Monday, October 28, 2019
IDS Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
From memory, page 6
Collins to close in fall to be improved By Mel Fronczek mfroncze@iu.edu | @MelissaFronczek
‘Rain or shine, it’s
powder time!’ Attendees and volunteers battle the elements to take part in the 20th annual Jill Behrman 5K run By Madi Smalstig msmalsti@iu.edu | @madi_smals
The clouds dulled the sky to a rolling grey, and the rain poured onto the concrete. The droplets dripped from the roof of the SRSC, slid down the top of multicolored umbrellas and bounced off the rain ponchos of the volunteers and attendees of the 20th Jill Behrman 5K Run. The JB5K, which was created 20 years ago in remembrance of IU student and Campus Recreational Sports employee Jill Behrman, took place Saturday at the SRSC. The money raised from the race contributes to the Jill Behrman Emerging Leaders Scholarship, which awards $1,000 each to two full-time undergraduate stu-
dents who have been involved in Campus Recreational Sports for at least one year and have exhibited leadership on campus or in their community. Jill’s parents wrote the criteria for the scholarship, race director Chris Geary said. At 10:30 a.m. SRSC staff members led the runners in a Zumba warm up. While some dancers stood huddled under the shallow edge of roof in front of the double doors, others followed the leaders in green ponchos as they stepped out and together, rolled their hips, grape-vined to the left, then to the right, jumped up and down and encouraged people to get moving. “Everyone come out!” said Jim Jamriska, assistant director for member services and parking operations and emcee for the day, into a
microphone. “You’re not not gonna get wet today!” After 30 minutes of either dancing in the drizzle or shivering under the SRSC entryway, the participants were ushered down the steps to watch the a cappella group Ladies First perform the National Anthem and then start the race with the announcement, “Let’s get this party started!” The participants, followed by Marilyn Behrman, Jill’s mother, filed through two flags with IU Recreational Sports onto the course. Throughout the race, runners ran through five color zones, where they were splashed with cakey chalk dust. They also ran past various entertainers such as the Pizza X music truck and student groups such as the Hoosierettes and D-Force
ANNA TIPLICK | IDS
An IU student runs through the last color station on her way to the finish line Oct. 26 at the Student Recreational Sport Center. The race was shortened from 2.8 to 2 miles due to rain, race director Chris Geary said.
Dance Club. The race was shortened from 2.8 to 2 miles due to rain, Geary said. “We decided to cut off the central campus part for safety reasons,” Geary said. “It’s always a risk when you do outdoor events. Twenty years and this is the worst weather we’ve ever had, though.” About 400 of the around 1,000 registered participants showed up for the race, which was
Collins Center will close next school year for a $23 million renovation to fulfill IU’s Bicentennial Strategic Plan. The renovation will include central heat and air, a card-reader security system, handicap-accessible restrooms and elevators, hardsurface flooring and repairs to the electrical system and roofs, said IU spokesperson Chuck Carney. While Collins is renovated, the living-learning center will be moved to Foster Quad, which will be newly renovated by that time, Collins director Padraic Kenney said. The Hillcrest Apartments and Collins’ arts facilities will still operate. Carney said the Collins renovation was scheduled for the 2021-2022 school year but was moved up when the McNutt and Foster quadrangles renovations were also moved up to this year. “It’s a beautiful, old building that needs some renovations,” Carney said. IU sophomore Aaron Sizemore is living in Collins for his second year and is the Collins Student Government historian. The building opened in 1924, and Sizemore said it was the first living-learning center in Indiana. “We’re really old, and a lot of cool things have happened here,” he said. Sizemore said some notable IU alumni lived in Collins, such as Laverne Cox, "Orange Is the New Black" actress, and Meg Cabot, author of "The Princess Diaries" series. Once known as the Men’s Residence Center, Collins has also been the home to military SEE COLLINS, PAGE 4
FOOTBALL
IU leaves Nebraska ready to go bowling IU’s postseason hopes in jeopardy after loss SEE 5K, PAGE 4
WOMEN’S SOCCER
By Caleb Coffman
By Will Trubshaw wtrubsha@iu.edu | @Willtrubs
IU women’s soccer got off to the exact start it wanted Sunday, but it went downhill from there. The Hoosiers scored in the seventh minute, but in-state rival Purdue answered with goals in the 21st and 59th minutes to stun a big IU crowd and keep the rivalry trophy, the Golden Boot, for a fifth straight season. Purdue’s first win since Sept. 22 also put the Hoosiers’ playoff hopes in danger despite having one more game in hand. “First 15 minutes we have total control, we scored a goal, we should have scored another one, and then we just dropped our standard, our level of intensity,” said head Coach Erwin van Bennekom. “With all respect to them, I think we cost ourselves that game.” Junior midfielder Melanie Forbes put the Hoosiers in front early with a strike in the seventh minute.
CLAIRE LIVINGSTON | IDS
Senior Chandra Davidson tries to move the ball across the field Oct. 27 at Bill Armstrong Stadium. IU lost its last home game of the regular season to Purdue, 1-2.
Freshman forward Jacelyn Smith crossed a pass from right to left that was settled down by freshman midfielder Avery Lockwood. Lockwood then touched a pass to Forbes, who did a half spin and sent a bullet into the top right cor-
ner of the net for her second goal of the season. IU had another great opportunity not five minutes later off of Lockwood’s foot, but her shot trickled wide left of the goal. After their initial flurry, the
Hoosiers were playing on their heels for most of the remaining first half. Purdue sophomore midfielder Grace Walsh was able to take advantage of her team’s constant pressure, as she lined up for a free kick in the 21st minute. Walsh sent a sinking shot on net that IU junior goalkeeper Bethany Kopel stopped initially, but she could not hold on and the ball rolled into the net to tie the game at 1-1. Heading into halftime, what the scoreboard indicated and how the Hoosiers felt about their chances suggested two very different things. “Suddenly we start losing the ball and people stop wanting to get on the ball,” van Bennekom said. “We just got worse as the game went on, and never felt we had a good grip of the game.” Purdue dominated the first 15 minutes of the second half and culminated its sustained pressure SEE SOCCER, PAGE 4
calcoffm@iu.edu | @CalCoff
LINCOLN, Neb — As the final whistle sounded and the Hoosiers poured onto the field, IU head coach Tom Allen breathed a sigh of relief as he ran to the “N” at the center of the field to shake hands with Nebraska’s head coach Scott Frost. To his right, the moment Allen has spent three years building began. The IU players jumped up and down hugging each other and danced their way to the corner of the endzone to share their 38-31 victory with the IU fans that made the trip to Nebraska. “It was awesome,” junior quarterback Peyton Ramsey said. “These are the reasons we come to Indiana, to play games like that. It was just fun, and we’re going to celebrate it.” For IU, the celebration with the fans in the corner of the endzone didn’t always feel like an inevitability. SEE FOOTBALL, PAGE 4
Indiana Daily Student
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NEWS
Monday, Oct. 28, 2019 idsnews.com
Editors Alex Hardgrave, Ellen Hine and Joey Bowling news@idsnews.com
A quiet goodbye Friday marked the tenants' last day in the Brickhouse after a shooting By Grace Ybarra gnybarra@iu.edu | @gnybarra
It was the last time he would wake up in the house he had called home for the last two and a half years. IU senior Grant Mitchell and his four other roommates spent Friday moving their belongings, furniture and memories out of the Brickhouse. After an Oct. 13 shooting outside a homecoming party being thrown at 422 S. Grant St. brought the popular Bloomington music venue into the spotlight, the tenants were asked to mutually terminate their lease. The tenants were asked to accept the mutual termination agreement or face eviction last week. They were given 24 hours to make their decision and expected to be out of the house within three days. Mitchell said he spoke with a lawyer, and IU ended up extending the move-out deadline by a week. But an extra week in the Brickhouse still wasn’t enough. The seven extra days went by, and it was time to part with the home that meant so much to them. Although Mitchell had to move out of the Brickhouse on Friday, he didn’t spend his morning packing. Instead, he spent that time in the Dean of Students Office. Mitchell was joined by a dozen of his friends to march from the Brickhouse to the office to present their petition. Mitchell’s friend Gus Gonzalez, guitarist and vocalist of the Bloomington-based band Flower Mouth, created the petition Oct. 18, and it has received more than 3,000 signatures. The petition advocated
for alerts for active shooters off campus and for the renters of the Brickhouse. Mitchell’s friends showed up to the Brickhouse one final time Friday. It wasn’t for a house show. They sat on the front porch in the daylight. And the mood was somber. Gonzalez arrived at the Brickhouse with the printed petition in hand, including all the signatures, comments and relevant social media posts. He stuck the 167-page stack of paper inside a notebook, and then they began their march toward campus. In less than 15 minutes, they were walking into the Indiana Memorial Union, carrying signs that read “Justice for Brickhouse” and “notify us.” They filed into the lobby of the Dean of Students Office, a room far too small for that many occupants. Mitchell and Gonzalez signed into the office and waited for the Dean – for almost an hour. Mitchell wanted the conversation to be public and inclusive of everyone present, but they were told that didn’t fit the Dean of Students Office policy. Instead, Mitchell and Gonzalez went back to speak with Dave O’Guinn, vice provost for student affairs and Dean of Students. After about a half an hour of discussions, Mitchell and Gonzalez emerged back into the lobby. Some supporters had to leave for their 11 a.m. classes, but many stayed until they were done. Mitchell said he was happy about what they discussed and felt like he got his point across. But he said he’d be happier if their conversation provokes any steps to-
IZZY MYSZAK | IDS
The door stands ajar Oct. 25 as the tenants move out of the Brickhouse. The tenants of the house were forced to move out roughly two weeks following the shooting.
ward change. Gonzalez said O’Guinn was receptive to the idea of an IU-Notify policy change and invited Gonzalez to speak in open forums. “The main concerns were the fact that they felt like there was no need to issue an alert, and we have 3,000 signatures to say otherwise,” Mitchell said. Though they felt heard about IU-Notify, Mitchell said there needs to be more discussions about his situation with the Brickhouse. “The Dean’s Office is not working for me,” Mitchell said. “They weren’t concerned about my rights, and they were just thinking about IU rather than about the students.” Mitchell said he demanded compensation and that no students are ever treated like they were again. He said he told O’Guinn that he would like his rent to be subsidized
to cover the cost difference between the Brickhouse and his new apartment. Mitchell returned to the Brickhouse to finish packing a little after noon. He took his belongings, put them in a moving van and transported it across town to his new apartment. The van arrived at Redbud Hill, Mitchell’s new home for the rest of the school year. He said his apartment has no air conditioning or controlled heating and costs over a $100 more a month than what he paid at the Brickhouse. “At this point, I’m happy to be living somewhere,” Mitchell said. “Two days ago I didn’t know I would be living anywhere. The fact that I have a place is really nice.” After moving everything into his new place, Mitchell drove back to Brickhouse for one final sweep. One final walk across the old wooden floor.
Mitchell was emotional. His bedroom off the kitchen was bare for the first time in two and a half years. But that wasn’t the hard part. What was hard was walking down the old stairs into the basement and looking into the room that held so many good memories and knowing he’d never make any more. Memories raced through his head as he looked around the room. Mitchell thought about how happy the basement made people and how impressed people were with the space. Mitchell said he could feel the room. He said it felt like being hugged. He always prided himself on how safe and inclusive it was. “It’s the thing I’ve been the most proud to be a part of,” Mitchell said, choking up. “I’m just really sad to see it go like this.” He said he sat down in the
middle of the large basement on the cement floor and began to meditate. It was just him and the basement. Mitchell said people often told him the Brickhouse was the heart and soul of the Bloomington music scene. Gonzalez said he knows the scene will survive even without its most influential venue. “We’ve proven through this petition and the response to this situation that there’s a lot of love here, and we’re always going to be here to hold each other up,” Gonzalez said. Mitchell and his roommates weren’t alone during this time of chaos, sadness and change. The Bloomington music scene was behind them. Another venue organized a house show Friday night to benefit the tenants of the Brickhouse. All donations collected were given to the tenants to go toward moving expenses.
Climate activists stage die-in protest Students debate By Sam Boland srboland@iu.edu
Climate activists escalated their recent campaigns by staging a “die-in” Wednesday afternoon in front of Ballantine Hall. Police broke up the protest after just 10 minutes. Roughly a dozen students participated in the protest organized by a student-led climate organization, Fridays For Future Bloomington, by lying in the street. The group marches every Friday to raise awareness for climate change. Wednesday’s protest was an effort to stand in solidarity with the humans and other species whose lives are altered by the climate crisis. When a police officer arrived to ask students to move out of the street so cars could get through, all but junior Patrick Saling complied. “Cars were absolutely able to get through,” said Saling, who sat with his feet
planted in the street. “I put my tush on the curb but alas, my feet stayed in the road because these feet are for moving with people, for changing the world, and they are staying in the road,” he said. The officer returned and engaged in a brief argument with Saling until the student left to take a quiz. “He got lucky this time,” Saling said. “Me and IUPD will see each other again. We always do.” The protest and exchange with the officer drew the attention of students passing by during a busy period. Steven Rigg, president of Students For a New Green World, a climate change activist group integral in staging the protest, was not content. “These demonstrations don’t mean a whole lot until we’re asking for something,” said Rigg. “Until the school seems unreasonable in not granting our requests. These
IU-Notify protocol after shooting By Joy Burton joyburt@iu.edu | @joybur10
SAM BOLAND | IDS
Climate activists escalated their recent campaigns by staging a “die-in” Wednesday afternoon in front of Ballantine Hall. Roughly a dozen students participated in the protest organized by a student-led climate organization, Fridays For Future Bloomington, by lying in the street.
actions don’t have a whole lot of weight right now, but they will in the future.” As for their future plans, Rigg and others are creating a list of demands for IU President Michael McRobbie. “If we can build an argument that their competitors
and other schools are making steps to advocate for the environment and are implementing policy while IU is not and is seen as lagging, then they’re going to pay attention,” said Rigg. “That’s the leverage point we’re going to try and pull here.”
More than 90,000 evacuated as fire grows From Tribune News Service HEALDSBURG, Calif. – Northern California braced for historically powerful winds and widespread power outages as the Kincade fire in Sonoma County raged on, forcing the evacuation of more than 90,000 people. Pacific Gas & Electric Co. said Saturday that it planned to cut power to up to 940,000 customers in Northern California to lower the risk of high winds _ predicted to gust over 70 mph _ knocking down live wires and sparking disastrous fires. The preventive blackouts began early Saturday afternoon. More than 2 million people could lose power. "The next 72 hours is going to be challenging," Gov. Gavin Newsom told reporters Saturday. "I can sugarcoat it, but I'm not." Officials ordered the towns of Healdsburg and Windsor evacuated. At 6 p.m., the order was extended to a wide swath of the Sonoma County coast. The new map shows that other communities under mandatory evacuation include Charles M. Schulz So-
noma County Airport, Bodega Bay and Guerneville, with zones of mandatory evacuation stretching all the way to the Pacific Ocean. Evacuation warnings were issued to communities north and west of Santa Rosa and areas close to Napa County. Officials emphasized that it was important for the evacuation to be complete before preventive power outages took effect. By Saturday night, winds are expected to pick up considerably. "I wouldn't be surprised if we saw gusts between 80 and 85 mph," National Weather Service meteorologist Drew Peterson said. "Hopefully, (firefighters) can make some progress. We'll most likely see the fire spreading once again." The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection warned residents to heed the evacuation orders. "If we look at the past three years, all of the large and damaging fires have occurred at this time of the year during an offshore wind event, particularly during red-flag warnings," said. Jonathan Cox, a spokesman for Cal Fire. "It has
us highly concerned that the vulnerable areas of California could see some explosive fires." Officials had already expanded evacuation zones to include Gifford Springs, Whispering Pines, Anderson Springs, Adams Springs, Hobergs and Cobb Mountain. Authorities said a firefighter and two civilians were injured when they were overwhelmed by flames as the firefighter was attempting to evacuate the pair. "The firefighter was forced to deploy his fire shelter, where he shielded them from fire," Cal Fire said in a statement. After the flames passed, all three were taken to a hospital. None of them suffered life-threatening injuries, the statement said. As of Saturday morning, 23,000 structures were still threatened. The fire was 10% contained. Residents of Healdsburg and Windsor and surrounding areas were urged to stay with friends or family outside the evacuation zone. Others were encouraged to head down Highway 101 to
Petaluma, where shelters were opening at the veterans hall and the fairgrounds. Livestock could be sheltered at the Santa Rosa fairgrounds, officials said. Dominic Foppoli, mayor of Windsor, urged residents to move quickly. "Do not take this warning lightly, we need everybody to evacuate.... This is a lifethreatening situation and a danger to our entire town," he said. Fire officials said the evacuation orders could be the largest in the region's history. "We understand the impact of the evacuations we are about to announce are going to be substantial," Cox said. "We are really prioritizing safety for what is potentially the worst case scenario." By noon in Windsor, traffic was moving slowly southward on Highway 101, a main evacuation route. Lines of cars snaked around a gas station in the town of 28,000. By Taryn Luna, Anita Chabria, Jack Dolan and Maura Dolan Los Angeles Times
The Political And Civic Engagement program presented a discussion Oct. 25 called “Is IU Notify working for us?” It was part of the group’s weekly Free Speech Fridays series at the IU Theater and Drama building. Students discussed the handling of the Oct.13 Brickhouse shooting. The shooting occurred outside a property owned by Indiana University. Two people were shot and hospitalized, including an IU freshman. An “IU-Notify” notification was not sent to alert students and families about the shooting due to existing protocol. The protocol specifies that notifications are not required for off-campus situations where there is not an ongoing danger, according to previous Indiana Daily Student reporting. At the Free Speech Friday event, sophomore Andrew Stewart said he thinks the standard for sending IU-Notify alerts should keep all IU students safe, not just people who live on campus. “If you want to help guarantee people stay alive off-campus, they should send a notification,” Stew-
art said. There was also discussion on why the situation was not ruled an ogoing threat when it was believed there was more than one shooter and only one was arrested. Freshman Maddy Morningstar said it looks to her like it was an error that an IU-Notify was not sent. “This can be a good excuse for IU to rethink the way they evaluate dangerous situations so this never happens again,” she said. Senior Gabe Donnelly, who was leading the talk today, said IU should also consider that RPS housing now extends off campus for students originally assigned to live in McNutt and Foster. IU sophomore Rebekah Amaya said she believes this situation is just another case of the university not taking enough action. “I feel like we just keep having to fight the administration,” Amaya said. “Shouldn’t they be fighting for us?” Maddie Dederichs, IUSG director of student life, said she just wishes the IU-Notify situation was handled better altogether. “I can be desensitized to phone notifications, but I can never be desensitized to gun violence,” Dederichs said.
Matt Rasnic Editor-in-Chief Christine Fernando & Ty Vinson Managing Editors
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Monday, Oct. 28, 2019 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
Survivors, allies march for Take Back the Night event By Kyra Miller
This year’s march was cold and rainy, but a small group still gathered in Dunn Meadow to hear speakers and learn more information about resources and communities for people who have survived sexual violence and those who promote safe sex activities.
kymill@iu.edu | @kyra_ky94
A circle of candles held in silence by survivors of sexual and domestic violence and their allies. This was the sight Thursday night in front of the Monroe County Courthouse at the Feminist Student Association at IU's annual Take Back the Night silent march and vigil. Take Back the Night is a volunteer-based global effort to combat sexual violence and abuse against women, according to its website. Take Back the Night partners with organizations all over the world to work toward the end of sexual violence. Take Back the Night events have been organized across the United States since 1975 and in Bloomington since 1977. Katie Koestner, the first woman in the United States to publically come out as a victim of campus date rape in 1990, brought together different groups practicing Take
“The silent march is really important because it allows us to stand in solidarity with everyone who is still silenced.” Zubia Rauf, Feminist Student Association president
IZZY MYSZAK | IDS
Seniors Zubia Rauf and Alexia Barraza lead the Take Back The Night march Oct. 24 along Kirkwood Avenue. The march helps bring awareness of sexual assault and domestic violence.
Back the Night events under one foundation in 2001, according to the foundation’s website.
“The silent march is really important because it allows us to stand in solidarity with everyone who is still
silenced,” said Zubia Rauf, FSA president, IU graduate student and survivor of sexual assault.
Groups included the Sexual Health Advocacy Group, Middle Way House and the Monroe County Indiana Chapter of the National Organization for Women. The organizations were all given the opportunity to share information about their
group and what Take Back The Night means to them. “Take Back the Night is such an evocative rally cry,” said Evelyn Smith, speaker for All-Options Pregnancy Resource Center. “It lays a grievance at the feet of everyone who has ever made us feel unsafe in our own communities after dark.” After the speeches, attendees silently marched down Kirkwood Avenue to the Monroe County Courthouse for the candlelight vigil. Ellie Johnson is a senior who founded Shatter the Silence, a group formed to support survivors and promote safety and ethical action in higher education. Johnson formed Shatter the Silence in August 2018 after publicly criticizing IU for its sexual misconduct policies and filing a Title IX complaint against the university. “Even if you haven’t experienced sexual assault, every single one of you is brave,” Johnson said to those assembled at the courthouse.
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Monday, Oct. 28, 2019 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
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» COLLINS
» 5K
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trainees and winners of the first three men’s Little 500 races. He said he has mixed emotions when it comes to Collins closing. “I’m sad to not have access to it for a year, but at the same time I’m excited for the changes we’re going to get,” Sizemore said. Kenney said Foster will be an ideal temporary location for the LLC because there are classrooms, lounges and office spaces. “Collins will be in pretty nice digs for a year while the renovation goes on,” Kenney said. “And then we’ll be returning in full force in fall 2021 back to the renovated Collins.” IU sophomore Jennie Moran chose to live in Collins again this year mainly because of the friends she made last year. She said she doesn’t plan on living in Collins next year because she thinks it will be easier to figure out off-campus living. “I’m going to miss having people around that I can always hang out with,” Moran said. Sizemore said students have a lot of input at Collins, even with this renovation. He said students have met with Kenney and architects. Kenney said the next town hall for students to learn about the renovation and voice their concerns will be 8 p.m. next Sunday in the Edmondson Hall classroom.
incredible considering the weather, Geary said. “I just want everyone that came out in the rain to have a great time,” Geary said. “It doesn’t matter how many are here, as long as they all have fun.” Freshman Makailah Govan said she signed up because she thought it looked like fun, and it was for a great cause. She decided to come despite the rain because she heard the color from the chalk dust would be even more vibrant this year. “The lady said the color would stick, and I wanted some color,” Govan said. During rain-free days, the chalk dust that is thrown does stick to shirts, but it is much more likely to shake off of the runners as they jog from one color station to the next. The rain caused the chalk to have a thicker consistency and stickier properties. As a result, this year’s par-
» FOOTBALL
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Once again, it was Ramsey who had to step in for the injured redshirtfreshman quarterback Michael Penix Jr. and delivered the game of his career. Ramsey spread the ball around completing 27-of40 passes for a career-high 351 yards, two touchdowns, while only throwing one interception, relying heavily on junior receiver Whop Philyor who caught 14 passes for 178 yards.
» SOCCER
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with a swift goal on a counter attack. Junior forward Hannah Melchiorre was sent into the box on a beautiful pass by redshirt sophomore Sarah Griffith that split two IU defenders and allowed Melchiorre to score her fourth goal of the year. The eventual game-winning goal in the 59th minute marked the first time Kopel IU’s offense set the tone early as the Hoosiers came out guns blazing scoring 16 points on its first three possessions. While the Hoosier offense consistently moved the ball downfield, the defense couldn’t put together enough stops to allow IU to create separation. IU’s defense gave up seven chunk-plays of 10 or more yards in the first half that allowed the Cornhuskers to extend drives as they trailed 21-16 going into halftime.
ANNA TIPLICK | IDS
IU students dance together with friends Oct. 26 at the Student Recreational Sport Center. Participants in the event had to run the course in the rain.
the SRSC loading dock for a final dance party. The stage, set up with plastic wrap still covering the speakers, sat unused as the instructors led around 20 people to songs such as “Uptown Funk.” The dance party was cut short by seven minutes. The original schedule had included the announcement of team awards and a final color release. Both were canceled. Even though the rain affected the race day events, Marilyn Behrman said the 20th race was special because of the way people still stayed positive through the cold and the rain. If it was raining any other day, Marilyn said, she would have stayed inside. Instead, she said, she had a great Saturday morning. “Just seeing all of the volunteers and the student staff that help run this through their committee, come out and have such a good time on a bad weather day,” Behrman said. “It’s always special.”
ticipants looked more colorful than ever before. When the participants had circled back to the finish line, a feast of Bucceto’s pizza, Baked! of Bloomington
cookies, hot chocolate, bananas, Kind bars, water and ham and turkey sandwiches awaited them. Participants were also invited inside the SRSC to take pictures with
the JB5K signs, warm up and peruse pamphlets about the race. At 11:30 a.m. SRSC staff members and a few straggling participants met out in
had allowed two or more goals in a game since Sept. 22 against Nebraska, which is ironic considering that Purdue’s last win had come on the same day. The Boilermakers managed to eat most of the remaining clock and win to hold onto the Golden Boot as they have every year since 2015. “I hope we all feel what I feel, that they’re celebrating on our field, which hurts more than anything,” van
Bennekom said. IU will now have to wait on results of Sunday afternoon matches for Ohio State, Nebraska, and Northwestern to know if its match on Wednesday against Michigan State will have an effect on their Big Ten Tournament chances. “Hopefully, we’re not done,” van Bennekom said “We’ll see this afternoon. Hopefully we’re still playing on Wednesday for something.”
Head coach Erwin van Bennekom gives advice to a player Oct. 27 at Bill Armstrong Stadium. IU ended the first half against Purdue tied 1-1 but ultimately lost in the second half.
In the second half, the Hoosiers turned a corner. “We just kind of settled in,” sophomore linebacker Micah McFadden said. “We started to not do too much and not get involved with the crowd.” On first and second down with 11:26 remaining in the third quarter, McFadden and junior defensive end Michael Ziemba broke through the offensive line to stuff Nebraska running back Wan’Dale Robinson in the backfield. After IU got the stop on
fourth down, Nebraska’s senior punter Isaac Armstrong shanked a punt out of bounds at Nebraska’s own 35 yard-line to set up an IU touchdown to take the lead. “Our whole defense was just swarming,” McFadden said. “Me and Mike got there and were able to make some plays, and then the punt and the offense were able to go and score.” The Hoosiers would be able to hold onto the lead through the fourth quarter after a third-and-seven scramble from Ramsey.
CLAIRE LIVINGSTON | IDS
As the pocket collapsed around him, Ramsey rolled out to his right tucking the ball as he barreled toward the first-down marker. As he crossed the marker and stepped out of bounds, Allen jumped up into the air double fist-pumping in excitement as his first bowlbirth neared. “I know I took some heat when I came out with ‘breakthrough’ a few years ago, and I believed with my whole heart we were going to breakthrough year one,” Allen said. “We were obvi-
ously close and we didn’t and I really believed in year two and we didn’t, but I didn’t quit believing.” It may not have been pretty, but IU clinching its first bowl game in the Tom Allen era in one of the toughest environments in the country embodies the type of program Allen has been trying to create. “I love this team,” Allen said with tears filling his eyes. “Everybody told us we couldn’t do it. We’re not defined by what others think we can do.”
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!!NOW LEASING!! August ‘20 - ‘21. Omega Properties 812-333-0995 omegabloomington.com
New opportunity for Students! Sales Canvasser: $10/hr. plus commission. Part time or full time. Contact Gary at:
2 & 3 BR/2.5 BA lrg. luxury twnhs. at Gables Bldg. near Downtown/ Campus. 3 free covered prkg. per unit. Avail. Aug. 2020. 812-333-9579 or
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Avail. August 2020 311 N Clark St - 2 BR 1 BA w/ 3 person occupancy *ALL UTILS. INCL!* $1800/mnth 812-360-2628 HPIU.com Houses and apt. 1-5 BR. Close to campus. 812-333-4748 No pets please.
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2 BR/1 BA next to Informatics. Avail. Aug., 2020. 812-333-9579 or
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3 BR/1 BA luxury apt. Located at 9th/Grant. Avail. Aug., 2020. 812-333-9579 or
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N64 with controllers and games, Super Nintendo w/ controllers and games. $350. salyharr@iu.edu
Brand new “Intermediate Algebra” book by Lynn Marecek. $40. ksstern@iu.edu
Textbooks Criminal Justice P304 Textbook “When Prisoners Come Home” $10. baihull@indiana.edu
Sublet Rooms/Rmmte. Sublet for The Gateway Jan.-May. $800/mo. 1 rmmate., personal BA. matsulli@iu.edu
465 505
2016 Roush R3 Mustang. 670 hp. $65,000, cash only. wesawalk@iu.edu
Motorcycles 2012 Honda Shadow w/ helmet, glasses and jacket. $4,000. jlmcinti@indiana.edu
Bicycles Electric bicycle in great cond. - Like new. $800. 812-349-8730
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Instax Camera. Brand new. Never used. $45. junhxu@iu.edu
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Textbooks “The Singing Book.” Good cond., only some tear on the cover. $55. wang562@indiana.edu
PS4-openbox-slim 1tb. Comes w/ second controller. $275. (812) 322-1655
2008 Volvo s40 2.4i, 130K miles, clean, serviced. $3,800, obo. kparrott@iu.edu
Slate pool table, barely used, perfect cond. $350. mrbennet@indiana.edu
Large 1/2 BR apts. & townhouses avail. Summer & Fall, 2020! Close to Campus & Stadium. 812-334-2646
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reference store 1991. See you soon!
Apple Magic trackpad, white, perfect cond., like new. $65. pw7@indiana.edu
2004 Ford F250 Super Duty Super Cab XLT, 4d, 6 3/4 ft. $9,000. dawmyers@indiana.edu
New Beats Studio3 Wireless with “Shadow Gray” Color. Cash. 812-558-4274
2018 Macbook Pro 15” (Warranty until 2022!). Great cond. $1,650. scottlo@iu.edu
5 BR/2 BA house at 7th/ Walnut next to Butch’s Deli. Free off-street prkg. WD/DW. Aug., 2020. 812-333-9579 or
2002 Ford F-150 Lariat, runs good, extended cab. $5,500. tbiehl@indiana.edu
Dyson Supersonic Blow Dryer. Brand new, in box. $350, cash only. miclivin@iu.edu
2018 gold MacBook Air. 8 GB RAM and 256 GB memory. $1,050. kjharshb@iu.edu
3 BR, 2 BA, A/C, a mile from Law School. Unfurn., w/stainless steel kitchen. Avail. now. Call/text: 812-325-0848.
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2001 Subaru Legacy Outback Limited 4door wagon. $1,100, obo. brhankin@indiana.edu
Columbia women’s size 8.5 medium hiking boots. Never worn. 2 styles, $45 each. 812-322-0808
2015 MacBook Pro, great condition. $550. rnswain@indiana.edu
Automobiles 1974 Cadillac Eldorado White convertible in great cond. 50k miles, 3k since 1993. 8594091160
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12 pc. dinnerware set w/ 4 dinner & salad plates, bowls, & silverware. $15. yafwang@hotmail.com
2014 MacBook Air, 13’’, 1.4Ghz, 4GB, works great. $550 neg. aincast@iu.edu
3-4 BR houses on Atwater, next to Optometry. Incl. utilities. Avail. Aug., 2020. 812-333-9579 or
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“Indiana University Basketball: For the Thrill of It” Excellent cond. $20. 812-585-5749
Electronics 14” HP gold laptop. 8GB RAM and a 1TB HD. Great cond. $350. rogers47@indiana.edu
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Welcome back students, Check us out! We are looking for highly engaged applicants who are available for part time or full time positions. We have everything from cashiers to management roles. Benefits include paid time off accumulated every hour worked, health and educational benefits and more! Starting wage is $11 and up! Apply at:
Wireless mouse + 2 pair of new batteries + 1 mouse pad. $6. xz68@iu.edu
Solid oak, four-shelf book / entertainment center. $60. 301-529-1037
515
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Computers Macbook 2010. Refurbished w/ updated software High Sierra. $250. (812) 322-1655
3-4 BR house at 9th/Grant. Avail. Aug., 2020. 812-333-9579 or
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Light up rave sneakers, women’s 8, only worn twice. $20. hnt@iu.edu
520
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Men’s IU watch. Black band, new battery. $25. 812-322-7914
Galanz retro light blue mini fridge in good cond. $90 - rpioveza@iu.edu
**Avail. August!** 3 BR homes. ALL UTILS. INCLUDED! www.iurent.com 812-360-2628 1-5 BR. Close to Campus. Call: 812-339-2859. elkinsapartments.com
Queen Mattress for sale. Good condition. $150. riesmurp@iu.edu
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Restaurant & Bar WORK TODAY GET PAID TOMORROW Wendy’s is reopening our store on College Mall Road! We are looking for friendly people to join our team. Wendy’s offers great pay and benefits including: Instant Pay, meal discounts, health insurance and 401K to qualifying employees. To apply please visit: nowhiring.com/wob
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Indiana Daily Student
FOR 2020 - 21
56” Farmhouse table w/ drawers and four ladder back chairs. $160.
1, 2, 3, 4 & 5 BR Houses, Townhouses and Apartments
French style 66” camelback sofa w/ wood-carved legs. $100, obo. 301-529-1037 Liberty Pub table and 4 pub stools less than 2 years old. $250, obo. ahanners@indiana.edu
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Indiana Daily Student
6
FEATURE
Monday, Oct. 28, 2019 idsnews.com
Editor Christine Stephenson enterprise@idsnews.com
Remembering the house on West Seventh and Jackson Story and Photos by Ty Vinson vinsonjo@iu.edu | @ty_vinson_
A man and woman pushed carts filled with items down the sidewalk on West Seventh Street earlier this month. When they got to where the Stancombe House used to be, they stopped. The brick fireplace from the front parlor room was still there. The front step was still there. Everything else was rubble, broken glass and shredded floral wallpaper. Faded yellow stucco still clung to a piece of what used to be the kitchen wall. Sitting on the front step was a stone frog, a little worn, with only hints of green paint left. “What used to be here, a house?” the woman asked. “Looks like it burned down.” The woman picked up the stone frog and examined it for a few seconds. Then, she placed it into the crook of her arm, put a hand on her cart and continued down the sidewalk. To answer her question, to understand what used to stand there and what it meant, you have to go back in time, back through four generations. A lot of things began and ended at 523 W. 7th St. – childhoods, a million meatloaves, even lives. The house caused a public controversy when wreckers took it down last week. The city wanted to protect it. The family who owned it wanted it gone. Now the family owes $83,000 in fines. They knew they’d missed some steps, and they knew the city would object, but they felt they had no choice. The house that held 90 years of their memories took a lot of trouble with it when it fell. Oct. 14, 2019 Steve Stancombe stood beside the flat space where his grandparents’ house used to be. It was cold, one of the first cold days in October. He put his hands in his pockets. “A lot of memories here,” he said. The dining room was gone. There wouldn’t be any more family dinners. The porch chair was gone — the one he used to lean back on as a kid, copying his grandpa. The porch is gone. Steve, 66, was able to recover some slats from the porch. They still had the blue shade of paint on them. “It don’t look so big when there ain’t nothing there, ya know it?” Steve said. Steve’s sister, Rosemary Stancombe Crockett, got out of her car and stood next to Steve. She shivered. “Just doesn’t look as big anymore, does it?” she said. Steve and Rosemary walked up the sidewalk. Steve stepped into the freshly laid straw and tried to map out where the front step used to be. Steve tries to keep connections to the past. He bought a ’52 Pontiac so he could have something from the year he was born. He hasn’t restored it much, though people always tell him he should. He always responds with, “It’s only original once.” Rosemary, 64, grabbed a set of aluminum cups from the rubble. Steve plans to pass them down to his son before he dies. “There was a lot of livin’ goin’ on in that house,” he said. Sept. 26, 2019 First, the demolition crew went through the house to salvage everything they could. They took out the stoves, cabinets, countertops, windows, mantels. They began to dissect the house piece by piece. The wrecker tore into the roof. It was all sorted, crushed and disseminated to landfills. Diana’s husband, Dave Holdman, watched the house come down. She came by after the roof was gone, but didn’t stay. When the house was gone, she called her mother, Judie. Judie couldn’t bear to see the house, not after what happened there.
TY VINSON | IDS
Steve Stancombe and Rosemary Stancombe Crockett stand Oct. 14 where the front step used to be of 523 W. 7th St., their grandmother’s home. The house had been in the family since the 1940s and was demolished in September.
“It’s finally done and over with,” Diana said to her mom. They cried over the phone. Sept. 25, 2019 An engineer hired by the family inspected the house to determine whether it could be saved. When he walked through the house, he laughed. The support underneath the house had rotted in the dirt. The pipes were broken from constantly freezing over. Fixing the problem would require lifting the house and setting it back down on new support, all while praying it didn’t fall apart. It also would require a lot of money. Diana and Dave went to the house and saw there had been another fire lit on the inside, destroying more of the house. They had to make a decision. Dave called Judie. Take it down, she said, once and for all. Judie was ready for it to be gone, and the bad memories along with it. Summer 2019 In May, Dave put in a request for a demolition permit. The family met with the Bloomington Historic Preservation Commission and the request was tabled. The meeting was moved. At the next meeting, it wasn’t discussed. The next meeting was supposed to allow the family to voice why they wanted the house to be demolished. They even brought a sketch of what they wanted to build in its place: a Queen Anne singlefamily home. The commission surveyed all the adjoining houses and then, on Aug. 7, voted to designate the neighborhood as a protected district and sent the decision on to the city council. Diana and Dave didn’t know about the meeting, they say. They didn’t know the home was protected by city ordinance at that point. Diana figured there would be consequences, but the house just wasn’t built well. “If we could’ve saved it, we would’ve done it,” Diana said. “You have to start from good bones.” May 2019 Diana Rush Holdman and other members of the family went through the house and salvaged what they could. Old photos of Easter egg hunts and naps with grandma, Carrie Stancombe. Photos of Diana and her siblings. Letters written back and forth between Carrie’s seven kids while they were in the war. Stained glass, doors, cups, old clothing, detached doors, a white corner cabinet, a set of eight ship mugs. The Stancombe family crest.
2006-2019 The house sat empty for 13 years. Homeless people would often break in and sleep there. Fires were lit in the fireplace, even though it had been plugged long ago. Toilets didn’t work, so people would use bottles or 5-gallon buckets. The fires slowly destroyed the house, charring the inside of the fireplace and burning the carpet around it. Diana and her husband Dave started thinking about what to do with the house. It had become an eyesore to the rest of the neighborhood, which is full of historic houses in the section of town called the Near West Side. The house was right across the street from Fairview Elementary, and people were constantly in and out of it, no matter how often they boarded it up. With colder weather would come more fires in the plugged fireplace. Someone could get hurt. When they went inside, Diana and Dave found broken glass, 5-gallon buckets of sewage, probation papers, dirty needles and around 40 bottles of urine. There were always offers from the church next door, but the family felt the house would just be torn down to make room for more parking spaces. Every year, people would ask Judie what she wanted to do, and she always avoided the question. It hurt to think about it. June 24, 2006 Judie had gone to stay with her daughter Diana for a few days when they both realized they hadn’t heard from Judie’s son Kenny Rush. He just got divorced and was living with his mom while he worked as a mason. He would usually call to check in, but when he didn’t answer the phone for a couple of days, Judie and Diana worried. When Judie and Diana arrived, they found blood all throughout the house, on the back patio, seeping down rocks. They found Kenny’s body on the floor of the back room near the bathroom. The details of the crime are sketchy. It was never solved. All they know is Kenny was killed by “blunt force trauma to the back of the head.” It could have been an altercation at the home, it could have happened somewhere else and Kenny tried to make it back home. Maybe they’ll never know for sure. He was 45. After Kenny died, Judie couldn’t bear to be in the house anymore. She shut the
house up and said she would never go back. 1990 The roots from the willow tree out back started growing into the pipes, so the family had to cut it down. In its place, the Stancombes started a tradition that lasted about seven years. Instead of a plastic Christmas tree or one with its end sliced off, the family would buy one with a healthy root ball. After it lived its life indoors for the holidays, Judie, Diana and Dave would take it outside and plant it on the edge of the property bordering North Jackson Street. The trees grew to more than 20 feet tall. 1989 Kenny had been working on a wall-building project for the Scholars Inn Bakehouse on College Avenue when he came across a stone frog painted green. He loved to find random, weird things like that to give to people he knew. So, he set it on the front step of his mother’s house on West Seventh Street. 1979 Carrie Stancombe told her granddaughter Judie to not worry so much about the house. She joked she thought someone built the house drunk, cutting so many corners you could stand in the front door and roll a marble all the way out the back. Carrie died in February at age 86. The house sat empty for six months. 1970 For Christmas, Carrie and her grandkids decorated the fireplace mantel with pine boughs and stockings. The family didn’t have much money. Diana would sometimes find marbles in her stocking. Carrie would always put up a little silver Christmas tree with blue balls behind the couch on a stand. Though it was small, Diana was smaller. She always thought the tree was big. 1967 Kenny was 7 when he ran down the brick sidewalk on West Seventh Street with an arrow in his hand. It was a game of Cowboys and Indians, and though the arrow was a toy, the tip was real and sharp. His mother Judie told him to stop running with it in his hand, he could get hurt. He stopped, but when he did, he fell on the arrow and it went straight through the roof of his mouth. Judie had to cut the arrow down so he could shut his mouth, then she took him to the hospital.
1962 Diana took her first steps in the hallroom just before the kitchen. It was the only halfway level part of the house, and there was very little in it, so it was safe to fall in. That same year, her father fell asleep at the wheel on his way to a duck hunting trip, drove into an embankment and died. 1960s Carrie watched a lot of wrestling. Everyone who walked into the house knew when she was watching AWA All-Star Wrestling. The volume would be cranked up on her little silver TV that sat on a silver tray. She liked Dick the Bruiser, the “World’s Most Dangerous Wrestler.” He won a lot of matches. She’d yell at the TV anytime he did anything wrong or lost a match. Granddaughter Judie told her she needed to calm down so her blood pressure wouldn’t spike. Carrie was in her 70s after all, it probably wasn’t healthy to be screaming at the TV all the time. Judie broke the news to her grandmother that wrestling is staged — not real. It broke Carrie’s heart. It was like a child learning Santa isn’t real. 1957 Steve would copy his grandpa Mose and sit in a chair on the front porch of the house and rock it back until it touched one of the posts, acting like it was a rocking chair. He would sit and watch people walk by, but he was always told not to talk to strangers. He could recall steam engine trains going through Bloomington and the black smoke crawling down the brick streets. On the Fourth of July, the family would drag a couple picnic tables out to sit under the willow tree out back. But the kids weren’t allowed to swing on the tree. That got them in trouble. Instead, they would go across the street to Fairview Elementary School. The kids would climb the fence and play on the playground, the swings, the monkey bars, the slide. It made Steve and his sister Rosemary wish they were old enough to go to school already. Some days the children would place a pillow on the large white sill of the bay windows in the parlor room, open the drapes and watch the kids play. Diana, Steve and Rosemary would finish playing on the playground and go back to the house to get a sandwich from the woman Diana called “Granny Good Witch,”
or as we know her, Carrie Stancombe. Diana called her that because no matter what someone would say about somebody else, Granny Good Witch would respond, “You never know somebody else’s troubles.” 1950s Grandmother Carrie always seemed to be at her little Warm Morning stove cooking something. She would wear an apron, usually one embroidered by her daughters. One had an embroidered terrier on it, similar to the one Carrie had for almost 20 years. Another was decorated with flowers and vegetables, like a garden. Carrie was known for meatloaf, pot roast, homemade chicken noodle soup and apple pie. She never had recipes written down, they were all in her head. It was a pinch of this, a pinch of that, every time. The only recipe she wrote down was for persimmon pudding, after family members begged her for it. While she cooked, she would talk to herself like nobody else was around. Every time Rosemary would walk into the house, she could hear a set of aluminum cups rattling on top of the fridge. It sounded just like bells. 1940, or so Carrie and Mose Stancombe moved to Bloomington from Vevay, Indiana. They started renting a house built in the 1890s at 523 W. 7th St. Mose began working in the Showers Brothers Building a few blocks down while Carrie stayed home. The house was one of two central parlor homes in Bloomington. After some years, the man they rented from offered to sell the house to Carrie and Mose. He took the rent they had paid so far as the down payment. The walls were covered in floral wallpaper. The kitchen was a yellow stucco and decorated with commemorative dishes. There was no central heat, just two warming stoves, and the fireplaces let in more air than they heated. Carrie and Mose had seven kids and one bedroom. Their granddaughter Judie was 5 when they moved in. Carrie and Mose turned the left parlor into a living room and the right parlor into a bedroom. They set a bunch of aluminum cups atop the refrigerator. The little house became known, then and forever, as the Stancombe house. FOR MORE PHOTOS, VISIT IDSNEWS.COM/FROMMEMORY
Indiana Daily Student
ARTS
Monday, Oct. 28, 2019 idsnews.com
Editors Ally Melnik and Greer Ramsey-White arts@idsnews.com
7
Students open lens into cultures Campus theater
presents ‘Big Fish’
By Raegan Walsh ramwalsh@iu.edu
It’s a Friday morning and the Indiana Memorial Union Starbucks is packed. The windows expose the colors of the fall leaves outside, the smell of freshly brewed coffee permeates the air, study materials are sprawled out on the many wooden tables and there’s a line out the door of sleepdeprived students hoping to get a jolt of energy before their next class. Sitting alone in front of it all is senior Dhruv Kapoor. Eyes focused on a music stand, he strums a fine-tuned guitar and begins singing a medley he composed that included “Hey Jude” by the Beatles and popular Bollywood songs. The rest of his set continued this trend, combining other English songs, like “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” and “Iris” by the Goo Goo Dolls, with music from his Indian heritage. “A lot of the music that I have performed is from different generations of music, so the ‘70s, ‘80s, 2000s,” Kapoor said. “It’s almost kind of an all-encompassing sort of performance, and I try to pick artists that have never received international acclaim.” Kapoor is only one of the many international students that has performed at the Noon Concert Series sponsored by the Office of International Services. Every other Friday, an international stu-
By Ally Melnik amelnik@iu.edu
ALEX DERYN | IDS
IU students study in the seating area across Starbucks on Oct. 27 in the Indiana Memorial Union. Senior Dhruv Kapoor performed Friday during the Noon Concert Series.
dent has the chance to show off their musical abilities in front of an audience of their fellow peers. Performers are encouraged to share cultural music from their home countries and take ownership in the way that their talents are presented. Kapoor has been playing the guitar and ukulele for the past six years. He has performed for the Noon Concert Series every semester for two and a half years as a way to get experience performing and to represent his culture in a positive light. Kapoor is also a part of the all-campus ensemble band where he plays alongside a large group of other students and their guitars. He said he
Horoscope Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Today is a 9 — Get creative and innovative. You can realize a personal dream. Go for what's most authentic and honest. Increase integrity for greater workability. Take charge. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Today is a 6 — Minimize noise and fuss. You can be especially effective behind the scenes. Let someone else take the limelight. Your greatest strength is love.
is given a beneficial experience at the Noon Concert Series as he is by himself and has to learn to attract a crowd and perform in front of others alone. “We just want students to be able to express themselves while they’re here,” coordinator for international orientation and outreach Katie Goodroad said. “It’s a way for the students to take pride (in their culture) but also present something in the way that they want and tell their own story.” The Student Life team at the Office of International Services works to prioritize diversity and incorporate a wide variety of cultures into the program. Past performances
To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Today is an 8 — You're motivated by a team cause. Share brilliant ideas, talents and resources. Leave nothing to chance. Express your compassion. Ride a wave together. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Today is an 8 — Revolutionize your attitude around a work assignment. Analyze the basic structure and make adjustments. Shift the context and consider possibilities from another vantage.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) Today is a 7 — Keep building bridges to realize a dream. Learn from other cultures and perspectives. Design an educational adventure. Study options and possibilities. Aries (March 21-April 19) Today is an 8 — Cover all financial bases. Follow rules carefully and check procedures. File and process papers, forms and applications. Disciplined efforts pay off. Coordinate actions.
BLISS
HARRY BLISS
have included cellos and violins, Mandarin rap, traditional Chinese instruments, acoustic guitar and singing. Goodroad explained how the concert series is a way for domestic students to obtain a cultural lens into another country. Kapoor’s medleys are just one example of the ways international students who have performed are able to introduce other students to the sounds of their home country. “One of the most exciting parts (of performing) is just trying to get everyone’s attention towards Indian music,” Kapoor said. “Just the fact that I would have a platform to spread awareness and be able to show my skills as well is great.”
Golden rays of sunlight stream through cracks of wooden paneling. Edward Bloom, donning a red-andgreen flannel, comes into view and is given a tweed flat cap, glasses and a tan cardigan sweater. He continues forward, looking out into the river and skips a stone into the audience. “Big Fish” is the second production of the 2019-20 season for the IU Department of Theatre, Drama and Contemporary Dance, showing through Nov. 2 at the Ruth N. Halls Theatre. Tickets are $10 for students and $20 for adults. “Big Fish” presents the imaginative, larger-than-life stories that Edward Bloom tells during his son Will Bloom’s adolescence. Years later, while Will prepares for his impending marriage and child of his own on the way, he investigates his father’s stories and the truth they may or may not hold. As Edward’s days become numbered, transitions back and forth between the past and present display the repairing of a father-son relationship. Based on the book, “Big Fish: A Novel of Mythic Proportions” by Daniel Wallace, the musical came into the public eye in 2013. John August wrapped up a film
adaptation alongside Tim Burton, and had a longing to hear what the characters were thinking through song and dance. IU musical theater student Ben Ballmer is responsible for examining the social and historical context of the production as a Dramaturg, which he took the role of for the first time; he explained the position as a conduit between the director and the text. Ballmer curated a resource guide that explains the importance of stories and folklore in American life. As Will works to uncover the truth behind his father’s stories, his wife, Josephine says, “But does it really matter what was true? Your father is telling these stories for a reason. If you understand the stories, you’ll understand the man.” It doesn’t matter if the stories are true, Ballmer said. In Edward’s case, the exaggeration of his stories demonstrate exactly why society has shared stories for centuries and will continue. “It’s hard to imagine a world without stories — why do we invent and create?” Ballmer writes in his note in the show’s program. “Stories explain our world. They keep our history alive. They teach us moral lessons; they entertain and delight. But above all else, as Tim O’Brien argued in ‘The Things They Carried’, stories can ‘dream us alive.’”
Taurus (April 20-May 20) Today is an 8 — Partnership yields benefits. One of you gets in where the other can't. Collaborate and network. Share resources, data and talents. Work toward a shared dream.
Cancer (June 21-July 22) Today is an 8 — Imagine perfection, especially with romance. Share creative ideas and possibilities. Have fun with family and your sweetheart. Allow for pleasant surprises. Weave dreams together.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today is an 8 — Prepare public statements and monitor breaking news. Imagination and creativity illuminate a profitable idea. Prepare, edit and issue comments and declarations. Make connections.
Gemini (May 21-June 20) Today is a 9 — Begin a new phase in your work, health and fitness. Words and action align for an energizing lift. Get farther than expected. Discover future options.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) Today is an 8 — You may need to get your hands dirty to make the domestic transformation you envision. It's amazing what paint can do. Energize a creative idea.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Today is a 9 — You're getting into a profitable groove. Stay in action. Make a persuasive case and boost sales. Provide excellent value. Your work is in demand.
© 2019 By Nancy Black Distributed by Tribune Media Services, INC. All Rights Reserved
Crossword
L.A. Times Daily Crossword 18 21 24 25 26 29 30 31 32 34 35 36 37 38 39 42 43 44 45 46 47 51 52
Publish your comic on this page. The IDS is accepting applications for student comic strips for the spring 2020 semester. Email five samples and a brief description of your idea to adviser@indiana.edu by Dec. 13. Submissions will be reviewed and selections will be made by the editor-in-chief.
su do ku
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
ACROSS
Difficulty Rating: How to play: Fill in the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 grid contains the digits 1 through 9, without repeating a number in any one row, column or 3x3 grid.
Answer to previous puzzle
1 5 9 14 15 16 17 19 20 22 23 24 27 28 32 33 34 39 40 41 44 48 49 50
© Puzzles by Pappocom
BREWSTER ROCKIT: SPACE GUY!
Gives in to gravity Annoying little kids Hunter's plastic duck, e.g. Clear off the road, as snow Actress Gilbert of "The Conners" Make amends What "Ten-hut!" is short for Income __ *Do business shrewdly Tidy up "__ you kidding?" Off-the-wall Walmart warehouse club *Murmur lovingly Muslim mystic Lake near Carson City *Basic experimentation method Sea item sold by 39-Down, in a tongue-twister Say no to *Like a typical walking stride Bygone Japanese audio brand Conclusion Boardroom VIP The Lone __
52 Compromising standpoint ... and what the answers to starred clues contain? 55 Deck alternative 58 Belittle 59 17-syllable Japanese poem 60 Suffix with major 61 Auth. unknown 62 Desert retreats 63 Monica's brother on "Friends" 64 German thinker Immanuel
53 54 55 56 57
Phillies' div. Significant stretch of time Twice cuatro Way in Forest female "__ tree falls in the forest ... " High-end chocolatier __ es Salaam Lustful At that time Oboe or clarinet Not feeling well __ volente: God willing Vigorous qualities to put into one's work See 39-Across Nancy Drew's beau Walk feebly Arctic jacket Exotic lizard kept as a pet Was happening Passionate Buenos Aires' country: Abbr. Karaoke prop that often ends in "c" nowadays Jared of "Dallas Buyers Club" Tolkien creatures Vietnamese soup Small battery "__ the season ... "
DOWN 1 Reproduces like salmon 2 __ Gibson, first AfricanAmerican to win a Grand Slam tennis title 3 Pep rally cheer 4 Candy and such 5 Turkey's largest city 6 Principal 7 Spur to action 8 Beach footwear 9 Job of typing in facts and figures 10 List-shortening abbr. 11 Courteney who played Monica on "Friends" 12 Single 13 "By all means!"
Answer to previous puzzle
TIM RICKARD
Indiana Daily Student
8
OPINION
Monday, Oct. 28, 2019 idsnews.com
Editors Emma Getz and Evan Carnes opinion@idsnews.com
EMMA GETZ IT
Celebrities should be willing to get arrested for the cause Emma Getz is a senior in English and history.
Jane Fonda has been arrested for protesting climate change again — this time with Ted Danson. This is the third consecutive week that Fonda has been arrested at the U.S. Capitol, and the last two times she has brought other famous actor friends to join the protests with her. Naturally, the reception to her actions has been mixed. Many applaud her efforts, while many others do not, but the reasoning is varied. Of course there are the people who do not agree with her cause, but at the same time, many others believe she is not doing enough. In Fonda’s case, she is definitely doing far more than most other celebrities, especially those with her acclaim. At the same time, there is a valid argument that every single celebrity should be doing more, especially when it comes to their money. Fonda has been an outspoken activist for her entire career. She is perhaps most well known for opposing the Vietnam War in the late 1960s and 1970s, but at the same time, she was also fundraising for the Black Panthers and protesting in support of multiple Native American causes. In 1972, she actually visited North Vietnam to speak out against the U.S. military presence. Her actions lead to extreme criticism from the U.S. government, with some lawmakers even suggesting she should be prosecuted for treason. This history follows her even today, as people keep bringing up her history with the Vietnam War to crit-
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE
Actress Jane Fonda is arrested for blocking a street in front of the U.S. Capitol on Oct. 18 during a climate change protest and rally on Capitol Hill, in Washington, D.C. Protesters are demanding urgent action on adopting the Green New Deal, implementing clean, renewable energy, and ending all new fossil fuel exploration and drilling.
icize her. Megyn Kelly called her out on the Today show in 2018 for this reason. She continues this activism today and in the past years has protested at Standing Rock and now currently the U.S. Capitol in support of climate policy reform. This is all to say that the 81-yearold actress seems to know what she’s doing and is obviously not new to activism. She knows she has the power and privilege to get arrested and not face any real conse-
quences, especially as she can afford to pay bail. Fonda said to the Los Angeles Times, “There is so much going on in the world and over it all is this ticking time bomb ... but we do have time. We have time, and it’s going to require that people in every country all around the world organize and mobilize and — if necessary — bring governments to a halt if we can’t make them do the right thing.” Of course, Fonda’s net
worth is $200 million. She is far richer than the average protesters fighting for their own liberation. Because of this, it can be hard to get on board with a rich celebrity getting publicly arrested each week when they aren’t redistributing their own wealth directly to the cause or the people most directly affected by the cause, which would be the ideal form of celebrity activism. It’s perfectly valid, and in fact good, to demand more from rich
people when it comes to saving the earth. It is also valid to question whether or not we should be looking to rich celebrities to lead us in activism movements. If the goal of leftist activism is essentially to liberate the oppressed working classes, is it possible to achieve this goal when the leader of the movement’s mere existence is a hindrance to that goal? It’s hard to come up with a clear answer to that question.
One counter argument is that it can create a safer environment for protestors when someone with the resources to be arrested takes the fall, and someone with that kind of power can create space for more protestors to do the same. Having people with a level of fame also makes the protests themselves much harder to ignore, as celebrities are going to draw attention no matter what. Ultimately, it’s not possible to turn activism into a game of purity politics. It’s not always possible to achieve a goal without implementing actions that might be deemed as problematic by some, and while it is helpful and necessary to question everything, denouncing these protests outright does nothing to help anyone. Along with that, there are so many celebrities with double her net worth who do absolutely nothing to help any cause, much less those with a history such as criticizing U.S. imperialism to its face during the Vietnam War. Hopefully many of them will follow her example. It helps that she is bringing along many other celebrities with her, urging them to get arrested with her. When it comes down to it, Fonda’s activism is a net positive. She raises awareness to many important issues and uses her privilege for the better. There is always more to be done, especially for rich celebrities and millionaires, but when it comes to activism and organizing, it is better for people like her to be on our side than against us. emmagetz@iu.edu
WIRE COLUMN
WIRE COLUMN
President Trump shouldn’t use the word ‘lynching’ because he’s white
Warren won’t improve schools by limiting choice
From Tribune News Service
From Tribune News Service
When I hear the word “lynch,” I immediately think of the black experience of torture, persecution and dehumanization that was so prevalent in the first half of the last century in the American south. I also think of the murder of Leo Frank, a Jewish business owner who was acquitted of raping young Mary Phagan but then kidnapped by an angry mob from his prison cell and hung from a tree. I think, too, of the 11 Italian men who were lynched in New Orleans in 1891 after having been acquitted of killing an Irish police officer. This Jewish man and these Italian men shared one very fundamental characteristic with the legions of African Americans murdered by racists: They were not considered white. Jews were “others,” and Italians were considered one step removed from blacks on the racial spectrum. That’s our history. According to Merriam Webster, which provides a race-neutral definition of the word, to lynch someone is defined as “to put to death (as by hanging) by mob action without legal approval or permission.” But we all know that there is nothing “race neutral” about the word. When Billy Holiday sang her masterpiece “Strange Fruit,” a song that made famous a poem written to protest American racism, particularly the lynching of African Americans, we know that she was not singing about anyone other than a black man. If 14-year-old Emmett Till had been white, his whistling at a white woman would not have ended with him swinging from a tree. That’s just a fact. I bring this up, because
Elizabeth Warren’s $800 billion plan to improve public education, like many of her plans, is admirable in its ambitions but misguided in its approach. If the federal government is going to spend more money on schools, then Americans should be allowed more choice about which schools their children attend. To her credit, Warren recognizes that competition for the best public schools increases residential segregation, leading not only to greater disparities in student performance, but also to runaway housing costs in preferred districts. The ideal solution would be to sever the link between students’ neighborhoods and their schools by expanding school choice. Indeed, Warren herself once advocated exactly that solution. Warren’s ideas have since evolved, apparently, tracking the preferences of white Democratic voters, among whom support for charter schools has declined precipitously. Yet the families most acutely affected by racial disparities remain strong supporters: The majority of black and Hispanic Democrats have a positive impression of charter schools. Warren’s plan not only rejects choice but also seeks to limit it, ending almost all federal funding for charter schools. Her plan relies on more money and a shifting portfolio of mandates to improve performance at low-income schools. This approach has failed countless times over the last several decades. The relationship between well-funded school districts and strong educational outcomes is clear to every parent. Less clear is whether lack of funding causes weak outcomes. In 1965 the federal government commissioned the sociologist James Coleman to conduct one of the largest social-science studies ever. His 737-page final
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE
President Donald Trump listens to U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo during a Cabinet meeting Oct. 21 at the White House in Washington, D.C.
on Tuesday, President Donald Trump tweeted that an impeachment inquiry against him is a lynching. Trump is well known for saying things off the cuff and “shooting from the hip,” something that delights his most loyal supporters. But invoking the word “lynching” to describe his current situation is offensive and tone deaf. It overlooks the historical connotation of the word. Some are frustrated that people are reacting strongly about the use of the word. They point to Jerry Nadler, who 25 years ago used it to describe the Clinton impeachment. Where, they ask, was the outrage for that? I agree that Nadler and the liberals are hypocritical in screaming about Trump’s use of the word now if, as I suspect, they had no problem using it to describe a white victim — their white victim — back then. But yesterday’s Democratic hypocrisy does not excuse Trump today. Conservatives who chafed at being called “deplorable” by Hillary Clinton can’t seriously dismiss the president’s use of lynching as a big nothing-burger. When I posted about this on my Facebook page, some of the friends I most
respect implied that I was being oversensitive. They wondered why I was being “triggered.” They asked me if it was wrong for Clarence Thomas to use the phrase “high-tech lynching” to describe his Supreme Court nomination process that was, according to many people — including me — an exercise in character assassination. I shouldn’t have had to remind them that the odds Justice Thomas had relatives who’d been lynched were significantly higher than the odds that President Trump’s family lived that tragedy. The point is this: Some words have profound historical meaning. I think abortion is mass genocide, but I cringe when people call it a holocaust. There was one Holocaust, and that word is taken. The same thing with lynching. Being annoyed that a partisan crew is making your life hell doesn’t give you the right to appropriate someone else’s dark tragedy. Call it railroading. Call it a witch hunt. Heck, I’d even agree. But leave the word lynching alone. By Christine M. Flowers Philadelphia Daily News
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE
Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Elizabeth Warren speaks Oct. 22 at a Chicago Teachers Union rally in Chicago.
report found that while there were enormous racial and economic disparities in educational funding across the U.S., a child’s performance was driven primarily by two factors: the educational background of his parents, and the socioeconomic background of his peers. Since the Coleman report, legions of researchers have tried to tease out exactly what was going on and whether the seemingly obvious link between school funding and student performance could be proved. Using sophisticated techniques, analysts have been able to detect a relationship _ but the results of those studies cast doubt on Warren’s proposal. Warren’s plan cites two of these studies. Both look at the effect of state-level schoolfinance reforms that aimed to ensure adequate funding across school districts. The first study shows that the achievement gap between poorer districts and richer ones can be reduced somewhat by reform. Yet the gap between high- and lowincome students, as well as the gap between white and black students, remains. The authors speculate that this is because not all disadvantaged students are in poor districts. That is, there is enough variation in income and race within both rich and poor districts such that increasing funding for poorer districts has little impact on achievement gaps due to income and race. This
explanation is plausible, but it undercuts the argument that residential segregation is trapping poor and minority students in underfunded schools. The second study also concludes that increased funding makes a difference, using a clever approach that involves predicting how districts would have been affected if they had received it. It also adds this caveat: “Importantly, we find that how the money is spent may be important.” Warren says that her plan will encourage districts to use federal money in ways that benefit the schools and students who need it most. Yet that very intention highlights a core problem with topdown proposals to improve schools: They presume that experts, rather than practitioners and parents, can determine what’s best for students. Affluent parents have little doubt about which schools are best for their children, and they are willing to pay exorbitant home prices to ensure that their children can go to those schools. Increasing support for charter schools gives lower-income parents that same ability to choose. Warren is right that all Americans should have access to “a great public education.” She doesn’t seem to understand that offering parents and students more choice is a good way to provide it. By Karl W. Smith Bloomberg News
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SPORTS
Monday, Oct. 28, 2019 idsnews.com
Editors D.J. Fezler and Phil Steinmetz sports@idsnews.com
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MEN’S SOCCER
Hoosier midfielder Joris Ahlinvi breaks games open By Sam Bodnar Sbodnar@iu.edu | @sgbod13
CLAIRE LIVINGSTON | IDS
Freshman Aidan Morris looks to pass the ball Oct. 25 at Bill Armstrong Stadium. Morris was able to get the ball to sophomore Joe Schmidt and assist in IU’s second goal aganist Rutgers.
No. 10 Hoosiers defeats Rutgers By Jared Kelly Jaakelly@iu.edu | @Jared_Kelly7
A chilly Friday night in Bloomington set the scene for a pivotal matchup between No. 10 IU men’s soccer and Rutgers with postseason implications on the line. Following a dominant showing against the University of Evansville in its final nonconference match of the season, IU returned to Big Ten play against Rutgers. A victory would place IU back atop the conference standings, but a loss would be catastrophic in its quest for consecutive Big Ten regular season titles. Both teams began the match looking sluggish out of the gate, a problem that has plagued the Hoosiers for much of the season. Although IU junior midfielder Spencer Glass was able to fire off a quick shot in the third minute, it would serve as the only shot in an otherwise quiet opening 10 minutes. A flurry of shots around the 20-minute mark from IU freshman midfielder Aidan Morris and IU freshman forward Victor Bezerra gave IU its best opportunities of the half, but a pair of saves from Rutgers freshman goalkeeper Oren Asher halted the attack. The Hoosier defense fared much better, clearing balls out of its zone with ease and neutralizing any offensive momentum for the Scarlet Knights. With the help of IU freshman defender Daniel Munie and IU sophomore defender Jack Maher anchoring the back line, Rutgers didn’t tally a single shot the entire first half. “I think our team defend-
CLAIRE LIVINGSTON | IDS
Junior Spencer Glass fights to get to the ball Oct. 25 at Bill Armstrong Stadium. Glass attempted one shot against Rutgers. The Hoosiers defeated the Scarlet Knights 3-0.
ing has been good all year, certainly really good in a lot of segments in games,” IU head coach Todd Yeagley said. “The back four have been good all year, no doubt.” IU exited the half with a 9-0 shot advantage, and while the opportunities continued to present themselves, its offense simply failed to capitalize resulting in a scoreless tie at halftime. “Rutgers made life difficult for us, in particular the first half,” Yeagley said. “But I thought we dealt with it pretty well for the most part.” The second half treated the Hoosiers much better, however, as it was only a matter of time before their offensive-minded approach paid off against a seemingly outmatched Rutgers defense. In the 54th minute, an illadvised yellow card shown to Rutgers freshman midfielder Jorgen Wisth Lie gave IU’s Morris a free kick from just
outside the top of the goal box. Following a rifle of a kick on net, IU senior forward Joris Ahlinvi was able to deflect just enough of the ball and sneak it past the goal line to give IU a 1-0 lead. “Always getting that first goal is a confidence booster,” Morris said. “But it changes the game, it changes the momentum. So, yeah, I knew the game was going to be different after that.” IU sophomore midfielder Joe Schmidt got in on the goal scoring midway through the 72nd minute as he found himself on the receiving end of a Morris’ pass and buried his first career goal past the right post. Just seven minutes later, Morris capped off his twoassist night with a game-sealing putback score in the 79th minute to hand the Hoosiers a firm three-goal advantage. “He’s a dominant personality, he’s one we want to
have the ball a lot,” Yeagley said. “He wants to win, he wants to be pushed, and we’re trying to do all that in one.” With IU’s defense continuing its rock solid play, and allowing the Scarlet Knights to generate only one shot on goal in the second half, IU freshman goalkeeper Roman Celentano cruised to his fifth win of the season, having to make just a single save on the night. It was another all-around quality effort for the Hoosiers as they gain three more crucial points in the Big Ten standings and leap Penn State for the top spot. Now with just two games remaining in the regular season, IU’s postseason aspirations are no longer too far off in the distance. “We’re always just trying to stay in the present,” Morris said. “Every single game is an important one.”
Missing 10 games is anything but ideal for an athlete in his senior year. Despite only playing in five contests for No. 10 IU men’s soccer this year, senior midfielder Joris Ahlinvi has made a significant influence on the offense. Ahlinvi scored the first goal of Friday’s game, which saw IU topple Rutgers 3-0. This was his second goal of the season, both of which came as opening goals in IU victories. His first goal as a Hoosier came in the team’s 3-1 win at Penn State. That game was his Hoosier debut and return from a lower-body injury. “Those were two leadoff goals that just open the game up,” IU head coach Todd Yeagley said. “He’s only going to get better as we move into this final phase, which is exciting for us because he can change games on his own.” All of Ahlinvi’s offensive highlights were not recorded on paper, however. His second-half play reflected a goal, but his ball movement in the first half kept IU on the prowl and Rutgers’ defense playing catch up. His near goal early in the match led to a handful of shot opportunities in the following minutes. Although the Hoosiers could not get a ball past freshman goalkeeper Oren Asher, they did put up nine shots, three of them on frame. Along with freshman midfielder Aidan Morris and junior midfielder Spencer Glass, Ahlinvi
pushed the ball deep into the Scarlet Knights’ territory throughout the first half. While some of his teammates were getting taken out with sliding and shoulder tackles, Ahlinvi maintained possession through physical contact and kept the ball moving into Rutgers’ territory. “He’s so physically strong that players will bounce off of him,” Yeagley said. “Once he seals you, he’s strong enough to hold you, and he can break the game open.” Starting on the field for the second half, Ahlinvi took nine minutes to put the Hoosiers up 1-0. His goal came off a Morris free kick in the 54th minute after he split the defenders and knocked the ball on the left side of the goal. “My teammates have been unbelievable, they always set me up really well,” Ahlinvi said. “As soon as I step on the field, I try and do my best and be in the best spot to score goals.” The senior has taken 16 shots in his limited minutes and is a constant threat from 15-25 yards out. Ahlinvi’s overall efforts sparked the Hoosier offense and gave the starters their necessary rest. “He can just break the game with an individual moment,” Yeagley said. “He can finish from distance, and you get excited when he’s in that position.” Even though the senior seemed to be nursing his knee and played just 39 minutes, he said his health is improving with every game. “I feel pretty good,” he said. “I’m 100% right now, and I’m ready to go.”
CLAIRE LIVINGSTON | IDS
Senior Joris Ahlinvi celebrates after his second goal of the season Oct. 25 at Bill Armstrong Stadium. Ahlinvi scored IU’s first goal against Rutgers in the 53rd minute. The Hoosiers defeated the Scarlet Knights 3-0.
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We have an Institute of Religion adjacent to campus at 333 S. Highland Ave. (behind T.I.S. bookstore). We offer a variety of religious classes and activities. We strive to create an atmosphere where college students and local young single adults can come to play games, relax, study, and associate with others who value spirituality. Sunday worship services for young single students are held at 2411 E. Second St. at 11:30 a.m. We invite all to discover more about Jesus Christ from both ancient scripture and from modern prophets of God. During the week join us at the institute, and on Sunday at the Young Single Adult Church. Robert Tibbs, Institute Director .
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