigma Alpha Epsilon finished fourth last year and is another team that could have the fastest time Saturday. The team has a history of difficulties with qualifying as high as they could, qualifying in the top five only once since 2011. “Sigma Alpha Epsilon is another race favorite, and they have a team of strong athletes,” Bailey said. “However, they are not necessarily known to be good at qualifications.” Bailey said another team who could qualify in pole position this

Looking for more coverage? Watch for continued coverage during qualifications and throughout the season on Twitter @ids_little500 or at idsnews.com/little500. year is Phi Delta Theta because they have two returning fifth-year riders. The riders to pay attention to during qualifications are Nicholas Thiery from Cutters, Kyle Knight from Beta Theta Pi and Rob Lee from Phi Delta Theta, Bailey said. All three were in the top-four Individual Time Trials last spring. Saturday will give a sense of which teams have emerged as potential race favorites and how old champions are looking ahead to April’s race. On the women’s side, 2014 and 2015 Little 500 winner Kappa Alpha Theta looks to continue dominance after graduating its leading rider, Liz Lieberman. Theta has six team titles, the most in the women’s Little 500 since the race began in 1988. In second place in terms of team titles is Kappa Kappa Gamma, with five. Last year during qualifications, Melanzana, an independent team, had the top qualifying time of 2:41.47. This will be Melanzana’s fifth year as a team. Gamma Phi Beta and Kappa Alpha Theta rounded out the top three to officially kick off the 2015 spring season. Qualification times begin Saturday morning at 8 a.m., beginning with Alpha Chi Omega. Teams continue to race every five minutes, with third attempts scheduled to finish around 6 p.m. There will be 35 women’s teams competing to qualify in 33 spots for the 2016 Little 5 season. Thirty-two of the women’s teams participated in practice rounds of qualifications Tuesday and Wednesday in order to prepare for Saturday. Alpha Chi Omega timed in at 2:42.69, the top time so far this year. Also on Tuesday, Phoenix put up a time good enough for second, followed by Delta Gamma in third. On Wednesday, Alpha Omicron Pi was the top finisher for the day with its time of 2:45.05. Alpha Gamma Delta and Melanzana came in at second and third. Hailey Hernandez contributed reporting.

PHOTOS BY JAMES BENEDICT, IKE HAJINAZARIAN | IDS

Top Black Key Bulls riders exchange bikes during the Little 500 Qualifications at Bill Armstrong Stadium in 2015. Middle Melanzana Cycling Riders exchange bikes at Bill Armstrong Stadium during the Little 500 Qualifications last year. Bottom Riders of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon team execute an exchange during 2015 Little 500 Qualifications at Bill Armstrong Stadium.

RULES FOR COMPLETING A SUCCESSFUL EXCHANGE According to the Rider’s Manual, an exchange must be made between each lap of the qualifying attempt except for between the warm-up and first timed lap. Exchanges must be made in the 16 feet before and after the starting line (32 total feet). The second rider has to be in control of the bike before leaving the exchange zone for the exchange to be valid. The judges will call an exchange

complete if the second rider is the only one touching the bike before leaving the exchange zone. The second rider cannot touch the bike until it has touched the line marking the beginning of the exchange zone. Once in the second rider’s possession, the first rider cannot touch the bike after the second wheel crosses the line marking the end of the exchange zone. If a team chooses to do a two-

bike exchange, the back wheel of the second bike must remain on the line marking the beginning of the exchange zone until the first rider has crossed and tagged them. The first bike and rider must stop before touching the end line of the exchange zone. Dropping the bike during the exchange will count as a foul. More information can be found on the IU Student Foundation website at iusf.indiana.edu.

QUALIFICATION SCHEDULE 8:00 8:05 8:10 8:15 8:20 8:25

Alpha Chi Omega Phi Gamma Beta Beta Theta Pi Alpha Omicron Pi Cru (Women) Tau Kappa Epsilon

8:40 8:45 8:50 8:55 9:00 9:05

Sigma Phi Epsilon Theta Chi Cru (Men) Kappa Delta Alpha Delta Pi Melanzana

9:20 9:25 9:30 9:35 9:40 9:45

Delta Gamma Delta Delta Delta Kappa Alpha Theta RideOn Sigma Chi Alpha Sigma Chi

10:00 10:05 10:10 10:15 10:20

Phi Kappa Sigma Phi Mu Forest Cycling Independent Council Gamma Phi Beta

10:40 10:45 10:50 10:55 11:00 11:05

Sigma Alpha Epsilon Zeta Beta Tau Lambda Chi Alpha Alpha Epsilon Phi Pi Lambda Phi Wing It

11:35 11:40 11:45 11:50 11:55 12:00 12:05

3PH SKI Black Key Bulls Gray Goat Pi Kappa Phi Delta Sigma Pi Sigma Delta Tau

12:20 12:25 12:30 12:35 12:40 12:45

Delta Zeta Air Force Cycling Cutters Delta Chi Phoenix Election Cycle

1:00 1:05 1:10 1:15 1:20 1:25

Wright Delta Upsilon Alpha Gamma Delta Acacia Sigma Alpha Mu Theta Phi Alpha

1:45 1:50 1:55 2:00 2:05

Alpha Sigma Alpha Sigma Nu Chi Omega Alpha Epsilon Pi Kappa Sigma

2:40 2:45 2:50 2:55 3:00 3:05

CSF (Women) Beta Sigma Psi Delta Phi Epsilon Alpha Xi Delta Delta Sigma Phi Alpha Phi

3:20 3:25 3:30 3:35 3:40 3:45

Phi Kappa Tau Young Life Kappa Kappa Gamma Pi Kappa Alpha Zeta Tau Alpha Young Pioneer

4:00 4:05 4:10 4:15 4:20

Sigma Kappa Phi Sigma Kappa Phi Delta Theta Delta Sigma Pi (Women) IU Nursing

4:40 4:45 4:50 4:55

Sigma Pi Teter CSF (Men) Delta Tau Delta

5:10 Third attempts begin


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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | F R I D AY, M A R C H 2 5 , 2 0 1 6 | I D S N E W S . C O M

MEN’S BASKETBALL

HEAR ME OUT

IU has a chance to prove its greatness Friday

JAMES BENEDICT | IDS

Senior guard Yogi Ferrell passes the ball over his shoulder during a drill on Thursday at the Wells Fargo Center. Indiana will play number one seed North Carolina in the Sweet Sixteen round of the NCAA Tournament tomorrow.

Seniors lead with experience By Grace Palmieri gpalmier@indiana.edu @grace_palmieri

PHILADELPHIA — Yogi Ferrell is the only remaining member of IU’s last Sweet 16 team. That was three years ago, when Jordan Hulls, Christian Watford and Derek Elston — all four-year IU players — were seniors. Now the senior guard is in the same position going into Friday night’s game against No. 1 North Carolina, but he doesn’t want to go out the way his former teammates did. The thentop-seeded Hoosiers fell to Syracuse in a performance Ferrell called uncharacteristic of one of the best teams in the country. IU Coach Tom Crean said despite Ferrell averaging under eight points a game his freshman year and playing alongside two stars in Cody Zeller and Victor Oladipo, he immersed himself in that team and became a leader in his own right.

This season, he’s taken his leadership to another level. “He not only leads his teammates but he shares, he talks to them constantly,” Crean said. And Ferrell has had a little help from an unlikely source. Senior forward Max Bielfeldt, like Ferrell, has been here before. Bielfeldt, who transferred to IU after four years at Michigan, played in the Elite 8 two seasons ago. As a redshirt freshman, Bielfeldt was part of Michigan’s Final Four team in 2013 that lost to Louisville in the championship game. Despite being in Bloomington for just one season, Bielfeldt has been a vital part of IU’s turnaround — in more ways than one. The senior forward is averaging eight points and 4.6 rebounds in 17 minutes per game. It’s something he said early in the season, though, that caught Ferrell’s attention. After the Duke game,

when almost everyone was down on the Hoosiers, Bielfeldt wasn’t. “I remember Max saying we could make a run in this Big Ten,” Ferrell said. “He saw our ability and then we all saw our ability to play. I feel like ever since then our level of play has changed dramatically.” Ferrell had no idea Bielfeldt would make the difference he has. As the two most experienced IU players, they feed off each other in leading a young team that hasn’t played this far into March. “His wisdom and knowledge he’s shared is a lot different than mine,” Ferrell said. Ferrell described Bielfeldt as having an “olderhead” mentality. “What he shares on the court and his knowledge, everyone listens to him,” he said. Every time he enters the game, Bielfeldt said, the best thing he can be in consistent. And from game to

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game, he likes to put things in perspective. “I think me and Yogi have both been around and our perspectives are both true in different ways sometimes,” Bielfeldt said. “He sees a lot of things I don’t, and I see some things he doesn’t. We complement each other pretty well as far as that goes.” While Ferrell is the only player who’s been a leader on the court for IU since his freshman year, Crean said that’s where he’s seen the most growth in his point guard. Ferrell said he was thinking back to his freshman year and their Sweet 16 game the other day. He’s using that experience to help prepare teammates that are now in the same place he was. “Just have to tell these guys to stick to our principles, everything that we do, our coverages, what we like to do on offense,” Ferrell said. “Because we definitely don’t want to lose this one.”

PHILADELPHIA — The debates around IU are changing. No longer are people wondering if IU is for real. It’s proven it. No longer are people clamoring for IU Coach Tom Crean’s job. He’s the Big Ten Coach of the Year and has the Hoosiers in a third Sweet 16 in five years. IU can lose Friday and all will be well. The season will have satisfied a lot of people. But now a new debate is surrounding the Hoosiers. As IU faces off with No. 1 seed North Carolina, it has the chance to prove it’s great. Hold the horses, I know. I have no idea if this team is great. The point is IU isn’t on its heels attempting to prove itself anymore. It’s now on an attacking path with nothing to lose and so much to gain. North Carolina is supposed to win this game. When it’s clicking, like it has been for the past month, it’s probably the second best team in the country behind Kansas. When Crean was asked about keys to beating the Tar Heels, he kept going and going with a laundry list of things this team does so well. They’re really good. IU defeated Chattanooga and a very good Kentucky team. Nobody can say this is a bunch of guys who don’t know how to win in March now. But it’s up to them to prove if they are great. The firepower is there. When a team has a floorgeneral star like senior guard Yogi Ferrell, it’s in the running. When a team has the depth and shooting IU has, it has a chance. And if IU does pull it off Friday, it will have a very winnable Elite Eight matchup. It would play the winner of Notre Dame and Wisconsin, two teams IU has beaten this season. But greatness is that extra

BRODY MILLER is a junior in journalism.

step. It’s flourishing when the opponent across from you is playing at the top of its game as well. That’s the next step. IU has proven it can grow through adversity. Story after story has been written about the improvements since Dec. 2, 2015, and overcoming the loss of sophomore guard James Blackmon Jr. As all of us wrote that the sky is falling, Crean sat in Cameron Indoor Stadium and repeated time and time again “it’s December 2nd.” He knew a team can’t be judged by December basketball. He made a comment Thursday about how he doesn’t know if there’s been any team held as accountable for basketball before Dec. 2, 2015, as IU. IU has proven it can play well when things go wrong. The Kentucky win Saturday was the best example. Sophomore guard Robert Johnson and freshman forward Juwan Morgan both went out for the rest of the game. Freshman forward OG Anunoby was out for a stretch. The Hoosiers were shooting poorly. IU won by six. It’s passed most major tests put in front of it. People have bought in and people believe. If the season ends Friday, it’s a good season. No doubt about it. If IU wins Friday, it’s a great team. I don’t throw around the word great. It should be saved for the best of the best. But If IU finds a way to beat North Carolina and advance to the Elite Eight, it’s a great team. Let’s find out. brodmill@indiana.edu @BrodyMillerIDS

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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | F R I D AY, M A R C H 2 5 , 2 0 1 6 | I D S N E W S . C O M

Malkovich appears as self, but nude this time

ARTS

EDITORS: JACK EVANS & BROOKE MCAFEE | ARTS@IDSNEWS.COM

Actor John Malkovich, famous for playing himself in “Being John Malkovich” and other people in other movies, will appear as a nude version of himself on a special Record Store Day picture disc, according to Fact magazine.

Last year, Malkovich recited Plato’s “Allegory of the Cave” over compositions by Eric Alexandrakis for a release called “Like a Puppet Show.” This year’s “Illuminated” will see those songs remixed by Yoko Ono and Sean Lennon, among others.

Cardinal explores women’s identity, clothing By Brielle Saggese bsaggese@indiana.edu

Chronicling the stories of women and their clothing, Cardinal Stage Company’s “Love, Loss and What I Wore” will explore the intertwining ideas of identity and style from March 31 to April 10 at the Ivy Tech John Waldron Arts Center Auditorium. The relationship between what a woman wears and how it shapes her memory is the thread between the play’s characters, but it is also a concept that the cast and crew share, marketing coordinator Rachel Glago said. “These stories give us the chance to relive our own clothing memories and to identify with this universal struggle of, ‘What am I going to wear today?’” Glago said. “You might be surprised how meaningful the answer to that question can be.” For Sylvia McNair, one of the show’s actresses and a senior lecturer at the Jacobs School of Music, this question takes her back to February 1985 and a white gown with gold, rhinestone beading. That night was her debut at Carnegie Hall in New York City, and after the show, she put on the dress and shared her first kiss with the man she soon married. For actress Sandy Sabbaugh, the answer is a pink, mohair sweater after her high school graduation. She spotted it at a department store and a few weeks later she received one just like it — only this sweater was handmade by her mother.

COURTESY PHOTO

Cardinal Stage Company’s production of “Love, Loss and What I Wore” opens March 31 at the Ivy Tech John Waldron Arts Center Auditorium.

The clothes and memories are different for each, but all of the women have an answer. “A power suit can inspire you to ask for that promotion or raise you’ve been wanting, while your ‘first date outfit’ might remind you of all the past relationships that got you ready for this date,” Anne Kostyo, company director of development, said. “In short, clothing can be reflective and

transformative if we let it.” This appeal goes one step further, as Cardinal will connect style and identity not only for the audience, but also for the community. Sixteen of the actresses are based in Bloomington and are donating their paychecks to the local organization My Sister’s Closet, according to Cardinal Stage Company’s website. My Sister’s Closet offers

Kris Swanberg imbues narrative with naturalism By TJ Jaeger tjaeger@indiana.edu | @TJ_Jaeger

Even before she became a mother, Kris Swanberg said motherhood had always interested her. As a result, she said some of her films have focused on pregnancy including “Empire Builder” and “Unexpected,” both of which screen at the IU Cinema this week. Friday, Swanberg will also speak as part of the cinema’s Jorgensen Guest Lecture Series. She will also present the 1953 independent film “Little Fugitive.” Swanberg said she has been influenced by “Little Fugitive,” which tells the story of a young boy running away to Coney Island after believing he killed his brother. “It’s a film that I discovered on my own one day while walking through a video store many years ago,” she said. “It really employs many of the naturalistic techniques that I employ in my films.” Her 2015 film “Unexpected” follows an innercity teacher, played by Cobie Smulders, who becomes pregnant at the same time as one of her students with whom she develops an unlikely friendship. “It has a lot to do with social class and impending motherhood and is a very personal story for me,” she said. 2014’s “Empire Builder,” which tells the story of a new mother who abandons her life in Chicago and moves to Montana, screened Thursday at the cinema. Swanberg, who studied documentary film at Southern Illinois University, said she makes her narrative films with a naturalistic, borderline documentary tone. By using a naturalsounding script, selective casting and improvisation, she said she prefers crafting scenes that feel like real conversations. Swanberg said she thinks most people tend to

COURTESY PHOTO

Indie filmmaker Kris Swanberg will speak Friday at the IU Cinema.

think of improvisation as improvised comedy, which is different from what her films seek to achieve. “It requires a lot of preparation and discussion ahead of time: talking about what’s going to happen in the scene, what the point of the scene is, where we are in the plot, what needs to be accomplished,” she said. “It’s a matter of finessing it take after take.” Due to the limiting nature of documentary films, narrative films have granted her more freedom of creation, she said. “You can only capture what they want you to capture,” she said. “You can’t lay in bed and go to sleep with them, or be with them during really intimate moments. In narrative film, you can do that.” Though she only has five directing credits so far, Swanberg’s work has been seen across the country. “Unexpected” premiered at the 2015 Sundance Film Festival,

KRIS SWANBERG Free 3 p.m. Friday, IU Cinema and 2009’s “It Was Great, But I Was Ready to Come Home” screened at 2009’s South by Southwest film festival. Despite this, she said she believes being a successful filmmaker means simply continuing to make work she cares about. “To have some desire to please everyone and for the masses to really enjoy your work is borderline impossible,” she said. Swanberg said the most important advice she always gives to aspiring filmmakers is to keep making films, regardless of budget, story or schedule. “It sounds really simple, but it becomes very difficult,” she said. “People put a lot on the idea of making a movie and end up never doing that. I’ve always found the most success in just making it.”

used clothing to low-income women seeking employment, according to its website. “The show provides us an additional opportunity to not only involve a bunch of fantastic women in the community, but also to support a fellow nonprofit organization that has such a powerful mission,” Glago said. Cardinal Stage Company plans to donate $2,500 in

names of the 16 women and will give the audience an opportunity to do the same. In hopes of matching the production’s donation, representatives from My Sister’s Closet will attend each show to collect monetary donations as well as gently used jewelry and purses, according to Cardinal’s website. While the show extends to a universal cause, “Love, Loss

and What I Wore” still centers on the personal identity of women and their style. “This is not about fashion,” co-writer Nora Ephron said at the play’s 2009 opening, according to the website. “It is about what clothes really are to us, those moments when we are constantly trying to find our identity through them and either failing or succeeding.”

STYLE SCRIPTURE

Body image too linked with fashion Scrolling through an Instagram newsfeed of harmless selfies and cat videos, you might stop on the image of a girl holding a piece of printer paper to her stomach. In this trend among Chinese women, the participant captions #A4WaistChallenge to show the width of the paper can completely cover up her body. While those 8.3 inches of an A4 sheet are normally meant for 31 typed characters per line, those 8.3 inches are now the newest size standard of the female waistline. Backlash for the trend was immediate. People noted how such a standard is detrimental to a universal body image when the average American woman measures more than quadruple that number. But what thousands of protesters, articles and bloggers fail to realize is body image issues on both sides of the controversy are destroying the industry’s sizing system. The A4 waist isn’t the first call to introduce new size standards in the Asian community. In August 2014, the sizing spectrum shifted downward to 000 or XXXS in brands including J. Crew and Gap. Again, the backlash was instantaneous as American women argued the new size would become a further proponent of eating disorders and negative body image. By simply tacking on another zero, they felt a new standard for women to achieve: to be that much tinier, that much

skinnier and that much more of an extra small than they already were. Just as quickly, these brands responded, explaining the new size did not have to do with American body image, but rather Asian bodies. As retail has expanded in China and Japan, those customers — who, on average, have smaller waists — were requesting smaller options. The 000 wasn’t meant to push women to be skinnier. It was meant to provide a 23inch pant to a woman who already has a 23-inch waist. When that size became a standard for all women, as it did with the A4 waist, it crosses a line. Measurements should never be seen as a challenge or goal simply to benefit the body image of smaller women and belittle that of others. Yet just as much as Asia has pulled fashion smaller, America has tugged on the opposite end. It has used the western world retail phenomena of vanity sizing to muddle our typical sizes. This concept, though only recently named, has been evolving for decades. It accounts for why a size 2 may be a size 4, which sometimes can even be a size 8. Basically, brands label clothes with smaller sizes than they truly are to boost the morale and confidence of shoppers, which ultimately results in more sales. In small degrees, not much damage has been done, but as

Brielle Saggese is a freshman in journalism.

American waistlines continue to grow, we now depend on fashion to mend our confidence with false numbers. Last August, the National Institution of Standards and Technology and the American Society of Testing and Materials released data demonstrating the outrageous inflation of clothing measurements. In 2011 a size 00 measured between 24 and 25 inches, whereas a size 8 in 1958 measured even smaller, between 23 and 24 inches. Furthermore, while the average size 12 was between 32 and 33 inches in 2011, it only measured between 24 and 25 inches in 1958. So on one side we allow more zeros and more X’s to make standards we never thought possible. Simultaneously, we muddle the lines as waistlines get bigger, yet our clothing tags tell us otherwise. As a fact of life, bodies do change, and if sizes changed accordingly, this would only make sense. But when society manipulates fashion to secure a false sense of body security, both the Asian and American sides of the spectrum are in the wrong. A4 or size 4, codependent ideas of body image and fashion can never survive. bsaggese@indiana.edu

YULIN YU | IDS

TIP TAPPIN’ AWAY Dancers of Hoosier Tap Company perform “Love on Top” from the art gala “Tap into Art” on Thursday evening at The Buskirk-Chumley.


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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | F R I D AY, M A R C H 2 5 , 2 0 1 6 | 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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Fourwinds Lakeside Inn & Marina is gearing up for another summer season and is seeking friendly, service-oriented individuals for our Paradise Boat Rental Operation. What better, then a job on the lake, taking reservations, pumping gas, assist in maintaining a fleet of 50+ boats, providing genuine customer service...and you get to work outside! Requirements: • Ability to stand on your feet for long periods of time • Ability to lift at least 30 pounds • Able to work in a fast-paced environment • Flexible to work nights, weekends and all summer holidays • Must have a natural smile • Must display a positive and Can-Do attitude • Experience not necessary, we will train the right individuals. If you’re not afraid of work that can be financially rewarding and you are a team player, apply now at the Fourwinds Lakeside Inn & Marina or complete an online application at FourwindsLakeside.com HT-6258289

Sublet Condos/Twnhs.

SUBLET - 3 BR condo, 1.5 bath, NS, no pets, quiet, lease, avail. JanJuly. $925. 812-361-4286

Sublet Houses

2 BR, 1 BA adorable bungalow near downtown & campus. Avail. 3/15/16. $1100/mo. 219-869-0414 4 BR, 2 BA, lg. backyard, hot tub, 2nd kitchen. $1450/mo., neg. Apr. 1Jul 31. 812-219-8949

Avail. Aug. 3 BR, 4 BA, plus bonus room. Walk-in closets, D/W, W/D, on-site prkg, close to Campus. 1116 S. Park Ave. $1,325/mo, plus utils. 812-825-5579. deckardhomes.com HPIU.COM Houses and apartments. 1-5 bedrooms. Close to Campus. 812-333-4748 No pets please. REMODELED! 5 BR/5.5 BA. Close to Campus. No pets please. 812-333-4748 HPIU.COM

Sublet Apt. Furnished

Need to fill 2 rooms in a 5 BR apt. starting May 10. Great location, $605/ mo. Text or call 317-690-4097

Sublet Apt. Unfurn.

1 BR, 1 BA apt. W/D, $600/mo. Utils. incl. May 10 - July 31. 765-760-5237 samkarlapudi@yahoo.com

Sell your stuff with a

FREE CLASSIFIED AD

Place an ad 812-855-0763 for more information: www.idsnews.com/classifieds *excludes ticket sales

415

Electronics

5.1 AV Dolby Surround Speaker System, $3,000. For details please email: wegacker26@gmail.com AZZA Gaming Keyboard. New in box. $10. houli@indiana.edu Beats by Dr. Dre Studio Headphones. $130. alexfigu@iun.edu Brand new Apple Watch. 42mm. $340. snardine@indiana.edu Brand new Dell E2414HM, 24” screen, LED-lit monitor, $110. rinaba@iu.edu Canon EOS Rebel T1i & EF-S 55-250mm f4-5.6 lens. Great cond. $250. ssteiman@indiana.edu Canon Vixia HF S200 Full HD Flash Memory Camcorder. $300. jbbutler@iu.edu DVD/CD player. 5 disc changer. Cables inclu. $15. stadano@indiana.edu EPSON color printer & scanner. Barely used. Color ink cartridge incl. $80. stadano@indiana.edu

goodrents.homestead.com

August, 2016. 2 BR apt. near new Bloomingfoods. $1000/mo. Some utilities incl. 812-330-1501 www.sargerentals.com

Avail. Aug. 1 BR, W/D, central air, close to Campus & dntwn. 520 S. Washington St., $595, water incl. 812-825-5579, deckardhomes.com

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*** For 2015-2016 *** 1 blk. North of Campus. 4 BR, A/C, D/W, W/D, micro. $465/mo. each.

Summer: 2 BR, 2 BA apt. avail. Scholar’s Quad. $527.50/per. W/D, free prkg. hsessler@indiana.edu

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rentbloomington.net

We’ve got it all... Houses, Apartments, Condos, Townhomes

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Dagwood’s Deli Sub Shop now taking applications for PT lunch shifts & weekends. Instore & delivery positions avail. Student friendly, flexible scheduling and fun work environment. Apply in person.

Restaurant & Bar

!!!! Need a place to Rent?

!!NOW LEASING!! August ‘16 - ‘17. Omega Properties 812-333-0995 omegabloomington.com

Avail. Aug. 1 & 2 BR. 812 S. Washington St. $495-$625. 812-825-5579 deckardhomes.com

Child Care

Houses

MERCHANDISE 405

Announcements

Apt. Unfurnished

Studio apt. Great dwntwn. location. $390 + elec. Avail. immediately. 812-585-0816

Appliances Brand new Nesco Portable Induction Cooktop. $40. houli@indiana.edu

Great quality microwave. Stainless steel. Haier brand. Everything works. $70. lejoy@iupui.edu Small mini-fridge for sale. $30. ohollowa@indiana.edu 410

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www.lizdomhopetoadopt.com

Now leasing: Fall, 2016. 1 & 2 BR apts. Hunter Ridge 812-334-2880

Seeking F grad student, quiet, tidy. 2 BR/2 BA. $353 ea/mo + utils. Avail Aug. peterelm@umail.iu.edu

Computers

HP Printer, Model B210a. No power cable. $30. awtrimpe@indiana.edu HP PSC 1610 All-in-One Ink Jet Printer: $50. tlwatter@indiana.edu iPad 4, black w/retina display, 32GB Wifi + cellular. $250, obo.

xinygong@indiana.edu

IPhone 6S Plus, gold. Unlocked network. Brand new (sealed). $900. ceorlows@indiana.edu Late 2011, 13” MacBook Pro. 1 TB hard drive. Minor damage.$300 neg. wbeltre@indiana.edu

iMac for sale! Purchased in Sept., 2015. Power cord incl. $800. kmihajlo@indiana.edu

Oscillating heater. 3 quiet settings. Digital thermostat. Remote control. $40 shixgu@indiana.edu

iMac. Purchased Sept. 2015. Power cord incl. $800. kmihajlo@indiana.edu

Pink iPhone 5c. Works like new. Comes with Speck case! $125 mvbond@indiana.edu

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Happy loving couple wishes to raise your newborn w/ care, warmth, love. Dominick & Liz: 1-877-274-4824.

New Grads Wanted. Bone Dry Roofing is one of the Midwest’s largest and most respected contractors. Located in Indianapolis, IN we are one of the top reviewed companies on Angie’s List and regularly appear in the top 15% of the Top 100 Contractors nationwide. We are built on a foundation of customer service and have been family owned for 26 years. We are seeking individuals that possess: • Tenaciousness and the ability to overcome objections from prospective customers • Ability and willingness to climb ladders • Computer skills and the ability to work in a technologically progressive environment • Career minded • Ability to travel when necessary We Provide: • Daily validated leads • Vehicle, phone, iPad • Full portfolio of benefits including profit sharing • In-house Gym with on-site trainer. We offer paid training and an opportunity to easily exceed $75,000+ first year. Please forward resume to todd@bonedry.com

ONLINE POSTING: All classified line ads are posted online at idsnews.com/classifieds at no additional charge.

Sublet Apt. Unfurn. 2 BR/1 BA apt. $463 each/mo. + elec. Unfurnished, avail. MayJuly. 317-294-9913

Near Campus & town. 1 BR duplex. www.rentdowntown.biz

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ANNOUNCEMENTS

General Employment

Apt. Unfurnished

Large 1 & 2 BR. Close to Campus & Stadium. Avail. Now! 812-334-2646

345

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REFUNDS: If you cancel your ad before the final run date, the IDS will refund the difference in price. A minimum of one day will be charged.

PAYMENT: All advertising is done on a cash in advance basis unless credit has been established. The IDS accepts Visa, MasterCard, Discover, American Express, cash, check or money order.

ELKINS APARTMENTS

HOUSING ADS: All advertised housing is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act. Refer to idsnews.com for more info.

COPY ERRORS: The IDS must be notified of errors before 3 p.m. the date of the first publication of your ad. The IDS is only responsible for errors published on the first insertion date. The IDS will rerun your ad 1 day when notified before 3 p.m. of the first insertion date.

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COPY CHANGES: Ad copy can be changed at no additional charge when the same number of lines are maintained. If the total number of lines changes, a new ad will be started at the first day rate.

AD ACCEPTANCE: All advertising is subject to approval by the IDS.

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CLASSIFIEDS ADVERTISING POLICIES

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Electronics

32” Vizio. Good picture. Nothing wrong with it. Remote included. $180, obo. sjreedus@iupui.edu 98% New Surface 3. Barely used. Free holder comes with it. $419. zhang442@indiana.edu

Polaroid .42x Fisheye Lens. Takes great photos! $40. ssteiman@indiana.edu Purple Beats by Dr. Dre. Battery operated. $140, obo. ashnbush@indiana.edu Razer DEATHSTALKER CHROMA keyboard. $70. houli@indiana.edu

SEASONAL JOBS Available NOW! Do you have Food & Beverage experience? Are you looking for a great summer job in a family-friendly setting? Look no further! We have a job for you! The Fourwinds Lakeside Inn & Marina is gearing up for another summer season and is seeking kitchen prep and utility positions. Requirements: t to stand on your feet for long periods of time • Ability • Ability t to at least 30 pounds • Able to work in a fast-paced environment x ble to work nights, weekends and alll summer holidays • Flexi • Must have a natural smile • Must display a positive and Can-Do attitude • Experience preferred. If you’re not afraid of work that can be ancially rewarding and you are a team player, apply now at the Fourwinds Lakeside Inn & Marina, or complete an online application at FourwindsLakeside.com.


Glass table with 4 Chairs. $125. 812-320-7109

Hermes 3000 manual typewriter w/ new ribbon, case, & brush. $100 obo. asmarcot@indiana.edu

High quality Ashley loveseat, $150. yueyuan@indiana.edu

I.U. Opoly w/ all pieces. 5th edition version. Good cond. $30. 301-797-5314 glens729@myactv.net

SEIKO 26” Flat screen TV - used once, $150. tlwatter@indiana.edu

Lamp in good condition. $10. shixgu@indiana.edu

Manual Treadmill for sale. Older model - still works. $20. dcottrel@iu.edu

TI-84 plus, silver edition, calculator for sale. Used one semester only. $50. 812-834-5144

Metal Book Shelf. 2 shelves. 35”W x 20”H x 13”D. $30 stadano@indiana.edu

UP MOVE by Jawbone. Brand new, still in box. $30. (812) 633-2288, ktbetz@indiana.edu

Stylish wall mounted elec. fireplace. 3 avail. $175 ea. ,obo or $600 all obo. shawnd2@hotmail.com

Wall mounted OLEVIA 32” LCD HDTV. $225.00, obo. Email: shawnd2@hotmail.com

Wooden queen bed set w/ dressser, mirror, night stands & sleigh bed, $750. mohskian@indiana.edu

Samsung 40 inch 1080p smart LED TV. $300. lee921@indiana.edu Samsung S6 Edge+ Plus SM-G928V (Latest Model) - 32GB - Gold (Unlocked). $530. rahupasu@indiana.edu

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Wooden Magazine Rack. 16”W x 17”H x 13”D $15. stadano@indiana.edu

Textbooks

TRANSPORTATION

Praxis PLT Textbook, Grades K-6. Incl. 2 full length exams & guides. $20. 812-834-5144

Automobiles ‘90 Oldsmobile. Reliable car. 4-door, FWD. V6, 3.8L engine. $1,200-obo. mharabur@indiana.edu

‘98 BMW Convertible. Green w/ tan leather, 90k mi. $5K. 812-824-4384

Automobiles Mitsubishi Lancer, O.Z. Rally edition, 2003, low miles, 87000. $2900. oabdelga@indiana.edu

510

Hamburger Grill. $5. Health food de-greaser. $20. 812-320-7109

505

Full bed, frame and headboard. From a petfree, smoke-free home. $80. ssteiman@indiana.edu

Misc. for Sale

Mopeds Genuine Buddy 50 scooter. 2016 model. Excellent cond. $2000, obo. yaljawad@iu.edu

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435

Misc. for Sale

450

Furniture

435

Electronics

Razer Firefly Hard Gaming Mouse Mat. $40. houli@indiana.edu

Motorcycles

430

bvweber@weberdigitalmedia.com

Xbox 360 Bundle. 60GB. Excellent cond. + games & 2 controllers. $200. hhallida@indiana.edu 420

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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | F R I D AY, M A R C H 2 5 , 2 0 1 6 | I D S N E W S . C O M 420

Instruments 15-inch Viola. $2,000.

maeveewhelan@gmail.com

Plastic bowls. 5 sizes, different colors. $5. stadano@indiana.edu

Tickets Wanted Looking for NCAA tix in Philly. 215-266-5208

Schwinn Elliptical 420. In perfect working order, ready for pick up! $300. mamato@iu.edu Stylish Perpetual Calendar. Black & red. $15. stadano@indiana.edu

Clothing Men’s, size 11. Nike leather shoes. In great condition, $35. awtrimpe@indiana.edu

Women’s size 7, tall, patchwork UGGs. $55, obo. bscanlon@indiana.edu

1981 Suzuki GS 750L. $2250. 502-836-3199

06 Dodge Grand Caravan. 107k, good cond. $3900, obo. atrego@indiana.edu

1998 Mercedes Benz M320. Fixer-upper, runs, not drive. $2500 firm. shawnd2@hotmail.com 2011 Honda CR-V EX (White). 75k mi. Great condition. $15,000. stadano@indiana.edu

Suzuki GW250 Inazuma Motorcycle. $3700. Jacket, helmet, & gloves incl. rnourie@indiana.edu 520

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Nikon 35-80mm lens. F4-F5.6, $60. kelleyjp@iu.edu

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CLASSIFIEDS

Bicycles **Beautiful La Jolla Street Cruiser Bike. Outstanding condition. $80. akoke@indiana.edu

2016 Toyota Corolla LE Sedan. 2800 miles. $14,900.

xw2295@math.columbia.edu

Furniture Baldwin Studio Piano. Good cond. Pick up. $200. Call: 345-1777.

Black desk for sale. From a pet-free, smoke-free home. $30. ssteiman@indiana.edu

Casio keyboard LK-55, $150. Keyboard stand, $10. hwangw@indiana.edu 435

Black desk, perfect for writing, large enough for 15’ laptop. $50. penchen@indiana.edu

Misc. for Sale

Cabinet for TV. $90. shupeng@indiana.edu

Gray, Nike Elite bookbag. Good condition, great quality. $40, obo. ascjames@indiana.edu

Camoflauge table with 4 chairs. $100. 812-320-7109

Hair Dryer. 1875 Watts. 2 heat/speed settings. $15 stadano@indiana.edu

Horoscope Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 7 — Attend to shared finances for the next two days. After that, plan adventures, travels and educational exploration over the next three months (with Saturn retrograde). Create detailed itineraries, file applications and reserve tickets. Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is an 8 — Follow budgets closely. Return to basics. For the next five months, with Saturn retrograde, financial discipline pays extra dividends. Exceed shared financial goals. Focus on foundations and structures. Collabora-

TO MORE

With Saturn retrograde (until 8/13), revisit plans for home infrastructure. Refine and polish. Try a new technology or style.

To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. tive projects undergo revision today and tomorrow.

over the next five months, with Saturn retrograde. Schedule your next big work projects with time to recharge.

Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Today is an 8 — Focus on balancing your work and health today and tomorrow. Go back to what worked before. With Saturn retrograde until 8/13, strengthen bonds between partners. Collaborative projects undergo revision. Resolve old misunderstandings.

Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is an 8 — Make your home and family more comfortable today and tomorrow. Study rules to win over the next five months, with Saturn retrograde. Find ways to renew the game. Invent new romance by returning to classics.

Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Today is a 7 — Have fun today and tomorrow. Get outside and move your body. Review and revise health practices

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a 9 — Keep a journal and make sketches. Today and tomorrow favor creative communications projects.

BLISS

HARRY BLISS

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is a 9 — Focus on making money over the next two days. Edit and revise over the next five months, with Saturn retrograde. Indulge nostalgic retrospection. Assess what worked before, and adapt to new circumstances. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is an 8 — Return to basic financial priorities. Exert budgetary discipline over the next five months, with Saturn retrograde. Plan for upcoming expenses, but wait to implement. You’re especially strong for the next few days.

Crossword

Find your new place at

*

Butterfly chair from Urban Outfitters and red chair. $10 each. shixgu@indiana.edu

OPE N the DOOR

*

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

Find more: INFORMATION REALTORS HOUSES APARTMENTS OPTIONS

Housing

idsnews.com/housing

Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is an 8 — Find a peaceful spot to think and plan today and tomorrow. Learn from the past without repeating it. Self-discipline produces personal results until mid-August with Saturn retrograde. Take charge to produce results. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is an 8 — Confer with allies today and tomorrow. Over the next five months, with Saturn retrograde, consider old dreams and visions. Measure ground taken and still ahead. Contribute to savings. Old passions rekindle. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is an 8 — Focus on professional goals for the next two days. Revise social infrastructures between now and

mid-August, with Saturn retrograde. Plan upcoming events and gatherings with friends new and old. Generate community enthusiasm.

Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is an 8 — Travel and study over the next two days. Prepare for a test or challenge. Play strictly by the book. Review career goals over the next five months, with Saturn retrograde. Disciplined backstage efforts win.

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

L.A. Times Daily Crossword 18 22 24 26 28 29 30 31 32 33 37 39 42 44 47 48 51 52 53 56 57 58 61 62

Publish your comic on this page. The IDS is accepting applications for student comic strips for the spring 2016 semester. Email five samples and a brief description of your idea to adviser@indiana.edu by April 1. Submissions will be reviewed and selections will be made by the editor-in-chief.

Pioneer mainframe Depth indicators, at times Court ploy Texter’s “Gimme a sec” Son of Abraham Levi’s Stadium player, familiarly Skate Stood In quick succession Like some speech components “Cagney & Lacey” co-star Church VIP Rest Govt. stipend provider “Fat chance” Charm “If __ Would Leave You” Perfume applications State in northeast India How ties may be broken, briefly Re-entry need Word in many place names Stir-fry additive Opening

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.

© Puzzles by Pappocom

NON SEQUITUR

1 “Dancing With the Stars” network 6 Early sign of spring 11 Big, uncouth guy 14 Flap 15 Now 16 King of ancient Rome 17 Songs without words? 19 Celebrity known for wearing gold jewelry 20 Like 21 Check for a poker player? 22 Corner of a diamond 23 Place name derived from a Koyukon word for “tall” 25 Touch 27 Earthquake consequence? 31 Span. title 34 Pasta sauce flavoring 35 Jane __, only female Chicago mayor 36 Strong flavor 38 Dog or fox 40 One looking ahead 41 Autobahn autos 43 Dreaded mosquito 45 Mercedes roadsters 46 House cat’s challenge? 49 Supplements

50 Date night destination 54 Corporate money mgrs. 55 Hustler’s genre 59 Dollar alternative 60 Pop __ 61 Money-making fiasco? 63 Important time 64 Leader of the pack? 65 Main artery 66 __ Taco 67 Manage 68 Solid that, when divided into three parts, describes this puzzle’s theme

DOWN

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 Sportscaster Rashad 2 Capital on its own river 3 “__ Thro’ the Rye”: Burns 4 Kin, informally 5 Soccer practice transport 6 Sphere opening 7 Lynda Bird’s married name 8 Auteur’s starting point 9 Stock-tracking device 10 Part of PBS: Abbr. 11 Current-carrying components 12 Staff 13 Substances that add protein to meat

WILEY BREWSTER ROCKIT: SPACE GUY!

TIM RICKARD


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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | F R I D AY, M A R C H 2 5 , 2 0 1 6 | I D S N E W S . C O M

SOFTBALL

BASEBALL

IU tries to follow 27-run game IU enters Big Ten play against Iowa

By Zain Pyarali zpyarali@iu.edu | @ZainPyarali

The 27-run performance by the Hoosiers in their previous outing against Butler have given the IU faithful complete confidence the team has finally recovered from its sluggish start. Winning eight of its last 10 games, IU has eclipsed the .500 mark for the first time since the opening game of the season when they poured 14 runs on Middle Tennessee State. IU will head to Indiana State for one game Friday before returning to Bloomington to finish out the threegame series with the Sycamores. “Being over .500 feels great, especially after the rough start we had,” senior shortstop Brian Wilhite said. “Hopefully we can just keep it rolling from now on.” Three players who have significantly influenced the offensive production have all come from the upper class. Junior outfielder Craig Dedelow and junior first baseman Austin Cangelosi have done what’s expected out of them so far, while Wilhite has exceeded expectations. Dedelow has been the most consistent Hoosier hitter in the lineup all season, reaching base in 18 of 19 games and never allowing his batting average to dip below .300. The junior center fielder entered the season expecting to be a major part in the offensive production and has done just that. His 17 RBIs are second best on the team, and he has one home run to his credit. Cangelosi not only has

By Jake Thomer jjthomer@iu.edu | @jake_the_thomer

KATELYN ROWE | IDS

Freshman Jomathan Stiever throws one of the first pitches of the game against Butler on Wednesday night at Bart Kaufman Field. The Hoosiers beat the Bulldogs with a score of 27-1.

great range in the field, making extremely difficult plays, but he has also heated up significantly over the past four games. The sure-handed first baseman has recorded at least one hit per game through the past nine games while finding his power stroke recently. Three home runs to go along with 10 RBIs in the past four games has a red-hot Cangelosi confident at the plate after some earlyseason struggles. “First couple weeks of the season were pretty rough for me,” Cangelosi said. “But now, playing at home, you have everyone cheering for you versus against you, so it’s nice to get back out here and start seeing the ball well again.” The offensive production

molding the Hoosier lineup has surprisingly come from the final spot in the batting order. Wilhite has been on an absolute roll as of late, riding a seven-game hit streak after starting the season just 2-for22 at the dish. His three home runs in the previous two games have him leading the team with four on the season along with a team-high 20 RBIs. Both of those numbers have already eclipsed his season totals from a season ago, showing his development at the plate in addition to being a smooth fielder. The Hoosier offense will also gain some help in the heart of the order this weekend after sophomore outfielder Logan Sowers returned to the lineup for the first time in 11 games

Wednesday. Recovering from a wrist injury, Sowers went 0-for-2 with a hit by pitch in his return before being removed once the game got out of hand. The starting pitching for IU is expected to be dominant this weekend once again, as the senior trio of Kyle Hart, Evan Bell and Caleb Baragar have a combined 1.79 ERA this season. Things won’t necessarily come easy, however, with the Sycamores batting .285 at the plate as a team this season. “I’ve got to hand a lot to the pitching,” Wilhite said. “When you look at it we’ve come out and dominated every game that we’ve played in. When we come out and put up zeros every inning, it’s great baseball.”

With six weeks of nonconference play under its belt and a winning record to show for it, IU is in the midst of a fiveweek homestand and will be host to Iowa this weekend to kick off the Big Ten schedule. IU (17-10) will look to get an early series win against a beatable Iowa (8-16) team on its quest for a Big Ten title. The Hoosiers can capitalize on a favorable start to their schedule as IU plays each of its first three Big Ten series at home. “What I really love about our Big Ten schedule is that we get to play our first three series at home,” IU Coach Michelle Gardner said. “That’s going to be big and we have to take advantage of it.” Gardner also added she likes where the team is at right now — the offense has been on a roll as of late after a tough start to the season. Drawing contributions from nearly every member on the team, IU has scored 24 runs in its last three games. Sophomore outfielder Rebecca Blitz has continued to maintain her team-leading .361 batting average by recording a hit in seven of her last eight games. Junior infielder Erin Lehman has also stepped up as the clear number-two hitter in the lineup with four multi-hit performances in the last two weeks. But other Hoosiers have delivered as well, as senior utility player Katelynn Conenna and senior infielder Michelle Huber have been on a

tear in the last week. Both entered last weekend’s Hoosier Classic with a sub-.200 batting average. A four-game hitting streak with starts in each game has seen Huber’s average rise to .245, while Conenna has gone 4-of-7 at the plate to boost her season mark to .286. Conenna, who also got an assist against Indiana State on Wednesday night while playing left field, credits the team defense for being able to hold opponents to low run totals. “Our all-around defense this year has been solid, more solid than last year,” Conenna said. “It’s good that our pitchers can have faith in our defense.” IU’s pitchers have been the key to the team’s successful start, as the three underclassmen arms have combined to post a team ERA of 2.37. Standout freshmen Josie Wood and Tara Trainer will be challenged to maintain their consistency throughout the Big Ten schedule. Trainer’s 1.85 ERA is good for third among all Big Ten pitchers, while Wood’s 2.52 ERA puts her at 11th in the conference. Both will be expected to see plenty of innings against Iowa, in addition to redshirt freshman Emily Kirk, who has allowed nine earned runs in 14 innings this year. Conenna and Gardner both said they think IU’s offense has benefited from playing at home and were optimistic the runs will keep coming. “I think we’re really ready to get going in the Big Ten,” Conenna said.

TRACK AND FIELD

As season moves outdoors, Hoosiers look for results By Seth Tow stow@indiana.edu | @ready_seth_go

IU track and field Coach Ron Helmer said while the results matter for indoor track, proper training is just as important. But for outdoor season, he said performance results gain added significance. This week, the team begins its outdoor season with the Pac 12 vs. Big Ten Invitational in Tempe, Arizona. Teams from Michigan, Nebraska, Penn State, Arizona, Arizona State, California and Washington will also attend the meet. Helmer was excited for the team’s addition for the outdoor season — senior pole

vaulter Sophie Gutermuth. Gutermuth was competing unattached during indoor season because she had used up her eligibility for indoor track last year, but she still has one year of eligibility remaining for outdoor track. Gutermuth is third in the outdoor school record book in pole vault. Along with senior Sydney Clute, who won the Big Ten Championship this indoor season, IU’s women pole vaulters should be among the best in the conference. However, neither of them are joining the team in Tempe this weekend. “I want to have an all-time PR again outdoor,” Gutermuth said. “And then I quali-

fied for the (Olympic) trials indoor, but I think that was B-standard. So I think it’d be cool if I qualified for the A-standard for the trials. It’d be a big jump, but I think it’s possible.” Helmer said many Hoosiers took big strides in their events during indoor season. Clute, along with junior thrower Nakel McClinton and senior multi-athlete Dylan Anderson, went to nationals. Helmer also said sophomore middle distance runner Daniel Kuhn had a great season, and he’ll be looking for all of them to carry their success over to outdoor season. “The way any of them keep their momentum going

is by being enthused about the direction they’re moving,” Helmer said. “Being excited about the fact that really good things are starting to happen for them.” Kuhn enters the outdoor season fresh off of his strong indoor season. He set school records in the 800 meter and the 600 meter, and he won the Big Ten Championship in the 600. He narrowly missed qualifying for nationals in the 800. But despite coming off such a strong season, Kuhn said his goals and expectations heading into the season aren’t that different compared to other seasons. “I just want to be on the

podium at Big Tens,” Kuhn said. “I want to make it through to nationals, not just regionals, and just be as competitive as I can every single race. I can have an off meet but still be competitive. I just want to be one or two in every race that I’m in.” Helmer said senior distance runners Rorey Hunter and Jason Crist are on the verge of taking the strides Kuhn took during indoor season. On the women’s side, he said senior thrower Laura Schroeder should make some noise in the hammer throw. He also said he’s looking forward to seeing how the team’s large group of freshmen per-

form in outdoor season. “That whole group of freshmen, who are pretty solid athletes, appear to be still on task and still very focused,” Helmer said. “There’s a big difference between a January-February freshman and a May-June freshman.” In their team meeting Tuesday, Gutermuth said a team goal was established to get the women’s team up to the same level as the men’s team. The women’s team finished 10th at indoor Big Tens, while the men’s team finished seventh. “I’d just like to see both sides of our team do really well,” Gutermuth said.

AM MERICA’S E R ICA’S ROLE ROLE IN THE

WOR W ORLD R LD ISSUES FACING THE NEXT PRESIDENT MARCH 30 – 31, 2016

All are invited to the SGIS conference on March 30-31 that looks at the next president’s foreign policy inbox. Hear and meet President Obama’s deputy national security advisor Ben Rhodes, IUB faculty from throughout the campus, and guest speakers from academia, NGOs, journalism, and from the world of policy. Presidential Medal of Freedom award winners and distinguished faculty members, Sen. Richard Lugar and Rep. Lee Hamilton are the co-conveners of this two-day event. The event is free to the IU community.

MORE INFORMATION + REGISTRATION:

http://go.iu.edu/1c6M

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