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INDIANA DAILY STUDENT | IDSNEWS.COM
Trustees approve Read changes By Ashleigh Sherman
ALISON GRAHAM | IDS
COURTESY PHOTO
aesherma@indiana.edu | @aesherma
The IU Board of Trustees approved more than $32 million in renovations during its first meeting of the academic year. The Board of Trustees, IU’s governing body, met Thursday and Friday at IU-Purdue University Indianapolis. The University Relations Committee and the Academic Affairs and University Policies Committee convened Thursday, while the Finance, Audit and Strategic Planning Committee and the Facilities and Auxiliaries Committee convened Friday. On Friday, during the Facilities and Auxiliaries Committee meeting, the trustees approved the second phase of renovations to Read Hall and the School of Public and Environmental Affairs. Read Hall will receive new accessible student rooms, said Tom Morrison, IU vice president of capital planning and facilities. Both new and existing rooms will receive new closet and storage layouts and new fire protection systems, as well as air conditioning systems. “Which I’m sure students will be excited about,” Morrison said. In addition, restrooms will be updated, elevators replaced and a new roof and new exterior windows will be installed, Morrison said. Morrison said the renovations are expected to begin this upcoming summer, lasting approximately two years, and are estimated to cost $20 million. The School of Public and Environmental Affairs will receive a 30,000 square foot addition to the southern edge, Morrison said, putting the southern edge of the SPEA roughly even with the southern edge of the new Hodge Hall. The addition will house new graduate classrooms, Morrison said. Morrison said the renovations are also expected to begin this upcoming summer, lasting 12 to 14 months, and are estimated to cost $12 million. The trustees also approved the sale of Chi Phi’s real estate, as Chi Phi has agreed to sell their real estate, 1400 North Jordan Avenue, to Phi Sigma Kappa.
IKE HAJINAZIARN | IDS
Top left The Ernie Pyle sculpture placed in front of Franklin Hall was sculpted based on this archival image of Pyle on his typewriter. Top right Langland’s Ernie Pyle scultpure started as a small clay mold, which he resized in foam. Afterwards, he was able to create the cast for the full-size sculpture. Bottom Sculptor Tuck Langland sits Thursday with the sculpture of Ernie Pyle he created for the Media School.
Sculpting a legend Ernie Pyle sculptor, Langland, creates works in home studio By Alison Graham akgraham@indiana.edu | @AlisonGraham218
He creates everything in a small, white shed in a large South Bend backyard. He’s surrounded by years of his work, more than 300 models of sculptures that are placed around the country, some that he completed many years ago. Herman B Wells sits atop a shelf above the door to the second room. His smile still the same and his hand outstretched. Tuck Langland creates bronze sculptures ranging from two to 11 feet tall in a garage turned into a
three-room studio. It was here that he created the newest sculptural addition to the IU campus, Ernie Pyle, placed outside Franklin Hall, the soonto-be-official home for the Media School. * * * Langland started sculpting in college. Before college, he attended a boys military prep school in St. Paul, Minn., where he received no art training or education. “Our headmaster said he didn’t believe in fads and frills
like the arts,” Langland said. “I finished four years, never heard the word Rembrandt, anything like that. It was a completely closed world to me.” He attended the University of Minnesota and, during the first quarter, took a woman on a date to the Minneapolis Art Institute. She knew all about the art, and he asked her how she knew so much. She said that she had taken an art appreciation course. The following quarter, Langland signed up for art appreciation. “It was like a big door
Sculpture to be formally dedicated Friday Read more about the inauguration of the Media School and sculpture dedication, page 6 opening,” he said. “It was like a different world. I didn’t know that stuff was out there.” In his sophomore year, he took drawing and design courses. In the first quarter of his junior year, he signed up for a sculpting class. “I walked out the first day saySEE LANGLAND, PAGE 6
SEE TRUSTEES, PAGE 3
MEN’S SOCCER
ELECTIONS 2014
No. 10 Hoosiers claim Funding gap separates candidates 3rd straight victory By Emily Ernsberger
emelerns@indiana.edu | @emilyernsberger
By Andrew Vailliencourt availlie@indiana.edu | @AndrewVcourt
With 1:07 left to play in regulation, IU sophomore goalie Colin Webb faced his second penalty kick of the game. Up by a goal, he needed a save to preserve victory. Ohio State midfielder Kyle Culbertson took aim and fired the ball toward the near post. Webb dove and made the save, giving the No. 10 Hoosiers a 2-1 win over the Buckeyes in Columbus — IU’s third straight win. “Honestly I walked away looking down to the ground when the shot was taken, so I didn’t see the save,” IU Coach Todd Yeagley said. “But by the reaction from the bench, I know Colin measured up
really well. Big play by Colin, he’s been really good for us this year. We needed him today to make a play to help us get the win.” Webb knew he had to make the stop and made sure his teammates could celebrate when the game was over. “It was definitely a big time result for the guys,” Webb said. “The guys put in a great effort and I wanted to make sure they were rewarded for the hard work they put in.” IU (8-1-3, 2-1-1) got its first goal in the 49th minute on junior midfielder Femi Hollinger-Janzen’s third goal of the season after a cross into the box by junior forward Andrew Oliver.
Many seats across every level of government are up for next month’s midterm election, including all 435 U.S. House of Representative candidates, many U.S. Senate seats and various state-wide and local positions. Politico has projected that all incumbent candidates for the U.S House of Representatives seats in Indiana are likely to win. One indication of this victory might be from the size of campaign funds compared to challengers. This election, incumbents for representative seats in Indiana have, on average, 126,538 times the funds their challengers do, based on numbers from the Federal Elections
SEE SOCCER, PAGE 6
SEE FUNDING, PAGE 6
COMPARING CAMPAIGNS According to information reported by candidates to the Indiana Secretary of State’s office in July, here is how campaign funding for state-wide races adds up. Republican
Libertarian
Secretary of State $524,552.51
Connie Lawson Beth White $195,364.55 Karl Tatgenhorst $615 Auditor of State Suzanne Crouch Michael Claytor John Schick $0 Treasurer of State Kelly Mitchell
$336,372 $57,266
$57,983.65
Mike Boland $292.62 Mike Jasper $0
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CAMPUS EDITORS: ANNA HYZY & KATHRINE SCHULZE | CAMPUS@IDSNEWS.COM
4 IU alumni to receive service award Four IU alumni will receive the Distinguished Alumni Service Award during Homecoming weekend. IU President Michael McRobbie will present the alumni with their awards at a ceremony on Oct. 17.
Recipients were chosen based on their service, success and contribution to their fields. After honoring these recipients, IU will have honored 321 alumni since the award’s inception in 1953.
Program brings 14 women from South Sudan to IU By Kathrine Schulze schulzek@indiana.edu | @kas_schulze
WENSI WANG | IDS
A HEALTHY IU Students attended the IU Health Fair last Thursday in Alumni Hall at the Indiana Memorial Union. The fair included a Taste and Tell event that allowed students to sample the healthier options that will soon be filling IU’s vending machines as well as hearing and vision tests, massage and aromatherapy, strengthening exercises and flu shots.
AEPi supports Emory chapter By Lindsay Moore liramoor@indiana.edu @_LindsayMoore
Anti-Semitic graffiti was found on the walls of an Alpha Epsilon Pi chapter house at Emory University last Sunday. In response, IU’s AEPi chapter reached out to the Emory chapter to show its support and raise awareness. The house was defaced with spray painted swastikas after the Jewish holiday, Yom Kippur. The AEPi Beta Iota chapter at IU posted a photo Thursday of members hold-
ing a “We stand with AEPi Emory” sign with the caption “We will stand with our brothers at Emory University and fight against any forms of Anti-Semitism.” “It is frightening to see that anti-Semitism still exists today on college campuses,” AEPi president Mitch Cooper said. “A lot of brothers were really shocked, but they also wanted to show our members at Emory some support.” There has been a global outpouring of support for the AEPi chapter, Director of Public Relations for AEPi headquarters Jonathan
Pierce said. AEPi brothers all over the United States, as well as Canada and Europe, have sent messages to the Emory chapter. “The response from chapters all over the world has been one of the most heartwarming things I’ve ever seen at my time here,” Pierce said. This type of hate crime, Pierce added, is becoming more prevalent on college campuses. This semester alone, AEPi brothers have reported at least six instances hate crime-related activity in the form of violence,
intimidation or vandalism, Pierce said. This anti-Semitism is speculated to stem from anti-Israel opinions and protests, Pierce said. “Anti-Semitism and antiIsrael attitudes have grown among college campuses dramatically over the last several years,” Pierce said. “I think it’s really important that brothers and other members of the Jewish community are stepping up and showing their support.” Although no hate crimes have been reported on IU’s campus, Jewish students SEE EMORY, PAGE 3
Archive named after faculty member From IDS reports
The Glenn Black Laboratory of Archeology is creating new archives to be named after an IU faculty member. Erminie Wheeler-Voegelin, the namesake of the archives, was a pioneer in her field of ethnohistory and founded the American Society for Ethnohistory in 1954, according to an IU release. Wheeler-Voegelin was also the first woman to receive a doctorate in anthropology from Yale University. She taught anthropology, history and folklore at IU from 1943 to 1969. She became editor of the
American Society for Enthnohistory journal, Ethnohistory, in 1954 and served in her role until 1964, according to the release. The archives will be a collection of documents, scholarly papers and other materials that encompass roughly 350 years of history of American Indians in the Midwest. It was announced that the archives would be named after Wheeler-Voegelin at the American Society of Ethnohistory’s annual meeting that concluded Oct. 12 in Indianapolis, which was cohosted by IU, according to the release. April Sievert is the director
of the Glenn Black Laboratory and senior lecturer in the Department of Anthropology in the College of Arts and Sciences. “We are pleased to recognize the remarkable contributions of Erminie WheelerVoegelin, who effectively established the field of ethnohistory 60 years ago at Indiana University,” Slievert said in the release. “The Great Lakes and Ohio Valley Ethnohistory Collection is an astonishing compilation that links historic and legal documents. We are working to improve access with electronic finding aids and a digitization initiative to make it easier for scholars and the
public to use the materials.” The Great Lakes and Ohio Valley Ethnohistory Collection is the centerpiece of the archives. The collection comprises materials collected by Wheeler-Voegelin and her colleagues in the 1950s, according to the University. The collection was compiled to provide evidence for land claims lawsuits in the Indian Claims Commission and cover both the history and land use of American Indian tribes in the region from 1613 to the late 1900s. The archives are housed in the James Kellar Library of the Glenn Black Laboratory. Kathrine Schulze
Maurer School of Law recruiting top Vassar students From IDS reports
The IU Maurer School of Law has formed a memorandum of understanding with Vassar College that will offer scholarships and mentoring to Vassar undergraduates interested in pursuing a law degree. Through this program, at least two Vassar Law Scholars admitted to the Maurer School of Law will receive a scholarship that awards about 50 percent of annual tuition, according to
an IU release. Depending on the students residency and other factors, the tuition over three years will be reduced by $45,000 to $75,000. “Vassar is an exceptional institution and a pioneer for liberal arts education in the United States,” said Austin Parrish, dean of the law school and James H. Rudy Professor of Law in the release. “Its students are among some of the most talented in the nation, and the great majority of them plan
to pursue advanced study.” Vassar College will be responsible for nominating at least two students or alumni for admission to the Maurer School of Law each year, according to the University. Vassar is consistently ranked among the top liberal arts colleges in the nation and is highly selective. Apart from the nomination, the Maurer School of Law will also consider a student’s academic performance, letters of recommendation, past experience
and desire to attend the law school will also be considered. The law school also has scholarship programs with Georgia Institute of Technology, Grinnell College, Knox College and Princeton University. At 5:15 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 15, in Rocky 200, the law school will host a workshop on law school applications that will include information on the Vassar Law Scholars program. Anna Hyzy
The day before applications were due for an IU master’s degree program for South Sudanese women, violence broke out in South Sudan. Opposing units of the Presidential Guard traded fire on Dec. 15, according to Amnesty International. Juba, the capital of South Sudan, became the epicenter of a conflict that resonated throughout the country’s 10 states. The next day, applications for the education program, funded by the United States Agency for International Development, were due. “That was sadly coincidental,” said Arlene Benitez, director of international outreach and development at IU. The program, South Sudan Higher Education Initiative for Equity and Leadership Development, was designed to take place in South Sudan in order to increase the number of educated women in the country. The master’s program was only one side of the program. It was only for women in education who already had undergraduate degrees. South Sudan is the world’s youngest country and also one of the least educated with a literacy rate of 27 percent overall and, as of 2009, 16 percent for women, according to the Central Intelligence Agency’s World Fact Book. Not many girls make it to primary school, and far fewer go to university, Benitez said. “In the field of education, there aren’t too many teachers and especially qualified female teachers,” she said. When the conflict broke out, Benitez, along with professor of curriculum and instruction Terry Mason, waited to see what would unfold. “We had a couple of weeks where we were hoping the situation would come down,” Benitez said. “And as we saw that it was escalating, we realized this was going to be a much bigger crisis and that there was probably no way we were going to be able to do what we had planned.” As USAID shifted its efforts from education to providing humanitarian aid, Benitez and her colleagues had to make a choice: abandon the program in its entirety, or take it apart and redesign it to take place in the U.S. They chose to redesign the program. Using the funds from USAID through Higher Education for Development, Benitez and her colleagues were able to bring 14 South Sudanese women to IU in order to earn master’s degrees from the School of Education. Out of the 63 applicants for the original program, 25 semifinalists were chosen. The program had already been redesigned to take place in the U.S. by the time the semi-finalists were chosen. Five of those semi-finalists were not interviewed either because they could not be reached due to the conflict, or they decided they couldn’t travel to the U.S. Twenty went to Kampala, Uganda, to be interviewed by a panel of IU faculty and USAID workers for two days. One of those 20 semi-
finalists was Drania Abula, a teacher trainer for Windle Trust International. Windle Trust is a UK-based charity with offices in South Sudan that provide access to both education and education training in several countries throughout Africa, according to its website. Abula applied for the program because out of more than 200 tutors Windle Trust employs, her program director, Masua David, encouraged only her to apply. And, following the two days of interviews, Abula was told she was one of the 14 women accepted into the program. “He was the happiest,” Abula said of her director. “He was very proud.” The program that was once going to send IU faculty to South Sudan for intensive, short programs now brought the South Sudanese women to IU. When Abula left South Sudan, she said that while things had begun to calm down in the nation’s capital, the other nine states of South Sudan were in turmoil. “When we were leaving South Sudan, people were having hope that things would calm down,” she said. But before they could settle down in their on-campus apartments for the year, the women spent five weeks this past summer back in Kampala for some intensive English training. They also took basic education courses to prepare them for IU. They arrived just in time for orientation, Abula said. “They are dealing with the same things that any graduate student deals with,” Benitez said. The classes they’re taking touch on issues and topics specific to South Sudan. These women are learning how to continue educating a population in the midst of a war. They are learning the tools and skills they’ll need to deal with the current conflict and its effect on the country, Benitez said. “The coursework that the women are taking are specifically designed with them in mind,” she said. Wile the classes are exclusively for the women in the program, these women will have the option to take an elective with other IU students during the spring semester. “When we started classes, it was not easy,” Abula said, because people are taught differently in South Sudan than they are in the US. The size of the books were intimidating, and they had to be taught how to read critically, Abula said. What takes Americans one hour to read, she said, it takes her three. But, Abula wasn’t discouraged. She learned how to manage her time to focus solely on studying when she had to and still carve out personal time. Now, she said, it’s much easier, and she can apply what she’s learning to several classes. Abula is taking advantage SEE SUDAN, PAGE 3
Michael Majchrowicz Editor-in-Chief Evan Hoopfer, Rebecca Kimberly Managing Editors
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Q&A with Fulbright teacher Fiona Jeffries By Alexis Daily aledaily@indiana.edu | @Alex_Daily1
Eleven teachers from five countries are at IU for the fall 2014 semester as part of the Fulbright Distinguished Awards in Teaching Program. Sponsored by the Bureau of Education and Cultural Affairs within the U.S. Department of State, the program recognizes and encourages excellence in teaching in the United States and abroad. It is part of the overall Fulbright Program, which promotes mutual understanding among people of the U.S. and other countries. The Global Teacher Programs Division of the Institute of International Education awarded $224,036 to the Center for International Education, Development and Research at the IU School of Education its first time running the program. The Fulbright grant awarded to IU was the only one given in the U.S. this year. Fiona Jeffries, an English teacher from Kapiti Coast, Wellington, New Zealand, has been teaching for 24 years. Currently, she teaches at Paraparaumu College. IDS How has your experience been as a Fulbright Distinguished Teacher? Jeffries I feel incredibly privileged and honored to be on the Fulbright Distinguished Teacher Program. Through this program, I got to experience Washington, D.C., and visit many of the Smithsonian museums and monuments. I felt like I had arrived on the set of “House of Cards.” The Fulbright Program gave me a chance to meet many U.S. Fulbright teachers in D.C., and it was a great opportunity
» EMORY
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2 have been confronted with verbal Anti-Semitism. This is often because students tend to blur the lines between Anti-Israel remarks and attacks on Judaism as a whole, Greek Jewish Council president and AEPi brother Michael Bruell said. “There’s a difference between being critical of Israel and hatred of Jews all over the world,” Bruell said. The most effective way students combat this lack of knowledge is informing their peers directly that their words and actions have stronger consequences
for me to share ideas with those teachers going to New Zealand and to learn about the U.S. education system. Bloomington is such a great place to be, and Indiana University has made all of us feel so welcome. Dr. Patty Kubow and her team from the Center for International Education, Development and Research have made our integration process into the U.S. so smooth, even down to taking us to Target to get our apartments set up. How many professors would do that? I am really enjoying the two classes I am auditing at IU, one on content area literacy and the other on critical thinking, creativity and collaboration. Although I have been teaching for a long time, there is always a lot to learn or to re-confirm. I also enjoy the seminars we have each Friday with Dr. Keith Barton and Hope Rias where we learn about the U.S. and the development of education in the U.S. It is also great getting into local schools. I am based at Bloomington High School North but have made visits to Bloomington Graduation School and University Elementary. The teachers have been so generous in their welcome and with their time. The great thing about this program is getting a global perspective. We all live in our insular little worlds, and it is great to be part of something bigger and learning about what education is like in other places. I am also learning from my Finnish, Indian, Singaporean and Moroccan colleagues. Not only am I learning about education in their countries, I am learning to adapt to
different cultures. In fact, I have gained a new family by living in an apartment with an Indian and a Moroccan teacher. Obviously we are culturally different. We also eat different foods, but we have come to regard each other as family. We even take it global when we drink tea. Each afternoon we either have black English tea, Moroccan mint tea or Indian Chai spicy tea. It changes daily.
than they may realize, Bruell said. “People should definitely know the implications of their actions,” Bruell said. “We don’t know who did it, and we don’t know if they were trying to be very malicious or if they were just joking but a lot of people take that kind of thing very seriously.” The investigation at Emory is still ongoing and is now being handled by the FBI, Pierce said. AEPi’s first priority when pushing back against AntiSemitism and hate is the safety of its brothers. AEPi headquarters also encourages brothers not to
be intimidated by acts of anti-Semitism, Pierce said. “(We encourage them to be) proud to be Jewish, proud to be openly and publicly Jewish and not be intimidated of being openly and publicly pro-Israel,” Pierce said. At this point, none of IU’s traditionally Jewish fraternities or sororities have reported being targeted by Anti-Semitics. “At Indiana’s campus our fraternity feels safe and hopefully nothing like that would happen to us,” Cooper said. “But just the fact that our AEPi organization was targeted like this, it just brings it close to home.”
IDS How does living in Indiana differ from New Zealand? Jeffries Living here in Bloomington is quite different from my home because there is no sea. I went to Lake Lemon several weekends ago, and it was the largest body of water I had seen in two months. That is one thing I miss. It gave me a nostalgic feeling for home. Every morning in New Zealand, I would walk with my husband and my dog on the beach. On warm evenings after work, we would go and swim in the sea. Living on the Kapiti Coast, and New Zealand being an island nation, you are never far from the sea. I asked some students in Bloomington if they had been to the sea, and many had not. Indiana has many things that do remind me of New Zealand, however. Wide open spaces, lots of greenery, small back country roads ... and people say “Thank you” to the driver when they get off the bus. We are known for that in Wellington, and it is nice to know it happens here, too.
Continued online Read the full interview with Fulbright teacher Fiona Jeffries on idsnews.com.
OU Y CAN
TIANTIAN ZHANG | IDS
IUDM GALA LARGER THAN EVER Attendees of IU Dance Marathon Fundraising gala look at auction items before the event begins. More than $40,000 were raised in the auction. The IUDM quilt went for the largest amount, $5,000.
» TRUSTEES
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
On Thursday, during the University Relations Committee meeting, the trustees approved the IU Non-Discrimination/Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Policy. “The trustees strongly reaffirmed their commitment to prohibit all forms of discrimination,” said Jacqueline Simmons, IU vice president and general counsel. The policy prohibits discrimination on the basis of age, disability, ethnicity, gender identity, marital status, national origin, race, religion, sex, sexual orientation or veteran status, Simmons said. The policy applies to the hiring and promotion of all IU employees, including administrators, faculty, staff and temporary employees, and the recruitment and admittance of all IU students, Simmons said. Though the policy has been in effect since 1969, the trustees approved an updated version of the policy, which includes a reference to Title IX. “Title IX prohibits sexual harassment or discrimination on the basis of gender or sex in any educational institution that receives government funding,” Simmons said. “Title IX is such a big issue right now.” During the Academic Affairs and University Policies
» SUDAN
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2 of her time at IU, choosing to live with two American roommates as well as another program member from South Sudan. She said that if she is in
America, she wanted to learn something new about the people who lived there. “Every week, if we want, we sit and have dinner,” she said. “It’s fun.” While Abula is enjoying her time at IU, she hopes to return to her job at Windle
Trust when she returns to South Sudan in June. She said she loves teaching and wants to help the people of South Sudan. “I am doing my research on conflict mitigation,” she said. “I feel that there is something else to be done.”
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University unit and a letter of support from the head of that unit before sending a detailed proposal to be approved by the Office of the Vice President and General Counsel, the Office of the Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, the Office of the President and the Board of Trustees, Simmons said. “We needed to make sure that (the organizations) were all going through the same decision-making process to decide whether they were legitimate or not,” Simmons said. The trustees also approved a new degree for IU-South Bend: a master of science in education in educational leadership. During the Finance, Audit and Strategic Planning Committee meeting, the trustees approved two resolutions. The resolutions delegated authority from the Board of Trustees to the Finance, Audit and Strategic Planning Committee to approve the issuance of tax exempt or taxable debt, including the issuance of tax exempt or taxable bonds. The debt will be used to pay for renovations to Franklin Hall and Assembly Hall at IU-Bloomington, the Arts and Sciences Building at IUNorthwest and student housing at IU-Purdue University Indianapolis, said Donald Lukes, assistant treasurer to the Board of Trustees.
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Committee meeting, the trustees approved the new University-Related Legal Entities Policy. The policy lays out a framework for establishing and monitoring Universityrelated legal entities, entities not legally considered to be affiliated with the University but commonly viewed to be affiliated with the University, Simmons said. “We have a number of entities around the university that people think of as being Indiana University,” Simmons said. “And so, because of their name or because of their relationship to the University, they may have been started by a professor or an employee or a student at Indiana University, people think of them as being Indiana University.” Simmons said that, as the number of requests for University-related legal entities has grown throughout the past year, the University’s concern about liability for these University-related legal entities has also grown. The policy defines a university-related legal entity as any organization with a legal existence separate from the University that is, nevertheless, likely to be viewed as part of the University or likely to viewed as affiliated with the University, Simmons said. Those organizations that meet this definition must receive sponsorship from a
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OPINION
EDITORS: LEXIA BANKS & EMMA WENNINGER | OPINION@IDSNEWS.COM
QUE SARAH SARAH
Waka Flocka needs to check his bags Waka Flocka Flame was arrested Friday in an Atlanta airport. Officers found a handgun in the rapper’s bag, and he did not have a permit. His wife, Tammy Rivera, told RumerFix
that the gun was hers. She said she had hid the gun in the bag from her child and her husband grabbed the bag by accident. Waka Flocka was released on bail from the county jail after two hours of detainment.
IDS EDITORIAL BOARD
ALL RILED UP
Not all gone girls
Not on my turf
JORDAN RILEY is a sophomore in comparative literature.
SARAH KISSEL is a sophomore in English literature.
HuffPost Women blogger Carol Bysiek published an open letter to the NFL on Thursday. The letter, entitled “To the NFL: Not on My Turf” described Bysiek’s disgust and frustration at the NFL’s profuse displays of pink during October games in honor of Breast Cancer Awareness month. A breast cancer survivor herself, and an avid football fan, Bysiek lamented the emptiness of the think-pink gesture. She wondered how we can be expected to applaud the league for this display of support for women when shocking evidence to the contrary has so recently come to light. I had the same reaction. Turning on the television and seeing the NFL logo emblazoned proudly over a pink breast cancer awareness ribbon felt like a pageant, full of cheap bravado, motivated by desperation to return to the good graces of women across the nation. I’m glad the NFL wants to raise awareness about breast cancer, but how can a woman expect to fight off a deadly disease if she’s also fighting off her husband or partner? The double standard is nothing short of exhausting, frustrating and disheartening. Just when it seems the domestic violence scandals have started to effect real change, our screens are dripping pink reminders that the NFL cares about women. Or, at least, its female viewers. It was in this antagonistic spirit that I began to do research, fully intending to find further evidence to support a vehement disapprobation of the league. Imagine my surprise when I uncovered the story that no one seems to be telling: the NFL is actually far less violent than the rest of the nation. In fact, a study published in July by FiveThirtyEight’s DataLab shows that members of the NFL fall far behind the national average, not only for domestic violence, but in every single one of the 13 assessed categories. This means we need to shine our light of scrutiny outward. Don’t get me wrong. There are many other reasons to criticize the NFL. Everything about football endorses the ancient gender construct that men are physically superior champions of athletic prowess and women are pretty entertainment on the sidelines only worth noting when the guys aren’t doing anything on the turf. But, as per usual, the truth resists simplicity. It is not just the NFL that has a major domestic violence problem — it’s the whole country. Rather than choosing celebrities as scapegoats, we must recognize that the issue is, literally, at home. The tough truth is the chance the guy on your block is abusing his family is higher than the chance Ray Rice was. While the NFL attends to the skeletons in its closet — and it had better attend to them quickly if they’d like me to start appreciating those pink socks again — we need to start conversations with our children, family and friends about violence that occurs between genders and within the home because, yes, it’s happening on our turf, too. sbkissel@indiana.edu
ILLUSTRATION BY STEPHANIE NIU | IDS
Almost there WE SAY: It’s time for a country-wide decision The legal status of same-sex marriage in Indiana has been a roller coaster throughout the past few months. But it looks like we could finally be getting off the ride. In June, U.S. District Court Judge Richard Young ruled against Indiana’s same-sex marriage ban. After the decision, same-sex marriages in Indiana were legal, and for two days those in the land of cornfields lived together in harmony. Then, everything changed when the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals attacked. They swept in and issued a stay. A stay, for those of us who don’t usually give a flying twig about court cases or their terminology, is a device used by the court to suspend the legal proceedings of a case.
Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller then petitioned Indiana’s case to the Supreme Court in September. Indiana wasn’t the only case waiting to be heard by the Supreme Court. Virginia, Wisconsin, Oklahoma and Utah were also making themselves comfortable in the waiting room when, on Oct. 6, the Supreme Court denied all six cases. In one fell swoop, the number of states where gay marriage was legal jumped from 19 to 24. And then the decision continued to branch out. North Carolina, South Carolina, West Virginia, Colorado, Kansas and Wyoming were also affected by the decision. These six states are located in the same judicial circuit as the five states whose cases were denied by the Supreme
Court. Their lower courts must abide by the rulings of their appeals courts, thereby legalizing gay marriage in those states, as well. The Supreme Court lifted a hold on gay marriage in Idaho on Oct. 10. The ruling will also affect Arizona, Montana and Alaska. More than half the country has either legalized, or is in the process of legalizing, same-sex marriage. You could practically drown in all the human rights. The Indiana Daily Student Editorial Board has long upheld the opinion that anyone and everyone has the right to marry the person he or she loves. However, we also recognize it might be a bit alarming that the Supreme Court refused to, you know, do its job. And we find it a bit confusing why
the court would make a decision that will eventually result in the legalization of gay marriage in 15 states instead of just legalizing it federally. It could just be a matter of timing. The Supreme Court likes to arrive fashionably late. The court waited until 1967 to strike down interracial marriage bans. It held its decision until 34 states began to allow such unions, then finally made such bans illegal, according to the New York Times. If the court is really waiting for the right time to strike federally, well, there’s no time like the present. The court has its 34 states as of now. People have waited too long for this game to continue. It’s time that people in all 50 states have the right to marry whomever they want, regardless of gender.
MICHAEL’S MARGIN
Playing to win Everyone has the naturalborn right to a healthy body and mind. Unfortunately, sports culture has reached such a fever pitch in this country that it has begun to hurt these prospects. President Obama’s Council on Fitness, Sports and Nutrition asserts that the average child will spend seven-and-ahalf hours a day in front of a screen, be it a television, computer or something else. This is excessive, considering how celebratory sports events are in this country. But when you overlook the celebrity aspect of an athlete, kids see what playing sports truly means: being active and healthy is great, but being a winner is best. Pediatric and adolescent sports-medicine specialist Dr. Paul Stricker found that child
athletes today suffer from injuries related to overuse and acute trauma. In the past, these types of injuries have only been seen in adults. Parents and a cultural expectation are to blame for this trend. If winning sports is the most important aspect of participation, then not only will more children be deterred from participating, but kids taught to play for fun will also be ostracized. I’m not arguing that sports are a bad thing. I’m saying the precedent set is that winning is what counts. The best-case scenario may be for a culture to prioritize actively engaging in a sport. The worst-case scenario may be for a culture to prioritize the tacit endorsement of a sport.
Take Alabama, for example, a state saturated in football. Auburn University is currently ranked No. 6 in the AP poll, while the University of Alabama is ranked No. 7. While you could consider Alabama a top football state, it ranks nearly last in just about everything else, particularly its standard of living, according to Measure of America. Measure of America 201314 includes a human development index, which is based mostly on census data, and incorporates life expectancy at birth, access to knowledge and standard of living. Alabama sits at 47th with an HDI of 4.04, compared to the national average of 5.03. Indiana ranked 39th with an HDI of 4.56. Sure, more pro athletes could encourage kids to get
MICHAEL HOMAN is a senior in journalism.
outside instead of playing the video games that directly endorse them. And sure, these athletes and their owners could make significantly less money and still live comfortably, but they deserve it, right? Athleticism is something to be proud of, as is navigating the sportsmanship field with maturity and vigor. But when celebrating sports becomes deleterious to other dimensions of your life, your priorities should be reconsidered. michoman@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.
If you have yet to see David Fincher’s new movie “Gone Girl,” or have read the book by Gillian Flynn, you need to stop reading this column and go do that instead. It is the most talkedabout movie of the season and deservedly so. The most divisive topic springing out of this examination of modern-day marriage is the psychopathic Gone Girl herself, Amy Dunne. After discovering that her husband cheated, Amy fakes her own death in order to frame her husband for murder. This is just one of the many terrifyingly ruthless things she does that showcases her as obsessive, manipulative and narcissistic. Many female watchers of the movie have found issue with this portrayal of a betrayed woman. Some feel this character falls into and validates the misogynistic stereotype of the crazy femme fatal. The author, Gillian Flynn, has dealt with these comments since the book came out in 2012. In an interview with the Guardian in 2013, she responded with a defense of her character as complex. Flynn says Amy can’t just be simplified as crazy with no legitimacy — she has an understandable motive, even if her methods are extreme. The real problem with the character of Amy is society wants her to represent women as a whole. It would be so easy for misogynists of the world to latch on to her character as proof of all the evil things women do to get back at innocent men. It’s just as easy for feminists of the world to condemn the movie for representing that proof. Both of these groups would be projecting onto a character that actively rebels against the idea that women fit into cookie cutter versions of how the public sees them. One character in one movie is not representative of an entire gender. No one is expecting every male to act like Walter White or Hannibal Lecter. The reason no one suspects male characters of containing the secret to every man’s inner workings is because there is a plethora of different male characters to relate to and draw from. For every Walter White, there are two Jim Halperts to remind the world men can also be harmless. The few women we do see on the big screen have a larger job. This is how you get sweeping generalizations in the media, such as the dichotomy of the virgin and the whore and the idea that one psychopath discredits honest women everywhere. There are certain parts of Gillian’s character that aren’t unrelatable, and there is a certain wish fulfillment in making a patriarchal system suffer for the psychological abuse it imposes on women that makes Amy’s character intriguing. There are also parts of Dexter Morgan that are relatable, but not everyone who thinks so also relates to his psychopathic nature. The idea that Amy’s character will convince people that all women are vindictive and evil only justifies the need for more characters like Amy. Media needs female characters of all kinds to fully represent half of the human population. jordrile@indiana.edu
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REGION
EDITORS: HOLLY HAYS & ANICKA SLACHTA | REGION@IDSNEWS.COM
Republican candidates will tour state Candidates from the Republican statewide ticket will launch the “Experience and Transparency” tour throughout the state, according to a release from the Indiana Republican Party. Secretary of State Connie Lawson, Auditor
Suzanne Crouch and treasurer candidate Kelly Mitchell will travel through more than 30 counties encouraging Hoosiers to participate in early voting. The tour will take place from Tuesday through midterm election day, Nov. 4.
Cyclists take in fall sights at Hilly Hundred By Amanda Marino ammarino@indiana.edu @amandanmarino
The sun peered through clouds on a chilly Saturday morning as hundreds of cyclists dressed and prepared their equipment for a long ride. An array of colors buzzed back and forth between Ellettsville’s Edgewood High School and the hill on which the start/finish line of the 47th Annual Hilly Hundred bike tour was perched. Friends and strangers alike swapped stories amid breakfast and bicycles, treelined path their backdrop, providing a taste of the same changing colors that first inspired the ride almost 50 years ago. Skip Higgins, managing director of the Hilly Hundred, called the event a “party on wheels.” Higgins said the ride, spanning about 100 miles throughout a two-day period, is a leisurely tour of the hills and changing leaves of the Monroe, Owen and Morgan counties — punctuated with rest stops offering music, entertainment and refreshments. Riders take on 55 miles of trail Saturday and 43 miles Sunday. Forty-seven years ago, people got together and went
biking to enjoy the fall, and the event has since grown exponentially, volunteer and cyclist Mark Ohlman said. Ohlman said he has participated the ride 41 times, having started as a teenager when he got a 10-speed bike and became a part of the Central Indiana Biking Association, the group that hosts the Hilly Hundred every year. “Back then, it was smaller, less than 1,000 people,” he said. Now, Ohlman said he continues to see familiar faces when he volunteers and rides. This year’s event had more than 4,000 riders, and each person who came had his or her own reason for being there, Higgins said. The event has drawn as many as 5,000 riders in the past, but the IU fall break this past weekend may have depleted the numbers a bit. Jessica Johnston of West Lafayette still came out for her fifth Hilly Hundred. “I’ve done different biking events, and I have to say this is one of the best,” she said. Johnston said she and her husband generally bike together, but because he was working and unable to come, she would be riding alone Saturday. “People are really friendly,” she said, explaining that
participants often swap stories and share locations of other events like the Hilly Hundred, building a networked community of riders. Ohlman said people spend all year riding and getting in shape, so once they arrive, they can just enjoy the ride. He added that the ride is supported and explained the rest stops located about every 12 miles include food, music and a scenic place to take a break before getting back on the path. People of all experience levels come out to ride the Hilly Hundred and, save for a few steep hills, Ohlman said the ride is completely manageable. “It’s really not a bad ride,” he said. A lot of times, you end up riding by yourself, he said, but people come to events like this one from all around to ride with a community. Some riders come from even farther away, like Henry Burden of St. Louis, Mo., who came to ride with a groups of his friends. “(The participants) use it as a reunion,” Higgins said, explaining that there are even some old Little 500 teams that reconvene for an annual group ride at the Hilly Hundred. He said his friends had
COURTESY PHOTO
Some participants of the 2014 Hilly Hundred gather at the start line Saturday prior to the race.
done the Hilly Hundred before, but this was his first time participating. “It’s a lot of fun to be able to get out and see the countryside,” Burden said. Burden said he likes group rides for a variety of reasons, ranging from the sheer safety in numbers felt by knowing motorists are aware of the hundreds of bicycles around them to the community aspect of these types of rides. “I’ve always enjoyed
cycling,” he said. “I’m just looking to enjoy myself.” Burden said there is fun both while riding and at the rest stops and that people should try out an event like this at least once. After a night of sleeping inside the school’s gym, getting started in the morning is a great feeling, Johnston said. “We love it,” she said. IU senior Ashley King said it is amazing to think people come from all around the country to ride their bikes
through a town she lives in during the school year. This year’s Hilly Hundred, promised to be a fun opportunity to meet new people, she said. “It’s just like a team bonding (experience),” she said. King added that she likes the easygoing nature of the event, which stems from the variety of skill levels. The event provides a good mix of challenge and fun. “You have to really push yourself,” she said.
Delivery service responds to expletive printed on receipt By Hannah Fleace hfleace@indiana.edu | @HFleace
PHOTOS BY LIONEL LIM | IDS
REBEL WEAVERS Above Textile artist Sarah Noggle weaves on the loom at ‘Slow Fashion!’ by the Rebel Weavers on Saturday at the Monroe Country History Center. Middle Different knitwear was displayed at ‘Slow Fashion!’ by the Rebel Weavers on Saturday at the Monroe Country History Center. Below Carol Krause spins wool on a charkha, an accelerated spinning wheel that originated in India.
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Jessica Montgomery simply wanted a quart of bourbon chicken stew. When the order was mixed up, she expected a refund. But what she found on her account was a “fuck you” from delivery service HoosierFood.com. To be absolutely clear: “It says F-U-C-K to me,” on the receipt, she said. She posted a screen shot of the receipt to the Bloomington Moms Facebook group and to the page for HoosierFood.com. “I’m totally shocked and disgusted,” she wrote. HoosierFood.com promptly deleted the photo from its Facebook page. The Bloomington Moms got mad. It started 5:15 p.m. Oct. 2 Montgomery ordered dinner from Dats, a Cajun restaurant on Grant Street. The go-between delivery service HoosierFood.com would deliver her food for a $2 fee. With a hungry, picky preschooler to feed, Montgomery waited more than an hour for her order. When the food arrived after the order had been mixed up, it was cold. “And it’s not something you can reheat,” Montgomery said.
While her daughter gnawed on cold bread, Montgomery called HoosierFood.com. She said owner Chris Wells apologized and agreed to a full refund. Wednesday night, before she went to bed, she checked her account. She still didn’t have the refund. And, there, on the receipt, was an odd notation: “Cody Took the Wrong Order First.” Under that, a $20 deduction next to the words “fuck you.” “It was 1 a.m.,” Montgomery said. “I thought, no way he wrote that.” She posted the screenshot of the receipt to Facebook and phone calls flooded in to Dats. “It wasn’t anything we did,” said Dats owner, Bob Crowley. He apologized anyway. “Jessica is a regular customer. We love her dearly. We try to bend over backward to make our customers happy.” Montgomery loves Dats back. She places the blame squarely on the delivery service. When contacted Thursday, a man who identified himself as the owner refused to give his name. He called the incident “unfortunate” but did not apologize. The owner’s name is Chris Wells, according to Indiana
public records. He said the note wasn’t intended for Montgomery. It was directed toward the delivery driver. He wouldn’t say who wrote it, but it wasn’t him. And Montgomery was not supposed to see it. He went on to say the publicity is taking food out of the mouths of his children. He invoked mountains and molehills and said that Montgomery was never charged for the meal. “That’s not true,” Montgomery said Thursday, adding that she’s still waiting for a refund. The response from HoosierFood.com has made her even angrier. “He could’ve just called and apologized,” she said. “He’s making it worse.” Montgomery said her family orders Dats a couple times a month. Her 3-year-old daughter is a picky eater, and the chicken and rice meal is a favorite. When it arrived cold, their daughter kept asking for the Dats meal. “It’s gross,” Montgomery told her. She opened a can of Campbell’s Chicken Noodle Soup for her daughter — sodium be damned — and ate Frosted Mini Wheats with her husband.
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Pyle sculpture to be dedicated with new school By Ike Hajinazarian ihajinaz@indiana.edu | @_IkeHaji
ALISON GRAHAM | IDS
Sculptor Tuck Langland shows an African piece he created after seeing a similar one in a museum. Langland’s work is usually commissioned, but he still enjoys making things for fun, he said.
» LANGLAND
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 ing, ‘That’s it, I’m a sculptor,’” he said. “‘I know what I’m going to be all my life.’” In that 12-week course, the students had to create a bust from a model. Langland said there were a lot of guys in the course from highquality art high schools. Despite their training, many of them struggled to finish the bust and had to pull all-nighters to complete the project. “I finished six,” Langland said, laughing. * * * Langland went on to graduate school and studied sculpture. He needed a job teaching sculpture in college, so he traveled to England to find one. “We did an insane, stupid thing,” Langland said. “We bought tickets and sailed on a ship to England in the summer of 1964, looking for a college teaching job in sculpture in a foreign country, to start in September. And I got one.” In 1971, he moved to South Bend and founded his
studio. Since then, Langland has created every sculpture in that studio, including that of Herman B Wells and the newest Ernie Pyle sculpture. * * * Installed last Thursday, and to be dedicated Friday afternoon, the Ernie Pyle sculpture started as a clay model a foot high. With sculpting, it’s all about the fine details, Langland said. He measured Pyle’s typewriter, which is kept in Bloomington. The lever on the end of the carriage that was used to move it back to the starting position and one line down did not work on Pyle’s typewriter. Because of this, he had to move the lever manually, which is what he is doing with his typewriter in the sculpture. The table Pyle sits at is warped and has cockeyed boards, which Langland added deliberately. “I wanted it to look like it had sat out in a farmyard for a couple of years,” Langland said. “I didn’t want a nice, neat table.” Langland, as for all of his
sculptures, also has to think about the environmental factors of his outdoor pieces. Most times, Langland pours water onto his clay mold to see how rain drains off of it. Allowing water to well up in his pieces would stain and damage the bronze, so Langland has to add drainage tubes to certain parts of each sculpture. Langland worked on the details and molds of the Pyle sculpture from December 2013 to October of this year. In his more than 50-year career, Langland has created dozens of these life-size sculptures, one of which sits on a bench just past the Sample Gates. * * * Langland sculpted IU’s eleventh president, Wells, in 2000. “I also made him a little thinner than he was because he was pretty fat,” Langland said. “I didn’t want people to come by and say, ‘Who’s the fat guy?’ and just notice that.” When Langland was asked to create the sculpture, it was an easy decision for him to take on the project. “I like to do people that I respect,” he said. “I really respected him. He was a great
man.” Langland felt similarly about Pyle. Ernie Pyle was an American journalist who is known for his coverage of WWII. He traveled to Europe, North Africa and Japan, covering the war from the trenches. He was killed by sniper fire in 1945. Langland developed respect for Pyle, especially after reading Pyle’s column about the Normandy invasion. “It’s incredible,” Langland said. “It chills you to the bone. He observed, he saw, he listened. Those are the two greatest weapons for a reporter: looking and listening.” The Pyle sculpture will join the ranks of what McRobbie calls, “the three iconic sculptures of IU,” Langland said. Each sculpture allows students to participate in the piece. Students can sit with Herman B Wells, play the piano with Hoagy Carmichael and, now, type with Ernie Pyle. “It’s the old story,” he said. “What can you do? If you can do something well, and you love doing it, there you are. I think a lot of people perhaps never quite figure that out.”
Spectators and students came face to face Thursday morning with Pulitzer Prize-winning World War II correspondent and former Indiana Daily Student editor, Ernie Pyle. A sculpture of Pyle was erected Thursday morning near Franklin Hall, the home of the soon-to-be inaugurated Media School. The Media School, a combined unit consisting of journalism, telecommunications and communication and culture departments in the College of Arts and Sciences, will be inaugurated 2 p.m. Friday. Pyle’s statue will also be formally dedicated. The Media School came into existence budgetarily earlier this year on July 1. With gray skies Thursday, the rain was holding off as the truck carrying the sculpture parked in front of the pathway to the Sample Gates. Harold “Tuck” Langland, who produced the work, is also the artist behind the Herman B Wells sculpture on campus. Langland waited along Indiana Avenue in front of the Sample Gates as his bronze Pyle sculpture arrived on site. The sculpture itself is based off photos of him reporting from the trenches during the war. In the sculpture, Pyle sits at his table in front of his typewriter with a mug nearby. The wood of the table seems warped, and if one looks closely, they can see spots on the edge of the table where it seems to be
» FUNDING
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
Homecoming Week. Bring your Hoosier spirit!
Wednesday, Oct. 15 Nearly Naked Mile | Dunn Meadow, 8 p.m. (pre-race begins at 6 p.m.) Take off (most of) your clothes and take a run around campus! Visit myiuaa.com/nearly-naked-mile to register and purchase a T-shirt.
Thursday, Oct. 16 Spirit Day | Red clock next to Woodburn Hall, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Get your free Hoosier swag. IU Athletics stops by at 2 p.m.
“I’m a Hoosier” Alumni Panel | Whittenberger at the IMU, 4 p.m. Hear advice on advancing your career from distinguished IU alumni. The session is moderated by Caroline Dowd-Higgins, the Alumni Association’s resident career expert.
Friday, Oct. 17 Homecoming Parade & Pep Rally | Kirkwood Ave., 5:30 p.m. March in the Homecoming parade and win money for your student group! Register by Monday, Oct. 13, at myiuaa.com/homecoming-parade. Stick around for the pep rally at the Sample Gates, where we’ll pump up the Hoosier spirit and crown our king and queen.
Saturday, Oct. 18 Homecoming Football Game | Memorial Stadium, 3:30 p.m. Cheer on the IU Hoosiers as they take on the Michigan State Spartans.
Commission. “Because incumbents have so many advantages over challengers — greater name recognition, an alreadyexisting staff, the experience of having won a race for that office before, greater likelihood of media coverage — it’s usually the case that challengers have to raise at least a certain threshold in donations in order to compete successfully,” IU professor of political science Marjorie Hershey said in an email. “Most challengers are not able to do that; they typically raise very little money for their campaigns.” Hershey said it is rare for fewer than 90 percent of incumbents for the U.S. House of Representatives to win. Races for state-wide positions are no different. Incumbents for the secretary of state and auditor of state offices also have significantly higher funds than their challengers. According to the July reports from the secretary of state’s office, the most recent available, Secretary of State Connie Lawson has $524,552.51. Her Democratic challenger Beth White has $195,364. Republican treasurer of state candidate Kelly Mitchell, a former employee of the
» SOCCER
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 “We know (Femi’s) a guy that needs to be in our top three scorers,” Yeagley said. “Balanced scoring is something we thought could be a strength for this team if we could find it.” The Buckeyes tied the game in the 77th minute on Culbertson’s first penalty kick of the game. Webb called the penalty “questionable.” Less than a minute later, however, freshman forward Jay McIntosh scored his first career goal on a pass from senior midfielder Jamie Vollmer. “It was unbelievable,” McIntosh said. “The pass from Jamie was perfect.” The goal will certainly be one that McIntosh remembers. A native of Kalamazoo, Mich., the statewide hatred of Ohio State still exists with him.
burned by cigarettes. Langland said that with the other seat at the table, students could sit across from the war correspondent with a laptop computer. He sat on the box to make sure it was the right distance away from the table, then gave it up so that other people could have a seat across from the famed journalist. The sculpture was announced when the IU Board of Trustees convened during its Feb. 13 meeting in Indianapolis. “We’ve listened to students, alumni and faculty about the significance of honoring Ernie Pyle,” said Lesa Hatley Major, associate dean of the Media School in a release earlier this year. “This sculpture is a tangible way of honoring his legacy. It is one of several initiatives we are working on to preserve his ideals, his work and his continuing influence in the lives of our students.” Pyle, who was killed from sniper fire while reporting from the Pacific war zone in 1945, wrote his columns from the soldiers’ viewpoint. He immersed himself in his reporting, living among the men he wrote about. The sculpture will be officially dedicated Oct. 17 during Homecoming weekend. IU President Michael McRobbie will preside at the ceremony. “It’s significant that the sculpture will sit at the Sample Gates, the entrance to campus,” Major said in the release. “It’s a prominent and fitting setting for one of the most important figures in American journalism.” treasurer’s office, has $57,266, which is 20 times the funding of her challenger, Mike Boland. Boland has $292.62 left over from his previous $6,275 in funds. Auditor of State Suzanne Crouch’s $336,372 is nearly six times the funding Democrat Michael Claytor has. Libertarian candidates for state offices have significantly fewer funds than both major parties’ candidates. Karl Tatgenhorst, candidate for secretary of state, reported $615. Auditor candidate John Schick and treasurer candidate Mike Jasper have no funds shown on the report. Research suggests that spending by the challenger in a race matters more than spending by the incumbent, Hershey said. While many funds that are raised by incumbents are from donations, often by organizations, candidates in other races and individuals, they are not always receiving money just for ideological support. “Incumbents tend to be re-elected because they have many, many advantages, not just in raising money,” Hershey said. “But the bigger spender doesn’t always win. And when they do, it isn’t necessarily that the spending brought the victory; donors are more likely to give to the candidate who is likely to win.” “Nobody from Michigan likes Ohio State,” McIntosh said. “That’s big time for me and my family.” Despite the big win that puts the Hoosiers in control of their own destiny for second place in the Big Ten, Yeagley wasn’t pleased with the entire game. “(Sunday) wasn’t a great performance,” Yeagley said. “We were off in the first half. I thought it was one of our weaker 25 minute periods of the season, if not the weakest. At the half, we had a pretty good conversation, more one way conversation, on the good news is that it is zeros, and we can play a heck of a lot better. I was pleased with our response after halftime.” He said the second half his team returned to a form he was more used to seeing. “When you’re not at your best, and you can still find results, that’s a really good sign for any team,” Yeagley said.
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Junior quarterback Nate Sudfeld is escorted off the field after being injured during the game against Iowa Saturday at Kinnick Stadium. Sudfeld’s injury left the IU offense unable to make a comeback against Iowa.
IU loses game, Sudfeld Sudfeld hurt without timetable for return, freshman quarterback can’t lead comeback By Sam Beishuizen sbeishui@indiana.edu @sam_beishuizen
Freshman quarterback Chris Covington was recruited by IU as an athlete. The 6-foot-2, 221-pound Chicago native was listed as a linebacker when he came to IU, but impressed the Hoosier coaching staff with his arm strength. IU Coach Kevin Wilson has spent weeks talking highly of Covington’s ability, but Saturday Covington was tested for the first time. Covington was called upon in the second quarter against Iowa in the midst of a shootout when junior quarterback Nate Sudfeld was forced to leave the game with what Wilson called “some degree of separation” in his non-throwing shoulder. Covington’s first drive was nearly perfect. On his first play, he handed the ball off to junior running back Tevin Coleman who ran 45 yards for a touchdown
to cut the Iowa lead to 28-21. That would be the closest to a comeback the Hoosiers would get. IU lost 45-29 to Iowa with Covington completing just 3-for-12 passes for 31 yards and two interceptions. He finished with a quarterback rating of just 13.4. “Seeing (Sudfeld) go down is always not a great thing to see, but I mean, Chris came in and did a great job trying to manage the game,” IU senior center Collin Rahrig said. “He came in a bad situation.” Sudfeld was sacked by Iowa senior defensive lineman Carl Davis about three minutes into the second quarter. As Sudfeld was being tackled, his arm tucked inward and was forced awkwardly into the ground on his left, non-throwing shoulder. Wilson said X-rays showed no bone breaks, and there is no timetable for SEE SUDFELD, PAGE 12
Big plays hurt Hoosiers in 45-29 defeat By Grace Palmieri gpalmier@indiana.edu @grace_palmieri
After a 22-point loss to Maryland two weeks ago, IU defensive coordinator Brian Knorr knew the problem. There were too many explosive plays. These were plays he defined as passes more than 15 yards and runs more than 12. “Our goal is six or less to be successful,” Knorr said. Against Maryland, the Hoosiers gave up 10 explosive plays. Against Iowa (5-1, 2-0) on Saturday, the Hawkeyes scored on plays of 72 and 60 yards in a 45-29 win against the Hoosiers (3-3, 0-2) at Kinnick Stadium. Both of those touchdowns came in the first quarter, and an early 21-point deficit was too much for the Hoosier offense to come back from. “When there was an opportunity to make a play, those guys made it,” IU Coach Kevin Wilson said. “They made
significant more plays than us, and that’s the difference in scoring. That’s the difference in the game.” After allowing 38 points and 300 yards in the first half, the Hoosier defense gave up just seven points and 126 yards in the second half. But the Hoosiers couldn’t overcome missed opportunities in the first two quarters on both sides of the ball. On first-and-10 from the Iowa 43yard line, IU quarterback Nate Sudfeld threw a nearly perfect pass to Shane Wynn that would’ve been a sure touchdown. Wynn dropped the pass, and IU failed to score on the drive. Earlier in the game, Sudfeld threw an interception at his own 35-yard line, resulting in a Iowa touchdown to put the Hoosiers down 13-0. “We’re playing uphill because of the start of the game,” Wilson said. “They SEE BIG PLAYS, PAGE 12
Columnist Brody Miller wonders where IU goes from here What other options do the Hoosiers have at quarterback with Sudfeld injured? See page 8.
Senior wide receiver Shane Wynn catches a pass during the game against Iowa Saturday at Kinnick Stadium. Wynn dropped a potential touchdown pass two plays before Sudfeld was injured.
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FIELD HOCKEY
SWIM AND DIVE
No. 18 Hoosiers beat Spartans 2-1 From IDS reports
RACHEL MEERT | IDS
Jackson Miller swims the men's 1000 yard freestyle during the meet against Auburn at Cousilman-Billingsley Aquatic Center.
IU, Auburn split dual meet By Grace Palmieri gpalmier@indiana.edu @grace_palmieri
In the final leg of the 200yard medley relay, freshman Ali Khalafalla was the first to touch the wall, and the IU sideline erupted. IU Coach Ray Looze jumped up and down, his fists in the air. The Hoosiers took first in 1:28.78 for a crucial relay win. They never lost that momentum in a decisive 165-78 win against Auburn on Friday. “That really changed the dynamic of the meet because they were favored to win both relays,� Looze said. “I got a little excited there, a little carried away.� The women’s team fell behind early and couldn’t make up the lost points, losing 129-113.
Freshman Kennedy Goss won the 200-yard freestyle and finished second in the 500 free in her first meet as a Hoosier. IU’s most impressive performance of the day came in the 200-yard butterfly. The women took first, second, third and fourth, with sophomore Gia Dalesandro finishing first in 1:59.73. Looze said if a couple early races had gone a different way, the outcome could have been very different. “We were down by 50 points at one point and could’ve really been blown out,� Looze said. “And they stopped it. They clawed their way almost all the way back.� Freshman standout Blake Pieroni was first in the 200-yard freestyle. He also placed second in the 100
free. The Hoosiers went 1-23 in the 500-yard freestyle, led by sophomore Grayson Smith at 4:33.89. Looze gave credit to the women’s divers, a weakness of last year’s team when they had just one diver on the team. “Lacey Houser and Jessica Parratto and the rest of their teammates ... last year it was a real weakness and that’s not the case anymore,� he said. Freshmen anchor divers In their first collegiate diving meet, Jessica Parratto and James Connor swept their events Friday against Auburn. Parratto was first in both the 1-meter and 3-meter competitions with 285.60 and 306.60 points, respectively.
Connor edged out IU sophomore Michael Hixon in the 1-meter by 2.33 points. “There was some adversity,� IU diving Coach Drew Johansen said. “Always, when you have live TV, the pace of the event is managed by someone else. They showed their experience. They’re both international swimmers. They’ve been around the block.� Connor and Hixon went back and forth during the 3-meter competition, with Connor coming out on top again with 415.58 points. “They’re both serious competitors,� Johansen said. “They bring that to practice everyday. “They’re going to trade on and off throughout their whole careers here because they’re both two of the best divers in the world.�
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After starting the Big Ten season 0-3, the IU field hockey team won its first conference game against Michigan State 2-1 on Saturday. The No. 18 Hoosiers (93, 1-3) got both goals from senior Audra Heilman, who has scored 12 goals this season. It was her third multiplegoal game, something she hasn’t done since recording back-to-back hat tricks to open the season. “Audra was so on,� IU Coach Amy Robertson said in a press release from IU Athletics. “She felt the game, she could eliminate like no other and she was a spark. They had to worry about her, and the entire team played up to their potential today.� The Spartans (7-5, 2-3) had four penalty corner opportunities in the first period but couldn’t capitalize. In the second period, IU outshot Michigan State 17-9. The first goal didn’t come until the 44th minute, when Heilman won a one-on-one with Spartan goalkeeper Sierra Patton. Heilman then scored in
the 53rd minute off an assist from sophomore midfielder Kate Barber to give the Hoosiers a 2-0 lead. IU senior goalkeeper Maggie Olson made six saves. She couldn’t preserve the shutout, though, with Michigan State’s lone goal coming off the foot of Megan Fenton in the 63rd minute. This is the second-consecutive win over a ranked opponent for IU, the first time accomplishing that since 2011. It beat No. 4 Duke last weekend. Robertson said that now is the time for IU to start building momentum with the Big Ten Tournament becoming increasingly near. “It’s huge, this is the time of year we want to start building out play and having confidence,� Robertson said in a release. “We’re exactly where we should be and we just have to keep our foot on the pedal and be hungry to continue to improve and realize we’re a team in the Big Ten that can beat any other team on any day.� The Hoosiers host Ohio State at 3 p.m. Friday. Grace Palmieri
HEAR ME OUT
If Sudfeld is out, what do the Hoosiers do at quarterback? Murphy’s law says anything that can go wrong will go wrong. There was one sure thing going into this IU football season. If Nate Sudfeld were to get injured, the Hoosiers would be in trouble. The hypothetical became reality in IU’s 45-29 loss to the Iowa Hawkeyes on Saturday in Kinnick Stadium. Sudfeld was brought down by four Iowa defenders two plays after Shane Wynn dropped a perfect Sudfeld pass in the end zone that would have gotten IU off the field. Sudfeld was not seen again on the field. The temporary Chris Covington era began, and it was not ideal. I cannot blame him for struggling. I doubt it is easy going from cozily taking notes on the sideline as a true freshman to playing in front of 68,590 opposing fans on homecoming weekend. Regardless, Covington was unable to establish himself as a pass threat at all. He went 3-for-12 passing for 31 yards and threw two interceptions. One was not exactly his fault. Without him as a passing threat, teams were able to stack the box against the run game and make it difficult for IU to establish any consistent movement. The Hoosier’s success with Covington all came as a result of big plays from junior running back Tevin Coleman, ran for 219 yards. Coleman broke plays because the offensive line worked its butt off and Coleman can do things physically that few others can. Besides these few breakouts, though, the IU offense seemed irrelevant as the defense actually hung on tight in the second half. The question becomes: What do the Hoosiers do if Sudfeld is out long-term? IU Coach Kevin Wilson said there was separation in Sudfeld’s shoulder and they will find out more tomorrow. It is likely he will not be back for a few weeks at the least. This means Covington may be expected to lead IU for a little longer, if not the whole season. There is also fellow true freshman Zander Diamont that IU has been planning on redshirting. Wilson said they will see how long Sudfeld’s timeline is before deciding if using Diamont is necessary. They do not want to waste a year of eligibility. Murphy’s law rears its head again as the Hoosiers
BRODY MILLER is a sophomore in journalism.
will face Michigan State, one of the best defenses in the entire country, right as IU has its most offensive uncertainty. It is frightening to have to put in a freshman quarterback against such an intimidating defense, because a bad beating so early can ruin a young quarterback’s psyche. Take a look at Covington. He is a physically impressive player. Listed at 6-foot-2 and 214 pounds, he looks even bigger and is incredibly athletic. He showed signs of being very gifted at scrambling and is an imposing runner when he finally gets room. Also, he has a strong arm and on his last drive he finally displayed a few quality passes through traffic during the last few minutes of the Big Ten matchup. He may not be very good yet, but I assume he will look much more prepared when he has a week to actually practice as the No. 1 guy and the coaches base a whole game plan around him as the first string quarterback. A lot of noise has been made about how he was brought in to play linebacker, because he was a quarterback in high school and put up 1,993 yards and 26 touchdowns passing as a senior. If freshman quarterback Zander Diamont ends up getting the call any time soon, that may be even more frightening. The Los Angeles native is listed at 175 pounds and is a very raw player. Him taking the kind of hits Michigan State may be applying is not very safe for him or for IU. Covington is also raw, but I feel more confident he could make plays on physicality alone right now. “Chris Covington is, hands down, the best,� Wilson said after the game about the backup quarterbacks. Nonetheless, the Hoosiers are in trouble without Sudfeld. He was finally beginning to get his downfield passing swagger back, and IU could have stolen this game if he were healthy. The future for the 2014 Hoosiers is as clouded as ever, and things may get ugly quick. brodmill@indiana.edu
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Redford to receive achievement award
ARTS
EDITORS: ALISON GRAHAM & AUDREY PERKINS | ARTS@IDSNEWS.COM
Robert Redford is receiving the Chaplin Award, a lifetime achievement award, from New York’s Film Society of Lincoln Center, according to the BBC. The actor’s life and work will be celebrated at a gala in April.
The prestigious award has been given to Nicole Kidman, Barbara Streisand, Martin Scorsese and Alfred Hitchcock in past years. The award is named after Charlie Chaplin, the silent movie era actor, who was the first recipient in 1972.
Men’s vintage night for locals at Blue Line By Amanda Marino anmarino@indiana.edu @amandanmarino
Outside, a vintage Hudson is parked at the curb. Inside, men in suits with fedoras and ladies in dresses mingle, drink and dance in a setting that has become difficult to find. Men were measured for suits and had their shoes shined, and women sipped drinks and rocked to the DJ’s music at the Handsome Devil Bespoke Vintage PopUp Show and Cocktail Party on Friday night at the Blue Line Gallery. “It’s definitely a men’s night tonight,” said Dan Baucco, owner of Handsome Devil Bespoke Vintage, a business dedicated to vintage menswear and accessories. The idea is to create not only a good excuse to get dressed up and go out but also to allow men to experience an entirely different environment, he said. Women always have an
excuse to dress up, he said, but men rarely get this kind of opportunity anymore. “It’s a really unique way to be pampered,” Bloomington resident Brent Molnar said. He said friends of his were helping to host the event, a gallery opportunity based around men. “It’s like a men’s day spa,” he said. Molnar said not a lot of places specialize in men, so an event like this where he can get his shoes shined and be properly measured for a suit is a great luxury. “I feel like I have a good eye for style,” Baucco said. Baucco said suits were being sold for 10 to 25 percent of their original retail value. One suit that Baucco particularly liked, originally valued at $6,000, was being sold for $300 at the event. “It’s a style event,” he said. Along with Baucco, his COURTESY PHOTO
SEE BLUE LINE, PAGE 11
Handsome Devil Bespoke Vintage hosted a pop up shop event at Blueline Art Gallery on Friday that featured men’s style at reduced prices and other men’s spa events.
Singer-songwriter coming Wednesday for solo show at Buskirk-Chumley From IDS reports
Singer-songwriter Todd Snider will perform 8 p.m. Wednesday at the BuskirkChumley Theater. Tickets are available at the Buskirk-Chumley box office or online at buskirkchumley.org. In his solo show, he will be performing his most recent album, “Agnostic Hymns & Stoner Fables,” which was released in 2012. The album is described
as alternative country, rock and folk music, according to a Buskirk-Chumley press release. Rolling Stone named the album one of that year’s top 50 albums. He also recorded a tribute album titled, “Time as We Know It: The Songs of Jerry Jeff Walker,” which was released in 2012. Walker is an American country singer and songwriter who served as Snider’s first inspiration to
become a musician. Snider also released a biographic book earlier this year. “I Never Met a Story I Didn’t Like” tells Snider’s stories as he toured with his friend John Prine. The book details Snider’s gigs gone wrong, onstage meltdowns and lessons he learned from touring with Prine, according to Rolling Stone. Alison Graham
XU YING | IDS
GREAT GLASS PUMPKIN People at the Great Glass Pumpkin Patch pick out glass pumpkins Saturday outside the Monroe County Courthouse. More than 400 blown glass pumpkins were for sale, created by members of the Bloomington Creative Glass Center.
A WALK DOWN SAXE FIFTH AVENUE
Natural beauty makes a comeback A personal mantra of mine has always been that confidence is your number one accessory. Without it, it really doesn’t matter what you’re wearing. It never fails. My roommate recently did a photography project that parallels how society expects us to look and real, natural beauty and confidence. When she asked me to be the subject of her project, I agreed without hesitation. And while, yes, I can’t deny that it was in part because I love dressing up and doing photo shoots, it was mostly because of the message she planned to send. Airbrushing and touchups are still extremely prevalent in the fashion and magazine industry, and I think in moderation that’s okay. However, many advertisers, companies and celebrities have started to make a shift in their campaigns, promoting several body types and natural beauty. I can’t think of anything more refreshing. The clothing website ModCloth won some recognition this year as the first company to sign the Heroes Pledge for Advertisers, a petition that claims “to do their best not to change the shape, size, proportion, color and/or remove/enhance the physical features, of the people in their ads post-production.” When you visit ModCloth’s website, it is also very clear that they work to include women of every size as models, something I believe more companies should aim for. Female musical artists have incorporated the ideas of the pressure to be perfect and self-acceptance in some of this year’s most
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Several organizations, companies and celebrities have made it a goal this year to promote loving all sides of yourself, makeup or no makeup, quirks and all.
popular music. Colbie Caillat released a music video this summer for her song “Try,” challenging fans to submit photos of themselves with no makeup on. The Grammy awardwinning star participated in the challenge as well. The queen herself, Beyoncé, made quite the statement with the drop of her self-titled album last winter. “Pretty Hurts,” one of the album’s most popular tracks, tackled the issue of the media putting too much pressure on women to look and act a certain way, claiming that “perfection is the disease of a nation.” Organizations on campus are contributing to the movement as well. The Alpha Sigma Alpha sorority participated in the Naked Face Project last week, pledging to go a week with absolutely no make-up. Meghan Burke, a senior member, said of the
LAUREN SAXE is a sophomore majoring in journalism.
campaign, “It just goes to show that women are beautiful without make-up and they don’t need it. As a chapter it shows that we’re confident enough to put ourselves out there without it.” Everybody has something that’s a little quirky or different about them, and instead of trying to conform and be like every image they see, why not use those differences to their advantage? Call me cheesy, but more often than not, those are the things that make someone the most beautiful. One of history’s most iconic, classy women, Audrey Hepburn, once said, “Happy girls are the prettiest girls.” I’m right there with you, Audrey. lsaxe@indiana.edu
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ONLINE POSTING: All classified line ads are posted online at idsnews.com/classifieds at no additional charge.
15 hours per week. Fall Horseback Rides. Couples: 50$ Call for an appointment: 812.360.8248.
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Harp student in master level at Jacobs School of Music. If you are interested in learning harp please contact me. If you are looking to have a harp play in your event, please contact me as well. Also piano minor, can teach piano class. $40/ class. 410-736-2956
All Majors Accepted. Seeking IU students with good organization, time management, and communication skills to work in advertising sales. Previous sales experience preferred but not required. Must own reliable transportation and be able to work through May, 2015.
I’m looking for a ride to Chicago Thursday, Oct. 16 to fly out of O’Hare Friday morning. My flight leaves @ 9am, I’m willing to leave early Friday morning. Hoping to return Sunday evening. Email or text: 952.215.7009.
Apply in person at: Ernie Pyle Hall,RM 120. Email:
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Online yard Sale. You can pick up on campus: http://tinyurl.com/ohtpfza or contact: crmedina@indiana.edu Seeking EGG DONOR. Age 18-26, Caucasian, brown hair, high cheekbones & forehead, Central/Southern European ethnicity,5’6+, good personal & family health history, blood type 0/A. Compensation & travel expenses paid. Please apply: www.bhed.com 305
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2 BR, 1 BA. Campus Court near stadium . $745/mo. Avail. winter break-July. 424.256.6748
2 BR apts. South of Campus. 320 E. University. Avail. Aug., 2015. $680. Water/trash included. A/C, D/W, range, refrigerator. Costley & Co. Rental Management. 812-330-7509 www.costleycompany.com
Grant Properties
Outstanding locations near campus at great prices Call Today 812-333-9579 GrantProps.com
3 BR, 1209 N. Grant. Near Stadium, avail. Jan. & Aug., 2015. $1050 for 3; $750 for 2. C/A D/W, on-site laundry. Costley & Co. Rental Management. 812-330-7509 www.costleycompany.com
Apt. Unfurnished
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1-4 BR units between campus &d/town. Aug., 2015. 333-9579 1 BR apt. by Bryan Park. 1216 S. Stull. $405 Avail. Aug. 2015. Costley & Co. Rental Mgmt. 812-330-7509
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1 BR apts. by Stadium. 301 E. 20th.,avail. Aug., 2015. Water, trash, A/C, D/W, off-street parking included. $475. Costley & Co. Rental Mgmt.
5 BR, 2.5 BA apt. Avail. for Fall, 2015. Call Mackie Properties: 812-287-8036
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Condos & Townhouses 3, 4, & 5 BR on campus. All amenities incl. 331-7797 Elkinspropertiesrent.com
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General Employment
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Furniture Assembler for Hire: I am very good at assembling furniture and repairing various things. I have a full toolkit and my own transportation. audalbri@indiana.edu
1 BR apts. by Stadium. 304 E. 20th, avail. Aug., 2015. $440. Water/trash included. Costley & Co. Rental Management. 812-330-7509
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THE BEST! Location, style, size & charm! 3-8 BR. 812-334-0094
Rooms/Roommates 1 BR avail. in 5 BR house. 820 N Dunn. $440 plus utils. Newly renovated. 406-250-5362
AVAILABLE NOW! 4 BR, 2 BA. house close to campus. $1600/mo. No utils. incl. No Pets. www.burnhamrentals.com.
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Carpool to Chicago! Thurs. Oct. 16th @ 1pm. Return Sunday Oct. 19th. $30 one way or $50 roundtrip. Contact alemay@indiana.edu or 952-215-7009.
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Now Renting August, 2015 HPIU.COM Houses and apartments. 1-6 bedrooms. Close to Campus. 812-333-4748 No pets please.
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Willing to create any masterpiece that you have in mind! I mainly draw & paint but am willing to try out different media as well. If you have a project in mind, contact me at the e-mail provided. I can also send you some examples of previous work. mmhender@umail.iu.edu
2-8 Bedroom Houses A/C, D/W, W/D
2 BR apts. near Stadium. 304 E. 20th, #5. Avail. Aug., 2015. $650. Water/ trash included. Costley & Co. Rental Management. 812-330-7509
HOUSING
1 blk. South. 4 BR, 2 BA, A/C, W/D, D/W, parking. We pay H2O and heat. $450/mo. ea.
The Hamptons: Luxury Townhomes, located 2 blks. west of IU campus. 3 BR, 3.5 BA twnhs. Now leasing for Aug., 2015! Call: (812) 322-1886 to schedule a priv. tour.
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Furniture Queen bed incl. mattress in fair condition, new box in plastic & basic metal frame. $70. nesrinsud@yahoo.com
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Apartments & Houses Downtown and Close to Campus
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Selling: 1 student section football ticket for Oct. 18th. Michigan State vs. IU student ticket. larahenr@indiana.edu Student Volunteers wanted! Food Recovery Network is a non-profit org. that unites with colleges to fight waste & feed others with our surplus unsold food from the dining halls. For more info/ to volunteer contact: blansald@indiana.edu
Tutoring
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English & FrenchTutoring Here! Contact: spellard@indiana.edu Price negotiable.
P R O P E R T I E S
The IDS is accepting applications for Advertising Account Executives to start Fall, 2014.
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$$ REWARD! LOST/STOLEN Yorkie! Missing since Sept. 30! 3228 Robinson Road. “BENTLEY PRINCE” Male, 3 lbs., & 14 dog years old, & an Elletsville, IN Vet Clinic tag on his collar! PLEASE CALL: (812) 606-8755.
Selling: wii & wii games, $35. very good condition. Bought it in 2011 but didn’t use it often. gaoxiao@indiana.edu
2-8 BR houses and apt. Aug., 2015.
TRANSPORTATION Automobiles
2009 Honda Acord EX-L for sale. 7 year/100,000 miles warranty. GPS, sunroof, heated seats, CD changer, AM/FM stereo, leather upholstery included. $15,500 OBO. Contact for more info: mtanhayi@indiana.edu
Instruments Cort Earth 100 acoustic guitar, very nice, $125. 812-929-8996 JamStand tripod microphone boom stand with mic clip. Very sturdy, $30 firm. 812-929-8996
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Announcements
Need Your Papers Proofread/Edited? $2.50/page or $25/hr. in person. ndipaolo@indiana.edu
Apt. Unfurnished 1 BR avail. immediately. $475 includes all utils. www.elkinsapts.com (812)339-2859
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Electronics 32” Audio sound bar. Remote & cords incl. $100. East side of Bloomington. 812-219-0750
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Clothing Plato’s Closet pays cash on the spot for trendy, gently used clothing. 1145 S. College Mall Rd. 812-333-4442
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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.
Misc. for Sale Black diamond ring for sale, 4.53 total carats. $4,000,obo. 812-325-4482
Hardly used treadmill: Reebok Intermix acoustic 2.0, $200. 812-855-5083 Selling: NEW Women’s Rollerblades, size 9. Roller Derby Aerio Q-60 women’s inline roller blades, worn once. $60.00, OBO. 812-272-4613 Selling: Weider Ultimate Body Works Home Gym. Must pick it up yourself. $100. hakar@indiana.edu
BMW, RWD, 2012. New 3 series. Price: $30000 (neg.). Mileage: 26xxx. MSRP was $41,085. Premium package: (Moonroof, garage-door opener, auto-dimming mirrors, auto-dimming rearview mirror, power front seats, lumbar support). Cold weather package (Heated front seats, heated steering wheel). No accidents and one owner. Excellent condition, LIKE NEW!! 812-369-1518 lmg1133@indiana.edu
Selling: 2007 Cadillac CTS. 109k. 3.6 liter V6, power sunroof, power seats, heated seats, tire pressure monitoring system, leather seats, Sirius radio, AT,AC,PDL,PM, CC, Tilt, PDL, PW. Runs great! Fun car to drive! $8900 seanhamm@indiana.edu
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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | M O N D AY, O C T. 1 3 , 2 0 1 4 | I D S N E W S . C O M
Author of ‘M. Butterfly’ presents lecture Thursday From IDS reports
The author of “M. Butterfly” is scheduled to present a lecture at 5:30 p.m. Thursday in the Ruth N. Halls Theatre. The Department of Theatre, Drama and Contemporary Dance brought in playwright David Henry Hwang to attend master classes, rehearsals and present a talk on his life in theater in light of its upcoming production of his Tony award-winning play. The lecture will be followed by an open question and answer session and is free and open to the public. The focus of his stay will be on interacting with
» BLUE LINE
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 9 store and the Blue Line Gallery, the event was also sponsored by a variety of other local businesses, such as the Atlas Ballroom, Cherry Canary, Sweet Grass Restaurant, Vega Stylista’s Foxhole, the Tailored Fit and Vanessa Rae of the Ecoatelier and the Briar and the Burley, said Blue Line Gallery owner Chelsea Sanders. Sanders said after Baucco approached her with the idea of the event, she was happy to be a part of things. It’s like an after party to a big city event, she said.
undergraduate and graduate theater students, sharing his experience, techniques and how to make a life in theater, according to a press release from the theater department. “M. Butterfly” first premiered on Broadway in 1988. It was inspired by a true espionage case in which a French diplomat was seduced by a famous Chinese opera star. In the play, Hwang challenges Western ideas of gender identity and colonialism, according to the press release. Hwang grew up in Los Angeles. He received a bachelor’s degree in
English from Stanford University and attended the Yale School of Drama. His most famous work is “M. Butterfly,” which won a Tony award, Drama Desk Award, the John Gassner award and the Outer Critics Circle Award for Best Play. It was also Hwang’s second play to become a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. “M. Butterfly” opens Oct. 24 in the Wells-Metz Theatre. Tickets are available online or at the IU Auditorium box office. Student tickets are $15 and general admission tickets are $25.
The event is a mix of vintage and modern fashion, style and atmosphere. “I would consider it kind of old, classic,” she said. Before the night was over, she said she expected about 200 or 300 people passed through the gallery. Baucco said he was happy with the turnout. Despite the rainy weather, people came out to have a good time in luxury and style. Sanders said she wants to host more events like this one because it helps to support local businesses and is a unique environment. “It’s totally all about
collaboration,” she said. “There are not a lot of events like this.” Baucco said he would like to see more men spend time on their clothes and enjoy looking good. He’s always been interested in clothes, and now is the opportunity to bring his passion to people in Bloomington, he said. “It’s fun,” Baucco said. “It’s affordable and it’s accessible.” Molnar said the event was a fun chance to hang out and that he hopes for more of them in the future. “If this works ... then I plan to do it at least six times a year,” Baucco said.
Horoscope Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is a 9 — Follow through on your promises. Publicize a joint success. It’s a good time to ask for money. Abandon old fears. Learn from a dear friend. Get organized, and prepare for the upcoming rush. Lay groundwork for a status upgrade. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is a 9 — Travel and exploration entice you outside. Choose a good conversationalist as companion. Consider all possibilities. The news affects your decisions today and tomorrow. Don’t react impulsively.
Alison Graham
To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. Flow like water, to adapt to shifting terrain. Relax together. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is a 9 — Teach and study with your friends about passionate subjects. Splurge just a little. Accept an older person’s suggestion. Great minds think alike. Catch up on paperwork, and invest your funds wisely. Attend to finances to grow them. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is a 9 — Figure what you’ve accumulated and can let go. Dream
BREWSTER ROCKIT: SPACE GUY!
up new home improvements. Trade for what you need. Success is your reward. A partner feels compelled to advise. Take it in stride. You’re acquiring wisdom, and learning fast. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is a 9 — Focus on your work today and tomorrow. Friends make an important connection. You’ll like the result. You could be tempted to do something impulsive. Fall into a fascinating exchange of ideas. Brainstorm now for action later. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) —
TIM RICKARD
TIANTIAN ZHANG | IDS
CELEBRATING LOCAL ART Sue Westhues demonstrates how a spring drum, made from a gourd, works while standing at her booth Saturday at the Bloomington Farmer’s Market. Westhues grows the gourds herself. “I enjoy growing them, making things from them,” Westhues said. “They have endless use.”
Today is an 8 — Make plans for expansion. Your credit rating’s going up. Stash away your loot. Speak of forever. Get animated, inspired and moved. Your words have great power now. Slip into relaxation phase today and tomorrow. Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is an 8 — Rest and review the situation. One avenue may seem blocked... look for other access. Today and tomorrow your feelings are all over the map, and that turns out to be a good thing. Let yourself get moved. Go for domestic bliss. Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 9 — Keep your long-term objective in mind. Accept constructive criticism without irritation. You can
Crossword
count it as an educational expense. Use this opportunity. Studying together is very bonding over the next two days. Shop locally for materials. Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Today is a 9 — Inspire co-workers with optimism. Look at the situation newly, and review your options. Work now, and play in a few days. It gets profitable. Don’t show a critic unfinished work. Keep it to your inner circle. Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Today is an 8 — Improve your property’s value with cosmetic upgrades. Ideas flood your awareness. You see the direction to take. Get all the pertinent information. You’re gaining confidence today and tomorrow. Take the philosophical path less traveled.
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
su do ku
ACROSS
Difficulty Rating: How to play: Fill in the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 grid contains the digits 1 through 9, without repeating a number in any one row, column or 3x3 grid.
Answer to previous puzzle
© Puzzles by Pappocom
NON SEQUITUR
1 Parody 6 Infant 10 Homeless child 14 Songstress Lena 15 Geometry class calculation 16 Throw hard 17 According to 18 *MTV staple 20 D-flat equivalent 22 Territory that became North and South states 23 Mauna __ 24 Syst. with hand signals 26 “Blazing Saddles” director Brooks 27 Baseball hat 30 Nine-digit govt. ID 31 *Oral indication of anger 34 Nickname of AA co-founder William Wilson 35 Word before limits or space 36 Home for a bird 39 Home for the Heat 42 Dermatologist’s concern 43 In front 45 Prophet whose name sounds like a mineral
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a 9 — Social activities produce results with maximum fun. You work well with others today and tomorrow. Get into a game with friends, and amplify your efforts with group collaboration. It could even get profitable. © 2014 By Nancy Black Distributed by Tribune Media Services, INC. All Rights Reserved
L.A. Times Daily Crossword
PHIL JULIANO
BEST IN SHOW
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 9 — Your luck has changed for the better. Think it over. Schedule carefully to leave time for contemplation. Convey your deepest feelings to your partner. Invest in home, family, and real estate. Save something each month.
47 *Trip to somewhere you’ve been before 50 “I need a short break,” in chat rooms 53 Brit. bigwigs 54 Vote of approval 55 Explosive initials 56 Egg cells 57 Either “Bye Bye Love” brother 60 Comprehends 62 *Selling point of a home on the Hudson, say 65 Take the part of 66 Fancy pitcher 67 Actor Morales 68 Mowing the lawn, e.g. 69 Small horse 70 Spanish muralist José María 71 Distance runs, briefly
2014 8 Turned into 9 Gabbed 10 Slightest amount 11 Chutzpah 12 Anger 13 Mel’s Diner waitress 19 Swedish automaker 21 Biblical song 25 Actress Taylor 28 Top poker pair 29 Sassy 32 Hindu teacher 33 “That’s painful!” 34 Boyfriend 36 Fish that complains a lot? 37 “Can I get a word in?” 38 Exacts revenge 40 Fine spray 41 Cake topping 44 Washer’s partner 46 Draw, as flies 48 Uneasy “bundle” contents 49 Suitcase 50 Marathon city 51 Place for Winnebagos ... and for the answers to the starred clues? 52 Lowest choral parts 58 Exceptionally 59 2014, for one 61 Hurt 62 Sales staff employee 63 __ Jima 64 Quickness of mind 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
DOWN 1 Crude dwellings 2 Western bad guy chasers 3 “Little __ Annie” 4 Top draft status 5 Classic Italian sports car 6 Happy hour spot 7 N.Y. Yankee suspended during
WILEY
Your comic here. The Indiana Daily Student is accepting applications for student comic strip artists to be published in this space. Email five samples of your work and a brief description of your idea to adviser@idsnews.com.
Deadline is Friday, Oct. 17
Applications will be reviewed and selections made by the IDS editor-in-chief.
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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | M O N D AY, O C T. 1 3 , 2 0 1 4 | I D S N E W S . C O M
VOLLEYBALL
Hoosiers can’t complete comeback, lose to Purdue By Evan Hoopfer ehoopfer@indiana.edu | @EvanHoopfer
JAMES BENEDICT | IDS
HOOSIERS BEATEN BY THE BLUE Senior midfielder Jordan Woolums intercepts a pass intended for Michigan defender Sydney Raguse. The Wolverines defeated IU 3-0. The loss dropped the Hoosiers to 1-7-1 on the season and dug a deeper hole in the Big Ten standings, putting IU closer to facing elimination from postseason elgibility.
» SUDFELD
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 7 Sudfeld’s return. “It’s some degree of separation, and we’ll evaluate it when we get back,” Wilson said. “I don’t know if it’s short or long term ... you know, one, two, three, four, five, six weeks.” During the second half, Sudfeld was spotted in the tunnel wearing a sling on his left arm. Wilson said Sudfeld was upbeat in the locker room talking to Covington after the game. Without Sudfeld, the Hoosier offense never really got into rhythm. At times, Covington looked confused, which Wilson partially blamed on playing on the road in Iowa City. With about five minutes
left in the third quarter, Coleman lined up to Covington’s right out of shotgun. After gathering the snap, Covington went to his left, looking to hand the ball off to a teammate who wasn’t there. “(There were a) couple calls he messed up a little and didn’t call it properly,” Wilson said. “We didn’t communicate our assignments properly. It looked bad, but as the game went along it was a good experience.” The Hoosiers outgained the Hawkeyes 432-426, but too many of those yards didn’t end with scores. Coleman rushed for 219 yards on 15 carries and scored three times. His rushing performance put him at 1,060 yards, making him the first Hoosier since Levron Williams in 2001 to
rush for 1,000 yards in a single season with six games yet to play. Coleman couldn’t hold back a smile after it was mentioned he was on pace for more than 2,000 yards. “I can, but it’s not something I think about,” Coleman said. “I’m just going to keep on working hard in practice and keep on fighting and it appears, it appears.” After an explosive first half, IU outscored Iowa 8-7 in the second half. Without Sudfeld, IU wasn’t able to overcome a 38-21 halftime deficit or make up for a 21-point opening quarter difference. “We had our chances, but we didn’t execute,” Wilson said. “They made more big plays than us, and that’s the difference in the final score.”
RECREATIONAL SPORTS
IU was up 23-21 in the fourth set, trying to force a fifth set against the No. 14 team in the country. Then everything unraveled. Sophomore setter Megan Tallman couldn’t get to a ball in time, and it dropped to the ground, giving Purdue an easy point. Purdue (16-2, 6-0) won the next four points and thwarted the Hoosiers’ (126, 3-3) attempt at an upset in front of a near-capacity University Gym on Saturday night. IU Coach Sherry Dunbar-Kruzan said she wasn’t pleased with her team’s effort on that dropped ball. “The ability to communicate and the ability to work together kind of got lost,” she said. “That’s not about skill. That’s not about technique. That’s about a relationship and working together.” Purdue won the first set of the game, and IU won the second set. After a 10-minute intermission, the Boilermakers came out on fire against IU. Purdue won the third
» BIG PLAYS
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 7 score, we give them a picksix. But as you weather the storm and get back into it, the onside kick opportunity, the dropped pass opportunity, you got a chance to make a stop on fourth down and we didn’t.” Aside from a few critical big plays, the Hawkeye offense moved the ball methodically down the field, eating up time and keeping the IU offense off the field. Iowa kept the ball for 35:20, compared to IU’s 24:40 time of possession.
set 25-8. Purdue had 11 kills and just one hitting error in the third set, compared to only five kills and 13 hitting errors for IU. When asked for an explanation of what happened to her team in that set, Tallman didn’t have one. “To be honest, I’m not completely sure,” she said. “After winning that second set, I wouldn’t say we were complacent, but we didn’t have that drive right away.” Even after losing the third set by a large margin, IU was neck-and-neck with Purdue in the fourth set, which saw 10 ties and five lead changes. Dunbar-Kruzan thought the particular play when nobody helped out Tallman really hurt her team. If IU had gotten that point, she was sure the match was going five sets. “We need one point to make it 24-21,” Dunbar-Kruzan said. “If it’s 24-21, then we’re going to five sets.” The crowd of 1,687 saw not only a volleyball game, but an honoring of tradition. This season marks the 40th year IU volleyball has been in existence, with the main celebration happening
Saturday night. During the intermission, alumni from throughout the 40-year history were honored on the court. Earlier in the day, IU had a banquet with the former members of the team. Some players hadn’t seen each other in 30 years, DunbarKruzan said. “This was a cool banquet, and I don’t like banquets,” Dunbar-Kruzan said. “It was a great day for our sport, to celebrate the tradition and heritage of those people who have walked before us, in our shoes.” The pair of games next week aren’t any easier for the Hoosiers. Ohio State, who has already beaten No. 8 Nebraska, No. 15 Illinois and No. 24 Northwestern this season, comes to University Gym on Friday night. The next day, the reigning national champion and No. 5 team in the country, Penn State, comes to Bloomington. Dunbar-Kruzan said she hopes to see the crowd that was at University Gym on Saturday night. “If you want to see highlevel sport, you watch Big Ten volleyball,” she said.
Senior linebacker David Cooper said it came down to a few plays where the defense wasn’t playing as 11 players together. “They just caught us on a few plays, missed communication and busted coverage,” he said. “It just all boils down to stopping big plays.” Offensive plays were also what kept IU in the game. Junior running back Tevin Coleman scored on runs of 45 and 69 yards. His 83-yard touchdown in the first quarter was the longest of his career.
That play came during a span of less than four minutes when the two teams combined for 35 points. An Iowa touchdown with no time left in the first half put the game out of hands. On fourth-and-goal Iowa running back Mark Weisman ran the ball in from one yard out, giving the Hawkeyes momentum going into the half . “That was real big,” Cooper said. “We just had to bow down. We did on the first try they had, and the second time we just didn’t bow down as well.”
IU STUDENTS
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T H E 1 5 th A N N U A L
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10.25.14
THE IU COLOR RUN OCTOBER 13 Early Registration Ends Last Day to Save $5 OCTOBER 17 Team & Pre-Registration Deadline OCTOBER 24 On-Site Registration & Packet Pickup at the SRSC (11AM – 6:00PM) OCTOBER 25 RACE DAY! On-Site Registration Available Beginning at 9:30AM
Oct. 25 Located at Showers Common at City Hall (next to Farmer’s Market)
FREE T-SHIRT for first 1,000
people to register
(if space available).
REGISTER ONLINE AT WWW.JB5K.COM OR THE SRSC OR WIC bursar billing available Campus Recreational Sports is a division of the
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9:00 a.m. Program honoring survivors and presentation of the Melody Martin Awareness Saves Lives Award
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