Thurs., Sept. 11, 2014

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SEPT. 11 | 13 YEARS LATER

IDS

MCT CAMPUS

A New York City firefighter looks at the ruins of the World Trade Center from inside a nearby office building Sept. 12, 2001. Two airplanes were hijacked and flown into both World Trade Center towers on Sept. 11, 2001.

What was left Piece of World Trade Center finds home with local firefighters union By Holly Hays | hvhays@indiana.edu | @hv_hays

American Airlines Flight 11 tore through the north tower of the World Trade Center in New York City at 8:46 a.m. Sept. 11, 2001, killing everyone on board and hundreds inside the building. American Airlines Flight 175 hit the south tower at 9:03 a.m. The plane crashed through floors 77 to 85 of the tower, according to the National September 11 Memorial and Museum timeline. Both of the towers had collapsed by 10:28 a.m. In less than two hours, the Twin Towers were gone. *** Nine years after the attacks, Bob Loviscek, president of the Union of Professional Firefighters Local 586 in Bloomington, received an email from the mayor. Fire departments across the nation were requesting possession of artifacts from Ground Zero, and Lo-

viscek was intrigued. A piece of the WTC could possibly make its way to Bloomington. Loviscek made an inquiry with the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. It was June 2011 by the time the logistics of picking it up were determined. Loviscek and his family took a cross-country road trip in a fire department vehicle with a trailer to retrieve the piece of steel, concrete and mangled rebar. In June 2011, the beam was hauled to Indiana, making the rounds at different festivals and traveling around the state before coming to Bloomington. At about 2,500 pounds, 10 feet long and roughly 13 inches thick, the beam appears to be an ordinary piece of the rubble. Because of the extent of the damage and the way the towers fell, there is no way of telling exactly where the

Basketball adds 4-star forward By Alden Woods aldwoods@indiana.edu | @acw9293

His blue shirt contrasting sharply with the bright orange banner draped on the podium in front of him, Juwan Morgan tugged at the black tie around his neck. “Division I basketball has been a dream of mine since third grade,” he said, voice shaking. “Every time I see them on the court, I just wanted to be there. At the time, I was short and chunky ... then one year, I just grew six inches.” In one announcement, Juwan Morgan began his IU basketball career and ended someone else’s. A small collection of cameras, reporters and fans had gathered in Waynesville High School’s gym in Waynesville, Mo., to see Morgan, now 6-foot-8-inches, announce where he would fulfill that dream. “Academics, player development and playing time are the best

things I want to get,” he said, pulling a white shirt from the podium and holding it aloft. “So I decided to further my education at Indiana University.” While the addition of Morgan, a 6-foot-8-inch power forward, projects to bring positive results to IU’s on-court performance, it only furthers the scholarship logjam in the program. Per NCAA rules, a Division I men’s basketball program is allocated 13 scholarships per season. Each of IU’s 13 slots is filled. With no seniors on the 2014-15 roster, no opening appears imminent. In essence, Morgan’s commitment signals the impending end of a current Hoosier’s IU career. Scholarship rules mandate at least one scholarship member of the current squad will need to leave the SEE MORGAN, PAGE 5

SEE 9/11, PAGE 6

BARI GOLDMAN | IDS

A beam that was retrieved from the remains of the World Trade Center following Sept. 11, 2001, sits in a Bloomington warehouse.

Volunteers remember

Where were you Sept. 11?

Local volunteers recount their time at Ground Zero. Read the story on page 3.

Tweet @idsnews with what you remember, and watch a video of other responses at idsnews.com.

Festival celebrates eating local By Ashleigh Sherman aesherma@indiana.edu | @aesherma

Goat cheese, kale muffins, nut butter and spinach pie were on the menu Wednesday. Students gathered at the IU Art Museum for the fourth annual Big Red Eats Green Festival where they treated themselves to food from local growers, restaurants and music from local bands and musicians. The mission of the annual festival is tri-fold, according to the IU Office of Sustainability’s website. The festival underscores the benefits and availability of eating local food and supports the native local food community, welcoming growers and restaurants committed to local food and sustainable practices. “We’re trying to get students interested and exposed to all the food options we have in Bloomington, all the restaurants that are really committed to local, sustainable practices,” said Ellie Symes, one of two student event coordinators. Three growers, Heartland Family Farm, Old Lane Orchard and the Chile Woman and 13 restaurants, in-

IKE HAJINAZARIAN | IDS

Local apple grower Janice Lehman sells apples to Wells librarian Kimberly Horne at the Big Red Eats Green festival on the IU Art Museum lawn Wednesday afternoon.

cluding Laughing Planet Cafe, Sweet Claire’s Bakery and the Village Deli, sold everything from banana bread and carrot cake to chipotle chicken and bean burritos. The Chile Woman’s Susan Welsand said she has sold her chiles and other peppers at Big Red Eats Green since the first festival in 2011. “It’s important because we want

to introduce students to our local food culture and want students to meet some of our local farmers and our local restaurants who buy supplies from the local farmers,” Welsand said. Six bands and musicians, SEE GREEN, PAGE 5


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CAMPUS EDITORS: ANNA HYZY & KATHRINE SCHULZE | CAMPUS@IDSNEWS.COM

Office of sustainability applications open The IU Office of Sustainability is accepting applications for 2014-2015 internships. This will be the 14th intern group. Interns participate in a seminar on sustainability, which helps to shape

sustainability efforts on campus. Applications and recommendation letters are due Sunday, Sept. 14. For more information visit the Office of Sustainability’s website at sustain.indiana.edu.

Walking breaks good for health By Neha Ramani nramani@indiana.edu | @neha_ramani

PHOTOS BY ADAM KIEFER | IDS

SPEA CUTS LOOSE ABOVE Lynn B. Nguyen, associate director of the IU Civic Leaders LLC, speaks with an IU undergraduate during SPEA's welcome back BBQ, "SPEA-Ganza!" Wednesday in the SPEA courtyard. RIGHT USB flashdrives with “SPEA” written on the outide were offered to undergraduate SPEA students as part of the “SPEA-Ganza!” welcome back BBQ Wednesday in the SPEA Courtyard.

Fraternity chapter to return By Lindsay Moore liramoor@indiana.edu @_LindsayMoore

After 55 years, Pi Lambda Phi will return to campus this semester. The fraternity will be reinstated at IU after leaving campus in 1959. It will join the 33 current chapters on campus this semester. The expansion process started last spring when 10 to 15 students reached out to Pi Lambda Phi headquarters to restart the chapter, said Patrick Spanner, Pi Lambda Phi director of Chapter Operations. The chapter aims to recruit 50 to 60 men during the eight-week recruitment process, Spanner said. The men will be recruited not only as members but also as re-founding fathers of Pi Lambda Phi. “Fraternities, at the basis, are created to prepare you for the rest of your life,” Spanner said. “‘To build better men.’ So not only do we do that with all of our groups but especially with our founding fathers. You’re getting basically that building better men plus plus. You’re getting that tangible creation entrepreneur experience.” Pledges will take on a dual membership process as they learn about the

chapter’s history, values and personal development through new member education and leadership training. “There has been a precedent that has already been set,” said Matthias Lebherz, sophomore Pi Lambda Phi member. “As a founding father, how can we take in what they’ve done in the past and incorporate that to what we’ve done? And what can we do to bring upon a change?” Pi Lambda Phi’s creation was a result of social change. Originally founded in 1895, the organization was the first non-sectarian fraternity and the first to break down the color barrier in the 1960s by admitting black brothers, Spanner said. The chapter honors this history in its creed, eliminating prejudice, and uses this as a guideline to find the right candidates. “We don’t discriminate on anything — race, creed, religion, where you’re from, whether you’re in Kelley or not,” Spanner said. “None of that matters to us. What’s important to us is that we find men of good character who align with our values and want to work hard and have fun.” Pi Lambda Phi’s philanthropy, the Elimination of Prejudice, fosters educated

To learn more Meetings can be arranged by contacting Pi Lambda Phi through its Facebook page, IUIFC.org or by contacting Spanner directly at patrick.spanner@pilambdaphi.org or 509-554-6634.

discussions about diversity, notably, through its Wall of Prejudice event, Spanner said. Other chapters built a wall where students and faculty on campus can write any term of hate they’ve heard. Later on, participants donated a dollar for a chance to take a hammer to the wall as a symbolic destroying of prejudice. “I want to make that a tradition here,” said Daniel Keay, sophomore Pi Lambda Phi member. “I want to do something really big like that, that causes a stir and gets people to start talking about things.” The value of inclusiveness carries over into Pi Lambda Phi’s recruitment process as well, Spanner said. The chapter is recruiting through one-on-one informational interviews with one of three representatives from its headquarters in addition to the Interfraternity Council’s formal recruitment. The fraternity is also interested in reaching out to students who didn’t initially think they would go greek or those who haven’t found

their home in the greek community yet, Spanner said. “I never thought that I would fit into the greek community at all,” Lebherz said. Part of the unique recruitment process for colonizing fraternities is referrals from faculty, students and other greek members. Candidates will also each have to meet a 2.8 GPA requirement. After receiving a bid, brothers will be expected to complete 15 hours of community service every semester. They will also be required to be part of at least one other organization outside of the fraternity, Spanner said. Eleven fraternity brothers have accepted a Pi Lambda Phi bid so far. The fraternity is not only looking for freshman and sophomores but upperclassmen as well, Spanner said. “I look for a young man who wants to grow as an individual,” Spanner said. “Someone that’s willing to take on that challenge, that true challenge of building a new organization. They’re willing to do that and move through that journey.”

GET THERE FASTER

From IDS reports

A human rights conference at IU next week will honor IU grad Mohammad Fahad al-Qahtani, who is currently serving a prison sentence in Saudi Arabia. The conference will take place next Wednesday in Wylie Hall 005. The event will feature a lecture from Karen Elliott House, a Pulitzer Prize winning journalist and author, according to the University. In March 2013, al-Qahtani was imprisoned in Saudi Arabia with a 10-year sentence on multiple charges, including planting seeds of sedition and breaking allegiance with the ruler, according to the University. Al-Qahtani is co-founder of the Saudi Civil and Political Rights Association, the largest human rights group in Saudi Arabia. Al-Qahtani earned his Ph.D. in economics from

IU in 2002, according to the University. Gerhard Glomm, the organizer of the conference and professor of economics, said in a University press release that the event will focus on whether or not fighting for human rights is an American interest or a luxury. The panel at 4 p.m. will feature House, Lee Hamilton, and Eric Goldstein, deputy director of Human Rights Watch’s Middle East and North Africa division. Patrick O’Meara, vice president emeritus of international affairs, according to the University will moderate. The School of Global and International Studies, the Center for the Study of the Middle East, the political science and economics departments the Middle Eastern Law Student Association and anonymous donors will sponsor the conference. Anna Hyzy

CORRECTION A headline on Wednesday’s Page 1 should have said that two buildings making up The Hill at Collins LLC will be closing after this year. The IDS regrets this error.

Evan Hoopfer, Rebecca Kimberly Managing Editors

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Students should break up long study sessions with hourly five minute walks, suggests a new IU study. The study “Effect of Prolonged Sitting and Breaks in Sitting Time on Endothelial Function,” is the first to use experimental evidence to show that a short five minute walking break every hour can reverse the negative effects that sitting for three hours can have on the body. Sitting for long periods of time, according to the study, contributes to slack muscles that do not effectively pump blood to the heart. The blood can then sit in the legs and adversely affect the ability of blood vessels to expand. Saurabh Thosar, the lead researcher of the study, said his interest in the topic began when he realized sitting for long periods is a big problem in today’s society. “I wanted to do research that was meaningful in public health and would look at basic vascular processes,” Thosar said. “Sitting is also relatively simpler to do in a laboratory setting.” Thosar said his experiment took about six months and involved 11 healthy, non-obese men, some college students, aged 20 to 35. “We had participants who weren’t very physically active,” he said. “The CDC recommends everyone perform a certain amount of physical activity, and we had people who did not do that.” Thosar said the experiment included one trial in which subjects sat for three hours without moving their legs and a second trial in

which the subjects walked on a treadmill for five minutes three times during the three hour period. Femoral artery functionality was measured at each hour mark during both trials, he said. “It’s the first study to show that functioning of the artery can be affected by just one hour of sitting down,” he said. Thosar said the study’s finding that even short walking breaks can help maintain arterial function has applications for those who are sitting non-stop during eight hour workdays and for students who study for long periods of time. “It will help the students preserve their (arterial) function,” he said. Thosar, a postdoctoral researcher at the Oregon Health and Science University, said he has another research focus now but added that he has ideas for followup research on the prolonged sitting topic. “The next step would be to try out different hours of sitting,” he said. “Perhaps the breaks will have more or less of an effect if the subject is sitting for, say, hours.” Thosar added he would also like to get blood samples from subjects while they are sitting. “Blood samples would give us a better idea of what actually goes on in the vessels,” he said. Thosar said it is also important to experiment with different populations, since he only used healthy young men in his first study. “Things might be more pronounced in less healthy populations,” he said.

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REGION

EDITORS: HOLLY HAYS & ANICKA SLACHTA | REGION@IDSNEWS.COM

Flags to fly at half-staff for Sept. 11 In honor of Patriot’s Day today, Gov. Mike Pence has directed that all flags at all state facilities be flown at half-staff. “Flags should be lowered at sunrise and remain at half-staff until sunset on Thursday, September 11,” a statement from the

governor’s office said. Although it is not required, Pence is also encouraging businesses and residents statewide to fly their flags at half-staff in remembrance of those who lost their lives Sept. 11, 2001.

STRATEGY IN SÃO PAULO

SEPT. 11 | 13 YEARS LATER

MARY KATHERINE WILDEMAN | IDS

Water coolers are almost universally used by Brazilian households and businesses, because the tap water generally isn’t safe to drink.

Brazil struggles with water shortage Here in Brazil, I take a 15-minute shower in the morning, just as I would in the United States. I wash the dishes under running water. At home or on campus, I have easy access to as much drinking water as I please. I arrived in São Paulo in the middle of a horrible drought. Since coming here, I’ve become more aware of how much water I use. But the reality is, because I live in a wealthier neighborhood, I feel the effects of this crisis much less than the poor do. Folha de São Paulo reported that this is the worst water crisis in the city’s history. In late July, Brazil’s Public Ministry issued a statement warning Sabesp, the largest water supply and sanitation utility in the area, and the São Paulo state government that the largest reservoir in the state, Cantareira, could run out within 100 days. The Cantareira system supplies water to about 8.5 million people in São Paulo and surrounding areas. The state government missed deadlines set by the ministry to begin water rationing, the Los Angeles Times reported. It also reported that the state has been accused of unofficial nighttime water rationing, although Sabesp has denied this. I have not noticed the water in my apartment being turned off at any time during the day, but other residents in my neighborhood have. Rodrigo Batista, the owner of a shop down the street from where I live, says his water is turned off nightly. Water rationing seems to vary depending on the region of the city. Some parts of São Paulo have less access to water than others. Thaís Felice, a student at the Pontifical Catholic University of São Paulo, also said she has had her water rationed. “In the northern region (of São Paulo), there is

IKE HAJINAZARIAN | IDS

Maria Carrasquillo sits on the bumper of the emergency response vehicle that she and her tour partner drove from Bloomington to New York in the days following Sept. 11, 2001.

Local volunteers remember By Holly Hays hvhays@indiana.edu | @hv_hays

It took Red Cross volunteer Susan Berwick 10 years to be able to talk about what she saw at Ground Zero. Berwick was one of 17 volunteers from Bloomington to be sent to either Ground Zero, the Pentagon or Shanksville, Pa. As a whole, the group logged 421 service days in the months following the attacks, according to documents provided by the Red Cross. Berwick, who had experience in critical incident stress debriefing, was sent on a two-week tour in December 2001, months after the attacks. While there, she worked as a volunteer in respite tents near the site, where workers cleaning the site were able to rest, decompress and talk about what they were seeing. “Some days they talked, and some days they weren’t talkative,” she said. “We just were there when they wanted to talk and gave support and counseling.” When Berwick arrived around Dec. 10, workers were sifting through what remained of the still-burning World Trade Center, she said. Volunteers and workers at the site would refer to Ground Zero as “the sacred ground,” she said. “There were flowers,”

9 11

Berwick said. “There were memorials on these walls that just lined the whole perimeter of the site.” Since she was required to wear her Red Cross credentials to gain access to the site, Berwick said New Yorkers would approach her and thank her for her efforts. “People would buy your lunch,” she said. “New York was very appreciative of what everyone was there doing.” Maria Carrasquillo, the current disaster program manager for the Monroe County chapter of the American Red Cross, volunteered at Ground Zero prior to becoming an employee. Carrasquillo was sent to Ground Zero on Sept. 15, 2001. She and her tour partner drove for two days in an emergency response vehicle to reach the site, passing the site of the Flight 93 wreck in Pennsylvania along the way. Her first glimpse of the site in New York City was the columns of smoke rising from the burning remains of the Twin Towers beyond the horizon. “A few hours away we could start seeing the smoke, and that is what we saw driving in for several hours,” she said. Years later, she can still remember the indescribable feeling of being surrounded by that smoke and debris from the buildings.

“A few hours away we could see the smoke, and that is what we saw driving in for several hours.” Susan Berwick, Red Cross volunteer

“There was so much stuff in the air, and it was constantly hazy,” she said. “The smell is something that I’ll never forget.” While she was at Ground Zero, she and her tour partner delivered meals to the respite tents Berwick would later work in. She said in the two weeks she was in the city, the rescue efforts were coming to an end. “When we got there, there was still a little bit of hope that they would find survivors,” she said. “By the time we left there, that was gone.” Carrasquillo said what she carries with her the most from her time spent in the city is a single moment from her last delivery run. They were on Wall Street, near a statue of George Washington, approximately a block and a half from where the barricades for the site were set up. “We look at the statue, and there’s an eagle, just sitting on one of the arms of the statue,” she said. “And that to me was just like, wow, you know, we’re still here.”

MARY KATHERINE WILDEMAN is a junior in political science and journalism.

rationing during the night. We are without water after midnight,” Felice said. Pedro Aguerre, a professor of economics and business administration at PUCSP, said the crisis was caused by the government’s inability to execute proper planning. The drought is very serious, he said, but the problem lies more with water companies and the state government not investing in water security. If investments in the right places had been scheduled, the crisis could have been avoided, he said. Aguerre said the management of the crisis has not been very democratic. For the most part, water cutoffs vary by neighborhood. Wealthier areas of the city generally have more access to water and consume more than poorer areas. It’s hard to imagine turning on a faucet in the U.S. and not having water coming out. Scientific American reported in 2012 that the U.S. was the third-greatest consumer of water. Brazil consumes less than half the water that we do in the U.S., according to the report. The difference seems to be in administration. In the U.S., it would be more common for state governments to implement heavy fines for households using more water than allowed. Here, the state reduces water pressure without notification. Poor management within both the federal and state government is a common source of frustration for many Brazilians. Given the lack of real governance, it’s difficult to say when the crisis will reach its breaking point. “I am very offended and ashamed of those who govern the crisis,” Aguerre said. marwilde@indiana.edu

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OPINION

EDITORS: LEXIA BANKS & EMMA WENNINGER | OPINION@IDSNEWS.COM

Police now saving us from other police After beating a man in an Indianapolis southeast-side bar while attempting to make an arrest Aug. 7, two police officers have been arrested and charged with felony assault. Indianapolis police chief Rick Hite said he

was disturbed by what he had seen. It seems like the police are finally realizing that they, too, can be punished for committing crimes. Good job, Hite.

KARL’S KORNER

IDS EDITORIAL BOARD

GUENTHER WITH AN “E”

Smart watch or product botch?

Pence’s budget means luxury chairs

JESSICA KARL is a sophomore in English.

ANDREW GUENTHER is a sophomore in political science.

As a student who both studies and works in the political science realm, barely a day goes by when I don’t witness Indiana Republicans cramming budget surpluses down the throats of any person who is brave enough to listen. And in the true fashion of a 7-year-old with a piggy bank, Gov. Mike Pence cannot control himself and his urges. The governor, known mostly for opposing the stimulus bill and then accepting stimulus funding, which he claimed credit for, has recently gone on a shopping spree. Taking time out of his pitiful pandering to presidential philanthropists, Pence unveiled his latest brainchild, a $338,000 renovation of the basement of the Statehouse. But, this isn’t just any basement — it’s a basement with a fancy floor! The renovation has the normal, key components of any government office. It has a $53,600 raised floor, chairs that cost about $400, frosted glass sliding doors and four touch-screen wall monitors that cost about $10,000 apiece. You know, just the necessities. Pence also entered into a $500,000-a-year contract with a software programmer and a $1.3 million consulting fee. The newly furnished space will be home to employees who will research and address policy issues within Indiana, such as infant mortality. Pence said this “new data hub” will give policymakers real-time data. I, for one, was woefully unaware that receiving realtime data was made possible solely through $10,000 monitors or $400 chairs. I always thought that, you know, Google still existed. And I hear it even works on normal computer screens. Considering IU was forced to cut $10 million in spending after Pence’s budget experienced a shortfall, you’d think the governor would be putting this extra money toward something such as education or healthcare or infrastructure. Personally, I think the employees in this data hub could operate perfectly fine with normal, massproduced computers and chairs. And while the governor did receive grants and cancel other leases in Indianapolis, that doesn’t change the fact that he spent more than $2 million on a glorified computer lab for policy analysts. Of course, this news comes less than a month after the Republican-approved renovations for the Statehouse were released. These renovations included chairs for the legislative chambers that cost $760 apiece. I’m not sure what Republicans love about big, fancy, expensive chairs, but it smells suspiciously like overcompensation and a false sense of superiority. “Welcome to the future of state government,” Pence reportedly said during the tour. If this is the future of Indiana government, we should all be deeply concerned. ajguenth@indiana.edu

ILLUSTRATION BY ALDEA SULLIVAN | IDS

Let’s take it all the way WE SAY: The states are divided, so the Supreme Court has to weigh in The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals, which presides over Illinois, Indiana and Wisconsin, declared Aug. 26 that the gay marriage ban in Indiana and Wisconsin is unconstitutional. We on the Editorial Board are with the thousands of Hoosiers celebrating this decision. The ban was discriminatory and served no other purpose than to pacify ignorance. Though a stay on the decision prevents gay marriage from immediately becoming legal in Indiana, the pieces are all in place for the controversy to finally end. The previous ban affecting thousands of Hoosiers was struck down because Indiana and Wisconsin could give “no reasonable basis” for it — a decision most everyone who isn’t prejudiced has already come to. Justice Richard Posner wrote the decision, which consists mostly of debunking and calling out the prejudices and unsubstantiated soundbites homophobes have been using against same-sex marriage for years.

The state’s main argument claimed the only point of marriage was to prevent unsupported and unexpected pregnancies and was, therefore, unnecessary for homosexuals. This argument hardly makes sense and is, as Posner said, “so full of holes that it cannot be taken seriously,” so it’s no wonder the ban was struck down. The state has given legal rights and meaning to the institution of marriage beyond the inherently emotional implications. To say marriage is clinical and solely revolves around procreation, making it basically meaningless, is to undermine the struggles of gay people as well as the opposing side’s claim that “ traditional marriage” is in jeopardy. The next crucial step was taken Sept. 9, when the decision was appealed to the Supreme Court. Ours is one of many states that has appealed gay marriage decisions to the highest court. The majority of states that have ruled on this controversy are on the same side as Indiana.

Unfortunately, the courts in Louisiana swung the other way. This difference in state-to-state protection of citizens’ rights makes the controversy a national issue, and the intensity with which Americans land on both sides of this topic means it should be resolved sooner rather than later. The predominantly conservative Supreme Court has been dragging its feet in an understandable effort to not stamp on states’ ability to decide for themselves, but this is not an issue of preference. Thousands of Americans are demanding their rights, even in states not always willing to recognize minorities. The inequality of protection under the law requires the Supreme Court act, and it is only a matter of time. Hoosiers have won a battle. Gay couples all over the state will soon have the equal rights they deserve and have fought for. Hopefully couples all over the country will soon be able to join in the celebration.

ZIPPER UNZIPPED

Do we really need an Apple Watch? No. But I don’t write for the Indiana Daily Student to give one-word answers. The Apple Watch was released Tuesday under a several year-long tidal wave of speculation, letting us finally exhale our baited breath. I could embellish and say the ghost of Steve Jobs appeared and granted everyone in the conference hall three iPhones. Apple isn’t in the business of selling us what we need. They convince us to think we need things and then sell those things to us. Many would argue that one needs a cell phone. I would probably agree with them. But nobody needs an iPhone. Yet it’s the most popular mobile computing device on the market today.

The fact that it’s unnecessary makes people like it. I love my iPhone very much and, sadly to say, I believe I would not be able to “survive” without it. Of course, one should notice that I put “survive” in quotes because, although being without an iPhone would make me anxious and cause me to constantly think about the fact that I don’t have an iPhone, I could easily survive without one. It’s like heroin. Apple is a glorified (and legal) drug dealer. We’re addicted to our Apple products. We’re addicted to the rush we get when Apple releases a new product line. It’s like being in on this secret that everybody is actually in on and refusing to believe

that other people are, in fact, in on it. Ten years ago people didn’t think they “needed” phones such as the iPhone. Palm and Blackberry had released smarthphone-esque devices long before this, and they continued to hold only a niche market of business professionals and the Real Housewives of Orange County. The iPhone was released in 2007, and by 2008, with the release of the iPhone 3G and Google’s Android OS, smartphones were deemed a necessity. And 10 years from now, maybe “smart watches” such as the Apple Watch will be deemed a necessity. Possibly even sooner than that. Apple is changing what we think we need faster than any

RILEY ZIPPER is a junior in English.

company in the history of capitalism. I’m not necessarily against this, but I can’t be for it. But it doesn’t matter what I’m against or in favor of — I buy into it anyway. I’m very much part of the Empire, and there’s nothing I can do about it. I don’t even really want to do anything about it because I love Apple products, and I’ll probably always buy them. Trust me, nobody needs an Apple Watch. But damn, they’re cool. ziperr@indiana.edu

LETTER TO THE EDITOR POLICY The IDS encourages and accepts letters to be printed daily from IU students, faculty and staff and the public. Letters should not exceed 350 words and may be edited for length and style. Submissions must include the person’s name, address and telephone number for verification.

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

Indiana Daily Student, Est. 1867 Website: idsnews.com The opinions expressed by the editorial board do not necessarily represent the opinions of the IDS news staff, student body, faculty or staff members or the Board of Trustees. The editorial board comprises columnists contributing to the Opinion page and the Opinion editors.

In our world, there’s a clear divide between people who wear watches and people who don’t. The non-watch wearers dominate the scene these days, but only time will tell whether the status quo will change after Tuesday’s release of the Apple Watch. Personally, I don’t wear a watch. I eat, sleep and go to the bathroom with my iPhone. If I had to take a guess, I’d bet that most students and professors on campus would agree with me. We’re constantly infatuated with our smartphones. As technology increases and clocks appear on LED screens lining every street corner, owning a watch has merely become a vanity that symbolizes luxury. Companies like Rolex and Cartier make money off a niche group of clientele who wear watches not only to tell time but also to brand a certain lifestyle. Therefore, one might say that having a watch is obsolete. Sadly, many young students haven’t even learned how to tell time via an analog clock. Since technology is ever-present in our lives, it seems logical that the watch business should evolve. In order for this to happen, watches need to advance by morphing to conjoin with online, social platforms. It’s attracting two groups of people: the high society watch-wearers and the Apple-obsessed technology lovers. Tim Cook, CEO of Apple Inc., unveiled the Apple Watch on Sept. 9. At first glance, it looks pretty and shiny, and all I wanted to do was hold it in my hands and play with it. But as he got more into explaining the design and purpose for the watch, I became apprehensive. Marketed as a “comprehensive health and fitness companion,” I felt like Cook was trying to sell me a personal trainer for the small fortune of $349. Then, Cook went on to explain how you can send your friends personalized drawings, as well as the beat of your own pulse, all through the wristwatch. Suddenly, I realized Apple is trying to take the feeling out of personal connections. Gone are the days of human interaction. Here are the days of inanimate objects literally running our lives. With the Apple Watch, we won’t have to respond to text messages anymore. Apple now has the capability to understand texts and create logical responses that are then corresponded back to the sender. At first, I thought the smart watch was good idea. But an idea, like that rainbow layer cake you saw on Pinterest and attempted to make, turned out looking like cow manure. Instead of hugging loved ones goodbye, we will be sending them a recreation of our heartbeat. It’s intimacy at a distance. It’s a little troubling. Who knows, next year Apple will probably be designing an app that chews our food for us. jkarl@indiana.edu


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Receiver uses dance-like moves to get open By Sam Beishuizen sbeishui@indiana.edu @Sam_Beishuizen

Nick Stoner will try anything to get open. The senior wideout and the rest of the IU wide receivers regularly watch film with offensive coordinator Kevin Johns in the wide receivers room at Memorial Stadium. They analyze their routes in practices and games, looking for ways to improve. It isn’t that uncommon for the Hoosier pass catchers to learn from one another. They’ll talk about their running patterns and dissect what allowed them to get open, each trying to add a wrinkle to their own games. But when highlights of Stoner get shown, there isn’t much Johns or the other receivers can say. “Coach Johns is just like, ‘That’s nice,’” senior Isaiah Roundtree said, only half-joking. “He’s not going to say, ‘Try this move,’ because Stoner just moves a certain way. He’s like, ‘That’s impressive. Next.’” Stoner, a two-sport athlete between football and running track, has made a name for himself for having unique routes. His moves off the line of scrimmage and unique routes often leave his teammates and coaches dumbfounded. But this is the first year he’s really had the chance to show off his uncanny ability to

» GREEN

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

including Peter Oren, Stone Irr and Fizzbang, and a local hoop dance troop, the Hudsucker Posse, supplied the entertainment. Like Welsand, solo artist Stone Irr has attended Big Red Eats Green since its inaugural event. “It really showcases the interesting food environment that we find ourselves in in Bloomington,” Irr said. “I think it’s really great to be engaged with that.” Supporters of locally

create space. Stoner spent the last three seasons stuck behind the likes of Cody Latimer, Kofi Hughes, Duwyce Wilson and a handful of other former Hoosier receivers, limiting his playing time. The former defensive back has caught 26 passes for 353 yards in just more than two seasons on offense for IU. His lone touchdown was a 44-yard score against Indiana State to begin the 2013 season. Despite an underwhelming aerial attack in week one, junior quarterback Nate Sudfeld said he expects Stoner to be a staple of the Hoosier offense this season, including Saturday when the Hoosiers play against Bowling Green. IDS FILE PHOTO “I’m excited about him,” Then-junior receiver Nick Stoner catches a pass during IU’s game against Michigan on Oct. 19, 2013, at Sudfeld said. “Stoner runs pre- Michigan Stadium. Stoner has garnered the attention of his fellow receivers for his unusual running style. nominal routes ... He’s a good the DB’s not expecting Stoner security blanket to have be- defensive backs are looking for them in bad situations.” Stoner looks at suggested to move the way he moves.” cause I know where he’ll be on tells in a receiver’s body lanStoner is a member of what guage. That’s where the mind routes in the playbook as just every play.” has become an increasingly that — suggestions. The 6-foot-1-inch, games come in. If a route calls for him to go rare group of two-sport college If his route has him going 190-pound Stoner doesn’t fit the stereotypical outside re- to the outside, he contorts his eight yards and then cross the athletes. The heavily tattooed wideceiver build. He knows he isn’t body in a way to make it look middle of the field, he will. He just doesn’t always do it in a out has run track for IU during going to be able to muscle past like he’s going inside. the spring. If IU’s in a tight split, the like the playbook suggests. defensive backs, so he doesn’t He redshirted last season Roundtree said watching corner might think out route. bother trying. Stoner is sometimes more to add weight to ensure his Instead, Stoner preaches Stoner will run an in or drag. “What helps me as a receiv- like watching a dancer than a body survives the rigors of Big an emphasis on footwork and “mind games” with opposing er is knowing what the corner- football player with the way he Ten football. Although the added weight back’s thinking and what he’s runs. cornerbacks. “His hips and feet, man,” might slow his 400-meter time doing,” he said. “He sees a cerAfter all, he was one. “I know some of their tain split or my body leaning a he said. “Stoner just moves. He down, Stoner said running certain way, a trigger is going can dance, and how he runs track has been beneficial for tricks,” Stoner said, smiling. Like a cunning pok- off in his head. So it lets me his routes, there’s a rhythm to his football career. He said teammates er player, Stoner knows screw with him a bit and put it. When he comes off the line, grown food argue that it comes with environmental and health benefits that nationally and internationally grown food lose during transportation, according to the Worldwatch Institute website. Transportation costs are also naturally lower than food grown elsewhere. In the U.S., food travels an average of 1,491.4 miles, according to the website. “So when you buy produce from a market or you buy produce from people at our event, you’re getting it fresh,” Symes said. “You

know the people you’re supporting. You can see (them) and you feel good about it,” Symes said. Symes said she encourages students to check out native meccas of local food, from Bloomingfoods Market and Deli to the Bloomington Community Farmers’ Market. “We really want students to get a really good sense of Bloomington,” Symes said. “Bloomington, compared to other American cities, is a heaven of food culture. Bloomington is so progressive.”

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» MORGAN

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

program after this season. Despite the scholarship shuffling, Morgan may be the solution to frontcourt issues. Entering the 2014-15 season, the Hoosiers’ roster boasts just four players who stand 6-foot-8-inches or taller. Of those, just two — junior Hanner Mosquera-Perea and freshman Jeremiah April — are true post players. Morgan’s addition may give IU Coach Tom Crean a player to fill the void left by Cody Zeller and Noah Vonleh’s

departures to the NBA. “(Morgan) owns a high field-goal percentage because he plays and operates best in the paint,” ESPN said in its scouting report. His commitment adds to Crean’s impressive recruiting résumé. In his seven seasons at the helm, Crean has received commitments from 14 four or five-star recruits. Waynesville Coach Chris Pilz said Morgan’s versatility and character are what made him a prized recruit. “Juwan is a great teammate,” Pilz said. “He has been in the spotlight, that’s hard

sometimes think he’s jogging when he’s at full speed. He added that it’s easy to underestimate how important the fundamentals behind running can be. “Your running form actually plays a big role in how fast you can run,” he said. “I think track has done a tremendous job in helping me.” The quicker Stoner gets up the field, the less time opposing defenses can get to his quarterback. The sooner Stoner gets in open space, the sooner Sudfeld can get the ball to him. Although Johns and the other receivers may not be able to copy Stoner’s routes, the wideout who plans to attend seminary school after graduating has made the most of his skillset. The run game dominated IU’s season opener against Indiana State, but Johns said he expects the passing game to be tested Saturday. “He’s kind of the standard route running that I like to see,” Sudfeld said. “They can do whatever they want. Make all the moves they want. But as long as they’re at point A when I expect them to be in point A, no matter how they get there is good for me.” Stoner agreed. Even if it does look like he’s “dancing” down the sidelines. “As long as I’m open,” Stoner said. “It doesn’t matter how I get there.” to handle sometimes, but his teammates love him. He shares the ball. A guy who could’ve scored 25 to 30 points last season averaged 19. “He is the complete package. Major college coaches have watched him across the country because he’s versatile and because of his high academics and how he handles himself off the court.” He averaged 19 points and 10 rebounds per game in his junior season, earning 2014 Ozark Conference Player of the Year honors. Rivals.com ranks him as the No. 105 recruit in the class of 2015.

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» 9/11

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beam came from, Loviscek said. The beam is listed by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey as 85th in an inventory of more than 350 WTC artifacts. Some of the artifacts are easier to identify specifically, such as parts of the north tower’s antenna. Some, like a “mangled ball of steel and concrete — composite,” are harder to definitively place within the structure. The piece that rests in Bloomington is serial number G-0057, simply labeled “steel beam.” “The actual beam itself is a steel girder with concrete embedded all the way around it and rebar,” Loviscek said. *** Construction of the WTC began in the mid-1960s as part of a $525 million plan to build a large business complex, according to the WTC website. The site would consist of six buildings, more than 10 million square feet of office space, and the Twin Towers, which, at 110 stories, would be the world’s tallest skyscrapers. The towers opened in April 1973. In February 1993, a van containing 1,500 pounds of explosives detonated in a parking garage located underneath the north tower. Thirteen years ago, terrorists hijacked two commercial jets and crashed them into the towers. The attacks destroyed not only the towers but four other buildings in the complex, as well. The attack killed more than 2,700 people and reduced much of the business complex to rubble.

piece of history to the area. The beam keeps the memory of the event and the fallen firefighters — whom he calls his brothers — at the forefront. “It’s our job to keep it alive, in my opinion,” Loviscek said. “Three hundred forty-three of our brothers died that day, and it’s our job as the fire department and the fire department union to make sure that this doesn’t get forgotten.”

***

***

When the plans for the WTC complex were revealed in the 1960s, several companies across the nation were contracted to provide steel and materials for the construction of the WTC. Atlas Machine and Iron Works in Virginia had the task of spinning 12,000 tons of raw steel into lower columns for the bases of the buildings, according to “City in the Sky: The Rise and Fall of the World Trade Center,” a 2003 book by James Glanz and Eric Lipton. Locations in Washington, Pennsylvania, Missouri, Virginia, Texas and California supplied wall bearings, floor trusses, steel decks, ductwork and more. For Loviscek, bringing the beam to Bloomington meant more than just bringing a

A coffee pot warms in the corner of Bloomington Fire Department Station 5. A crockpot sits on the kitchen counter. The television in the garage is blaring. An American flag is pinned to the wall in the inlet where the radio and computer sit. Beside it hangs an often-reproduced 9/11 photo of three men raising the American flag over the gnarled wreckage of the World Trade Center. At the other end of the room, next to a door leading to the garage, is a similar photo, taken from a different angle. Beside it, a silver and red wood-handled axe emblazoned with the digits 343. Items like this remind Bloomington firefighter Bob Loviscek of the events of Sept. 11, a day when life’s normal progression was stalled for

PHOTOS BY IKE HAJINAZARIAN AND BARI GOLDMAN | IDS

Bob Loviscek, top, brought a beam from the World Trade Center to Bloomington in June 2011. Above, the beam rests in a local warehouse.

several devastating hours. Loviscek, a veteran of the Marine Corps, has been a firefighter for 17 years, 12 of which he has spent with BFD. He was working in Speedway, Ind., the morning of Sept. 11 when his father, also a firefighter, called and told him to turn on the television. One of the Twin Towers was on fire. “I said, ‘Oh, yeah, I see it,’” Loviscek said. “We were just talking, and we saw the plane coming.” Loviscek said there was something unsettling about the plane flying across his TV screen. “I said, ‘Boy, that plane’s awful close,’” he said. “It went into the building and it was like, ‘Holy shit.’” When it came time to lower the flag outside of the station that evening, Loviscek said he had a perfect moment of clarity. The scale of the day’s events had finally hit him. All flights had been grounded. Not a soul was outside. The calm, Loviscek said, was startling. “Speedway is the taxiway to the Indianapolis International Airport. It was just so eerily quiet,” he said. “There wasn’t anybody on the road. The airspace was silent.”

*** During his trip to New York to retrieve the beam, Loviscek and his family were able to tour Ground Zero with the Port Authority. Nearly 10 years after the attacks, Loviscek said the rebuilding process was still slow. Though construction had begun on parts of the superstructure for the memorial tower, Loviscek said much of the site remained undeveloped. “In 2010, it was nothing,” he said. “It was a giant hole in the ground.” The experience, he said, was emotional. “I go to a lot of conferences around the country and within the state and knew a lot of instructors from New York City and actually knew some that were lost that day,” he said. “It was personal.” *** Thirteen years later, the photo of the flag being raised at Ground Zero reminds Loviscek of the magnitude of that day’s events and the resilience of the American spirit. He has the photo hanging in his home next to the iconic photo of soldiers raising the flag at Iwo Jima during World War II.

For him, both photos carry much the same meaning and inspiration. Though the country had been through something traumatizing on both occasions, life would go on. “It’s almost, to me, the same thing,” Loviscek said. “Like, ‘Hey, we’re going to be OK.’” *** Before the towers fell, it was just a piece of superstructure. Now, the significance of the beam carries far more weight than that of a skyscraper. Mark Webb, a BFD battalion chief with more than 30 years in the department, arranged for the beam to be stored in a local CFC Properties warehouse until a proper venue could be determined. For Webb, the significance of the beam weighs heavily on his mind. “Thousands of pounds of steel and concrete in this one minuscule piece of the World Trade Center, and to imagine all of that come crashing down, all of that weight, it’s ... to me it’s just mind-boggling,” he said. Traveling to New York and seeing the 9/11 memorial and the spaces left behind by the towers changed his perspective of the event.

“It’s hard to imagine the scale of the footprint of those buildings until you’ve been there,” Webb said. “You see all of the names all around the memorial, and it’s mindboggling. You see the battalion chief’s helmet and some of the remembrances that were left behind ... it’s just stirring inside.” Webb said in his 35 years with the department, he has taken part in some harrowing fire and rescue runs. But he said his experiences do not compare to those of the first responders at the WTC. “I have been, in my career with fire, the first arriving to people hanging off of balconies and in desperate circumstances, pleading and screaming for help, for rescue,” he said. “And I know the sense of urgency and all of the other feelings that I had when I was faced with that, and that’s minuscule compared to the Twin Towers going down.” Paul Karaffa, an employee who works in the warehouse in which the beam is stored, said working next to the beam every day makes the loss of life that occurred that day a constant reality. “It’s hard not to hear the voices,” he said. Karaffa said seeing the beam, however, never gets old. He said he is protective of it and will do all he can to ensure that it is taken care of until it finds its permanent home. “It means a lot to me,” he said. “I feel blessed that I’ve been able to, I guess, be the guardian.” Taking care of the beam for the time being means he can give back to those who suffered loss in the event, Karaffa said. “Life as I know it changed then, and as many times as we can bounce back, that had to be the single most important (historical event) to happen in my life,” he said. The beam has not yet been moved from the warehouse because it is not financially possible and there has not been an appropriate venue, Loviscek said. Though he said he had originally suggested that the piece be used as a memorial in Bloomington’s Switchyard Park, the project was not progressing quickly enough. Loviscek said he hopes the beam will soon be used as part of a memorial in the student commons area of the new Ivy Tech building, though it may not be possible for another two years. The memorial would commemorate not only those lost in the attacks on 9/11 but also the other men and women who have died in the line of duty in Monroe County, he said. Until an appropriate venue is determined, the beam waits.

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EDITOR IKE HAJINAZARIAN

FROM SPOOKS TO SELFIES Congratulations, television lovers. You’ve made it through the summer, and all your shows (and some new ones) are back on air. Weekend breaks down this fall’s batch. By Ike Hajinazarian | ihajinaz@indiana.edu | @_IkeHaji

“AMERICAN HORROR STORY” Wednesday, Oct. 8, on FX Two words: freak show. Ryan Murphy (IU alumnus!) is gracing us with strokes from his genius paintbrush for yet another season of “American Horror Story” this fall, complete with the return of the impeccable Jessica Lange, themed as a circus freak show. Let’s just hope this season doesn’t slowly disappoint the way the past two have. “THE NEWSROOM” Sunday, Nov. 9, on HBO Among the biggest tragedies of television is the fact that HBO executives decided “The Newsroom,” led by Will McAvoy (played by Jeff Daniels in perfect form) only deserved to be on air for three seasons. Nevertheless, this is a show that’s going to absolutely slay its fall competition. “BOARDWALK EMPIRE” Currently playing, 9 p.m. Sundays, on HBO HBO’s period drama is coming to a close this fall after five seasons. “Boardwalk Empire,” with Steve Buscemi at the helm, has been nominated for its fair share of Emmys in its run — 40 to be exact — but alas, all good things must end. “RED BAND SOCIETY” Wednesday, Sept. 17, on FOX “Red Band Society,” on the surface at least, seems like Fox’s halfhearted attempt at milking “The Fault in Our Stars” popularity currently sweeping the country. Either way, the show’s pilot reveals that it has potential, and it’s definitely got Octavia Spencer going for it. “SELFIE” Tuesday, Sept. 30, on ABC ABC’s “Selfie” looks very, very bad. A social-media crazed Eliza, played by Karen Gillan, needs help to fix her image in the real world. This show makes this list only because it’s definitely going to be one of those “so bad it’s good” type of pilots. “BROOKLYN NINE-NINE” Sunday, Sept. 28, on FOX “Brooklyn Nine-Nine,” the non-comedy about Andy Samberg’s New York Police Department officer character, Detective Jake Peralta, received far too much praise for its first season. However, it’s coming back, and it might be worth another shot. “THE VOICE” Monday, Sept. 22, on NBC New season, new coaches. Pharrell Williams and Gwen Stefani are joining Adam Levine and Blake Shelton in this season of “The Voice.” Aside from the fact that it’s a great “American Idol” replacement, it’s worth it to watch for the new coaches. SEE TELEVISION, PAGE 12

Gwen Stefani The Voice

Andy Samberg Brooklyn Nine-Nine

Octavia Spencer The Red Band Society

John Cho Selfie

Steve Buscemi Boardwalk Empire PHOTOS COURTESY OF MCT CAMPUS


column

weekend PAGE 8 | SEPT. 11, 201 2014

fashion (technically) Wearable tech makes memorable impression during fashion week Fashion week is beginning to wrap up in New York City, but it’s only the beginning of fashion month as the catwalk marathon continues in London, Milan and Paris throughout September. Also happening this week, Apple released the iPhone 6 and previewed their technological wrist candy, the Apple Watch. So what do these simultaneous events have to do with each other? Now more than ever, it’s not only important who you’re wearing, but what

ILLUSTRATION BY ROSE HARDING | IDS

it does. That’s right, wearable tech is making its bold appearance on the runway this fall, and it’s the future, people. In years ahead, our kids will be gushing about the popular kids’ shirt that also tracks his heart rate and biometric data. Wait. That technology already exists. It was debuted by Ralph Lauren using conductive silver thread to send data back to the user’s smart phone or tablet. Check out the U.S. Open. The boys are already trying out the technology. My prediction is that the convergence of fashion and technology will be a gorgeous intersection between design, functionality and beauty. Here are some of the top designers and their recent takes on wearable tech. Rebecca Minkoff is launching a new

jewelry tech line. Its products include a gold and black-studded bracelet, which is conventional for Minkoff. Not as conventionally, the bracelet notifies the wearer when she receives a call or text on her mobile phone through Bluetooth technology. CEO of the brand, Uri Minkoff told Women’s Wear Daily that “our girl wants to wear bracelets and jewelry, and she has this relationship with technology, but for us, we’re adding function into very fashionable items she would choose to buy, whether they were tech-enabled or not.” He has a point. If the future of fashion is going to be techy, then it needs to be something that fashion A-listers will want to wear. It can’t be a gimmick. It can’t look like it came from an infomercial. It needs

JANICA KANESHIRO is a junior in journalism.

to blend seamlessly between the worlds of technology and avant-garde. Earlier this summer, Tory Burch teamed up with Fitbit to create a tech line that was also beautiful. Not only was it nice to look at, but it enhanced the brand by getting right to the target audience. Fitbit tracks calories, steps and sleep. What better way to appeal to women than to team up with a feminine designer? It’s smart on both ends. It ups the value of the clothing by, well, making it more expensive. But it also gives tech geeks a place among starlets and fashionistas. A true win-win. If this technology is our future, then our future looks trendy.

Engage with a company that hires leaders, not followers. Engage with us at your campus career fair and our on-campus events. You’ll learn how we’re taking 80 years of experience and leadership as part of GE and applying that heritage to our new company. You’ll find out how we’re the country’s largest provider of private label credit cards based on purchase volume and receivables. You’ll also get more information about our Business Leadership Program and Internship Program, which train the best students to be the best in the industry. Kelley Networking Night • September 16, 2014 • 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm (2nd years at 6:00 pm, 1st years at 7:00 pm) • Atrium of the Graduate Business School

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ARTS

EDITORS: ALISON GRAHAM & AUDREY PERKINS | ARTS@IDSNEWS.COM

Monet landscape discovered in suitcase A Claude Monet landscape was found at a German hospital in a suitcase that belonged to famed art hoarder Cornelius Gurlitt. Gurlitt died in May at the age of 81 and had 1,280 works of art hidden in his Munich

NOT A MISSION TRIP

Memorials serve as reminder of genocide In a region of Rwandan called Bugesera, there sits a genocide memorial site inside Nyamata Church, where about 10,000 men, women and children lost their lives in 1994. During the genocide, Tutsi citizens knew they were being targeted, leading them to seek refuge in churches. No one would kill them in a house of God, they believed. During the genocide, there were no rules. One million people died in 100 days. Ten thousand died in one location. I tried to find something to compare it to. In just that church, it was similar to everyone from my entire high school dying, 28 times over. Outside of the church, you can see the light streaming through the bullet holes on the overhang. Bricks are broken to form a jagged hole near the entrance, a spot where a grenade hit the wall. There were two young women on the tour before us. German, our guide said. “I think they are very interested in this genocide because of their own Holocaust,” he said. The Rwandan Genocide was a systematic, statesponsored attack on the Tutsi minority group. The genocide was carried out by friends, neighbors, policemen, mayors, even their own family members. In the Nyamata Memorial, dozens of benches contain piles of the victims’ clothing, still covered in dust and dirt and blood. There are the identity cards Rwandans were forced to carry, the ones that had been on the Tutsi victims when they

Weekend Specials thursday

3

$

Cocktails: Martinis, Long Islands, Cosmopolitans, Manhattans

The 25th anniversary of the Jazz Fables Concert Series will be celebrated from 5:30 to 8 p.m. Thursday at Bear’s Place. The cover charge is $6 for general admission and $5 for students, only those 21 and older. The concert series was founded by David Miller in 1989. Thursday’s celebration will feature the Jazz Fables Quintet with three of the original members from the 1989-90 quintet: David Miller on trumpet, Tom Walsh on saxes and Luke Gillespie on piano. Walsh is the chairman of jazz studies and a professor of jazz saxophone at the Jacobs School of Music.

died. They were killed because of their condemned ethnicity in the church they prayed in. And over it all, the statue of the Virgin Mary looks down in prayer and solemnity at the destruction humans inflicted upon each other. Rwanda has used its many genocide memorials as a way to educate people and preserve the memories of the genocide, still so fresh in people’s minds, from fading — or else it could happen again, there or anywhere else. Often the memorials are housed in old churches and schools where masses of Tutsis hid and ultimately perished. The memorials

vary in degrees of intensity. In the Murambi Genocide Memorial, a formerly a school, there are rooms containing the actual bodies of victims encased in lime, a mineral-based material commonly used in mortar and plaster. Terrified bodies are forever preserved in their last moments. Others have large collections of human skulls and bones. It’s something straight out of a nightmare. Right outside these memorials, though, it is oddly peaceful. Serene. Most of Rwanda is like that, a sea of rolling hills disappearing off into the mist. Birds chirp, children play soccer nearby. A strangely

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Alison Graham

CAROLINE ELLERT | IDS

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Gillespie is also a professor of jazz at the music school. The quintet will also feature professor of jazz Pat Harbison on trumpet and jazz associate instructor Bobby Scharmann on bass. IU jazz alumnus Ben Lumsdaine will perform a tribute to Horace Silver, an influential jazz composer and pianist who died this summer, according to Bear’s Place. The Jazz Fables Concert Series is the longest-running off-campus jazz series in Bloomington. Thursday will also mark the 37th anniversary of the Jazz Fables Quintet, which was also founded by Miller in 1977.

The Murambi Genocide Memorial Centre in the Murambi district in southern Rwanda has small buildings where preserved bodies of genocide victims are displayed, encased in lime after being exhumed from mass graves.

Bottles of Bud & Bud light

crazyhorseindiana.com

Jazz Fables concert marks 25th anniversary From IDS reports

the BLOOMINGTON’S BEER AUTHORITY

apartment. His collection included pieces by Picasso, Chagall and Matisse, according to the BBC. The painting found may have been painted as early as 1864.

SEPTEMBER

19, 20 26, 27 TICKETS ON SALE NOW! MAC Box Office: (812) 855-7433 music.indiana.edu/opera ballet

CAROLINE ELLERT is a junior in political science and English.

picturesque backdrop to the hellish events that took place. Every single memorial I have visited also contains the same quote, translated from Kinyarwanda: “If you had known me, and you had really known yourself, you would not have killed me.” And right now, knowing is my responsibility. In a small country in Africa, 20 years ago, 1 million people died. That number will always be a part of me. cjellert@indiana.edu

TIM FARIS | IDS

TAKING THE MAC David Effron conducts the IU Philharmonic Orchestra on Wednesday at the Musical Arts Center. The Orchestra began with a piece composed by Antonín Dvořák and ended with four pieces by Ottorino Respighi.


10

I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | T H U R S D AY, S E P T. 1 1 , 2 0 1 4 | I D S N E W S . C O M

SPORTS

EDITORS: SAM BEISHUIZEN & GRACE PALMIERI | SPORTS@IDSNEWS.COM

5 athletes announced to IU Hall of Fame IU athletics named five members to its Athletics Hall of Fame, Indiana Vice President and Director of Athletics Fred Glass announced Wednesday. A.J. Guyton (men’s basketball, 1997-2000),

Adwale Ogunleye (Football, 1996-99), Ben Raimondi (Football, 1944-46), Benigno Fernandez (Men’s Gymnastics, 1971-74) and Bea Gorton (Women’s Basketball Coach, 197276) will be officially inducted Friday, Nov. 7.

Q&A Catching up with IU offensive lineman Feeney By Sam Beishuizen sbeishui@indiana.edu @sam_beishuizen

IDS FILE PHOTO

Players watch from the dugout during IU's game against Kentucky on March 11 at Bart Kaufman Field.

Baseball fall schedule IU BASEBALL FALL SCHEDULE (TIMES TENTATIVE) 3 p.m. Friday Saturday, Oct. 4 (TBA) Scrimmage Scrimmage 11 a.m. Saturday 3 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 8 Scrimmage Scrimmage 3 p.m. Friday, Sept. 19 6 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 9 Scrimmage Xavier (exhibition) 11 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 20 3 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 15 Scrimmage Cream vs. Crimson Game 3 p.m. Friday, Sept. 26 4 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 16 Scrimmage Cream vs. Crimson Game 2 11 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 27 Saturday, Oct. 18 (TBA) Scrimmage IU Alumni Game Wednesday, Oct. 1 (TBA) 1:30 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 19 Scrimmage Cream vs. Crimson Game 3 Friday, Oct. 3 (TBA) Scrimmage

From IDS reports

The Chris Lemonis era of IU baseball will begin this week. Lemonis announced IU’s 2014 fall schedule Wednesday with a series of intrasquad scrimmages and an exhibition contest beginning Sept. 12. IU will play 10 scrimmages at Bart Kaufman Field, building up to the Oct. 9 exhibition with Xavier. The Cream vs. Crimson series will be Oct. 15. All practices, scrimmages and exhibition contests will be free to the public this fall. Alden Woods

Horoscope Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is an 8 — A brilliant idea regarding infrastructure comes to light. Experience plus excellent service make a winning combination. Watch for hidden treasures. Invest in your family’s comfort, while keeping the budget. Relax after a job well done. Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is an 8 — Change your mind. Tackle a delayed project. Let an expert solve a technical problem. Invest in home, family, and real estate. Confer with your team. Stay home instead of going out. Soak up

To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. peaceful moments. Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Today is a 7 — Appearances can deceive. You’re making money by saving money. What seems sudden has actually been planned. Keep practical considerations in the forefront. You have strange ideas and admirable discipline. Make use of them. Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Today is a 6 — You can see farther now, and are free to venture outside your safe zone. Stick to your budget.

BREWSTER ROCKIT: SPACE GUY!

Friends help you do the job. Networking plus focused efforts equal a raise in status. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 7 — Work out your plan in seclusion. Figure it out for yourself. Offer advice only if asked. Check out an unusual investment. Present practical decisions to your family. Be watching for bargains. Shop carefully. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a 7 — A radical idea poses an unexpected benefit to your fam-

TIM RICKARD

Sophomore offensive guard Dan Feeney returned to the playing field Sept. 30 against Indiana State for the first time after missing all of last season with a foot injury suffered in preseason camp. Feeney adds even more depth to an IU offensive line roster that has combined for 135 career starts. The offensive line set the foundation last season for IU setting a school-record 6,102 total yards per game. Healthy again, Feeney will be part of a group aimed at improving on that number this season. In advance of Saturday’s game against Bowling Green, Indiana Daily Student football reporter Sam Beishuizen caught up with Feeney to talk about IU’s bye-week, the offensive balance and Bub’s Burgers. Q You guys are coming off an early bye week. Were you able to do anything different with the day off from playing?

ily accounts. Encourage creative thinking. Ask someone with more experience to teach you. Notice potential difficulties. Friends help you make a long-distance connection. Listen carefully. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is a 7 — A challenging new opportunity arises in a partnership. Get feedback from a variety of perspectives, and move ahead. Paying debts boosts your credit. Your team is hot. Offer encouraging words and helping hands. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is an 8 — A passionate moment kindles. Put the work in to get the results you’re after. Friends can help beat a deadline. Sparks build to

Crossword

A We got an extra off day, which is really good. It was needed, you know. Just a little extra rest. We still had some nice, tough physical practices getting ready for Bowling Green and Missouri and games down the line like that, but nothing really changed. Q The bye-week fell on opening weekend for the NFL season. Did you get a chance to see any of those games? A Yeah, definitely. I definitely watched the NFL. I’m a die-hard Bears fan, but they lost, so that kind of stinks. Q What’s sort of the mind set of this team after week one where you guys were primarily a run-heavy team? Is that something your pushing at all or will there be more balance this weekend? A I guess it just comes down to what they’re going to do. Whatever they’re going to do, we’re going to try and take and go with that. If they’re dropping eight, we’re going to try and run steady flame with patient tending. Entertain new ideas and suggestions. Encourage creative thinking. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is a 6 — There’s some excellent fun available. Toss the ball to a teammate. Things may not go according to schedule or budget, and a diversion could distract. Spontaneous playtime may beckon. Communication works it out. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is a 7 — Keep digging and find the truth. Include personal insights, and establish the rules at home. Listen to children and elders. Teachers come in many forms. Continue building your equity. Rest deeply after extra efforts.

su do ku

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

Answer to previous puzzle

© Puzzles by Pappocom

NON SEQUITUR

1 Wildlife photographs may be a memento of one 7 Visit Overstock.com, say 11 It’s near Miss. 14 Reebok rival 15 Piece of glass 16 “Collages” novelist 17 Triangular chip 18 Zero degrees Celsius, for water 20 Go out with 21 Synthetic rubber, for one 22 Capacity limit 27 Turn down 28 Bathroom fixtures 29 Airline seat pocket item, briefly 30 Word with ball or cup 32 Molar mender’s org. 33 University of Nevada city 34 Pinnacles 38 Not getting it, and, in a different way, what 18-, 22-, 52- and 58- Across are 42 Pound and Poe 43 Bounders 44 Santa __, California 45 Attorney’s thing

Q Coach Kevin Wilson has made some noise lately with the slip-n-slide video and his ALS Bucket Challenge. Is that what he’s like with you guys? It seems like he’s a bit more outgoing out there than when he’s up in front of the media. A Yeah, he’s definitely outgoing. He’s a good guy. He really cares about us. He’s really oriented on family and like, being a single unit. Every decision he makes is for the team and is the best decision for the team. Q Before the season I know a lot of the players went to Bub’s Burgers. Did you go and do the Bub’s Big Ugly challenge? (The Big Ugly Burger Challenge consists of a 1.5 pound hamburger.) A I came in, I think it was like third or fourth in the pound burger challenge. It was pretty fun. It was a lot, man. I was definitely full after that thing. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is a 6 — Do the best job possible. The bottom line is a surprise with unexpected value. Find what you need far away. Amaze even yourself with the solution... the crazier the better. It’s the right decision. Talk it over. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is an 8 — Dive into a family project. Follow your inner voice. Look at a situation from a new angle. Breakthrough! Take it one step at a time. Increase efficiency. Use your imagination. Get it down in writing.

© 2014 By Nancy Black Distributed by Tribune Media Services, INC. All Rights Reserved

L.A. Times Daily Crossword

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis

Difficulty Rating:

the ball, and if not, we’ll pass. But we’re definitely going to try and be a two-way offense.

47 I-5, for one 48 Salt Lake City Winter Olympics year 49 Abbey recess 52 Moment of change 55 Viruses, worms, etc. 57 Bk. after Ezra 58 Sensitive spot 60 Be unable to stand 63 Squeeze (out) 64 Govt. agent 65 Like most wedding cakes 66 Who __ Nation: New Orleans Saints fans 67 Exists no more 68 Said

DOWN

10 Spa treatment 11 Cartoon genre 12 Hotel housekeeping supply 13 Fuming 19 Louisiana music style 22 Forever __ 23 TV feed component 24 Hymn ender 25 Cranberry quality 26 Practical joker’s cry 31 Kennel sounds 33 Opposite of set 35 American Airlines Arena team 36 Film composer Morricone 37 Carpet blemish 39 Scatters, as petals 40 “Private Benjamin” star 41 Nestlé ice cream brand 46 Plays chords, in a way 48 Medit. hot spot 49 Unlike rock bands on MTV’s “Unplugged” 50 Insulated jacket 51 Winter fall 53 Aired again 54 Not reactive 56 Wine from Italy 59 Otitis-treating MD 60 Uno y uno 61 Law firm office, perhaps: Abbr. 62 Journalist Koppel

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 In a funk 2 Stir 3 Diamond corner 4 Parting words 5 Olympic judge, e.g. 6 Equi- kin 7 Beach lotion letters 8 Horn honker of classic comedy 9 Score that often requires overtime

WILEY


11

I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | T H U R S D AY, S E P T. 1 1 , 2 0 1 4 | I D S N E W S . C O M To place an ad: go online, call 812-855-0763 or stop by Ernie Pyle Hall 120 from 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Monday - Friday.

Avail now. 1 BR. Hdwd. floor, laundry, parking. $480-$520 + utils. Eff. $480, utils. paid. 812-320-3063/ 325-9926 Call today to ask about our low prices on apts. One blk. from campus avail. now through Aug., 2015. 812-333-2332

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Aug. 2014, near campus. 3 & 4 BR houses. thunderboltproperty.com August 2015- Cute 3/4/5 BR houses downtown on SW edge of campus. Shoe organizers, walk-in closets, DW, W/D, Central AC, secure keyless entry, off-street prkg. “Like finding hidden treasure” is what we’re told. 812-336-6898 for details & tours. No Pets. No smoking. No idiots. Lg. 5 BR, 2.5 BA. Close to campus & town, 338 S. Grant. $226.50/mo. + utils. Aug., 2015. 327-3238

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Misc. for Sale Clean, mold-free minifridge. Works great! $45 (317) 850-5819

Sublet Apt. Unfurn. Samsung Galaxy S3 LTE Sprint CDMA for sale Clean ESN. $200,obo. harriasl@indiana.edu

1 BR sublet for school year. Near Bryan Park, on S. Stull Ave. $405.00/mo. 812-584-4416

MERCHANDISE

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iPhone 4S-64GB. Originally AT&T - has been unlocked. $250. Email: jspor6@gmail.com

Automobiles 2007 Toyota Matrix XR automatic. Excellent condition. 56,000 miles. $9,975 obo. 812-320-8046

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The YMCA is for youth development, healthy living & social responsibility. Experienced Gymnastics Coaches needed for Monroe County YMCA Gymnastics Center. Employment open house will be held on Friday, September 19, 6 p.m. – 7:30 p.m. Bring completed application found on website, 3 reference names-one being a family member. See details: monroecountyymca. org Lost Contact Michelle Stroud at mstroud@ Lost: White iPhone 5. monroecountyymca.org Morning of August 29, with questions. Downtown Kroger. Black case w/ white apples. $500 Reward! Call or Text: (812) 322-9956.

Great, South, IU location: 1 BR apts. Avail now. 12 mo. lease, $700. Offstreet prkg. & no pets. 812-361-6154 mwisen1111@gmail.com

8 BR, 3 BA, 3 kitchens. 8th & Lincoln. W/D, offstreet parking avail. Avail. Aug., ‘15. 812.879.4566

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Campus Walk Apts. Immediate move-ins avail. 812-332-1509 cwalk@crerentals.com

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Garage Sale Moving sale in Renwick: Antique sideboard, lamps, Hoosier cabinet. Media cabinet, patio furniture, shelves, daybed, bed frames, decor. 8am-noon Sat. 1921 S. Eva Hill Drive.

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812-330-1501

Notice of Third Party Comments Regarding Accreditation Review: The IU School of Public Health-Bloomington will participate in a review for accreditation by the Council on Education for Public Health (CEPH) from December 8 – 10, 2014. CEPH will accept third-party comments about the school’s programs, practices, and procedures up to 30 days prior to the scheduled site visit. The deadline for submitting comments to CEPH is November 8, 2014. Comments will be accepted by email sent to: Kristen Varol, Accreditation Specialist (kvarol@ceph.org) or by postal mail sent to her attention at: Council on Education for Public Health, 1010 Wayne Avenue, Suite 220, Silver Spring MD, 20910.

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3 BR, 1209 N. Grant. Near Stadium, avail. Jan., 2015. $1050 for 3; $750 for 2. C/A D/W, on-site laundry. Costley & Co. Rental Management. 812-330-7509

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reviews

weekend PAGE 12 | SEPT. 11, 2014

ADVANCE REVIEW

‘Utopia’ far from perfect “Utopia� review D+

PHOTO COURTESY OF FOX BROADCASTING COMPANY

Fox pilot shows potential “Red Band Society� review C Even before I watched the “Red Band Society� pilot, I kind of hated it. It seemed like such a blatantly obvious and tasteless ripoff of “The Fault in Our Stars� that it kind of made me sick. Some Fox executive must have thought, “Wow, the people really seem to love stories about teenagers with cancer being philosophical. Let’s do it while it’s still popular. Let’s also a cast a lead guy who looks the exact same.� I watched it. And it’s true, actor Nolan Sotillo looks a lot like Ansel Elgort in “The Fault in Our Stars.� And it is about a bunch of teenagers with ailments

being philosophical. But it’s not the worst thing ever. In “Red Band Society,� a group of teenagers live in a hospital (Fox, what?) because they have terminal illnesses and need pretty constant care. They also go to school at the hospital (again, Fox, what?) so they’re a pretty tight-knit group. In the pilot, which is narrated by Charlie, a boy in a coma who is played by Griffin Gluck, Jordi, played by Sotillo, is preparing to get his leg amputated. There are other teens in Jordi’s group, as well. There’s Leo, played by Charlie Rowe, who has also had his leg amputated, and Emma, played by Ciara Bravo, has an eating disorder and used to be in a relationship with Leo, among others. There was a lot to look past before I could start liking “Red Band Society.� Among other things, there’s the corny network

“dramedy� dialogue and the fact that I don’t think the writers at Fox quite know how a hospital works. Once I got past those, though, I didn’t mind the show. Octavia Spencer is pretty great as Nurse Jackson and, despite all of the show’s terrible writing, I was compelled the entire episode. I wanted to see what would happen next with every character. That’s not an easy feat. It’s always hard to judge pilots because they can’t be graded like movies. You’re supposed to be able to see the show through its pilot. Strictly going off of potential, the pilot for “Red Band Society� was OK. The show’s going to go somewhere, and it’s going to get plenty of viewers. It’s got quite a bit of polishing to do first, though. Ike Hajinazarian

As a young, sexually confused preteen, I would watch “The Real World� on MTV mainly because it had at least one hot guy every season, who often went shirtless, and I got to see that hot guy get into sexual escapades with other members of the house. It was exciting stuff. The show was pretty bad, but at least it had that going for it, along with drama played out by drunk 20-somethings. Fox decided to go for the same general idea but throw in some “Hunger Games,� “Survivor� and a dash of “Naked and Afraid.� The premise of “Utopia�

is that 14 strangers are left a piece of land with very limited resources, and we watch through “hidden cameras� what they choose to do within this lawless, uncivilized paradise. The strangers have to choose what to do (or not do) with a limited amount of money. We also have the group performing maintenance, field work and general survival-esque stuff. On paper, it’s really not a horrible concept. But Fox overproduced it so much that it’s no longer fun to watch. There’s a girl that looks quite a bit like Jennifer Lawrence’s Katniss Everdeen, even using a bow and arrow. There’s a scene in which the “pioneers� are sitting at a table being told of their task via hologram. A hologram on the table.

I’m sorry, is this “Star Trek� now? Conflicts feel cheap and forced. The main conflict of the pilot revolves around one of the guys getting way too drunk the first night and sexually harassing a girl. The other contestants then have to decide, as a sort of jury, whether or not they’re comfortable with him staying. Not very interesting and very contrived. None of the characters in the game are really very compelling. I didn’t really care about any of them. Perhaps if Fox hadn’t picked stock, stereotypical weirdos, like the pastor who talks exclusively about the Bible, I’d be more interested. A swing and a miss, Fox. Ike Hajinazarian

Generic story, acted terribly “The Identical� F If I kept a list of life regrets, watching this movie would be up there right under the time I ate at White Castle. Blake Rayne stars in “The Identical� as Ryan Wade, a preacher’s son who doesn’t quite fit into the Bible mold. Since he was kid, Ryan has had a gift for music, a gift that grows into his passion as he gets older. But Ryan’s father, Reece Wade, has other plans. Reece wants his son to follow his footsteps into the ministry. As Ryan struggles to make his father happy, another man is living out Ryan’s dream as a budding rock star. The man is none other than Ryan’s longlost twin brother, Drexel Hemsley.

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Go ahead, and get your eye rolls and groans out of the way, because it only gets worse from here. The boys’ parents, William and Helen Hemsley, were a young couple starting out during the Great Depression. Though times were hard, they were happily expecting their first born. Then the stork blindsided them with a two-for-one sale. Knowing they couldn’t raise two children, the Hemsleys decided to give one of their boys to the Wades. From there, it is a frustrating journey as Ryan sets out to discover who he truly is. There is an irritating lack of common sense in this film. The movie is mostly set in the 1950s and 1960s. As a rock star, Drexel Hemsley performs on television, his picture is on album covers and he’s in movies. Yet, every time someone

Âť TELEVISION

sees Ryan all we get is a slightly stunned, “Oh my gosh, you look just like him.� As identical twins who both look and sound exactly the same, it is not possible that at least one person in that era didn’t put the dots together, especially Ryan himself. Another annoying aspect is that the look and sound of the characters Ryan Wade and Drexel Hemsley are obviously based off of Elvis Presley, who would have been rising to fame at the same time but is only mentioned once. What’s more, the actor Blake Rayne actually lived as an Elvis impersonator, making his life eerily similar to that of his character’s. The acting is awful. The story is horrible. The wardrobe could result in projectile vomiting. Just don’t, guys. Don’t. Lexia Banks

“SHARK TANK� Friday, Sept. 26, on ABC Now here’s a reality show in which it’s easy to become invested. ABC’s “Shark Tank,� which pits up-and-coming inventors against majorly wealthy potential investors (including IU alumnus Mark Cuban!), is back this year. More of the same would be absolutely fine, thanks.

“A TO Z� Thursday, Oct. 2, on NBC It’s easy to pass “A to Z� off as a “How I Met Your Mother� ripoff. Oh, classic... telling the story of the whole relationship — “a to z.� It even features Cristin Milioti as the lead — the titular “mother!� But this show looks like so much more. Also featuring the incredibly likable Ben Feldman, this show looks like it’s got potential. At least potential to be better than “How I Met Your Mother.�

“THE WALKING DEAD� Sunday, Oct. 12, on AMC Groan. Another season of this show? I’m in the minority here, I know, but this show deserves none of the hype it’s gotten over the past few years. Either way, the millions of viewers that obsess over this zombie-apocalyptic soap opera are excited.

“MADAM SECRETARY� Sunday, Sept. 21, on CBS Oh yeah. We all love a good political drama, right? CBS has jumped on the bandwagon and is bringing its own player to the arena with “Madam Secretary,� a show featuring a female secretary of state. Morgan Freeman is producing it, so really, how bad can it be?

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 7

“NEW GIRL� RL� RL Tuesday, Sept. 16, on FOX The fourth urth season of “New Girl,l,� set to air this month, will bring more of the love-her-or-hateve-her-or-hateher Zooey ey Deschanel, along with th her trio of male friends. nds. Having never won on a Primetime Emmy, it’ss probably not worth h getting your hopes up p too high, though.

REGISTER ONLINE! Sign up now through September 22 at recsports.indiana.edu

NO TEAM? NO PROBLEM!

Register yourself or with a friend and we’ll ďŹ nd a team for you!

MCT CAMPUS


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