MONDAY, SEPT. 15, 2014
IDS
See how IU lost in the final seconds to Bowling Green Page 7
INDIANA DAILY STUDENT | IDSNEWS.COM
Soccer falls in Big Ten opener Sat., 1-0 By Andrew Vailliencourt @availlie@indiana.edu | @AndrewVcourt
Senior Patrick Doody drilled a corner kick into the box with 12 seconds left and IU down a goal. The Hoosier’s goalie, sophomore Colin Webb, was playing all the way up the field as his team went for the equalizer. The ball got through to Webb, who headed the ball into the netting on the outside of the goal. The fans cheered, and the band started to play as neither realized the shot was no good and IU had just suffered its first defeat of the season. No. 16 Penn State beat the No. 11 Hoosiers 1-0 Saturday at Bill Armstrong Stadium as Nittany Lion sophomore Mason Klerks put in the lone goal of the match. “The ball skipped through and, it was there by the back post,” Webb said. “I was there by the back post and just wasn’t able to put it across the field into the backside of the net.” Klerks wound up and fired a shot SEE SOCCER, PAGE 6
LUKE SCHRAM | IDS
Lead singer Damian Kulash of OK GO sings as confetti comes down around him Sunday at the Bluebird Nightclub.
Here they go again
Lost chances How many opportunities did IU have to score against Penn State? Find out on page 8.
OK Go takes the Bluebird stage Sunday night By Camille Sarabia
New biotech degree program offered By Neha Ramani nramani@indiana.edu | @neha_ramani
A new degree program aims to bridge the gap between science and the humanities. This fall is the first semester the biotechnology department is offering a bachelor of arts degree in addition to the existing bachelor of science option in the hopes of preparing students for careers in the biotech industry outside of lab research. Professor Cheng Kao, director of the biotechnology program, said the B.A. program will still be science-based but will emphasize writing, marketing, sales and communication. “I think putting the focus on scientific communication opens a lot more job options,” he said. Kao said biotechnology is a fastgrowing, well-paying industry with new jobs relating to research, business and communications. “We want to allow the students to be on track to all these types of careers,” he said. Kao said the biotechnology department was established in 2006 with the bachelor of science degree but only started gaining traction recently. “The first seven years or so, it wasn’t really advertised,” he said. SEE BIOTECH, PAGE 6
csarabia@indiana.edu | @camille_sarabia
The stage is set, and the crowd can barely contain itself. With back and forth sways to the DJ’s beat, a mash up of Rihanna’s “Diamonds” and M83’s “Midnight City” plays, the anticipation is set, and the energy is alive. Soon the lights darkened, and the crowd cheered as they raised one by one on their toes aiming for a higher view. Then, the four emerge. Damien Kulash, the lead. Tim Nordwind, the bassist. Andy Ross, the guitarist. and Dan Konopka, the drummer. Claps, whistles and hollers fill the
Bluebird Nightclub’s brick room, lights flash and confetti blows. OK Go is on. However, the music, the camaraderie and the relationships started between OK Go’s Kulash and Nordwind, as they met at a summer camp when they were 11. “We started a band that year, but we didn’t have any instruments,” Kulash said. “We borrowed a guitar. We couldn’t find any drums to borrow, so our drummer played metal folding chairs.” Kulash said that by process of elimination, he became the guitarist because he was the only one that played a string instrument, even if it was the violin.
“I was a terrible violinist, but a worse guitarist,” Kulash said. “I played all six strings at once. I held down one note, so it was the same chord over and over.” To some, OK Go brings back old memories from childhood, but to others, it’s a new band altogether. Lisa Locey, 28, came with Thay Pham, 21, for their first viewing of OK Go live. Pham had been a fan, quoting all of their music videos and his favorite songs, but Locey, who was googling OK Go on her phone, saw the opportunity at the Bluebird and decided to enjoy the night. “I remember their treadmill video,” Pham said. “The first time
Interview with OK Go For an extended interview with OK Go, watch the video at idsnews.com. I saw it was five months ago, but I loved it, and I can’t wait to see them live.” OK Go’s treadmill video sparked widespread attention, but it wasn’t the type of label that they were looking to be associated with. “It’s a careful balance to have goals and things you want to do, but to also remain open enough to things that you never thought of in advance,” Kulash said. “We SEE OK GO, PAGE 6
Balloon Festival raises money for Kiwanis By Amanda Marino ammarino@indiana.edu | @amandanmarino
A crowd of hundreds of people gathers in an open field. Eyes darting around. They take in the flurry of activity as a dozen colorful hot air balloons are laid out on the grass before them. One by one, each balloon comes to life, breathing in the cool air the fans provide them. Suddenly, the balloons are gone, taking with them passengers that are experiencing the same miracle of flight that started in France in 1783. This past weekend was the second year for the Kiwanis Club of South Central Indiana’s Balloon Fest this weekend at Monroe County Fairgrounds. The event raised money for the club’s projects and affiliates to help improve the Bloomington community. Bill Oliver said if you close your eyes, you can’t even tell you are being lifted off the ground by a giant balloon. Oliver has been a pilot for 39
years, and this year’s Kiwanis Balloon Festival was another opportunity to be a part of what he called a choreographed dance of balloons in the sky. “I taught a lot of these guys,” Oliver said, glancing around the room where the pilots would be briefed before an early morning flight. Though the wind and clouds kept the balloons grounded that morning, he said the night flight would be better. “We’re very sensitive to that kind of thing,” Oliver said, pointing to the tops of trees that were barely rustling in a breeze. Pilots must look to other balloons, smoke, trees, flags and even the surfaces of ponds to determine the wind speed and direction, Smith said. Oliver said the technology has improved greatly since he began flying. His Oliver Winery balloon and 42-by-72-inch basket can carry six people anywhere from 500 to 18,000 feet in the air. Warren Smith has also been flying for decades. He said he started
SEPTEMBER 1ST - 30TH
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BEN MIKESELL | IDS
Before flying in the 2014 Kiwanis Balloon Festival, Bill Oliver stands on the basket to keep the balloon on the ground.
flying planes about 30 years ago and took up hot air balloon piloting 15 years later. When he was learning to fly, the instruments were far cruder, and learning to control a balloon is difficult enough as it is, he said. Smith said flying a hot air balloon is comparable to driving a semi
in terms of control. “We can’t steer the balloon left or right,” Smith said. It’s this big mass that you can only move down and up, Oliver said. The wind decides the rest of your journey. SEE BALLOONS, PAGE 6
Upcoming Fall Break Trips Rock climbing - Southern Illinois Canoeing – Little Miami River, Ohio
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CAMPUS EDITORS: ANNA HYZY & KATHRINE SCHULZE | CAMPUS@IDSNEWS.COM
Business school, COAS pair for new degrees The Kelley School of Business and the College of Arts and Sciences are collaborating to create new accelerated master’s degrees, according to a Sept. 11 press release. These new degrees will be in the sciences,
mathematics, information technology and others. Students in these programs will be able to earn a bachelor’s degree from COAS and a master of science from the business school, according to the University.
Kelley starts online paper By Ashleigh Sherman aesherma@indiana.edu | @aesherma
PHOTOS BY NADINE HERMAN | IDS
YOGAFEST Above Kristen Becher teaches a yoga session at the Yogafest Saturday morning in the IU Art Museum. Right People strike a pose as they gather for a yoga session. Left Stephanie Deboer teaches a session at Yogafest.
IU professor named VP of scholarly society From IDS reports
The Association for Slavic, East European and Eurasian Studies has named IU history and international studies professor Padraic Kenney as vice president and president-elect for the upcoming year, according to a University release. ASEEES is an international nonprofit, non-political scholarly society. The association focuses on the teaching, research and publication of information about Central Asia, the Caucasus, Russia and
Eastern Europe, according to their website. Kenney will takeover as vice presi- Kenney dent of ASEEES in 2015, according to the University. His role in the more than 3,000 member group will later change in 2016 as he will become president. Kenney will be the seventh ASEEES president to come from IU, according to the University. He will join the ranks
of David Ransel, Charles Jelavich, Robert Campbell, Robert Byrnes, Edward Brown and William Edgerton, according to the University. “Professor Kenney is known throughout the United States and the region and around the globe as one of the leading scholars in the field,” said Lee Feinstein, dean of the IU School of Global and International Studies. “His scholarship is matched only by his dedication to his students and colleagues. On behalf of the School of
Global and International Studies, we congratulate him for this recognition.” Here at IU, Kenney studies Poland and Eastern and Central Europe from czarist Russian rule to present day. Kenney specifically studies the social movements and transition into post-Soviet society, according to the University. This aligns with the ASEEES primary goal of furthering the knowledge of Eurasian studies in a regional and global context, according to their website. “Regional expertise is
more important now than it has been in a generation as we all try to understand Russia’s effort to remake the world order,” Kenney said the release. “Historians, political scientists, experts on literature, culture and society in Russia, Central Asia and Eastern Europe are going to be contributing to vital national and international conversations. I am honored to be chosen to lead ASEEES at this time,” he added. Lindsay Moore
Fall career, internship fair to take place Tues. By Amanda Marino ammarino@indiana.edu @amandanmarino
More than 116 organizations will be attending the Fall Career and Internship Fair on Tuesday in the Indiana Memorial Union’s Alumni Hall, Solarium and Georgian Room. The event will last from 3 to 4 p.m. for specific student groups, such as scholarship groups, disabled students, student veterans and diversity groups, and from 4 to 7 p.m. for all students, said Alan Gusse, recruitment
coordinator for the Career Development Center and Arts and Sciences Career Services. Gusse said groups in attendance will include All State Insurance Company, Baxter, C. H. Robinson, Chrysler Group, Coyote Logistics, Eli Lilly, MSDS Online and Uniqlo. He said businesses want to see and interact with as many students as possible. Last year, 1,465 students came to the fair, which had 120 employers present. At the time, the Frangipani Room replaced the
Georgian Room, giving them more space but also spreading the fair far across the Union. “I’m expecting anywhere between 1,400 and 2,000 students, and I’m hoping for the higher number, of course,” Gusse said. The variety of businesses, ranging from public services to software companies, means that students of all majors are welcome to attend, he said. “We have a very wide range of employers,” Gusse said. Gusse said students
should come prepared to the fair by being dressed to impress, having their resumes in hand and preparing an “elevator pitch,” a self-promoting speech that is about two minutes long. “All students need to do is to attend and be prepared, and the rest is taken care of,” he said. Gusse said 30 organizations will have interviews the day after the fair, so students who come could be interviewing for a job or an internship as early as Wednesday. “Employers are here to
give the students jobs,” he said. Gusse said it is important for students to attend career and internship fairs in order to stay competitive with their peers. “It’s personal branding,” he said. “It’s getting experience talking to employers.” Gusse said this kind of fair is a great benefit to both students and the employers who want to engage and develop them. “It’s a good idea for students to start attending career fairs, even for freshmen and sophomores,” he said.
Lecture to discuss current national security policies From IDS reports
Wednesday will mark the 10th-annual national Constitution Day. In celebration, the Maurer School of Law will be host to Geoffrey Stone, professor of law at the University of Chicago, to give a lecture about national security. Stone was chosen by President Obama to serve in a five-member group reviewing intelligence and communication technologies, according
to a Sept. 11 press release. This review group assembled a 300-page report discuss- Stone ing the legal framework and aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks as well as future steps for dealing with the collection and security of both foreign and domestic intelligence, according to the Liberty and Security in a Changing World report.
The 46 recommendations sent to President Obama included proposals to restrict government power to collect and store all mass, undigested and non-public personal information, according to the report. It also suggested that bulk storage of telephone metadata collected by the government should be terminated as reasonably as possible to a private provider or private third party. Stone will address these
decisions and others made by the review group during his lecture. Stone’s lecture will also discuss some of the National Security Agency’s current policies as well as its most controversial ones, including the dealings of Edward Snowden, according to the University. The lecture will take place at noon Wednesday in Maurer 123. The event is free and open to the public. Lindsay Moore
IU alumni share their secrets to success in a recent endeavor by the Kelley School of Business. The Kelley School of Business recently debuted an online magazine to be published three times a year. It will be filled with articles, informational graphics, photos and videos. Dubbed Momentum, the magazine is inspired by the school’s mission of turning key moments into positive momentum, according to the school’s website. Rebecca Salerno, director of creative and content marketing at the Kelley School of Business, said the team behind Momentum found inspiration in the virtual pages of competitor schools’ online publications, as well as Whole Foods Market’s online magazine, Dark Rye. “We were looking at that magazine, and we were also looking at publications from competitor schools, business schools, and thought, ‘You know? We really want to do something fresh and different and bold,’” she said. “And that was really, I think, the heart of the idea.” Darren Klein, director of marketing at the Kelley School of Business, said the team behind Momentum plans to take stories from Kelley faculty, students and alumni and share them not only with those within the business school but with those outside the business school and even those outside of IU in hopes of making them approach business differently. “We spent a lot of time talking about how do people define business,” Salerno said. “And what do they think of business? And we wanted to find great stories that kind of got people out of their traditional ways of thinking about business.” Each issue will center on a distinct theme, Salerno said. The first issue focuses on entrepreneurship, innovation and creativity with profiles of Susan Jones, founder of innovation firm Seed Strategy; Ashley Volbrecht, founder of mobile fashion boutique Truckshop; and Donald Kuratko, Kelley School of Business professor of entrepreneurship. The online format appeals to the targeted demographic of 16- to 35-year-olds, Klein said. “It’s a much easier way to share a story,” he said. “You can do it through video, and you can do it through some interactive tools that we haven’t used yet but that we’re always open to.” Not only does the online format make the stories shareable, it makes the magazine itself shareable, Klein said. Kelley School of Business alumni, who were sent SEE KELLEY, PAGE 3
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COURTESY PHOTO
IU professor Katy Börner was the keynote speaker at the University of Miami opening of the first exhibit of all 100 maps of the “Places and Spaces: Mapping Science” exhibit.
IU professor Katy Börner curates mapping exhibit From IDS reports
BARI GOLDMAN | IDS
The Crimson Cruisers program provides free bikes to students, staff and faculty each semester.
Crimson Cruisers completes pilot stage By DeJuan Foster dejfoste@indiana.edu | @DeJuan_Foster
After completing its summer pilot program, Crimson Cruisers is looking to expand in semesters to come. The Crimson Cruisers program at IU is a bikelending program that hopes to provide free bikes to students, staff and faculty each semester. The IU Office of Sustainability, Transportation Working Group and IU Outdoor Adventures made the program possible after deciding to recycle and restore old bikes back to mint condition. Henri Venable, intern at IUOS, noted how the idea of the program came from a number of people but was also inspired by the University of Kentucky Wildcat Wheels program and the Fort Collins bike library. Venable also said that, once the idea was formed, the support came in and the process began to move along. The program just recently completed the pilot stage. “The summer pilot went really well,” Venable said. “We had 10 riders, or ‘ambassadors,’ who together covered more than 800 miles with their bikes. We had a great mix of faculty, staff and students with a variety of interests regarding bicycling. Some wanted to lose weight,
» KELLEY
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2 a trailer prior to publication and links to the magazine after publication, have shared links to the magazine via social media, garnering the magazine an average of 100 views per day. “We want to kind of get
some used them to get to work, some to mountain bike and others to haul their groceries.” “The goal of the bicycle initiative internship, generally, is to encourage a shift in transportation habits away from single occupancy vehicles and toward more active and sustainable transportation, like biking or walking,” Venable said. “The hope is to change transportation habits and preconceptions by introducing people to alternatives and demonstrating their practicality in a way that is wholly personal and tangible.” When renting a bike, riders also receive a helmet, lights, lock and a bell to ensure that all state and local laws are met. Riders are not required to pay to rent the bike or supplies, but they are held responsible for returning the bike in good condition. IU Outdoor Adventures assists in this effort by providing free maintenance on the bikes as needed during the semester. IU Outdoor Adventures trip leader Aryn Doll discussed the process of bike maintenance. “When you apply, if you get accepted, you get a free tune-up throughout the semester,” Doll said. “But if it needs attention, we will help you.” IU Outdoor Adventures trip leader Bridget Masur
said riders are also required to take a safety class to help prepare them for situations, such as adverse weather, but it was noted that riding in certain conditions is the rider’s decision. “It’s personal preference,” Masur said. “I wouldn’t ride in icy conditions because it isn’t safe. It’s definitely possible to ride in the winter, but riding in ice isn’t a good idea, ever.” Although the program is fairly new, Venable said he is already thinking about future plans for Crimson Cruisers. “Expansion, plain and simple,” Venable said. “I would love to see the CC library move into a dedicated space on campus with room to hold more bikes and possibly serve as a workshop where students can learn bike maintenance and work on their own bikes.”
the ball rolling,” Klein said. “We want to let people know, but we’re really hoping that this will be such inspiring content and enjoyable content that people will want to share it. That’s our ultimate goal.” Inspiring and enjoyable content comes from business school faculty, students
and alumni, Salerno said. "(They’ve) been a big source of inspiration,” she said. “It’s because we have a belief that people learn things here at Kelley, at Indiana University, that give them an ability to succeed in the business world in a slightly different way than anyone else does.”
“The goal of the bicycle initiative internship, generally, is to encourage a shift in transportation habits away from single occupancy vehicles and toward more active and sustainable transportation, like biking or walking.” Henri Venable, IU Office of Sustainability intern
One hundred maps and 10 years later, IU professor Katy Börner has completed a mapping exhibit entitled “Places and Spaces: Mapping Science.” “Places and Spaces” takes a microscopic look at scientific and human activities from a broad range of research topics, according to an IU release. Börner, an information visualization specialist, was lead curator of the exhibit, which featured a total of 236 mapmakers’ works, according to a University release. The mapmakers came from 68 cities in 16 different countries and represented a total of 30 different scientific disciplines. “Maps have guided mankind’s explorations for centuries,” Börner said. “In the information age, key opportunities for discovery and innovation reside in knowledge and expertise spaces, and maps of science help us navigate, manage, understand and exploit these spaces.” Ten maps were made every year, and all 100 were displayed together for the
first time last month at the University of Miami in Coral Gables, Fla., according to the release. Some of the topics featured are science maps for kids, the history of science fiction, the environment and the state of the polar bear. All were designed to help the layperson understand the enormous amount of data scientists generate, Börner said. Hung side by side, the maps would be the length of two football fields. Börner is IU’s Victor H. Yngve professor of information science in the School of Informatics and Computing. Todd Theiault, editor and co-curator of the exhibit, and designer Samuel Mills, both of whom work at the IU-Bloomington Cyberinfrastructure for Network Science Center, worked with the mapmakers to aid in making the maps for the general public. “Places and Spaces” is currently being exhibited at the University of Miami where Börner will be lecturing for the rest of the semester on visualizing data and its confluence in the arts,
sciences and everyday life, according to the University. Next, the exhibit will be displayed for five months at Northwestern University on its Chicago campus. Previously, the unfinished exhibit was displayed annually in hundreds of venues in 23 countries. Most notably, it has been on display at the New York Public Library and has been a mobile exhibit on a passenger train that traveled across Germany, according to the University. Several IU faculty and staff were among the mapmakers for the exhibit. Among them, Y.Y. Ahn, assistant professor of informatics, collaborated on “Pulse of the Nation,” which used Twitter to time-stamp mood variations across the United States. With the maps completed, both the exhibit team and an international advisory board will move on to the next phase of the exhibit, which will focus on interactive tools and online services to empower users to both read maps and to visualize their own data. Kathrine Schulze
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OPINION
EDITORS: LEXIA BANKS & EMMA WENNINGER | OPINION@IDSNEWS.COM
ALL RILED UP
What happens at snowmobile parties... Snowmobile-themed parties are a real thing, and Sarah Palin’s family throws them. That is, until the police are called. Track Palin and several other family members were allegedly involved in a fight
with a man, who dated Willow Palin, at a party before the Iron Dog race in Anchorage, Alaska. We can’t confirm any arrests, but we can confirm that the Anchorage police most definitely do not get paid enough.
IDS EDITORIAL BOARD
QUE SARAH, SARAH
Elderly education
Throw what you know
JORDAN RILEY is a sophomore in comparative literature.
The burden of student loans has become a constant anxiety for students that often has the potential to financially haunt them for the rest of their lives. For those who utilize these loans, most of us imagine we will be paying them off well into the future. But for students who attend school in their later years, the payment period is significantly shorter and potentially more damaging. The Guardian published an article claiming 3 percent of those 65 and older carry the same debt traditional students do and with less time to pay it off, meaning it frequently defaults and is taken out of their already meager Social Security. Some might claim it is irresponsible of the elderly to attend school at that cost, but the same could be said for students taking out loans at 18. The real problem is that higher education shouldn’t be just for the wealthy or for the young. For many elderly people, retirement is the only time in their lives they have the free time to start crossing off things on their bucket list, especially for those who were unable to afford or attend college in their prime. Retirement is often the first chance to travel and experience new things. For many who were denied the experience earlier in life, this also includes college. But it’s more than retirees trying to broaden their horizons. Twenty-seven percent of retirees younger than 65 are shouldering student loans for their children’s education. Many parents and grandparents are now made to enter into crippling debt upon retirement just to provide for their children. And it is worse for them because once you hit 65, the U.S. Treasury starts taking money out of Social Security to pay those loans. For many, Social Security is the only check they have coming in, and siphoning away their already meager checks has left many seniors in poverty. It is ridiculous that we have made the pursuit of knowledge so necessary and appealing for a higher station in life but have also made it so infeasible for so many. The American dream allows for people to build themselves up to be better than they were, but this requires access to education, which it seems that no one but the luckiest have access to anymore. Teens can’t pay for it and neither can people who have earned money their whole lives. People of all ages are compromising a comfortable future for what should be available to anyone who wants it. If this trend continues, no generation will be free from the debt that comes with education. We don’t want to subject our grandparents or our children to the same anxieties that we as college students will continue to live with long after graduation. We don’t even want it ourselves. It’s time the education system realizes the harm it is inflicting on those it is supposed to be serving. It’s time to reel in student debt for all ages. jordrile@indiana.edu
SARAH KISSEL is a sophomore in English literature.
ILLUSTRATION BY STEPHANIE NIU | IDS
Queen’s University’s royal mistake WE SAY: Let them report sports Queen’s University granted the sports section of the Journal, the school’s student newspaper, only one sporting event pass. In previous years, it has received eight passes, according to the Globe and Mail. The Kingston, Ontario-based university denied the regular amount of passes to the paper after it published a story that questioned the voting procedures for the school’s recent athletic department awards. After the story was published, Queen’s responded in a letter to the paper’s editor-in-chief, who also had written the story in question, saying the paper’s “privileged access” would be reconsidered. It revealed the university’s ignorance of the importance of student journalism. Although the university reinstated the paper’s credentials subsequent of the backlash, there is an important conversation to be had here about student journalists and the roles they serve on campuses. By denying school journalists access to sporting events, the school exposed
itself and the athletic department to rumor and dishonest reporting. Imagine opening the Indiana Daily Student only to find the sports section missing or no reporting detailing IU Athletics events. Suddenly, everything you hear about a sporting event is a cat-and-mouse game of true or false. It was also, plainly, a poorly planned and self-destructive move. They prevented the creation of sports culture and culture of spirit and pride within the university. They denied themselves the opportunity to detail an important element of university and student life and made themselves seem dishonest and unfair. These publications are what students read in order to relive the excitement of the previous night’s victories or to analyze the mistakes that caused a loss. This reactionary move actually signals that the athletic department might have some big, scary, unethical skeleton hiding in its equipment closet. In its haste to originally deny these students, they have forgotten they rely
on students to begin with. Student athletes are attractions that pull in millions of dollars to universities. And, students have a right to report about indecent behavior in order to protect other students and members of the campus community. If a school wants what’s best for itself, its athletes and the rest of the student body, as well as to manage a large source of revenue, it should continue to allow its students to report about the athletic department or any department, event or organization that is affiliated with the university. The university’s refusal to interfere when the pass count was cut, in order to “protect” the athletic department, brings to light the fact that athletic departments seem exempt from any type of criticism. Student journalists should be able to have an honest dialogue between the student population and the school. Both students and the newspaper need to work together to promote honest reporting, conversation and accountability.
BURCH PERCH
Construction ‘struction, what’s your function? When I returned to Bloomington early in August, the very first thing I did was drive north on Fee Lane. Of all the wonderful things to do in Bloomington, my first choice was to drive down a road. For freshmen who haven’t been here the past few years, this might seem a little odd. But anyone who had to suffer through the awful construction of Hodge Hall these past two years understands. The construction slowed down traffic and made getting to class hazardous and hard. So much so, that if you searched Fee Lane on Twitter when it first reopened, you would find students partying as if it were Little 500. Finally, after months and months of construction, I felt like campus would finally be open and accessible. The feeling of sheer joy in my heart was soon replaced
with sorrow when I turned to see the Arboretum, one of my favorite parts of campus, was fenced off. My fellow Indiana Daily Student columnist, Claire McElwain, touched on this issue in depth earlier in the year. IU is stuck between a rock and a hard place. The University must continue to upgrade to satisfy students and maintain a high positon in important magazine rankings. It must also comply with alumni expectations, or act quickly when it receives large donations made by people or oganizations that want to see change on campus. In doing so, they must close down parts of campus, usually for an extended period of time. For example, graduation this year, my graduation, must now take place outside at Memorial Stadium due to renovations of Assembly Hall,
which guarantees it will be either 105 degrees outside or a torrential downpour reminiscent of the Great Flood. Maybe I’m overreacting a little. After all, the University does need to complete construction in order to maintain a high quality education experience. Having upgraded rooms with the newest technology does make class more interesting. Construction in general isn’t the real issue, though. The construction on campus would be fine if the University was more transparent about the construction projects. Multiple times over the course of my four years in Bloomington I have stumbled upon construction on campus that I wasn’t aware were even happening. For example, last year when returning to campus the IU Art Museum lights were randomly shut off. A part of campus that
LUCAS BURCH is a senior in informatics.
many students love was taken away in the blink of an eye. These sorts of incidents leave students frustrated, especially when there is little to no warning of the construction projects. Informing the students of closings on campus in an efficient manner would help alleviate many of the negative feelings. Perhaps I’m naive, but I feel the Assembly Hall construction could have been designed to allow for graduation inside while still being completed in a timely fashion. Now if you need me, I’ll be cruising up and down Fee Lane. luburch@indiana.edu
LETTER TO THE EDITOR POLICY The IDS encourages and accepts letters to be printed daily from IU students, faculty and staff and the public. Letters should not exceed 350 words and may be edited for length and style. Submissions must include the person’s name, address and telephone number for verification.
Letters without those requirements will not be considered for publication. Letters can be mailed or dropped off at the IDS, 120 Ernie Pyle Hall, 940 E. Seventh St., Bloomington, Ind., 47405. Submissions can also be sent via e-mail to letters@idsnews. com. Questions can be directed to the IDS at 855-0760.
Indiana Daily Student, Est. 1867 Website: idsnews.com The opinions expressed by the editorial board do not necessarily represent the opinions of the IDS news staff, student body, faculty or staff members or the Board of Trustees. The editorial board comprises columnists contributing to the Opinion page and the Opinion editors.
With the start of a new school year, a new set of preconceived notions and their accompanying judgments of one of the many facets of my life as a student have begun to rear their ugly heads. Everything from someone’s sunglasses to shoes to speaking voice factors into their assessment, but it seems to me that one item sure to draw quick attention — and quick assumptions — is the presence of greek letters on a student’s apparel. At IU, greek life is as much a part of the landscape as the Sample Gates and perfectly-pruned mums. Unlike the stunning architecture and flawless grounds, however, greek life draws its fair share of intense criticism: in it or not, you love it or hate it. As we get settled into the social environments of each new class, the typical snap judgments we make when getting to know a large group of strangers begin to fly. We’re all familiar with the greek stereotypes. Those in the greek system are all heavy partiers — we don’t care about academics or anything with much substance because we’re too busy obsessing over our love for each other, climbing the social ladder and “throwing what we know.” Amid the torrent of indelible first impressions forged within the first few weeks of school, too many greek students avoid wearing our letters to class until we have solidly established ourselves as scholars and individuals worthy of respect for fear that we’ll be known by our professors and classmates only as “the sorority girl” or “the frat kid.” One of my close friends was mocked by her professor in front of a large class when she finally decided to wear her greek letters to a discussion. The professor expressed utter shock. How could such a bright, thoughtful, dedicated student be a member of the greek system? In this woman’s mind, the two were clearly mutually exclusive, and my friend shrunk in her seat under the weight of her unwelcome new identity. No one wants to be the object of a professor’s disdain for “the frat bro in the front row.” It’s frustrating. It’s unfair. And those of us worried about being judged for being greek are exactly the people who need to get over ourselves and reverse the cycle. I am incredibly proud of the home I have found within the greek system. I am incredibly proud of the millions of charitable dollars raised annually by chapters across the nation. I am incredibly proud of the ideals on which greek chapters were founded and the individuals who uphold those ideals. If we want to stop hiding our letters until we’ve established a good impression to evade judgement, we’re only diminishing that legacy. So tomorrow when you’re getting ready for class, throw on your dads’ weekend quarter zip or philanthropy tank. There is so much behind those letters of which to be incredibly proud. sbkissel@indiana.edu
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REGION
EDITORS: HOLLY HAYS & ANICKA SLACHTA | REGION@IDSNEWS.COM
Lake Monroe bike tours offered next month Everyone is invited to join the Indiana Department of Natural Resource’s “Bike Back in Time: A Guided Cycling Tour of Monroe Lake’s Cultural History” tours on Oct. 5 and 18, according to the department. The 37-mile ride will take participants
around Lake Monroe to explore the area’s cultural history. Pre-registration is required, including a $20 fee. More information is available on the registration site at in.gov/dnr.
Walk aims to raise Alzheimer’s awareness succumb to the disease and the toll it took on her family, specifically her mother, who worked as his caregiver. “I think I only watched him once, and it was the most terrifying thing I’d ever done,” Lay said. “He didn’t know who I was anymore.” Lay began volunteering with the association last year at its walk in Indianapolis. The walk Saturday was the first walk she’s worked in her new position. Lay said the information the Alzheimer’s Association provides is invaluable to any person or family whose loved one is suffering from Alzheimer’s. Had her family known about the organization when her grandfather was alive, she said, it would have benefited them greatly. “I have made it my mission and goal to bring that information to other people,” she said. “We are here to help them, we are here to support them, and they need to know that they have that care for them.”
By Carolyn Crowcroft ccrowcro@indiana.edu @carol_crowcroft
Last Saturday morning, Lisa Quigley and her kids, Tera and Will, bundled up against the cool morning air and walked. A yellow flower pinwheel in her daughter’s hand represented Quigley’s mother, who’s currently living with Alzheimer’s at Autumn Hills Alzheimer’s Service Care Center in Bloomington. Quigly was among those who participated in the 2014 Walk to End Alzheimer’s Sept. 13 in which all proceeds from the event were donated to the Alzheimer’s Association. In her gloved hand, Quigley carried a purple pinwheel for her father, who died from the disease in 2011. Scrawled across the petals in black Sharpie were drawn-on hearts and words of love from Lisa and her family. “Lyle Calkins. Dad. Grandpa.” “Anita Calkins. A.k.a. Grandma. Mom.” Quigley said she tends to avoid events like the 2014 Walk to End Alzheimer’s, which this year was at the Bryan Park Woodlawn Shelter. But she added it’s events like these that remind her of the support people in Bloomington can offer. “This is the kind of thing that makes me realize there’s really people here,” she said with a smile. Quigley said this year marks the second time her family has taken part in the walk, but she didn’t tell her mother about it. She wouldn’t remember. “We’ve shown her the flowers before,” she said. “We showed them to her last year, and she thought they were pretty.” For the past two years, Quigley’s mother has been at Autumn Hills, which she said serves as a middle ground for people who are independent but slowly losing functions. The center works to help people with memory loss of any kind, not just specifically related to Alzheimer’s.
Founded in 2011, Autumn Hills was not around in time to benefit Quigley’s father. She said her mother cared for him in their home until it became clear another course of action was necessary. “It just didn’t work out anymore,” Quigley said. “He was getting pretty violent with her.” Quigley and her family moved her father into Bell Trace, a senior living community in Bloomington. At the time they were moving him, she said the memory unit was in the process of shutting down, so she didn’t know what his care would be like. She said her father only lasted at Bell Trace for a couple of weeks before it was time to move on. “He would walk out of his room, and he wouldn’t know where his room was,” Lisa said. Quigley moved her father into two different nursing homes before he passed away in 2011, just as Autumn Hills was being built. Then her mother started showing early signs of the disease, and Quigley moved her into Autumn Hills in
2012. Quigley said the social environment at the center keeps her mother happy and healthy. She and her family are able to visit as frequently as they want, she said. “They do a lot of activities where you can come and join them,” Quigley said. “They have Easter egg hunts and special meals on all the holidays where families can join them.” Quigley said her mother has even begun to relive her younger years while at Autumn Hills. At 86 years old, her mother has had two boyfriends while at the center, and she often tells Lisa she could have a new father. “One guy – the one that was going to be my new dad – he had a roommate who really liked her, and they had to separate the men because they were fighting over her,” Quigley said, laughing. “So they’re no longer roommates.” Her mother’s spirit is something Quigley said she hopes to have when she’s older. “If it happens to me, I want to be like her,” she
Bloomingfoods workers seek change, unionization By Brian Seymour briseymo@indiana.edu | @briseymo
Workers at Bloomingfoods are attempting to unionize. “We love working for Bloomingfoods and wish to make the work environment a better place for all the employees,” the group Unite Bloomingfoods said in a Facebook post Sept. 7. “The employees have gone too long waiting for our admin offices to take care of not only the company, but to take care of its workers.” They also said the decision to unionize should not be taken lightly by Bloomingfoods, a local food cooperative. About a month ago, workers at the co-op met with Scott Barnett, the organizing director for the United Food and Commercial Workers Local 700 based in Indianapolis. Barnett said the workers expressed unhappiness with the co-op’s administrative offices, which they claimed lacked consistent policy and failed to address concerns expressed by the workers. Barnett declined to comment about specific policies or concerns. Unite Bloomingfoods said it is being purposefully vague at this time until the group is confident it can make such statements evident. Union organizers have verified that Blooming-
foods has spoken with an anti-union consultant, Barnett said. “When you hire a unionbusting attorney, you’re only going to run a destructive campaign, especially when you consider that co-ops have a particular stance on social equality and follow these seven tenants,” he said. According to Bloomingfoods’ website, “cooperatives are based on the values of self-help, self-responsibility, democracy, equality, equity and solidarity.” The site also listed the seven cooperative principles, which have been taken down as of publication time. The principles, as given by the National Cooperative Business Association, are voluntary and open membership, democratic member control, economic participation from members, autonomy and independence, education, training and information, cooperation among cooperatives, and concern for the community. Awareness efforts will take place later this week in what Barnett is calling a community awareness solidarity action. After garnering support, UFCW Local 700 and the unionizing workers will go through an election process that will be handled by the National Labor Relations Board. The majority vote will decide whether UFCW Local
700 will represent the union. After representation, collective bargaining from the workers and Bloomingfoods can begin. For now, however, Barnett said he hopes Bloomingfoods remains fair and neutral by letting the workers decide what they will. The organization does not wish to put Bloomingfoods in an ill light, a sentiment expressed by Unite Bloomingfoods. “The effort to unionize Bloomingfoods is about our right to organize and form a collective bargaining unit,” Unite Bloomingfoods posted. “It is NOT about creating an ‘us’ versus ‘them’ mentality. The one thing everyone here wants is to make Bloomingfoods an even better place to work and shop.” Neither unionizers nor representatives from Bloomingfoods were available for comment. Bloomingfoods is a community-based organization founded in 1976. Since its creation 38 years ago, the business has had a local focus and dedication to good food and health, according to the co-op’s website. UFCW Local 700 is a union of 13,000 working people in the state of Indiana. The organization focuses mostly on retail but also seeks to improve working conditions for food processing and manufacturing.
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NICOLE KRASEAN | IDS
Top Lisa Quigley and Tera Quigley speak about their personal history with Alzheimer’s on Saturday at the Walk to End Alzheimer’s event at Bryan Park. Lisa Quigley lost her father to the disease in 2011, and has a mother currently battling it. Above A group of people hold up their pin-wheel flowers during the opening ceremony of the Alzheimer’s Association’s Walk to End Alzheimer’s event on Saturday at Bryan Park. Yellow flowers represent being a caregiver to a person with the disease, while purple represents having lost someone to Alzheimer’s.
said. “I want to have boyfriends and stuff.” *** Every 67 seconds, a person in the United States is diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, according to the Alzheimer’s Association. The group sponsors the walk in Bloomington and many other cities across the nation.
With more than five million people currently living with the disease and 500,000 people dying from it each year, Alzheimer’s is the sixth leading cause of death in the U.S. Lauren Lay, the development specialist for the walk in Bloomington, was drawn to the walk for reasons similar to Quigley’s. For three years, she watched her grandfather
Quigley said she was impressed by anyone she saw carrying an orange flower at the walk. Those who were carrying orange flowers had not known anyone who had Alzheimer’s but were there supporting the cause. “Lucky them,” she said. Having people in her life touched by the disease, Quigley said she is always up-to-date on the latest research in Alzheimer’s. She receives literature from Autumn Hills, and her past involvement in Alzheimer’s Association events has landed her on an email chain. But amid all the talk of new findings and cures, Lisa said the future is unclear for anyone, including herself. “They’re saying that there’s going to be so many more people diagnosed by 2050,” she said. “I just keep hearing, ‘You don’t have anything to worry about because the doctors are on it.’ So I’m either one of those people, or the doctors are on it.”
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» BIOTECH
» BALLOONS
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“You gotta be way ahead of it,” he said. Fast reaction times are vital to flight because there can be up to a 10-second delay from the time an action is executed to the time the balloon responds, he said. If you are close to the tree line, you don’t always have 10 seconds to spare. “It gets really tricky when it’s windy,” he said. The wind coupled with the hilly terrain makes for some difficult flights at times, he said. “Being comfortable in more wind over time is the biggest challenge,” Oliver said. Other than learning control, Oliver said pilots learn the basics of safety and complete 10 hours of flight time to get their license. It takes hundreds of hours to truly become comfortable with the wind, he said. The license is more of a “license to learn.” But Oliver’s interest in balloons stretches far beyond his time in training. He said when he was in grade school, books about balloons and flying fascinated him. The ability to go up in a hot air balloon and not know where you are going, that ultimate escape, is what drew him to the pastime. “I think that’s just a fantastic feeling,” he said. Oliver said he was the child who always wanted to be on top of the highest
Kao became the director of the program about two and a half years ago and said he is attempting to revamp the program’s offerings to match the demands of the biotech industry. The biotechnology department also recently introduced a minor program available to all students on campus and an accelerated B.S./M.S. combined degree. “The B.S./M.S. degree is a five-year program that was formed after we talked to people in the industry and asked what would help our students get better jobs,” Kao said. Getting students jobs is important to the biotechnology department, Kao said. “The biotechnology program places strong emphasis on students doing internships and participating in programs to help generate these opportunities,” he said. Last week, the executive director of the Indiana Medical Device Manufacturers Council came to speak about jobs and challenges in the Indiana medical device industry, Kao said. Kao expressed surprise that students don’t appear aware of Indiana’s vibrant biotechnology industry. “The bioscience field in Indiana continued to gain jobs during the recession,” he said. “We’re very established in biotechnology, and it’s interesting that our students don’t seem to know that.” Kao said approximately 70 students are pursuing the biotechnology B.S. degree. Four additional students declared the B.A. degree this fall, she said. No students are currently pursuing the minor or combined B.S./M.S. program. Kao said he believes the programs will become more popular as students hear about them. The B.A. program will also attract students who may not have considered biotechnology as a potential major, she said. “There’s quite a bit of excitement about having a B.A. because I don’t think all the students intend on just doing experiments,” he said. One of these students is senior Jessica Sipes, who began working toward the B.A. this fall. “While I enjoy the lab aspect of biotech, I have always been more interested in the business side,” she said. “When the B.A. was approved, I knew it would give me the opportunity to pursue the business and sales aspects of biotechnology.” Sipes was originally pursuing the biotechnology B.S. and said the switch will delay her graduation date by a semester to December 2015. The novelty of the program also means that Sipes has no seniors to look to for guidance. “There haven’t been any graduates, so I’m not sure how the job market will be for my degree after graduation,” she said. “It can be a bit difficult.” Despite the challenges, Sipes said she loves the B.A. program so far. “The new program really fits my interests perfectly,” she said. “They have tailored the program to have less lab courses, and that allows room for some business-type classes and a certificate in life sciences business.”
» SOCCER
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from the top of the box. It flew into the upper left corner of the net past a diving Colin Webb, and gave Penn State the only goal it would need. “The kid just hit a great shot, upper 90,” freshman defender Grant Lillard said. “Sometimes you just have to tip your hat and say, ‘Good shot.’” The coin toss played a role in the game, as IU was forced to look into a glaring sun
» OK GO
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hit a watershed moment when the treadmill video exploded. We had to decide. We thought, ‘Alright, this is not where we thought we were going.’” Soon, OK Go became known as the “men on the treadmills.” “‘Are we going to run from this?’ we thought,” Kulash said. “We wanted to be a rock band. We thought, ‘Should we embrace this and make it part of what we do?’ Instead of trying to out-cool it, we wanted to think of new ways to make videos that would be that much fun and work the same way.” * * * OK Go’s musical background came from several bands they had started separately in high school and college, but none of them were very good, Kulash said. “Bands, especially in high school or college, are social clubs,” Kulash said. “You play music, but you also hang out and drink. Hopefully chicks will think you’re cool and
BEN MIKESELL | IDS
Hot air balloons take off from the Monroe County Fairgrounds on Saturday as part of the Kiwanis Club of South Central Indiana Balloon Fest.
building, the tallest bridge — anything to get his feet off the ground. Now, as a pilot, he said he is still amazed by the magical and impossible concept of taking off in a flying basket. The complete lack of acceleration leads to a feeling of being lifted off the ground. “Well, we spend all of our lives looking up at trees,” Smith said. “Now, we get to look down at them.” Oliver said he has landed in a variety of interesting places. Once, he dropped in
at a child’s birthday party because conditions were right to do so. He said when the balloon is only 500 feet in the air, he can talk to people in yards as he passes over them. Friday, he said he flew over a wedding party asking him to land. Smith said when looking for a place to land, it is best to find somewhere that looks friendly and is relatively accessible by main roads. “The landing site kind of chooses us,” he said. Some people welcome
the surprise of a hot air balloon landing on their property, and some don’t, Smith said. He said when the first hot air balloon was sent up by the Montgolfier brothers in 1783, it was met with a pitchfork-wielding farmer. After that first encounter, all pilots make sure to carry a bottle of champagne with them as a peace offering to landowners. When the landowners don’t show up, however, a pilot never lets the champagne go to waste and instead uses
it to celebrate a successful flight and a safe landing. Interacting with people is one of the best parts of flying, Oliver said. “I just like flying with other balloons,” he said, and the community of pilots is close-knit. This is Oliver’s second year at the Balloon Festival, and he said he is happy to be back and flying in Bloomington for its scenery and ample landing space. “This is really a special place to fly,” he said.
during the first half, a view the Nittany Lions never had to face as the sun went down for the second half. “The sun was definitely rough in the first half,” Webb said. “There were points where you couldn’t see more than 10 or 15 feet in front of you. It was definitely a disadvantage.” It was a very physical game, just as IU Coach Todd Yeagley and his players said they expected it to be. There were three yellow cards given in the game. “It was our first Big Ten
game,” Lillard said. “Everyone is amped up and ready to go. Definitely more physical play, bigger bodies banging around. We were buzzing in the second half. I thought we really controlled the tempo.” IU had its chances as the team out-shot Penn State 206, but Webb’s shot at the end was the one that generated the most excitement. “I thought that was in honestly,” sophomore midfielder Tanner Thompson said. “From my angle it looked in. The ball rolled through, and I was
wondering if there would be anyone at the back post to get a touch on it, and he did, but the bounce just didn’t go our way. That was the story of the game today.” Among other chances, senior midfielder Jamie Vollmer fired a shot just wide with less than two minutes remaining, and several other shots were tapped just over the net. Junior midfielder Femi Hollinger-Janzen also sailed a shot just over the net late in the second half. “There are a lot of positives to take away from the
game,” Lillard said. “We worked our butts off, and sometimes you don’t get the result you want.” Despite the fact that Penn State was playing without its starting goalie, who was suspended for the game for picking up a red card in Penn State’s previous game, IU (31-1, 0-1) was unable to get the touch it needed. “That was by far our best performance of the year,” Yeagley said. “I thought that second half was just a full-on comprehensive performance in every component.”
that sort of thing. It was nice to be with like-minded people who thought this was for fun, but they knew, we’re not here to joke around. We’re gonna play this song 40 times and actually be good at it.” However, there was never a defining moment in their lives, a drastic shift, from friends playing in a band together to actually thinking of music as a career. “I don’t know if there was ever a time,” Kulash said. “I never thought this would actually work. When I got out of college, I worked as a graphic designer and a radio engineer, and I figured that I would do those things.” OK Go started in an old warehouse in Chicago. “It was a school or a hospital,” Kulash said. “It was a big industrial building that caught fire once a year or so.” Kulash said they practiced six hours a day for three or four days a week for a year. “We’ve been on tour for most of the last 15 years,” Kulash said. “That’s the one thing we don’t have to practice anymore. We can play together. If you watch Tim and me on stage, watch our feet. We don’t feel the beat in the
same place, but watch our hands, and they’re the exact same way. We’ve played so long together that it’s not conscious. We all play the music the same way, but we feel it differently.” “We also have the same menstrual cycle,” Nordwind said. “It’s true,” Kulash said. “Our hearts are beating at the same time.” The easy-going relationship between Kulash and Nordwind is easy to recognize, on stage and off. “On stage we’re really friendly towards one other,” Kulash said. “In real life, Tim is not often looked at. We were friends for a long time, but you know, things change.” “Yeah,” Nordwind said. “We’ve scripted it, so that we’re quite friendly.” * * * As OK Go opens with its song “The Writing’s On the Wall,” the crowd hangs on every beat. Kulash is no longer playing one chord at a time. His smoky voice fills the room as the thrilling beat pounces
throughout and intensifies the energy. Kulash described the magnetic connection that occurs between the band and the crowd. “You get this collective emotion that everyone is feeling at the same time,” Kulash said. “Even if you have the loud drunk dude, the spaced out dancer or the mopey goth kid, people who feel in different ways, they all manage to feel the same thing. It’s really hard to describe, but it’s super intoxicating.” Nordwind said they
design the show to have an emotional arc. “We start out on a pretty high note, but then we take it down a bit,” he said. Then we will start a song with the audience, go out with them and then end on a high note. It’s nice to go on an emotional journey with the audience.” “He wants to get the whole crowd on his menstrual cycle,” Kulash said. “Yeah, but by the end, when we’re on the same menstrual cycle, I know we’ve done something right,” Nordwind said. “It’s a real journey.”
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Damian Kulash and Tim Nordwind of the band OK GO stand outside the Bluebird Nightclub prior to their Sunday night show at the venue.
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Freshman Robert McCray III, left, and senior Bernard Taylor walk off the field after losing to Bowling Green on Saturday at Doyt Perry Stadium. IU’s defense gave up a go-ahead touchdown to the Falcons in the final nine seconds of the game.
ORANGE CRUSHED Bowling Green beats IU on touchdown with 9 seconds left By Sam Beishuizen sbeishui@indiana.edu | @Sam_Beishuizen
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio — On second-and-goal from the Indiana two-yard line, Bowling Green quarterback James Knapke gathered the snap trailing by three. The redshirt sophomore stepped back with nine seconds on the clock. He turned to his right. He saw his freshman wide receiver Roger Lewis create separation on a fade route as he ran toward the corner of the endzone. Knapke released a touch-pass just over the head of IU senior cornerback Tim Bennett. The ball fell into Lewis’ outstretched arms for a Bowling Green touchdown as Bennett fell to the ground. Bennett looked around with his arms spread out looking for an answer. He reached for his face mask, motioning for the referee to throw a flag he wouldn’t get. Knapke turned toward the sideline with his arms raised into the air. He was greeted by Falcons teammates before he even got to the bench, which was erupting with cheers. The former-backup quarterback making his second career start had just led Bowling Green to a gamewinning drive in the final seconds to beat IU 45-42. “It was a shootout,” IU senior linebacker Forisse Hardin said. “When it comes down to it, we just had to make a stop.” But with the game on the line, there was no defensive stop. Saturday was just another road loss for an IU team needing earlyseason nonconference wins if the program wants any chance of reaching its first bowl game since 2007. “We played a really good team on the road,” IU Coach Kevin Wilson said. “(We) didn’t make a few plays. SEE TOUCHDOWN, PAGE 11
Senior receiver Shane Wynn runs past defenders during IU’s game against Bowling Green on Saturday at Doyt Perry Stadium. Wynn was quarterback Nate Sudfeld’s main target, catching 10 passes for 139 yards.
Hoosiers lose battle of high-speed offenses, fall 45-42 to Falcons By Grace Palmieri gpalmier@indiana.edu | @grace_palmieri
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio — In a back-and-forth clash between two high-scoring, high-speed offenses, IU football ran out of time. Bowling Green got the ball for the final drive of the game with 1:59 remaining on the clock. Eightyeight yards later, Roger Lewis caught a James Knapke pass that would prove to be the game-winning touchdown. With just nine seconds to go, IU was unable to regain the lead, losing to Bowling Green 45-42 at Doyt Perry Stadium. There were nine lead changes in the final 30 minutes. IU had the lead five different times throughout the second half. But the Falcons had it when it mattered most. “I thought we needed to play our best to win, and we played pretty close to a good game,” IU Coach
Kevin Wilson said. “Not quite as good as we need to.” In Knapke’s second start, the redshirt sophomore threw the ball 73 times, completing 46 of those passes for 395 yards. The Bowling Green offense went on to rack up 571 yards of total offense. The Falcons ran 113 plays. While the IU defense held them to only field goals in the first half, five of those 113 were second-half touchdowns accounting for 33 points. This compares to a defense that gave up just 10 points and 170 yards two weeks ago against Indiana State. Wilson said his team made mistakes as an offense that led to the defense being on the field for too many minutes. “You miss a kick, you fumble red zone, you let a team run 113 snaps, you’re not going to win the game,” he said. “We’re a tempo team, which everyone says hurts the defense. Well, you convert on third
More football coverage Read why columnist Brody Miller thinks Saturday might be a defining game in the Hoosiers’ season. downs and don’t turn the ball over, you’re fine.” Despite the outcome, the IU offense saw vast improvements from its season opener, when Nate Sudfeld threw for just 111 yards. Saturday, Sudfeld was 31-of-41 for 347 yards passing. He and his receivers had improved communication on the field, something Sudfeld said they emphasized during the bye week. Senior wideout Shane Wynn caught 10 passes for 139 yards. JShun Harris scored the first touchdown of his career and had 68 yards receiving. “The last two weeks with the bye week, we really got a lot more SEE OFFENSES, PAGE 11
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Men’s soccer fails to capitalize on 20 chances By Michael Hughes michhugh@indiana.edu @MichaelHughes94
The IU attack put ripples in the net three times Saturday. The only problem was that it was the wrong side. The third and final time came in the dying seconds of the match when none other than sophomore IU goalkeeper Colin Webb headed a corner into the side netting. Most in attendance thought IU had tied the match and forced overtime. The band began to play the fight song. It took mere seconds to realize where the ball ended up and that the game was lost. Penn State staved off a number of IU attacks to preserve a first-half goal and win 1-0 against IU in the Big Ten opener. “The bounce just didn’t go our way,” IU sophomore Tanner Thompson said. “That was the story of the game today.” Firing 20 shots toward goal against a goalie in his first career collegiate game is often a recipe for success. IU spent most of the game with possession of the ball in the Penn State half of the field. The only problem is that possession and shots don’t win games. Goals do. For all the shots IU sent bound for the goal, only two actually managed to arrive on frame. “It’s really frustrating,” Thompson said. “In practice we practice on getting balls on goal, and today there were some that were just wide. Good shots but just wide.” Thompson had two shots that either sliced wide of the post or sailed over the cross-
LUKE SCHRAM | IDS
Midfielder Jack Griffith reacts after his shot missed the goal Saturday at Bill Armstrong Stadium. IU lost 1-0 in its Big Ten opener against Penn State.
bar. He also had a few efforts toward goal and crossed toward teammates blocked by Penn State defenders. Thompson was not the only Hoosier thwarted by the Nittany Lion defense. Nearly every time an IU attacker gained possession of the ball inside the 18-yard box, he was swarmed by a pack of Nittany Lions. “Give Penn State credit,” IU Coach Todd Yeagley said.
“Their guys were making some plays. If you can’t hit it the first time, you have to make sure to get it off the foot quickly, and I thought we did for the most part. I think part of it was Penn State making plays. As much as us not making plays, it was them.” Since the Hoosiers struggled to maintain possession long enough inside the box to shoot, they figured they might
try their luck 18 yards and out from goal. “We wanted to test this keeper,” Yeagley said. “It’s a dewy night. You put things on frame. Get some sniffers. It’s a night where you put pressure on him, get a deflection, get a second chance, and that doesn’t always happen.” The problem with extending the distance you shoot from is that the quality of shots you take are diluted.
It becomes exceedingly difficult to not only generate enough power and accuracy with the shot but also to navigate the shot through the pack of defenders stationed in the box the farther you get from goal. “I thought we were a little aggressive with our finishing,” Yeagley said. “There were only a couple ill-advised ones that I thought were a little bit out of reach for the player,
Women’s soccer drops two Big Ten matches By Sam Beishuizen sbeishui@indiana.edu @Sam_Beishuizen
IU Coach Amy Berbary called Penn State’s offense one of the quickest teams IU will play. At halftime, she made sure to re-address her team about Penn State’s speed up top. The No. 8 Nittany Lions women’s soccer team has the ability to wreak havoc, poaching ill-advised passes from opposing defenses. And Sunday, the Nittany Lions took advantage of it. Penn State (6-1, 2-0) defeated IU (4-4, 0-2) 3-0 behind two goals created directly off of untimely IU passes in its own final third of the field. “We addressed that they were too fast and too athletic and that we could not just pass it around in the back,” Berbary said. “We made a few mistakes. So, young and dumb, I guess.” Penn State senior Emily Hurd intercepted an errant Hoosier pass in the 11th minute to set up a one-onone scoring opportunity. She directed a shot past IU junior goalkeeper Sarah Stone for the early score. Penn State scored a second goal in the 57th minute after yet another IU defensive miscue allowed for junior Raquel Rodriguez to score off a rebound from 15 yards in front of the nearside post. Rodriguez’s powerful right-footed shot on goal
JAMES BENEDICT | IDS
Midfielder Jordan Woolums dribbles past an Ohio State defender Nicole Miyashiro on Sept. 12. Ohio State tied the game in the 90th minute and eventually won in overtime 2-1.
was too quick for Stone to react. The Nittany Lions added a third goal in the 86th minute, taking advantage of the Hoosiers pushing numbers down field. “They were just too quick up top,” IU senior midfielder Abby Smith said of the defensive mistakes. On the other end of the field, the Penn State defense stymied the Hoosier attack. IU was held to just seven shots — six of which came in the first half. Penn State
goalie Britt Eckerstrom was forced to make just one save. “I think they just kept it tight, and they were forcing us outside,” Smith said. “We did a good job of getting outside and getting in the box. Maybe we could have found something more in the middle.” The loss to Penn State on Sunday came just two days after a stunning 2-1 fall to Ohio State (4-4, 1-1) on Friday.
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The Hoosiers went up 1-0 in the 38th minute off a corner from senior defender Tori Keller that found the head of junior midfielder Jessie Bujouves, who headed the ball home for the Hoosier goal. IU maintained the onegoal lead well into the second half. But with time ticking down, Ohio State sent the ball into the 18-yard box. IU freshman defender Taylor Coley made contact
with an Ohio State player. The Buckeye went down, and a referee was quick to award Ohio State with a penalty kick with only two seconds remaining on the clock. Ohio State senior Kayla Varner sent her penalty effort to the lower 90, tying the game and forcing overtime. Seven minutes into the overtime period, Ohio State junior midfielder Michela Paradiso scored, finalizing the victory. “I’m absolutely gutted,” Berbary said after Friday’s game. “This is one that’s going to unfortunately stick in their heads for a while.” After the penalty call was made, there wasn’t much Stone could do in goal. “Nothing you can do,” senior defender Tori Keller said. “The ref made a tough call. They took advantage .... Obviously, just devastating.” Despite failing to pick up any points in the opening conference weekend, there’s still plenty of time for IU to establish itself in the Big Ten standings with 11 games remaining. The Hoosiers will play a pair of Big Ten games this week. IU travels to Illinois on Thursday and then play Northwestern on the road Sunday looking to pick up a few much-needed points. “It’s huge,” Berbary said of the upcoming road trip. “We’ve got to treat every game like its our last because it could be. We need to push forward and regroup quickly.”
but I liked the mentality of looking for goal.” In the end, Yeagley and his players said the team’s performance was the most impressive of the season going forward and that they were just unlucky to not find goal. IU freshman Grant Lillard had a different way of describing the result. “That’s soccer,” he said. “Sometimes it does that to you.”
Hoosier men’s golf place last of 15 teams From IDS reports
Led by senior Nicholas Grubnich, the IU golf team finished 15th out of 15 teams at the 2014 Fighting Illini Invitational on Sunday at Olympia Fields. The Hoosiers had a team score of 307 on the final day and 922 overall in one of the strongest fields they’ll face this season. Grubnich placed 38th with a total of 227. He struggled in the final round Sunday, scoring an 80. In his first collegiate tournament, freshman Matt Weber scored a 73, 3 over par, in the final of three rounds. He birdied his first hole of the day and scored a double bogey and bogey on his last two holes. Weber finished at 231 and tied for 57th place. Sophomore Will Seger tied for 59th place with a score of 233, and freshman Brendon Doyle was two strokes behind him at 235. Sophomore Andrew Havill placed 73rd. The Hoosiers will compete next Sept. 20 and 21 at the Wolf Run Intercollegiate in Zionsville, Ind. Grace Palmieri
IU field hockey moves to 5-0 on season From IDS reports
The IU field hockey team is still perfect and is off to its best start in program history. An Audra Heilman goal gave the Hoosiers a 1-0 win against Miami (Ohio) (1-6) Sunday. They are now 5-0, an all-time IU record. “You’ve got to celebrate any milestone you achieve,” IU Coach Amy Robertson said in a statement Sunday. “But we take it one game at a time, and this was a really important regional win for us. But it’s so cool for this team to be the only group that holds that record.” Heilman’s goal was her eighth of the season. She also scored the game-win-
ner against New Hampshire earlier this season, a game in which she recorded a hat trick. IU had four shots on goal in the first period but couldn’t convert. “We just emphasized the importance of using easy passes and staying composed,” Roberston said in the release. “They put a lot of pressure on us, and we forced some passes.” “The second half was a completely different mindset — it was a matter of time and belief that we could finish.” Junior Nicole Volgraf found Heilman on a breakaway in the 53rd minute for a goal that would prove to be the winner.
“We just emphasized the importance of using easy passes and staying composed. They put a lot of pressure on us, and we forced some passes.” Amy Robertson, IU coach
That’s the third time this season Volgraf has assisted for a Heilman goal. With two saves, senior goalkeeper Maggie Olson earned her second shutout of the season. The Redhawks have now lost to three Big Ten teams. The Hoosiers travel to Ball State on Wednesday. Grace Palmieri
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Bipolar artist uses condition for inspiration
ARTS
EDITORS: ALISON GRAHAM & AUDREY PERKINS | ARTS@IDSNEWS.COM
Broadcasting Corporation. The 37-year-old artist has lived with the disorder for most of her adult life. Painting, at times, exacerbated her mania, Douglas said. However, she said she wants her work to raise awareness of the condition.
Missy Douglas, an artist diagnosed with bipolar disorder, refused medication for a year to paint 365 paintings reflecting her unregulated emotions. “I wanted it to be as pure a view of the disorder as possible,” she said to the British
Color influences student’s music production By Anthony Broderick aebroder@indiana.edu | @aebrodakirck
Nitish Kulkarni sat ramrod straight in his seat near the barista at his usual spot at the Starbucks on Indiana Avenue. It was in this seat where he said he likes to write music that breaks down language barriers and speaks to people directly, using only sound. Kulkarni is an IU senior who has played multiple instruments since he was 4 years old. He has been working on his upcoming debut album, “Synesthetic,” since July. The album is produced by recording artist John Adorney and features more than 50 instruments, both electronic and acoustic. The title of the album comes from the term “synesthesia,” which Kulkarni said he was strongly influenced by when producing his music. Kulkarni defined synesthesia as a neurological phenomenon where two senses in your head are connected in a way they are not necessarily supposed to be. “When I hear music, I see colors,” Kulkarni said. “Every melody has a distinct color, and I also feel textures from instruments. When I am writing a piece, I really get submerged by the colors, shapes, textures and all that imagery that my brain is providing me, and I use it strongly to guide and influence what I am writing.” He has created his own contemporary instrumental style music using instruments and sounds from around the world, according to his website, nitishkulkarni.com. “When breaking it down to its fundamental attributes, my music is instrumental because the instruments are the main voices, and it is contemporary because it is not particularly classical but not necessarily pop or rock since it evolves with the times,” Kulkarni said. As an IU student, Kulkarni first majored in business before he decided to create an individualized major. His major specializes in musical instruments and sound and how they combine to produce emotional
MEGAN JULA | IDS Senior Nitish Kulkarni recorded his debut album “Synesthetic” this summer. Nitish created his own major at IU studying musical instruments and sound.
responses. He also created his own radio show through IU’s student radio station, WIUX. “My time at IU has really allowed me to be exposed to things I have never been exposed to before,” Kulkarni said. “Bloomington is where everything started since it offered me the creative space to think and find out what shaped my music.” His new instrumental single, “Mermaid,” will be released exclusively on Spotify on Sept. 16 and is the first track from the album. It is a very easy track to listen to, Kulkarni said. “‘Mermaid’ is a song that uses a lot of guitars backed with many effects creating a club beat but mixed with clarinets, flutes and mallet percussions,” Kulkarni said. “It is an easy-to-getalong-to track since it has an
interesting blend of ethnic cultures.” He produced music before coming to IU and kept it up, writing a whole series of musical material. Ten of his produced pieces will be on his album. Kulkarni produces his instrumental music by combining different instruments not normally played alongside each other. This process often involves instruments from many different cultures around the world. “The liberty of being a listener to instrumental music is there’s not words in the songs that tell you what it’s about, but instead the music speaks to you and says whatever it wants to you,” Kulkarni said. “I want to point the listener in the right direction and give them an idea of what it’s about, but I don’t want to tell
BY THE BOOK
MADISON HOGAN is a sophomore in journalism.
The teacher of my class later revealed to me in private that the switch occurred because most students in the class could not follow the thick reading. Now, that’s not to say all classics are too dense for our lovely brains. Most students enjoy reading “The Great Gatsby” by F. Scott Fitzgerald, and “Dracula” by Bram Stoker rests on my bookshelf among other favorites. This makes me wonder what future generations will consider classics from our time. One could assume our own classics will stem from award-winning novels, but maybe our most popular works will outshine the critically acclaimed. Would a novel like “The Hunger Games” by Suzanne Collins make the list? Or is a Pulitzer Prize-winner like “The Road” by Cormac McCarthy more appropriate? I’ve started reading “Wuthering Heights” by Emily Brönte for the past week in hopes to find a connection with the romantic classic. While reading, I noticed I picked this book because of its status as a timeless novel, which makes me wonder if I would have ever chosen the book to begin with if I had not known of its prestige as a classic. I’ve realized the only difference between the classics and today’s books is we have been SEE BOOK, PAGE 11
cal mind. It’s always been a part of me, and when I went to high school and college, I knew I didn’t want to get away from it,” Kulkarni said. “I think being surrounded by both my native Indian music and American music, which was foreign to me, and being able to incorporate both of these styles into my music is the major driving force which has kept me going and let me explore many new things.” One of Kulkarni’s main musical influences is professional contemporary musician and composer Yanni. He credits Yanni for helping him find his voice and style when he first dabbled in composing. “When I first listened to his music, it created an explosion in my head that opened all of these ideas and influences that let me produce four to
five albums worth of material,” Kulkarni said. “When you get influenced so much by one person, it’s hard to ignore their influences in your own music, so I started off by imitating Yanni’s style along with Indian elements with my music.” After his time at college, Kulkarni said he aims to continue composing and performing music. He said he is excited for the release of his new single and album and hopes to impress listeners with his personalized music style. “What pleases me most about the record is how it doesn’t sound like a copy of anything else out there,” Kulkarni said. “With the instruments I have chosen and the way I went about recording them, it sounds very unique and fresh on the ears.”
FALL PERFORMANCES
In with the old We’ve all been there at some point in a high school literature class where we’re assigned to read and analyze a book written well before this century. These books are usually placed high upon a pedestal of greatness. We continuously praise their importance because they’re classics and stand as pillars of a higher level of writing. These works go beyond the popular category because they have been trendy for decades. Now they have become legends in the book community. But in actuality, I wonder if these classics hold any significance for today’s generation. To be frank, old does not necessarily mean good. I’ve never known someone my age to enjoy reading “Crime and Punishment” by Fyodor Dostoyevsky. Through the years, I’ve noticed a phenomenon similar to a language barrier between students and older texts. The dense phrases and wordings prevent a connection for many of today’s readers. SparkNotes becomes the epitome of aid for texts that read beyond our comprehension. I remember when my eighth-grade literature class started reading “Frankenstein” by Mary Shelley, and we had to switch to “Z for Zachariah” by Robert C. O’Brien because it was more “relatable.” I’ve never lived in a postnuclear world by myself or manifested a monster, so I fail to see how either remains applicable.
them so much that they can no longer create their own specific imagery or message from it.” The record label’s distributor is aiming for a January 2015 release for the album on his website, Amazon and iTunes, among other outlets. For Kulkarni, the release of his first album has been decades in the making. When he was young, Kulkarni would drum on anything he could get his hands on. His mother would always put on cassettes, and he would listen and play along with them. He grew up playing the tabel drum, playing pieces that were associated with his Indian heritage. In high school, he stayed active musically by rehearsing and performing at concerts. “I always had a musi-
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Notice of Third Party Comments Regarding Accreditation Review: The IU School of Public Health-Bloomington will participate in a review for accreditation by the Council on Education for Public Health (CEPH) from December 8 – 10, 2014. CEPH will accept third-party comments about the school’s programs, practices, and procedures up to 30 days prior to the scheduled site visit. The deadline for submitting comments to CEPH is November 8, 2014. Comments will be accepted by email sent to: Kristen Varol, Accreditation Specialist (kvarol@ceph.org) or by postal mail sent to her attention at: Council on Education for Public Health, 1010 Wayne Avenue, Suite 220, Silver Spring MD, 20910.
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su do ku
How to play: Fill in the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 grid contains the digits 1 through 9, without repeating a number in any one row, column or 3x3 grid.
Answer to previous puzzle
© Puzzles by Pappocom
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L.A. Times Daily Crossword
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57 Early metalworking period 61 Hush-hush fed. org. 62 Centrally managed store group 64 Explosive situation 66 Metamorphosis stage 67 Scat legend Fitzgerald 68 “__ upon a time ...” 69 Speak 70 Optimistic 71 Brew found in increasing quantities in the ends of 17-, 28-, 47- and 64- Across
DOWN 1 Spanish appetizers 2 Texas mission 3 Every cloud’s silver feature? 4 Somme summer 5 Soft mineral 6 “Ah, me!” 7 What you pay 8 Half a guy-gal argument 9 Infantile 10 Had dinner 11 “For Dummies” bookstore section 12 Reduced-price event 13 Harbinger
18 Drive and reverse 22 Stockholm’s land: Abbr. 25 Lady in the 1965 sitcom pilot episode “The Lady in the Bottle” 27 Pot for clams 29 “__ better to have loved ...”: Tennyson 30 How half-shell clams are eaten 31 Eel, at sushi bars 32 Land in la mer 33 Silent agreement 36 Knight’s title 37 Cubes in a bucket 38 Wheels on the links 40 Mohawk-sporting actor 41 Biennial games gp. 44 Advanced college course 46 “Golly” 48 Cat’s coat 49 Like capitalized nouns 50 Legendary football coach Knute 53 Cake serving 54 Like the idiomatic beaver 55 Civil rights org. 56 Online dialogue 58 __ contendere: court plea 59 Leatherworking tools 60 Down Under greeting 63 “__ got it!” 65 Director Reiner
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
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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | M O N D AY, S E P T. 1 5 , 2 0 1 4 | I D S N E W S . C O M
Volleyball splits weekend games By Evan Hoopfer ehoopfer@indiana.edu | @EvanHoopfer
RACHEL MEERT | IDS
Senior running back D’Angelo Roberts carries the ball during IU’s game against Bowling Green on Saturday at Doyt Perry Stadium. The Hoosiers rushed for 242 yards on 37 carries in a 45-42 losing effort.
Will the Hoosiers allow this loss to define them? BOWLING GREEN, Ohio — In high school, we used to have this “motivational speaker” type of guy come talk to our football team. A lot of what he said completely went in one ear and out the other, but I remember very well something he used to say about adversity. “You can either define it or you can let it define you.” It’s not a complicated saying, but it lingers in the back of my mind when I try to wrap my head around IU’s 45-42 loss to Bowling Green because of a touchdown with nine seconds remaining. IU lost this game, and there is no changing that, but what happens from here is what will define the 2014 IU football season. This was a game the Hoosiers should have won, and this was yet another example of IU being unable to make that next step. But IU can go two ways from here. They can let this loss snowball into a losing season that began in Bowling Green, Ohio, on Sept. 13, or they can let this loss be the spark that
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CONTINUED FROM PAGE 7 on the same page with the lineup,” Sudfeld said. “Coach did a good job of getting me in a rhythm early, and then I just felt like I couldn’t miss throughout the game. “We played a good team, and we played pretty well
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CONTINUED FROM PAGE 7 They did.” IU took a 42-39 lead with 2:04 remaining with a oneyard, diving touchdown run by junior quarterback Nate Sudfeld on a fourth-andgoal. On Bowling Green’s ensuing possession, the Falcons moved the ball 88 yards in 12 plays for the game-winning score. The Hoosiers (1-1) had their chances to make gamewinning stops, but the defense couldn’t slow the Falcons’ (2-1) offense. With about a minute left at midfield, Knapke completed a 12-yard pass to Lewis on third-and-one for a first down. Bowling Green was at IU’s 35-yard line facing thirdand-two with 27 seconds remaining when a Knapke pass seemingly fell incomplete. But IU senior cornerback Kenny Mullen was charged with pass interference, breathing back new life into the Falcons and bringing them to the 16-yard line. On the next play, Knapke sent a pass destined for the endzone toward Lewis with senior cornerback Michael Hunter defending. Hunter made contact with Lewis in the endzone, sending him to the ground. He never got his head around to look at the ball and the referee threw a flag. The Hoosiers were faced with devastating back-toback pass interference penalties, setting up Knapke’s game-winning touchdown pass to Lewis. “We had them third and long, and we let them off the
lights a fire for a winning season in Bloomington. This loss is disappointing because of all the things that did go right. Although it seems so far away now, in the first half, the IU defense was being commended for keeping IU in the football game. The offense and special teams continued to keep the defense at their heels in rough situations, but Brian Knorr’s unit kept “bending not breaking,” as was the consensus term on Twitter, and making stops. Then, in the second half, the Falcons figured them out and torched IU for 33 second-half points. Next, there’s quarterback Nate Sudfeld. The muchscrutinized junior was heavily questioned for his mediocre performance against Indiana State, and going into this game, the worry was Sudfeld’s past struggles on the road. What did Sudfeld do today? Everything that was asked of him. He was 31-of-41 passing for 347 yards and remained
the lone rock of the offense as the run game stood irrelevant in the first half. He kept moving the ball downfield all game even when poor play calls or teammate turnovers jeopardized the Hoosiers’ chances. Lastly, there’s Tevin Coleman. It almost feels like he needs a “the” before his name with some of the runs he’s been having this year. Coleman was held to only 30 yards rushing in the first half but ended the day with 194 due to a few lengthy touchdown runs that had me sincerely thinking for a little while that a human being was not capable of tackling him. Then Coleman fumbled the ball in the red zone with a chance to put the game away. All of these contributions on their own kept the Hoosiers in this football game, but if they were able to put it all together, this game would not have been a contest. Today we saw all of the ingredients for a winning football team, but they were never mixed together to concoct a victory.
overall. We just didn’t make plays when we had to.” Running back Tevin Coleman, who rushed for 347 yards two weeks ago, came alive in the second half for IU. He scored three touchdowns on three consecutive IU possessions. He seemed to be making
the plays Sudfeld spoke of. But, with IU threatening to score, Coleman fumbled. It was recovered by the Falcons and turned into six Bowling Green points. “He came from behind, and just stripped it,” Coleman said. “I was trying to fight for more yards, and he just stripped it, so I’m disap-
hook,” Wilson said. “They got midfield, worked a couple screens. We had two PIs. They got it down to the endzone.” Wilson said he didn’t think Bowling Green was necessarily going for the win on the final drive. He said he thought they would have been fine with kicking the field goal and sending the game to overtime. But the Hoosiers’ two pass interference penalties brought the Falcons about 30 yards closer to the endzone. Those penalty yards let them go for the win. “When we’re going on the road, we’re not expecting to get anything,” Hardin said. “We’re expecting everything to go against us. I mean, it just wasn’t our game.” The extra point after the touchdown was blocked. But by then, it didn’t matter. The Hoosiers had one final chance, but Bowling Green’s James Sanford knocked down Sudfeld’s Hail Mary attempt. Sudfeld finished 31-of-41 for 347 yards and threw for one touchdown. Junior running back Tevin Coleman rushed for 190 yards and three touchdowns. In what was a back-andforth game, IU and Bowling Green exchanged the lead 10 times Saturday. But Knapke’s touchdown in the closing seconds would prove to be the most dramatic. He finished with 395 yards and three touchdowns, completing 46-of-73 passing attempts. “Today, we had the opportunity to play a good team,” Wilson said. “We let one go.”
BRODY MILLER is a sophomore in journalism.
This loss is the fork in the road for a team that hasn’t made a bowl since 2007. They can buy into the idea that this is a losing squad and allow this loss to mentally cripple them, or they can make sure us in the media remember this as the wakeup call for a team capable of making a statement in the Big Ten. Wilson had the right idea when asked about his defense, although his words apply to the whole team. “You don’t have a good defense or a bad defense until the end of the year,” he said. “Anybody could have one good week or one bad week or get lucky.” He’s absolutely right. We will know at the end of the season whether or not the Hoosiers let this loss define them or if they defined it. brodmill@indiana.edu pointed.” Wilson and his players agreed it was the little mistakes, the missed opportunities, that just added up. “It’s a real tough loss,” Coleman said. “We played hard, but the plays that we had to convert we just didn’t make it happen. That’s what hurt us.”
Despite not playing well, IU volleyball still had a chance to keep its perfect season going. After losing the first two sets against the University of Illinois-Chicago, IU responded by winning the next two sets to force a winner-take-all fifth set against UIC. It was a back-and-forth set. In NCAA volleyball rules, the fifth set is won by the first team to get to 15, and the team must win by two points. UIC was able to hold on 18-16 and pulled off the upset. The loss was IU’s first this year. After the game, IU Coach Sherry Dunbar-Kruzan was blunt about how she felt about her team’s lackluster performance. “We didn’t deserve to win that match,” she said. IU (7-1) split its two games Friday in Chicago with the loss against UIC followed by a win against Eastern Kentucky in which the Hoosiers hit the ball at a much better rate. But after both the games, the loss against UIC bothered Dunbar-Kruzan the most. “We weren’t ready to play, to be honest,” she said. “When we stepped on that floor, we weren’t ready to go.” She had to take key players out of the game against UIC to try and jumpstart the stagnant Hoosier offense. She said sophomore outside hitter Taylor Lebo, who is third on the team in kills this season, was struggling with illness and not playing at her best. Dunbar-Kruzan had to take out Lebo, switch senior Morgan Leach to the opposite side and put in sophomore Mariah Coleman in Lebo’s place.
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told for years these old texts hold significance. But just like any other work of literature, it’s up to the reader to determine this. So what’s the point in reading these old books anyway? We read them because they stand as hallmarks to give us an idea of what literature during a certain
But Lebo wasn’t the only outside hitter playing poorly against UIC. “Our outside hitters were really, really bad,” DunbarKruzan said. The whole team’s demeanor seemed off, junior middle blocker Awele Nwaeze said. Last season when IU went just 9-22, Nwaeze said the team often wasn’t ready to play. Several of her teammates have said last year’s team struggled with maturity. The loss against UIC brought back those worries for Nwaeze, she said. “I think we underestimated UIC,” she said. “We didn’t come ready to play hard. It was a problem that we had last year. And I think it’s starting to come back.” In the second game of the day against Eastern Kentucky, IU only had 90 minutes to try and regroup from its loss. IU won in four sets, with Leach leading the team with 14 kills. But it was the play of Lebo that pleased DunbarKruzan the most. “I challenged Taylor Lebo,” Dunbar-Kruzan said. “I said, ‘We need you to play better.’” Lebo responded with 13 kills and a .393 hitting percentage. Not only was she making points, she was doing it at a high rate, too. “I’m very proud of her,” Dunbar-Kruzan said. “She came back and responded very, very well.” Part of the reason the outside hitters weren’t successful was the health of the players. Lebo was ill, and junior Amelia Anderson was out due to a concussion. Dunbar-Kruzan said she expects Anderson to be ready to start practicing Monday. “Injuries are a part of the game,” Dunbar-Kruzan said. “We needed people to step up. And that didn’t happen, obviously.” time was like. They provide a certain aspect of historic entertainment generations of people participate in. To forget where you come from is ignorant at best, so reading books from the past educates us in the history of reading. Try out a golden oldie, and see if you can connect with a work written well before your time. You might just love it.
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