Monday, March 9, 2020

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Monday, March 9, 2020

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Badgers spoil senior day, page 7

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Second COVID-19 case confirmed in Indiana By Kyra Miller kymill@iu.edu | @kyra_ky94

The second case of coronavirus was confirmed Sunday in Hendricks County, Indiana, according to the Indiana Department of Health. The man traveled to Boston in late February to attend the

BioGen conference and has been quarantined with mild symptoms, according to the IndyStar reports. He has not been hospitalized and has been experiencing symptoms since March 2. According to the IndyStar, more than a dozen COVID-19 cases nationwide have been tied to the conference, includ-

sense precautions, but also to be aware that the vast majority of COVID-19 cases are mild in individuals without underlying medical conditions.” Hendricks County health officer Dr. David Stopperich said in a statement that the county has prepared for coronavirus and assured residents

ing a Marion County resident who was identified Friday. “This new case isn’t surprising, but we know it causes concern in the community,” State Health Commissioner Dr. Kris Box said in a statement. “I urge Hoosiers to continue to educate themselves about this illness and take common-

that all necessary steps are being taken to reduce the spread of the illness. “Our health department and the entire medical community of Hendricks County have been working in conjunction with schools, emergency management and other organizations to develop plans to

limit the spread of this disease,” Stopperich wrote in the statement. “I ask anyone who thinks they might have symptoms of COVID-19 to call a healthcare provider so they can be evaluated by phone before going to a medical facility.” SEE INDIANA, PAGE 5

Insulin costs rise, but diabetes stays the same Student contracts COVID-19 overseas By Kyra Miller kymill@iu.edu | @kyra_ky94

Lucy Matthews is 8. Her family spends almost $1,000 a month on her insulin. By Izzy Myszak szak imyszak@iu.edu | @MyszakIzzy

Clean the finger, so the needle goes in nicely. Pull back the trigger. Brace for a small, sharp pain — many patients bite their tongues at this step. Push the button. The three-step process to check blood sugar in diabetes patients isn’t a complicated one. Prick your finger, watch the blood ooze out and dab it on a test strip to be checked in a glucose monitor. But it can be scary and difficult to understand for younger patients such as 8-year-old Lucy Matthews. Her parents, Ashley and Garrett, call the process “the pokie” to make it easier on their daughter. Lucy still hates it. Lucy, a Scottsburg, Indiana, native, loves to draw. She loves to dance and tell jokes. She is a very social child, spending as much time as she can

with her friends and grandparents. She loves eating ice cream, and her favorite color is purple. She has lived with Type 1 diabetes for three years. Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune chronic condition in which the pancreas produces little to no insulin, a hormone needed to control sugar levels. Diabetes, both Type 1 and Type 2, affects 34.2 million people in the United States. Of those, only 1.6 million people live with Type 1 diabetes. It’s not preventable and has no cure. Insulin pricing has spiked in recent years, prompting a national conversation as patients struggle to cover ever-increasing costs. Both Colorado and Illinois have capped the price of the insulin. A proposed bill to cap the price of a month’s supply of insulin at $100 was voted on March 3 in the Indiana State Senate but failed in a vote of 13-36. One vial of Eli Lilly’s Humalog, a fastacting form of insulin, has gone from an

average $35 in 2001 to $332 in 2020. The amount of insulin a patient needs varies, with patients typically requiring more as they grow older and gain weight. Lucy goes through three vials of Humalog, nearly $1,000 worth of insulin, a month. * * * Being diabetic means Lucy has had to grow up just a little bit faster. The days of thoughtlessly eating cookies are over. Everything has a carb count. She has to be given insulin every time she eats. When she runs around and plays with her friends, adults around her have to be ready to swoop in at a moment’s notice if she needs medical help. Her blood sugar could quickly fall, and she could pass out. Or, her sugar could start to skyrocket and she could start puking. Her family now has to juggle how to best take care of

IZZY M MYSZAK | IDS

Lucy, 8, gives herself insulin before eating a snack. Lucy and her mother must always check her blood sugar and administer the right amount of insulin to keep her numbers in check.

SEE ABROAD, PAGE 5 her and how to let her be a kid. Cheerful laughter filled the living room in the Matthews’ home one afternoon in February as Lucy and her cousins ran around playing. Later, Lucy sat in the kitchen with her cousins and mom about to play the offline texting card game, New Phone, Who Dis? when one of her cousins grabbed a cookie. Wanting one herself, Lucy jumped up on the counter. She asked Ashley: “Mom, how many units for this?” Ashley checked her daughter’s sugar on an app from her Dexcom sensor, a constant glucose monitor Lucy wears, to determine how much

BIG TEN

Games continue despite COVID-19 By Phillip Steinmetz

SEE DIABETES, PAGE 4

WOMEN'S BASKETBALL

IU falters against Maryland in Big Ten semifinals

COLIN KULPA | IDS

SEE SEMIFINALS, PAGE 5

An IU student who has not been on campus or in the U.S. in 2020 has tested positive for COVID-19, IU announced Friday. The student will remain in isolation in their home country and will continue to receive care there. They will not return to Indiana or IU while being treated, IU spokesperson Chuck Carney said. The student has not been on the IU campus or in the United States in the 2020 calendar year, according to the release. The student, who is in the Kelley School of Business, contracted the disease while on a flight between two CDC level three advisory countries, one being their home country, when returning from a study abroad program, Carney said. One other person on the flight tested

Sophomore Aleksa Gulbe dribbles around a Maryland defender March 7 at Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis. No. 4 seed IU lost to No. 1 seed Maryland 66-51 in the semifinals of the Big Ten Tournament.

psteinme@iu.edu | @PhillipHoosier

The Big Ten conference tournaments and championships will continue as scheduled despite the threat of coronavirus, according to a statement released Saturday. The first case of coronavirus in Indiana was reported Friday, and Gov. Eric Holcomb declared a public health emergency. The Chicago Tribune reported Friday that the Big Ten Network won’t send its studio team to the men’s basketball conference tournament in Indianapolis because of the threat of coronavirus. The network will shoot “The B1G Show,” pregame, halftime and postgame shows from its headquarters in Chicago rather than live from the tournament at Bankers Life Fieldhouse. “The Big Ten Conference’s main priority is to ensure the safety of our students, coaches, administrators, event staff and fans as SEE TOURNAMENT, PAGE 5

Five-time Grammy Award-winning group featured on Paul Simon’s Graceland

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TOMORROW OMORRO NIGHT!


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Marie Yovanovitch speaks at IU conference By Cate Charron catcharr@iu.edu | @catecharron

Former United States ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch spoke about her experience as an ambassador March 6 at the IU Auditorium as part of a foreign policy conference at the Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies. “I believe that we need to reconnect to our principles that involve generosity, spirit and understanding that we are stronger together,” Yovanovitch said. Yovanovitch testified in President Donald Trump’s impeachment hearing that she felt threatened by comments Trump made toward her during his July 25 phone call with the president of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelenskiy. President Michael McRobbie awarded Yovanovitch the Richard G. Lugar Award for distinguished work as an ambassador. The award honors the late Indiana senator who is one of the namesakes of the Hamilton Lugar School. Yovanovitch’s remarks and the Richard G. Lugar Award presentation was the final event of the America’s Role in the World conference March 5-6. The conference was open to the public to learn about foreign policy from multiple panel discussions with diplomats, scholars and journalists. Speakers

ALEX DERYN | IDS

Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch smiles while holding her Richard G. Lugar Award on March 7 in the IU Auditorium. Yovanovitch spoke about her career as a former United States ambassador to Ukraine.

included diplomatic correspondent at the New York Times Lara Jakes, president of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace William Burns and Sen. Todd Young, R-Ind. Yovanovitch served as an ambassador to Ukraine, the Republic of Armenia and the Kyrgyz Republic between

2005 and 2019. She was also the principal deputy assistant secretary of state for the Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs from 2012 to 2013. In this position, she was responsible for policy on European and global security issues. Yovanovitch graduated from the Hamilton Lugar School summer

language workshop in 1979, according to an IU press release. Hamilton Lugar School Dean Lee Feinstein asked Yovanovitch what it was like to be in the spotlight during Trump’s impeachment hearings. Yovanovitch said she used her experience working in the U.S. govern-

ment to conduct herself appropriately and tell the truth. “It is important to tell the truth and then hand it over to political leaders who take their own actions,” Yovanovitch said. Feinstein also asked Yovanovitch questions about her career and thoughts about the State De-

partment. Yovanovitch said the State Department needs to be stronger and more resilient. She said the State Department needs to do a better job communicating with the public and limiting influences from outside the U.S. She also predicted issues such as weapons of mass destruction, poverty and the environment will continue to be present in foreign policy. Yovanovitch said she wanted students to think about what they need to accomplish in the future. She said she hoped students would go into a career of public service and contribute to helping the world. IU junior Jacqueline Beck said she thought Yovanovitch was well-spoken. She said she was most affected by what Yovanovitch said about the challenges she faced. “I remembered her during the impeachment trials and was really impressed with how she handled it,” Beck said. Yovanovitch also said there needs to be more togetherness between the members of the State Department. “We are in this together, and we need to find the solution together,” Yovanovitch said. “We can never forget that our foreign policy needs to be American foreign policy.”

Bloomington seeking applicants for Mayor, experts discuss income farmers market advisory council tax increase By Ty Vinson

vinsonjo@iu.edu | @ty_vinson_

The Bloomington Parks and Recreation department is seeking applicants for 10 open positions on the Farmers’ Market Advisory Council, according to a March 3 press release from the city. Applications are due at 5 p.m. April 3. Marcia Veldman, the Bloomington Community Farmers’ Market coordinator, said the open positions are for people who will represent the needs and wants of market customers to the parks and recreation department staff and the Board of Park Commissioners. There are 11 regular voting members on the market advisory council. Six represent vendors, and five represent customers, according to the press release. Four customer positions and six vendor positions are available. Applicants for the customer positions must be Bloomington residents. Applicants for the vendor positions do not have to be Bloomington residents. The Board of Park Commissioners reviews the applications and appoints new members. The term for each member of the market advisory

By Joey Bowling jobowl@iu.edu | @joeybowling8

IDS FILE PHOTO

People walk through the aisles of vendors at the Bloomington Community Farmers’ Market near City Hall on June 16. According to a press release from the city, the Bloomington Parks and Recreation department is seeking applicants for 10 open positions on the Farmers’ Market Advisory Council.

council is two years, and members can serve three consecutive terms. These positions are open because the current members’ terms are up. “We are looking for people who are regular market customers and who have a strong interest in local food security and supporting local farmers, growers and food artisans,” she said. “Also those interested in

helping ensure the market is welcoming and diverse.” Veldman said the department has been actively promoting the position opening with organizations that represent people of color in hopes to make the council more diverse. She said the parks and recreation department has already begun receiving applications. The market advisory

council works with the community and governmental agencies such as the Board of Park Commissioners to help improve the farmers market, according to the press release. Meetings are the third Monday of every month at 5:30 p.m. in City Hall. Those who are interested can apply online or they can contact Veldman at 812349-3738 for an application.

Stores see effects of COVID-19 scare By Ty Vinson vinsonjo@iu.edu | @ty_vinson_

Aisles of sanitizers and medications stood empty in Bloomington on Sunday morning, with seldom a person passing through like a tumbleweed as they realize there’s no more cold medicine and hand sanitizer to fight off the scare of coronavirus. Stores and businesses around the country are seeing the effects of the coronavirus outbreak, with items going out of stock within days or weeks and no indication of when they’ll be restocked. According to the New York Times, hand sanitizer sales in the U.S. went up 73% in February. When searching for hand sanitizer on Amazon, an article from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention comes up at the top of the search page. Hand soaps, wipes and gels are also still available. One gallon of unscented Nature’s Oil hand sanitzer, listed as a best seller,

is selling for $69.95, plus $9.97 for shipping. There have been two cases of coronavirus reported in Indiana, and Gov. Eric Holcomb declared a public health emergency Friday. Hannah Ikerd, shift supervisor at the CVS on West Third Street, said the first difference she saw was people coming in for flu shots. She said this was odd because flu season is technically over, and CVS has been out of flu shots for months. Ikerd said after flu shots, people started stocking up on surgical masks. CVS has been out for weeks. Then it was hand sanitizer, which has also been out for weeks. Now people are going for Clorox wipes and Lysol sprays. She said the store hasn’t put a limit on the amount of cleaning and sanitizing items still available that people can buy. Stores plan to restock items as soon as possible, and Ikerd said she doesn’t expect a limit on how much people can buy once that happens.

“But someone did just come in and buy four cans of Lysol,” Ikerd said. She said the store has had to turn people away quite a bit when they ask for sanitizers and disinfectant wipes, but most people just move on to a different store in hopes of finding the last remaining cleaning items. She said the requests for disinfectant items have been steady, if not getting worse with time as stores continue to run out of cleaning supplies. The aisles at Target on West Third Street were emptier than those at CVS on Sunday. People searched for medicines and sanitizers, but to no avail. “They were probably here but not anymore because of coronavirus,” a woman said to a child as they walked through the cold and flu aisle. A Target employee who insisted on not being named due to corporate policy said the store has also been out of hand sanitizer for weeks now. Items such as cleaning wipes,

bleach, toilet paper and water are starting to get bought in bulk and beginning to run low. He said the store hasn’t put any restrictions on the amount of disinfectant items people can buy, but employees have had to turn people away plenty of times when they’re looking for hand sanitizer. A representative from Kroger on College Mall Road couldn’t be reached for comment by Sunday. Aisles in the health department ran low on hand sanitizers, surgical gloves and cold and flu medicines. Price stickers were partially covered with signs reading, “Sorry for the inconvenience. We’ll restock this item as soon as it’s available.” Although hand sanitizer may be scarce, one of the best ways to protect oneself is to wash hands often with soap and water for at least 20 seconds, according to the Indiana State Department of Health. Hand sanitizer is a good option is soap and water is unavailable.

Mayor John Hamilton, environmental experts and community members met Thursday night at Dimension Mill to discuss a proposal to raise Monroe County’s local income tax. The taxes would go toward a sustainability investment fund for the city and county to combat climate change. Monroe County’s income tax rate would increase from 1.345% to 1.845%. Monroe County is currently the 22nd-lowest taxed county in Indiana. 73 of Indiana’s 92 counties dedicate some of the local income tax to economic development.The tax would raise $16 million annually. Bloomington and the county would each receive $8 million, city councilor Matt Flaherty said. The fund is meant to invest in a more sustainable future and help develop an economy focused on small businesses and sustainable development. Flaherty said any tax increase would have to be approved by the Monroe County Local Income Tax Council. The council is made up of the Bloomington City Council, Monroe County Council, Ellettsville Town Council and Stinesville Town Council. Hamilton first proposed the tax at his second term swearing-in meeting in January. He mentioned it again during his Feb. 20 State of the City address. Lauren Travis, Bloomington assistant director of sustainability, said there are three main parts to making Bloomington more sustainable: creating a diverse economy, having equal access to services for everyone

and protecting natural resources. She said there are many ways the community can work toward fighting climate change, and she wants public input. She said she hopes students get involved in the process as well. She said many of them may leave after graduation, but they can take what they learn in Bloomington to help create change in their new communities. “They’re residents too,” Travis said. Andrea Webster, IU’s Environmental Resilience Institute implementation manager, said climate change has ravaged Indiana through increases in temperatures and annual rainfall. There are about 19 days per decade where daily precipiation is two inches or more, according to data from the Hoosier Resilience Index. That may rise to as many as 23 per decade by 2050. She said increases in precipitation can cause more household flooding and indoor mold. There are about 37 days per year with temperatures above 90 degrees, according to data from the Hoosier Resilience Index. That could increase to as many as 100 days per year by 2050. She said this could cause a spike in medical emergencies and smog production from cars’ tailpipe emissions. “These things sound quite dire,” Webster said. “However, there are things we can do about it.” Webster said the city can create plans in cases of heat waves like it does for other problems such as blizzards and tornadoes. She said the city can also create more SEE TAX, PAGE 3

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La Una Cantina opens on 7th By Veronica Rooney vrooney@iu.edu

La Una Cantina opened its doors Tuesday for the first time. Executive chef and general manager Dean Wirkerman, 34, bounced between the front and back of house, checking in with staff as the first three customers sat at tables alongside Mexicaninspired murals. The restaurant, located on the corner of Seventh Street and North Walnut Avenue, offers a menu of traditional Mexican dishes from beef barbacoa tacos to pork cochinita. “We felt that the cuisine of Mexico is not being represented well, and that we could bring some amazing beverages, some amazing food, and do it better than anyone else,” Wickerman said. Wirkerman said he spent the formative years of his career working in the kitchens of restaurant giants such as Charlie Trotter. Having trained exclusively in French restaurants, he said La Una Cantina is a challenge for him, despite being half-Mexican. “It was an interesting experience to realize I’ve climbed this very high ladder, but I don’t even know the food of my people,” he said. “I went to Oaxaca and worked in a restaurant called El Criollo, and I gained my Mexican palette to paint with from that experience.” His training at El Criollo has influenced the traditional Oaxaca cuisine of La Una Cantina. Staples such as tortillas, torta bread and salsa are made fresh daily, with an emphasis on quality of ingredients. “We’re putting in the

By Luzane Draughon luzdraug@iu.edu | @luzdraughon

JOY CURTON | IDS

La Una Cantina sits March 3 on the corner of Seventh and North Walnut Streets. The modern Mexican restaurant opened March 3.

extra work that a lot of people don’t want to pay for,” Wirkerman said. Toward the back, servers and bartenders hovered around a sleek, modern bar equipped with shelves upon shelves of spirits, anticipating the day’s crowd. “We’re fresh squeezing everything behind the bar,” bar manager William Osterholt, 38, said. “Everything we do, we do with passion, but we do it from scratch.” He also said the restaurant has one of the best tequila selections in Bloomington, and the most extensive selection of Mezcal, an agave-based liquor, in the state of Indiana. Wirkerman’s goal for La Una Cantina is to provide an atmosphere that both Bloomington residents and people from major cities can enjoy. He hopes it will gain national recognition. “There’s a lot of cultured people in Bloomington who are frustrated they

don’t have those options, and we’re going to provide them,” Wirkerman said. The management duo said they want to focus on the employee experience in addition to customer satisfaction. Having worked in hospitality for many years, both Osterholt and Wirkerman said they know what they to provide in a restaurant work environment and what they don’t. Wirkerman said the culture of restaurant work tends to encourage negative behavior such as drugs, alcohol and bad mental health practices. He wants to move the industry forward by changing the standards. Osterholt, who said he has dealt personally with such things, couldn’t agree more. “I’ve made it a personal mission of mine to really focus on mental health with my employees, specifically having a good work-balance life,” he said.

Osterholt plans to help workers by being an openbook and encourgaring positive outside of work activities. Kyra Taylor, 20, who works full time serving and managing, said she left a different job to work at La Una Cantina. She said Wirkerman values respect and teamwork. “I just feel like everyone should be talked to with respect,” she said. She said schedule flexibility makes La Una Cantina a great place to work as well as a great place to dine. “We’re giving something that customers can be proud to bring their friends to,” Wirkerman said. “And we’re giving a place for a young father to come support his family.” La Una Cantina is open 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 10 a.m. to midnight Friday and Saturday and 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday.

IUSG is trying to eliminate the add/ drop fee. Here’s how that could happen. By Luzane Draughon luzdraug@iu.edu | @luzdraughon

IU Student Government released a petition last month to measure support for eliminating the $8.60 add/drop fee for classes. IU-Bloomington is the only campus that charges students to change their schedules after the registration period ends. IUSG Speaker of Congress and third-year law student Andrew Ireland said once Congress passed the bill it went to the executive branch, which is in charge of trying to get the fee eliminated. He said IUSG’s goal was to collect 5,000 signatures before taking the petition to IU administration. As of Thursday, the petition

» TAX

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2 green architecture to absorb rainfall. Attendees broke out into groups at the end of the night to brainstorm ways to invest the funds raised by the proposed tax. At the table labeled mobility options, one idea was reducing the effects of floods by creating more green architecture. Another table focused on local food brainstormed creating a subsidy for residents to join community-supported

may not come before the board until June 2021. She said the board discusses tuition fees every two years. However, she said she thinks there is a good chance it could come to them earlier if students and administrators push for it to get approved faster. If the petition goes to the board, Connor said she thinks board members would be open to hearing from the students and administrative bodies. “College affordability is more important than ever in my opinion,” Connor said. IUSG Student Body President Isabel Mishkin said in an email to the Indiana Daily Student that the next IUSG executive administration elected in April can

agriculture groups, where families would pay farmers during the winter to receive vegetables and fruit during the summer. Another suggestion was to educate the community on ways to be more green such as composting or reducing waste. Hamilton said there are many benefits to the tax and what it can do for helping the city. There will be more public meetings scheduled to get further suggestions and critiques. “We will have a community that is so much better than it is today,” he said.

Mayor John Hamilton speaks March 5 in Dimension Mill during “A Conversation about a Sustainability Investment Fund.”“We want to make sure that as this community evolves, we have a place for everybody,” Hamilton said.

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9 a.m. − 4 p.m. March 11, IMU Georgian Room *Credit cards or bursar billing accepted.

OPTOMETRY

take advice from the past administration to continue to work toward getting the fee eliminated. “People are listening, people are engaged in this, and they’d like to see change,” Ireland said. Sophomore Brandon Barnes said he was charged about $50 in add/drop fees his freshman year because he changed his schedule several times. He became aware of the petition when his roommate from last year posted it on social media. He said he wanted to sign it after learning that IU-B is the only IU campus that still has an add/drop fee for classes. “I think it’s such an absurd thing,” Barnes said. “I’m being punished for being indecisive.”

had over 2,000 signatures. Second year IU-Purdue University Indianapolis law student Molly Connor, a student trustee on the Board of Trustees, said there is no threshold for a number of signatures the petition needs to gain, but rather it’s a matter of getting the issue in front of the board. Connor said the petition is still in its early stages. First, IUSG needs to continue working with the Office of the Bursar and relevant administrators on the IU-Bloomington campus, including the Office of the Vice President & Chief Financial Officer. The proposal would pass if the majority of the board voted to eliminate the fee. Connor said the issue

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Decorated tables were set up around campus on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday with members from nine organizations handing out green bandanas, the color representing mental health awareness, for students to tie on their backpacks to show support for those struggling with mental health. “It felt really good to see all the people with their bandanas walking through the hallways,” IU senior Leah Murray said. This project is a Big Ten initiative to help end the stigma around mental health, said IUSG congressional steering committee member Rachel Aranyi. The organizations involved in this project, listed on IUSG’s website, also handed out cards at the tabling events with lifeline numbers that provide confidential support for things such as suicide and sexual assault. Aranyi said the goal of the project is to show a visual allyship on campus. The hope of these organizations is to offer more projects or events supporting mental health in the future. Murray said she heard about the Green Bandana Project on social media and went to a table to get a bandana Tuesday. After, she posted about the project on her Instagram story to inspire her friends to pick up a bandana. Murray said she thinks this project is a good step toward breaking the stigma surrounding mental health, but it isn’t the only step. She said she thinks it’s good that so many people on campus are willing to show their support, but hopes to see more done to break the stigma in the future. She hopes the green bandanas will encourage students to seek help who have not yet. “Hopefully seeing the green bandanas around will give someone the courage they need to talk to that first person,” Murray said. She said the goal of this project is to have tons of students display green bandanas on their backpacks to show visual solidarity on campus. There was also a post-it board at the tables where people wrote about mental health and how it’s affected them. “IU is proud to be part of this initiative,” Aranyi said.

This is their first time running this project at IU, but Aranyi said the hope of IUSG and Kelley Student Government is to make it annual. She said the stigma around mental health is a broad societal issue, but the student body has made showing support a priority. They are moving toward the goal of ending the stigma, and Aranyi said she encourages people with ideas for future projects to come to their Monday night meetings, which are open to everyone. She said IUSG passed the bill to fund the information cards that go along with the bandanas and used money from their budget to purchase a few thousand bandanas to contribute at the tabling events. The rest of the bandanas were bought with the budgets of the other organizations involved. There were 5,000 bandanas in total handed out during this project, said Nailah OwensJohnson, vice president of outreach in KSG. She said she heard about the Green Bandana Project at an IUSG meeting and decided to bring the project to KSG. Owens-Johnson said at this year’s Balance Week, the week before exams, KSG plans to hand out more bandanas and tie-dye shirts green at the Kelley School of Business to continue the supporting mental health. She said KSG has other events planned during Balance Week, such as a massage event. “Going forward, this is a visual to see that you’re not alone,” Owens-Johnson said. Owens-Johnson said at the beginning of the project, many weren’t sure what the project was for, but by the last day of tabling, people were seeking the bandanas out. She said students asked about donations, but they were not accepted because the sole purpose of the project at IU was to show the alliance between everyone on campus in understanding mental health. Owens-Johnson said the biggest part of the tabling events was to show that it’s okay to not be okay. Owens-Johnson said all 1,800 of the bandanas contributed from KSG were paid for by the Kelley School of Business. She said she felt as if this was a representation of how much the administration cares about their students and those struggling with mental health.

Connexion / Evangelical Community Church 503 S. High St. 812-332-0502 eccbloomington.org • cnxn.life Facebook: Connexion ECC Instagram: cnxn.life Sunday Service: 9:30 a.m. & 11 a.m. Connexion: Sundays, 6 p.m. Connexion is the university ministry of ECC. We’re all about connecting students to the church in order to grow together in our faith. We meet weekly for worship, teaching, and fellowship as well as periodically for service projects, social events and more. College is hard, don’t do it alone!

Bob Whitaker, Senior Pastor Adam deWeber, Worship Pastor Dan Waugh, Pastor of Adult Ministries

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» DIABETES

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 insulin her daughter needed to take for the treat. “Give 10 and I will keep a look on it,” Ashley said. Lucy can work her insulin device herself, but leaves the needles to her mom. She pulled the small machine, which resembles a pager. The sensor lets Lucy check her insulin and administer more from the red polka dot fanny pack she wears. She pressed some buttons before watching 10 units of insulin flow from the device through a tube and into her stomach. By the time she was done giving herself insulin, her cousins had already finished eating their snacks and were ready to keep playing. Before running over to join them, Lucy shoved a sugar cookie in her mouth. * * * The average 4-year-old weighs 40 pounds. However, when Lucy was 4, she only weighed 30 pounds and was rapidly shedding more weight. Ashley and Garrett were worried. One doctor thought Lucy had facial cellulitis, an infection of the facial tissues. The penicillin she was prescribed backfired when she broke out into a head-to-toe rash. Another doctor said her symptoms were from just a normal stomachache and combined with the penicillin and steroids prescribed for the rash, but the symptoms did not go away. “You see it happening, but you can’t do anything to stop it,” Ashley said.

There was a point when Ashley thought Lucy was just dealing with anxiety. She was constantly shaking and crying all the time, but then she kept getting sicker. On Jan. 22, 2017, Lucy was unable to walk. The family was getting worried. After suggestions from family members, Ashley used her diabetic stepfather’s glucose meter to check Lucy’s sugar levels. Lucy screamed and cried at the finger poke, the first of many. The meter read, in all caps: HIGH. “We were all like ‘what?’ So we checked again and of course Lucy is screaming and crying because she does not want to get poked, but it read HIGH again,” said Ashley. Ashley called her best friend Kenzi McRadey, a registered nurse who recommended the family head to Norton’s Children Hospital in Louisville, Kentucky, an hour drive away from home. Lucy’s condition was so unstable that she was put into the pediatric intensive care unit upon arrival at Norton's. Once her family told medical staff her sugar was reading HIGH, it wasn’t hard to diagnose her. The doctor walked into the

Humalog insulin prices have increased The rise is not uncommon compared to other insulin brands 350

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room with a big smile on his face. ”Well, we have answers,” he said. “Lucy has Type 1 diabetes.” Lucy was actually in diabetic ketoacidosis, a condition in which blood begins to turn acidic, when she arrived at the hospital. Lucy’s blood sugar was more than 600, nearly eight times higher than the average blood sugar of 80. The doctor informed Lucy’s parents that if she would not have come in that night, their daughter would have died. Doctors and nurses swarmed a severely dehydrated Lucy in the hospital. While preparing to give her a central line, a nurse was able to find a vein in her foot after 30 minutes of searching. Lucy was initially brought to the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit. It took roughly three days to move her to the diabetes floor. Ashley said it was like having a perpetual newborn. Lucy constantly had to be cared for. While in the hospital, doctors and nurses spent two hours instructing Ashley and Garrett about Lucy’s new needs. Parenting a diabetic child meant Ashley and Garrett needed to learn a new set of skills: how to check Lucy’s blood sugar, how to give her medication, the differences between varieties of insulin. “I felt overwhelmed and underprepared,” said Garrett. Now, they have to be ready to step in when Lucy’s blood sugar levels suddenly drop. One time when she was 6-years-old and “low,” Lucy climbed into the refrigerator and sprayed whipped cream in her mouth for a quick sugar fix. “This is the side that a lot of people do not see,” Garrett said. Facebook groups and

IZZY MYSZAK | IDS

Above Lucy, 8, poses for a picture with her Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation bear in her home. She practices giving insulin injections with him. Top left Cousins Kaitlyn, Lucy and Carmen play New Phone Who Dis? with one another in Lucy’s living room. Lucy said she sees the stigma society has set for diabetes, but she does not let that stop her from being a kid. Below Ashley Matthews inserts a Dexcom g5, a monitor that continuously checks blood sugar, into her daughter Lucy’s arm. Dexcom's continuous glucose monitors are used to monitor the glucose levels of diabetics.

Google provided Ashley and Garrett with 95% of their diabetes information. It took them years to be able to finetune and figure out the small, ever-shifting details of caring for their daughter. As Lucy grows, the numbers change and so does the way her body reacts to different stimuli. Lucy’s diabetes also strains the family financially. When they left the hospital with all the prescriptions and called CVS, they were told nothing was covered and it was going to be a $1,200 bill just to get the things to keep her alive. “I’m crying in the hospital, and we will forever be in debt when paying off her hospital bill,” Ashley said. Garrett’s parents offered to pay for Lucy’s medical costs after the first bill, but that only went so far. That high bill would be the first of many for the Matthews. The cost of living with diabetes is more than just paying for insulin. Garrett and Ashley now have to cover test strips, alcohol swabs, snacks to fix Lucy’s low blood sugar, pump supplies, Dexcom continuous glucose monitor sensors and transmitters, syringes, ketone strips and doctors' appointments. Even though they have health insurance, sometimes it’s cheaper for them to buy

supplies at cash price due to inflated insurance costs. All together, Lucy’s parents estimate they pay around $15,000 per year out of pocket, a major financial burden for Garrett, a cook, and Ashley, a stay-athome mom. One vial of insulin contains 10 milliliters, and each milliliter has 100 units. That cookie with her cousins cost the family $3.32. Ashley said the root of the problem is that pharmaceutical companies’ motivation lies in profit instead of care. “We don’t matter,” she said. “My 8-year-old child does not matter, you don’t matter, I don’t matter. If they do not make money off of us, then it does not matter to them.” * * *

Having diabetes became more than just being sick — it became a flood of emotions for Lucy. Even though she’s young, Lucy can see the stigma. She sees the glances from grocery store cashiers as they see diabetic supplies and sugary foods on the belt. She knows that people stare at her pump. “I don’t want diabetes,” said Lucy. Ashley fears for her daughter. She knows one day Lucy will have to find her own insurance and she doesn’t want her to have to settle for a job she doesn’t want because it has the medical benefits she needs. She doesn’t want anything to hold her daughter back. ''It is time for a revolution,” Ashley said. “We are not going to do it anymore.”

INDIANA DAILY STUDENT 150 Years of Headlines, Deadlines and Bylines

Order the IDS history book on Amazon idsnews.com/book Featuring contributions from generations of IDS journalists including Ernie Pyle, Marge Blewett, Ray Boomhower, Craig Klugman, Myrna Oliver, Melissa Farlow, Thomas French, Eric Deggans, and more.


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Monday, March 9, 2020 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com

» INDIANA

» ABROAD

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

According to the Centers for Disease Controls and Prevention website, the best ways to prevent the spread of the virus are to avoid touching your eyes, nose and mouth, covering coughs and sneezes and staying home when you are sick. Wiping down frequently touched surfaces with cleaning sprays or wipes is recommended as well.

positive, but no other IU students have. “The student’s academic situation moving forward is still being worked out,” Carney said, “but obviously we will be making accommodations for the circumstances.” Carney said the IU Office of Environmental Health and Safety will conduct

contact tracing, which is the process of identifying, assessing and managing people who have been in contact with the illness in order to prevent further transmission. The best ways to prevent the spread of the virus are to avoid touching your eyes, nose and mouth, covering coughs and sneezes and staying home when you are sick, according to the Centers for Disease

Controls and Prevention website. The CDC also recommends wiping down frequently touched surfaces with cleaning sprays or wipes. The CDC has level three travel restrictions to China, Iran, Italy and South Korea and a level two restriction to Japan. On Thursday, IU announced the cancellation of all international university-sponsored spring break programs.

» SEMIFINALS

» TOURNAMENT

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 we continue to monitor all relevant information on the COVID-19 virus and its impact on hosting events in publish spaces,” the statement read. This comes after the decision to play Division III men’s basketball tournament games at John Hopkins University over the weekend without fans

in attendance due to coronavirus-related concerns. IU women's basketball is playing in Indianapolis for the Big Ten Tournament. The Hoosiers will face No. 1 seed Maryland on Saturday night in the semifinals. The men's team will play in the same building for the opening round of the men’s basketball tournament Wednesday for the first time in program history.

COLIN KULPA | IDS

Left Senior Brenna Wise strips the ball away from Maryland senior Stephanie Jones on March 7 at Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis. Wise scored seven points in the Hoosiers’ loss to Maryland in the semifinals of the Big Ten Tournament.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

Top right Redshirt junior Ali Patberg looks for an open teammate March 7 at Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis. Patberg scored a team-high 16 points in IU’s 66-51 loss to Maryland in the semifinals of the Big Ten Tournament. Bottom right Junior Jaelynn Penn points to a teammate March 7 at Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis. Penn scored only 2 points in IU’s 66-51 loss to Maryland in the semifinals of the Big Ten Tournament.

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Chamber singers to honor Matthew Shepard By Hannah Johnson hanjohn@iu.edu | @hannah_dailey1

Four single piano notes broke the silence in the Unitarian Universalist Church sanctuary, where 40 people gathered Tuesday night to rehearse for their upcoming concert. They were soon followed by the soft entry of baritone voices. “I walk to the fence with beauty before me,” the group sang, the alto and soprano singers gradually fading in. The Bloomington Chamber Singers was referring to the fence which 21-year-old Matthew Shepard was tied to before being beaten and left to die in one of the most horrific LGBTQ hate crimes in history. The group is in the midst of preparing its two-hour choral piece honoring Shepard, which it has been rehearsing since January and will perform 7:30 p.m. May 2 and 3 at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater. The piece, “Considering Matthew Shepard” by Craig Hella

Johnson, explores the perspectives of Shepard, his family, mourners, homophobic protesters and even the fence that would later become an iconic symbol of the tragedy. Though it’s purely metaphorical, personifying the fence is one of the many ways the music helps people process what happened, production manager Abby Henkel said. “It helps us think he wasn’t alone, to think that the fence was holding him, cradling him and listening to him,” Henkel said. The lyrics have a powerful effect on everyone who listens to them, Henkel said. She said one of her fellow choir members was so moved by Shepard’s story that she recently left her Catholic church because it didn’t support gay people. “It’s not really music you can hear and not have feelings about,” Henkel said. “I expect it’s going to raise a lot of questions in people’s hearts.” The music is a collection of different genres, including

classical, gospel, country, yodeling and show tunes, Henkel said. As a gay person, Henkel said the music is especially meaningful. “I was 12 when he was killed, but that could’ve been me,” Henkel said. “I think that if you’re gay, the story is really close to you.” Graduate student John Buchanan will sing a solo from the perspective of Matthew Shepard as a child during the song “Ordinary Boy,” the lyrics of which are compiled from Shepard’s diary entries. He said that planning a show with such upsetting subject matter can be taxing, but the positivity Shepard exuded in his life is one thing that keeps him and the rest of the choir motivated. “The positivity of how amazing he was when he was with us, we use those pieces of positivity to keep going,” Buchanan said. “It’s inspiring that we get to share such a powerful message.” Gerry Sousa, who has directed the Bloomington

JOY BURTON | IDS

Members of the Bloomington Chamber Singers rehearse a vocal piece March 3 at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Bloomington. The group is preparing for a performance of “Considering Matthew Shepard” in May.

Chamber Singers for 35 years, said he studied the lyrics so much in the process of rehearsing the show that he now feels he knew Shepard personally. But many people either don’t remember or never learned Shepard’s story, he said. He said he hopes the performance will remind audience members why it’s important to acknowledge

unjust events in history, so they’re not repeated. “They’ll realize they have a responsibility and will feel energized to change things,” Sousa said. “I would hope people want to come and know about this because it gives us hope at a time where we need hope.” Though the concert will be in remembrance of a pro-

foundly sad incident, Sousa said the main takeaways should be positive. The music sends a message that people can unite to make change and reminds them that beauty and pain are interconnected, he said. “It means we have to experience pain to also experience joy,” Sousa said. “We have to experience loss to appreciate love.”

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Badgers spoil senior day Devonte Green closes out career in Assembly Hall By Matt Cohen mdc1@iu.edu | @Matt_Cohen_

dren’s show,” Miller said. “Every bracketology is a children’s show.” Miller’s views on bracketology shows aren’t wrong. The shows are a joke, and it still amazes me that people such as ESPN’s Joe Lunardi get paid six figures to make semi-educated guesses about the NCAA bracket. The best part is that they are rarely correct. “But when you start to go through the bracketology and you listen to the ‘Sesame Street’ cartoon guys on TV who need people to click and do all this stuff, the bottom line is strength of record,” Miller said. “Who did you play, what did you beat.” Miller’s belief that IU is in the tournament is optimistic. IU sits at 19 wins. Since the beginning of the season, it likely needs 20 to reach the tournament, according to most analysts. That puts IU in a must-win situation on Wednesday in the Big Ten Tour-

IU senior guard Devonte Green said he wanted to be remembered as entertaining in a video posted to the IU men’s basketball team’s Twitter account Friday. Saturday was Green’s senior day, which came during a 60-56 loss to No. 24 Wisconsin. In his final game at Assembly Hall, Green put on one last show. A showman typically goes last. The event all builds up to the final act, the headliner. So it was fitting that Green was the last player introduced in the starting lineup Saturday and the last player to give his speech during the senior day presentation. Green’s shows are a result of his scoring. After his most productive games as a Hoosier, Green has said he just has to keep shooting. He has to keep shooting through the games where nothing goes in and the games where everything does. So on his senior day, he shot. A lot. He made each of his first three shots including a pull-up 3-pointer. He scored 13 of IU’s first 17 points. He finished the game with 16 points on 6-17 shooting and didn’t score in the second half. In his senior day speech, Green didn’t know what to say at first. He seemed a bit emotional. IU head coach Archie Miller had already talked about the 3-pointers Green has made and will continue to make. He also talked about the lessons he’s tried to teach Green. “Trying to teach me along the way even if I didn’t want to learn,” Green said when he got to speak to the crowd Saturday. Green’s senior day performance, even while playing through a left ankle injury, encapsulated a career that is complicated and maddening. It’s characterized by its unpredictability. Fans have coined the simple nicknames “Good Devonte” and “Bad Devonte” for his two types of performances. Both versions of Green are game changing. “Bad Devonte” makes careless passes and takes crazy shots searching for the highlight reel. “Bad Devonte” was suspended during his junior season for not meeting standards expected by the program. But then there’s “Good Devonte.” That version comes in the games where he showcases talent that single handedly carries IU past opponents. That’s the version that puts on the best shows, the entertaining player Green wants to be remembered as. That’s the version that is so good, yet so frustrating to the fans who wonder why that can’t be there every night. There is no way to know which Green will show up. His career spanned the course of two head coaches and tumultuous years for the program. Green was recruited by former head coach Tom Crean and played his freshman year before Crean was fired. But he and senior forward De’Ron Davis stayed after Crean was gone and for three years with Miller. Green experienced the highs of wins over Michigan State, Florida State University and Kansas University. He stayed for the lows of the 1-12 stretch last season, the uncer-

SEE OPTIMISM, PAGE 8

SEE GREEN, PAGE 8

ANNA TIPLICK | IDS

Sophomore guard Rob Phinisee steals the ball from Wisconsin junior Brad Davison on March 7 in Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall and scores a layup. Wisconsin defeated IU 60-56.

IU falls to Wisconsin to close out regular season By Phillip Steinmetz psteinme@iu.edu | @PhillipHoosier

Over the final nine minutes and 30 seconds, IU men’s basketball only made a single field en route to a 60-56 loss Saturday afternoon to No. 24 Wisconsin. The Hoosiers finished the season with an overall record of 19-12 and 9-11 in Big Ten play. The loss was the second time this season that IU couldn’t defeat a ranked team at home. It was senior day for IU guards Adrian Chapman and Devonte Green and forward De’Ron Davis. Green and Davis started in place of sophomore guard Rob Phinisee and junior center Joey Brunk, and the senior duo secured IU’s first 17 points. Redshirt freshman guard Jerome Hunter made a 3-pointer with 11:42 remaining in the half, making him the first non-senior player on the scoreboard. Green scored 13 of IU’s 20 points before Hunter’s make. He led the team into halftime with 16 points while shooting 60% from the field. IU’s second leading scorer was Davis with the four points he scored at the beginning

of the game. The Hoosiers led by as many as seven points after the first 20 minutes, but only made two of their last 12 shots. Coming into the matchup with Wisconsin, freshman forward Trayce Jackson-Davis led IU with 13.9 points per game. But it wasn’t until 15:16 remained in Saturday’s game that Jackson-Davis scored. Wisconsin was packing the paint since there wasn’t a single IU forward who provided much of a threat from the 3-point line. The Hoosiers made seven of their last 10 buckets to create some distance from the Badgers. In under five minutes, IU took a sevenpoint lead. The Hoosiers made it a nine-point lead on the following bucket from sophomore forward Race Thompson. Wisconsin forward Micah Potter had 14 points, but played most of the second half in foul trouble. IU had issues defending him and the rest of Wisconsin’s frontcourt. Wisconsin used a 10-0 run over a span of two and a half minutes to take a 54-51 lead. It was the Badgers’ first lead since they led 13-12 in the first half. The Hoosiers never retook the lead after they fell behind. IU junior

guard Al Durham madee a 3-pointer with 55 seconds remaining ning to end a field drought of almost st nine minutes. His pair of free throws with 11.5 seconds remaining ng would be the final points IU would score. Green led IU with 16 points, but only scored red three after having 13 of IU’s first 20 points. He missed all seven of his second-half shot attempts. mpts. Jackson-Davis finished shed with six points and eight rebounds while Thompson pson had seven points and 111 rebounds. Up next for the Hoooosiers is the Big Ten Toururnament where they’ll be the No. 11 seed. They’ll y’ll play in the first round nd of games Wednesdayy for the first time in pro-gram history.

ANNA TIPLICK | IDS

Junior guard Al Durham scores March 7 in Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall. Durham scored nine points in IU’s game against Wisconsin.

CALEB’S CORNER

Archie Miller thinks IU is in the NCAA Tournament. That’s optimistic Caleb Coffman is a junior in sports media.

IU has lived on the bubble of the NCAA Tournament for most of the season, bouncing in and out of bracket projections. After two ranked wins over then-No. 20 Penn State on Jan. 29 and No. 18 Iowa on Feb. 13, IU looked to be comfortably in the field of 68. In the final four games of the season, IU has only won one game. The team beat Minnesota by five and squandered a likely clinching opportunity in a 60-56 loss to Wisconsin on Saturday. IU head coach Archie Miller still believes the team is a lock. “If you don’t put in a top-25 strength of record team with the wins that we have, you know, somebody is going to have to answer some questions,” Miller said after the game Saturday. Miller is right in some respects. The Hoosiers have the No. 13 strength of schedule, according to KenPom.com and have a handful

of impressive, wins against some of the top teams in the country. At times, IU has looked like a team that could play during the second weekend of the NCAA Tournament. The biggest knock against the Hoosiers is that they’ve only played at a high level in Assembly Hall. As soon as IU steps onto any other court, it is a completely different team. There is a reason the NCAA Evaluation Tool and the NCAA selection committee weighs road and neutral site games so heavily compared to playing at home. The Hoosiers won’t have the comfort of Assembly Hall if they get selected for the tournament. Instead, all IU can do is keep an eye on the projected brackets to see where the team might end up. However, if it was up to Miller he would get rid of all the clickbait bracketology shows. “It’s like when you watch ‘Sesame Street’ and you listen to the guys on ‘Sesame Street’, it’s a chil-


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Men’s Big Ten Tournament Wednesday, March 11

Thursday, March 12

Friday, March 13

Saturday, March 14

Sunday, March 15

No. 9 Michigan No. 8 Rutgers Noon

No. 13 Northwestern

No. 1 Wisconsin Noon

Semifinals

No. 12 Minnesota 6 p.m.

1 p.m.

No. 5 Iowa 25 minutes after Game 3

No. 4 Illinois 25 minutes after Game 7

No. 10 Purdue

Championship 3:30 p.m.

No. 7 Ohio State 6:30 p.m.

No. 14 Nebraska

No. 2 Mich. State 6:30 p.m.

Semifinals

No. 11 IU 25 minutes after Game 1

4:30 p.m.

No. 6 Penn State 25 minutes after Game 5

No. 3 Maryland 25 minutes after Game 9

SOURCE Big Ten Conference

» OPTIMISM

» GREEN

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 7

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 7

nament against Nebraska, which has lost 15 straight tainty of a new coaching hire games. and failing to make the NCAA If IU loses in the first Tournament three straight round to either of those years. teams, the team doesn’t “I mean, for us, we’re the deserve to make the last two standing from the NCAA Tournament. There Crean era,” Green said Friday. are consequences for bad “Not everybody did stick with losses, and a bid to the it. I think that the fact that we tournament is a large one chose to says something about hanging over the Hoous.” siers. But there is still one thing One thing is for sure: Green hasn’t done — make What bracket analysts like the NCAA Tournament. Green Lunardi, fans or Miller bestands as part of the first IU lieve doesn’t matter. The graduating class since 1972 only opinion that matters to have not made the NCAA is the selection commitTournament. That was Bob tee’s on Sunday. Knight’s first season as IU head coach. calcoffm@iu.edu “I mean, we set a goal in the beginning of the season,” Green said. “We knew what was on the line for us as seniors especially, and we want to finish it up the best we can and do something we’ve never done before in our four years.” IU isn’t there yet. With the loss to Wisconsin, the team’s path to the NCAA Tournament will likely require a win at next week’s Big Ten Tournament. Green’s IU career only has so many games left. The version of the senior guard that shows up may just determine whether Green attains that last ANNA TIPLICK | IDS goal. Senior guard Devonte Green stands with his family March 7 in Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall while being recognized for senior night. Wisconsin defeated IU 60-56.

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Indiana Daily Student

OPINION

Monday, March 9, 2020 idsnews.com

Editors Abby Malala and Tom Sweeney opinion@idsnews.com

EVERETT’S EXAMPLES

THE ELECTIVE PERSPECTIVE

Anger at CAPS mental health services is misdirected

What’s next for Pete Buttigieg?

Everett Kalman, he/him is a junior in law and public policy.

More students than ever are seeking mental health care. This is a positive change but has resulted in campus mental health care resources that never seem to be enough. What used to be a problem of stigma facing students with mental health concerns has shifted to become a lack of resources for the many students seeking mental health care from their campus health centers. Anxiety and depression continue to be top concerns for many students, with anxiety showing a slight increase since last year, according to Penn State’s Center for Collegiate Mental Health 2020 Annual Report. The report additionally finds that trauma has become a more significant concern, especially since 2016. These statistics are difficult to interpret. Increased self-reports of anxiety, depression, trauma and “threat-to-self” characteristics may be the result of greater prevalence, increased comfort with reporting or both. From 2014 to 2019, the number of students seeking mental health care has increased by 35% compared to just 5% increase in enrollment, according to an Associated Press analysis of 39 large state universities. In my three years on the Mental Health Committee for Culture of Care, I’ve heard countless stories of how students are dissatisfied with the quantity and quality of support from IU’s Counseling and Psychological Services, citing long waitlists and shortened one-on-one sessions, among other complaints. Some students have also lamented that CAPS offers only two free counseling sessions per semester. However, we shouldn’t blame CAPS. While many of the Big Ten schools do not restrict their students to only two tuition-paid visits per semester, the problem of lacking the necessary mental health

Maximilian Sandefer, he/him is a sophomore studying Spanish and political science.

FILE PHOTO BY IZZY MYSZAK | IDS

The Counseling and Psychological Services check-in desk is located on the fourth floor of the IU Health Center.

resources to effectively treat students is felt nationwide. At Northwestern University and the University of Michigan, for example, the student health fee covers all CAPS services without a limit on the number of sessions. CAPS strives to keep the wait time for initial appointments to no more than a week, CAPS Director Denise Hayes said. The wait for these intake appointments, however, can often be closer to two weeks, Hayes said. Many students can’t wait three weeks for just an intake appointment. It’s important to note, though, that emergency appointments are available every day from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. with a crisis line open 24/7. CAPS receives 75% of its funding from the mandatory student health fee, IU Health Center Executive Director Peter Grogg said. About 14% of funds come from fees for services, and only 9% comes from the IU Bloomington Provost Funds, the general budget for academic and other campus spending. The health center has hired more counselors in recent years, but meeting the demand with a tight budget is no easy task. Master’slevel counselors cost roughly

$68,000 a year, and Ph.D. psychologists earn $98,000 annually between salary and benefits, Grogg said. Using IU Health Center’s funding model, hiring more staff and increasing CAPS’ ability to treat students would most likely mean an increase in the annual student health fee. This lack of proper funding for mental health services has come, particularly this year, at great contrast to the funds used to build the relocated Metz Carillon and the Indiana Memorial Union renovation. While this is frustrating, it’s not quite accurate to say that IU funded the Carillon at the expense of CAPS. Building and renovation are often funded by private donations and public grants that cannot be used for the CAPS budget. In the meantime, however, students should know the resources available to them for mental health care. Besides individual therapy sessions, CAPS offers free mental health workshops throughout the semester focused on mindfulness, substance abuse and anxiety management. It also provides group therapy, couples counseling and counseling

sessions via video chat. IU Crimson CORPS, a group of undergraduate students trained and supervised by CAPS, provides informal counseling and nonjudgmental peer support. Their office is located on the fourth floor of the IU Health Center. The Center for Human Growth, a part of the School of Education, provides counseling to students and non-students from trained graduate students studying counseling and educational psychology. Let’s Talk, another program initiated by CAPS, helps students to find solutions to everyday problems in a confidential and informal setting. Let’s Talk Now offices are located in the LGBTQ+ Culture Center, the Student Academic Center and the Atkins LLC in Forest Residence Hall. The state of mental health services at CAPS presently is frustrating and underfunded. While I believe we can work to bring more funding to these services from the university, please take advantage of the various other sources for mental health care. eskalman@iu.edu

KYLE’S KITCHEN

Indiana infrastructure needs new investment Kyle Linder, he/him is a junior in journalism and international relations.

Indiana might be the “Crossroads of America,” but the state’s aging infrastructure and poor climate change preparation should make residents concerned about its future. Despite increased funding for road repairs and piping replacements in the past three years, Indiana must invest much more to make its infrastructure system safer and more reliable in the long term, with a particular emphasis on water infrastructure, public transit and climate change mitigation. About 12% of Indiana’s roads as poor condition, 7% of its bridges structurally deficient and 240 of its dams high-hazard potential, according to a 2017 report from the American Society of Civil Engineers. ASCE estimates that $7.5 billion in drinking water and $7.2 billion in wastewater infrastructure needs over the next 20 years. Gov. Eric Holcomb signed an infrastructure bill in 2017, which provided $1.2 billion for road and bridge repair. Additionally, a 2019 bill provided $20 million annually for water infrastructure investment, and last month INDOT announced $120 million in funding for rural roads and bridges. Still, it is not enough. While Indiana has proven willing to make investments, state officials should address long-term needs such as climate change mitigation, safe drinking water or reliable public transit. The state’s response to infrastructure issues has been underfunded compared to ASCE’s estimates. Climate change threatens to put new stresses on already aging infrastruc-

Former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, Pete Buttigieg ran a historic campaign. Whether you agree with his policies or not, it is remarkable that a gay mayor of a town in Indiana with an estimated population of a little over 100,000 residents was able to catapult himself into national recognition and even, at least according to the state Democratic party, win the Iowa Caucuses. “By every conventional wisdom, by every historical measure, we were never supposed to get anywhere at all,” he told supporters March 1 in South Bend. However, after a disappointing finish in South Carolina and not enough steam headed into Super Tuesday, Buttigieg announced he was dropping out of the race March 1. Still, with high name recognition and a strong base of supporters, Buttigieg has the capability to remain an important public figure in Democratic politics beyond his failed presidential run. The question is, what should he do? Unfortunately, Indiana politics is pretty much out of the question for the former mayor. His old position as mayor of South Bend, Indiana, is already filled by James Mueller, both the races for his home congressional district, IN-02, and governor are rated as likely Republican for 2020, and even if he wanted to take the risk and run, the deadline to file for the Indiana primary already passed. He should set his sights on a national role. Buttigieg endorsed former Vice President Joe Biden on Monday, alongside fellow recent dropout Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn. This move is more than an olive branch to the Biden campaign. It seems clear that Buttigieg wants a cabinet position in a potential Biden administration. A role as the Secretary of Defense might suit Buttigieg. A former naval intelligence officer, he leaned extensively on his time in the military during his run. As someone who speaks extensively of the “values that were encoded in the flag that was on my shoulder when I was deployed overseas,” working in the Defense Department would offer Buttigieg the opportunity to further develop those selfpurported values. Yet criticism remains about Buttigieg’s leadership experience. The right-leaning National Review described him touting his military credentials as “hollow” and his work within the military as “apple-polishing, résumébuffing, box-checking, attention-seeking vaporware.” Buttigieg needs to dem-

9

onstrate his military knowledge and defend his overall military experience if he wants to convince the Senate that he is the right fit for the position come confirmation time. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development is another floatable position for Buttigieg. As mayor of South Bend, his fiercest supporters claim he revitalized the dying industrial town, with Curbed calling it “good urbanism.” This included turning vacant lots and homes into new development projects and a $25 million “Smart Streets” plan, where he reshaped the downtown area with new streetscapes and pedestrian areas. A role as HUD Secretary would give Buttigieg the opportunity to encourage similar policies on a larger scale. However, many community members of South Bend have pushed back against the changes Buttigieg enacted as mayor, with many accusing Buttigieg of gentrifying South Bend. An IndyStar article describes how this is especially prevalent in the neighborhoods near Notre Dame. Predominantly minority subdivisions in the town have consistently been replaced by upscale homes and businesses largely owned by white people, according to the article. “Ain’t shit changed,” Shawn White, a black 24-year-old from the west side of South Bend, told CNBC. Buttigieg needs to answer to his constituents and defend his record as mayor if he wants to prove he’s capable of running an entire national department. These are just two positions of many potential spots for Buttigieg in a Biden administration. With his youth, however, comes a relative lack of experience, so Buttigieg doesn’t have a long record to lean on when his shortcomings are brought up. Regardless, he’d better hope that Joe Biden wins the presidential nomination — and then wins the presidency. If Biden loses, Buttigieg will most likely have go back into the private sector as his political career goes silent for the next several years. Of course, nothing is off the table. Biden might not find Buttigieg suitable for any position in a potential administration. Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., might win the nomination and presidency and find a place for Buttigieg in his White House. Buttigieg might go the way of Andrew Yang and become a television political commentator. One thing’s for certain: At 38 years young, Buttigieg has a lot of time left to work his way back up the Democratic Party. maxsande@iu.edu

CLAIRE LIVINGSTON | IDS

Two pieces of construction equipment sit Jan. 19 on the side of Interstate 69.

ture with increased rainfall and temperatures. The Midwest Economic Policy Institute reports that the consequences of climate change reduce the lifespans of pavements, deteriorate bridges, threaten dams and flood wastewater facilities. In order to prevent further damage, Indiana should invest in repairing this infrastructure now, while accounting for increased rainfall and temperatures in new construction. The problem isn’t likely to be solved at the federal level. ASCE’s 2017 report gave the United States an overall grade of D+, meaning large portions of the system are significantly deteriorated. Even though both President Donald Trump and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi agree the nation needs greater infrastructure investment, talks at the national level have stalled, leaving states without new federal funding. In the long run, delaying infrastructure needs only escalates the costs and risks associated with it. Nearly 60% of Indiana dams were constructed in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Designed for a 50year lifespan, it’s no sur-

prise that many are in critical shape and some have breached in recent years. As rainfall increases due to climate change, many of these dams are now under increased threat. The state must close its funding gap for drinking water needs. The 2019 bill, if continued for 20 years, would leave them underfunded by approximately $7 billion, according to ASCE estimates. Both copper and lead are byproducts of aging water pipes, and neglecting to address it could prove problematic for public health. Serious investments in the state’s public transit system would go a long way in improving its infrastructure. Instead of attempting to cut funding for IndyGo, Indianapolis’ public transportation operator, Indiana should be looking to expand public transportation options. Increased funding for passenger trains and buses would provide Indiana residents with greater travel options at a cheaper cost while decreasing the state’s greenhouse gas emissions. CNBC ranked Indiana highest in the country last year for infrastructure in its annual “America’s Top

States for Business” report. However, CNBC give more weight to business-focused metrics not used by ASCE, such as total U.S. population within 500 miles. Importantly, CNBC neglected to include climate change preparation in their rankings. The ASCE report accounts for future needs, while CNBC focuses on present data. Indiana did not receive a grade from the ASCE, but Kentucky, ranked second and given an A by CNBC, scored only a C-. Given the U.S.’s overall dire infrastructure projections, the CNBC ranking is hardly a cause for celebration. Instead, Indiana should double-down on its efforts and lead the country through its infrastructure slump. With aging infrastructure, whether it be dams, piping or roads, Indiana is throwing its future into question, especially considering the consequences of climate change. If the state hopes to succeed in a 21stcentury economy, it must move to make these serious investments now, rather than wait for more problems to arise. kylinder@iu.edu

ALEX DERYN | IDS

Then-South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg smiles April 14, 2019, as he speaks about running for president in 2020 in Studebaker Building 84 in South Bend, Indiana.

LETTER TO THE EDITOR POLICY The IDS encourages and accepts letters to be printed from IU students, faculty and staff and the public. Letters should not exceed 400 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, 6011 E. Kirkwood Ave. Bloomington, IN 47405. Send submissions via email to letters@idsnews. com. Call the IDS with questions at 812-855-5899.


10

SPORTS

Monday, March 9, 2020 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL

BASEBALL

Third quarter run lifts Maryland over IU

IU splits doubleheader against San Diego Saturday

the floor, while Berger hit just three of her 12 shot attempts. The team was only 21% from 3-point range. The Terrapins also played strong defense off the ball, which removed the Hoosiers’ presence near the basket. Maryland’s defense deflected passes and broke through IU’s screens that attempted to free up players at the basket on inbounding plays. IU committed 12 combined turnovers in its efforts to bring the ball across half court or find forwards and guards cutting through the paint. Patberg typically looks for Berger to catch the ball and shoot it near the freethrow line, but Berger’s defenders did not give Patberg room to throw the ball. IU sophomore forward Aleksa Gulbe usually capitalizes on shots near the basket, but the Terrapin guards’ defense denied her from getting much of a chance. Freshman Mackenzie Holmes was the only IU forward to have success near the basket. Holmes scored 10 points with her post hook shots and up-and-under layups. Despite Holmes’ efforts, the presence, height and length of Maryland’s forwards challenged IU’s ability to get shots off which translated into points in transition. IU allowed 15 fast break

By Sam Bodnar sbodnar@iu.edu | @sgbod13

As Maryland made its way to the free-throw line midway through the fourth quarter Saturday, the starters on the No. 20 IU women’s basketball team searched each other’s eyes for answers. Maryland’s defensive pressure was overwhelming, and time was running out. “We fought hard all night,” junior guard Ali Patberg said. “Our shots didn’t fall, and that’s really disappointing.” The Hoosiers dropped Saturday’s conference semifinal In Indianapolis, 66-51.The Terrapins played tight defense, pushed the ball in transition and outrebounded the Hoosiers throughout the second half. The team shot 33% and couldn’t keep pace. “Our zone changed the game,” Maryland head coach Brenda Frese said. “It gave them more defenders to have to look at.” Maryland’s full-court press stagnated IU’s offense inside Bankers Life Fieldhouse. Patberg and sophomore guard Grace Berger were forced to pick up the ball, make risky passes or take contested shots from the 3-point line. “Their press obviously slowed us down, without question,” IU head coach Teri Moren said. Patberg shot 6-21 from

Horoscope Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) Today is a 7 — Reach a turning point with a partnership under the Full Moon. Compromise and collaborate for shared commitments. Adjust to a change in plans. Aries (March 21-April 19) Today is an 8 — Begin a new physical health and fitness phase upon reaching a barrier or obstacle. Review and revamp skills and practices under this Full Moon.

points that gave Maryland the chance to cement its name into the conference championship. Whenever IU came close to climbing back into the game, a transition layup or jump shot pushed it further away. “They’re great at getting that ball inbounded quickly and getting it up the sideline before some of our guys turned around,” Moren said. Rebounding was another part of what made Maryland’s transition offense successful. The Terrapins had 13 offensive rebounds that enabled its forwards to soar above Berger and Gulbe for second-chance opportunities. These opportunities translated into quick layups or jump shots on the other end of the floor and kept Maryland out of reach. IU lost all three games to Maryland this season and is yet to defeat its conference rival in the 10 matchups between these programs. Moren and her players have to wait until March 16 before the team finds out if it will return to Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall in the opening round of the NCAA Tournament. The Hoosiers were 11-4 this season in Bloomington. Saturday’s loss might not bode well for the program, but there is still a possibility that its first game of the tournament will be in front of a home crowd.

To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. Taurus (April 20-May 20) Today is a 7 — Change directions with a romance, passion or creative endeavor under the Full Moon. Express your heart, imagination and artistry. Shift perspectives for a new view.

Cancer (June 21-July 22) Today is a 7 — Start a new chapter. A new two-week phase in communications, connection and intellectual discovery dawns with this Full Moon. Shift the direction of your research.

Gemini (May 21-June 20) Today is a 9 — Make repairs. Renovate, remodel and tend your garden. Domestic changes require adaptation under the Full Moon. Begin a new home and family phase.

Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) Today is an 8 — A turning point arises around income and finances. You can find profitable opportunities over two weeks under the Virgo Full Moon. Generate positive cash flow.

BLISS

HARRY BLISS

By Sara Kress sekress@iu.edu | @sarakress4

IU baseball went 1-1 in its doubleheader Saturday to open its weekend series against the University of San Diego at Bart Kaufman Field. The Hoosiers won the first game 9-2 and lost the second game 6-2. Their record is now 8-4 for the season. IU head coach Jeff Mercer said the team played the two games in completely different ways. “The game rewards toughness and rewards consistency,” Mercer said. “And so we have to be consistent, and when we’re not, it’s a really tough game to win.” San Diego’s pitchers struggled in the first game. Five pitchers walked 11 IU batters, and five scored. The Hoosiers started off slow offensively in the first game but heated up toward the end of the game. They hit three back-to-back doubles in the seventh inning, earning two runs and bringing the score to 6-2. Their lead widened to 9-2 in the eighth inning when sophomore outfielder Grant Richardson hit a triple to clear the loaded bases. Junior infielder Cooper Trinkle had a successful day of batting. He went 3-4 from the plate in the first game, knocking in an RBI double in the fourth inning. He was one of the four players to get a hit in the second game and the only player to hit more than once. The Toreros’ pitchers performed better in the second game with a combined strikeout count of 13. Starting Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today is an 8 — A challenge redirects you. This Full Moon in your sign illuminates a new personal direction. Expand your boundaries. Turn toward an inspiring possibility. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Today is a 6 — Review priorities privately. Balance old responsibilities with new. Meditate on dreams past and future. This Virgo Full Moon illuminates a transition. Begin an introspective phase.

Crossword

ALLY MELNIK | IDS

Junior Elijah Dunham prepares to catch the ball at first base March 7 at Bart Kaufman Field. IU won the first game Saturday 9-2 and lost the second game 6-2 against the University of San Diego.

pitcher freshman Carter Rustad struck out five batters in a row in the third and fourth innings. He struck out nine batters in the game and didn’t allow a hit until the seventh inning, when Richardson singled to center field. The Hoosiers were unable to keep up the momentum Richardson started. Junior Elijah Dunham hit a double in the seventh inning, which brought Richardson home to score the Hoosiers’ first run of the game. San Diego sophomore pitcher Kohl Simas loaded the bases after Dunham’s hit, but both freshman outfielder Hunter Jessee and senior catcher Collin Hopkins struck out and stranded the three runners on base. The team left two more runners on base in the eighth inning when Dunham popped up to the second baseman. Senior infielder Jordan Fucci hit a solo home run in the ninth inning, the first IU homer at Bart Kaufman Field this year. But a subsequent fly ball to left field and a double play ended any attempt at a rally. Mercer said he was disap-

pointed the team didn’t adapt its playing style to get more hits. “There’s so many opportunities that are presented over the course of 27 outs,” Mercer said. “You have to force them to work in your favor. And we’ve done that over and over again throughout the course of the season to this point, and the second game was the first time where we haven’t.” IU managed to stall San Diego’s offensive efforts until late in the second game. Junior catcher Adam Kerner hit a solo home run for San Diego in the eighth inning to bring the score to 3-1. The team then scored three runs in the ninth inning, one of which was unearned. In the first game, IU’s pitching kept San Diego from scoring big. Sophomore Gabe Bierman pitched 6 1/3 innings, striking out five batters and reaching a pitch count of 99. Senior pitcher Braden Scott only allowed one hit when he relieved Bierman for the remainder of the game. San Diego and IU played the last game of the series at 1:05 p.m. Sunday.

Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Today is a 7 — This Full Moon illuminates social changes. One door closes and another opens. Friends come and go in your community. Share appreciations, goodbyes and greetings.

Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Today is a 7 — An exploration changes. The Full Moon illuminates a shift in your educational direction. Experiment with concepts. Travel expands your view. Learn from a master.

Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Today is an 8 — Finish a project before beginning another professional phase. This Full Moon sparks a career shift. Focus toward current passions. Don't reveal unfinished plans.

Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Today is an 8 — The stakes could seem high with this Full Moon. Shift directions with shared finances over the next few weeks. Work out the next phase together.

L.A. Times Daily Crossword

Publish your comic on this page. The IDS is accepting applications for student comic strips for the spring & summer 2020 semesters. Email five samples and a brief description of your idea to adviser@indiana.edu by March 31. Submissions will be reviewed and selections will be made by the editor-in-chief.

su do ku

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis

ACROSS

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

Answer to previous puzzle

1 6 11 14 15 16 17 19 20 21 23 26 28 29 31 33 35 36 39 40

© Puzzles by Pappocom

BREWSTER ROCKIT: SPACE GUY!

43 44 46 47 49

Seminary book E-cigarette output Media-monitoring org. __-proof: easy to operate How the cheese stands, in a kids' song "__ be in touch!" *Fruity ice cream treat Be litigious Grandstand group Cough syrup, e.g. Chad or Rob of movies Practical joke Lacking a downside Immobile Chafing result Smart set member "Great Leap Forward" Chinese leader Storybook fiend Upside-down sleeper Fixed, like the ends of the answers to starred clues Put a jinx on Messy roomie Nourished House speaker Nancy Luggage tie-on

© 2020 By Nancy Black Distributed by Tribune Media Services, INC. All Rights Reserved

52 53 55 57 58 60 62 63 68 69 70 71 72 73

Shops with slicers Gondolier, e.g. Deviate from a course, at sea MASH shelter Declares to be true Carpentry wedge Nautical pronoun *Knock one out of the park Afternoon social Chopin piece Marble mineral Write "mispell," say "Jurassic Park" critters, briefly Well-known

DOWN

12 13 18 22 23 24 25 27 30 32 34 37 38 41 42 45 48 50 51 53 54 56 59 61 64 65 66 67

Crossword hints Checkout worker "Life of Pi" director Lee Common jazz combo Tree branches Shaq of NBA fame *Won 10 in a row, say 2/2/20, for Super Bowl LIV Many coll. lab instructors Roll of bills Egyptian queen in Tut's time Amber, for one Be Like fresh nail polish __ XING: crosswalk sign Restrain, as one's breath Captive's plea Worked together perfectly Serious cuts Keep moist, as turkey [none of the above] Grinch victim Zap with a Taser Somali-born model Pointless bother Squeal on the mob Rugged vehicle, for short "Game of Thrones" patriarch Stark

Answer to previous puzzle

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

Highchair wear Wash. neighbor TSA checkpoint container Shoes sans laces Sicilian volcano Seven Sisters college Tyrolean peak C-SPAN figures, informally French crockful with a cheesy crust 10 Captured back 11 *Place for rural anglers

TIM RICKARD


1

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Brand new MiniLab Music Device, $75, obo. tjarrell@iu.edu

Wood armoire, good condition. Missing bottom drawer. $50. bmmcswai@indiana.edu

Misc. for Sale “Rachael Ray 50” book. $10, brand new. dsmittal@iu.edu

GoPro HERO5 Session and accessories. $100. grigutis@iu.edu

TRANSPORTATION Motorcycles Red 1986 Honda Magna 750 motorcycle. Has 24,000mi. $2,100. dusnyder@indiana.edu

Bicycles Trek 2004 Bontrager Race Lite wheel set. Excellent cond. $500. 812-322-2804 Womens Schwinn SR sun tour bike. Brand new. Aluminum frame. $299. 812-322-0808

ELKINS APARTMENTS

Ikea desk lamp, good condition, $10. most@iu.edu

Now Leasing for Aug 2021

iPad 32GB and Apple Pencil, $250, obo. floresru@iu.edu

Aug 2020 still available

1, 2, 3, 4 & 5 BR Houses, Townhouses and Apartments

iPhone 4S - does not work. $10. umquresh@indiana.edu New & sealed Google Home Minis. $15 for white, $20 for black. thanania@iu.edu

Brand new “Intermediate Algebra” book by Lynn Marecek. $40. ksstern@iu.edu

Almost brand new fullsize futon mattress (brown, 8-in. thickness). ibanka@iu.edu

Appliances

Eufy RoboVac 11+ robotic vacuum, good condition, $100. amkoop@indiana.edu

leasinginfo@grantprops.com

Touchscreen HP laptop and pen, $450. campbchm@indiana.edu

MERCHANDISE

Textbooks Ancient Greece textbook, for intro level Greek culture class, good cond. $12. whitekn@iu.edu

TCL 32S327 32-Inch 1080p Roku Smart LED TV (2018 Model), $150, obo. bwerle@iu.edu

515

3 BR/1 BA at 9th/Grant. DW/WD. $1575. Aug., 2020. 812-333-9579

Cry of the Children, Inc. Youth Group wanting volunteers to make a difference in young peoples lives by leading a Step Team, Drill Team, Choir or any special gift of interest for young folks. Also need grant writer. Mrs. Boddie 812-361-4059

Wanted: Part-time help for spring clean up. Yardwork, odd jobs. Starting at $12/hr. Call after 10 a.m. 812-606-7935

426 E. 10th St. COMPLETE REMODEL!! 5 BR, 5 BA house, W/D, D/W, AC in unit, centrally located, 5 parking spots incl. $4,400/mo. 706 N. Washington St. FULL KITCHEN REMODEL! 5 BR. 4 BA, house, W/D, D/W, AC in unit, centrally located, beautiful back porch, 2 parking spots incl. $4,100/mo.

leasinginfo@grantprops.com

Assistant/General Helper needed. Part time. 10 to 12 hours a week (flexible schedule). Clean 1 bedroom apt., errands, laundry, light ironing and cooking, maintain storage unit & other general duties. Must be punctual, reliable, honest & hard working. Submit resume & phone number to Lynique@aol.com

Nantucket Island, MA Summer Help Wanted: Landscape / Irrigation positions for 2020 season. Landscape or trade related experience helpful but not necessary. A willingness to learn and a good work ethic required. Housing available. Excellent wages and rewarding work environment. Call Mark at (508) 228-2745 for more info.

Apt. Unfurnished 2 BR/1 BA next to Inform/Kelley. $1375. Aug 2020. Prkg & Laund. 812333-9579 or

General Employment

cryofthechildren@gmail.com

252 N. Walnut 3 BR, 2.5 BA apartment. Ready for an immediate move-in, $2550.00. Please call:812-333-0995

HOUSING 310

Valparaiso, Indiana Children’s Camp Lawrence looking for counselors & lifeguards, 6 wks 219-736-8931 or email: nwicyo@comcast.net

TC Electronics Ditto Looper Effects Pedal w/ac pwr adapter, $125. jbarbry@indiana.edu

Salvatore Ferragamo black/gold sunglasses. Never worn. $100. saihaque@iu.edu

520

Camp Staff

Philips LED light bulbs (4 pack), new, $8. yiju@iu.edu

Sony WH-1000XM3 wireless, noise canceling headset, $280. ag32@iu.edu

Sublet Apt. Unfurn.

Sublease avail. Great location, 1212 North Grant, May 1-Aug. 1.1 BR $500/mo. (317)503-4075

North Face backpack, never been used, $95. jkutche@indiana.edu

Samsung 27’’ curved gaming monitor - good condition. $225,obo. mamurley@iu.edu

420

Work Study Food service assistant job. Must be punctual and reliable! $12/hr. chabad@indiana.edu

EMPLOYMENT

345

219 E. 8th St. - Ideal for group of 9. 3 separate units/leases: (1) 2-BR Carriage House, LR, full bath. (2) Main House (5 tenants), LR, 2 baths. (3) Basement unit (2 tenants), full bath. All w/equipped kitchens, private backyard, close to Campus. Avail. Aug., 2020. Contact Dan (812) 339-6148 or damiller@homefinder.org.

New Ted Baker tri-fold wallet, $30. yiju@iu.edu

Rechargeable Bluetooth Keyboard (for Mac), lightly used, $18. dahrendt@iu.edu

1 BR, 1 BA, for sublease. Available April 2 or 3rd. Nice big eat in kit. Cable ready, pool, sundeck, courtyard dog park. Close to IU Campus, College Mall, restaurants and so much more. Call Jenny at 812-339-0951 leasing manager or myself at 812-606-9642.

2019 N. Dunn Street. Pet friendly, 3 BR, 2 BA, 1 level. Varsity Properties. livebythestadium.com

Columbia women’s size 8.5 medium hiking boots. Brand new. 2 styles, $45 each. 812-322-0808

Razer gaming mouse with green light. $15. gmariano@iu.edu

435

240

Red knit hat w/pom pom. Lost at Assembly Hall. Reward! 812-339-5717

2 BR Bungalow for rent at 212 E. 15th St. 2 blks. from Stadium, A/C, W/D, nice front porch, cherry tree, private. $1100/mo., no pets. Avail. now or for next year Call 812-339-6479 or Text 812-272-1209.

Misc. for Sale

Brooks Bedlam womens running shoes. Size 8.5. Lightly used. $75. vnoquez@iu.edu

Pioneer DJ controller & Odyssey case. Great cond. $1,200. bralord@iu.edu

Call 333-0995 omegabloomington.com

405

Lost

1395 N. Lincoln Street 5 BR, 2.5 BA, 3 levels. Varsity Properties. livebythestadium.com

411

125

facebook.com/e3rdStreet/

1316 N. Lincoln Street 5 BR, 3 BA, 2 levels. Varsity Properties. livebythestadium.com

11

12 pc. dinnerware set w/ 4 dinner & salad plates, bowls, & silverware. $15. yafwang@hotmail.com

Nintendo Switch Lite w/ games, original box, and charger. jwelford@iu.edu

426 E. 10th St. Minutes to campus and nightlife 2 Laundry Rooms 5 Private Parking Spaces A/C, D/W, W/D Covered Porch Completely Renovated 5 BR, 5 BA House

Houses

Electronics Nintendo 3DS special Mario edition w/ carrying case. Games incl. $120. bradevan@iu.edu

O M E G A P R O P E R T I E S

415

110

Announcements STRESS RELIEF A FEW BLOCKS FROM CAMPUS Visit us on Facebook:

210

Restaurant & Bar

Houses HPIU.com Houses and apt. 1-4 BR. Close to campus. 812-333-4748 No pets please.

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

The Original, a new concept from Big Woods Restaurant Group, is seeking experienced industry professionals to help craft an elevated dining experience for our guests in the artists’ colony of Brown County, Indiana. The Original will serve guests ages 21-andolder and feature a menu of next-level Midwestern comfort foods complemented by cocktails designed with locally-crafted Hard Truth Distilling Co. spirits and beer by Brown County’s Quaff ON! Brewing Co. Seeking experienced candidates for all front of house and back of house positions (Servers, Bartenders, Hosts, Line Cooks and Prep Cooks). Apply at any Big Woods location or email: hr@quaffon.com

ANNOUNCEMENTS

220

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

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235

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

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325

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

325

CLASSIFIEDS ADVERTISING POLICIES

415

CLASSIFIEDS

Monday, March 9, 2020 idsnews.com

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

To place an ad: go online, call 812-855-0763 or stop by Franklin Hall 130 from 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. Monday - Friday. Full advertising policies are available online. idsnews.com/classifieds

Quality campus locations

ELKINS APARTMENTS

339-2859 www.elkinsapts.com

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Skills that translate to superpowers. A liberal arts degree provides students with the skills to question critically, think logically, communicate clearly, act creatively, and live ethically. These are the superpowers needed to succeed in a complex world. And this is where they are developed. The College of Arts and Sciences is proud to call newly named Disney CEO Bob Chapek, B.S. Microbiology, ’81, one of its own.


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