Thursday, Sept. 17, 2015

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THURSDAY, SEPT. 17, 2015

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HORROR VILLIAN SHOWDOWN, page 7

INDIANA DAILY STUDENT | IDSNEWS.COM

Lawyer defends former student John Phillip Enochs faces two counts of rape By Carley Lanich clanich@indiana.edu | @carleylanich

ADAM KIEFER | IDS

Junior midfielder Tanner Thompson dribbles the ball during IU’s game against Bulter on Wednesday at the Butler Bowl in Indianapolis. The Hoosiers and the Bulldogs tied, 2-2.

SLIPPED AWAY Hoosiers, Bulldogs end game in 2-2 overtime draw

Changes in IU attack help create early two-goal lead

By Lionel Lim

By Michael Hughes

lalimwei@indiana.edu

michhugh@indiana.edu | @MichaelHughes94

INDIANAPOLIS — Butler University (3-0-2) kept No. 22 IU men’s soccer (3-2-1) to a 2-2 draw at the Butler Bowl Wednesday. The Hoosiers raced to a two-goal lead within 15 minutes of the first half, but Bulldog senior Vincent Mitchell scored twice in the second half to force two overtime periods. Both teams were unable to score during overtime, and the Hoosiers had to settle for a draw after racing to a two-goal lead in the first half. “Butler’s a good team and they’re coming in undefeated at home,” IU redshirt junior Derek Creviston said. “They had the home crowd and they came out the second half and put in the work and we got rattled a little bit and they ended up getting two on us and we can’t let that happen on our side.” The result, however, might have been different as IU senior Femi Hollinger-Janzen had a potential goal that was contentiously ruled out in the 67th minute when the Hoosiers were still up 2-1. IU started with a different look up top as Hollinger-Janzen spearheaded the attack in place of graduate transfer Ben Maurey while redshirt senior Kyle Sparks started ahead of redshirt junior Phil Fives and freshman Rece Buckmaster had his first start on the right side of the trio playing behind Hollinger-Janzen. Buckmaster would then double IU’s lead just three minutes after the penalty as he arrived late in the box to apply the finishing touch to a piece of play by the Hoosiers. “Rece Buckmaster I thought was phenomenal tonight,” IU Coach Todd Yeagley said. “Scored a great goal. He was a big part of our success that first half and we are starting to see how good this young man can be.” It was all IU for the next few minutes but Butler managed to

INDIANAPOLIS — Through the first five games of the season, the Hoosiers scored five goals. In IU’s sixth match against Butler University, it managed to find the back of the net twice in the first half, with two different players. Despite Tuesday at practice when he said he was happy with how his attack was working, IU Coach Todd Yeagley made a variety of changes to his attack for IU’s 2-2 draw Wednesday at Butler. “They brought energy to our starting lineup and they did a great job today,” senior Femi Hollinger-Janzen said. “Their energy and their speed and quickness really helps us out.” The changes included inserting senior Kyle Sparks and freshman Rece Buckmaster into wide attacking midfield positions and moving Hollinger-Janzen up to forward from the midfield. Early on, the changes were evident. The attack looked more fluid, with Hollinger-Janzen providing more movement and activity from the forward position than the Hoosiers have seen in games past. Both Buckmaster and Sparks were able to create problems with their pressure, forcing turnovers in the Butler half of the field. “The energy of the team was just up and we were pressuring very well and attacking as a unit,” Hollinger-Janzen said. Much of the change was centered on Hollinger-Janzen’s advancement up the field. Oftentimes, when Sparks, Buckmaster or another Hoosier was able to pressure and steal the ball from a Bulldog defender, Hollinger-Janzen was there as an option to pass to.

SEE TIE, PAGE 6

SEE ATTACK, PAGE 6

Representing former IU student John Phillip Enochs in a case involving two counts of rape, lawyer Katharine Liell said she believes there is evidence in the case not reported in the probable cause affidavit that “will change the minds of the public.” Liell is representing Enochs in partnership with attorney Amelia Lahn. Liell said only women will be on the defense team for Enochs’ case. “It is not by coincidence that a team of all women are representing him in the case,” Liell said. “He has a team of female warriors ready to go to bat for him.” The two alleged rapes were reported as separate incidents to the IU Police Department. One was reported as occurring at the Delta Zeta sorority house in fall 2013 and the other was reported as occurring in the Delta Tau Delta house in spring 2015, according to a Monroe County Court probable cause affidavit. Witness statements, victim identification, DNA results and video evidence gave IUPD probable cause to seek a warrant for Enochs’ arrest on two counts of rape, according to the IUPD statement. Enochs surrendered to the Monroe County Jail Friday, according to a statement from the IUPD. Liell said she is “clearly convinced” of Enochs’ innocence. “We are eager to tell his story in a court of law to test the women’s credibility,” Liell said. Enochs is facing one count of rape as a Level 3 felony and one count of rape as a Class B felony, according to a Monroe County Court case summary. Enochs first enrolled at IU in fall 2012 and his last semester was in spring 2015. Enochs hasn’t been enrolled in fall classes and has not graduated from IU, University spokesperson Mark Land said. Enochs was studying business and was a brother of the Delta Tau Delta fraternity at the time of the alleged rapes, Liell said. Delta Tau Delta fraternity was placed on a deferred suspension Sept. 1, effective through March 2016. The suspension is a result of an “environment conducive to endangering university students that resulted in a sexual assault,” according to IU’s Student Life and Learning’s disciplinary probation records. Delta Tau Delta fraternity Chief Operating Officer Jack Kreman said in an email that the fraternity’s headquarters office is “aware of a lawsuit filed involving its chapter at Indiana University,” and that the office is SEE RAPE, PAGE 6

Chamber Orchestra performs 1st show of the semester By Brooke McAfee bemcafee@indiana.edu | bemcafee24601

There was no conductor on the stage of Auer Hall as the Chamber Orchestra began its performance. Instead, the musicians relied on each other, the sheet music on their stands and the orchestra leader Jorja Fleezanis, who performed violin with the ensemble. The Jacobs School of Music’s Chamber Orchestra performed its first concert of the semester Wednesday evening. The Chamber Orchestra is a group of about 30 musicians involving strings, brass, woodwinds and percussion. Fleezanis, a professor in the Jacobs School of Music, trains the musicians in skills such as listening. The orchestra is a mixture of undergraduate and graduate students. Each student earns their place in the orchestra by auditioning from behind a screen, so they are placed based on ability rather than status. The students range from

freshmen to master’s students. “The beauty of that is to watch how older students mentor younger students and how some younger students, who obviously earned their position in that orchestra, are contributing in that their abilities are on par with some of the master students,” Fleezanis said. The orchestra teaches students skills such as responsibility, collaboration and self-sufficiency, Fleezanis said. She said it is like an “orchestral training boot camp” that gives them the skills of a professional orchestra. Performing without a conductor adds a level of excitement and risk, and it is like a free-fall where the only people in charge are the performers themselves, Fleezanis said. Senior Leo Kowalski, who plays violin in the orchestra, said Chamber Orchestra provides a different experience than playing in a large orchestra. “I like that it’s a smaller orchestra, because it puts more account-

ability on each individual member,” Kowalski said. First-year master’s student Jacqueline Kitzmiller plays the violin in the orchestra. She said she likes the feeling of performing during a concert because being onstage in front of an audience is exhilarating. The orchestra requires learning on musical levels and human levels at the same time, Fleezanis said. “It’s like being in a lifeboat together,” Fleezanis said. “Everyone depends on everybody, and if one person gets off base and tips the boat, it’s important that we all compensate and bring ourselves back to a right position.” The orchestra performed Ludwig van Beethoven’s “Overture to ‘Egmont, Op. 84,’” Justin Merritt’s “Lachryme (version for string orchestra, 2002)” and Franz Schubert’s “Symphony No. 5 in BFlat Major, D.485.” The combination of the three pieces conveys a bittersweet emotion, Fleezanis said, because the Beethoven piece is both tragic and

RACHEL MEERT | IDS

The Chamber Orchestra performs during the Jacobs School of Music’s 114th program of the 2015-16 Season. The orchestra was led by first chair violinist Jorja Fleezanis.

victorious, Merritt’s piece is sad and Schubert’s piece is sunny and optimistic. Performing at a high skill level requires high standards, Fleezanis said. “I’ve been very demanding, as I should, because I think without be-

ing demanding it’s very hard to say, ‘I can do it,’ and I insist that they do it,” she said. The orchestra had only about two weeks to rehearse the music. Fleezanis said performing in an SEE ORCHESTRA, PAGE 6


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CAMPUS EDITORS: ALYSON MALINGER & ASHLEIGH SHERMAN CAMPUS@IDSNEWS.COM

Law school to celebrate Constitution Day Author and journalist Dahlia Lithwick will give a lecture at noon Thursday in the Maurer School of Law’s Moot Court Room in celebration of Constitution Day, according to an IU press release. The presentation is titled “Four Women

Justices: Has Gender Made a Difference When Supreme Court Justices Read the Constitution?” The event is free and open to the public. One hour of Indiana continuing legal education credit has been approved.

IU invests $300 million in future research initiatives Laurel Demkovich lfdemkov@indiana.edu

ANDREW WILLIAMS | IDS

Students gather in Ballantine Hall Wednesday evening to enjoy Trumpapalooza with IU College Democrats. Entertainment kicked off with an entertaining game of “Whose line is it anyway?” starring Donald Trump and other media stars.

IU Democrats discuss Trump By Laurel Demkovich lfdemkov@indiana.edu

After discussing what Donald Trump’s campaign means for the Republican Party and for the country, Hannah Miller, president of the College Democrats at IU, announced it was time to do what they had been waiting for — play Pin the Toupee on the Donald. After blindfolding players, members of the executive board gave attendees a bright orange wig. They then spun them around, pointing them in the direction of a fishpuckering poster of Trump. Members then walked forward attempting to stick the wig closest to the top of Trump’s head. The College Democrats at IU hosted Trumpapalooza Wednesday for students who wanted to learn more about Trump’s campaign, play Trump-themed games or make fun of him. “We decided to do this because it’s a little ridiculous that Donald Trump is

running,” Miller said. “The fact that he can run is ridiculous. The reason we did this is to kind of make fun and shed light on why it’s not OK.” As attendees walked into Ballantine 144, they grabbed a Baked! of Bloomington cookie, found a seat and looked around at the room decorated with a Donald Trump poster and a slideshow beginning with the quote “Make America Hate Again!” They then settled in to take Trump-themed quizzes and watch Trumpthemed videos. The quizzes gave specific quotes and members had to guess if Trump or another famous character, including Lucille Blath or James Bond villains, said the quotes. Once the quizzes were taken, laughter began to fill the room as members began to watch Trump-themed videos, including “Saturday Night Live” skits, speeches Trump has made and speeches others have made regarding Trump.

After the jokes were made, Kegan Ferguson, vice president, said it was time to talk seriously. Ferguson discussed Trump and what his campaign means for both Republicans and Democrats. “It’s really weird to think about how just much of a lead Donald Trump has actually taken in the opening primary,” Ferguson said. Ferguson went on to talk about how Trump appeals to the lower and middle class, despite his growing up wealthy. “He communicates with them very well,” Ferguson said. “He resonates with them which is kind of why he’s soaring.” Ferguson then discussed what Trump means for the Republican Party. He said Trump has sucked the air out of the primary, leaving no room for any other candidates to discuss their own message. “He’s driving the agenda, he’s driving the dialogue,” Ferguson said. “He has all the media appearances.

He’s the reason all of us watched the debate. I mean, this guy is really magnetic.” Some attendees said they felt it is important to learn more about Trump’s campaign and what it means for both parties. IU College Democrat member Richard Taylor said it was important for both Democrats and Republicans to learn since he is the only person currently in the spotlight. “People don’t pay enough attention to the context,” Taylor said. “It’s important for us to talk about it and recognize issues, as he is a potential candidate for the Republican ticket. It started as a joke but became very serious. We have to prepare as a group and as a party.” Member Chelsea Snedden agreed. She added that Trump’s campaign feels like a joke. “He just feels like a ‘Saturday Night Live’ skit waiting to happen,” Snedden said. “It’s what I see — a joke.”

Lecturer talks about foreign relations By Julie Masterson julmaste@indiana.edu

Former governor of Utah Jon Huntsman discussed challenges and opportunities posed by United States interaction with China, which he said he considers to be the most challenging and strategically significant relationship of the 21st century. Students and faculty gathered from 4 to 5:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Indiana Memorial Union’s Whittenberger Auditorium for the fifth annual Patrick O’Meara International Lecture. The series, established in 2011, honors IU Vice President Emeritus for International Affairs Patrick O’Meara by bringing distinguished speakers who address critical topics in international affairs to IU. O’Meara, who was present at the event, provided Huntsman’s introduction. “Jon Huntsman, governor, ambassador, presidential candidate and political thinker, represents the very best of our tradition, the very tradition I am talking about preserving,” O’Meara said. Beginning his career in public service as a staff assistant to President Ronald Reagan, Huntsman has since served four U.S. presidents in a variety of positions around the globe, including ambassador to Singapore, deputy assistant secretary of commerce for Asia and U.S trade ambassador. Huntsman was also appointed U.S ambassador to China by President Obama in 2009, a position he kept

LAUREN MCNEELEY | IDS

IU announced last week that it would invest $300 million in the Grand Challenges research program. This program is a part of the Bicentennial Strategic Plan for IU and will provide funding for three to five research initiatives throughout the next five years. The program will fund large research projects, called Grand Challenges, throughout the next five years in an attempt to address large-scale problems that can be solved only by multidisciplinary teams of researchers. IU-Bloomington Provost Lauren Robel said this program is intended to ask the biggest questions with the highest effects. These Grand Challenges will be exciting, effective programs that will make a real difference in the success of humans, Robel said. Along with improving the quality of life for the people in Indiana and the world, the Grand Challenge program aims to enhance quality of research at IU, in addition to providing investment in the research infrastructure of IU and improving IU’s ability to compete successfully for external research support. The program’s goals also include facilitating collaboration. This is in pursuit of common goals and creating valuable intellectual property, in addition to making it available to the general public, according to the Grand Challenges website. Leading the program is IU’s Office of the Vice President of Research, the head of which is Fred Cate, vice president of research. Among those heading the project is Rick Van Kooten, IU-Bloomington vice provost of research. Van Kooten said these initiatives will ask big questions that will bring faculty from across the Bloomington campus and other IU campuses together. “We do a lot of multidisciplinary work, but this is a way to sort of have a big question pulling everything together,” Van Kooten said. “Everybody working toward one direction.” With IUPUI and the IU School of Medicine also working with the program, Van Kooten said faculty is encouraged to work on programs from other campuses. “We encourage people from campus to work with IUPUI, the regionals or the medical school,” Van Kooten said. “In fact, a lot of them will very naturally have those kinds of collaborations.” Van Kooten also said although IUPUI and the School of Medicine have

“In our case, there is such a large and good diversity across all the research fields.” Rick Van Kooten, IU-Bloomington vice provost of research.

announced their overarching themes, IU-Bloomington has not. “The reason for that is that this campus has a lot more diversity in the types of research it does,” Van Kooten said. “In our case, there is such a large and good diversity across all the research fields.” Although the preliminary proposal deadline is not until November and the research teams will not be notified until January, multiple teams already submitted proposals. “What we’ve done is met with almost all of those groups over the summer and talked about the Grand Challenge ideas and brainstormed about making further connections and let them know what we had to offer them in terms of help,” Van Kooten said. These programs will offer more opportunities for faculty to research. “What it will bring to the campus is more researchactive faculty lines,” Van Kooten said. “That in itself will boost the research, in addition to the fact that people are working on these big questions.” In addition to more research opportunities for faculty, the Grand Challenge initiatives will also add more opportunities for students to get involved in the research. Graduate students will have more opportunities to work with faculty on their research, and although undergraduate student involvement has not been fully discussed, it will develop naturally, Van Kooten said. “These areas can be especially rewarding to students when they can see their research actually being used for the good of the people of Indiana,” Van Kooten said. It is important for faculty and interested students to remain engaged in the process of developing these Grand Challenges, Van Kooten said. Another important aspect of the program is the hiring of more faculty to complete the research. “The very fact that they’ll be all these faculty lines involved means you’re hiring people with an interest in that Grand Challenge, and so it’ll be a very natural extension,” Van Kooten said. “We’ll hire very good people, excellent people coming in, and that’s what faculty do is continue that research.”

Jon Huntsman, former governor of Utah and former U.S. ambassador to China, delivers a lecture entitled “U.S. and China: Challenges and Opportunities” Wednesday in the Whittenberger Auditorium.

until 2011. Huntsman said the relationship between the U.S. and China will prove to be one of America’s most important, and difficult, relationships in the 21st century. “Both countries are very different in terms of history, geography, language, culture,” Huntsman said. “The things that will ultimately determine whether the U.S.China relationship is a success or a failure will be what kind of human capacity have we achieved in terms of better understanding one another.” Huntsman talked about the importance of trade investment in securing more stable, mutually beneficial international relationships. “Trade investment is a weapon of peace,“ Huntsman said. “Countries who

trade and invest in one another generally don’t go to war with one another. I think that, long-term, this is an insurance policy that we can balance a lot of our differences, which are going to be big, profound and sensitive in years to come.” Despite the gravity and complexity of these differences, Huntsman said the root of the issue is simple. “Our problem is that we’ve experienced a thing called human failure,” Huntsman said. “People won’t work together in solving our most pressing issues.” Huntsman also noted the global drivers that will increasingly shape the world, including diffusion of power in the world, the rise of transnational terrorism, the rise of individual empowerment and demographic

trends, such as mass migration and urbanization. “I have no doubt that when the history books are written at the end of the 21st century, they’re not going to talk about the Great Recession, we’re probably not

going to read about government shutdowns,” Huntsman said. “I think we are going to read about the rise of China and how the world responded.” Attendants were invited to partake in a reception in the President’s Room of the University Club following the lecture. Huntsman’s speech was free and open to the public. “This is not just another ordinary period in history — this is another inflection point,” Huntsman said. “This is a serious time, and it requires serious conversation.”

CORRECTION In the Wednesday edition of the Indiana Daily Student, an article should have said Garnett Bruce, stage director for IU Opera’s “Barber of Seville,” said, “He’s (conductor Paul Nadler) able to shape us, lead us and give room for ideas to expand.” The IDS regrets this error. Janica Kaneshiro Editor-in-Chief Suzanne Grossman Grace Palmieri Managing Editors

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REGION

EDITORS: ANNIE GARAU & CORA HENRY | REGION@IDSNEWS.COM

New LGBTQ group seeks student mentors The IU Queer Mentor Program had a call-out meeting Wednesday night. This marks the first year of the program, which will be a queer mentorship collaboration between college, high school and middle school students in Bloomington, according to the group’s

Facebook page. The program is “geared toward helping young LGBTQ+ folks find acceptance, community and role models, whether or not they can find these things closer to home,” the event’s organizer said in an email.

State police use radio show to promote safety By Annie Garau agarau@indiana.edu | @agarau6

KATELYN ROWE | IDS

Barry Lessow, executive director of United Way of Bloomington, speaks during the United Way Campaign Kick-Off Luncheon Wednesday at Henke Hall in Memorial Stadium.

United Way starts campaign By Cora Henry corahenr@indiana.edu | @coraghenry

The United Way of Monroe County aims to raise $1.3 million in the next year. At the United Way Campaign Kick-Off Luncheon on Wednesday, more than 120 business people, volunteers and IU representatives gathered in Memorial Stadium’s Henke Hall of Champions to hear why they should donate to the organization. The tables were dressed in United Way’s blue and orange. The music was light jazz, and the food was lemon leek chicken breast with a roasted vegetable medley and wild rice pilaf. The topics of the speakers were hunger, poverty

and education. “A donation to United Way touches one in three lives in the community,” Community Engagement Director Jennifer Hottell said. Donations to United Way remain in the community, Hottell said. The United Way allocates grants to 25 agencies in Monroe County, including Big Brothers Big Sisters, Girls Inc. of Monroe County and the Boys and Girls Club. The organization also supports the Monroe County Community School Corporation’s School Assistance Fund, which provides clothing and school supplies to students in Monroe County schools. In her address to the

crowd, volunteer and Board President Heidi Schulz shared the story of a second grader who was having some trouble at school. The second grader was in foster care and the school social worker noticed she was becoming more withdrawn. The girl was having trouble reading , wand she could not see the board. She had amblyopia — one of her eyes wandered. The School Assistance Fund covered the cost of her eye exams and glasses, and the girl could see better at school. “Why am I a volunteer? Because I know I am making a difference in the community,” Schulz said.

Although the economic value of hope and optimism is immeasurable, the United Way’s economic effect can be measured when it helps a family understand an eviction notice or a senior put in a ramp so she can remain in her home, Executive Director Barry Lesssow said. He said United Way puts the resources and people in place to care for people who have immediate needs. “I hope you want to see that impact,” Lessow told the crowd, urging them to fill out their donation cards. “We want to work with you to create the town you want to live in. Now we just need you to spread that word to others,” Lessow said.

Before police administer a polygraph test, they first spend some time talking to the people who they need answers from. They make them feel comfortable, and they ask them all of the questions they have about the crime at hand. Only after this has been done do officers strap wires around their bodies to monitor their breathing, a blood pressure cuff on their arms to record their stress level and plates on their fingers to see how much they sweat. They then repeat the questions that they’ve already asked and analyze the results. This is the kind of background information on police operations that citizens can learn from the Indiana State Police Road Show. The weekly radio show began in the 1960s when a prosecutor’s office in northern Indiana gave a tape recorder to a local trooper. “He taped his traffic stops, and he would go on the radio once a week and play some of those recordings and just kind of have fun with it,” said Sgt. Rich Myers, the public information officer for the ISP’s Indianapolis district who hosts the show. From this, the show

evolved into the 15-minute program that is currently broadcast in counties across the state. Myers said that the show is sometimes even aired in Chicago. The episodes are also available on the ISP YouTube channel. The program is supported by the ISP’s Cops for Kids, an organization meant to build relationships between police officers and children. Because of this funding, the show does not use any taxpayer dollars. “It gets people thinking about what we want them to talk about,” Myers said. During months with a lot of fires, for example, they have officers come on air and talk about fire safety. “I’ve been a police officer for 29 years, and there were a lot of things I didn’t understand about the polygraph instrument and how it worked,” Myers said. “I learn something from our own troopers, our own investigators and people from different walks of life every time I do this show.” Myers said he has not heard of any other state police departments who have similar programs, certainly none that have lasted this long. “We have a public that likes to listen to us and hear about what we’re doing,” he said.

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OPINION EDITOR: MADISON HOGAN | ASST: GREG GOTTFRIED OPINION@IDSNEWS.COM

Whaling through the sea with my woes Have you ever just been minding your own business in a kayak and a whale decides to crush all the bones in your body? Us neither. But apparently, two kayakers were nearly pancakes after a humpback whale flipped

onto them. The whale committed to a 180 breach and while we thought the move was totally sick, we’re glad the kayakers are safe and sound. Next time, the kayakers should just try to speak whale like the rest of us.

EDITORIAL BOARD

ILLUSTRATION BY MORGAN ANDERSON | IDS

A Huntsman among wolves WE SAY: John Huntsman sets the bar high for Republicans For the Editorial Board, last night’s CNN Republican debate stage was conspicuously missing someone: former governor of Utah and ambassador to China, Jon Huntsman. Through all the smoke and mirrors, candidates and party officials are likely to employ in the upcoming election, conservatism — as the Tea Party has come to define it within the Republican Party — is wildly out of touch with a majority of college students and a majority of Americans.

Few Republicans have been able to articulate an inclusive vision of conservatism that doesn’t divide or even alienate significant portions of the population. One of those few Republicans wasn’t on the CNN debate stage — because he was here on campus. Huntsman delivered the fifth annual Patrick O’Meara International Lecture at the Whittenberger Auditorium, focusing on the challenges and opportunities facing United States-China relations.

Huntsman, elected twice governor of Utah, has served as ambassador to Singapore, deputy assistant secretary of commerce, U.S. trade ambassador and, most recently, served as ambassador to China under President Obama. In addition to his foreign policy experience, what makes Huntsman stand out is his politics — a brand the GOP desperately needs if it has any hopes of winning back the White House. Huntsman ran for president in 2012 and found little

appetite for his candidacy amongst the GOP. Though the establishment eventually picked Mitt Romney, it was the same cycle Rick Santorum came in as the party’s No. 2 — an omen of the far right politics that would come. What is so revolutionary about Huntsman’s brand of conservatism is that he fundamentally understands that, regardless of our issues, America can work toward a better tomorrow — it’s just a matter of how. Huntsman isn’t a demagogue. He isn’t preaching

the end of America, as so much of the Republican Party currently is. He, like so many Americans, wants solutions. He’s one of the few adults in the GOP who grasps that to govern, you have to compromise. Huntsman, with his positions and experience, is a modern conservative in the truest sense of the word. He believes same sex-couples should be allowed to marry, supports ending corporate welfare and closing corporate loopholes and deductions, recognizes the effect

of income inequality, understands the role the U.S. should play in a complex world and, above all, fundamentally understands how partisanship has paralyzed our government. At his lecture, Huntsman touched on his 2012 run and how it was in large part sunk by the inroads he made with Democrats. That’s wrong. The Editorial Board hopes one day Republicans will be more Huntsman than Donald Trump. The country, and our political discourse, desperately needs it.

MAGGIE’S MUSINGS

AN EMMA DILEMMA

The big huff over Huffpost Women

Violence against refugees in the EU

The fact there’s even an alternate version of a news outlet for women is an issue, and it doesn’t matter how you slice it. If a publication created a section just to feature content and opinions solely written by female writers, the administrative decision to create it would have been almost understandable. However, a section of that nature is unnecessary. Why should we separate the female voices from rest of the headlines? It creates a divide between what’s normal news and what’s women’s news. As if they weren’t the same thing. But actually, Huffington Post seems to think there’s a difference. While most of the writers in the section are indeed women, it’s clear Lady Huffpost is not just women’s perspectives on day-to-day happenings. The site claims to feature women’s issues, advice and personal stories.

What it really features is mostly fluff pieces, some weight loss propaganda and the occasional rape story. But why is the occasional rape story even confined to a section that claims it’s for women’s issues? That implies that rape is not only an issue that only concerns women, but that it only happens to women. Rape isn’t a fluff topic; everyone needs to be educated about it, what it means and how to stop it. On Huffpost Women, rape just gets lumped into the rest of the less-thanhard-hitting material. So, say I’m a woman — because I am — and I’d like to consume some media from the Huffington Post that is made just for me. My choices for categories are not politics, business, entertainment, tech, media and the like, as they are on the normal news. They are healthy living, weddings, divorce, style, home and other

domestic topics. Many of the front-page articles are about relationships and sex, all with clickbait titles, such as “Women Want More Sex, Survey Says.” Because we needed a survey to tell us. I mean, doesn’t the title “Do you need to break up with your birth control?” sound like something you should be digesting along with your coffee before morning classes? Huffpost is known for some of its unnecessary articles. No one’s surprised when we see something like “Artist Draws Disney Princesses As Pinup Girls,” but Huffpost Women takes it too far. A little deeper into the site brings us articles centered on what makes a man sexy and why the Miss America body types have changed throughout the years. Just girly things. And what about girls who like

Maggie Eickhoff is a sophomore in international studies.

politics or business? These are things that are deemed not womanly enough for them to like. If we as a culture continue to stereotype and pigeonhole women’s interests like this, we will be perpetuating the idea that’s all women should be interested in. It’s the idea that is limiting the amount of women who choose to explore STEM careers, and it’s the reason so many girls who enjoyed their frog dissection go home crying because they aren’t “normal girls.” So stop embarrassing women with articles that insult their bodies, their relationships and, most importantly, their intelligence. meickhof@indiana.edu

LETTER TO THE EDITOR POLICY The IDS encourages and accepts letters to be printed daily from IU students, faculty and staff and the public. Letters should not exceed 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. Submissions can also be sent via e-mail to letters@idsnews. com. Questions can be directed to the IDS at 855-0760.

Indiana Daily Student, Est. 1867 Website: idsnews.com The opinions expressed by the editorial board do not necessarily represent the opinions of the IDS news staff, student body, faculty or staff members or the Board of Trustees. The editorial board comprises columnists contributing to the Opinion page and the Opinion editors.

No one has a plan for how to deal with the Syrian refugee crisis, and some countries have resorted to brutality and violence rather than helping. Tear gas and water cannons were used on refugees attempting to cross the border into Hungary earlier this week. Refugees were attempting to cross the HungarianSerbian border, and Hungary refused to open it. Many fear the European Union does not have the resources available to support the thousands of migrants now flooding into their countries. With all the economic problems caused by the financial crisis in Greece and the falling value of the euro, the EU is in a tailspin. Even with all these things in mind, the use of violence is excessive and unnecessary. Hungary is not the only nation guilty — Greek police have been involved in brutal clashes with refugees attempting to cross their border. There have been reports of migrants suffocating while trying to cross the borders into safety, and a heart-wrenching photo of the body of a dead 3-year-old boy that washed up on a Turkish coast went viral, with many calling for action. With economic troubles in mind and with limited resources, we cannot expect that the EU will be able to give sufficient care to these refugees. Luckily, a few plans are now in place to deal with the crisis, though they are heavily criticized and have made

Emma Wenninger is a senior in English and Spanish.

some more nervous than reassured. Germany had a hero’s welcome for the migrants, worrying not about how they could afford it, but what they could do to help. Austria opened its borders to allow Syrians to cross either into their country or pass through. Yahoo reported that Germany will accept 31,000, France 24,000 and Spain 15,000 refugees. It is clear the EU is trying to solve the crisis, but no one seems to agree on how to handle the problem. No one seems to have a plan in place, and it is unclear what countries can and can’t help. But what has shocked me is the staunch refusal by some to allow even one Syrian across their border, instead electing to beat them back with water and tear gas and to refuse them shelter. These people are suffering. To have one nation willing to give them shelter and another trying to send them away with water cannons is unacceptable. Even if Hungary cannot accept Syrian refugees, even if it cannot provide food or resources, Hungary does not have to respond with violence. At a certain point, it stops being politics and starts being an issue of human rights and human dignity. ewenning@indiana.edu


I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | T H U R S D AY, S E P T. 1 7, 2 0 1 5 | I D S N E W S . C O M

SPORTS

EDITORS: NICOLE KRASEAN & TAYLOR LEHMAN | SPORTS@IDSNEWS.COM

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Women’s golf finishes eighth in Classic The IU women’s golf team finished eighth in the Powerade Cougar Classic on Tuesday at Yeaman’s Hall Golf Club in Hanahan, South Carolina. The Hoosiers started the day tied for 12th place after two previous days of play.

Arkansas finished first in the tournament. As a team, IU posted a score of 297 in the final round and an overall score of 893. The Hoosiers will be back in action at the East West Match Play Championship in Madison, Wisconsin, from Sept. 20 to Sept. 22.

MEN’S BASKETBALL

Transfer writes letter to former IU guard By Andy Wittry awittry@indiana.edu | @AndyWittry

Before former IU guard A.J. Guyton had ever met or spoken with Max Bielfeldt, he was very familiar with the current redshirt senior forward. Bielfeldt played against Guyton’s step-father’s high school basketball team in Peoria, Illinois, where both were born and raised. “He didn’t know I was watching, but I was watching him play,” Guyton said. Last week, Bielfeldt introduced himself to Guyton through a handwritten letter, an advice-seeking note that bridged a decade and a half gap in IU basketball history. Guyton, IU’s fourth alltime leading scorer who played for the Hoosiers from 1996-2000, shared the letter on social media last Thursday. Of any other emotion, Guyton said his initial reaction was shock upon receiving the letter. “I was just surprised that a college student would take time out to write a handwritten letter to somebody like myself,” he said. “I consider myself a supporter of the program and an alum, but there are many others that have come before and after me that were probably more worthy of a handwritten note.” As Bielfeldt’s letter explained, he spent his entire childhood in Peoria, where he played in Guyton’s basketball summer camps. “I wanted to apologize for everything you have had to deal with as an alumni of this university, and I wanted to personally tell you that

I will do everything in my power to lead this team from within to make you proud to cheer for the Hoosiers without any distraction,” Bielfeldt said in his letter. For the majority of IU’s off-court incidents in the past two years, Bielfeldt resided in Ann Arbor, Michigan, where he was redshirted as a freshman and before playing three seasons for the Wolverines. Since using the graduate transfer provision to transfer to IU in June, Bielfeldt has seen former teammate Emmitt Holt dismissed from the team, after Holt and freshman center Thomas Bryant were cited for illegal possession of alcohol in August. “I understand that this basketball program is special, and it is an honor to be a part of this storied tradition, even if it is only for 9-10 months,” Bielfeldt said in his letter. “If you have any advice on what this program needs, or even just want to grab lunch when I’m home in Peoria, don’t be hesitant to call or text.” The two recently spoke on the phone, which was likely the first of many calls between the pair of Hoosiers. “We just committed to creating a relationship, staying in touch and following his short tenure here at Indiana,” Guyton said, “so the letter definitely sparked and created a relationship for us.” By reaching out to an alumnus of the program, Bielfeldt showed he’s on the right path as a leader, Guyton said. “That’s something that’s never happened before,”

“One thing about these players nowadays, they don’t seem to respect or care enough about the history of whatever program that they’ve been involved with. It showed me that he cares.” A.J. Guyton, former IU guard

Guyton said. Guyton offered words of wisdom to the fifth-year forward. Be outstanding citizens of the community first and basketball players second and everything will fall in line, Guyton told Bielfeldt. The former Hoosier hopes Bielfeldt will relay the message to his teammates in the locker room. As someone who, while a supporter, is admittedly “not super close” to the program, Guyton said he appreciated the attachment between alumni and active players. “That showed me that he cares,” Guyton said. “One thing about these players nowadays, they don’t seem to respect or care enough about the history of whatever program that they’re involved with. It showed me that he cares about the players, one through 12, who played at Indiana before him and have already done everything he’s trying to do. He wants that to be reflected in himself and who he is and how he plays and also instill some of that into the locker PHOTO room, and that’s what the The 6-foot-8 former Michigan forward Max Bielfeldt committed to IU last June. Bielfeldt was COURTESY allowed to locker room needs.” transfer from Michigan to IU after winning an appeal to transfer within the Big Ten Conference.

WOMEN’S SOCCER

Campus and Community Fall Celebration TIANTIAN ZHANG | IDS

Sophomore midfielder Kayla Smith holds off a Ball State University Cardinals’ defender at Bill Armstrong stadium on Sunday evening. IU tied the game 1-1.

Hoosiers prepare for this weekend’s Big Ten play By Teddy Bailey eebailey@indiana.edu @TheTeddyBailey

The Hoosiers will begin a new season this weekend as University of Illinois and Northwestern University visit Bill Armstrong Stadium for a weekend series to open Big Ten play. Though IU was able to post a 4-2 record through non-conference play last season, it struggled with its conference schedule, completing a 3-9-1 season against conference opposition. There’s a different sense of preparation for this year’s Big Ten slate, IU Coach Amy Berbary said. “I think it showed our team that we can play with some of the best teams in the country,” Berbary said of her non-conference schedule. “I thought we improved every game, made some major mistakes but, ultimately, we’ve moved forward and are ready for the conference schedule.” The difference in nonconference rigor between the two years is enormous. In 2014’s campaign, IU did not play a power conference

opponent, handling teams such as George Mason University, Dayton University and University of California at Irvine, among others. Berbary made it a point of emphasis to test her team before they face Big Ten opponents each and every weekend. “I like putting our team in difficult situations,” Berbary said. “I think that’s going to help us grow for the future of this program. Putting them in uncomfortable positions to see how they react is going to help us.” While this early campaign has featured numerous season-ending injuries, ranked opponents and road trips, the Hoosiers will open up the Big Ten schedule at home for the third straight year. “It makes it a lot more relaxing,” sophomore forward Kayla Smith said. “You don’t have to worry about traveling or getting your schoolwork done. Now we’ll have our home crowd, and it’s a Big Ten opener so there’s a ton of excitement.” Berbary, in her third season, has had success against Illinois and Northwestern,

teams that come to Bloomington Friday and Sunday, respectively. Berbary’s teams are a combined 3-1 against the Fighting Illini and Wildcats, although the Hoosiers are trying to change their mindset from last season. “We’ve got to take it one game at a time this year,” Berbary said. “I think last season, we caught ourselves looking too far ahead. I know it’s cliché, but we really have to only look at the game that is ahead of us and prepare for each and every game individually.” Smith, who assisted in senior midfielder Jessie Bujouves’ game-tying goal Sunday against Ball State, also echoed her coach’s thought process as IU looks to start its Big Ten slate with a win. “Coming into this weekend, we really just have to focus one game at a time, especially the Friday game,” Smith said. “Winning one game a weekend is key; winning two is the best. We’re really focusing on Illinois right now, and we’ll worry about wNorthwestern when it comes.”

Join friends across campus and neighbors in the community in celebrating a milestone year for the School of Public Health–Bloomington!

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25 2-4 PM

Look for the tent on the west side of the building.

EVERYONE WELCOME!


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» RAPE

I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | T H U R S D AY, S E P T. 1 7, 2 0 1 5 | I D S N E W S . C O M

» ATTACK

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

“working with its counsel to review the complaint.” Delta Tau Delta fraternity is also being placed under social restrictions through Jan. 1, 2016, according the disciplinary probation records. Assistant Dean of Students Steve Veldkamp said in an email, “The social sanctions are a result of organization being held responsible for creating an environment which led to sexual misconduct from a 2015 incident.” Enochs is scheduled to appear in court Nov. 10.

Other times, he was available as an outlet at midfield when the IU defense won the ball and needed to clear the ball out of its own box. Hollinger-Janzen was able to control the clearance, hold off a defender and either find a teammate to pass to or draw a foul so IU could advance up the field. Hollinger-Janzen also exorcised somewhat of a demon for the Hoosiers, scoring from the penalty spot in the 12th minute. The Hoosiers are now 2-for-4 from the spot this season. But what he did most was provide a mobile target for his teammates, and one capable of distributing and starting the attack. “We thought athletically he would cause problems and he was fantastic in the first half,” IU Coach Todd Yeagley said. “I thought Femi was an All-American.” For the second Hoosier goal, Hollinger-Janzen did more of the same.

» ORCHESTRA

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

orchestra concert requires a level of bravery. When they are on stage, the group works together to create an experience that is special to themselves and to the audience, she said. “They’ve been given a lot of tools, but what happens at that point is a set of decisions that everyone makes right then and there,” Fleezanis said.

An IU player had pressured a Butler defender and forced a turnover. The ball found its way to the feet of Hollinger-Janzen about 40 yards from the goal. The Hoosiers moved forward toward goal and Hollinger-Janzen laid the ball off the senior midfielder Matt Foldesy. Foldesy then lobbed a ball to the left corner for junior midfielder Tanner Thompson. Thompson controlled the pass, took a few touches toward the endline and played a cross toward goal and Sparks, who flicked the ball to the far post where Buckmaster tapped the ball home for his first career goal. Four passes in the span of about 10 seconds and a goal. Yeagley was impressed with the effectiveness of his new offensive formation, despite the team’s failure to come out on top. “That was a clinic in the first half,” Yeagley said. “I haven’t seen an IU team pull apart Butler like that. They had nothing.”

» TIE

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 find its way back into the game and fired a few shots of its own. The Hoosier defense to their credit managed to keep their lead and went into halftime 2-0. Butler came out of the break the brighter of the two and junior Colin Webb had to be alert, as he pulled off a double save in the 51st minute. However, the Bulldogs would finally get the better of Webb as Mitchell halved the deficit nine minutes later. IU then had an opportunity to restore its two-goal advantage in the 67th minute, but the officials contentiously ruled out the potential goal. “It looked to me like it was,” Yeagley said. “I’m assuming the AR on that side had a good view of it and I can’t speak for that.” That decision would alter the course of the game as Mitchell popped up to score his and Butler’s second goal of the night. It was a similar display of athleticism by the Jamaican

ADAM KIEFER | IDS

Sophomore defender Grant Lilard dribbles the ball during IU’s game against Butler on Wednesday at the Butler Bowl.

as he sprinted onto a pass from senior Jeff Adkins before putting it beyond the reach of Webb. “We played against a bunch of pacey players and he’s one of the best,” Creviston said. “It’s good to play against some and it’s good for us and will be good for the season.” Both teams then went in search of their third goals, but were unable to do it and the game was brought into overtime.

The Hoosiers registered a total of six attempts throughout two overtimes but were unable to put the ball into the back of the net. Mitchell had a chance to complete his hat-trick and become the hero in the second period of overtime, but he fluffed his lines after being put clean through by Butler junior David Goldsmith. IU plays Rutgers University on Sunday at Bill Armstrong Stadium after being on the road its last two games.

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Source: LIMRA Secure Retirement Institute, Not-for-Profit Market Survey, first-quarter 2015 results. Average assets per participant based on full-service business. Please note average retirement account balances are not a measure of performance of TIAA-CREF retirement offerings. 2 The Lipper Award is given to the group with the lowest average decile ranking of three years’ Consistent Return for eligible funds over the three-year period ended 11/30/12, 11/30/13, and 11/30/14 respectively. TIAA-CREF was ranked among 36 fund companies in 2012 and 48 fund companies in 2013 and 2014 with at least five equity, five bond, or three mixed-asset portfolios. Past performance does not guarantee future results. For current performance and rankings, please visit the Research and Performance section on tiaa-cref.org. TIAA-CREF Individual & Institutional Services, LLC, Teachers Personal Investors Services, Inc., and Nuveen Securities, LLC, members FINRA and SIPC, distribute securities products. ©2015 Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of America–College Retirement Equities Fund (TIAA-CREF), 730 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017. C24849D 2

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EDITOR GREG GOTTFRIED

SEPT. 17, 2015 | PAGE 7

DEATH MATCH It seems we are always treated to a horror villain bracket that eventually comes down to these two killers. This is the chance for you, the reader, to decide who would win in a duel.

Freddy Krueger

Norman Bates

Height: 5’8” Weight: 160 lbs Occupation: Janitor at Springwood Power Station/murderer in dreams Weapon of choice: Clawed glove, your worst nightmare From Wes Craven’s “A Nightmare on Elm Street” film series and your dreams, Krueger is definitely the favorite in this matchup. He is a burnt serial killer and vengeful ghost who utilizes his razored glove to kill victims in their sleep, which also leads to their deaths in real life. In the dream world, he is an indestructible villain and godlike in his invulnerability. Krueger dons an infamous red-and-green sweater as he remains in the shadows, ready to attack. Definitely terrifying, Krueger represents our subconscious fears and has the better weapon in this matchup. His claws, compared to Bates’ knife, have the advantage, however his main ability, to creep into dreams, will not come into play in this duel. It seems fair to say that Bates will not fall asleep during this fight, which drastically hurts Krueger’s chances. Overall, Krueger is definitely the more fleshed-out villain in this matchup as his misdeeds have been published over and over again.

Height: 6’2” Weight: 170 lbs Occupation: Owner of Bates Motel Weapon of choice: Knife (when wearing mother’s clothing) Out of the mind of Alfred Hitchcock, Norman Bates is from the film “Psycho”, which at the time, was one of the more shocking and horrific movies ever made. After suffering emotional abuse from his mother, Bates was an isolated child who, after his mother found a boyfriend, murdered her with strychnine. He developed dissociative identity disorder and began killing to escape his guilt for his past. As the owner of the Bates Motel, Bates becomes obsessed with his female guests and tries to kill them. Certifiably insane, Bates uses his notorious knife to great use in the films that he is featured in. Surely he will not be intimidated by Krueger and, even though he is the underdog, has the edge in pure insanity. Also, he has an advantage in motivation as he would be fighting for the memory of his mother. Bates has killed adults before, something that Krueger is not as experienced in due to his focusing on teenagers.

Check out idsnews.com/section/weekend and vote for your favorite villain Read next week’s Weekend section to see who you chose as our winner!


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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | T H U R S D AY, S E P T. 1 7, 2 0 1 5 | I D S N E W S . C O M

FX’s romantic-comedy remains incredible ‘You’re the Worst’ Chris Geere, Aya Cash AI have often struggled to explain to people why I consider FX’s “You’re the Worst” to be one of the most confusingly beautiful shows on television. The bare bones plot line is that two generally awful people fall in love, and I can feel people rolling their eyes and shifting their attention to something else each time I give my pitch. Anyone who watches the show tends to immediately become as enamored as I am, but I have learned that the log line of a show rarely captures what it brings to the table. “Mad Men” is by no means about advertising and “The Wire” is not about drugs. So how can I tell people what’s so appealing about it?

I think I came to my conclusion while watching the season-two premiere last week that brought back the characters I missed hating and adoring. What works so well for “You’re the Worst,” — what makes viewers put it on a pedestal — is that the protagonists, Jimmy and Gretchen, are by all accounts shitty people. They are selfish and rude and antagonistic and closed off and that’s the beauty. We all view ourselves as messes and focus on our flaws. Most people I know hate themselves in some way or another. So instead of the usually gorgeous main characters that have all the likable traits we wish we possessed, “You’re the Worst” shows that messes can find each other as well. “You’re the Worst” feels grounded despite seeming more absurd than most shows on television. The exaggerations are not the positives. The exaggerations are the awful,

cringe-worthy moments. So the ooey-gooey, aw-shucks moments that normally would result in an eye-roll end up feeling earned, because we have seen the ugliness along the way and how these two actually need each other. Though season one focused on the obvious attraction between Jimmy and Gretchen combined with their mutual reluctance to ever be vulnerable with each other, season two shifts towards them learning how to actually be a couple. They have conceded defeat to each other. They are ready to try, but how do couples keep the fairy tale alive? In the premiere, “The Sweater People,” Jimmy and Gretchen find themselves exhausted by how often they are partying together because they assume the other wants it. This taps into a fear most have in relationships. Both are trying so hard to live up to the ideals the other has in their

TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

mind of who they are. Jimmy and Gretchen view each other as this fun, partying couple that is better than everyone else. But what they try to do — key word “try” — is show each other the side that just wants to get some sleep or read a book. It is OK to rest easy.

Yet as I write hundreds of words about how “You’re the Worst” captures the struggles of intimacy, I look back on the moment in the premiere when the two are at the phone company trying to join a family plan. The salesman goes on a long, beautiful pitch about

what makes family so important and turns around to find Jimmy and Gretchen gone.They are at a bar, talking crap about that salesman. It was a reminder of how fun these two can be, and how shitty they are. Like all of us. Brody Miller

Still underwhelming, even with low expectations ‘The Perfect Guy’ Sanaa Lathan, Michael Ealy COpening at number one last weekend — and continuing the five-week string of African-American lead films dominating the box office — “The Perfect Guy” had all of the makings of a good, guilty-pleasure, girl’s-night-out-thriller, but it couldn’t have fallen more flat. Sanaa Lathan and Morris Chestnut are together again, having first worked together on “The Best Man,” along with a young — and beautiful — Michael Ealy, which, on paper, sounds like a dream team. From the start of the film until the end, though,

the first of many issues is that there isn’t any real chemistry between Lathan and either of her leading men. The first few scenes of the movie open with highpowered lobbyist Leah Vaughn, played by Lathan, and her boyfriend of nearly two years, Dave, played by Chestnut, heading to a party for a couple of mutual friends. Leah, having seen Dave be super cute with a kid at the party, can’t help but address her ticking biological clock. When he says he’s not ready, she breaks up with him. This is where I want to interject and offer that Leah has a habit of doing this throughout the film. The woman makes hasty decisions. She even says at one point “I jump into things sometimes,” which explains why she has fallen into another relationship in less than three months, this time

with IT analyst and smooth operator Carter Duncan, played by Ealy. As someone who loves a good — and by “good” I actually mean “garbage” — Tyler Perry drama, I was expecting a similar guilty pleasure in “The Perfect Guy.” This movie had the makings of everything I look for: romance, action and beautiful and successful characters, but it lacked any level of believability. In fact, to believe Lathan’s character is genuinely foolish enough to fall into the trap that is Carter Duncan is to suspend all reasonable notions of reality. As stated previously, I’m a reluctant fan of Tyler Perry, so my standards aren’t all that high to begin with. To put it simply, Duncan is a creepy dude. He has vague responses to any and all questions about his past, he

works in an especially shady industry — he’s essentially a hacker who busts into people’s private networks — and he just gives off a generally weird vibe. Leah, a successful lobbyist, a woman whose career depends on her ability to read people, should have been able to notice that she was dating a creep. However, she seems to take to him throughout the course of a month in a way she never took to her boyfriend Dave, with whom she was with for two years. Something just doesn’t add up. Even past the nochemistry relationships, the shower scenes where she doesn’t manage to get her hair wet — How many times are we going to have black women in films who shower without shower caps, honestly? — and a storyline so predictable my roommates spent the

entire film calling out what would happen next — “He kidnapped the cat,”“Dave is going to get into a car accident,”“Carter is a fake name” — Leah never even realizes that perhaps the way Duncan is entering her home without force is because she literally showed him where she hid her spare key. Just past being annoying, movies this simple are just plain frustrating. It doesn’t help that I’m growing pretty weary of our leading lady. Lathan has played the same character in at least three different films. Hard working, well-to-do woman seemingly consumed with her ever-growing career and plagued with a perpetually dissatisfying love life. From Monica in “Love and Basketball” to Kenya in “Something New” and Andrea in “The Family that Preys,” she just has a history

of playing characters that are wildly one-dimensional. I found myself constantly underwhelmed with the acting and the character development in this movie. On the bright side, for all intents and purposes, this was what could have just as easily been a “white” movie. All of the main characters’ names could have just as quickly been white characters as they were black. There were no hidden racial undertones that would have otherwise denoted this a black film. And that, to me, is a sign of progress, no matter how discrete. Normalizing images of blackness on the big screen without storylines reliant on drugs or gang violence is crucial to our eventual assimilation into mainstream cinema. Leah Johnson

3

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MAKE IT A NIGHT OUT. Pair your meal with a fun event from the Happenings online at idsnews.com/happenings


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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | T H U R S D AY, S E P T. 1 7, 2 0 1 5 | I D S N E W S . C O M

ARTS

EDITORS: CASSIE HEEKE & BRIDGET MURRAY | ARTS@IDSNEWS.COM

Mathers takes part in @Work with limestone By Sanya Ali siali@indiana.edu | @siali13

The Mathers Museum of World Cultures displays artifacts and articles related to many aspects of global life, from art to commerce and beyond. The latest event at Mathers explores a wellknown skill in the context of a larger narrative. “The Art of Limestone Work,” taking place at noon Thursday, will celebrate the limestone workers of Indiana and their craft. Professor of practice and organizer of the program Jon Kay said the event was a culmination of artistry and story related to limestone. “It is a one-day event that explores the occupational arts associated with limestone in our region,” Kay said. “It will have carving demonstrations, music and a narrative stage.” The event takes place in conjunction with the Themester topic “@Work: The Nature of Labor on a Changing Planet.” Kay said the historical value of limestone work connects it to the theme. “Working with limestone is one of the oldest and iconic occupations in the region,” Kay said. “It seems that any project that explored the changing nature of work in the world should look at the local manifestations of work, and limestone work provides a great opportunity for this.” Limestone work is often acknowledged in a strictly

View the full story online Read more about the limestone exhibit online at idsnews.com. artistic way, Kay said. The work aspect of the craft and the people participating are less emphasized. “It is a living tradition that has deep roots locally,” Kay said. “We often focus on the history of limestone art, but I wanted to focus on the work by contemporary workers and the art and skill they continue.” Kay said the event will include demonstrations from Amy Brier, known for her work with the Limestone Symposium; Scott Todd, a stonecutter practicing in Bedford, Indiana; Casey Winningham, selftaught carver; and William Galloway, who worked on the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C. As the organizer of the event, Kay said he brought nearly 12 years of experience looking at artistry typical to the region. He is also acting director of Traditional Arts Indiana. Kay said limestone is one of the defining features of the campus. “One of the things that makes the IU-Bloomington campus special is limestone,” Kay said. “This distinctive local material is quite literally what our campus is built on. The Salem Oolitic Limestone Belt runs through Monroe County, and, as we walk to our classes, we pass great limestone buildings.”

trlehman@indiana.edu | @trlehman_IU

A Block Party will be assembled at 5:30 p.m. Thursday at IU Cinema located on Seventh Street. The Block Party is an effort to promote the Cinema through IU culture. “We feel that most students come and go at IU without taking advantage of the cinema,” said Lauren Hall, the Block Party director. “It’s a very under-tapped source because students outside of movie production don’t know what happens there or don’t feel welcome.” The Block Party will also feature a screening of 1979 Academy Award nominated film “Breaking Away,” which centered on IU’s annual bicycle race, the Little 500. Hall, who is earning a dual degree in arts administration and non-profit management, began organization of the party to increase student engagement with the IU Cinema and to raise identification of IU culture.

“I played Division I lacrosse as an undergraduate, so I understand that sports can be an extremely productive community-building centerpiece,” Hall said. “My goal is to bring these two worlds together.” Beginning outside in front of the Cinema, the Block Party will provide stations with an array of tables ranging from trivia questions and prizes to selfie stations and Pizza X. Moving to the inside of the Cinema, awards will be presented to last year’s winners of the Little 500, and the film will be played at 7 p.m. Little 500 coach Tom Schwoegler will speak inside before the film is played and will present 15 trivia questions at the trivia table outside before the movie. “The entire concept of the Block Party is really cool,” Schwoegler said. “When Lauren came to me, asking to introduce the movie, I thought to myself that this could be a hell of an event.” Schwoegler began coach-

The IU-Bloomington Arts and Humanities Council is administering a survey to students, staff and faculty about campus arts and humanities resources, according to a press release. The findings will be used by the council

to create a five-year strategic plan for strengthening the culture of arts and humanities on campus. Randomly selected participants will receive email invitations in the next few weeks. Those interested may email csr@indiana.edu.

Visiting professor teaches on- and offstage for ‘Hedda’ Bridget Murray bridmurr@indiana.edu @bridget_murray

The cast of IU Theatre’s “Hedda Gabler” sat center stage in Ruth N. Halls Theatre during a rehearsal Monday evening, practicing the pronunciation of character names. A recording of correct pronunciations was played for the actors, but ultimately Director Dave McFadden said it was their decision to make. They toyed with title character Hedda Tesman’s name for a moment, experimenting with the sound before visiting professor Henry Woronicz spoke. “Tesman, it’s stress on the first syllable,” he said. Woronicz and first-year master of fine arts acting student Abby Lee looked to each other to confirm before the whole cast followed his lead and practiced the pronunciation. Woronicz said acting alongside students as Judge Brack in “Hedda Gabler” is another way of teaching. Woronicz has been acting, directing and teaching for more than 35 years. As an actor and director, he worked for prominent theater companies such as American Conservatory Theatre, the Shakespeare Theatre and Indiana Repertory Theatre. Woronicz also appeared on Broadway in 2005 in “Julius Caesar” at the Belasco Theatre. As a teacher, Woronicz was an associate professor

Block Party comes to Cinema By Taylor Lehman

Arts and Humanities surveys to be sent

ing the Little 500 in 1976, earning six victories in the 47 races he has coached. He also acted as a consultant for the cast and crew of “Breaking Away” when it was produced. “The cinema is so flipping cool that it’s scary,” Schwoegler said. “I watched ‘Breaking Away’ at the IU Cinema once, and the picture was so clear you could step into it.” Hall said she hopes the Block Party can serve as a “welcome back” for returning students and a “welcome to IU” for new students. She also said she hopes the event’s focus on the Little 500 will motivate riders to not only arrive to the event, but also to prepare and gain excitement for the race in April. “When most people think of college cinemas, they think of black-and-white Swedish films with English subtitles,” Schwoegler said. “That’s not how it is at the IU Cinema. I hope they get a lot of butts in the seats Thursday.”

Tap into Btown. The new IDS app keeps you in the know on all things IU and Bloomington. From sports to classifieds, music to food, the IDS app has it all.

Find the app under “Indiana Daily Student”

TIANTIAN ZHANG | IDS

Henry Woronicz rehearses his scene in the upcoming play “Hedda Gabler” in Ruth N. Halls Theater on Tuesday night.

on the School of Theatre faculty and head of the MFA Acting Program at Illinois State University from 2009 to 2012. He returned to Bloomington in January 2014 as a visiting faculty member and guest artist for the IU Department of Theatre, Drama and Contemporary Dance, according to its website. Upon his return, Woronicz appeared on the IU stage as the titlular character of Shakespeare’s “King Lear.” He said Shakespeare has been his specialty in his career. “I’ve been in 70-something productions of Shakespeare,” he said. “I’ve been working on these plays for a

long time.” Woronicz teaches a graduate course and undergraduate course in acting Shakespeare at IU, as well as an undergraduate introductory acting course for theater majors. He said being on stage allows him to teach the craft effectively. “Acting is an art form that’s best learned by doing it,” he said. When performing with students, Woronicz said he is aware that he is functioning as a sort of role model for the current students in the production. McFadden said Woronicz is a valuable cast member for students to observe because

of his ability to listen and engage with others on stage. “He’s going to bring the best out in other people on stage,” he said. Acting students are able to learn from Woronicz both on and off the stage because they get an idea of what a working process in a theater can be, McFadden said. Woronicz said acting with students allows him to break down the barriers between professor and student, making lessons in acting more tangible to them. “They see someone who’s dealing with the same kinds of things they’re dealing with in class,” he said. “But it’s at a different level.”


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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | T H U R S D AY, S E P T. 1 7, 2 0 1 5 | I D S N E W S . C O M

The twist is that it’s all right Not the best, but pretty fun

‘The Visit’

Olivia DeJonge, Ed Oxenbould, Kathryn Hahn

‘Best Time Ever with Neil Patrick Harris’

C+

Neil Patrick Harris

In a world where week-long visits with your grandparents already seem like a nightmare, director M. Night Shyamalan has turned that nightmare into something much worse. Since my first encounter with his films when I watched “The Sixth Sense” and got my adolescent mind blown, I’ve had a place in my thrillerloving heart for just about anything made by this guy. Throughout the years he’s had his ups and downs in the cinematic world of horror and thriller films, not to mention the flop with “The Last Airbender” and the confusing and anticlimactic plot of “The Happening,” so I was excited and intrigued to experience his attempt at redemption with “The Visit.” Despite the casting of one of my personal comedy favorites, Kathryn Hahn, who plays Paula Jamison, the young and free-spirited “cool mom” who sends her two children off to her parents’ house whom she hasn’t spoken to in 15 years, the comedy in this film is light and seems to be meant to ease the tension and anxiety. Paula’s two kids, Rebecca and Tyler, played by Olivia DeJonge and Ed Oxenbould, are invited to stay at their grandparents’ house for a week while their mother sails away on a cruise

C+

ship with her boyfriend. Rebecca is a teenage aspiring filmmaker and decides to turn this trip into a forgiveness documentary between her mother and grandmother, hoping to mend the broken pieces that were made when her mother eloped with her high school teacher 15 years prior. The moments after Rebecca and Tyler step off the train and meet their grandparents up until the last moment of the film can only be described as creepy. Now, this isn’t my first Shyamalan rodeo so I was prepared for that. What I wasn’t prepared for was the cheesy scenes. And

Horoscope Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a 7 — You’re learning quickly. Monitor changes and revise long-term plans. There’s more analysis required over the next three weeks, with Mercury retrograde. Allow extra time for transportation, and care with communications. Check data for errors, and ignore rumors. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is an 8 — Misunderstandings at work could slow the action. Be cautious with tools and time for the next several weeks, with Mercury retrograde, and make repairs immediately. Rethink your core values. Refine the message, and re-establish

there are a few. It puts a lull on the vibe this film gives and is one of the only components I didn’t really like. But then there’s the twist — there’s always a twist. It’s a pretty good twist, and executed well. Not “The Sixth Sense” good, but worthy enough to elicit a gasp from me. It’s what makes the movie worth seeing and gives it purpose. Before the twist, it just seemed like grandma and grandpa needed to be put into a nursing home. This film is told from Rebecca and Tyler’s point of view. And let me just say, these kids were great. Their characters complimented each other well and I loved

weeks with Mercury retrograde. Support each other through breakdowns. Finish up old business. Check your accounting for errors. Regroup and go again.

To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. old bonds. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is a 7 — Make plans and itineraries over the next three, weeks with Mercury retrograde, for travel after direct. Disagreements come easily. Communicate carefully. Keep confidences and secrets. Organize, sort and file papers, especially regarding academics. Repair old bonds. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is a 6 — Sort, file and organize paperwork, with Mercury retrograde over the next three weeks. Allow extra time for travel, transport, invoices and collections, and

double-check numbers. Listen and step carefully. Completion heals. Pay off debts. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is a 7 — Remain patient with miscommunications and disagreements. Reaffirm old bonds, and renegotiate partnership terms over the next three weeks with Mercury retrograde. Ask for what you want. Support each other through breakdowns. Develop team goals. Regroup. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is a 7 — Develop team goals. Remain patient with your partner over the next three

BLISS

watching them interact. But does this film live up to my expectations? To be honest, not really. The plot was just OK up until the climax, and the scenes were meant to look as if they were shot by an amateur filmmaker with a handheld camera, so there’s not a lot to go off of in that department. Don’t get me wrong, this movie is not a complete flop. It has great young actors, notable moments of jumping out of your seat and a home-hitting moral. It didn’t necessarily give me the chills I was expecting, but it definitely makes you never want to stay at your grandparents’ house.

Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is an 8 — For the next three, weeks with Mercury retrograde, reminisce, review and put in corrections at work. Listen carefully and stay respectful. Revise strategies and plans. Edit your work carefully for errors before submitting. Keep equipment repaired. Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 7 — Review your game, with Mercury retrograde in Leo for the next three weeks. Repair equipment, vehicles and tools. Look for where you can make improvements. Plan your moves, especially with love, romance and passion projects.

“Best Time Ever with Neil Patrick Harris” is a good time, but not quite the best time. It’s still working on its voice but it is entertaining and boasts one of the best hosts in the entertainment industry. That host’s name, as you can tell from the title, is Neil Patrick Harris. He’s a good choice to helm a variety show, as he’s a bit more than an actor. He’s an entertainer. An entertainer is someone whose goal is to entertain you by any means necessary. They’re versatile and willing to try anything to make an audience happy. The best entertainers make whatever they’re doing look like fun. Harris is the most wellrounded and cheerful entertainer working today. He’s a magician, singer and Tony award-winning actor. He’s the type of person who treats every new challenge with a shrug and a smile before revealing that he was good at that new thing the whole time. He’s the best thing about “Best Time Ever with Neil Patrick Harris.” Whether it’s performing magic or beating guest announcer Reese Watch for mirages. Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is an 8 — Clean, sort and organize at home over the next three weeks, with Mercury retrograde. Back up computers and files. Revise and refine household infrastructure. Misunderstandings require patience. If it looks too good to be true, it probably is. Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Today is an 8 — Traveling flows today and tomorrow. Review data to find the truth over the next three weeks, with Mercury’s retrograde. Guard against communication breakdowns. Revisit creative ideas from the past and revise future plans. Patiently consider. Tread carefully. Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Today is

Witherspoon by climbing up 15 stories faster than her. In one segment, “Best Day of Your Life,” Harris brings a couple onstage and reveals he was secretly a part of events they had attended. The segment closes with footage of him photobombing their wedding photos before he reveals that he is sending them on a honeymoon to Antigua. It was a fun segment that reminded me of what Michael Scott from “The Office” thinks when he hears the term “big brother” which is, “Wow, I love my big brother.” The idea of someone following you and secretly inserting themselves into your life can be scary. It isn’t scary when it is a beloved celebrity who will give you a trip. Some of the other segments were less fun. Harris’s prank on Carson Daly and the judges of “The Voice” had a good premise, but you get the feeling they cut the best jokes out. The closing “end of the show show” number features Harris performing magic and doing pogo tricks as the various guests dance. It’s a lot like “Best Time Ever with Neil Patrick Harris” itself: overstuffed, high energy and fun. It might not be the best time ever, but it’s a good start. Jesse Pasternack a 7 — Review statements and account activity for errors. Double-check financial data over the next few weeks, with Mercury retrograde. Pay off bills. Secure what you’ve gained. Revise plans and re-affirm important commitments. Invest in your business. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 7 — Check your figures again. Get into a three-week revision phase, with Mercury retrograde in your sign. Secure what you’ve achieved. Reaffirm commitments. Figure out what worked and what didn’t. Review written work and grant extra patience around communications.

© 2015 By Nancy Black Distributed by Tribune Media Services, INC. All Rights Reserved

HARRY BLISS

Crossword

L.A. Times Daily Crossword

Publish your comic on this page. The IDS is accepting applications for student comic strips. Email five samples and a brief description of your idea to adviser@indiana.edu by Sept. 21. Submissions will be reviewed and selections will be made by the editor-in-chief. Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis

su do ku

ACROSS

Difficulty Rating: How to play: Fill in the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 grid contains the digits 1 through 9, without repeating a number in any one row, column or 3x3 grid.

© Puzzles by Pappocom

NON SEQUITUR

1 Ways to the docks 7 Military unit 14 California colleague of Barbara 15 Worked on a runway 16 Spouse of 66-Across 17 Winter clothes 18 2008 Benicio del Toro title role 19 Fruit support 21 Fiber-yielding plant 22 Spouse of 20-Down 24 Messes up 26 Command to Fido 28 Pump output 30 Downturn 32 “__ ideal world ... ” 34 Fancy neckwear 37 Mess up 39 “A likely story!” 40 Friend of 66-Across 42 Ike’s domain in WWII 43 Orwell’s “1984” Inner Party is one 45 Aired as a marathon 47 Track setting 48 Ship, to a sailor 49 Chips for the winner

50 “__-mite!”: “Good Times” catchword 52 Patron of Alice’s 54 Friend of 16-Across 58 What we have here 60 River-bottom accumulation 62 Word with odds or bricks 63 Water pistol output 66 Comic strip celebrating its 85th anniversary this month 68 Brighter, in a way 69 Colors again 70 University officers 71 Last

DOWN 1 Union member since 1890 2 Niamey is its capital 3 Order companion 4 Slaughter in baseball 5 U.S. IOUs 6 The Four Questions ritual 7 Audi rival 8 Santa’s target 9 Graven images 10 Makeup of many capsules 11 Son of 16- and 66-Across 12 Scouting unit 13 Paper staffers, briefly 16 CCCL doubled

WILEY BREWSTER ROCKIT: SPACE GUY!

20 Employer of 16-Across 23 Back then 25 She won an Oscar for her 1980 portrayal of Loretta 27 1945 “Big Three” conference site 29 “__ boy!” 31 Chi preceder 33 Light element 34 One bounce, in baseball 35 __ days 36 Creator of 66-Across 37 Caffé order 38 Beginning of space? 41 Surg. sites 44 Real 46 E. African land 49 Springtime concern for many 51 Hatch in the Senate 53 Cuba __: rum drink 55 Respected figure 56 Bring up 57 High seed’s advantage 59 “Ignore that edit” 61 Taylor’s husband between Wilding and Fisher 63 Cold War letters 64 “__ Sera, Sera” 65 Grads to be 67 Manhattan coll. founded in 1831

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

TIM RICKARD


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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | T H U R S D AY, S E P T. 1 7, 2 0 1 5 | I D S N E W S . C O M To place an ad: go online, call 812-855-0763 or stop by Ernie Pyle Hall 120 from 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Monday - Friday.

CLASSIFIEDS

Full advertising policies are available online.

General Employment

Flexibility with class schedule.

¿Es Usted Bilingüe? Come Work At Bloom As A Licensed Agent Trainee. Full-Time Bilingual positions starting at $12/hour and $15/hour after receiving agent card. Potential for year round employment. Professional office environment. Paid time off and 6 paid holidays. What are you waiting for? Go online and apply now! www.workatbloom.com

Real-world Experience. NO WEEKENDS! All Majors Accepted. Seeking students with good organization, time management, and communication skills to work in advertising sales. Previous sales experience preferred but not required. Must own reliable transportation and be able to work through August, 2016.

Bloomingfoods Cooperative Grocery wishes to hire a new general manager for its 3 retail stores & commissary. Full advertisement can be found at: http://www. bloomingfoods.coop/ wp-content/uploads/ 2014/08/FINALad.pdf

Apply in person at: Ernie Pyle Hall,RM 120. Email: rhartwel@indiana.com

for a complete job description. EOE

Houses

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!!UNIVERSITY VILLAGE Leasing for 2016-2017: 218 E. 19th St., 4 BR, 2 BA. 1336 N. Washington St., 4 BR, 2 BA. 216 E. 19th St., 5 BR, 2 BA. 220 E. 19th Street., 5 BR, 3 BA. 1315 N. Lincoln St., 5 BR, 3 BA . LiveByTheStadium.com 1-4 BR avail. ‘16-’17. Quiet, studious, environment. 812-333-9579 2 & 3 BR. A/C, W/D, D/W, near campus. Avail Aug. or sooner. 812-327-3238 or 812-332-5971

Wings Xtreme is accepting applications for delivery drivers, front counter, & cook. Apply at store location located at: 2612 E. 10th St. If a student, please provide class schedule w/ app.

5 BR, 2 BA duplex-apt. Quiet location, off-street prkg., busline, close to downtown. No pets. $1600/mo., utils. not incl. Avail. 8/15. 317-435-4801 Houses & apts. for Aug., 2016. 2-8 BR, great locations. 812-330-1501 www.gtrentalgroup.com

www.grazieitalianeatery.com

NOW HIRING! - OPEN INTERVIEWS THUR., SEPT. 17th, 1-4p.m. ONCE UPON A CHILD. Sales associates and shift leaders. Flexible hrs, fast paced, high energy, fun kids retail store. For details call 812-339-1050

425

340

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Automobiles

Pontiac G5 for sale. 50k miles. $5500. sisixie@indiana.edu

Sublet Condos/Twnhs. Brand New! PowerBilt Lil Slugger Junior, 5-piece, red, golf set. (Ages 9-12) $70. tsaiwu@indiana.edu

Red ‘09 Nissan Cube, 145k mi., $6000. hgenidy@indiana.edu

Looking for Christian fem. rmmte. Nice, affordable housing. Avail. Jan. 2016. 812-360-7352

!!NOW LEASING!! August ‘16 - ‘17. Omega Properties 812-333-0995 omegabloomington.com

Honda Accord, 2012. Available Dec., 2015. $13,500. 812-964-9465 jtarifin@indiana.edu

Misc. for Sale 17” HP Pavillion laptop (Crimson Red). 1 yr. old. $400. (812) 276-9487 or sashirle@indiana.edu

Studio apt. Great dwntwn. location. $480+elec. Avail. immediately. 812-585-0816

3 BR/1.5 bath townhome, $997/mo. Utils. included. 903-283-4188 petejess@indiana.edu

!!!! Need a place to Rent?

2010 Audi A5 Prestige. Blue, 38,000 miles, $27,000, obo. 317-989-8806

Used student flute. Price neg. 812-327-7253 yerlee@indiana.edu

2 BR/2 BA apt. avail. now until 7/31/16. Bonus: 1/2 deposit and water paid. $849/mo. 317-840-8374. Jan. - July, 2016. 2 BR, 2 BA apt at Scholar’s Quad. $527.50/person. hsessler@indiana.edu

Instruments Selling: Wurlitzer upright piano, $300. mtsuppig@indiana.edu

2 BR, 1.5 BA apt. on bus line to campus. Avail. 10/12. $735/mo. No deposit. 812-606-4224

Automobiles

1989 VW Cabriolet. Only 42k mi.Convertible, $6k, neg. smaini@indiana.edu Call/text: 330-221.9763.

Men’s burgundy Toms. Size 11. Excellent cond. $40. 260-442-6028 rhavert@iu.edu Selling: 2002 black Volvo S40. $3000.

dszekere@indiana.edu

Staub Ovale cocotte, 5 QT. In good condition. $200. zhuoqiu@indiana.edu

MERCHANDISE Electronics Black Beats Solo2 headphones, mint cond. Never opened. $170. jnigrell@indiana.edu iPhone 5S, 16GB. $150, obo.

ackollme@indiana.edu

LG Tone + 730Bs Bluetooth earphones w/carrying case. 812-650-8241 tuengo@indiana.edu MACBOOK AIR - MINT CONDITION w/case and keyboard cover! $599.99 310-779-0376 TI-83 plus calculator, only used one semester. $60. 317-658-9420 or knmaxwel@indiana.edu TI-84 plus, silver edition, calculator for sale. Used one semester only. $50. 812-834-5144

520

220

15 hours per week.

Large 1 & 2 BR. Close to Campus & Stadium. Avail. Now! 812-334-2646

1 BR apt. 3 min. from campus. $573/mo.+ dep. A/C, parking, W/D, free utils. grad-apt-413@outlook.com

TRANSPORTATION

Bicycles

Schwinn SR Suntour Womens Bike. $75. mcdowers@indiana.edu

Textbooks

For sale: The Praxis PLT Textbook, Grades K-6. Incl. 2 full length exams & other guides. $20. 812-834-5144

Clothing

SERVICES Air Jordan 11 Low Concords, size 10. Price neg. sc46@indiana.edu

White Tarik Ediz designer gown. Size 4. $650, obo. 8125999521 caychase@indiana.edu

665

EMPLOYMENT

Sublet Apt. Unfurn.

450

The IDS is accepting applications for Advertising Account Executives to start Fall, 2015.

Campus Walk Apts. Close to Campus, 2 BR avail. Call for special. Utils. incl. & free prkg. 812-332-1509 Cwalk@crerentals.com

3496 Saddlebrook Ct. Dishes, lamps, glasses, jewelry, knick-knacks. Sat. Sept 19th. 8am-2pm

465

*** Upcoming Concert!!! Taylor Gang’s Chevy Woods & Prettyboy ENT. #1 College IU venue: The Bluebird. Sept. 17th. Presale tickets $12 at Bluebird or Ticketfly.com

325

110

Schedule a plasma donation. In September all donors can receive up to $70 per week. Call 812-334-1405 or visit biolifeplasma.com to download a coupon and make an appointment. Limited time only: No appointment necessary Fridays before 5 p.m

Announcements

Grazie Italian Eatery is now hiring cooks! Apply online at:

2 apts. available: 1. 1 BR near Kirkwood. $700/mo. + utils. 2. 2 BR, 10 min. from Bloomington. $700/mo. + utils. Both no pets, no smoking, 12 mos. lease. 812-361-6154 Voice/Text.

Garage Sale

Sublet Apt. Furnished

435

!!NOW LEASING!! August ‘16 - ‘17. Omega Properties 812-333-0995 omegabloomington.com

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Bloomington tech. manufacturing company seeks part time graphic designer. Must be proficient w/ Adobe suite of products, modern web design patterns & content mgmt. tools. Work samples required. jobs@netirrigate.com

Apt. Unfurnished

Furniture Twin bed w/drawers, headboard storage, and mattress. $150, obo. rolebenn@indiana.edu

Seeking fem. to sublet 4 BR apt. Indiv. BR. & bathroom, lg. closet, furn. stishman@umail.iu.edu 345

General Employment

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

350

220

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

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

Houses Now Renting 2016-2017 HPIU.COM Houses and apartments. 1-6 bedrooms. Close to Campus. 812-333-4748 No pets please.

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

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

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

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

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CLASSIFIEDS ADVERTISING POLICIES

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idsnews.com/classifieds

Misc. Services

Handyman Services available. Furniture assmebly, TV wallmount, etc. 812-320-0363

HOUSING

onceuponachildbloomington.com

NOW HIRING IU Student to assist in delivery and circulation. Monday through Friday, 10-20 hours/week. Must be available 5:30am7:30am as needed, all other hours are flexible to fit individual schedules. Requirements: -3 semester commitment. -Reliable vehicle. Compensation: hourly + mileage reimbursement. To apply send resume to: ads@idsnews.com or dantdavi@gmail.com

nashvillehouse1@gmail.com

1-9 Bedrooms We’ve got it all... Houses, Apartments, Condos, Townhomes

Locations throughout the Bloomington area

ParkerMgt.com 812-339-2115 305

PT wait staff needed. Busy season is coming up, make some extra money this Fall. Located In dntwn. Nashville, 20 min. from Bloomington. Experience preferred but will train if needed. Send resumes to:

Properties Available NOW and 2016-2017

Apartment Furnished Lavish dntwn. apts. Extreme luxury dntwn. living. Call or text: 812-345-1771 to schedule your tour today. www.platinumdevelopmentllc.com.

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