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Culture Shock lineup unveiled By Jack Evans jackevan@indiana.edu | @JackHEvans
LEVI REECE | IDS
Hiker Diana McClure points to the destruction of the Tecumseh Trail on Thursday at the Morgan Monroe State Forest. Conflict has stirred between forest visitors and the Department of Natural Resources, the agency responsible for bulldozing the trail.
After the Department of Natural Resources widened trails in Morgan-Monroe State Forest, hikers spoke out against the demolition. By Lyndsay Jones jonesly@indiana.edu | @lyndsayjonesy
hen several hikers arrived at the Tecumseh Trail in Morgan-Monroe State Forest earlier this month, they weren’t prepared for what lay ahead of them. The hikers could only walk for a couple of minutes before they ran into trees that had been sawed down and a section of trail that had been widened significantly from its previously narrow width. Diana McClure was one of these hikers. McClure said she has been hiking in Morgan-Monroe nearly every other week for 25 years. What she saw when she went to the trail Feb. 6 alarmed her, she said. “They bulldozed our trail,”
McClure said. “It’s just utter devastation.” The Tecumseh Trail was originally a hiking trail — no pavement, no gravel and room enough for only one person to walk in either direction. She said the hikers had not expected to see changes to the trail that were this significant, although they had heard a bike trail might be put into the forest. On Thursday, she surveyed the changes. “It’s widened,” McClure said. “Two cars could easily pass each other here.” She stopped walking and shrugged. A tree with a white guide mark stood next to a pile of trees that had been bulldozed. Even if the trail would have been walkable in that condition, she said she didn’t know where
the next marked tree was because it had been taken down, too. State Forester John Seifert said the DNR was in a “tough situation” regarding the trail. “We build trails all the time,” Seifert said “Our objective is forest management.” Seifert said the development of the new bike trail wasn’t meant to destroy the Tecumseh Trail or any other hiking trails. It just happened to overlap at points on three different trails, Seifert said. Some of the apparent tree destruction near the trail was just part of the management of the forest, he said. “We have to remove trees before April 1 because of bats,” Seifert said. If foresters disturb bats in trees before then, the bats will have
Video story online Go to idsnews.com to see more of the Morgan-Monroe State Forest’s widened trails and bulldozed trees. nothing to eat, as their main food source, bugs, aren’t really around until spring and summer months. “We have all these constraints we have to work under,” Seifert said. McClure and other concerned hikers reached out to the Department of Natural Resources after Gary Boehle, the leader of a central Indiana hiking group, sent a message urging them to do so. “DNR has to hear from the people that the changes aren’t welcome,” Boehle said in an email to the group. SEE FOREST, PAGE 6
Since its inception 30 years ago, Culture Shock, student radio station WIUX’s annual free spring music festival, has transitioned from exclusively showcasing local acts to balancing local and high-profile touring bands. Neon Indian, Whitney and White Reaper are the three headliners WIUX announced Friday. Six local artists are featured in the 2016 Culture Shock lineup. The daylong festival will take place April 9 in Dunn Meadow. After expanding to three headlining acts in recent years, the station added more acts to maintain the local feel the festival has historically had, WIUX Special Events Director Ben Wittkugel said. “It’s really about the locals, too, and I think all the bands really enjoy playing,” he said. “It’s a big onetwo punch — just an entire day of really good stuff.” Those locals include bands ranging from noise rock outfit Dasher to lo-fi pop group HOOPS. The diversity within the lineup gives it a different feel from previous years and makes it a bill to rival past festivals, Wittkugel said. The headliners should appeal to the festival’s audience in many ways, he said. Top headliner Neon Indian, which released its most recent album, “VEGA INTL. Night School,” in October, has been in the public eye long enough to have name recognition even for casual fans of indie music. “I think it’s really cool because they were one of the big indie buzz bands in like 2008, and they’ve still been able to keep their groove going,” Wittkugel said. The other headliners aren’t as long-standing, but Wittkugel said they’ll appeal to listeners for other reasons. White Reaper is young and energetic, he said, and its 2015 album “White Reaper Does it Again” was its most high-profile release to date. Whitney recently signed to Bloomington-based record label Secretly Canadian. Wittkugel said the band’s lineup, which includes former members of Smith Westerns and Unknown Mortal Orchestra, gives it name recognition despite being a fairly new band. “They’ve also taken it to another level,” he said. “It’s so, so, so good. There’s a lot of stuff in the music people can get behind.” Both White Reaper and Whitney are Midwestern bands SEE LINEUP, PAGE 6
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
Nursing students will care for dying patients By Nyssa Kruse nakruse@indiana.edu | @NyssaKruse
PHOTO COURTESY OF THE DAILY IOWAN
Sophomore guard Tyra Buss attempts to drive against Iowa’s Tania Davis. IU lost 76-73.
Hoosiers’ win streak snapped By Taylor Lehman trlehman@indiana.edu | @trlehmanIDS
IU was down by 15 at halftime in Iowa City. The Hawkeyes had gone on two separate runs Sunday, 15-0 and 10-0, and outscored IU 24-8 in the second quarter. From then on, IU played from behind, trying to extend its fivegame win streak and maintain a third-place standing in the Big Ten. But Iowa hung onto the lead,
downing the Hoosiers 76-73. “I’m disappointed, especially in that second quarter,” IU Coach Teri Moren said. “That’s the quarter we really dug ourselves a hole. Not that we haven’t been there before, but we needed to be better.” IU outscored Iowa in every quarter aside from the second, including in the second half when the Hoosiers were staging their comeback. The third quarter began with an 8-0 run by IU, the start of a second half in which
IOWA 76, IU 73 Points Cahill, 22 Rebounds Cahill, 14 Assists Gassion/McBride, 4 IU outscored Iowa 45-33. The Hoosiers had dwindled the lead down to four points at six different times in the second half and faced a three-point deficit with 15.4 seconds left. IU needed a three. SEE BASKETBALL, PAGE 6
As a critical care nurse, Greg Carter saw pained and dying people throughout his career. Now, as a clinical assistant professor in the IU School of Nursing, Carter said the idea of people dying alone keeps him up at night. No One Dies Alone, a program potentially starting in Bloomington this summer or fall, would work to end this worry by providing people with a companion during the last 24 hours of their lives. “I think, just because someone is leaving this world, we still owe it to them to be compassionate and caring,” said junior Mackenzie Reetz, a nursing student working to start the program in Bloomington. Reetz initially tried to start NODA after taking a class her sophomore year that addressed death in health care. She volunteered at a hospital in Indianapolis with the program and wanted to bring it to Bloomington. NODA started at a hospital in Oregon and the program now has affiliates across the country. This year, Reetz renewed her efforts with Carter’s help. Reetz is now in the process of putting together training information and setting up contacts with IU Health Bloomington Hospital. Reetz said she hopes the program will have trials this summer using nursing students before integrating the program into nurs-
ing students’ clinical rotations in the fall. Participants in the program will be called for several-hour shifts with patients roughly 24 hours away from death. Reetz said their duties could include reading to them, playing music or providing comfort in other ways. “It’s not necessarily these grand actions,” Carter said. “It’s just pulling up a chair and sitting down.” Reetz and Carter both said they hope the program will expand through time. After nursing students initially test the program, Reetz said she hopes other volunteers at the hospital will join, and eventually the broader community will engage as well. Carter said he hopes the program can work with patients in their homes or long-term care facilities. “I think there will be a lot of people in the community who will be touched and want to be involved,” Carter said. “And maybe not health care individuals — they could just be compassionate individuals.” Reetz said an important component of training will be understanding cultural differences in end-of-life care. She said people of different faiths or backgrounds might want or need different comforts as they die. Learning to deal with personal feelings toward death will be another part of the training, SEE ALONE, PAGE 6
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CAMPUS
EDITORS: CARLEY LANICH & TAYLOR TELFORD | CAMPUS@IDSNEWS.COM
Malcolm X’s daughter to speak, sign books Following yesterday’s anniversary of the assassination of Malcolm X, Ilyasah Shabbaz, Malcolm X’s daughter, will give an address commemorating her father’s legacy. Titled “By Any Means,” the lecture will begin at 7 p.m. today in Alumni Hall in the Indiana
Memorial Union. The event will conclude with a meet-andgreet at 9 p.m. in the IMU Tudor Room. Shabbaz will sign copies of her book, “X: A Novel,” which will be available at both locations.
Media professionals offer advice on careers By Hannah Rea hanrea@umail.iu.edu | @rea_hannahj
Alumni counseled students on how to grow their skills and secure jobs and internships at the Media School’s inaugural Career Day. Panels for students interested in media-related careers were held all day Friday at the Indiana Memorial Union. The first panel concerned sports media and consisted of freelance writers, reporters and editors from SI.com, ESPN The Magazine and CBS4 WTTV. Students filled the Maple Room for the public relations, advertising and marketing panel. The panelists were executives and managers associated with advertising and PR firms such as the Chicago Tribune Media Group and a marketing start-up called PlaceIQ. Panelists spoke about the importance of interconnectivity, the globalization of media and the virtues of internships. “I think a lot of people coming into internships have the false perception that they need to know everything,” said Alexandra Brown, senior account executive at FleishmanHillard. “But you’re there to learn. You can learn a lot on the fly in just the day-to-day work.” The increased use of the Internet in media is affecting the industry, adding to the list of things with which interns need to become familiar. “Media is changing so much in how they function,”
ANDREW WILLIAMS | IDS
Current Media School students listen in as IU Journalism Alumni tell stories of their lives after college during the Media Career Day event Friday morning at the Indiana Memorial Union’s State Room East. Alumni discussed financial issues, job offers, relocation and many other pros and cons recent grads may face upon graduation.
Brown said. The television and film production panel consisted of editors and producers from Turner Studios and Bart Fox Productions. Also in attendance were presidents of Third Eye Creative Advising and Kodak. The news reporting and editing panel featured reporters and producers from
14 WFIE, the Washington Post, the New Yorker, ESPN The Magazine and CNN.com. One of the most important steps to getting opportunities is forming relationships, several panelists said. “To get a seat at the table, sometimes you have to get your foot in the door,” said Deanna Allbrittin, morning
news anchor and reporter at 14 WFIE. The panelists also emphasized having a typo-free resume and cover letter and getting experience outside of the classroom. “Here, you can do whatever you want,” Washington Post and former Indiana Daily Student reporter Jessica Contrera said of students’
time at IU. “Focus on writing good stories, making things you’re proud of.” Simultaneously, there was the entrepreneurs/freelance media professionals panel, consisting of a photojournalist, several freelancers and the president of Motion Picture and Entertainment from Kodak. The final event of the IU
Media School’s Career Day was a networking reception, which allowed students to have one-on-one interactions with the alumni. Many alumni said the best advice they could give was to never say no to an assignment. “You’re not above any story,” Contrera said. “Go and write the hell out of it.
Outstanding Junior Faculty named IFC intramurals adds point system to tournament From IDS reports
Five assistant professors have been announced as the 2015-16 Outstanding Junior Faculty award winners. This year’s recipients came from the astronomy, art history, mathematics, public affairs and sociology departments at IU. The award is presented by the Office of the Vice Provost for Research and the Office of the Vice Provost for Faculty and Academic Affairs, according to an IU press release. It celebrates tenure-track faculty who work on nationally significant research projects or innovative programs. The winners were Jennifer Brass from the School of Public and Environmental Affairs, Jessica Calarco from the Department of Sociology, Margaret Graves from the Department of Art History, Noah Snyder from the Department of Mathematics and Enrico Vesperini from the Department of Astronomy. “I am thrilled that the campus is able to recognize and provide support for the excellent research and scholarship that these award recipients are conducting,” said Eliza Pavalko, vice provost for faculty and academic affairs, in the release. “Selecting just five Outstanding Junior Faculty from among
the many extraordinary nominees was a challenge for the committee, but our awardees stand out for the excellence, originality and impact of their research.” Any faculty working to earn tenure on the Bloomington campus are eligible for nomination. Winners receive a $15,000 award to invest in future research and projects. Brass became part of IU faculty in 2010. She received her Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley the same year. Her research focuses on service provision and governance in developing countries, particularly subSaharan Africa. Brass’ first book, “Allies or Adversaries? NGOs and the State in Africa,” will be available from Cambridge University Press in 2016. She received an IU SPEA Teaching Award for Excellence in graduate instruction in 2014. Calarco has been part of the Department of Sociology since 2012 and received her Ph.D. in sociology from the University of Pennsylvania the same year. Her research focuses on issues related to education, social class stratification, family, children and youth, and culture and social interaction. She has published her work in journals such as
the American Sociological Review and American Educational Research Journal and Social Psychology and was a recipient of IU’s Trustees Teaching Award in 2014. Graves joined the Department of Art History in 2012 and has a Ph.D. from the University of Edinburgh. Graves’ research focuses on art and architecture of the medieval Islamic world. She has been awarded several major fellowships, including some from the Institute for Advanced Study and the British Academy. This academic year, Graves was honored with membership to the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey. She is the 2013 recipient of IU College of Arts and Sciences’ Trustees Award for Excellence in Teaching. Snyder joined the IU Department of Mathematics in 2012. He received his Ph.D. in mathematics from the University of California, Berkeley in 2009. Snyder was a National Science Foundation postdoctoral fellow at Columbia University and a visiting scientist at the Max Planck Institute for Mathematics from 2009 to 2012. Snyder received the CAREER Award from the National Science Foundation for his research on tensor categories and for his outreach work.
Jessica Calarco
Noah Snyder
By Austin Faulds afaulds@indiana.edu | @a_faulds9615
Margaret Graves
Enrico Vesperini
Jennifer Brass
Vesperini became part of the Department of Astronomy in 2012. He earned his Ph.D. in physics from Scuola Normale Superiore in Pisa, Italy, in 1994. He had postdoctoral fellowships at University of Edinburgh, University of Massachusetts and Michigan State University. His research focuses on the formation and evolution of star clusters and specializes in globular clusters, some of the oldest objects in the Milky Way galaxy. Taylor Telford
The Recreational Sports Fraternity Council is adding a competitive edge this semester to the ongoing Recreational Sports Hoosier Grail. The Recreational Sports Hoosier Grail is an intramural sports competition occurring this semester among fraternities in the Interfraternity Council. The chapter that wins the competition is awarded the Hoosier Grail. The idea to combine recreational sports and greek life came to RSFC president Sean Ndebele last spring semester when he was approached by members of IU Recreational Sports seeking to expand campus involvement with members of greek life, Ndebele said. After agreeing to the offer, he spent the summer
developing a constitution for RSFC. He even designed the trophy used for the Hoosier Grail himself. “Overall, it was about 23 hours of work that I put in,” Ndebele said about his design. As soon as the project was kick-started, Ndebele said he began recruiting new members for RSFC and the intramural teams with RSFC Vice President Kalvin Greer. The new point system is designed around competitiveness and participation, Greer said. He said a member can earn points just by signing up. All intramural sports count toward points. Players can earn more points by winning games and making it to the championship. However, he said a lack SEE IFC, PAGE 3
CLARIFICATION A story on the front page of the Thursday edition of the Indiana Daily Student reported on a female student who reported a sexual assault to the IU Police Department after being picked up for medical assistance at Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. The female student was not a member of the sorority. Sisters of Kappa Alpha Theta went out of their way to assist the female student, house director Jeanie Van Meter said. Mary Katherine Wildeman Editor-in-Chief Alison Graham Katherine Schulze Managing Editors
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NOBLE GUYON | IDS
CATCHING SOME SUN Freshman Anthony J. Brown plays a game of frisbee in Dunn Meadow with friends Sunday afternoon.
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Sporting events require increased security presence By Sarah Gardner gardnese@indiana.edu @sarahhhgardner
IU Police Department officers Joshua Sung and Johnny Goode arrived at Assembly Hall a few hours before the IU men’s basketball game started Wednesday night. They stood in a corner of the north lobby next to the trophy case, out of the way and watching closely. Though they often stay behind the scenes, a large police and security presence is essential to making campus events like football and basketball games run smoothly, IUPD Capt. Andy Stephenson said. “It takes most of our police force, whether directly or indirectly, to police events like this,” Stephenson said. “There’s a lot of planning before the season starts just to make sure every assignment is covered and everything remains consistent.” About 25 officers are stationed inside Assembly Hall, Stephenson said. Officers protect each entrance, both teams and the game officials, and also roam around the arena. IUPD’s K-9 Unit, Officer Chris Collins and tracking dog Tery, also police the arena. “I’m usually positioned down on the court, and I like
» IFC
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2 of participation in the council or a lack of sportsmanship can cause the chapter to forfeit points. “The system is designed to encourage people, but it can also hurt them if they don’t play or try to cheat,” Greer said. Though the RSFC was established last semester, this will be the first semester the point system will be employed. Additionally, several new sports, including soccer, softball and table tennis, will be added after spring break, Ndebele said. He said the two biggest sports in the Hoosier Grail are basketball and futsal. The latter is basically indoor soccer, Ndebele said. Sixteen fraternities are competing in basketball, and eight are competing in futsal. “In intramural sports, there is something for everyone,” Ndebele said. Thirty-two chapter representatives and 21 fraternity houses make up the intramural teams, Greer said. “Anyone in a chapter house has an opportunity to play the sports and show their abilities,” Greer said.
working down there,” Sung said. “You definitely get a good view of the game while you’re working.” Sung and Goode kept their positions near the back of the north lobby. As students and other spectators began flooding through the doors, the two officers watched everyone who came through security to find their seats. Every time a large group of people went by, they looked a little closer. They watch for anything out of the ordinary, Sung said. Huge coats in warm weather, extremely baggy clothing and people who look nervous can all be signs that put officers on alert. Sung and Goode also keep an eye on the ticket office and the merchandise stands in the lobby. “Shoplifting could very easily become an issue,” Goode said. “Anywhere money is being exchanged is a potential problem area for us.” This is just one of many potential concerns the officers keep in mind all night. Sung and Goode pay attention to excessively drunk spectators, dangerous behavior in the student section, medical emergencies and plan for scenarios such as an active shooter, Sung said. EMTs and paramedGreer said the RSFC is planning on including other non-IFC fraternities to join the intramural games. “We want this to be allinclusive of anything greekwise,” he said. The Hoosier Grail is a traveling trophy. When another chapter wins, that chapter will receive the trophy. Greer said winners will also receive a plaque on the wall in their chapter, as well as a $500 donation to a chapter’s choice philanthropic organization and a pizza party from Bucceto’s Smiling Teeth. “I wanted to do something to give back to the greek system,” Greer said. IU is not the first fraternity to have greek life intramural sports on a competitive level, Ndebele said. He said he designed RSFC after similar programs at schools like Purdue University, Northwestern University and Penn State University. For those who love sports and are part of greek life, Greer said RSFC is a great organization to join this semester. “I thought it was a cool idea and something I wished I had when I was younger,” Greer said.
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ics are positioned throughout the building as well, Stephenson said. “We want to let people have fun, and usually our presence alone helps make people act right,” Sung said. “But the people causing problems for everyone else, they definitely get our attention really fast.” Assembly Hall is also staffed by IU Event Services employees, as well as ESG Security and Event Services. ESG security guards serve as a first line of defense as people enter the building, ESG President Mike Rose said. It can take hundreds of people working on game day to keep an event safe, Rose said. ESG and IU Event Services coordinate to help escort people into the building, search them, secure the locker rooms and maintain crowd control. “Every resource we have is thrown at keeping this place safe,” Rose said. “At big sporting events, the people you’re dealing with are often fanatics. To keep everything under control, your plan has to be airtight.” While the game gets underway inside the arena, officers are busy outside Assembly Hall as well. Officers from IUPD,
Bloomington Police Department, Ellettsville Police Department and the Monroe County Sherriff ’s Office are stationed throughout the parking lot and at each nearby intersection to control traffic, Stephenson said. Traffic policing is one of the most important roles the police play on game day, Stephenson said. “IUPD puts up flares, cones and barricades all over the place just to try to help people figure out where they can drive,” Goode said. “People are running late and in a hurry to get in, or they’re just trying to drive home and get stuck in the game traffic pattern, and everyone starts getting stressed out and impatient.” Officers on shift who aren’t working the game also pay attention to places nearby where people celebrating might get into trouble, Sung said. Wednesday was a quiet night for Goode and Sung. An elderly man fell and hit his head, prompting a response from IUPD, EMTs and the Bloomington Fire Department. But for the majority of the game, Goode and Sung quietly stayed on guard. At the end of the game,
NOBLE GUYON | IDS
IUPD officer Joshua Sung talks to patrons entering Assembly Hall last Wednesday for a basketball game against Nebraska. Sung is one of many officers who provides security throughout Assembly Hall for the basketball games.
the officers start preparing again for the surge of people leaving. Students rushing the court and creating a mob also sits at the front of their minds, Sung said.
“We enjoy signing up to work the games, because it’s an exciting environment,” Goode said. “But at the end of the day, it’s just another place where we’re doing our job.”
5 cases of mumps confirmed at IU From IDS reports
LEVI REECE | IDS
Scott Olshaker, center, goes for a layup against Graham Cenko, left, and James Blodgett, right, at the WIC during an IFC intramural game Friday. Olshaker’s Phi Delt Platinum beat Cenko and Blodgetts’ Phi Sig Silver with a final score of 68-31.
Five confirmed cases of mumps have been reported at IU-Bloomington and IUPurdue University Indianapolis campuses, according to an IU press release. Four confirmed cases have been reported at IUB, two of which were reported in a release last week. The cases were reported several weeks apart with no identifiable connection. A single case has been confirmed at IUPUI. The University is working with the Indiana State Department of Health, the Monroe County Health Department and the Marion County Health Department to identify and notify anyone who may have been in close contact with the reported case, according to the release. Friday, nine confirmed cases were announced as being reported at Butler University, with an initial three cases reported last week, said Marc Allan, Butler associate
director of public relations. Some IUB students received emails this week with advice signs of symptoms and what to do if exposed to the disease. Sophomore Nick Lykoudis said he was not worried by mumps until receiving an email. “Originally I wasn’t until I heard someone in my class had it,’” Lykoudis said. “This inspired me to research when I get home what mumps is because I don’t even know what it is.” IU is advising University members to check vaccination records, especially for the MMR vaccine for measles, mumps and rubella. According to the release, additional recommendations may be made. The University is advising anyone at IUB showing symptoms to stay home and immediately call the IU Health Center at 812-8555002 during office hours or 812-330-3790 after hours. Carley Lanich
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OPINION EDITORS: HUSSAIN ATHER & JORDAN RILEY OPINION@IDSNEWS.COM
Find your sexy Bernie Sanders sweetheart Many supporters of Sen. Bernie Sanders find themselves in lonely, loveless lives. Fortunately, the new dating site berniesingles.com lets users find sexy singles near them who “feel the Bern.” The creators of the site thought it would be “pretty dank” to
EDITORIAL BOARD
connect with other supporters, and the site also lets users meet others without an interest in dating. Now Sanders supporters can enjoy the intimate passion of fancy dinners while having someone with a job pay for them.
RILED UP
Serve justice for Kesha
ILLUSTRATION BY EMILY TATUM | IDS
Mental health of veterans WE SAY: The government should serve veterans with the mental health treatment they deserve In 2013, the United States spent $718 billion, about 20 percent of its budget, on defense. A smaller percentage went to veterans’ benefits. Veterans and federal retirees only accounted for seven percent of the budget. Not only is there a dearth of money being spent on veterans, there is also a lack of good care being given to these men and women. Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder dismissed the state’s Director of Veterans Affairs for failure to provide adequate care services. One in six calls to the Veterans Affairs suicide hotline go to hold. With these conditions, it is not surprising there is a surge of untreated post-traumatic stress disorder cases in veterans. However, for a nation that spends so much on defense, the number of these cases is a damning, dark stain on the
U.S. Regardless of anyone’s views about the U.S. military, there is a consensus veterans should be respected. They sacrificed a good portion of their lives and deserve respect. Politicians on both sides of the aisle voice these sentiments constantly. But this sentiment does not seem to translate into direct care given to those who served, and that is becoming increasingly clear, especially in the case of mental health. According to RAND corporation, a nonprofit think tank that gives research for the Armed Forces, one-third of troops diagnosed with PTSD and less than one quarter of troops diagnosed with depression are receiving the full number of therapy sessions. After seeing the horrors of war, veterans are entitled to treatment options. However, the lack of at-
tention we pay to the situation is shocking. Last year, the defense budget was $598 billion, and a good portion was used on advertising the military to new recruits, building new weapons and funding bases. While the usefulness of some of these purchases is important to consider, the budget needs to increase in terms of veterans spending. There are between 500,000 to 800,000 homeless veterans every year, according to Veterans Inc., a nonprofit organization that provides services to veterans. These veterans are not receiving the care they are promised for wartime afflictions. If Veterans Affairs hospitals and clinics cannot properly care for them, veterans should be able to use their benefits at other hospitals or providers and should receive insurance support for private care.
This solution changes the system to help veterans more effectively, unlike the solutions of privatizing Veteran’s Affairs that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Sen. Bernie Sanders have criticized. The staggering number of untreated cases of mental health problems for veterans is astounding. However, it can be fixed with adequate spending. As a nation that prides itself on its troops, we’re obligated to give those who serve exemplary care. Veterans Affairs needs to be reformed, and politicians need to stop discussing military spending without mentioning the dark spot of American politics. Our country and these organizations need to give greater attention to the mental health of veterans. Until then, we aren’t giving them the respect they deserve.
WHO’S SANE
Excited about engineering at IU When the Indiana Commission for Higher Education approved IU’s creation of an engineering school, I couldn’t have been more excited. The Intelligent Systems Engineering School, set to start in fall 2016, is part of the Bicentennial Campaign, a document that sets goals and plans for student success, research and other initiatives. With an Engineering School, students and faculty at the University will make a greater impact on societal problems through research. Many prospective undergraduates and current students don’t know what the new school will offer nor the significance of engineering at IU. Engineering at IU will differ from our rival, Purdue. While Purdue offers degrees in chemical engineering, electrical engineering and other areas, IU’s Engineering will focus on smallscale, networked problems. The programs IU will offer include neuro-engineering, bioengineering and
computer engineering. Despite these differences between IU and Purdue, the goal is to “cooperate and collaborate and not to compete” said Deba Dutta, Purdue’s Provost and Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs and Diversity. The interdisciplinary nature of these fields will allow students to find solutions to societal problems from a multitude of perspectives. It will also give engineering students the opportunity to work with faculty from science areas, such as physics and chemistry, and nonscience areas like business and public health. And, through these collaborative efforts, the Engineering School will provide both undergraduates and graduates the resources they need to build a better future. Geoffrey Fox, Distinguished Professor of Computer Science, Informatics and Physics, will chair the Intelligent Systems Engineering School. Fox expects the first class of undergraduates to be less than 50 students.
But students and faculty will work closely with other departments so they’ll have access to a wide variety of resources. The way physicists and engineers work alongside one another shows this. Some people think physicists only study theory and equations while engineers apply those things for practical purposes. But there’s no clear boundary between the applied and theoretical areas of scientific research, much like engineering. Research in nanoengineering can be used to create new materials for semiconductors and transistors while physics work can study those materials for quantum effect properties. But, throughout each step in the process, the work of engineers and physicists blend into one another. And my physics coursework has taught me that the two fields function hand-inhand, rather than as opposites. Similarly, engineering at IU will use these interdisci-
HUSSAIN ATHER is a junior in physics and philosophy.
plinary methods of research from putting theory into practice. This integrated approach will help students understand science while looking at its benefit to society. The addition of the Intelligent Systems Engineering School will accomplish that. The Engineering School supports the University’s “entrepreneurial culture and economic competitiveness”, as IU President Michael McRobbie said. But the purpose of being productive should not overshadow the need to cultivate intellectually vibrant minds of the future. The Intelligent Systems Engineering School will attract creative, intelligent students who want a challenging and rewarding experience. sather@indiana.edu @SHussainAther
Kesha was once one of the world’s most successful pop artists. But she hasn’t released music since 2012 due to ongoing litigation against her producer and accused abuser, Lukasz “Dr. Luke” Gottwald. The struggle between Kesha and her producer puts the spotlight on music industry giants in the background that aren’t held accountable for the industry’s corruption. Hopefully Kesha’s story will allow even more stars to come forward and begin to battle the misogynistic and dangerous culture of the music industry. In October, Kesha filed a civil suit against Gottwald that he emotionally, physically and sexually abused her in their almost 10-year relationship. The Manhattan Supreme Court ruled against releasing Kesha from her contract with Kemosabe Records, owned by Sony Music Entertainment. Gottwald discovered the pop star when she was 18. According to Kesha’s filed suit, Gottwald convinced her to drop out of high school and move to Los Angeles. A 2013 New Yorker profile of Gottwald explains why he signed Kesha: “But to have real control — to be more than the appetizer-maker to the queen — Dr. Luke needs to discover and develop his own superstars, so that he can participate in every aspect of their career. That’s what he hoped to do with Kesha.” Disney is constantly under fire for the same controlling behavior as it has proven to produce mental and physical risks for the young girls trying to escape from it. Kesha’s lawsuit details sexual assault and manipulation: date rape, verbal abuse Kesha feels resulted in her bulimia
JORDAN RILEY is a senior in comparative literature.
nervosa and threats. The suit also claims Kesha has been denied “any meaningful profit from her work due to Dr. Luke’s exploitation of her over the last decade” because Gottwald refused to negotiate her contract beyond the one-sided contract she signed at 18. Producing more albums with her abuser and unable to make a living, Kesha would be emotionally attacked with a destroyed career. This litigation has cost Kesha six years in an industry in which youth is part of the product. Gottwald filed a defamation countersuit that Kesha has made false allegations. But if it is a business move, it’s an incredibly unwise one. As her lawyer claimed in court Friday, “Her brand value has fallen ... Kesha will suffer irreparable harm, plummeting her career past the point of no return.” Sony should never have let it get this far. Gottwald has produced hits with Britney Spears, Kelly Clarkson and Miley Cyrus, none of whom still work with him. Sony refused to let Kesha go since Kesha makes money, which forced her to remain in an abusive situation. This ambition and ambivalence for exploited young stars remain trademarks of the music industry. Think Marylin Monroe, think Britney Spears. It is unacceptable, and it must stop, starting with #FreeKesha. jordrile@indiana.edu @RiledupIDS
ELYSE’S THOUGHTS
The illness we don’t see Whether we admit to it or not, we judge each other every day. Maybe you roll your eyes when someone takes the elevator in Ballantine one floor up, or you give someone a death stare when they take the bus for two stops. But many of these people may have chronic illnesses. In fact, there are more young people suffering from chronic illnesses or disabilities than you might think. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found half of all American adults have at least one chronic disease. This includes diabetes, arthritis and more. University of Alabama researchers estimate up to 25 percent of 1829 year-olds live with chronic pain. And according to the National Health Institute, one in five people struggle with mental illness and one in 25 are considered disabled because of their mental illness. When you see the numbers, it’s not hard to imagine that many of our peers are dealing with more than what you see on the surface. I am one of them. For many years, I’ve been dealing with several chronic illnesses. I look healthy, so you couldn’t tell I struggle with my health. These are not any fault of my own, but caused by stress and genetics. You might have to tell a friend you can’t meet because you have a migraine or you’re too exhausted. Your grades
ELYSE JOHNSON is a sophomore in community health and human sexuality.
might hang in the balance if your class attendance takes hits from your illnesses. Even when things seem to be under control, you always live with a caution sign flashing in your head, warning you not to trigger anything that would cause a flare-up. Your college years are supposed to be the best of your life, so it’s discouraging to know you can’t enjoy it to the fullest. It’s more discouraging to know others don’t understand this. They may assume you’re lazy, faking it or weak. Others who struggle with chronic illness know all you can do is take care of yourself and ignore the ignorance. We see the mean looks, hear the condescending voices and know how others talk behind our backs. We take our medicine and try our best to get along like everyone else. It is important others understand this reality. The next time you judge someone as lazy but perfectly healthy, know a lot of students may be hiding a battle with an illness. Show compassion and try not to think the worst of a person whose situation you do not know. elyjohns@indiana.edu @ElyseJWrites
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 500 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. Send submissions via e-mail to letters@idsnews.com. Call the IDS with questions at 8550760.
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.
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REGION
EDITORS: ALEXA CHRYSSOVERGIS & LINDSAY MOORE | REGION@IDSNEWS.COM
Trump and Clinton win primary elections The South Carolina primary elections ended with Donald Trump winning the GOP vote and Jeb Bush dropping out of the race. With his win, Trump sustained his position as front-runner in the race for the GOP. Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton
also secured a narrow victory at the Nevada caucuses. The Republican Party caucus will take place in Nevada on Feb. 23 and the Democratic primary will take place in South Carolina on Feb. 27.
Local history center preserves wedding details By Cody Thompson Comthomp@indiana.iu.edu @CodyMichael
Black and white photos of happy faces and held hands sat on a table. Behind the photos stood antique fabrics sewn elegantly into patterns that promised eternal loyalty. Underneath the bicycles and telescopes on the upper floor of the Monroe County History Center was Happily Ever After, a wedding preservation open house. Dresses and photographs greeted those who entered the museum Saturday from 2 to 4 p.m. This was a first-time event organized by the museum in Bloomington. The antique dresses were part of an exhibit from a few years past, Museum Collections Manager Hilary Fleck said. The open house began with an idea to bring back an older exhibit in a new way that would fit with the current season, Fleck said. “We were looking to engage the collections a bit more and make people more aware of preservation techniques because we’re a history center and that’s what we kind of do around here,” Fleck said. “I think it was September that we started tossing around ideas for the spring. February is the month of love, and we have a very extensive wedding dress collection.” Workers spoke with attendees in a one-on-one setting about any specific questions they had. Whether it was how to preserve an old photo or the benefits of silk vs real flowers, the workers had an answer. The event was free advice, Fleck said. They gave alternative methods of preservation that would typically be extremely expensive to have done professionally. “It’s to educate people about wedding preservation and the best way to preserve these memories,” Fleck said. However, this open house was not just for brides from the local community. Fleck said grooms were welcome, too, if they wished to ask about pres-
“We were looking to engage the collections a bit more and make people more aware of preservation techniques because we’re a history center and that’s what we kind of do around here. February is the month of love, and we have a very extensive wedding dress collection. We have about 36 pieces,” Hilary Fleck, Museum Collections Manager PHOTOS BY TAE-GYUN KIM | IDS
Participants choose bowls during the 22nd Annual Soup Bowl event Sunday at Monroe County Convention Center. Local potters, IU Ceramics Guild, Ivy Tech-Waldron Ceramic Department and students from Bloomington North High School made about 600 bowls. Participants could have bowls once they paid for the ticket. The event was hosted to fundraise Hoosier Hills Food Bank.
ervation of photos or other documents. One of the dresses on display dated back to 1888 and survived through four generations before being acquired by the museum. Visitors gazed at the old photographs and pointed at the antique fabrics on display. “I love the antique dresses, and my father was born in 1898, so I can relate to some of the old stuff as a small child,” attendee Joyce Wampler said. One of the many tips was to avoid the photo boxes purchasable at locations like Hobby Lobby, as they may not reliably protect wedding photos from damage and decay. The museum took three dresses and some photos to the bridal expo at the end of January in the Monroe County Convention Center to advertise for the event, Fleck said. At the open house, museum employees handed out papers donning printed advice such as, “Basic rules of storage: Items should be clean. A contemporary item, such as a new christening gown, should be cleaned by the manufacturer’s recommended method before storage.” Similar discussions will take place at an event March 9. The event, which will also be presented at the Monroe County History Center, will be center on discussion of undergarments worn in the late 19th and early 20th century.
Soup bowls generate funds By Anne Halliwell ahalliwe@indiana.edu @Anne_halliwell
Jim Halvorson spun a pottery wheel in the lobby of the Bloomington Monroe County Convention Center on Sunday evening. In a few minutes, another clay bowl grew under his hands, was shaped, etched and set aside. Upstairs, about 600 handmade bowls lined white plastic tables, waiting to be chosen and filled with soup for the annual Hoosier Hills Soup Bowl Benefit. Halvorson demonstrated the process for the crowd waiting about 90 minutes to be admitted. “It helps people understand that the bowls they’re getting upstairs are made by hand,” Halvorson said. “Even though the potter may make a dozen of the same kind of bowl, they are all different.” Halvorson’s wife, Suzanne, helped found the fundraiser 22 years ago. He’s made bowls for about 19 of the fundraiser years and has been practicing in pottery since 1977. In a little more than an hour, Halvorson shaped 13 bowls — fluted, curved or etched around the rim — to demonstrate the range of possibilities when working with clay.
Actually completing the number of bowls upstairs takes much longer to glaze and fire, he said. “I can make 10 of these an hour, but for every hour I spend in these, I commit to 10 other hours,” Halvorson said. His kiln at home holds 100 pieces. Halvorson said it may take him four to six weeks to fill the kiln. Every piece is handled at least a dozen times, and many are fired twice. Suzanne Halvorson said in the beginning years of the fundraiser, the potters in Bloomington donated 10 bowls apiece for the fundraiser. Now that the number of people to serve has grown, the Food Bank buys many more bowls wholesale to ensure they have enough for everyone. “It’s become kind of a business for potters to make some money,” she said. Halvorson made 29 bowls for this year’s fundraiser. Julio Alonso, the executive director and CEO of Hoosier Hills Food Bank, said the event generates a recurring crowd every year, as well as much of the organization’s funding. “It’s really been something that a lot of people look forward to and come
Chris Gray, right, dips a piece of bread into his son, Evan Gray’s, 12, bowl Sunday at the Monroe County Convention Center. Participants chose various bowls, made by local potters, and ate soups from local restaurants.
to every year,” Alonso said. Robert Meitus, the Soup Bowl’s co-founder, said he remembered when the event consisted of 100 people in the basement of a Catholic church at IU. Now, the Soup Bowl serves about 700 people and sells out at least a week before the event. One $30 ticket covers a handmade bowl and refills of soup. Now in its 22nd year, Alonso said the Soup Bowl will leave them with a profit of about $100,000 after about $10,000 in operating costs are levied. “It’ll help support our food distribution for the
whole year,” Alonso said. The fundraiser supports general operations like the Food Bank’s mobile clinic and food boxes for seniors, Alonso said. The workers spent Saturday picking up gallons of soup donations from 41 restaurants, including Malibu Grill, Darn Good Soup and the Owlery. Many restaurants also donated cookies and breads or wine, beer or coffee. “We don’t ask the restaurants for anything,” Alonso said. “We rely on them to give us what they want and what they want to highlight.”
Young will remain on U.S. Senate ballot in spite of Democratic party’s challenge IDS reports
The Indiana Election Committee voted Friday to keep Rep. Todd Young, R9th District, on the primary ballot after challenges to his campaign for United States Senate. The committee cast a 2-2 vote, effectively keeping Young on the ballot. Young is currently running against Rep. Marlin Stutzman, R3rd District. Chairman of the Indiana Democratic Party John Zody
formally challenged the candidate’s ballot petition after the IDP noticed Young had 501 validated signatures, exactly one more than the 500 required by state law. After filing an open courts request and doing a recount of signatures, the IDP found Young to be two short of the 500, Zody said in a press conference. Zody said in a statement Friday it was clear Young did not meet the signature threshold requirement.
“Today’s hearing showed two things — Todd Young thinks he’s above the law and it’s always someone else’s fault,” Zody said in the statement. Young’s campaign also sent out a press release, which said the campaign had always had a sufficient number of signatures. The IDP’s efforts to kick Young’s name off the ballot were a political stunt, the release said. The release also criticized Stutzman for joining
the IDP’s campaign against Young. “They ripped a page straight out of Obama’s playbook,” the release said. “And Marlin Stutzman showed his true colors when he joined the Democrats. But their political tricks couldn’t stop us.” The IDP also released a statement after the decision to keep Young’s name on the U.S. Senate ballot was made. While the IDP is a political party, it also believes in following the law,
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something it believes Young didn’t do, it said. “Despite Todd Young’s repeated defiance over the past week, calling our challenge a ‘stunt,’ today’s hearing proved one thing: he did not have enough signatures to be on the primary ballot this May. He did not follow the law,” the IDP said in its statement. “This is why we fight. No one Hoosier, and no one candidate, is above the rule of law in our state.” In his statement,
Zody said while he was disappointed in the decision made Friday, he stands by the case made by the IDP against Young. “I remain confident in the case we made in our challenges, and any decision regarding further action is forthcoming,” Zody said. “Regardless of outcome, the IDP will continue to look after everyday Hoosiers and advocate for fairness under all laws — including those governing our elections.”
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» FOREST
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
McClure said Assistant State Forester of DNR Dan Ernst called her when he found out she had been calling the department. She said Ernst told her the DNR failed to obtain permits for the project. “We feel like this is an inside job,” McClure said. The DNR told the hikers the trail would remain in place — just widened and paved in parts so bikers could use them, McClure said. That turns hikers away from ever using the trail, she said. “Hikers have a relationship with their trails,” McClure said. “Hikers know every turn, every tree. We seek these places out. It’s easier on the knees, legs and the back to go on natural surfaces.” Seifert said he did not know about a lack of proper
» ALONE
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 Reetz said. “We all have our own experiences with death, but it’s being able to separate that from a professional standpoint,” Reetz said. Carter said the program might also provide insight into death in Bloomington. He is unaware of any research about how often
» BASKETBALL
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 Junior guard Karlee McBride and sophomore guard Tyra Buss both had opportunities to hit the game-tying 3-point shot at the end, but both fell short. “I really thought our kids got us back into this ball game in the second half,” Moren said. “The only thing that you want at the end is to be able to catch and get it to overtime. We got a good look and it just didn’t go down.” Fueling the comeback and recording her ninth double-double of the season, sophomore forward Amanda Cahill struggled in the first half but scored 18 second-half points. The forward ended with a gamehigh 22 total points and 14
permits for the project and said people’s concern that development was being funded illegally was misguided because it was funded internally and the DNR was using their own employees for the project. Tom McGinnis, another longtime hiker of the forest, said he’s not sure what’s really going on with the project. His forestry background should help him make sense of what the DNR is doing, but so far it hasn’t, he said. “I see forest activity, and I have a different perspective,” McGinnis said. “I’m trying
to compute it into forestry management and it’s not quite right,” McGinnis said. McGinnis, who lives in Indianapolis, said if the Tecumseh Trail is paved, a lot of hikers will lose the only place relatively close to Indianapolis where they can truly walk a hiker’s trail and walk it legally after dark. “On a weeknight, you can justify an hour drive,” McGinnis said. “The only other place you can hike after dark is another hour and a half away in Deam Wilderness.” For McGinnis, the project still won’t be justified if the DNR had or would have obtained proper permitting or funding. McClure said it won’t justify the removal of the trails to her either, but she still wanted to know. “Personally, I’d like to see another foot-hiker trail built south of this one,” McClure said. “I believe that would be appropriate.”
people in Bloomington die alone and for what reasons. He thinks modern family structures might lead to more people dying alone, he said. People are having fewer or no children, and children may move away from their families now more than in the past. “Not all of us have kids or families,” Carter said. “I’m sure it’s going to hit home with people who are going
to wonder what it’s going to be like when they reach that point.” People have ideas about how they want to die, and this program could give people comfort as they approach that time, Carter said. “We want to be surrounded,” Carter said. “Knowing that there’s a resource out there has to take some of the isolation and loneliness out of that process.”
rebounds. Moren said Cahill is a player who recognizes when she is not playing as well and adjusts as the game goes on. She said it was that ability that helped get the Hoosiers into position to tie the game. “Cahill struggled in the first half, but I thought she showed up in a big way in the second half,” Moren said. “That’s kind of what Cahill has been able to do.” Adding to the comeback was junior center Jenn Anderson, who scored eight of her 10 total points in the second half, including two putbacks and a block in the last three minutes of the game to keep IU close. The center ended with a double-double, as she recorded 10 rebounds on top of her 10 points.
Buss, who had been averaging 22 points during the five-game win streak, scored 18 and did not attempt a free throw. Junior guard Alexis Gassion ended the game with 15 points, pushing her to a fifth consecutive game with double-digit scoring. But it was the nine firsthalf turnovers, nine firsthalf fouls and the second quarter that prevented the Hoosiers from taking a sixgame winning streak to Lincoln, Nebraska, in the team’s final away game of the regular season. “We still have a lot of basketball ahead of us,” Moren said. “We’ve got to hold our heads up high because we did come back and I’m proud of that. Now we have to go back and figure out how to get on the road and tackle Nebraska.”
“Hikers have a relationship with their trails. Hikers know every turn, every tree. We seek these places out.” Diana McClure, hiker
IDS FILE PHOTO
Members of Thee Tsunamis, a local band from Bloomington, perform during the Culture Shock Music Festival put on by WIUX on April 11, 2015.
» LINEUP
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 — the former is from Louisville, Kentucky, the latter from Chicago — and both have played in Bloomington recently. The headliners have also shown up on lineups for the upcoming summer festival circuit. Both Neon Indian and Whitney will play Chicago’s Pitchfork Music Festival. Wittkugel said the fact Culture Shock offers festival-level bands for no cost should draw a large crowd.
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“That’s also honestly the best part of this — you don’t have to pay anything,” he said. “If I lived within a few hours of here, I’d be here in a minute. It’s two bands that are playing Pitchfork for zero dollars.” The buzzed-about headliners continue a recent tradition of high-profile indie bands headlining Culture Shock. Foxygen headlined last year’s festival, and other recent acts include Beach House, Ty Segall and the War on Drugs. Those headliners have given Culture Shock at-
tention from outlets like Pitchfork, Consequence of Sound and College Music Journal. Wittkugel said the goal is to maintain the strength of those recent lineups. “I think we’ve been on a good roll the past few years, so we’re just trying to keep momentum going and try to be able to build this into something even bigger,” he said. “It’s a very established event. It’s pretty established with the school and it’s very known, but it’d be cool to try to bring it to another level, too.”
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SPORTS EDITORS: TEDDY BAILEY & MICHAEL HUGHES | SPORTS@IDSNEWS.COM
BOILER DOWNED HALEY WARD | IDS
Junior forward Troy Williams dunks during the game against Purdue on Saturday at Assembly Hall. It was his 1000th point. IU defeated Purdue 77-73.
Hoosiers win the battle inside to gain sole possession of first place in the Big Ten
Williams scores 19, leads defensive effort in win over No. 17 Purdue
Michael Hughes
Grace Palmieri
michhugh@indiana.edu | @MichaelHughes94
his game featured three IU big men with at least four fouls. Two T others had three. Junior forward Collin Hartman played the last few minutes with a bandage covering a gash on his chin. The wound would require stitches after the game. But the Hoosiers, even with foul trouble and injuries, didn’t back down Saturday night. Against a Purdue team featuring two 7-footers and another 6-foot-9 player, IU attacked the paint and won 77-73 against Purdue to gain sole possession of first place in the Big Ten. “All of our inside guys were up to the task, and it’s no easy task to go to battle with the three centers they have,” IU Coach Tom Crean said. “They responded, and they carried their own on the offensive end as well.” Junior forward Troy Williams led the way with 19 points. Ferrell was close behind with 18 of his own. But it was the big men who led the way in the second half, when Ferrell and Williams combined for only nine points. Senior forward Max Bielfeldt scored 10 points. Freshman center Thomas Bryant scored 10 as well, and freshman forward OG Anunoby contributed nine. Purdue started the game going right at IU’s perceived weakness. AJ Hammons touched the ball on the first five possessions of the game, and he scored three times. But Hammons could only play six minutes in the first half because of his own foul trouble. This meant it was primarily Isaac Haas the Hoosiers were forced to defend. For a while, they couldn’t. He was able to shoot over or work through whatever IU player was trying to guard him. “Nobody has guys right now that can just guard those guys one-onone,” Crean said. “I haven’t seen it.”
77-73 So IU stopped trying to defend one-on-one. It started sending another player at Haas as soon as he caught the ball. Haas couldn’t score after that, and Purdue’s guards didn’t hit outside jump shots consistently. Offensively, IU tried spending as much time as possible in the paint despite Purdue’s size advantage. Once the ball was in the paint, whether it was by a guard driving or a player posting up, scoring opportunities opened up. “We did a great job, I think, sharing the ball,” Ferrell said. “We didn’t force anything I feel like. We took the open shots, got it inside and our big guys were phenomenal down there trying to work against those big guys.” In a way, IU switched Purdue’s game plan. The Boilermaker guards passed the ball into the post to their big men. The Hoosier guards got into the paint before passing it to the perimeter. IU’s forwards combined to shoot 7-of-14 from behind the arc. “I think Max did an unbelievable job in the second half screening and popping basically,” Ferrell said. “They couldn’t guard all of us at once so they had to give something up, and I felt like Max did a great job getting his feet set, getting his hands set and knocking down those open jumpers.” Bielfeldt and Bryant spent the majority of the second half trying to contain Hammons. He still scored, but the baskets were infrequent. He also was only able to grab one rebound. Purdue came in as the best offensive rebounding team in the Big Ten and only had four Saturday. “We just did our best out there guarding their big men,” Bryant said. “Hammond and Haas are two big guys who are very talented down there in the post. I just tried to do everything I could, and so did Max.”
gpalmier@indiana.edu | @grace_palmieri
Williams can dunk. That, everyone knows. TButroy Saturday night, he showed how he can be more than that. The junior forward’s 19-point performance wasn’t the only thing that brought the Assembly Hall crowd to its feet. Williams played maybe his best defensive game of the year in the Hoosiers’ 77-73 win over No. 17 Purdue. What showed up on the stat sheet were his four steals. What didn’t is the handful of times he was on the floor diving for the loose ball. In one instance in the first half, Williams was guarding the ball at the top of the key, knocked the ball loose and then dove on it, wrapping his arms around the Purdue player’s leg. It resulted in a jump ball and possession to IU. Early in the second half, he was defending on the wing. Purdue’s guard lost control and Williams was the first sprawled across the court, grabbing the ball while trying to stay in bounds. Again, IU earned the possession. “Troy was incredibly committed on the defensive end this week, and it’s amazing what happens to your offense,” IU Coach Tom Crean said. “Troy played a phenomenal game.” Less than a week ago, Williams scored zero points against Michigan State. He’s led IU in scoring in both games since. Against Nebraska on Wednesday, Williams tallied 18 points on 8-of-9 shooting. That effort carried over against the Boilers. He said before Wednesday’s game he met with Crean and made a change in his mindset, which has made the difference in his success. “Just staying on the attacking
NO. 22 IU 77, NO. 17 PURDUE 73 Points Williams 19 Rebounds Bielfeldt 6 Assists Ferrell, 4
mindset really,” Williams said. “Reading what’s there, not trying to force anything, letting the game come to me.” They talked about Williams being more aggressive and then put him in situations on the court where he can be. “The worst thing that could happen when somebody’s struggling is you keep reminding them of it,” Crean said. “The last thing we want to do is dwell on what’s not working. We want to spend enough time on what is and try to refine it.” Williams played his best minutes in the first half Saturday, scoring 14 points before the break. It seemed every time the IU offense became stagnant, he made it go again. The Hoosiers had gone almost five minutes without a field goal to end the first half before Williams scored a breakaway layup to put his team up by nine. And when the Boilers, who trailed by as many as 19, started a run of their own in the second half, Williams stepped back and knocked down a long jumper to end it. “Troy playing like that — he’s basically unstoppable,” senior guard Yogi Ferrell said. “He gets lost in the game. When he’s doing that, playing at such a high level, we feed off that energy.” Williams helped give the Hoosiers sole possession of first place in the Big Ten standings. He also gave the crowd plenty to cheer for in what is IU’s biggest rivalry game. So as Williams walked off the court, he put his arm around Ferrell’s shoulder and they both pointed up at the fans.
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HEAR ME OUT
WRESTLING
Hoosiers were able to overcome Purdue’s size No team is going to beat Purdue with size, right? The Boilermakers trot out two high-quality 7-footers for much of the game, and former McDonald’s All-American power forward Caleb Swanigan is a double-double machine. Yet IU sort of did beat Purdue with size Saturday night in Assembly Hall. It did it by trying to take away Purdue’s size. While the near collapse at the end may alter the way this game is remembered, the performances of the Hoosier big men in the second half were what earned the W. IU often had freshman center Thomas Bryant along the perimeter to begin the game. Bryant can shoot the ball, sure, but that is by no means his strength. An IU fan tweeted at me that this was “beyond dumb.” I think IU Coach Tom Crean won this round. IU may not be as big and strong down low as Purdue, but it has size that is versatile. It can shoot and drive. So IU stuck with its bigger players around the perimeter at times and used it to space out Purdue’s defense. Purdue had two options: chase the shooters and open up the paint, or allow Bryant, senior forward Max Bielfeldt and others to make 3-pointers all night. “They couldn’t guard all of us at once, so they had to give something up,” senior guard Yogi Ferrell said. This didn’t mean the goal was to chuck up 3-pointers. IU has had most of its success this season when it is driving to the basket. When it drives well, it either scores in the paint or opens up an open shot from deep. Crean spoke about how the team thrived when the ball went through the paint at some point Saturday and struggled when it didn’t. In the first half, the effects of the big men moving around may not have been
BRODY MILLER is a junior in journalism.
as evident. It just opened things up. In the second half, they took over. Bryant scored the first seven points after the break. Several times, he would get the ball up top and drive to the rim with the ball control of a guard. One time, he sunk a 3-pointer. Then freshman forward OG Anunoby started chipping in with a 3-pointer and some points down low. Then Bielfeldt hit two 3-pointers and finished the half with 10 points. Twentytwo of IU’s first 24 second half points came from players 6-foot-8 or taller. This is all leaving out the decision-making of the team as well. IU, normally worst in the Big Ten in turnover percentage, turned the ball over only four times Saturday. It’s also leaving out how IU held one of the best offensive-rebounding teams in the conference to only four offensive rebounds. The Purdue big men are also great at causing havoc down low and either scoring in the paint or forcing opponents into foul trouble. IU had its foul scares, but it double-teamed well enough that Crean thought it took pressure off Bryant and company. IU wasn’t perfect Saturday night. It nearly gave away a 19-point lead in the final minutes. But it beat a team that used to be a matchup nightmare for IU. It proved against Iowa it can beat an up-tempo offense, and it proved Saturday it can beat an oldschool post team. Then again, it did all of this at home. Now it’s time to prove the Hoosiers can win big games on the road. brodmill@indiana.edu
LEVI REECE | IDS
Duane Goldman coaches his son, senior Garrett Goldman, during a playoff meet against Appalacian State on Sunday at the IU Gymnasium. IU lost to Appalachian State with a final score of 21-13.
IU falls to Appalachian State By Ryan Schuld rschuld@indiana.edu | @rschuld
In the last dual match before the Big Ten Championships, IU fell to Southern Conference Champions Appalachian State 21-13 in a match that came down to the last matchup. This match was a part of the National Wrestling Coaches Association Dual Series, a series in which the Hoosiers participated for the first time in the program’s history. “They wrestled tough, and we wrestled tough,” freshman Elijah Oliver said. “They did everything right. There are some areas we definitely need to improve on. Even if we would have beaten them, we still have to improve.” Despite the loss, four Hoosiers got their hands raised, coming away indi-
vidually victorious in the match. In the second match of the day, freshman Bryce Martin defeated Forrest Przybysz 5-4. This was the second time the two had met this season, and Martin drew even with the win. Martin did so by securing a takedown in the final seconds of the match. His takedown prevented giving up an escape point by holding Przybysz down for the remainder of the match. In the next match, No. 11 junior Nate Jackson defeated Nick Kee by major decision 12-4. Jackson’s win makes him 27-5 on the season, including a three match win streak heading into the Big Ten and NCAA Championships. In the last home match
of his career, senior Matt Irick won a close bout by a score of 7-5. Rounding out the wins for the Hoosiers was No. 19 Oliver. He found himself down most of the match and needed two takedowns in the final 45 seconds to take home the win. With 30 seconds remaining, Oliver got the first of two takedowns. Time was quickly dwindling, and with five seconds remaining, Oliver put Vito Pasone on his back, securing the takedown and the last-second victory to get his 27th victory of the season. Despite the win, Oliver said he knew he didn’t have a particularly good match that day. “It was kind of a bad day for me, but I knew all along I was going to find a way to
pull out the win,” he said. Oliver and the rest of the Hoosiers now have almost two weeks to prepare for the Big Ten Championships in Iowa. Oliver’s teammate Jackson has been a big help throughout the grind of a Big Ten season. “He’s been like a mentor,” Oliver said. “He’s been there before, he knows what it takes. He’s been to the big stage, he knows what he has to do and he’s been talking to me every day about it.” With less than one month remaining in the wrestling season, Oliver said he has the mindset of being great. “From here on out, I plan on going undefeated and continuously winning,” he said. “I plan on being aggressive and dominating the matches.”
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ARTS
EDITORS: JACK EVANS & BROOKE MCAFEE | ARTS@IDSNEWS.COM
Lil Wayne to perform at Assembly Hall visited on his past tours, according to the IU Auditorium website. The show will also feature special guest Rae Sremmurd., which is a trap and hip-hop duo. Bursar billing is now available for tickets. Prices for student tickets begin at $28.
Grammy Award-winning hip-hop musician Lil Wayne will perform at 7 p.m. March 3 at Assembly Hall. The performance is part of “The Dedication Tour.” The tour is a “personal thank you from Lil Wayne” for his fans in cities he has rarely
MCPL features Maurice Sendak exhibition By Maia Rabenold mrabenol@indiana.edu | @maialyra
Maurice Sendak watched Disney’s “Fantasia” when he was 12 years old. That was the moment when he decided he wanted to draw for the rest of his life, he said. Mickey Mouse figures were the first things Sendak drew. In 10th grade, his assignment to draw scenes for Macbeth was done so well that his teacher let him skip the next assignment if she could keep the drawings. Sendak went on to write and illustrate “Where the Wild Things Are” and to help adapt the story to the stage and screen. Fifty of Sendak’s original illustrations are on display until March 26 at the Monroe County Public Library. “It’s an internationally touring exhibit of all privately owned works,” Library Communications and Marketing Manager Mark Hoerger said. “An old friend of Maurice Sendak knew all the collectors and people who had bought pieces over the years, and he organized the whole thing.” The exhibit came from Toronto and is going to Grand Rapids, Michigan, next. It started 50 years after the publication of “Where the Wild
Things Are.” Along with the 50 works, there are 50 quotes, displayed on a banner outside the gallery, from people who either knew Sendak or were inspired by him in their own artistic endeavors. Sendak’s friends Jim Henson, who produced “Sesame Street,” and Dr. Seuss are among the quoted people, as well as admirers Stephen Colbert, Lemony Snicket and Barack Obama. “Whether child or adult, we were together invited to explore his world of magic,” magician David Copperfield said in one of the quotes. “Maurice opened our eyes and allowed all of us to dream, discover and imagine.” Limited-edition lithographs of the original watercolors for “Where the Wild Things Are” join original ballpoint pen sketches of characters for the 2009 screen adaptation, as well as costume concepts for an opera adaptation and original animation cells. One sketch of the costume for Max, the main character in “Where the Wild Things Are,” has Sendak’s scribbled notes on the side that say it should be made of “soft terrycloth” with exactly three buttons and a “fox-like tail.”
NOBLE GUYON | IDS
Visitors look through the 50 pieces of art displayed in the Maurice Sendak exhibition Saturday at the Monroe County Public Library. Sendak was well known for his drawings of “Where the Wild Things Are.”
Before the exhibit, art teachers in second-, thirdand fourth-grade classes of Monroe County Community School Corporation had students draw their own wild things after they analyzed the textures and artistic images in “Where the Wild Things Are,” Hoerger said.
These paper cutouts of colorful monsters, with varying numbers of eyes, limbs, tails and horns, fill the hallway leading up to the exhibit. “We’ve worked with the local school systems,” Hoerger said. “Every second-grader in MCCSC and RBB (RichlandBean Blossom), basically all
Alumna engineered ‘1989’ album By Jack Evans jackevan@indiana.edu | @JackHEvans
When studio engineer Laura Sisk was a student at IU, she said she took as much work as she could find — working as a teaching assistant for studio classes, doing live sound for the African American Arts Institute and working as a production assistant for music school performances. On Feb. 15, she won a Grammy Award for album of the year for her engineering on Taylor Swift’s “1989.” Sisk, working alongside producer Jack Antonoff, recorded three of the tracks on “1989.” Sisk said her time at IU prepared her for life in the studio, and since graduating in 2010, she’s done engineering work on albums by big names in the worlds of pop
music and indie rock. With “1989,” as with all projects she works on, Sisk said she was excited about facing new challenges and acquiring new skills. “Of course, it’s always thrilling to work with someone whose previous work you already love, but I have to say, every production is always different, and there is always something to learn,” she said in an email interview. Sisk’s discography is split between work with pop stars, including recent albums from Carly Rae Jepsen, Florence and the Machine and Sia, and with indie rock mainstays like Wavves, Sigur Rós and Tune-Yards. The projects she works on each have their own workflows and details, but that’s not necessarily due
to the popularity of the artists or the labels they’re on, she said. “Not only is every artist different, but every single day brings new challenges that you have to be ready to tackle, and that’s what keeps the studio a fun and exciting place to work,” she said. Several of the projects on which Sisk has worked have been critically well-received, and though she said it’s satisfying to see positive receptions, she tries to move forward once the work is done. She also said she’s happy to be able to work her way up in a music industry that’s male-dominated, especially in its technical aspects. “A lot of artists tell me I’m the first female engineer they’ve worked with or even ever seen and that they love having a different energy in
the studio,” she said. “There isn’t an inequality in the gender of music fans, but there is an inequality in the gender of those who make it, and I’m excited to be a part of the growing community of women in the industry.” Sisk now lives in Los Angeles, which she said is an ideal location for a career in music. She’s working with Antonoff on the next record for his Bleachers project, as well as on several other projects he’s involved in as a writer or producer. “Being freelance in Los Angeles means always working with new people on an unimaginably wide variety of music,” she said. “I feel so fortunate to be working in this industry alongside the incredible musicians and producers who keep pushing it forward.”
IU Auditorium to present ‘42nd Street’ production From IDS reports
The IU Auditorium will present the musical “42nd Street” at 8 p.m. on March 1 and 2. The production is the “quintessential backstage musical comedy classic,” according to the Auditorium website. “42nd Street” is based on a novel by Bradford Ropes and a 1933 movie by Busby Berkeley. It is the story
of Peggy Sawyer, a young dancer who comes to New York to audition for a Broadway musical and becomes the star after the lead breaks her ankle. The show is about experiencing highs and lows in a career and growing as both a performer and a young woman, according to the Broadway Musical Home website. The show won an Olivier Award for Best Musical in
1984 and a Tony Award for Best Revival in 2001. It features a book by Michael Stewart and Mark Bramble, music by Harry Warren and lyrics by Al Dubin. The new production is directed by Bramble and choreographed by Randy Skinner. “42nd Street” is the “song and dance fable of Broadway with an American Dream story that includes some of the greatest songs
ever written,” according to the Auditorium website. It includes songs such as “We’re in the Money,” “Lullaby of Broadway,” “Shuffle Off to Buffalo,” “Dames,” “I Only Have Eyes for You” and “42nd Street.” Tickets are available for purchase now, with prices ranging from $21 to $44 for students and $39 to $65 for adults.
the second-graders in public schools in the county, are coming for private tours of the exhibit and a special storytelling.” One displayed quote is Sendak’s description of a piece of fan mail. A boy sent him a card, so Sendak drew the boy back a picture. His
mother replied, saying the boy loved the drawing so much he ate it. “That to me was one of the highest compliments I’ve ever received,” Sendak said. “He didn’t care that it was an original Maurice Sendak drawing or anything. He saw it, he loved it, he ate it.”
Multimedia exhibition at Breezeway Gallery features text messages From IDS reports
An exhibition of 941 pages of printed text-message correspondence is on display at the Breezeway Gallery. The exhibition, titled “Mutual Projection,” is the work of multimedia artist Molly Soda and was curated by fine arts alumna Jenna Beasley, according to a press release. It’s on display through March 4. The conversation featured in “Mutual Projection” took place over the course of a year between Soda and a long-distance acquaintance. The resulting correspondence covers a 13-foot wall from floor to ceiling. Soda, who grew up in Bloomington and is now based in Detroit, will conclude the exhibition at 4 p.m. March 4 with a talk in Global and International Studies 1118. The talk will be followed
by a closing reception at the Breezeway Gallery, located between the IU Art Museum and the Henry Hope Radford School of Fine Arts. Soda will also be host to a DJ night at the Bishop that evening. In addition to text message-based art, Soda has worked with video, photo and GIF art. Her work has been displayed internationally. Soda was featured in a 2013 Rolling Stone article called “One of 50 Things Millennials Know That GenXers Don’t,” and she was ranked 24th on Complex magazine’s Most Important Artists of the Year list. She rose to prominence by publishing art via web media platforms like Tumblr and YouTube. She has also worked as a backup dancer for electropop musician Grimes. Jack Evans
Brooke McAfee
The Open Door Burskirk Chumley Theater 114 E. Kirkwood Ave. 812-332-0223 opendoorfumc.org Facebook • fumcbopendoor
Sunday: 11:15 a.m. @ the Buskirk Chumley Theater Wednesday: 7:30 p.m. @ Bloomington Sandwich Co (118 E. Kirkwood) for Jubilee College Ministry The Open Door is an alternative worship experience of the First United Methodist Church, and is located in the iconic Buskirk-Chumley Theater. The Open Door is about hospitality, worship, and service. We are truly open to all. We are passionate about Christ centered worship. We love to serve the Bloomington community.
Mark Fenstermacher, Lead Pastor Stacee Fischer Gehring, Associate Pastor Travis Jeffords, Worship Leader Sarah Sparks-Franklin, College Ministry
COURTESY PHOTO
HHART SHOWCASE Pierce Ross, right, waits in line at the HHart Showcase to participate in a performance piece by Devin Carrier Friday at Hutton Honors College. Carrier observed participants for 30 seconds and wrote down a single word on paper, which he handed to the participant.
Check
the IDS every Friday for your directory of local religious organizations, or go online anytime at idsnews.com/religious.
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1-9 Bedrooms We’ve got it all... Houses, Apartments, Condos, Townhomes
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Computer/Office work for local business. Flexible, 8-16 hours per week. Call 812-345-1005 during business hours. Dental Assistant. Parttime. No experience req. Will train. 812.332.2000 Living Well Home Care is hiring Personal Care Attendants in the Bloomington Area. Benefits include: paid time off, health insurance, and paid training. Call 812-849-6000 to set up an interview. Applications are available at: livingwellhomecare.org P/T Leasing Agent needed for afternoons & Sat. Base pay + leasing bonus. Email or stop by for application.
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1 BR apt., avail. Fall. 2 blks. from Campus. Off-street prkg. Pref. students. 812-325-0848 1 BR,1 BA. Close to Campus. 519 N. Lincoln. $595/mo. On site laund., covered prkg. Avail. now through Aug. 339-2700. 2-3 BR @ Grant & 9th, W/D, D/W & water incl., 812-333-9579.
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Sublet Condos/Twnhs.
Great quality microwave. Stainless steel. Haier brand. Everything works. $70. lejoy@iupui.edu
rentbloomington.net
Mini Fridge. $40. 413-331-9247 shixgu@indiana.edu
*** For 2015-2016 *** 1 blk. North of Campus. 4 BR, A/C, D/W, W/D, micro. $465/mo. each.
3 BR, 2 BA. A/C, W/D, D/W. 801 W. 11th St. for Aug., ‘16. $975/mo. No pets. Off street prkg., 317-490-3101 goodrents.homestead.com
4-5 BR, 2 BA @ 310 E. Smith Ave. Avail. Aug. $2000/mo. 812-327-3238 5 BR in great condition. Avail. Aug., 2016. $1,850/mo. + util. Call Deb @ 812-340-0133.
Electronics (USED) Nikon D3200 with 18-55mm lens. $260. rinaba@iu.edu 2015 MacBook Air, 13-inch, $899 neg. deware@iu.edu 21” flatscreen TV w/out remote. $150. dchelton@iu.edu
Full size mattress. $70, neg. May be able to deliver. li529@indiana.edu
Wooden Magazine Rack. 16”W x 17”H x 13”D $15. stadano@indiana.edu
5.1 AV Dolby Surround Speaker System, $3,000. For details please email: wegacker26@gmail.com
Avail. Aug., 2016. 5 BR/5.5 BA. Newly remodeled. Close to Campus. No pets please. 812-333-4748. hpiu.com
Beats by Dr. Dre Studio Headphones. $130. alexfigu@iun.edu Black Bose ound link color. $150 dchelton@iu.edu DVD/CD player. 5 disc changer. Cables inclu. $15. stadano@indiana.edu EPSON color printer & scanner. Barely used. Color ink cartridge incl. $100. stadano@indiana.edu IPhone 6S Plus, gold. Unlocked network. Brand new (sealed). $900. ceorlows@indiana.edu
Pets Selling pink dog cage. Great quality. $25. 812-650-2192. yc45@indiana.edu
Textbooks Book Hershey. Price neg. xinysong@indiana.edu
Plastic drawers for sale. $5-8. 812-650-2192, yc45@indiana.edu
Calculus MATH-M 211/212/213 textbook for $90. kim968@indiana.edu
Wooden 5-drawer dresser. Great condition. $150. 812-340-9129, glantz@indiana.edu
ECON-E201 Microeconomics for Prof. Paul Graf. Price neg. xinysong@indiana.ed
Instruments
Full battery clicker. Only used for one class. $25. 812-327-9005 weye@indiana.edu
15-inch Viola. $2,000.
maeveewhelan@gmail.com
2003 Fender American Standard Telecaster. Excellent cond. $1000, neg. bdemares@indiana.edu
Mathematical Modeling with Computer Simulation. Price neg. xinysong@indiana.edu
Casio keyboard LK-55, $150. Keyboard stand, $10. hwangw@indiana.edu
Praxis PLT Textbook, Grades K-6. Incl. 2 full length exams & guides. $20. 812-834-5144
Lowrey Organ - Model 25, Orchestra type. Mint cond. $900, obo. Trades accepted. 812-988-4731
Selling Book: K201. Price neg. xinysong@indiana.edu
Misc. for Sale
2 black lights, $25 each or $40 for both. dchelton@iu.edu
Sets & Probability M018 textbook. $15. allenws@iu.edu
4 Knife set with stand. 3” ~ 5” each. $10. stadano@indiana.edu
The Adventure of an IT Leader. Neg. xinysong@indiana.edu
8” bedrisers with USB and 3 prong outlets. $40. dchelton@iu.edu
The Philosopher’s Way: Thinking Critically about Profound Ideas. Price neg. xinysong@indiana.edu
Apple AirPort Express Router (Like New) $80, neg. jfsohn@indiana.edu
Hair Dryer. 1875 Watts. 2 heat/speed settings. $15 stadano@indiana.edu Humidifier Price neg. xinysong@indiana.edu
Clothing 08-09 Liverpool Gerrard Jersey (long sleeve) Size 95 (M), $150. yk59@indiana.edu
Cheap colorful binders. $2 each / $5 for all 3. xinysong@indiana.edu
5 BR, 2 BA. W/D, near IU. $370 each. www.iu4rent.com
Close to IU. 1 house for rent. 1) 5 BR, 3 BA, 902 E. 14th St. $2400/mo., 3 blks. to Geology & SPEA, off-street prkg. A/C, free W/D, 12 mo. leases, Aug. ‘16-’17. No pets. Call: 333-5333.
Women’s size 7, tall, patchwork UGGs. $55, obo. bscanlon@indiana.edu
Metal Book Shelf. 2 shelves. 35”W x 20”H x 13”D. $30 stadano@indiana.edu
Ca. 1930s Carl Sorensen Bronze Bowl. Worth $400. Must sell - make offer. mnshifle@indiana.edu
5 BR, 2 BA house 2 blks. from Campus. $2900/mo. No pets. 812.339.8300 burnhamrentals.com
Avail. Aug., 2016. 203 S Clark. 3 BR, 2 BA. ALL UTILITES INCL. www.iurent.com 812-360-2628
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415
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Small mini-fridge for sale. $30. ohollowa@indiana.edu Toaster Oven. Fits a 9” pizza. 11”D x 14”W x 9”H $10. stadano@indiana.edu
Furniture
Desk & Chair. 23”D x 42”W x 29”H. $30 stadano@indiana.edu
Appliances 12-cup coffee maker, (red). Price neg. xinysong@indiana.edu
reidhery1@aol.com
Cherry wood. Queen, bed frame. $250. 812-340-9129, glantz@indiana.edu
MERCHANDISE
!!!! Need a place to Rent?
2, 3, & 5 BR houses avail. for Aug., 2016. All with A/C, W/D, D/W & close to Campus. Call 812-327-3238 or 812-332-5971.
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Vintage 1960’s/1970’s records. Great condition. Plays like new. $15/each!
Summer: 2 BR, 2 BA apt. avail. Scholar’s Quad. $527.50/per. W/D, free prkg. hsessler@indiana.edu
Houses
For 2015- 2016 **1 blk. S. of Campus*** 4 BR apts. Utils. pd. except elec. $465/mo. each.
Apt. Unfurnished
TI-84 plus, silver edition, calculator for sale. Used one semester only. $50. 812-834-5144
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Seeking F grad student, quiet, tidy. 2 BR/2 BA. $353 ea/mo + utils. Avail Aug. peterelm@umail.iu.edu
SUBLET - 3 BR condo, 1.5 bath, NS, no pets, quiet, lease, avail. JanJuly. $925. 812-361-4286
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2612 E. 10th St. HIRING: FRONT COUNTER POSITION. Starting pay: $9.00! Apply at store location or online at: wingsxtremeu.com
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Sony Xperia Z3 D6616 - 32GB (T-Mobile). $260 dgk@iu.edu
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TOMS navy blue stand up backpack. $30. dchelton@iu.edu
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Sublet Apt. Unfurn.
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General Employment
Tatung 6 cup rice cooker. $30. 812-650-2192 yc45@indiana.edu
445
Outstanding locations near campus at great prices
Samsung 40 inch 1080p smart LED TV. $300. lee921@indiana.edu
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HOUSING
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original package. $1,000. ebourlai@indiana.edu
465
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Grant Properties
Tao Tao 49cc ccooter with an 80cc Big Bore engine. $560, obo. nsapharas@hotmail.com
Boston Celtics Rondo Jersey (MEDIUM). $50 yk59@indiana.edu Brand new, small, pink fur for women, $25. haiyzhan@indiana.edu
Miscellaneous craft supplies. $20, obo. lbraeker@indiana.edu
Christmas Jersey Paul George (small), $70. yk59@indiana.ed
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TRANSPORTATION 505
Graduating or NOT? Background in dance? (Any form of dance). Join the Fred Astaire Dance Studio team. We will train you in all aspects of ballroom dance. Why Fred Astaire? Great environment sharing passion for what we love, guaranteed salary, great training, great career opportunity, travel, compete. Need we say more? 317-846-3237 Ask for Dan.
MINT COND. iMac, 27” mid-2010 w/all acc. in
Size 7 Keds purple sneakers for Women, Taylor Swift edition, $20. haiyzhan@indiana.edu
2002 Nissan Maxima (Dark Grey). $2950. 812-606-3907 ribowers@indiana.edu
Size 7 Via Spiga sneakers for women-$35. haiyzhan@indiana.edu
2005 Honda Pilot SUV 4WD - Reliable! $5750. 812-325-1166 lkarcher@indiana.edu
Size 7 Zara Black Oxford Women shoes, $30. haiyzhan@indiana.edu Size 7, Delia’s over-knee boots for women, $10. haiyzhan@indiana.edu Size 7, Nine West, blue flats, $50. haiyzhan@indiana.edu Soft purple leather cross-body bag. $5. haiyzhan@indiana.edu
Automobiles 1999 Ford Mustang. Clean, sharp, new tires, new rotors. $3,250, obo. 812-876-9091
Shampoo mini bottle for travel. 0.75 oz. $0.50. stadano@indiana.edu
2006 VW Jetta TDI Diesel. 160,200 miles. $6950. snbabcoc@indiana.edu 515
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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | M O N D AY, F E B . 2 2 , 2 0 1 6 | I D S N E W S . C O M
SWIM AND DIVE
IU finishes second at Big Ten Championships Grace Vertigans. In addition, sophomore Delaney Barnard and freshman Miranda Tucker were awarded second team All-Big Ten. King was also named Big Ten Freshman of the Year. Friday’s event finals included a gold medal time of 3:30.17 from the 400 medley relay team of Chamberlain, King, Dalesandro and Goss. Their performance set a new school record, Big Ten meet and conference record and pool record in Ann Arbor, Michigan, at Canham Natatorium. Relays are one aspect of the meet that always get the team’s energy flowing, King said. They are worth double the amount of points, so winning the relays is a big key. “The relays are so much fun to be a part of,” Dalesandro said. “It really gets the morale up. It’s a fun and exciting way to start off the meets like that. Winning those are huge.” Dalesandro also brought home a silver medal in the 100 butterfly. Lips placed third in the 200 freestyle finals, followed by Goss in fifth. The freshman duo of Tucker and King went on to set more records for the Hoosiers in the 100 breaststroke. In preliminary heats, Tucker set a school record of 59.37, then King topped her with a time of 58.28. In the 100 breaststroke finals, King and Tucker finished first and second, bringing home gold and silver medals. King’s new record time of 57.35 marks the is also
By Hailey Hernandez hmhernan@indiana.edu
Although it failed in its goal of winning the Big Ten Championships, the performance put on by the IU women’s team was no disappointment. After finishing Friday and Saturday’s events, the Hoosiers managed a second place finish at the Big Ten Championships. IU scored 1207.5 points and won a total of 16 medals but lost to Michigan. “We were the hardestfighting team out there,” IU Coach Ray Looze said. “Whether we had the numbers or not, we were going to go for it. We put pressure on and we hoped they would crack. Our team represented us well, though. We had that championship mentality.” This is the eighth consecutive year the women’s team has placed either first or second at Big Tens. “A lot of us wanted to win,” junior Gia Dalesandro said. “We swam the best we could, and it really was a fight the whole way. We had great sportsmanship, and everyone had the mindset that it’s not over until it’s over.” In addition to personal bests and setting records, multiple Hoosiers were also named to All-Big Ten teams. First team All-Big Ten members include sophomore Dalesandro, sophomore Marie Chamberlain, sophomore Kennedy Goss, freshman Lilly King, senior Haley Lips and sophomore
Horoscope Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is a 6 — A fork in the road appears. Begin a new phase in partnership with this Full Moon. It could get spicy. Compromise and work together for shared commitments. Be flexible and cooperate. You can work it out. Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 7 — Embrace your creative inspiration at work under the Full Moon in Virgo. Apply artistry to your efforts. Hold off on making decisions. One phase ends as another begins in service, health and
IDS FILE PHOTO
Sophomore Holly Spears swims the 200 yard Freestyle on Dec. 4, 2015, at the Hoosierland Invitational.
the fastest ever in the Big Ten. After three days of competing, the team’s momentum never slowed down, King said. They kept focus on their goals to overcome mental exhaustion. “Usually after a couple of days people are ready to finish up and go home,” King said. “This was not one of those meets. Everyone was in it until the very end. We had a weak day to start off so our stronger events at the end re-
To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. labors. Complete old projects. Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 5 — Take time over the next two days for fun with family and friends. One game folds as another begins under this Full Moon. Reach a turning point in a romance, passion or creative endeavor. Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Today is a 5 — A turning point at home draws you in with this Full Moon. Domestic changes require adaptation. A new phase in family life
dawns. Balance new work with old responsibilities. Renovate, remodel and tend your garden. Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Today is a 6 — Begin a new phase in communications, intellectual discovery, creative expression and travel with this Full Moon. Shift your research in a new direction. Start a new chapter. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is an 8 — Profitable new opportunities bloom under the Full Virgo Moon. A turning point arises in
WILEY
NON SEQUITUR
ally kept us in it.” The final day of competition finished with Saturday’s event finals in which Goss finished with a silver medal in the 200 backstroke and Dalesandro won gold in the 200 butterfly. King and Tucker were at it again in the 200 breaststroke, where King won gold with a new school record of 2:05.58, Tucker with the silver medal and a personal best of her own.
Even with her success at Big Tens, King wasn’t fully rested. “My ultimate goals are set for NCAA finals and Olympic Trials,” she said. “We’ve got a lot more in us. With the second place finish, we’re able to look forward now and have the mentality to swim to win rather than swim not to lose. We’ll be right back into things to set us up to finish strong.”
As the Hoosiers have less than four weeks to prepare for NCAA finals, they are looking to continue moving forward. In his 25 years of coaching, Looze has yet to have a team compete perfectly in a meet. “Some people kind of look at us as the underdogs,” Dalesandro said. “We take that as a grain of salt, but I think we can accomplish some really cool things. I’m excited to see what we still have left to give.”
your income and finances. A busy phase has you raking in the dough, and it could also require extra expenses. Keep track.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is a 7 — A new social phase sparks under this Full Moon. Doors close and open with friendships. Share appreciations. Talk about what you want for each other. Discuss possibilities.
with new concepts. To really learn, visit the source. Plan your itinerary before flying off.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a 7 — This Full Moon in your sign illuminates a new personal direction. Push your own boundaries and limitations. It could get exciting! Contemplate possible changes. As you gain strength, you also gain options. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is a 7 — This Full Moon shines on a spiritual fork in the road. Complete old projects, and begin a new phase. Love’s a requirement, not an option. Enjoy peaceful contemplation. Make plans.
Crossword
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is a 6 — Reach a Full Moon turning point in your career. Shift focus toward your current passions. Expect a test. Begin a new professional phase. Hold off on launching a new endeavor. Investigate all possibilities. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is a 6 — The Full Moon reveals a new educational direction. Begin a new phase in an exploration. Wax philosophical as you experiment
su do ku
ACROSS How to play: Fill in the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 grid contains the digits 1 through 9, without repeating a number in any one row, column or 3x3 grid.
© Puzzles by Pappocom
BEST IN SHOW
1 Nickel or dime 5 Zenith 9 Toboggan, e.g. 13 Fairy tale villain 14 Visitor from space 15 Soft drink nut 16 “You almost had it” 19 2016 Hall of Fame inductee __ Griffey Jr. 20 Weighty books 21 Curved fastener 22 Flabbergast 23 UPC-like product ID 24 “Mork & Mindy” or “Mike & Molly” 32 Beef cut 33 Reason for a cold sweat 34 GI chow 35 Writing fluids 36 Parking __ 38 Gaucho’s weapon 39 Dental suffix with Water 40 Slim racetrack margin 41 Slightly open 42 Event where many dress as Stormtroopers or Klingons 47 Question 48 Grandson of Eve
© 2015 By Nancy Black Distributed by Tribune Media Services, INC. All Rights Reserved
L.A. Times Daily Crossword
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
Difficulty Rating:
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is a 5 — Consider the emotions involved before taking action. A Full Moon turning point develops in shared finances. Balance old responsibilities with new ones. The stakes could seem high. Work out the next phase together.
49 Malice 52 Sans serif font 54 Hawaiian tuna 57 What polar opposites have 60 Tiny pasta used in soup 61 Washington’s __ Sound 62 “Agreed!” 63 Smile ear to ear 64 Enjoy a novel 65 After 1-Across, pregame football ritual, and what’s literally found in this puzzle’s circles
DOWN
18 “My Fair Lady” director George 22 The “Star Wars” planet Tatooine orbits two of them 23 Lasting mark 24 Mishaps 25 Greek column style 26 Kipling mongoose Rikki__-Tavi 27 Many times 28 Bridal bio word 29 Texting icon 30 1964 Tony Randall title role 31 Thirst (for) 36 Lampoon 37 Spanish “that” 38 Array on a dugout rack 40 Japanese- American 43 Get to the bottom of 44 Marked with streaks, as cheese 45 Put into law 46 __ contendere: court plea 49 Stuffed shirt 50 Peruse, with “over” 51 Chichén __: Mayan ruins 52 Fever and chills 53 Capital of Latvia 54 Bullets and such 55 Soil-shaping tools 56 Wayside lodgings 58 “Talk of the Nation” airer 59 Yoga class need
Look for the crossword daily in the comics section of the Indiana Daily Student. Find the solution for the daily crossword here.
1 Tilt to the side, as one’s head 2 Look at wolfishly Answer to previous puzzle 3 Small laundry room appliance 4 Nintendo’s Super __ 5 Homecoming attendees 6 Refer to in a footnote 7 Clothing store department 8 Music producer Brian 9 Slopes fanatic 10 Letterhead emblem 11 Israeli airline 12 Missile in a pub game 14 Regarding 17 Singer James
PHIL JULIANO BREWSTER ROCKIT: SPACE GUY!
TIM RICKARD
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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | M O N D AY, F E B . 2 2 , 2 0 1 6 | I D S N E W S . C O M
BASEBALL
SOFTBALL
Hoosiers drop first series to Blue Raiders By Taylor Lehman trlehman@indiana.edu | @trlehmanIDS
As IU baseball traveled to Murfreesboro, Tennessee, to begin its season Feb. 19 against Middle Tennessee State, it looked like the series would be a cakewalk. Junior outfielder Craig Dedelow knocked a single into the outfield, scoring two base runners, and sophomore outfielder Logan Sowers crushed a two-run home run in his first at-bat of the season. Senior pitcher Kyle Hart pitched five innings of scoreless ball, recorded seven strikeouts and earned his first win. IU went on to win 14-4. Day two was a different story. The Hoosiers dropped both games of a double-header Saturday to the Blue Raiders, 3-2 and 5-4. They lost the series two games to one. “We played very well Friday, and did really good things all weekend,” IU Coach Chris Lemonis said. “We just have to learn how to drive runs home.” The bats looked to be strong to start the season, as the Hoosiers knocked 16 hits off the Blue Raiders on Friday night and chased MTSU ace Nate Hoffman after three innings and seven earned runs. Dedelow went 4-for-5 with three runs batted in and his first home run of the season, while Sowers went 3-for-4 with two runs batted in and a home run. As a team, IU recorded four extra-base hits with two doubles and home runs in game one but left 14 men on base. That would remain the story for the rest of the weekend. The Hoosiers left 11 men on base in the first loss to MTSU on Saturday and 11 more in the second loss. Even after getting off to early leads, the bats lost steam when runners reached scoring
Upcoming schedule Feb. 26-28 @ Cal St Fullerton March 3/5 vs. Seton Hall March 4 vs. Illinois State March 6 vs. Butler position, allowing the Raiders to stay in the game and force extra innings in both games. When the bases were loaded in the ninth inning of game two, Dedelow, one of the hottest batters on the team, couldn’t bring in a go-ahead score, as he flied out to the center fielder. “It’s a good thing because we’re getting guys on base, but when you can’t hit them in, it causes a lot of pressure,” Lemonis said. “We just need to get more timely hits.” Senior Evan Bell pitched 4.1 innings in the first game Saturday and allowed just two runs on four hits, while senior Caleb Baragar took a no-hit bid into the fifth inning of the second game of the double-header. Baragar lost his bid when he surrendered a double and then a triple to MTSU designated hitter Drew Huff, which brought in one of Baragar’s two allowed runs through 5.1 innings. The bullpen combined for 13 innings pitched, a 1.69 walks plus hits per innings pitched and surrendered a total of eight runs to the Blue Raiders’ hitters. Junior pitcher Thomas Belcher pitched in both games of the doubleheader. He allowed four hits in 1.2 innings and then surrendered the walk-off run in the second game. Junior pitcher Luke Kelzer received the loss in the first game of the double-header, while Belcher was credited with the loss in the second. “It’s just part of being early in the season, seeing who can handle the pressure and who can’t and things along those lines,” Lemonis said.
ADAM KIEFER | IDS
Junior Michelle Huber high-fives her coach, Michelle Gardner, after hitting a home run during IU’s first game against Purdue April 22, 2015, at Andy Mohr Field. IU won 6-3 after Mena Fulton hit the 3-run home run during the last inning of the game.
IU wins three of four in tournament Jake Thomer jjthomer@indiana.edu @jake_the_thomer
With three games already under its belt and 12 innings into another, IU was rewarded Saturday for its composure on offense and defense. Senior catcher Kelsey Dotson hit a walk-off home run to give the Hoosiers a 3-1 record at the Panther Invitational in Miami. Dotson’s three-run shot in the bottom of the 12th inning gave IU a 4-1 win against Holy Cross. Freshman pitcher Tara Trainer worked with sophomore Emily Kirk to shut out Delaware earlier in the day in of 5-0 win. In the marathon game against Holy Cross, freshman pitcher Josie Wood threw a complete game and struck out 10 batters to earn her third win of the young season. Wood allowed just three
earned runs and struck out 16 in 20.2 innings during the tournament at Florida International. “All three of the pitchers did a good job,” IU Coach Michelle Gardner said. “We just have to continue getting better. Wood was in a couple tough spots, and she threw her way out of it.” On the first day of the tournament, IU won its opening game against Delaware 5-2 behind the first of Wood’s two complete games in the tournament. The Hoosiers fell to host FIU in the nightcap when they blew a one-run lead in the 5th inning and lost 5-2. For the second weekend in a row, the IU offense failed to produce large run totals, scoring only 16 runs in four games. But they left 32 runners on base during the tournament. Senior outfielder Shannon Cawley was a consistent performer throughout
the weekend. She compiled three extra base hits and notched a hit in each game. The Illinois native has scored a hit in every game to begin the season, giving her a ninegame hitting streak to open the year. “I’ve had a completely different perspective this season than any other,” Cawley said. “I feel like I’ve been seeing the ball really well, and I’m feeling good out there.” The key to the Hoosiers’ success in the tournament was the dominance of the young pitching staff. Wood’s 12 pitched innings Saturday afternoon were the most thrown in a single game by an IU player since 2010. She now owns a 2.60 ERA this season, with her counterpart Trainer sporting a 2.96 ERA. Wood said it was tiring to throw so many innings Saturday, but she thought she did a good job of mix-
ing things up as the game continued. “It kind of goes both ways,” Wood said. “Obviously the longer I’m in the more they’ll face me. But as the game went on we were able to switch things up well enough.” IU now sits at 5-4 through two tournaments this season, an improvement over the two wins they secured their first nine games last year. The Hoosiers will travel to College Station, Texas, next weekend to take on three different schools from the Longhorn State. Gardner said she has been impressed with what the team has shown it can do thus far and remains optimistic of its potential. “They really battled in the extra-inning game, and I was really happy with that,” Gardner said. “There’s going to be some growing pains, but in a couple of weeks we’ll be there.”
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