Friday, Sept. 26. 2014

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FRIDAY, SEPT. 26, 2014

IDS

IU opens Big Ten season vs. Maryland Page 8

INDIANA DAILY STUDENT | IDSNEWS.COM

MEN’S SOCCER

No. 17 IU will play Wildcats at home By Andrew Vailliencourt availlie@indiana.edu | @AndrewVcourt

NICOLE KRASEAN | IDS

Marlee Davenport, right, and her younger sister Madison model for IU Dance Marathon's third annual Runway Riley on Thursday at Alumni Hall in the Indiana Memorial Union. Children who participated modeled the hospital’s new apparel for the year.

Kids for a cure IUDM hosts fashion show for Riley Hospital By Hannah Fleace hfleace@indiana.edu | @HFleace

When her daughter was just six weeks old, Shaney Dale was told to gather the family and prepare to say goodbye. Morgan Dale was going to die. Before even breathing her first breath, Morgan suffered two strokes and had four blood clots amassing her body. Soon after Morgan was born, she underwent a failed heart

valve operation. Afterwards, the doctors told Shaney her daughter was not a candidate for a heart transplant. “The doctor came out and told me there was nothing else he could do,” Shaney, who is a resident of Indianapolis, said. “I started asking about what other things we could do.” Five days later, though, Morgan received a heart. Now, 17 years later, Morgan stood at the foot of two gray steps, preparing to walk her first

runway. Her purple, blond and brown hair shined under the lights of Alumni Hall where more than 300 students gathered for the third annual Runway for Riley. The event, hosted each year by IU Dance Marathon, invites children from Riley Children’s Hospital in Indianapolis to showcase the new merchandise and apparel for the year. The Runway Riley precedes the IUDM’s main fundraiser, an

annual 36-hour dance marathon, scheduled for Nov. 14 to 16. Last year’s marathon raised $2.6 million in total. The IUDM is the second largest student organization in America and spends an entire year raising money for Riley Children’s Hospital. Since its creation in 1991, the organization has raised more $16 million for the hospital. Morgan was the oldest of 13

Coming off of its highest scoring total of the season, the IU men’s soccer team is looking to carry over its offensive production Sunday when it plays Northwestern. No. 17 IU (5-1-2, 1-1) has three points in Big Ten play and currently sits behind No. 7 Penn State. The Nittany Lions have six points in conference play. Three points are awarded for a win, one for a tie and none for a loss. “(Those three points) are huge, right now we’re sitting at a decent spot, but we’ll be sitting in a much better spot if we get those three points,” freshman defender Grant Lillard said. “They’re vital three points. Every point matters in the Big Ten and we need to get them early.” Lillard scored his first career goal in Wednesday’s 4-2 win against Central Florida. “Grant needed to get on the board,” IU Coach Todd Yeagley said. “He’s been dangerous on his restarts, and we need him to score goals. I thought this year he’s a three- or four-goal scorer for us on restarts.” Despite the team’s win, players came away feeling like they could have played better and are hoping to improve on their performance Sunday. “We cannot wait to play Sunday because we know we can play better,” senior defender Patrick Doody said. “It’s a Big Ten game, which is awesome, but we want to just get back out on the field and play a 90 that we have been doing, just be better on all phases.” Yeagley echoed this and said

SEE IUDM, PAGE 3 SEE SOCCER, PAGE 7

ELECTIONS 2014

Meet the state candidates By Emily Ernsberger

SECRETARY OF STATE

TREASURER

The secretary of state is in charge of state records, overseeing state elections, chartering businesses, regulating the securities industry and registering trademarks and licenses of vehicle dealerships.

The treasurer is in charge of investing money across the state. The current treasurer is Daniel Huge, who was chosen last month to serve until the next term.

Beth White (D) White, a Bloomington Native and IU alumna, is the Marion County Clerk. In 2008, she created yVote!, a program to help high school students learn about the voting process, as well as helping them register. She has also increased the number of voting locations, expanded early voting hours and has helped enhance online court payment services.

Mike Boland (D) Boland, a former Illinois legislator, would like to see higher tax credits for Indiana residents using the 529 Direct Savings Plan, a program for beneficiaries saving money for student loans. He would also like to give Indiana banks that abide with policies Boland would like to impose, such as giving students and entrepreneurs of small businesses smaller interest rates.

Karl Tatgenhorst (L) Tatgenhorst, from Chesterton, Ind., believes that there are too many barriers for candidates trying to be put on the ballot. He would like to see less of them, as well as change guidelines involving redistricting.

Mike Jasper (L) Jasper would like to invest state funds in creating jobs, including helping those who would like to start businsesses. He also would like to add transparency to state reporters, detailing who has received state money and measuring its effect on the state..

emelerns@indiana.edu | @emilyernsberger

The Midterm Election is Nov. 4. While a lot of focus across the nation is situated on Congressional elections, three offices for the Indiana State government are also going to be chosen by citizens. If elected, those chosen will serve four-year terms. Candidate information was compiled from candidates’ websites and interviews.

AUDITOR The auditor of the State is in charge of state funds, local tax distributions and paying the state’s bills. Michael A. Claytor (D) Claytor, a certified public accountant and lawyer, would like to see more accountability of the auditor’s office. He wants to establish an internal audit control system and develop a transparency portal. John Schick (L) Schick, an IU alumnus and consultant at Information Services Group, believes that there are constitutional limits to spending that should be applicable to recent spending initiatives. Suzanne Crouch (R) Crouch was appointed to the auditor position by Gov. Mike Pence in January. During the last fiscal year, Indiana had a $106.8 million surplus, and is expected to have another surplus the following year of more than $200 million.

Connie Lawson (R) Lawson was appointed to serve as the Secretary of State in 2012 by then-Gov. Mitch Daniels following former Secretary of State Charlie White’s criminal convictions. During her time in the office, she has been most active in the voting process, including updating records and creating new ways for Indiana residents to register to vote, such as the IndianaVoters mobile app launched last week.

Kelly Mitchell (R) Mitchell worked for the treasurer’s office for seven years under former treasurer Richard Mourdock, who stepped down last month. She hopes to increase fiscal literacy across the state, specifically for students, veterans and educators. She would like to start a program designed for teachers to learn about fiscal literacy to teach to their students.

RACHEL MEERT | IDS

Rosanne Cash, daughter of late musician Johnny Cash, performs Thursday night at the IU Auditorium. Cash followed in her father’s footsteps and played folk music.

Rosanne Cash tour plays IU Auditorium By Hallie Peilet hpeilet@indiana.edu | @halliepeilet

An energetic pre-show buzz filled the IU Auditorium Thursday evening as hundreds of fans of country singer Rosanne Cash anticipated her onstage appearance. The heavy red curtains were already open, displaying a full repertoire of instruments beneath a blue spotlight. Behind the instruments, a picture of Cash from a projector filled a giant screen. Auditorium doors opened to a large crowd Thursday evening for

Cash’s current tour, “The River and the Thread.” Following in father Johnny Cash’s country music footsteps, Cash provided a show of moderately paced songs and displayed a blend of folk and country music styles. Before the show began, fans in their seats expressed their excitement for the show. People everywhere had their heads buried in their programs, learning more about the artist before she started her first number. SEE CASH, PAGE 7


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

Earthquake expert to speak Monday William Ellsworth, a seismologist with the United States Geological Survey, will speak at IU Monday, Sept. 29. His research links the increase in earthquakes in Central and Eastern U.S. with wastewater disposal from oil-and-gas

exploration by injecting the wastewater under pressure into underground disposal wells, according to a University release. The lecture will be 4 p.m. in the Geology Building. There will be a reception beforehand at 3:30 p.m.

Bloomingcon features fandom panels, new major By Alexis Daily aledaily@indina.edu | @AlexDaily1

IU’s first BloomingCon starts Friday and continues through Saturday in the Indiana Memorial Union. The event, sponsored by Union Board, is student run with a goal of connecting students who share similar pop culture interests. Union Board Director of Gaming and Electronic Entertainment Kellie Boberek said that the event will feature cosplay competitions, a Fullmetal Alchemist marathon, a masquerade ball, a trivia contest, panels about various fandoms, the new game design major at IU and more. Boberek said that each welcome gift bag includes a welcome packet of the events and clubs represented and comic book from Vintage Phoenix Comic Books. She said that throughout the weekend, attendees will have the opportunity to receive free giveaways, purchase fan art from Bloomington or student vendors and swap fandom items at the Trading Post. She said she hopes the convention unites groups of students who are involved in fandom societies on campus and allows them to continue to expand. Among the clubs represented is the Doctor Who Society at IU. Sophomore Alexandra Koyfman, the president of the society, said she is very excited to represent the Doctor Who Society through a panel and a booth. “For me, the convention is an opportunity to share with others my love of Doctor Who, Oscar Wilde and other con-related interests,” she said. “I’m really glad that Bloomington will have its own convention so people can connect with other fans locally and develop their interests together.” Boberek said attendees are encouraged to come in cosplay, and that various competitions for the best cosplay will be held

BLOOMINGCON 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., Friday, IMU 1 a.m. to 9 p.m., Saturday, IMU $10 for students $15 for general admission throughout the convention. Koyfman said she will wear a TARDIS dress, and Vice President Neathie Patel said she will dress as the tenth doctor from the show, David Tennant. All props have to be shown at registration, though and can not contain any metal. Any mask that covers the entire face has to be easily removable, according to Bloomingcon’s guidelines. Boberek said she wants BloomingCon to become an annual event and continue to grow over time. “We want people to come for the experience,” Boberek said. “I’ve never been to Comic-Con before, so I relied on my committee members to tell me what they liked the most. We’re doing this for the fans of the shows.” She said this is the first year that the position of Director of Gaming and Electronic Entertainment has existed as a Union Board position, and it was created because of the responses from IU students. “We noticed on the student surveys that there was a huge demand for a ComicCon-like event, so we decided to create on this year,” Boberek said. She said that she and her committee are constantly looking for suggestions from students to see what types of events they want to have. “From FIFA tournaments to fandom events like BloomingCon, we’re hoping to reach out to all types of students at IU,” she said. More information about the event, where to buy tickets and the schedule can be found at bloomingcon.com. Participants must purchase a badge for the event. Attendees can pre-purchase badges before Bloomingcon begins or during the event this weekend.

IU study shows alcohol use decreasing among children, adolescents From IDS reports

Alcohol use by Indiana adolescents in grades six through 12 continues to decrease. The 24th Annual Survey of Alcohol, Tobacco and Other Drug Use by Indiana Children and Adolescents shows that alcohol use has been declining for 21 years, according to the University. The survey is conducted by the Indiana Prevention Resource Center, a unit in the IU School of Public Health. According to the results of the survey, less than 60 percent of high school seniors reported having tried alcohol at least once, down from a reported 80 percent in 1993. Surveyed adolescents reported that the most common means by which they obtained alcohol was by having it purchased for them or being given it by a family member. These results were obtained by surveying 119,147 students at 429 public and private schools. The survey addressed a number of concerns, including mental health, gambling, parental incarceration, tobacco use, marijuana use, methamphetamine use and prescription drug abuse. Indiana teenagers reported having fewer suicidal thoughts and a lower

tendency toward depression than the national survey results, according to the University. Ruth Gassman, executive director of IPRC, said in the University release that there is a strong connection between mental health concerns and substance abuse. In terms of parental incarceration, high school seniors reported the lowest figure, with 17.9 percent of them reporting a parent having served time and eighth-graders had the highest rate at 23.9 percent. Tobacco use continued to decline as it has since 1993, much like alcohol use, according to the University. Marijuana use increased among high school seniors and decreased among freshmen, but Indiana’s marijuana usage rate remains lower than the national average. Methamphetamine use remained largely unchanged, according to the University, and prescription drug abuse decreased across the board. Gambling increased among high school freshmen but decreased among seniors. Types of gambling included playing cards, betting on games, betting on sports, buying lottery tickets, gambling in a casinos and playing online for money. Anna Hyzy

PHOTOS BY BARI GOLDMAN | IDS

The Kappa Alpha Theta sorority house displays a banner against hazing in honor of National Hazing Prevention Week.

Greeks fight against hazing By Lindsay Moore liramoor@indiana.edu @_lindsaymoore

The greek community is joining in on the national call to action to end hazing through campus initiatives and social campaigns. National Hazing Prevention Week is demonstrated during the last week of September every year. The week is spent spreading awareness in an effort to stop hazing in fraternities, sororities, sports teams and other communities. IU’s Interfraternity Council has started an anti-hazing initiative called Hoosiers Against Hazing, IFC Vice President of Membership Development Sean Ndebele said. “Unfortunately, hazing is part of the fraternity

culture across the nation,” Ndebele said. “We want to make sure that’s not happening at our fraternities at IU.” Hoosiers Against Hazing’s ultimate goal is to eradicate hazing in all capacities, Ndebele said. The campaign is new this school year but it plans to follow a similiar model like those of the sexual assault awareness groups such as Safe Sisters and Men Against Rape and Sexual Assault (MARS). The IFC booklet defines hazing as any voluntary or involuntary act that may degrade, intimidate or harass an individual physically, mentally, emotionally or psychologically. The punishment for reSEE HAZING, PAGE 3

The Kappa Alpha Theta house displays a banner against hazing in honor of National Hazing Prevention Week.

IU awarded grant for water testing By Ashleigh Sherman aesherma@indiana.edu | @aesherma

According to the United Nations, 783 million people do not have access to clean water. Through their joint Water Sustainability and Climate program, the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture have awarded $2.6 million to IU faculty to study water quality and supply, according to the University. Adam Ward, assistant

professor in the School of Public and Environmental Affairs, will lead a team of three in a three-year study on the effect of agriculture on water quality in Iowa. “It’s a great thing to care about and there’s a lot of room for improvement, but what we’re going to help do is to understand how to get to that improvement,” Ward said. Ward will collaborate with Kajsa Dalrymple, assistant professor of journalism and mass communications at the University of Iowa, and Scott Spak, as-

sistant professor of urban and regional planning at the University of Iowa. Each researcher will focus on one of three distinct components. Ward said he will focus on how agricultural practices affect the physical system. For example, Ward will study the effect of crop placement, fertilizer usage and land tillage on water quality. Ward said Dalrymple will, in turn, focus on how the physical system affects agricultural practices. For example, Dalrymple will study the effect of water

quality on crop placement, fertilizer usage and land tillage. “You as a land manager might look at (a problem) and say, ‘You know, my decisions are part of the problem, I could be part of the solution,’” Ward said. While the first component assumes farmers and land managers just make decisions, he said, the second component questions why farmers and land managers make the decisions SEE WATER, PAGE 3

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» HAZING

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2 ported instances of hazing is chapter suspension. Hazing or other bias misconduct can be reported to the Office of Student Ethics or Student Life and Learning, according to the Culture of Care website. Greek members can also go to the IFC and Panhellenic Association membership development or risk management chairs as a resource. Both the IFC and Panhellenic Association chairs do not have jurisdiction, though, because hazing is viewed as a crime, Ndebele said. As part of the Hoosiers Against Hazing initiative, the IFC has given chapter presidents an anti-hazing oath to distribute among their members. The oath is based off the National Hazing Prevention pledge but has been edited to be greek specific, Ndebele said. The oath reads, “As a fraternity man and member of the community, I am vowing to prevent hazing before it occurs, stop hazing when I see it happening and help empower others to do the same in their organizations, schools and communities.” The Panhellenic Association addressed National Hazing Prevention Week with a social media campaign through their Twitter account, @IUBPHA. Abby Kloberdanz is a sophomore in Phi Mu sorority who participated in

NICOLE KRASEAN | IDS

Elliott Weaver, left, and his older brother Owen model for IUDM’s Runway Riley fashion show Thursday night at the IMU.

» IUDM

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 kids to tackle the runway Thursday night in a blue sweatshirt with the IUDM logo tagged across it. Her favorite song, “The Rest of Us” by Simple Plan blasted as she and an IU student walked the runway. “It’s about all of the people who are just not normal and are just unusual,” she said. “I’ve always been a little different myself, and it just fits my life.” She rounded the first corner on the runway, the

» WATER

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2

they make. Finally, Ward said Spak will focus on the policy affecting the relationship between humans and the physical system. For example, Spak will study the effect of Watershed Management Authorities, governmental agencies and voluntary associations formed to improve water quality on agricultural practices and water quality.

smile widening across her face. Then she reached the center of the central platform, lyrics pumping through the speakers. “The lost, the geeks, the rejects, the losers / The wrong, the freaks, the hopeless, the futures.” Without hesitation she kicked out her foot and threw her fist into the air in a power stance. The crowd exploded. Behind her the MC announced Morgan’s one wish: that no child ever be faced with a terminal ill-

ness. The road to health was long and often hopeless. When Morgan’s body developed coronary artery disease, the heart she had been given couldn’t do its job anymore, and valve stints wasn’t an option. Once again, it looked like the end. “I had two mothers donate their child’s heart, and my child has been fortunate and blessed,” Shaney said. “We’ve been able to give her a full life, and I can never repay them.” It is events like Runway Riley that provide an outlet

for Morgan and her mom to give back. As a senior preparing to graduate from her home school courses, Morgan maintains two internships and participates in events across the state to raise awareness for organ donation. Her health is the best it has ever been, and she wants to attend the University of Southern Indiana. “I’m good,” she said. “I get to go, for the first time in 18 years, five months without seeing my cardiologist. It’s a really big deal.”

The three components would typically be targeted in three separate studies, Ward said. By targeting all three components in one common study, the researchers will be able to identify linkages between the agricultural practices, the physical system and policy. “It’s a very interdisciplinary team, so we’re trying to tackle all of the pieces of it and how they all work together,” Ward said.

Ward said he and his team will use web-based interactions, such as dropdown menus and checkboxes, to survey farmers and land managers. Participants will input a series of agricultural practices, such as crop placement, fertilizer usage and land tillage. They will then receive the predicted effects of those agricultural practices. Ward said he and his team will then study how

this information influenced the participants’ agricultural practices and, in turn, how these agricultural practices influenced water quality. “If we shoot one hundred arrows at the board, what we want to do is find, like, the four arrows that went to the extremes,” Ward said. “We don’t care so much about the 96 arrows that all hit the same bullseye. We want to know what it is that you can do to change the system.” Additionally, Tom Evans,

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professor of geography in the College of Arts and Sciences, will lead a team of four in a five-year study on the effect of water supply on decision making in Zambia and Kenya. The team will look particularly at the effect of water supply on food security, according to the University. Evans will collaborate with Beth Plale, professor in the School of Informatics and Computing, Shahzeen Attari, assistant professor in

“I don’t think joining a house should have anything to do with harming others. You’re joining to be sisters or brothers.” Abby Kloberdanz, sophomore in Phi Mu sorority

the twitter campaign. “We think sisterhood is so important, we can’t imagine doing anything to harm at all,” Kloberdanz said. “The sisterhood is top priority.” The account spread awareness through the hashtag “Be the Change”, urging sororities to take a pledge against hazing. Individual sorority Twitter accounts such as Gamma Phi Beta, Alpha Omioron Pi and Phi Mu posted pictures of sisters with signs that read, “pledges against hazing” as part of the campaign. “I don’t think joining a house should have anything to do with harming others,” Kloberdanz said. “You’re joining to be sisters or brothers.” The first Hoosiers Against Hazing seminar will be Oct. 6, with an expected 200 fraternity members present. Hoosiers Against Hazing plans to hold assemblies one to two times a semester, Ndebele said. “Hazing is something that’s been going on in America for decades,” Ndebele said. “I think as a society we’ve turned a blind eye to it for too long.” the School of Public and Environmental Affairs, and Kelly Caylor, associate professor of civil and environmental engineering at Princeton University, according to the University. “There’s just a really robust community here of people who want to work across disciplines and solve these kinds of problems and address these kinds of issues,” Ward said. “And it’s a great part of being here at Bloomington.”

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Visit WonderLab museum Sunday for $1

REGION

The WonderLab Museum of Science and Technology will have its lowest admissions price of the year Sunday. Patrons may visit WonderLab from 1 to 5 p.m. for discounted admission at $1, according to WonderLab’s website.

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

Visitors can have their photo taken with Stuffee, the museum’s giant stuffed doll, to share with friends and family. This year, the Dollar Day sponsor is Southern Indiana Radiological Associates, Inc.

Leave No Trace workshop touts 7 principles By Holly Hays hvhays@indiana.edu | @hollyvhays

What do you do if you’re without shelter in the woods during a rainstorm? That’s just one of the questions the Subaru/Leave No Trace Clinic hopes to answer. The Subaru/Leave No Trace educators travel the country in their hybrid vehicle to educate people about the seven principles of Leave No Trace, a program designed to help campers and hikers minimize their environmental impact. The principles include lessons such as “dispose of waste properly” and “travel and camp on durable surfaces,” including reminders to respect wildlife and be considerate to others, according to the Leave No Trace organization’s website. For example, if someone is stuck in a rainstorm, it’s better to be prepared than to improvise a shelter, which can cause damage to the surrounding area. Two educators visited J.L. Waters, a local outdoor supply store, Thursday night to work with clinic attendees to help them realize that some of their outdoor practices may be harming the wilderness. Emily Hodapp, the

store’s assistant manager, said the idea of the clinic is to help improve the environment. “The idea is that if everyone in the world followed these ethics then we would have a much better and cleaner world,” she said. The educators visit areas in particular that have wilderness — like the Charles Deam Wilderness Area near Lake Monroe — that is being damaged by improper human use. Hodapp said it’s both good and bad that the educators are coming to Bloomington. “It’s also kind of sad because it means we’re not taking care of our land,” she said. “We’re enjoying it, but we’re not enjoying it in the right ways.” The clinic is also part of the 50th anniversary celebration of the Wilderness Act. Signed into law in 1964, the Wilderness Act was made to set aside certain areas of wooded land for protection. Wilderness is defined by the National Park Service as “untrammeled” land. The Deam Wilderness was set aside in the early 1980s and encompasses nearly 13,000 acres of the Hoosier National Forest, according to the National Park

BARI GOLDMAN | IDS

Pat Beezley, who leads the Leave No Trace program, explains how to camp without adversely affecting the environment as he presented Thursday at J.L Waters Adventure Outfitters. Beezley and his wife T.J travel around the country with their program.

Service Website. Much of the damage seen to the Deam Wilderness is caused by improvised structures including rock chairs and chimneys that visitors build for their camp sites. An assortment of trash and camping gear is left behind, including tarps, buckets and tires.

the water. “You should be 200 feet away from any sort of water source so we’re not contaminating that,” she said. “We’re having human and pet runoff into the water and that’s causing issues for fish and even humans who are using that water to drink.” Hodapp said she hopes

“What we’re doing is causing a lot of damage to the areas where people are camping out at,” she said. One of the principles of Leave No Trace includes camping on “durable surfaces,” which includes locations off the trail, but Hodapp cautions that campers should not stay too close to

the people attending the clinic become aware of some practices that may be harming the wilderness and change their habits. “Take only pictures, leave only footprints,” she said. Anyone interested in learning more can call the store at 812-334-1845.

Ind. unemployment rate decreases despite lost jobs By Brian Seymour briseymo@indiana.edu | @briseymo

The Indiana Department of Workforce Development released Indiana’s monthly employment report last week for the month of August, which found the state’s unemployment rate had dropped to a seasonally adjusted 5.8 percent. Despite the decrease in the unemployment rate, the state also lost an aggregate 2,600 private sector jobs last month. The private education and health services sector accounted for most of the damage, losing approximately 4,100 jobs. These damages were offset mostly by the manufacturing sector, which added about 900 jobs. The unemployment rate is the quotient of the state’s unemployed population and the total labor force, which

may account for why Indiana experienced lower unemployment in August while also experiencing heavy job loss, said to IU economics professor Paul Graf. The unemployed population is inclusive of those who are currently unemployed and are actively seeking a job, Graf said. It does not include people who don’t have a job and are not looking for one. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics calls this population the marginally attached. For example, if the labor force comprises 100 people, half of which are unemployed, then the unemployment rate is 50 percent. But if 20 of these people stop searching for a job prior to the survey, they are a part of the marginally attached and not considered unemployed, thus dropping the unemployment rate to

Changes overall in job market This graph visualizes changes in the job market, breaking down each sector into loss and growth patterns.

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30 percent. “It’s a basic algebra function,” Graf said. “The unemployment rate is consistent, but problematic.” There is other evidence to suggest that not only is Indiana growing economically

but that it also may be ahead of the curve. On average, Indiana is adding nearly 4,000 jobs a month, Joe Frank, a spokesman with the Indiana Department of Workforce Development said.

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“Indiana is one of the most manufacturing intensive states in the country, and when these jobs come back, they come to Indiana,” he said. The positive tax climate of the state also incentives

businesses to start-up in Indiana. Frank said the reduced corporate income taxes and property taxes aren’t as pricey here as some of the surrounding states, creating a favorable business environment. When compared to the rest of the country, Indiana’s unemployment is lower than the federal rate of 7.2 percent and second in the Midwest. “Indiana’s unemployment rate has decreased 1.7 percent over the past year, while the labor force has expanded by more than 51,000 workers, which is quite remarkable,” said Scott Sanders, commissioner of the Indiana Department of Workforce Development. “During the same period, the Hoosier State has also added more than 56,000 private sector jobs. Together, these figures stand in stark contrast to our Midwestern neighbors.”

School voucher program to expand By Tori Fater vrfater@indiana.edu | @vrfater

Indiana’s school voucher program is expanding, with close to 30,000 student applications for Choice Scholarships this year. More than 29,000 people submitted applications to enroll with vouchers during the 2014-15 school year, Department of Education Spokesman Daniel Altman said. Not everyone who submitted an application is guaranteed a voucher, but the quantity of applications this year is still an increase over the close to 19,800 Indiana students enrolled using vouchers in the 2013-14 school year. Through the program, parents can apply to direct a portion of the state funding that would pay for their child’s education to a school of their choosing instead. Some parents use the voucher funding to enroll their children at a private or charter school. According to the Center for Education Reform, a provoucher organization, the number of students in Indiana’s voucher program has doubled each year since it was instituted.

Indiana’s voucher program was passed by the Indiana General Assembly in 2011. Conditions for eligibility are considered less strict than in other state programs, partly because students can be eligible whether or not they are currently attending a failing school, according to the Center for Education Reform. According to the Indiana Department of Education, Indiana students ages five to 22 have several different claims to receive a voucher, including financial need, disability, attending a failing school or having received a voucher the previous year. The CER recently named Indiana’s Choice Scholarships program the top state voucher program in the country for its flexible requirements and capacity. CER Communications Director Michelle Tigani said she believes voucher programs allow parents to make the best decision about their children’s education. “It means that private schools are no longer offlimits or out of reach for families who feel a private school would be best for SEE VOUCHER, PAGE 7


Connect with members of many diverse faiths at idsnews.com/religious Paid Advertising

Christian

Adventist Bloomington Seventh-day Adventist Church 2230 N. Martha St. 812-332-5025

Highland Village Church of Christ 4000 W. Third St. 812-332-8685

BloomingtonSDAChurch.org Saturday Mornings: Sabbath School, 9:30 a.m. Worship Hour, 10:45 a.m.

Wednesday: Prayer Meeting, 6:30 – 7:30 p.m. The Bloomington Seventh-day Adventist Church is part of a worldwide organization with more than 15 million members in countries around the world. We would love to have you join us in worship or at one of our church events. John Leis, Pastor Mike Riley, Elder Ann Jaramio , Elder

highlandvillage@juno.com

Bloomington Seventh-day Adventist Church 2230 N. Martha St. 812-332-5025

Sunday: Bible Study, 9:30 a.m. Worship, 10:25 a.m., 6 p.m. Wednesday: Bible Study, 7 p.m. *On the second Sunday of each month services are at 10:25 a.m. & 1 p.m. A place where the pure Gospel is preached. Where a dedicated body of people assemble to worship, and where souls are devoted to the Lord and His word. Phil Spaulding and Mark Stauffer, Elders Justin Johnston and Roy Wever, Deacons

Saturday Mornings: Sabbath School, 9:30 - 10:30 a.m. Worship Service, 10:30 a.m. - Noon

The Bloomington Seventh-day Adventist Church is part of a worldwide organization with more than 15 million members in countries around the world. We would love to have you join us in worship or at one of our church events. Mike Riley, Elder • Hernan Hammerly, Elder • John Leis III, Elder

Anabaptist/Mennonite Mennonite Fellowship of Bloomington 2420 E. Third St. 812-202-1563

First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)

Sunday: 5 p.m.

Kelly Carson, Pastor mfbpastor@gmail.com

Assembles of God/Evangelical Genesis Church 801 E. State Rd. 46 Bypass 812-336-5757

igenesischurch.com

Genesis Church exists for the purpose of worshipping God, honoring one another in the unity and love of Christ, and building missional communities that seek the reign of Jesus' Kingdom in all aspects of culture and life.

Sunday: 8:30 a.m. & 11 a.m. Wednesday: 7 p.m. Prayer & Praise As God has welcomed us, we welcome you. With all our differences – in age, ability and physical condition, in race, cultural background and economic status, in sexual orientation, gender identity and family structure – God has received each one with loving kindness, patience and joy. All that we are together and all that we hope to be is made more perfect as the richness of varied lives meets the mystery of God’s unifying Spirit, and we become the Body of Christ. Helen Hempfling, Pastor

Episcopal (Anglican)

David Woodcock, Pastor Timothy Woodcock, Associate Pastor

Canterbury House Episcopal (Anglican) Campus Ministry at IU

Baptist (Great Commission)

719 E. Seventh St. 812-334-7971 • 812-361-7954

fx church

indiana.edu/~canterby canterby@indiana.edu

812-606-4588

fxchurch.com • @fxchurch on twitter

Sacramental Schedule: Weekly services Sundays: Holy Eucharist with hymns, followed

Sunday: 10:10 a.m. at Bloomington Playwrights

by dinner 4 p.m. at Canterbury House

Project, 107 W. Ninth St.

Wednesdays: Evening Prayer & Bible Study

f x c h u r c h is foot of the cross, a place where all generations meet to GO KNO SHO GRO in relationship to God and others. Enjoy a casual theater environment with live acoustic music and real-life talks. Street and garage parking is free on Sundays. f x c h u r c h, the cause and fx. Mat Shockney, Lead Pastor mat.shockney@fxchurch.com Trevor Kirtman, Student Pastor trevor.kirtman@fxchurch.com

Christian Science Christian Science Church 2425 E. Third St. 812-332-0536 CSO IU Liaison 812-406-0173

bloomingtonchristianscience.com Sunday: 10 a.m. Wednesday: 7 p.m. Visit our inspiring church services near campus. Healing Sentinel Radio programs broadcast on CATS channel 7 and Uverse channel 99 Sundays at 1 p.m. and Mondays and Thursdays at 9 p.m. Check these sites: Your Daily Lift, christianscience.com, Go Verse, time4thinkers.com, and csmonitor.com.

Religious Events Sunday, Sept. 28 Connexion / Evangelical Community Church Event: Fall Membership Class Part One Contact Connexion / Evangelical Community Church for more information, at eccbloomington.org or 812-332-0502.

Thursday, Oct. 2 Hope Presbyterian Church Event: Skholay Time: 8:30 – 10:30 a.m. For more information, contact Hope Presbyterian Church at 812-323-3822 or

connect@hopebtown.org.

at 5:30 p.m. at Canterbury House

Thursdays: Evening Prayer & Holy Eucharist at 5:15 p.m. at Trinity Church (111 S. Grant St.) Episcopal (Anglican) Campus Ministry is a safe, welcoming and inclusive Christian community; it is an inter-generational nesting place for all who pass through the halls of Indiana University. All people are welcome. All people get to participate. There are no barriers to faith or participation. There are no constraints — gender, sexual orientation, ethnicity, country of origin, disability or ability, weak or strong. In the end, it’s all about God’s love for us and this world.

Opportunities for Fellowship Please join us for these programs at Canterbury House

Mondays and Wednesday: 2 – 4 p.m. Open House with coffee bar & snacks

Tuesdays: 5:30 p.m. Bible study and discussion Second Sunday of every Month: 6 p.m. – 8 p.m. Film Series and Food

Fall Retreat September 19 – 21: St. Meinrad's Archabbey in southern Indiana

Community Service Days To be announced Additional opportunities will be available for service projects, social gatherings, Bible study and retreats. Spiritual direction and pastoral counselling are available by contacting the chaplain.

Monday, Oct. 6 First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) Event: Women's Arts & Crafts Group Time: 7 – 9 p.m. For more information, contact First Christian Church at fccbloomington.org or 812-332-4459.

For membership in the Religious Directory please contact us at ads@idsnews.com. Email marketing@idsnews.com to submit your religious events. The deadline for next Friday's Directory is 5 p.m. Tuesday.

stoneridgebaptistchurch.org Sunday: 9:30 a.m. College Class Bible Study 10:30 a.m. Morning Worship Service 6 p.m. Evening Service

Wednesday: 7 p.m. Midweek Prayer Service Our services are characterized by practical Bible-centered messages, traditional music, and genuine Christ-centered friendships. We believe that God's Word meets every spiritual need, so as we obey Christ we experience God's best. For more information about our ministries visit our website or feel free to contact us. Andy Gaschke, Pastor Matthew Patenaude, Campus Ministry Director

The Rose House 314 S. Rose Ave. 812-333-2474 • lcmiu.org

Sunday Worship: 8:30 a.m. & 11 a.m. at St. Thomas Lutheran Church.

Growth, 6 p.m. at the Rose House. Free to students. Rose House is home to those seeking an inclusive Christian community. Students of all backgrounds are invited to our campus center for spiritual (and physical!) nourishment 24/7. Rose House is an intentionally safe space for all students to reflect and act on your faith through Bible study, faith discussions, retreats, service projects, and more! Jeff Schacht, Campus Minister Rev. Kelli Skram, Campus Pastor Marissa Tweed, Pastoral Intern

Non-Denominational

Saturday: Great Vespers 5 p.m. Sunday: Matins 8:50 a.m.

A parish of the Antiochian Archdiocese of North America – our parish welcomes Orthodox Christians from all jurisdictions around the globe and all Christians of Protestant and Catholic backgrounds as well as seekers of the ancient church. We are a caring and welcoming family following our Lord Jesus Christ. Rev. Fr. Peter Jon Gillquist, Pastor Rev. Lawrence Baldwin, Deacon Marcia Baldwin, Secretary

Presbyterian (PCA) Hope Presbyterian Church 205 N. College Ave. Suite 430 812-323-3822

HopePres is a community of broken people, renewed by the grace of Jesus. We want to grow in the messiness of real life, and seek to be hospitable to the cynic and the devout, the joyful and the grieving, the conservative and the liberal, the bored and the burned out. We invite you, wherever you are in your story, to HopePres. Know God. Love People. Renew Our Place.

Join with students from all areas of campus at ECC on Sundays at 6 p.m. for Connexion — a Non-denominational service just for students, featuring worship, teaching, and a free dinner. We strive to support, encourage, and build up students in Christian faith during their time at IU and we'd love to get to know you! Josiah Leuenberger, Director of University Ministries Bob Whitaker, Senior Pastor Dan Waugh, Pastor of Adult Ministries

Rev. Dan Herron, Pastor

Roman Catholic St. Paul Catholic Center

The Life Church

1413 E. 17th St. 812-339-5561

3575 N. Prow Rd. 812-339-5433

hoosiercatholic.org

lifeministries.org

The Life Church is a multi-cultural, multigenerational, gathering of believers who seek to show Gods love through discipleship. We welcome everyone with open arms.

7821 W. State Road 46 812-876-6072

redeemerbloomington.org

Steve VonBokern, Senior Pastor Rosh Dhanawade, IU Coordinator 302-561-0108, rdhanawa@indiana.edu

Wednesday: Vespers 6 p.m.

eccbloomington.org • cxiu.org Sundays: Service: 9:30 a.m. & 11 a.m. Connexion: 6 p.m.

930 W. Seventh St. 812-269-8975

You will be our honored guest! You will find our services to be uplifting and full of practical teaching and preaching by Pastor Steve VonBokern, as well as dynamic, God-honoring music.

allsaintsbloomington.org

Sunday: 10:30 a.m. at Harmony School, 909 E. Second St.

Redeemer Community Church

Thursdays at 7 - 8 p.m., Cedar Hall C107 Every other Thursday starting Sept. 4 - Dec. 4

Orthodox Christian

503 S. High St. 812-332-0502

Lifeway Baptist Church

Campus Meeting: Barnabas Society

Loving God, Serving People, Changing Lives

connect@hopebtown.org • hopebtown.org

Independent Baptist

Lifeway Baptist Church exists to advance the Kingdom of God by making disciples, maturing believers and multiplying ministry. Matthew 28:19-20

David G. Schunk, Senior Pastor Tom Rude, Associate Pastor D.A. Schunk, Youth Pastor Lisa Schunk, Children’s Ministry Director

Connexion / Evangelical Community Church

Mike & Detra Carter, Pastors

* Free transportation provided. Please call if you need a ride to church.

Sunday: 10 a.m. Our small group meets weekly — give us a call for times and location. On Sunday mornings, service is at 10 a.m. We are contemporary and dress is casual. Coffee, bagels and fruit are free! Come as you are ... you’ll be loved!

Divine Liturgy: 10 a.m. Wednesday: “Table Talk” Dinner & Spiritual

* Free transportation provided. Please call if you need a ride to church.

Thursday Campus Bible Study: 7 p.m.

btnvineyard.org

6004 S. Fairfax Rd. 812-824-3600

Wednesday: 6:45 p.m.

Sunday Worship: 10 a.m. & 6 p.m.

2375 S. Walnut St. 812-336-4602

Lutheran Campus Ministry at IU

Mother Linda C. Johnson+, University Chaplain Evan Fencl, Outreach Coordinator Megan Vinson, Community Development Coordinator Samuel Young, Interfaith Linkage Coordinator

9 a.m. Sunday

Vineyard Community Church

Lutheran/Christian (ELCA)

Sunday: 10 a.m.

College & Career Age Sunday School Class:

Non-Denominational

All Saints Orthodox Christian Church

Counseling available by appointment

Wednesday Night Bible Study: 7 p.m. For more information, contact The Life Church at lifeministries.org or 812-339-5433.

4645 W. State Rd. 45 812-325-5155

Chaplain’s Office Hours: Tuesday & Wednesday: 3 - 5 p.m. Friday: 11 a.m. - 2 p.m.

lifewaybaptistchurch.org

Monday, Oct. 6 The Life Church Event: MEGA Men Time: 6 p.m. – 7 p.m.

StoneRidge Baptist Church

fccbloomington.org

Sunday: 9 a.m. & 10:30 a.m. Wednesday: 7 p.m. Prayer & Praise

Independent Baptist

205 E. Kirkwood Ave. 812-332-4459

bloomingtonmenno.org

A welcoming, inclusive congregation providing a place of healing and hope as we journey together in the Spirit of Christ. Gathering for worship Sundays 5 p.m. in the Roger Williams room, First United Church. As people of God's peace, we seek to embody the Kingdom of God.

bloomington22.adventistchurchconnect.org

Christian (Disciples of Christ)

Sunday: 10 a.m. at Banneker Community Center Redeemer is a gospel-centered community on mission. Our vision is to see the gospel of Jesus Christ transform and redeem us as individuals, as a church and as a city. We want to be instruments of gospel change in Bloomington and beyond. Chris Jones, Lead Pastor

The Salvation Army 111 N. Rogers St. 812-336-4310

bloomingtonsa.org Sunday: 10 a.m. Sunday School & 11 a.m. Worship Service The Salvation Army, an international movement, is an evangelical part of the universal Christian Church. Its message is based on the Bible. Its ministry is motivated by the love of God. Its mission is to preach the gospel of Jesus Christ and to meet human needs in His name without discrimination. Lt. Sharyn Tennyson, Corps Officer/Pastor Lt. Shannon Forney, Assoc. Corps Officer/Pastor

Weekend Mass Times Saturday: 4:30 p.m. Sunday: 8:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 5:30 p.m., 9 p.m. Spanish Mass Sunday, 12:30 p.m. Korean Mass 1st & 3rd Saturdays, 6 p.m.

Weekday Mass Times 7:15 a.m. & 5:15 p.m.

Weekday Adoration & Reconciliation 3:45 - 4:50 p.m. We welcome all; We form Catholics to be alive in their faith, We nurture leaders with Christian values in the church and the community; We promote social outreach and justice, We reflect the face of Christ at Indiana University and beyond. Fr. John Meany, O.P., Pastor Fr. Simon-Felix Michalski, O.P., Campus Minister Fr. Jude McPeak, O.P., Associate Pastor

United Methodist Open Hearts * Open Minds * Open Doors

St. Mark’s United Methodist Church 100 N. State Rd. 46 Bypass 812-332-5788

stmarksbloomington.org Sunday Schedule 9:30-10:30 a.m.: Breakfast 9:15-10:15 a.m.: Adult Sunday School Classes (Nomads, Pilgrims, Bible Banter) 9:30-10:15 a.m.: Celebration! Children’s & Family Worship 10:30-11:30 a.m.: Sanctuary Worship 10:30-11:30 a.m.: Children & Youth Sunday School Classes Ned Steele, Pastor Mary Beth Morgan, Pastor Diane Menke Pence, Deacon


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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | F R I D AY, S E P T. 2 6 , 2 0 1 4 | I D S N E W S . C O M

OPINION

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

iPhone 6 Plus might be an iPhone miss Turns out Apple’s basket may have a few bad seeds. iPhone 6 Plus users have begun posting on social media sites about the qualities of the phone. The big problem? People’s skinny jeans

pockets are so tight that the phones bend. Given how expensvie the phone is, the fact that it’s so flimsy is making many justifiabely angry. Looks like the skinny jean trend is over.

IDS EDITORIAL BOARD

JUST JOSH

PH INDICATOR

Give me soda, or give me death

Getting a makeover STEPHEN KROLL is a senior in journalism.

JOSHUA ALLEN is a sophomore in creative writing.

On Tuesday, the soda companies PepsiCo, Coca-Cola and the Dr. Pepper Snapple Group announced that they will attempt to cut the number of calories consumed by the average American from sugary drinks by 20 percent. I find this commitment entirely absurd. My first argument is basic — why should a group of private companies determine my consumer habits? Granted, they shouldn’t intentionally harm the customer, but to consume or not to consume is my choice. Namely, I believe that if I gain weight from consuming too much soda, I cannot blame the company that produced it. That is my issue, not theirs. The only way they could be implicated is if they deliberately hid or obscured the product’s nutritional facts and I, in complete ignorance, drank too much and suffered from health problems. But this isn’t the case. I can’t reasonably imagine that any significant portion of the American population is ignorant about soda’s lack of nutritional value. They partake in soda with complete knowledge of what it contains. The commitment says the companies will sell their products in smaller packaging so people can’t consume as much at one time. But, with the higher package-to-product ratio, soda will end up costing more if the packaging costs more than the actual product. If these soda companies wanted to actually do something that would cut the number of calories consumed by the lowerincome population, they would cut the prices on the products in which they already have huge profit margins. For example, they have the full capability to cut their bottled water prices to make them as cheap, perhaps even cheaper, than their soda prices. This would make a healthier option than soda, and it would actually be at a realistic price for consumers. I don’t really want to suggest this, though, since bottled water is already a ridiculous product. Most municipal water systems are perfectly fine. But that is one of the very few things soda companies can, and perhaps even should, do. Really, one of the few other things that could help is if they cut prices on their sports drink products to make them competitive with soda prices. If they give lowerincome people options, they won’t be financially restricted to buy only soda. Other than that, one cannot legitimately expect soda companies to cut calories for us. Our health is oure responsibility. They are businesses and, as long as they are honest about their products, we are free to choose what we want, even if that happens to be a two-liter of Coke. allenjo@indiana.edu

ILLUSTRATION BY JOEL BUSTAMANTE | IDS

The juggling game WE SAY: Students are not machines In a recent Lafayette Journal and Courier guest column, Indiana Education commissioners Teresa Lubbers and Stan Jones made a strange assumption about college students in Indiana. They claimed that students taking 15 or more credit hours do better in school than those who take less. From this assertion, they suggest that students who aren’t doing well should take more credits in order to do better. Not only does this not make any logical sense, it also shows how out of touch with actual college students the Indiana education system is. Correlation does not equal causation. This is a pattern, not an explanation. Numbers don’t exist in a vacuum, and there are always more factors at work, especially with college students today. Most students who are taking less than 15 credit hours are doing so because they have other obligations that require their attention. For some non-traditional students who are returning to school, they can only take on so many credit hours because of their full-time job or because they need to care for their children. These extra obligations require time and concentration that cannot be spared.

To assume that these people are taking less credit hours simply because they are lazy is inaccurate, insulting and discredits students who are bravely overcoming obstacles that most other full-time students aren’t. Surely this call for more credit hours is related to the new norm of students staying longer than four years, which looks unproductive for the university they attend. The education system wants students to take on more so that they can graduate earlier and make Indiana look like a more efficient university. This is an outdated view of higher education. The problem isn’t that students today aren’t trying hard enough. The job market, due to a large population, and the economy, due to the decisions of past generations, is more challenging to navigate than it was when our parents were in school. In order to have a chance out of college, students have to constantly be thinking about how to market themselves to potential employers. We have to constantly be working to make ourselves stand out. This means more majors, more internships and more extracurriculars. On top of this, some students also

have to maintain a part-time job in order to combat the high price of their college education. A member of the editorial board has two part-time jobs, an internship, a full course load and is committed to multiple time-consuming extracurriculars. If such students don’t get straight As, it isn’t because they don’t care about their futures. If they don’t graduate in four years, it wasn’t because they weren’t trying hard enough. We didn’t ask to have to survive in this economic climate, but it is the reality we have to work within. That is why it is so infuriating when baby boomer bureaucrats who made a lot of the decisions that left the education system in the condition that it’s in try to blame us for not living up to their standards. Our experiences are completely different from what theirs must have been, and this accusation just proves they have no idea what it is like to be a young adult today. We shouldn’t have to justify our struggles to the people who are responsible for them. We definitely don’t have to take on more than we already do just to placate their outdated and delusional expectations.

KARL’S KORNER

The Cuddlr creeps A few weeks ago, an app came out that is designed for strangers to meet and cuddle. It’s called Cuddlr. It makes sense. OK, let me rephrase that. It makes sense to a creepy 30-year-old man with nothing else to do with his life than cuddle in a field with a slightly manic college student who just broke up with her boyfriend. The app is designed to be nonspecific, gender-neutral, age-neglecting and non-psychopath-detecting. To figure out how it works, I took the liberty of downloading Cuddlr myself. In Bloomington, there’s a fair amount of people who are using the app at the moment, and it looks as if they’re mostly college-aged IU students. One boy had his picture set to himself standing next to his grandmother, which was quite endearing. But then there was Charlie, who made his profile a pic-

ture of a penguin. As much as I would love to believe that Charlie is a cuddly penguin who knows how to use an iPhone, I can’t. All one has to do to get a quality cuddle is go to a person’s picture and click “ask XYZ for a cuddle.” Then there’s a “cuddle now” option at the bottom, and it gives people 15-minute opportunities to meet the other person for an impromptu cuddling session. It sounds a lot like a PGrated Tinder to me. At first, I thought this was fine. Weirdos can be weirdos. But this isn’t about cuddling. It’s about strangers cuddling. When I cuddle with friends, it’s amicable and familiar. It makes me feel better. But with strangers, you’re not friends with them — so the only motive to cuddle is for physical reasons. If you’re cuddling for the physical aspect, then it’s full of desire for touch, and with desire comes

some sort of sexual insinuations, which is where things can go south. Because the app displays the other individual’s location, it creates the perfect treasure map for rapists and kidnappers. Aside from the eminent danger that Cuddlr presents, it works like any other dating app. But instead of getting a one-night stand, you’re getting a noncommittal, platonic cuddle from a complete stranger. In case a cuddle goes wrong and someone experiences discomfort due to this sexual desire, users can report if their session was inappropriate. The creator of this app, Charlie Williams, advises that Cuddlr matches meet up in communal areas. This lets them avoid private places for safety reasons or for Williams to avoid future lawsuits. Essentially, Cuddlr is the same thing as Tinder, but with

JESSICA KARL is a sophomore in English.

a nonsexual excuse. Sadly, this excuse revs up the sexuality even more, since the physical contact is so forced. Two strangers can’t snuggle with each other. It just doesn’t make sense. Besides the fact that the person could be a serial killer, there’s no way for Cuddlr to sense a person’s cleanliness. An app unfortunately doesn’t come with a scratchand-sniff button to detect body ordor or, even worse, lice. Overall, the idea of touching strangers is weird. We don’t like brushing hands when we borrow a pencil from someone. Just imagine being their little spoon. jlkarl@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.

There are a lot of people frustrated with our government. Maybe it’s party bickering, maybe it’s a lack of transparency, maybe it’s our huge debt. And the deficit. But I think we can all get behind being mad at government workers who watch porn all day. One senior-level employee at the Environmental Protection Agency was reportedly caught looking at porn for six hours a day, according to the Washington Post. Apart from the impressive stamina that that particular task takes, it’s an incredible waste of time and resources. It kept the employee on and continued paying them. Alright, so maybe it doesn’t make sense to the Average Joe, but this is politics we’re talking about, and somehow this was justifiable. The employee is currently on leave but still getting paid. It’s not just porn. Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., according to the Post, said many workers across the government waste hours of time. This is a systemic problem. Meadows is trying to pass a law to stop government workers from looking at porn on the job. The lack of that precedent is a little disturbing. Our government is an annoying paradox. It allows incidents like this to happen, partly because it’s supposed to be slow and ineffective. Government checks and balances keep things from going too fast. No one can pass a law quickly and destroy people’s rights without them being able to stop it. Of course, when you can’t pass a law at all, that’s also a problem. Alexis de Tocqueville observed the United States and its political system just as it was starting, and his insights still ring true today. He saw that the U.S. wasn’t the country with the greatest government. It would never rise to the speed and ability of a strongly led authoritarian regime. But it did allow for the greatest number of people to benefit the greatest amount. Our big, lumbering democracy might do us more good than we think. Of course, just because our government moves slowly to protect our freedoms doesn’t mean we should stand for these time abuses. Our government should always be moving forward. When we can’t pass any laws to make progress, we’re not any better off. And when our taxpayer money is wasted so obviously, something needs to change. Still, the solution isn’t totally clear. We should obviously try to reduce these inefficient uses of time and computer RAM. But whether we should try to make our government faster and less cautious is a more difficult value judgment. Our government needs to do better. It has a responsibility to stop these kinds of waste. But at the end of the day, we’re going to need to keep an eye out, because who knows what they’ll do when no one is looking. sckroll@indiana.edu


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» CASH

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 Promoting her new album “The River and the Thread,” Cash’s tour marks her IU debut. Rick and Stephanie Emanus of Jasonville, Ind., said they traveled an hour to see Cash perform. “We bought our tickets when they first went on sale eight weeks ago,” Stephanie said. “This is our first show here, (and) we’re looking forward to it.” The couple said they have never seen Cash perform, but that did not stop them from having high expectations of the show. “I like her deep roots with country music and especially her new album that bares tribute to her dad,” Rick Emanus said. “And I’ve liked her since the eighties. I think she’ll be a tremendous performer.” Stephanie quickly agreed with her husband. “I think it’ll be very moving. It’s nice to see her at a smaller venue instead of a big stadium,” she said. The Emanus’s were not the only ones excited to see Cash perform. Elaine Hartman, a ticket taker at the IU Auditorium, said she had not listened to Cash’s music and was planning to watch her perform. “Of course we can go into some of the shows, so that’s always exciting,” Hartman said. “I’m her father’s generation, so I know her father’s music.” And much like her father, Cash is widely known for a deep, soothing voice and southern charm. Cash takes the audience on a multimedia journey through the American

» VOUCHER

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 4

their child,” Tigani said. “It provides access and opportunity for families.” She said she believes the best voucher program would be available to all students in the state. She also said this ideal program would not have

RACHEL MEERT | IDS

Rosanne Cash, daughter of late musician Johnny Cash, performs Thursday night at the IU Auditorium. Thursday was Cash’s first time performing at IU.

South during her performance with a virtual trip through the southern states. The presentation is meant to be reflective of Cash’s own life. The band started to play the first song without Cash on the stage. Later on, Cash walked out from backstage, receiving astounding applause, and immediately began singing her first song, “A Feather’s Not A Bird.”

As she finished her first song, she expressed her gratitude to her fans. “Thank you,” Cash said to the crowd. “This is my first time at IU. Thank you for having us.” To Cash’s right was John Leventhal, her husband of almost 20 years. A guitarist for Cash’s band, Leventhal collaborated with Cash on the album, helping her write all of its songs.

“We spent a lot of time in the Delta when we were writing these songs,” Cash said to the audience, explaining the inspiration for the album. And with Newsweek referring to “The River and the Thread” as “the work of a lifetime,” Cash appears to have succeeded in making this an effective and enjoyable album. “I’m doing something I’ve always wanted to do:

playing an entire album in sequence,” she said. Cash did not forget to acknowledge her famous father, telling the audience that he was the inspiration for her second song on the album. But although moments of her storytelling became historical and thoughtful, she maintained a playful demeanor with the audience. “We wanted to write a

gospel song that even Agnostics would love,” Cash said before performing her song, “Tell Heaven,” evoking laughter from the audience. Although Cash is traveling the country for her national tour, she told the audience the place that inspired her music is something she will always take with her. “Sometimes all roads lead back to Memphis,” she said.

a cap on the number of vouchers that could be issued. Vic Smith of the Indiana Coalition for Public Education, a nonprofit group against privatizing schools, disagrees. “It takes away money from the public school,” Smith said. The program expanded

in 2013, after which it dictated that students did not have to attend public school prior to applying for a voucher for private school tuition. Smith said this meant 7,000 students who received vouchers last year were not transferring away from a public school — they were already attending private

school. “The savings to the state comes when students are at a public school and they transfer to a lower-cost private school,” Smith said. In addition to this, the voucher program has received criticism because it indirectly provides some public funds to private schools that were founded

on religious principles, according to an article published in the Indiana Daily Student in February. Smith said that, in addition to the economic issues, this is why ICPE doesn’t support the voucher program. “It’s not a choice that taxpayers should make, to provide a religious education,”

Smith said. “We believe public schools are available for everybody and should be supported strongly so everybody can go.” Altman said the Department of Education will release full statistics about the number of vouchers granted for the 2014-15 school year in mid-October.

IU to partner with Middle East Technical University From IDS reports

During President Michael McRobbie’s trip to Turkey this week, he signed a partnership agreement with Middle East Technical University. During his visit in Ankara, Turkey, McRobbie met with Ahmet Acar, METU’s president, according to a University press release. McRobbie and Acar held a meeting along with 15 METU administrators and faculty. METU departments in economics, engineering, education, physical education and sports and computer and instructional technology were all represented at the meeting, according to the University. “Providing Indiana University students and faculty with increased opportunities to study and work over-

seas, especially in such culturally and historically significant countries as Turkey, is of paramount importance to IU,” McRobbie said in the release. He also toured Turkey’s oldest, largest and innovating science and technology park. METU was established in 1956 and currently holds more than 24,000 students. Most of the university’s departments only take the top 1 percent of the applicants that take Turkey’s National University Entrance Examination, according to the IU. About 1.5 million people take the national university entrance exam. “We are delighted to formalize our partnership with such a pre-eminent institution as Middle East Technical University and to explore new exchanges and research

collaborations that will greatly serve the needs of both institutions and build upon IU’s longstanding engagement in this vital economic and political part of the world,” McRobbie said. After the partnership agreement was signed, collaboration options were discussed in the areas of business, education and social and physical sciences, according to the University. Friday, McRobbie is set to visit Ankara University, another one of IU’s partner universities. AU is partners with the Turkish Flagship Program, which is the only federally funded program in the Ankara area, according to the University. This trip is a sitting IU president’s first trip to Turkey since 1955. Kathrine Schulze

» SOCCER

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this was one of the things he talked to his team about after Wednesday’s game. “I think our guys are ready and kind of hungry that they left (Wednesday night) feeling good about some things, but they want to get out and perform better,” Yeagley said. Northwestern (4-1-3, 0-1-1) is coming off of a win against DePaul. In its previous Big Ten game, it played to a scoreless draw against Michigan. The Wildcats’ first conference game came against Ohio State in Columbus, which saw the Buckeyes win 2-0. “Northwestern is a great defensive team, and they have a great goalie,” Doody said. “So we have to be sharp again in the attacking half on Sunday.” Northwestern is led by juniors Joey Calistri, who has tallied three goals and an assist this season, and Cole Missimo, who also has

Move more. Eat right. Love life. Be happy. IU Bloomington is participating in

World Heart Day Did you know Indiana ranks 41 out of 50 states in overall health? Or that we rank 39 out of 50 in deaths due to heart disease? At IU we’re working to dramatically improve those numbers as we literally “walk the talk.” Together, we’ll show that IU students, faculty and staff are #DoneWith41.

First 50 Participants get a free t-shirt! RACHEL MEERT | IDS

Junior midfielder Femi Hollinger-Janzen traps the ball during the match against Central Florida on Wednesday at Bill Armstrong Stadium.

three goals. Senior goalkeeper Tyler Miller has six shut-outs so far this season and has allowed just three goals while saving 24 shots. “Every Big Ten game, every match, (is important),” Yeagley said. “There’s just no one on our schedule where you can say, ‘Well,

OK, if we don’t do so well this game we’ll recoup it in game 10 or 11.’” “I mean, look at our stretch coming up, we’re playing some of the toughest teams in the country, and Northwestern is always very disciplined and tough to break down, so I’m looking forward to it.”

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Senior running back D’Angelo Roberts runs with the ball during IU’s game against Missouri on Saturday at Faurot Field in Columbia, Mo. Roberts scored the game-winning touchdown with 22 seconds remaining.

WELCOME TO THE BIG STAGE IU , Maryland aim to control running game By Grace Palmieri

HEAR ME OUT

Can IU contain the Terps?

gpalmier@indiana.edu | @grace_palmieri

Hoosiers, Terps open Big Ten play By Sam Beishuizen sbeishui@indiana.edu | @Sam_Beishuizen

BRODY MILLER is a sophomore in journalism.

For the first time in IU Coach Kevin Wilson’s four seasons at the helm of IU football, his offense is being recognized for more than its highoctane passing attack. IU’s rushing offense is ranked No. 9 in the nation. Led by junior Tevin Coleman, who leads the nation in rushing and all-purpose yards per game, and senior D’Angelo Roberts, the Hoosiers are averaging 310 yards on the ground per game this season. They look to build on that against Maryland (3-1) at Memorial Stadium on Saturday, in the two teams’ first meeting since 1935. “It’s an attitude to run,” Wilson said. “It’s more of a mindset, and it’s taken us some time to get that mindset where we’re mature enough across the board.” Last week, in IU’s win against then-No. 18 Missouri, Coleman left the game for most of the second quarter. Roberts and freshman Devine Redding didn’t miss a beat, combining for 114 yards rushing and two touchdowns. Coleman picked up where he left off in the second half. He and Roberts each made big plays on the final drive that resulted in the game-winning score. All three IU touchdowns against Missouri came on the ground. An offense that prides itself on its passing game is becoming a running team this season. The Hoosiers had 241 rushing yards to 252 passing against Missouri, more balanced offensively than they have been yet this season.

In consecutive seasons, Trent Dilfer and Tom Brady won their first Super Bowls. Neither was by any means expected to be a championship-level quarterback. One was a sixth-round pick and the other was let go by his former team and picked up on a replacement level contract. Despite both going on surprising title runs, Brady went on to become one of the greatest quarterbacks of all time. Dilfer, on the other hand, was let go and never started a full season for the rest of his career. The Hoosiers just pulled off an unanticipated road upset of No. 18 Missouri. The question will be, are the Hoosiers more Tom Brady or Trent Dilfer? Will that Mizzou win be an anomaly, or an indication of things to come? Saturday will start to reveal the answer. IU will play host to Maryland (3-1) in both schools’ Big Ten opener. This Maryland team reminds me a lot of IU. Even more so, they remind me of last year’s IU. I do not mean in terms of talent or production. I mean their habits. Like last year’s Hoosiers, and sometimes this season’s, the Terrapins have a big play offense and a defense that can be marched on.

IU and Maryland’s recent competitive history is brief. They have none. The last time the Hoosiers and Terrapins met was in 1935. Maryland hasn’t even played in the state of Indiana since 1934, when the Hoosiers defeated the Terrapins 17-14. When IU and Maryland last met in 1935, Franklin D. Roosevelt was president. That matchup came just months after the inaugural Sugar Bowl and Orange Bowl, and Amelia Earhart was busy flying across the Pacific Ocean. But nearly two years after Maryland announced it would join the Big Ten, IU (2-1) will officially welcome Maryland (3-1) to the conference at 1:30 p.m. Saturday at Memorial Stadium. Because of the unfamiliarity between the teams, IU has been relying almost exclusively on game film in preparation this week. One advantage IU has had this week comes from the experience of first-year IU defensive coordinator Brian Knorr, who spent the last three seasons at Wake Forrest. “Having faced them in the past in the Atlantic Coast Conference, Maryland is very talented,” Knorr said. The first player Knorr brought up when asked about his experience game-planning for Maryland was sixth-year senior quarterback C.J. Brown. The Maryland offense runs through the dual-threat quarterback who is averaging 208 passing yards and a team-high 61 rushing

SEE RUN GAME, PAGE 15

SEE HOOSIERS, PAGE 8

SEE MARYLAND, PAGE 8


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WOMEN’S SOCCER

IU set to play Wisconsin, Minnesota By Sam Beishuizen sbeishui@indiana.edu @Sam_Beishuizen

IU coach Amy Berbary wants to see more of what senior Abby Smith did last Sunday. Smith has been hampered by a pair of ear infections that have been bothering her in games. During IU’s 2-0 loss against Illinois last Thursday, Smith had to be taken out of the game because of the pain. But when IU needed a goal against Northwestern, Smith scored on a header in overtime despite her injury. “That’s the type of grit and effort that we need to sustain,” Berbary said. “It was pure effort. We need more of that.” IU will look to pick up a few crucial points this weekend against No. 13 Wisconsin at 7 p.m. Friday and against Minnesota at noon Sunday, both at Bill Armstrong Stadium. Wisconsin (8-1-0, 2-1) comes to Bloomington having suffered one lone loss on the season. The Badgers have outscored opponents 25-3 this season, with the team’s lone loss coming in the final second of a 2-1 loss to Michigan on Sept. 14. Wisconsin leads the conference in points (66), goals (24) and is second in shutouts with six. IU’s offense has only managed two goals in its four Big Ten games so far this season. IU’s two conference goals have both come on set pieces, which the Hoosiers have been emphasizing in practice as of late. Players have been working earlier with assistant coach Benji Walton taking free kicks. Each player does about 10 repetitions at various positions on the field. “It’s been good for us,” senior defender Tori Keller said. “It’s just good to get a few of those in.” Those free kicks could create the scoring opportunities IU will need to take advantage of against a Wisconsin team that has played well defensively this season.

“It’s going to be a game of execution. They may have the better of the ball, but we’re going to certainly get in. It’s a matter of what we’re doing with the ball when we get into the final third.” Amy Berbary, IU coach

But despite the Badgers’ ability as of late to lock down opposing offenses, she said she is confident IU can take advantage of its opportunities. “It’s going to be a game of execution,” Berbary said. “They may have the better of the ball, but we’re going to certainly get in. It’s a matter of what we’re doing with the ball when we get into the final third.” IU’s second game of the weekend comes against a Minnesota (4-5, 1-2) team that has been consistently in the middle of the Big Ten statistically across the board. Minnesota is listed as the fifth-best scoring team in the conference, but the Gophers average 1.5 goals per game when a 10-0 drubbing of Stetson is ignored. The Hoosiers currently sit 11th in the Big Ten standings with nine games to play. Although it is still early, IU sits one point behind Maryland, who holds onto the final spot in the Big Ten Tournament. Berbary said the upcoming weekend would be a crucial one for IU to ensure it doesn’t dig itself into too deep of a hole to climb out of later in the season when teams begin to be eliminated from the playoffs. The Hoosiers are 106th in the RPI rankings, meaning an at-large bid for the NCAA Tournament will require a few more résumé building wins. “We’re only guaranteed nine more games,” Berbary said. “It would be huge. Right now, where we’re sitting, every game matters. We need to play like it’s our last.”

» MARYLAND

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yards per game. He’s the only player in Maryland history to both pass and rush for 20 or more touchdowns. Between 2011-2013 at Wake Forrest, Knorr was 2-1 against Maryland and has prepared for Brown twice in the past three seasons. He joked that Brown’s sixthyear season felt more like his eighth after seeing him so many times. “(Brown) is very athletic,” Knorr said. “Six-foot-three, very fast, saw him one night run for about 250 against a good Clemson defense. He’s a dangerous quarterback, as far as a guy with flat out, straight-line speed, he can really run away from people and has a lot of targets.” Brown is coming off of an efficient 16-of-26, 280 yard passing performance where he threw two touchdowns and no interceptions in a 34-20 win against Syracuse. Junior receiver Stefon Diggs headlines a group of four Maryland receivers who have more than 100 yards. He leads Maryland with 23 catches and 286 yards through four games. “(They’re) as good as there is collectively on any college team,” Wilson said. “Very impressive receivers, very impressive offense. They’ll stress you out and score a bunch of points.” Maryland Coach Randy Edsall has had to remodel his defense after injuries have plagued his team early on in the season. Maryland will be without junior defensive end Quinton Jefferson, who underwent season-ending knee surgery this week. Senior linebacker Matt

» RUN GAME

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This Maryland team thrives off large plays. Against West Virginia, the Terps scored on 75 and 77-yard plays as well as defensive back William Likely’s 69-yard punt return. Last week at Syracuse, they converted on 90 and 46yard passes. Likely also had an 88-yard interception return in this one. Interestingly enough, Maryland’s ugliest offensive game was in a South Florida game in which Maryland was not able to put up big plays. The Terrapins only had one big gain play, which was a 44-yard pass. Not counting that play, South Florida held them to 273 yards and forced two interceptions. It is not clear yet if the Terps simply rely on big plays

IDS FILE PHOTO

Junior Tevin Coleman runs by defenders during IU’s game against Bowling Green on Sept. 13 at Doyt Perry Stadium. Coleman is leading the nation in rushing yards and all-purpose yards per game.

Robinson missed Maryland’s game against Syracuse and was still questionable as to whether or not he would play. Backup sophomore outside linebacker Cavon Walker is also out for the season and last week, junior cornerback Alvin Hill was seen on crutches after the game. IU’s offense will look to take advantage of an ailing defense that allowed 589 total yards, 370 of them on the ground, to Syracuse last week. IU senior running back D’Angelo Roberts said despite not having a history against Maryland, game film and focusing on improving at the individual

level will take up most of IU’s time preparing. He said the Maryland defense actually looks similar to IU’s, which could be beneficial since Roberts and the rest of his teammates are used to practicing against one another. “I believe their defense is similar to ours,” Roberts said. “We have different skill type players. Just watching and understanding what their keys are and who their playmakers are will be big.” Wilson said that despite members of the Big Ten not knowing Maryland as well, it isn’t as if Maryland is an unproven team. He said Maryland’s success against schools like

for success or if they have just been so talented at the skill positions that they create big plays. Regardless, this may not fair well for an IU defense that has done well in the trenches but keeps teams alive by allowing big plays. The Hoosiers allowed passes of 27, 31 and 40 against a not-so-great Bowling Green squad. Also, IU essentially outplayed Missouri’s offense all day but allowed a few massive plays that stemmed from a lack of discipline. Maryland’s offense may be in the perfect situation against IU. Defensive coordinator Brian Knorr tries to prevent big plays by sending constant pressure and not allowing quarterbacks to make the correct decision. Like Missouri, Maryland has an athletic quarterback

that can create plays and IU contained Maty Mauk pretty well. The difference here is, Maryland’s quarterback C.J. Brown has an elite trio of receivers to toss the ball up to, unlike the previous three opponents. No disrespect to Bowling Green or Missouri’s wide outs. Stefon Diggs, Deon Long and Marcus Leak are just elite playmakers when given the chance to do something. From what I have seen, IU should be able to contain the run for the most part. There just has not been much precedent this year for IU stopping elite receivers. It will be a very interesting matchup, especially as IU just lost some depth at cornerback with Kenny Mullen out for the season. I think this game will be very similar to the past few

IU FOOTBALL (2-1) vs. Maryland (3-1) 1:30 p.m. Saturday, Memorial Stadium, BTN Clemson and Florida state will make it a tough opponent for IU to kick off its Big Ten campaign with. “It’s not like to me they’re stepping up. They just moved over,” Wilson said. “But at the end of the day, they’re not out of their league. This is where they belong. We’re excited to have them here and excited to have them in our division, and we look forward to a great game Saturday and we need to play very, very well.” games for Maryland — big plays and some mistakes. It is such a hard game to predict because we never know which IU team will show up. The Mizzou upset threw everyone off. When it comes down to it, I think it will be a very close game. I predict another big running day for Coleman & Co. I expect another gamemanaging game plan for Sudfeld due to Maryland mainly getting by on forcing some turnovers. I say IU pulls through as I expect Memorial Stadium to have a slightly greater crowd energy due to the big upset last week. That should provide a boost. My prediction: IU wins 31-27. brodmill@indiana.edu

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Long-range shooting woes After being subpar behind the arc, IU may flip the script this year By Alden Woods aldwoods@indiana.edu | @acw9293

During the 2013-14 season, IU all but abandoned the 3-point shot. The Hoosiers attempted just 512 shots from long range, a figure that ranked last in the Big Ten and No. 262 nationally out of 351 teams. IU converted on just 176 of those attempts, its 34.4 percent clip from behind the line ranking No. 166 in the country. Exactly half of the Hoosiers’ made 3-pointers came from guard Kevin “Yogi” Ferrell. The thensophomore’s 220 3-point attempts set an IU single-season record. Looking beyond Ferrell, the numbers get ugly. The other 17 Hoosiers shot just 30 percent from deep last season, with only senior Will Sheehey making more than 20 3-pointers. Only three other returning Hoosiers attempted at least one 3-pointer last season, with thenfreshman Troy Williams’ 21 percent shooting leading the pack. Williams, then-freshmen Stanford Robinson and Collin Hartman combined to shoot just 19 percent from deep last season. Last season, the lack of a true outside shooting threat allowed opponents to sit back and crowd the paint on defense. This limited the Hoosiers’ ability to create post chances for freshman Noah Vonleh or get clear paths to the rim. IU’s struggles with outside shooting led to a rash of forced drives to the basket, often ending in missed opportunities. No major conference team turned the ball over more frequently than IU, and only Northwestern had a higher percentage of its shots blocked. IU Coach Tom Crean set out

to solve that problem during the offseason, adding Nick Zeisloft, James Blackmon Jr., Rob Johnson, Max Hoetzel and Tim Priller for this season. Zeisloft, a junior guard who transferred from Illinois State this summer, is a career 37-percent 3-point shooter. Freshman guards Blackmon and Johnson come as consensus top-100 recruits with long-range ability, and freshmen Hoetzel and Priller project as stretch forwards who combine size and outside shooting. On paper, the additions should alleviate at least some of IU’s struggles from distance last season. Whether that will play out on the court remains to be seen. With Vonleh now a member of the NBA’s Charlotte Hornets, the Hoosiers have no real scoring presence on the inside. Junior Hanner Mosquera-Perea and sophomore Devin Davis are poised to take Vonleh’s minutes, but neither has proven an ability to score consistently. Combined, the two average 4.4 points per game for their careers. Barring a massive increase in interior scoring from MosqueraPerea or Davis, opposing defenses will play the opposite of their gameplans from last season. With no need to double-team a Hoosier in the post, teams will be able to stretch out to the 3-point line in an effort to limit IU’s new sharpshooters. It’s the paradox Crean finds himself in this season: the better his new marksmen shoot from deep, the less room they will be given to spot up. Simply put, IU figures to see fewer open looks from behind the line this season. This is where Cre-

Want a video demonstration? Alden Woods breaks down how the Hoosiers’ spacing will be different this year on idsnews.com. an’s new weapons must prove their worth. The Hoosiers will need to make not only open shots, but contested ones as well. With the season still months away, IU’s most likely starting lineup consists of juniors Ferrell and Mosquera-Perea, sophomores Williams and Robinson and freshman Blackmon. That backcourt figures to provide plenty of shooting, with Ferrell steady from behind the line and Blackmon poised to become one of the country’s breakout freshmen. Backcourt shooting shouldn’t be an issue, but for that lineup to avoid last year’s spacing issues, either Robinson or Williams will need to improve on their disastrous shooting campaigns as freshmen. Williams, who showed flashes of a strong jump shot at the end of last season and vowed on Twitter to make 10,000 shots before the season tips off, is more likely to accomplish this goal. After the starting five, Crean’s bench should be stocked with shooters. Zeisloft, Hartman, Johnson, Priller and Hoetzel each provide plenty of range. In their back-to-back Sweet 16 seasons in 2011-12 and 201213, the Hoosiers were among the country’s best 3-point shooting teams. If IU is to return to that winning form, it will have to distance itself from last season’s disastrous shooting and create a threat from deep again.

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London art fair cooks Fukushima soup

ARTS

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

Artists will present a piece called “Does This Soup Taste Ambivalent?” in the Frieze Art Fair in London, according to the Guardian. The piece involves making a soup from vegetables grown in the region of Fukushima,

the scene of the 2011 nuclear disaster. Though all the vegetables are considered edible, people are still hesitant. “I haven’t decided yet if I’m going to eat it,” Matthew Slotover, co-founder of the fair, said.

Photographer shares her artistic inspiration By Audrey Perkins audperki@indiana.edu | @AudreyNLP

It’s been heard before. An image is worth a thousand words. For Miyako Ishiuchi, photography was a means for her to communicate with her late mother and the women lost in the World War II atomic bombing of Hiroshima. Ishiuchi covered this topic last night in her “At the birth of my photography” lecture tucked off Kirkwood Avenue in Franklin Hall. According to the School of Fine Arts, Ishiuchi was recently awarded the 2014 Hasselblad Award, the highest international achievement in photography. In 2005, she showed her work “Mother’s – Traces of the Future” at the Venice Biennale. The Biennale is an event that occurs in Venice, and according to its website, organizes international events in the field of the contemporary arts that are among the most important of their kind in the world. It was there where she got her initial launch into what would eventually lead to her current work, the yearly photography of World War II era clothing. However, to get to clothes, Ishiuchi first stripped her photography down to the skin. *** She started photography at 19, however her career did not really launch into what it is today until age 40. At that age, she hit a slump. She established herself in her home town of Yokosuka by taking pictures of scenery, architecture and the red light district. “What is 40 years and how do I understand that,” she said to the audience through her translator. She found her answer by taking photos of 40-year-old women’s hands and feet. The series was titled “1947,” the year of Ishiuchi and her models’ birth. “I felt like as I was looking

at hands and feet,” she said. “I could see the accumulation of those 40 years.” As hands and feet are extensions of the body, Ishiuchi said she felt as if she could see the entirety of those women’s lives in their skin. It was there where her fascination with the human body began. To take it one step further, she launched a series on scars. “Scars really, when you look at them, they are an accumulation of the past and history,” she said. “When you look at them, they are sort of proof that you are alive.” On the screens behind her was a large image of a woman’s bare torso. It was cropped, to just pass her breasts, run down her ribs and end at her hips. A long, vertical gash sliced approximately six inches down the woman’s stomach. Another scar pushed surrounding skin up and to the side due to the way it healed. “I started to think that scars are almost like photographs in the memories that they carried,” she said. From there, she moved to her “Innocence” series. In this series, the key photo took the viewer a step back, showing a woman’s nude body from the thighs up. Her head was cropped out. Sprinkled under her arm and around her hip were large burns. She was burned with boiling water in an accident as a child. *** In 2000, during the “Innocence” series, her mother died. After her mother’s funeral, she became fascinated with photographing her mother’s lingerie. Ishiuchi said she was never close with her mother while she was alive. They never communicated, she said. However while she was working with her mother’s undergarments she felt as if her mother was still there. Philosophically, Ishiuchi said undergarments were like a person’s second skin.

PHOTOS BY XU YING | IDS

Photographer Ishiuci Miyako and her interpreter talk before Miyako’s speech Thursday at Franklin Hall.

When she took those photos, even though her mother was gone, Ishiuchi felt as if there was a permanent piece of her that remained and could never go away. “I started doing this in order to really communicate with my mother, whom I never communicated with,” she said. “I was sort of able to open a channel of communication.” Those delicate pictures of lace through a bright window, among other photos in her “Mother’s Traces of the Future” series brought Ishiuchi to her current work of today. *** Every year, Ishiuchi visits Hiroshima to photograph vintage World War II clothing. It first started after her “Mother” series caught the attention of a museum in Hiroshima. They brought her in to take pictures of their collection’s clothing in a similar style to her mother’s photo series. Much like with her mother, she felt a connection to the women who at one point,

owned the clothing. “I felt a conversation from the objects of the remains of the person,” she said. One of the first photographs shown was the image of a tattered black dress against a homemade light box. Since then, donations of clothing piled up and Ishiuchi returned to photograph the new additions. One of her latest images was the photo of a white shortsleeved sweater that had survived the bombing tucked in a woman’s wardrobe. Its owner had not. Ishiuchi frequently brought up one point in her lecture. Despite taking images of historical clothing, she never wanted people to think her work was documenting history. This is again not a documentary, these are images of how I saw and felt something while looking at the object, she said. “So in photographing, I don’t feel like I’m recording things about Hiroshima,” she Ishiuci Miyako speaks about the story about her photos Thursday in said. “I feel more like I am re- Franklin Hall. The photographer found many different inspirations around New York and from her own mother. cording time.”

Chance The Rapper to perform in Oct. From IDS reports

COURTESY OF IU UNION BOARD

Chance the Rapper is coming to IU for a Halloween concert.

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Chance The Rapper will perform 8 p.m. Oct. 29 at the IU Auditorium. Tickets go on sale 10 a.m. Monday, Sept. 29 and are available from IUauditorium.com and the IU Auditorium Box Office. Tickets will be billable to students’ bursar accounts. Student tickets are estimated to be around $30 to $40, and general admission will be around $40 to $50. The performance is sponsored by the Indiana Memorial Union Board, who has been planning the performance since February. “He’s really wanted to

perform at Indiana University,” Brett Bassock, Union Board director of Live Entertainment, said. “Indiana University is a destination many performers would want to perform at.” Halloween weekend worked the best for Chance, Bassock said, and the timing is perfect. “I would love it if people showed up in costumes,” he said. “I think that’d be really fun.” Chance will perform with other special guests, according to a Union Board press release. This will be the first ever performance for Chance at IU. “Chance is one of the

most up and coming, respected rappers out there,” Bassock said. Chance, who’s real name is Chancelor Bennett, is originally from Chicago. Chance started his career in high school when he founded his own hip-hop duo. His career took off after the release of his album, “Acid Rap,” which has been downloaded over 800,000 times, according to a Union Board press release. “Chance the Rapper, he’s,” he said, pausing to find the right word. “He’s the real deal.” Audrey Perkins and Alison Graham


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Symphony Orchestra to perform Sat. By Lanie Maresh emaresh@indiana.edu

The Bloomington Symphony Orchestra will perform its first concert of its 45th season at 7:30 p.m. Saturday at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater. Tickets are $15 for general admission and free for those 18 and younger. “We’re thrilled to have them (perform) downtown and in our historic theater,” said Rebecca Stanze, associate director of the BuskirkChumley Theater. “It’s a classic Bloomington organization, and it makes them a great match for the theater having them perform in our space.” Executive director and trombonist Donna Lafferty said the BSO will play four out of its eight concerts at the theater as part of its new partnership. “Hopefully if this works well then we’ll do more of our concerts there and eventually, move full time to the Buskirk-Chumley,” Lafferty said. Lafferty said she, along with other BSO players, is looking forward to a permanent location for the BSO. “Having the Chumley downtown and this being such a strong partnership between the theater and orchestra, adds a layer of class and polish,” Lafferty said. “We were looking for a place to call our home, and I think we found it.” Artistic Director and Conductor Adam Bodony said in a press release that rehearsals are blessed events in which the musicians come together each week to make music. “The players get my humor, they understand what

I’m driving at, and they know I try not to waste time, but to use the two-and-a-quarter hours to the max,” Bodony said. While the music is a key factor in the concert, Lafferty said the BSO strives to do more and create a community approach, as well. “Our conductor will talk about each piece of music before and after we play things,” Lafferty said. “We want to help the audience understand the context of the piece (and) what’s important to listen for in the music (in order to) make them feel more connected to the performance itself.” The theme of the concert, MMM, stands for Mozart, Milhaud and Murphy. Mozart and Milhaud are composers, while Murphy stands for Otis Murphy, one of the youngest faculty members in the history of IU’s music school. Lafferty said Murphy will perform a saxophone solo and is very collaborative in how he rehearses with the BSO. “There are times when he trades off the melody with the oboe or flute player, and they match tone,” Lafferty said. “He’ll listen to them and mimic what they did and vice versa. It’s very fun and playful.” Lafferty said it’s the connectedness and participatory factors of a live symphony that make it so important. “You can listen to your radio in your car, and it’s an experience you have on your own,” Lafferty said. “If you’re taking the time to actually go to a performance, sit down and engage with what’s going on right then and there, it means so much more to you. It’s a way to connect and learn about yourself and life.”

IKE HAJINAZARIAN | IDS

CONDUCTING BEAUTY Director David Dzubay conducts the New Music Ensemble at Auer Hall in the Jacobs School of Music on Thursday evening.

New comedy opens this weekend By Alison Graham akgraham@indiana.edu @AlisonGraham218

Chad Rabinovitz read one of the 300 submissions for the annual Reva Shiner Comedy Award at 10 p.m. After laughing at every page, he knew that the play had to be produced by the Bloomington Playwrights Project. “Kalamazoo” opens the BPP’s main stage season 7:30 p.m. Friday. BPP will also perform the play 7:30 p.m. Saturday and Oct. 2 through Oct. 4 and Oct. 9 through Oct. 11. The comedy tells the story of Peg and Irving, two 70-year-old widowers who meet on an online dating site. “It’s about how they can learn to move past their previous relationships and reengage with life,” Artistic Director Rabinovitz said. “They go through relationship problems many of the younger people do and in a very funny

way.” Irving, played by Ken Farrell, and Peg, played by local actress Kate Braun, have their first date at a Mexican restaurant. After having too much to drink, they end up in a hotel room with tattoos and no memory of how they got there. After waking up, the two start to talk more and begin fighting about religion. Peg is an Irish Catholic woman from California, and Irving is Jewish and from the East Coast. The rest of the play features more ups and downs in their relationship. Finally they end up in Kalamazoo, Mich., where on her dating profile Peg said that she wanted to go to in order to see the bird sanctuary. “Anyone coming to this is going to leave happy when they leave the door. Guaranteed,” Farrell said. “It’s about making the best use of time. Life is so short.”

The director, actors and crew members have been putting a lot of time into the performance themselves. Work for the play began Sept. 5, and the group has been rehearsing every night from about 5:30 to 11 p.m. BPP has also been collaborating with the writers from Los Angeles, Michelle Brooks and Kelly Younger., who were flown in and have stayed in town this week, offering suggestions and watching runthroughs. The writers added a new scene at a bachelorette party hosted in a dance club. “It’s pretty funny watching a 70-year-old woman throw cash and say, ‘Make it rain, sweetheart,’” Rabinovitz said. The play’s humor is what made it stick out from the 300 submissions the group received. “This comedy wasn’t just the funniest, but it was a story that was so sweet and touching and hysterical all at the same time,” Rabinovitz said.

“My living is in reading and developing new plays, and its one of the best new plays I’ve developed in years.” Rabinovitz read and cast the play in a matter of two hours, he said. Reading the play at 10 p.m., he emailed the agents in less than an hour and contacted Farrell to play the role of Irving by 11:30 p.m. “I read the play and imagined him in it,” Rabinoviz said. “It all happened within two hours. That’s how confident I am with this play.” That confidence makes Rabinovitz positive that this play will have a positive effect on audiences. The only person to see it was a student named Erin Brown, he said. Brown had worked to paint the chairs used as props for the Mexican restaurant scene. “After the show, she said, ‘I was smiling the whole time,’” Rabinovitz said. “That’s what I want out of it. That one reaction sums it all up.”

BY THE BOOK

‘Banned Books Week’ serves as reminder to not censor our minds There is a wicked feeling about reading something you shouldn’t. Especially when the law says you can’t. Believe it or not, this country that prides itself on freedom of speech and press tends to ban books on the regular. This week commemorates Banned Books Week, an annual event that observes the freedom of reading. Books are continually challenged or banned in schools and libraries all over the country. More than 11,300 books have been challenged since the 1980s, according to bannedbooksweek.org. Some books challenged last year include “The Hunger Games,” “Looking for Alaska,” “The Bluest Eye” and “The Perks of Being a Wallflower.” Honestly, anything remotely popular and controversial is challenged at some point. Our country’s history consists of the censorship of books, from “Ulysses” to “Uncle Tom’s Cabin.” While schools have the right to censor content within books, the act of banning books practically resonates with burning them. To restrict books based on content almost slaps culture on the wrist. Not only does the idea seem like a nightmare from the prejudiced past of America, but it’s specifically ignorant. By refusing to allow ideas to challenge our students and their way of thinking, we hinder the learning process. I, unfortunately, have committed an unforgivable sin as a book lover: I’ve had a book banned. During my awkward year in the sixth grade, I was placed into a group project for a book report. Naturally, I ended up

HISTORIC BLOOMINGTON

ANTIQUE MALL MADISON HOGAN | IDS

Classics novels shown above, like “Moby Dick” and “The Grapes of Wrath” are a few books that the American Library Association challenged with the intent to ban.

reading ahead of my classmates and stumbled upon a descriptive sex scene in the novel. To my chagrin, I had been the one to choose the book for our group, having known nothing about its content. In order to avoid embarrassing my classmates by having them read the same scene, I told the teacher in private. As a student of southern public education my entire life, I should have seen what was coming. Later in the day, after the teacher had collected my copy along with all of my classmates’, she approached me in the lunchroom. She said she took it up with the superintendent and that the book was officially banned from our school library. Then she mentioned how the author had made a public appearance to our school years ago and even signed a few copies. To say I was disappointed in myself would have been an understatement. In my naïve thoughts, I had assumed my book group would simply pick another novel for our report. But no, I had to be the

MADISON HOGAN is a sophomore in journalism.

whistle blower. Me, the girl who always checked out the maximum limit of books you could in a library. I was the student who librarians knew by name, the maniac who reread novels for fun. I robbed not only the novelist but also other readers from a possible literature adventure. But the greatest sin would be to have this lesson and not learn from it. I vow to never take any action that would result in the censorship of a book. In fact, I enjoy picking books to read off the naughty banned list. In a country such as ours, a school may try to block the reading experience, but as citizens, we can continue to read these books outside the education environment. So, dear readers, celebrate Banned Books Week by reading one of the controversial novels off the black list. Schools may censor your books, but you should not censor your minds. maehogan@indiana.edu

Open Daily 10-6 812-323-7676 311 W. Seventh St. DOWNTOWN

BloomingtonAntiqueMall.com


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Found Dog. We found a dog wondering around the stadium. Call/ text, or swing by the red house on 17th/Dunn. 317-412-6777

Highly qualified tutor for Math, Chem, Astronomy and Physics. I have had 4 years tutoring employment for IU. One-On-One session avail. for $25/hr. 765-319-8657

Looking for singers to compete for a vocalist position in our band! We plan on playing at small gigs and hopefully working our way up to landing a record deal. Submit your video(s) of you singing your favorite song at acemodugno@ yahoo.com for us to review. Music Style: Hard Rock/Metal/Proggressive.

P/T IT specialist wanted for website management & database entry. Must have knowledge of WordPress. Send resume to: info@blueberryhillestate.com

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HOUSING EMPLOYMENT

2 BR, 1 BA. Campus Court near stadium . $745/mo. Avail. winter break-July. 424.256.6748

General Employment

Caregivers wanted. Provide companionship, homemaking, errands, transportation, & personal care to elderly living in home. Part & full time employment. 330-3771 Counsilman Center Swim Team looking for 1-2 add. swim coaches. MUST BE CPR/FIRST AID CERTIFIED. Lifeguarding/safety training a plus. Must be experienced swimmer and be good with children ages 8-18. Please contact Kosuke Kojima. Email kokojima@indiana.edu or call 812-856-2893. Dental assistant. Part-time. No experience necessary. 332-2000 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

Apartment Furnished

Apt. Unfurnished 1-4 BR units between campus &d/town. Aug., 2015. 333-9579

2-3 BR luxury units near Music & Ed buildings. 333-9579 3 BR, 1209 N. Grant. Near Stadium, avail. Jan., 2015. $1050 for 3; $750 for 2. C/A D/W, on-site laundry. Costley & Co. Rental Management. 812-330-7509 www.costleycompany.com

4-5 BR house, 1 blk. to Law School. Aug., 2015. 333-9579 Campus Walk Apts. Immediate move-ins avail. 812-332-1509 cwalk@crerentals.com

THE BEST! Location, style, size & charm! 3-8 BR. 812-334-0094

2 MASTER SUITES close to Stadium & Busline

AVAILABLE NOW $995/mo

All units include washer and dryer Ample offstreet parking

1715 N. College Ave. CALL 812-323-1231 Ideal for senior and grad. students. Close to campus. No pets. Parking. 812-332-2520

1-5 bedrooms by stadium, law school & downtown

(812)

339-2859

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Prime IU Student Rental Houses! Great Campus Locations! August 2015 - August 2016 112 E Cottage Grove 211 E 10th St 221 E 10th St 308 S Madison St 401 S Dunn St 405 S Ballantine St 426 E 2nd St 509 E 1st St 518 E 2nd St 519 S Fess Ave 521 S Park Ave 611 S Park Ave 612 S Grant Ave 612 N Walnut St 619 N Washington St 701 S Woodlawn Ave 718 S Lincoln St 720 E Hunter Ave 805 N Lincoln St 807 N Walnut St Apt 1-4 1004 E 2nd St

4 4 5 4 5 3 4 4 5 5 5 3 3 5 5 3 3 4 5 2-3 5

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chickeringrentals.com Rooms/Roommates 1 BR avail. in 5 BR house. 820 N Dunn. $440 plus utils. Newly renovated. 406-250-5362

Sublet Apt. Unfurn.

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

Sublet Condos/Twnhs. The Hamptons: 3 BR, 3.5 BA luxury twnhs., 2 blks. West of Stadium. Free parking, avail. now. (812) 333-2052

The Willows Condos. 3 bedroom beauties! 2 remaining for August. Updated, modern feel. 812.339.0799

Houses !!!! Need a place to Rent?

MERCHANDISE

rentbloomington.net

2-8 BR houses and apt. Aug., 2015. GTRentalgroup.com

Emerson 1.7 cubic foot fridge for sale. Used for 2 years. Functionality and appearance in great condition. Free shipping anywhere in Bloomington. Email price offer to: liu337@indiana.edu Holmes air purifier, great condition. Pick up @ IU Campus. $22 cash. maribelm@umail.iu.edu

812-330-1501

Properties Available NOW and 2015-2016

1-9 Bedrooms

Furniture Antique dresser for sale. Good condition but some damage to top. Make an offer 812-322-2599.

Tall bookshelf @ IU Campus. About 6 feet tall, 6 levels, great condition $50 cash, contact: maribelm@umail.iu.edu

Tickets for Sale

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I am selling TWO season basketball tickets for this coming season! Buy now so you can get your group seating assignments in before Monday! $350 each.

Clothing Plato’s Closet pays cash on the spot for trendy, gently used clothing. 1145 S. College Mall Rd. 812-333-4442

TRANSPORTATION Automobiles 2007 Toyota Matrix XR automatic. Excellent condition. 56,000 miles. $9,975 obo. 812-320-8046 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. $16,000 OBO. Contact for more info: mtanhayi@indiana.edu 2013 Subaru CrossTrek XV. AWD. Auto. Excl. Cond. 11,345 miles. $22,000. 585-789-1186 Classic e30. This car rocks. Stock 6 cylinder engine & manual transmission make it a pretty fun ride. Power windows, locks, cruise control. It has everything. Top is in great shape, no leaks, & the body is nearly perfect, other than one little dent on the trunk & a few paint chips in likely places. Interior is also in great shape, showing some wear & tear from 26 yrs of being a convertible, but there are no rips in the leather. aharman@indiana.edu Price: 11000 (Neg.) Contact 408-718-7215 Email: yiuc@indiana.edu Description: Mileage: 93xxx Color: Royal Blue Manual Transmission Full Option (Navigation) Accident free Welcome to test drive! We need to buy a minivan. No longer avoidable. Selling our great CR-V. No problems w/ this car. Sunroof, 6 CD changer. Automatic, 2WD. New Michelin tires in 2013. (Kelley Blue Book “very good” price is $14,967.)” cracek@indiana.edu

Instruments Crate CA30D acoustic guitar amp in excellent condition w/many effects. $125,obo. 812-929-8996

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

Locations throughout the Bloomington area

Johnson semi-hollow body electric guitar, mint, pro-set-up, solid woods, with perfect deluxe hard shell case & more. $300. 812-929-8996

ParkerMgt.com 812-339-2115 8 BR, 3 BA, 3 kitchens. 8th & Lincoln. W/D, off- street parking avail. Avail. Aug., ‘15. 812.879.4566

Appliances

Textbooks

In HISP S-324 & having trouble with the textbook? Here is the English version for you. Price: negotiable. dnfuller@umail.iu.edu 455

Chickering Rentals

Available 2015-2016

!!UNIVERSITY VILLAGE Leasing for 2015-2016: 220 E. 19th Street, 5 BR., 3 BA. 1315 N. Lincoln Street, 5 BR., 3 BA. 1316 N. Lincoln Street, 5 BR., 3 BA. 216 E. 19th Street, 5 BR., 2 BA. 219 E. 19th Street, 4 BR., 2 BA. 1309 N. Lincoln Street, 3 BR., 2 BA. LiveByTheStadium.com

Pets FREE FRIENDLY FELINE. Female tabby with white chest to a good home. 702-302-7059.

Large 3-5 BR d/town, newly remodeled, prkg. incl. Aug.-2015. 333-9579 Pavilion Properties now renting for Aug., 2015, call today to set up a tour! 812-333-2332

Selling: Werner Herzog & Klaus Kinski: A Film Legacy. $800. S.T dupont. Bought in Hong Kong for $1200. Used about a month. Call/ text 5169461004.

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ONE UNIT LEFT TOWNHOUSES

Misc. for Sale

Selling this 2012 Mercedes-Benz ML350 4MATIC BlueTEC (Diesel 20/28MPG). Loaded with Navigation, Sirius Satellite Radio, Ipod Interface, Voice Commands, Rear-view Camera, Heated Seat, Heated Steering Wheel and power everything. Only 18000 miles, regular service and excellent mechanical conditions. No car accidents or scratches ( I am a good driver). This beauty is still under factory warranty for 3 years or 32000 miles. For more information, please visit my facebook: https://www.facebook. com/jiawei.xiang.9 Please contact me if interested: 812.360.3161.

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P R O P E R T I E S

HUGE 2-3 BR. Luxury twnhs. d/town, prkg. incl. Aug., 2015. 333-9579

435

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Call 333-0995 to set up a showing omegabloomington.com

1 BR avail. immediately. $475 includes all utils. www.elkinsapts.com (812)339-2859 2-3 BR apts next to Business School. Aug., 2015. 333-9579

Now Renting August, 2015 HPIU.COM Houses and apartments. 1-5 bedrooms. Close to Campus. 812-333-4748 No pets please.

Internet & Water included

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

Ride Exchange

http:www.facebook.com/IUTutoring

Looking for a partner who’s interested in learning Arabic language. I prefer a native English speaker, but if your English Language is good don’t hesitate to contact me. I can teach writing, reading ,speaking & Islamic books. If interested contact me. 312-730-5074

NEED MONEY? SAVE A LIFE. Schedule a plasma donation. New donors receive $140 in just three donations. Call 812-334-1405 or visit biolifeplasma.com to download a coupon and make an appointment.

Driving to Chicago the evening of Fall Break weekend, on Thurs., Oct 9, 2014. If interested, please contact me. $35 if I drive you to a common location in Chicago. $40 if you would like to be dropped off at your place. 812-219-6826

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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

Need experienced daytime babysitter for two boys ages 4 & 7, Oct. 69 (Monday - Thursday) or as many of those days as possible. Hours would be 9-5. Please include resume or list babysitting experience in your response and at least one reference. Neg. - about $11/hour.

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

FREE Spaghetti Dinner/ Music Fest. Sunday, Sept. 28th at 4pm at Knightridge Pentecostal Church. Transportation avail. Contact Stephanie: 812-876-2200. Get your own professional headshots! Great for resumes, LinkedIn profiles & grad school applications. $20 for 2. Edited, digital photos will be emailed to you. September 26th from 2pm-5pm in Hodge Hall 2006. All proceedes go to IU Habitat!

LSAT Tutor Avail. Affordable LSAT tutoring avail. w/ experienced attorney & graduate of Georgetown Law. Can meet in-person near IU campus. Call Megan at (818) 288-7043 or e-mail megan.m.needham@ gmail.com

1-4 Bedroom Apartments A/C, D/W, W/D

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English & FrenchTutoring Here! Contact: spellard@indiana.edu Price negotiable.

The Indiana Football department is looking for students interested in becoming a Hoosier Host this season. Hoosier Hosts will be responsible on home game days from about 3-4 hours before kickoff until around the end of the 1st quarter. The Hosts give tours of Memorial Stadium to IU Football’s future prospects and their families, answer any questions they have, escort them onto the field before kickoff, and guide them to their assigned seats. This is a great opportunity for those who are interested in working in sports or students who would like to build their resume. We are still accepting students for this Saturday’s game vs. Maryland. We would need you to arrive at 9:30 am on Saturday. Please contact Bailey Smith at: baismith@indiana.edu or 812-855-9618 if you are interested! Go Hoosiers!

Looking for student to work as afternoon receptionist at the IU Art Museum. Duties include answering the phone, greeting & directing visitors. Previous customer service experience is desirable. Must be wellspoken,able to maintain a calm, courteous demeanor when working with the public. $8.25/ hour. If interested, please send an e-mail to Steve Cook at cooksb@ indiana.edu, indicating your availability Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday afternoons. No phone calls.

2-8 Bedroom Houses A/C, D/W, W/D

Call today to ask about our low prices on apts. One blk. from campus avail. now through Aug., 2015. 812-333-2332

EOE 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

Lg. 5 BR, 2.5 BA. Close to campus & town, 338 S. Grant. $2650/mo. + utils. Aug., 2015. 327-3238

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Cello Teacher Avail. Looking to teach students of all ages/skill levels. Have played cello for ten yrs. & have three yrs. of teaching experience. 818-299-1628 inscho@indiana.edu

Stop by the IDS office in Ernie Pyle Hall, Room 120, or email: ads@idsnews.com for an application.

Online yard Sale. You can pick up on campus: http://tinyurl.com/ohtpfza or contact: crmedina@indiana.edu

Apartments & Houses Downtown and Close to Campus

405

www.bloomingtoncohousing.org www.facebook.com/Bloomington Cohousing

Must be available to start now and commit until August, 2015.

Now Leasing for Fall 2015

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Offering: VIOLIN MUSIC for WEDDINGS: jmossbur@indiana.edu (260) 224-5979

Announcements

Bloomington Cohousing is a planned community of private homes with shared amenities offering old-fashioned friendship & support. Public Information Forum: Sunday, Sept 28th at the Monroe County Public Library, Room 1C.

Looking for students interested in Customer Service positions. 12-15 hours/week.

Houses August 2015- Cute 3/4/5 BR houses downtown on SW edge of campus. Shoe organizers, walk-in closets, DW, W/D, Central AC, secure keyless entry, off-street prkg. “Like finding hidden treasure” is what we’re told. 812-336-6898 for details & tours. No Pets. No smoking. No idiots.

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Happy married couple wishes to adopt. We promise to give your child a fun, loving home. Home study cert. Expenses paid. Please call Nora & Rich anytime at: 1-888-57-ADOPT. www.ourspecialwish.info

Are you a senior & looking to update/get your first professional head shots? Or maybe you haven’t gotten pictures taken since senior year of high school & need a new linked in/profile pic? Consider booking a fall session w/ me! I will cater your shoot to whatever you need w/ the price that is right for you! Check on my website or Facebook page for more info & email me to save your spot! http://kelsey carlisle22.wix.com/ kcphotography

Customer Service Representatives

Looking for: KoreanEnglish language exchange for IU graduate student. Easygoing and interested in American culture. Contact me at: jihykwon@indiana.edu

ELKINS APARTMENTS

Adoption

General Employment

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ANNOUNCEMENTS

Announcements

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

O M E G A

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

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

Apt. Unfurnished Avail now. 1 BR. Hdwd. floor, laundry, parking. $480-$520 + utils. Eff. $480, utils. paid. 812-320-3063/ 325-9926

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

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

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

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

idsnews.com/classifieds

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CLASSIFIEDS ADVERTISING POLICIES

Full advertising policies are available online.

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CLASSIFIEDS

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

Selling: Apple MacBook. (Mid 2007) $250. contact: grigutis@iu.edu

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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | F R I D AY, S E P T. 2 6 , 2 0 1 4 | I D S N E W S . C O M

VOLLEYBALL

IU opens Big Ten play vs. Wolverines, Spartans Plus, the game was played in East Lansing, Mich. “We needed that win,” then-senior libero Caitlin Hansen said after the upset. But that was the lone win for a Hoosier team filled with freshmen who weren’t ready for the spotlight of Big Ten play, several members of the team have said this season. IU has historically struggled in the Big Ten. It’s been 15 years since IU had a winning season in the conference. That is in part due to the competition level in the Big Ten. The conference is regarded as the nation’s best volleyball conference. Six of the last eight NCAA champions have been Big Ten teams. Five of those come from Penn State, who won an incredible four-straight championships from 2007 to 2010. The Nittany Lions, who IU is just 1-46 against all-time, also won the national championship last season. In fact, last season’s national championship game featured two Big Ten teams:

By Evan Hoopfer ehoopfer@indiana.edu | @EvanHoopfer

The last time IU had a winning season in the Big Ten, freshman outside hitter Jessica Leish, the younger of the two true-freshmen on the team, was three years old. IU (9-3) will begin Big Ten play at 8 p.m. Friday against Michigan State (7-4) and then continue against Michigan (5-5) at 8 p.m. Saturday. Both games will be played in University Gym. Friday’s game against the Spartans will be on Big Ten Network as well as the radio broadcast, while Saturday’s game against the Wolverines will only have the radio broadcast, available on iuhoosiers.com. Last season, IU went 1-19 in the Big Ten. Its only win of the season came against Michigan State in a five-set nail-biter on Oct. 26, 2013. It was a major upset. IU was 0-9 in the conference at the time, while Michigan State was No. 10 in the country.

» OFFENSE

IU faces the worst rush defense in the Big Ten in Maryland. The Terrapins are allowing an average of 199.3 rushing yards per game. IU offensive coordinator Kevin Johns said Maryland’s defensive scheme is very similar to what his offense faced all of preseason — its own. “They have a tough, physical defense,” he said. “They’re based out of an odd front, which means they can bring pressure from all over the

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 9 In the Indiana State season opener, IU had a lopsided 111 passing yards to 455 rushing yards. Against Bowling Green, it was 395 yards passing to 176 rushing. “It’s a team effort to run the ball,” Wilson said. “The pass helps the run, the run helps the pass and it all goes together.”

Horoscope Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is an 8 — Work together on financial strategies. Grow your nest egg with careful steps. Consider an investment in your own education. Don’t let a windfall slip through your fingers. Consensus gets achieved by talking it over. Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is an 8 — Re-affirm a commitment. Pay attention to your relationships. Partnership provides the key to locked doors. You’re not alone. Focus on peacemaking, collaboration and compromise. Inspire

IU VOLLEYBALL(9-3) vs. Michigan State (7-4) 8 p.m. Saturday University Gym, BTN

Penn State and Wisconsin. The Big Ten’s dominance in volleyball not only is present at the national title scene, but the depth of the conference is also unparalleled to any other conference in NCAA volleyball.

Of the top 17 teams nationally, six are from the Big Ten. The success of the Big Ten can be understood even more when compared to a higher revenue sport. The South Eastern Conference (SEC) in college football

is also regarded as the best football conference and a perennial juggernaut. Of the top 17 teams in the nation, seven teams are from the SEC, according to the Coaches Poll this week. So, the Big Ten in volley-

ball is remarkably similar to the SEC in football in terms of overall conference success. IU knows where it is in the conference, sophomore setter Megan Tallman said. It’s had one of the worst teams in terms of overall record for more than a decade. But IU might not have to get more than .500 in the conference to earn a bid for the NCAA Tournament. After all, the 2010 IU team, which made the program’s first and only Sweet 16 appearance in the NCAA Tournament, had just a 9-11 record in the Big Ten regular season that season. “We are towards the bottom of the Big Ten right now, and we all know it,” Tallman said. “And in order for us to get better, we have to get out of our comfort zones. That’s what coach tells us all the time.”

place. So anytime you see that kind of front, that can present a major problem.” After last week’s game, Coleman gave a lot of credit to his offensive line and receivers for crucial blocks, especially on his final play of the game that put the Hoosiers inside the 10-yard line with less than 30 seconds to go. Wilson agreed, saying when they run the ball well, all the credit goes to the

offensive line. While IU has played freshmen and sophomore linemen in the past couple years, not one of the current starting five have less than two years of experience. Johns said offensive line coach Greg Frey has made a point to have every single player ready to go. When one gets injured, the next is ready to step up. “Every day, every week, every year you’re developing

guys at that position because you need a bunch of them and you never know when someone’s going to go down,” Johns said. That offensive line held off a Missouri defensive front that was considered one of the best in the country. They have made way for an IU running game that has 872 yards this season through three games. To offensive tackle Ralston Evans, IU has some of the

best running backs in the league. But they still have something to prove, beginning with Maryland on Saturday. “We feel like we still left a lot of yards and a lot of points out there, even this past weekend,” Evans said. “We just came in Sunday and we enjoyed it while we enjoyed it, but when we went back and we watched film we believe we still have much to improve on.”

NICOLE KRASEAN | IDS

Junior Amelia Anderson bumps the ball over the net during the volleyball team’s game versus Butler on Saturday night. The Hoosiers defeated the Bulldogs and went on to win the Hoosier Classic 2-1.

To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. others by working together. Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Today is an 8 — Listen, and ask questions at work. Today and tomorrow get busy. You’re creating a buzz. Concentrate on generating more money. It could even get fun! Get down to brass tacks. Gather up honey for your honey. Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Today is an 8 — Today and tomorrow favor fun and games. Spend time with loved ones. Invent, create and make messes together. Outrageous

BREWSTER ROCKIT: SPACE GUY!

suggestions abound... follow a few. Celebrate with a home-cooked meal and extra snuggling. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is an 8 — Get into a household project today and tomorrow. Save money, and gain the satisfaction from doing it yourself. Get the opinions of close family before proceeding further. Put your discoveries in writing. Document changes. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is an 8 — Communicate compe-

TIM RICKARD

tency, and a screamer will calm down. Have the necessary information ready. Study and practice today and tomorrow. Don’t overlook anything. Find safe places to stash your treasure. Complete writing projects and hit “send”. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is an 8 — You can make extra cash today and tomorrow. Try something new. Business gets hopping, and your work is in demand. Build and strengthen structures for support to manage it. Your schedule is your friend. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is an 8 — Conditions are good for in-depth conversations. Life seems easier for the next few days. You’re

Crossword

empowered with confident fire. Inspire, rather than demanding. Communicate your compassionate side. Share a spiritual connection. Give love away. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is a 7 — The next two days favor planning and quiet preparations. Take notes. Express your affection in words easily. Clean up old messes. Hold out for the best deal. Do the math to make sure. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is a 9 — Set meetings for today and tomorrow. Your friends are really there for you. Complete a writing or research project. Being polite is a virtue to be practiced. Check the facts before you publish.

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 Hamlet, for one 5 Happy hour sandwich 11 Modern film effects, briefly 14 Troubled cry 15 Roman board game similar to modern backgammon 16 Cartoon Chihuahua 17 Seriously uncool dairy product? 19 Farm resident 20 Mauna __ 21 Sitcom world 22 Nail polish brand 24 Enjoy a TV psychologist? 28 Long cold spell 31 Renée’s “Chicago” role 32 Pulitzer author McMurtry 33 Church cry 37 Boom, e.g. 38 Chose, with “for” 40 Flier on the beach 41 Mad Max or Dirty Harry 43 “__ directed” 44 Serape wearer 45 They may be pulled 46 Followers’ flowers?

Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is an 8 — Things fall into place over the next few days. Listen to your intuition. Travel compels, but could get complex. Words and figures come easily. Confer with family. Discuss your next adventure together.

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

L.A. Times Daily Crossword

PHIL JULIANO

BEST IN SHOW

Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is a 7 — Negotiate and state your terms. Career matters claim your attention today and tomorrow. Make long-range plans. Include recent changes. Listen to someone who gets it. Assume more responsibility, and your status rises.

50 Isabella, por ejemplo 51 Teacup feature 52 These, to Thierry 55 WWII battle site, for short 56 Sign on a hacker’s door? 61 “__ and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance”: ’70s best-seller 62 Code of silence 63 Sleekly designed 64 Masthead VIPs 65 Response to constant carping 66 Last little bit

13 Big name in chips 18 Composer Carmichael 23 Doesn’t remain silent 24 Indiana player 25 They provide addresses 26 Iditarod terminus 27 Marked, as a ballot 28 “Sing it, Sam” speaker 29 Skip on the sea 30 Q.E.D. word 34 Carriage 35 Nouveau- Mexique, e.g. 36 Head of the Untouchables 38 Sonoma prefix 39 TA’s boss 42 Honeycomb cell shape 43 Development sites 45 Witch who was a Popeye nemesis 46 Cherish 47 Cut down 48 Community service club, with “the” 49 Penta- plus two 52 “Believe” singer 53 Cork setting 54 Kiss and cuddle, in Kent 57 Medical suffix 58 Pic source 59 Northwest end? 60 Blue

Look for the crossword daily in the comics section of the Indiana Daily Student. Find the solution for the daily crossword here.

DOWN 1 Dungeonlike 2 Natural heartburn remedy, some say 3 The Darlings’ dog 4 Alleged ability 5 Feel a strong need (for) 6 Traditional Hanukkah serving 7 “THINK” sloganeer 8 Issue of MADD 9 Addition, perhaps 10 Collects a lot of, as chips 11 Attend uninvited 12 Bottled spirits

Answer to previous puzzle

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 Monday, Sept. 29.

Applications will be reviewed and selections made by the IDS editor-in-chief.



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