Wednesday, Feb. 11, 2015

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WEDNESDAY, FEB. 11, 2015

MEN’S BASKETBALL

IDS

IU looks to sweep Maryland tonight

INDIANA DAILY STUDENT | IDSNEWS.COM

By Sam Beishuizen sbeishui@indiana.edu | @Sam_Beishuizen

IU’s offense is at its best when it walks the thin line between lightning quick and out of control. When it’s working, the Hoosiers aren’t wasting dribbles. They’re spacing the floor. The ball is constantly being shared between shooters and the scoreboard lights up. When it’s out of control is when the trouble starts. The ball doesn’t move. Players try too hard to create scoring opportunities that aren’t there. Turnovers and poor shot selections start piling up and IU’s offense goes stagnant. For IU to sweep the season series against Maryland tonight, the Hoosiers (17-7, 7-4) More basketball, will need to page 9 play quick Read about IU like they getting junior did in their forward Hanner 19-point Mosquera-Perea win against back early. the No. 19 Terrapins (19-5, 7-4) nearly three weeks ago. “We don’t want to play slow, but we certainly don’t want to be a team that’s in a hurry and trying to make something happen that’s not there,” Crean said. “We get going too fast sometimes, and I like that we’re playing fast, but we can’t go so fast that we miss the open shot, that we miss the open man, that we don’t make the pass ahead.” Playing the same team twice in 20 days presents its own set of special challenges. Both IU and Maryland have studied film on their opponents twice now and are familiar with one another. In the three weeks since, players on both teams have had enough time to reflect on what worked and what didn’t. At its core, the rematch is a game of adjustments. “A lot can change in a few weeks,” IU sophomore forward Collin Hartman said. “Teams adjust. Players adjust. Coaches adjust. We’ve got to focus on the game plan and be able to adjust within the game, within each possession because they’re going to throw things that we don’t know yet at us.” IU will need to find out how to adjust on the road, where the Hoosiers have lost four of its last five games by an average margin of 15.5 points per game. In IU’s first matchup against Maryland — when the offense was clicking — IU made a season-high 15 3-pointers. The team shot 68 percent from behind the arc as a whole. That type of shooting has been harder to come by on the road,

Where’s the porn? Apartment complex, service provider working to address blockage of popular porn sites By Michael Majchrowicz mmajchro@indiana.edu | @mjmajchrowicz

As the four roommates sat around their apartment last month, Elliott Ritterling spoke up. “Hey, can you get your porn?” he said. What was first dismissed as a prank quickly escalated into an all-handson-deck mission for answers. Over a few beers, the roommates and their neighbors came together when they realized there was a problem. Nobody could access their favorite porn sites — sites, up until then, they’d visited on multiple occasions. The same error message would consume the monitor: “This page has been blocked ...” The roommates reached out to other tenants — at least four different apartments — who reported back the same issue: nobody could access their porn. Ritterling even commiserated with a guy on the bus back home to the apartment whose Internet access had befallen the same fate. They learned at least half the residents of Stadium Crossing, formerly known as the Varsity Villas, have been without access to some of the most heavily trafficked porn sites on the Internet. “The porn blockade,” one called it. Deciding on a systematic approach, they made a list. Ritterling and others clicked through more than two dozen websites. PornHub.com, blocked. Xvideos.com, blocked. Xnxx.com, blocked. They didn’t know who was blocking their porn, but they knew they had to say something. “Rimjobs for Molly” — the roommates’ endearing name for their Wi-Fi network — had to prevail. “It’s the principle of it,” he said. “Sure, right now they’re blocking our porn, but looking down the line, who’s to stop them from blocking something else?” SEE PORN, PAGE 6

SEE BASKETBALL, PAGE 6

IU (17-7, 7-4) at Maryland (19-5, 7-4) 9 p.m. today, Big Ten Network

ILLUSTRATION BY ANNA BOONE | IDS

Guest composer performs at IU By Adam Smith adbsmith@indiana.edu | @adbsmithIU

Fashion design students to host model callout By Lauren Saxe

In front of a small audience, composer and violinist Maria Newman and her husband, violinist Scott Hosfeld, took the stage last night in Auer Hall. Newman and Hosfeld were the first to perform at the recital Tuesday, which was dedicated entirely to Newman’s work as a composer. The recital is one of multiple events centered on Newman at IU. Newman lectured at Sweeney Hall as a guest composer Monday, and tomorrow, the IU Philharmonic Orchestra will perform one of her pieces at the Musical Arts Center. “We are so thrilled to be guests of IU,” she said before playing. The composition Newman and Hosfeld began with was her 2001 piece “Appalachian Duets” in A Major, op. 38. Newman called the piece a collection of “pictures” that ranged from images of “The Train” to those of “Grandpap’s Fiddle.” Jacobs School of Music student Michael Kim-Sheng said he got the chance to see Newman’s lecture and decided to come see the recital. Emilio Colón, an associate SEE CELLO, PAGE 6

lsaxe@indiana.edu

TIANTIAN ZHANG | IDS

Emilio Colón (front), American solo cellist and international artist, performs “Paccavi Duo” at Auer Hall on Tuesday evening with Wendy Prober, founding pianist of the Viklarbo Chamber Ensemble.

For those who binge-watched “America’s Next Top Model,” walked around the house in their mother’s heels as a kid or have ever dreamed of becoming a model, the opportunity may have just arrived on campus. In preparation for the upcoming IU Fashion Design Show on April 9, junior and senior fashion design students will host a model callout from 6-9 p.m. today at the Union Street Center Auditorium in Cedar Hall. Although the event starts at 6 p.m., it is an openhouse style event and students are welcome to come and go as they please. The event will be complete with photographers, videographers, a judging panel and fashion design students dispersed throughout Cedar Hall’s auditorium to help sign in and assist applicants. They are in search of both male and female models, and ask that candidates come dressed in tightfitting clothing and bring heels, according to the Facebook event. A few different stations will be set up in the auditorium, beginning with an area designated for taking measurements. Models will then

WANT TO BE IN THE SHOW? 6-9 p.m. today, Union Street Center Auditorium in Cedar Hall be photographed and walk for the panel of judges, according to Rebecca Sales, a senior fashion design student hosting the event. No one particular body type or height is required for the callout, and all students are encouraged to audition. Sales explained that the process of choosing models typically depends on the designer and type of garment. “Some people are looking for a different type of model, a different mood, vibe, maybe a different face,” Sales said. Some might want tall models, but at the same time it doesn’t always matter, Sales said. Heels can also elevate a person. “More importantly, I would say it’s about how they’re going to fit in the garments you’re designing because some garments will look totally wrong on a certain body type but great on another,” she said. As far as preparation for the callout goes, Sales offered a few tips for those who want to go the extra mile. “My advice would be to watch SEE CALLOUT, PAGE 6


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Wednesday, Feb. 11, 2015 by Indiana Daily Student - idsnews - Issuu