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Over 250,000 possibly affected by grade leak Christine Fernando ctfernan@iu.edu
A reported 250,285 students’ grades were vulnerable to being searched using an official IU GPA calculator that gave students, faculty
and staff access to other students’ grades, IU spokesperson Chuck Carney said Monday. IU has yet to release specific information of how many students’ grades were searched by another person.
IU blamed a software mistake for the grade leak in a Monday email notifying students of the situation. Only a small number of individuals used the tool to look up grades that were not their own, according to
the email. In violation of federal privacy law, the calculator gave students, faculty and staff access to the grades, courses taken, and GPAs of all enrolled undergraduate and graduate IU-Bloom-
ington students, current transfers to and from IUBloomington, and former students from any IU campus who graduated or left after 2013, IU spokesperson Chuck Carney said. The tool also included the grades
of students who graduated before 2013 whose records were reactivated on or after Nov. 26, 2013. Student records are reactivated for a number of SEE GPA, PAGE 7
Diné chef cooks Native food in demonstration
Civil rights activist honored at panel
Middle left Fulbright scholars Dishari Chattaraj and Suparat Gulkong watch Native American chef Freddie Bitsoie on Feb. 19 in the Bookmarket Eatery in Wells Libary. Chattaraj and Gulkong are part of a food and cultures class taught by professor Jennifer Robinson.
Shelby Anderson
Madi Smalstig
anderssk@iu.edu | @ShelbyA04288075
msmalsti@iu.edu | @madi_smals
An IU alumnus and civil rights activist was awarded a Bicentennial Medal on Wednesday at a Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center lunch and learn event focused on student activism. Keith Parker, former assistant vice chancellor at the University of California, Los Angeles who was an IU student body president from 1970 to 1971 and member of the Black Panther Party, was awarded the medal. The panel's discussion focused on the activists' experiences and activism inspirations. “When I left IU they weren’t awarding me medals,” Parker said. Parker helped form the African Studies program. While student body president, he was investigated by the FBI as part of an effort to disrupt the Communist Party of the United States. The campaign was later expanded to investigate groups like the Black Panther Party and the Ku Klux Klan. Parker's student government demanded the creation of ethnic studies programs, organized daycare centers for students that had children and food co-ops to try to lower the cost of food and created the Student Legal Services program. IU Bicentennial Medals are awarded to individuals and organizations that have broadened IU’s reach through their professional, personal, artistic or philanthropic achievements, according to the IU Bicentennial website. They are made of bronze recovered from bells that used to be part of the Student Building. Parker said he first became involved with activism in 1954 when he began kindergarten. He
The smell of New Mexican chili powder wafted through the air as Native American chef Freddie Bitsoie placed the seasoned pork in the pan. As he rotated the tenderloin, the smell grew stronger. Audience members sniffed the air, captivated by the spices. Some breathed in so deeply they coughed. “Thank you,” Bitsoie said. “Tomorrow your si-
SEE MEDAL, PAGE 7
IZZY MYSZAK | IDS
Above Native American chef Freddie Bistoie pours broth into a pan Feb. 19 in the Bookmarket Eatery in Wells Library. Bistoie gave a cooking demonstration as part of the Indiana Remixed series. Top left Native American chef Freddie Bistoie pours ingredients into a pan Feb. 19 in the Bookmarket Eatery in Wells Library. Bistoie owns FJBits Concepts, a company that specializes in Native American foodways, a practice relating to the production and consumption of food.
nuses will be clear.” Bitsoie, executive chef at the Mitsitam Native Foods Café at the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian, prepared four dishes for a cooking demonstration Wednesday afternoon in the Bookmarket Eatery in Wells Library. The menu prepared by Bitsoie was sold at the Traveler food station in that same area. Throughout his talk, Bitsoie, a member of the Diné (Navajo) Nation, frequently discussed how culture is
connected to food. He discussed how the domestication of animals changed Native people’s diet. He also explained that Native food is more expensive because of availability and the fact that few people work to get Native ingredients such as Heart of Palm. This demonstration was a part of 2020 Indiana Remixed Festival. Joe Hiland, associate director of the IU Arts and Humanities Council, said the council worked with IU Dining, IU Food In-
stitute and the First Nations Educational and Cultural Center to bring Bitsoie to IU. Hiland said while the festival mainly includes what would be considered traditional art forms, such as dance, painting and music, it was important to include culinary arts because food is a defining trait of most world cultures. One of the plates Bitsoie prepared was a combination of two recipes: a spicerubbed pork tenderloin and a three-bean ragout.
For the pork tenderloin, Bitsoie seasoned the meat with cayenne pepper, chili powder, cumin, brown sugar, dry mustard, dried sage and extra kosher salt and turned it a few times in a pan with oil and then put in the oven “till it was done.” He then placed the pork over the ragout, or stew, which included onion, garlic, thyme, bay leaf, carrot, celery, tomatoes, chicken stock and kidney, black and canSEE COOKING, PAGE 7
Dance company to perform new piece at IU Helen Rummel hrummel@iu.edu
The Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Company will perform its newest work, “What Problem?” at 8 p.m. Feb. 22 at the IU Auditorium, which cocommissioned the work with George Mason University. The international, Harlem-based dance company features 10 main company dancers along with cofounder Bill T. Jones. The group has created social commentary through dance and has performed in over 40 countries since its inception in 1982. Performer Shane Larson joined the company in 2015 after graduating from New York University with a BFA in dance. Larson said he attended mock rehearsals before joining the company and at a certain point looked around, confused, realizing he was one of the
COURTESY PHOTO
Members of the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Company perform. The company will perform its newest work "What Problem?" at 8 p.m. Feb. 22 at the IU Auditorium.
few still being considered. “By the last two days there wasn’t really anyone left, but she never told me that I got the job,” Larson said. Larson was told later that day he had secured a spot
with the company. Around 400 people apply for a position in the company when one member leaves, Larson said. Before joining the company, Larson worked five
jobs at once to support himself. He said many of his peers still work jobs in addition to their roles with the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Company. Larson himself works other jobs alongside
PERFORMING A NEW DANCE WORK CO-COMMISSIONED BY IU AUDITORIUM TITLED WHAT PROBLEM?
his dance career. “Even though this is one of the premier dance companies in the world we’re still fighting for financial equality,” Larson said. “You sacrifice that for freedom of expression." “What Problem?” will tour at three locations in February. The show focuses on the dynamic between division and isolation, as well as the struggles of marginalized communities. “What does it mean to be a problem?” Larson said. “Are you a problem? It’s not even that you have to answer it, but having that dialogue with yourself will elicit a lot of deeper understanding about self-identity.” The piece, choreographed by Jones and the company, will open with a movement inspired by the words of Martin LuSEE DANCE, PAGE 7
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Editors Mel Fronczek, Claire Peters and Peter Talbot news@idsnews.com
Donor to match donations for IU LGBTQ charity By Shelby Anderson anderssk@iu.edu | @ShelbyA04288075
ANNA BROWN | IDS
Vice President of Capital Planning and Facilities Tom Morrison discusses IU’s sustainability initiatives Feb. 18 in Presidents Hall. The presentation was part of the Bloomington Faculty Council meeting.
IU’s direct emissions down 49% By Natalie Gabor natgabor@iu.edu | @natalie_gabor
After a Bloomington Faculty Council member asked the rest of the council how the university was handling coronavirus and was met with a short response from Provost Lauren Robel, the council moved on to its agenda items. At its Tuesday afternoon meeting in Presidents Hall, the council discussed a sustainability report, updates to IU Libraries and a possible change to a committee name. Sustainability report The report detailed various efforts to be more environmentally conscious in the university’s usage and consumption of electricity. The council introduced the first half of this report at the Jan. 21 meeting. Tom Morrison, vice president for IU’s Capital Planning and Facilities department, said one of IU’s top priorities is to construct or alter buildings to be more environmentally friendly and to lower the university’s carbon footprint. IU plans to save about $157,000 through its initiative to convert more than 2,100 campus lights to LED lights, according to the report. It will also save about 66% of energy annually. Only about 40% of campus lights have been converted so far, but the university projects 80% will be converted by the end of 2020 and the rest by the end of 2021. IU also plans to implement solar energy production in a series of five installations. Morrison said this will help ween the university off of nonrenewable energy sources. This will produce an average annual savings of $5,900.
“We will look to use it to offset peak demand when electricity demand is higher,” Morrison said. “The problem is during the winter months, our ability to capture sun’s rays is not as efficient as it should be.” The university also saw a decrease in overall emissions in the last decade but wants sustainability efforts to continue, Morrison said. Morrison said the problem is not IU’s ability to cut down the energy usage and consumption it produces, but rather the remaining energy IU must purchase from outside sources. IU purchases remaining necessary energy from Duke Energy Corporation, which uses coal to fuel energy production. According to the report, scope one emissions, or direct emissions the university owns or controls, are down 49% since 2010. However, scope-two emissions, emissions the university doesn’t own nor control, are down only 7%. Lastly, the report highlighted IU’s dedication to LEED certifications and initiatives. LEED stands for Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design and is a green building certification program used across the country. According to the report, LEED’s rating system evaluates buildings for their performance in seven categories: sustainable sites, water efficiency, energy and atmosphere, materials and resources, indoor environmental quality, innovation and regional priority credits. The university dedicated its updates to maintaining at least a silver standard with 50-59 points but reached a gold standard of 60-79 points in its efforts. There is one level higher than gold, and
it requires 80 or more points, according to the U.S. Green Building Council. “As we’re shooting for silver, we’re getting gold,” he said. “Gold is now our standard.” Morrison said IU has the most LEED-certified buildings of all Big Ten schools. Morrison said even though some sustainability goals are unrealistic due to cost, his ultimate goal is to get the university to a state of carbon neutrality, meaning not producing more carbon emissions than can be removed naturally. Updates from IU Libraries Carolyn Walters, dean of university libraries, presented updates to the council regarding journal licensing and planning for the future of Herman B Wells Library’s collections. IU’s deal with Elsevier, a Dutch publishing company specializing in science, technology and health is up for renewal this year, Walter said. According to her presentation, the publisher provides access to more than 7,000 journals for fields such as computer science, mathematics and chemistry. IU Libraries will form a negotiation team including faculty representatives to work on the deal, according to Walter’s presentation. She said the council needs to consider that journals are becoming more expensive, print materials are being used less and there’s a push for open access to journal articles. Robel said Elsevier often requires universities to buy what it doesn’t want in order for the university to get access to what it does want. She asked council members whether schools in the Big Ten Conference would be
able to negotiate as a group to get a better deal. “We may need a larger faculty conversation to happen on this issue,” J Duncan, co-chair of the Educational Policies Committee said. IU Libraries is also continuing planning for Wells Library’s materials. Walter said re:Work, a consulting firm, will conduct focus groups and interviews with faculty, students and campus administrators this spring to get feedback. This will help IU Libraries understand how people use the library’s collections and what resources are important for them to have.
An anonymous donor pledged to match all donations up to $200,000 given to IU’s Queer Philanthropy Circle, a charity that raises money to support LGBTQ programs and resources. The donor is matching donations made between now and June 30. Jessica Wootten, the associate director of LGBTQ+ Philanthropy, said the donations matching is meant to encourage others to donate to the Queer Philanthropy Circle. The organization was founded in November 2019, Wootten said. Becoming a member requires an annual donation amount which raises money to reinforce programs that improve the quality of life for people in the LGBTQ community, according to an IU press release. Attaining membership in the circle includes three levels of donation amounts. The associate level, from $500 to $2,499, does not grant the donor any leadership in the circle. The partner level, from $2,500 to $4,999, allows the donor to attend meetings but
Student allegedly called racial slur on electric scooter By Kyra Miller
Updating a committee name The BFC voted to move an update to the bylaws to a second reading. If approved, this update will rename the Diversity and Affirmative Action Committee to the Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Committee. Committee co-chair Selene Carter, co-chair of the committee, said this change is necessary to be more compliant with initiatives across the university. She said using the words “diversity,” “equity” and “inclusion” are more comprehensive than the term “affirmative action.” “This is a formality, and I realize that a name change will in no way enhance our efforts towards more diversity, equity and inclusion,” Carter said. “However, it seemed relevant to update our title to be more contemporary in the nomenclature and to align with the other offices and initiatives around diversity, equity and inclusion.” Peter Talbot contributed reporting to this story.
not vote in them. The founding or active member level, $5,000 or above for three years, allows the donor to have a vote and participate in meetings, according to the release. These donations will go toward supporting students, Wootten said. She said supporting faculty is also beneficial for students. The priorities of the circle will be set by the members and will center around making the campus as welcoming as possible through supporting resources such as the LGBTQ+ Culture Center. “They want to strengthen and improve the reach that they have on their communities,” Wootten said. Wootten said the specifics of these improvements have yet to be decided by the members because the Queer Philanthropy Circle has only been active for four months. No students are currently in these groups, though they are able to if they make a donation of $500 or more. Members currently include alumni, faculty and parents of LGBTQ students, Wootten said. The members ages range from 30 to 75.
kymill@iu.edu | @kyra_ky94
Andrew Rhodes, a sophomore at IU studying exercise science, often rides electric scooters from campus to his house. He was riding home Feb. 12 on Henderson Street when he was harassed by a man driving a car behind him who reportedly called him a racial slur. Rhodes said he did not notice the man in the car at first. He continued to listen to his music while thinking the car would pass him. He said he didn’t notice the man until he turned around and saw the man flipping him off and yelling. “I didn’t let it affect me emotionally or mentally, because that’s what people who do this want to see,” Rhodes said. Rhodes said the university told him the man was an employee hired through a third-party who has since been suspended. The university also told Rhodes that the Bloomington Police Department is pursuing charges against the man. Once Rhodes heard the
man yelling at him, he got off his scooter. He began filming the incident on his phone. In the video, the man can be heard arguing with Rhodes, who is black, for riding on the road before running over the scooter Rhodes had just dismounted. The man later reportedly calls Rhodes a racial slur. The video also shows the man had an IU parking pass. The tweet, which contains offensive language, had almost 2,000 likes and 751 retweets as of Monday. “You have no legal right to be on the road,” the man can be heard yelling before running over the scooter. IU spokesperson Chuck Carney said in a text message the university is aware of the situation and has reached out to the student to provide assistance. He said the offcampus incident is being investigated by BPD. Rhodes also filed a separate bias incident report with the university. “The behavior exhibited toward our student in the video is abhorrent and no SEE SLUR, PAGE 3
IU’s first step team hopes to stand out By Nick Telman ntelman@iu.edu | @telmonster_11
Seen in movies such as “Drumline,” “School Daze” and “Stomp the Yard,” stepping has been part of black culture in America since the 20th century, according to Step Afrika!’s website. IU’s first step team, called L.E.G.A.C.Y, was created on campus this school year. “Since we don’t have a step team at IU, I felt I had a responsibility to start one,” junior and co-founder Arie Martin said. “Cultural dances are essential in keeping a culture together.” Stepping rich is a form of percussive dance that is a mixture of footsteps, calland-response and hand claps, according to a July 2008 article on Ausdance’s website. While stepping requires participants to create rhythmic sounds with their bodies, strolling is a form of stepping that is done to music. Stepping has origins in African foot dance and has been used as communication and entertainment. Slaves used a form of stepping to communicate with each other when they weren’t allowed to talk.
“It’s a form of art that is used with your body to make a rhythm that corresponds with a beat,” Martin said. “It’s not only creative but keeps us connected to our roots.” Stepping at IU has usually been reserved for the National Pan-Hellenic Council fraternities and sororities. IU NPHC organizations compete in an annual strolling competition called Stroll Fest. Additionally, the Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity has a fundraiser called Shimmy Grams, and members step for recipients of the gram. Martin said the L.E.G.A.C.Y step team wants to set itself apart from the idea that stepping is only for NPHC organizations. “We are not doing it with a specific organization attached to us, and we don’t use the hand signs or signature moves of the NPHC fraternities and sororities,” Martin said. “We do it for the love, fun and hard work.” Stepping is popular at many historically black colleges and universities. For example, at Howard University in Washington, D.C., some teams represent residence halls, and one represents the university. While
prevalent at HBCUs across the country, there are no reports of a step team at IU until now. “I hope that our team will bring a sense of home and culture to the black community at IU,” freshman and co-founder Makailah Govan said. NPHC step teams have signature moves, symbols and traditions associated with their stepping, but the L.E.G.A.C.Y step team must rely on its members’ imaginations to put routines together. “I always have material in my head,” Govan said. “Most of my inspiration comes from everything around me.” One aspect of stepping that the team hopes to incorporate soon is competition, Martin said. While there aren’t any other teams on campus to compete with, the team is looking to compete against other schools’ teams. Govan said Indiana State University has a good step team, and the rivalry between IU and ISU would add to the excitement of a competition. While typically associated with black culture, the team is open to all IU stu-
dents. This collaborative style helps bring more diversity and influence to the routines, L.E.G.A.C.Y executive board member Madeline Tanner said. “It’s helped broaden my horizon,” she said. “It’s very different from what I’ve done in high school. I come from a tap dancing background, and I think it’s really cool to see where the styles collide.” When any type of cultural expression is introduced to an outsider of that community, there is a risk of appropriation and inauthenticity, Martin said. This is especially true when bringing a traditionally black form of expression to a campus where, in 2019, 5.1% of the student population was black. However, Martin said the group is not meant to be exclusionary. “I want people to view step as they view the chacha-slide,” Martin said. “I want people to see it as inviting, informal and something that can bring a community together.” The team’s first showcase will be from 6 to 8 p.m. March 7 at the Willkie Quad Auditorium.
ANNA BROWN | IDS
The LGBTQ+ Culture Center is located at 705 E. 7th St. An anonymous donor pledged to match all donations up to $200,000 given to IU’s Queer Philanthropy Circle, a charity that raises money to support LGBTQ programs and resource.
CORRECTIONS In the Feb. 17 issue of the IDS, the photo accompanying the article “Bus driver suspended, yells at man in video” was misattributed. The photo was taken by Joy Burton. The article “BFD increases fire safety education” left out associations other than BFD that are involved in on-campus fire safety education. The IDS regrets these errors.
Lydia Gerike Editor-in-Chief Caroline Anders & Emily Isaacman Managing Editors
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Thursday, Feb. 20, 2020 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
IU researchers create climate change map By Kyra Miller kymill@iu.edu | @kyra_ky94
Some climate scientists predict that Indiana will see increases in rainfall over the coming years, but IU researchers found that increasing temperatures and seasonal droughts are likely to reduce the amount of water in Indiana’s soils and streams over time, according to an IU press release. These predicted changes can be viewed through the interactive data portal called FutureWater. A research team led by Chen Zhu, professor of Earth and atmospheric sciences, published findings about future water availability in January. These findings were used to make the interactive data map. “By making Future Water data publicly available and accessible, we endeavor to change the way that science results are communicated and serve society,� Zhu said in the release. “We’re giving everyone the opportunity to build on our work and address pressing problems in water and land management.� The project is a part of IU’s Environmental Resilience Institute and the Prepared for Environmental Change Grand Challenge. The purpose is to track long-term trends that could negatively affect water availability in the future, according to the release. A water shortage can damage industries such as
KAREN CHENG | IDS
The Environmental Resilience Institute is located at 715 E. 8th St. IU researchers found that due to increasing temperatures and seasonal droughts the amount of water in Indiana’s soil and streams may decrease over time, according to an IU press release.
agriculture, wastewater treatment, land use and species migration. IU’s researchers have compiled models from many different sources, including Notre Dame’s current climate models, the latest Indiana Climate Change Impacts Assessment Report and software developed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, according to the press release. The purpose of the
can show water availability through 2100 under various different climate scenarios. The creation, research and implementation of this model are notable because although climate scientists have already predicted hotter days and more extreme rain in spring and winter, it is not known how these climate events would affect water availability and consumption in our state, according to the release.Â
model is to give detailed information about the Wabash River Basin, Indiana’s largest watershed, which covers about two-thirds of the state, according to the release. A watershed is an area or ridge of land that separates waters flowing to different rivers, basins or seas. The model allows the user to view long-term trends based on current and predicted information that
Sorority placed on cease and desist By Kyra Miller kymill@iu.edu | @kyra_ky94
The IU chapter of Kappa Delta has been put on cease and desist by both IU and the chapter’s national headquarters, according to the IU Division of Student Affairs website. The national headquarters of Kappa Delta placed the chapter on cease and
desist last Friday, and IU ordered the same probationary measure Monday. This will suspend all social events and restrict new member activities, according to the IU website. Heidi Roy, director of communications for the Kappa Delta national headquarters, said they are investigating a few individuals for inappropriate behavior.
Kappa Delta declined to comment and provide details. Cease and desist is an interim suspension of certain operations of any IU student group when there is an immediate threat or ongoing investigation, according to the website. Groups on cease and desist must put a hold on all activities, including meetings or orga-
nized events. Rebecca Carl, IU chief communications officer, told the Indiana Daily Student in an email Tuesday evening that she was looking into the situation. Miranda Gluth, president of the IU Panhellenic Association, did not respond to a request for comment as of Tuesday afternoon.
FEB. 28, 29 MAR. 6, 7 7:30 PM Musical Arts Center Bursar billing and group sales available!
Purchase tickets at 812-855-7433 or operaballet.indiana.edu
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Zhu’s team also took advantage of IU’s new supercomputer Big Red 200 to develop the modeling technology. The team now uses the supercomputer to run updated versions of the original hydrological model, according to the release. The supercomputer can run updated versions of the team’s models more efficiently than ever. Jennifer Dierauer is a University of Wisconsin-Stevens
Âť SLUR
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2 one in our IU family should be subject to such a circumstance,� Carney said. “It’s good to see the university’s reaction to this,� Rhodes said. “It’s good to see there are consequences for these actions.� Bloomington has specific regulations when it comes to electric scooters such as those provided by Lime and Bird. While many of these regulations are still being debated,
Point assistant professor in watershed science and a coauthor of Zhu’s published research paper. Under a changing climate, rising temperatures will increase soil moisture and hydrological drought, Dierauer said in the release. “Indiana’s soil and streams will likely be drierfor longer periods of the year in future decades,� Dierauer said in the release. the city allows riders to use the street, bike lanes, sidewalks and trails outside of the busiest parts of town, while street riding is preferred downtown and in the city square, according to the city of Bloomington website. Rhodes said he often rides a scooter to get home from campus. He said it’s convenient because he does not have a car. A Bloomington Scooter Survey from March 2019 reported that 26.7% of scooter users in Bloomington ride on the roads.
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Indiana Daily Student
4
SPORTS
Thursday, Feb. 20, 2020 idsnews.com
Editors D.J. Fezler and Grace Ybarra sports@idsnews.com
WATER POLO
Hoosiers cruise to perfect 3-0 weekend Doug Wattley dwattley@iu.edu | @dougwattley
The IU water polo team took control of the weekend as it racked up three consecutive wins in its home debut. Quick starts combined with strong defense were key for the No. 15 Hoosiers, who won each game by at least eight goals. The team’s win over No. 25 California Baptist University marks IU’s fourth victory over a ranked team in 2020, which is already three more than the total of last season. IU welcomed three schools this weekend for the third annual Hoosier Classic at the Counsilman-Billingsley Aquatics Center. The four teams participated in a round-robin tournament, playing twice on Saturday and once on Sunday. After three straight losses last weekend, IU needed great performances. The team came out motivated Saturday and defeated St. Francis University 14-6 in the morning and California Baptist 15-7 in the afternoon. The Hoosiers faced an
ALEX DERYN | IDS
California State University junior utility Jennalyn Barthels blocks junior driver Emily Powell’s face March 3, 2019, in the Counsilman Billingsley Aquatics Center. The team had three consecutive wins in its home opener this weekend.
early 2-1 deficit in the first match, but they used the passing game to their ad-
vantage to tally five straight goals. Sophomore Izzy Mandema scored three more in
the second half while IU continued scoring late until the game got out of reach.
Sophomore Sarah Greeven performed well at goalkeeper with five saves
and only three goals allowed while receiving the bulk of the minutes. After a five hour rest, IU looked energized as it jumped on California Baptist from the start. The Hoosiers dominated the time of possession battle. Sophomore Tina Doherty scored three goals in the first quarter and the team recorded a total of eight in the first eight minutes. Not much changed the morning after when IU won 16-3 over Villanova University. The game was knotted at one a piece before IU scored eight consecutive goals. Like the previous two matches, this one got out of hand early on. The offense clicked for the cream and crimson throughout the whole weekend. They scored 45 goals during the weekend, the most in a three-game stretch this year. The perfect weekend puts IU above .500 for the second time this season. The 6-5 Hoosiers’ next tournament will be the Cal Lutheran Invite on Feb. 28 in Thousand Oaks, California.
WRESTLING
IU takes on Chattanooga in final regular season test Tyler Tachman ttachman@iu.edu | @Tyler_T15
IU wrestling will look to string together its first twomatch winning streak this season when it takes on the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga at 7 p.m. Friday. IU knocked off the University of Southern Illinois Edwardsville 24-11 on Sunday in Wilkinson Hall in the final match of the season. “It’s a confidence booster,” IU head coach Angel Escobedo said. “You could see the way that they carried themselves off of the mat, and hopefully we can follow that up in Chattanooga.” Both squads will enter Friday coming off a win. Chattanooga went on the road Sunday and defeated The Citadel 39-9. The win improved the Mocs’ record to 6-9 on the season. Earlier in the year, Chattanooga also squared off against SIU Edwardsville. The Mocs handled the Cougars in a 29-14 score that is very similar to the Hoosiers’ outcome on Sunday. SIU Edwardsville wasn’t
the only common opponent for the two teams. Chattanooga fell to Illinois 22-10 in November. The Hoosiers weren’t as competitive because they dropped their match 32-3 to the Illini. Despite its losing record, Chattanooga has three ranked wrestlers, as opposed to IU’s two. Sophomore No. 23 Tanner Smith from Chattanooga and redshirt freshman No. 14 Graham Rooks could meet in a top-25 bout on Friday. Rooks, who turned a sixpoint deficit into a two-point win against SIU Edwardsville, has won seven of his last nine matches. Smith was named to the Southern Conference AllFreshman team after finishing runner-up at the conference tournament last year. This year, Smith boasts a 22-7 overall record. “I’m definitely looking forward to the NCAA’s and the Big Ten Tournament coming up, but I still have to take it one match at a time and not look too far forward,” Rooks said Sunday. “I have to focus on one match at a time.”
Another marquee matchup could surface at 125 pounds between junior No. 23 Liam Cronin and Chattanooga’s No. 17 Fabian Gutierrez. Gutierrez, a junior, was named the SoCon Wrestler of the Month as a sophomore. In his junior campaign this year, he has racked up 16 victories, including a 6-0 conference record and three technical fall wins. Cronin has put together a seven-match winning streak dating to Jan. 20 against Purdue. He also added a technical fall victory of his own Sunday in a convincing 20-5 route. After IU trounced SIU Edwardsville on Sunday, Chattanooga appears to present an even contest. IU will have a full two weeks to recover and prepare for the conference tournament after Friday’s meeting. The extra break could give 174-pound junior Jake Covaciu more time to recover from the head injury he suffered against Maryland on Jan. 26. Covaciu has missed the last four matches, and
JOY BURTON | IDS
Redshirt junior Liam Cronin wrestles Nebraska redshirt freshman Alex Thomsen Feb. 9 at Wilkinson Hall. IU will compete against the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga at 7 p.m. Friday on the road.
since his exit, IU has failed to win a match at 174 pounds. With a win, the Hoosiers would take a multiple match win streak into the Big Ten Championships on
March 7-8 in Piscataway, New Jersey. “If you have a lot of confidence you can upset anyone in the country,” Escobedo said. “For us it’s about put-
ting another weekend together. Let’s get another win and then steam roll into the Big Ten Tournament and get some upsets and get more guys to Nationals.”
MEN’S GOLF
Hoosiers to play in Puerto Rico for first time since 2005 Evan Gerike egerike@iu.edu | @EvanGerike
For the first time since 2005, the IU men’s golf team is headed to play in Puerto Rico. The Hoosiers will be one of 13 teams at the Dorado Beach Collegiate in Dorado, Puerto Rico. The tournament, which features the University of North Carolina at Greensboro as the home team, will start on Sunday and run through Tuesday. IU head coach Mike Mayer said the team’s practice rounds have been strong, and the team is ready to go to Puerto Rico. The Hoosiers have been preparing for the tournament at the Pfau Course
at IU. Mayer said the team managed to play three rounds of practice at the team’s home course this past weekend despite fighting cold weather and wind. “The conditions weren’t perfect, but we made the best of it and got some really good numbers,” Mayer said. Mayer said the team also traveled to Naples, Florida, to practice in warmer weather on a course similar to what it will see in Dorado. Mayer said he wants to see a top-10 performance from one of his players this weekend for his team to do well. “If we get that kind of performance, and it doesn’t matter from who, we will be right in there,” Mayer said.
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JOSH EASTERN | IDS
Then-sophomore Jake Brown practices at the IU Golf Course in April 2017. IU will play the University of North Carolina at Greensboro Feb. 23-25 in Dorado, Puerto Rico.
IU’s lineup will include the same first four players they had at the Big Ten Match Play — sophomore Mitch Davis, junior Ethan Shepard, senior Brock Ochsenreiter and graduate Jack Sparrow. The fifth spot will go to
junior Tate Heintzelman, who qualified to be in the lineup for the first time after winning the practice rounds at Pfau. “We’re looking for him to continue the play he’s been having,” Mayer said. “He
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needs to take his swagger down to Puerto Rico. Hopefully that’s contagious.” Mayer said he believes the tournament has a good but beatable range of teams. The field includes No. 5 University of Notre Dame and No. 20 University of Louisville, but Mayer said IU matches up well with most teams. IU defeated UNCG in the Crooked Stick Invitational on Oct. 15. “There’s a lot of opportunities for us to get some wins and improve our rank,” Mayer said. When IU played in Puerto Rico in 2005, the team finished the tournament tied for fourth out of nine teams with the University of Southern Mississippi.
The tournament will also include two Big Ten teams Rutgers and Michigan State. Mayer said his team is riding the momentum coming off a solid showing at the Big Ten Match Play. The Hoosiers beat Rutgers in their match on Feb. 8. Mayer said the team will fly to Puerto Rico early Friday afternoon so the players can recover from the travel before they play a practice round Saturday. Mayer said the team should have free time Saturday to enjoy Puerto Rico and the beach. “Maybe they simply jump in the water a little bit, but obviously our main goal and only goal is to go down there and win that tournament,” Mayer said.
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Indiana Daily Student
ARTS
Thursday, Feb. 20, 2020 idsnews.com
Editors Kevin Chrisco and Madi Smalstig arts@idsnews.com
5
‘The Color Purple’ to debut February 24 By Helen Rummel hrummel@iu.edu
Ten-year-old Chédra Arielle sat with her cousin watching the movie “The Color Purple.” While watching, Arielle would pause and replay a particular scene multiple times, studying the words and paying close attention to the way they made her feel. Arielle, now 30, will now join her first national theater tour as Sofia, in the musical “The Color Purple.” The show will have performances at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 24 and 25 at the IU Auditorium. “It took me a few hours,
but I memorized that monologue and I just loved it because she made my body fill up with so many emotions,” Arielle said. The Tony and Grammy awards-winning show, based on Alice Walker’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, follows Celie, a black woman, as she navigates the American South during the first half of the 20th century. The musical features a blend of gospel, jazz, blues and ragtime music. Arielle’s character, Sofia, is characterized as a strong female role throughout the show who helps support Ce-
lie throughout her life. After she graduated from Florida A&M University, Arielle worked for 10 months and saved about $20,000 before moving to pursue acting in Los Angeles. “For years, I didn’t get anything,” Arielle said. “But I made sure that I stayed in acting classes and that I was perfecting my craft.” Arielle has now earned a part on the tour as her dream role after being captivated by the performances of others such as Oprah Winfrey, who played Sofia in the 1985 film adaptation. Fellow actress also em-
barking on her first national tour, Gabriella Rodriguez plays Squeak who represents an antithetical portrayal of Sofia. “My teachers definitely pushed me to work on material that’s outside of my comfort zone and being a little more bold,” Rodriguez said. “I did not think I was even going to be considered for Squeak until there was a final callback.” Rodriguez took time off for the tour following two years of studies at Point Park University in Pittsburgh. “I think what I love the most about Squeak is that
from the very beginning, she wants to be different,” Rodriguez said. “She just doesn’t really know how to do that and tries to go about it in the wrong ways by seeking affirmation and attention from the male characters.” In turn, the show delves into the effect of gender roles and masculine stereotypes. Brandon Wright, who plays Sofia’s husband Harpo, feels a sense of responsibility toward women both on and off the stage. “I, both as Brandon and as Harpo, can use my masculinity to support the lives of women and fight for them,”
Wright said. The musical covers a storyline that spans over 40 years, following the lives of its characters through their late childhoods and into adulthood. “I really enjoy the journey of the entire story,” Wright said. “Every time we set the stage from beginning to end is really exciting because we get to live through the telling of the story.” Tickets can be purchased at IU Auditorium’s website and the auditorium box office. They start at $17 for students and $29 for general admission.
Alexandria Ford named Miss Indiana University 2020 By Claudia Gonzalez-Diaz clabgonz@iu.edu
Senior Alexandria Ford was named Miss Indiana University at 8 p.m. Sunday at Willkie Auditorium, winning $1,500. A newcomer to pageants, Ford said the title provides her the perfect platform to advocate for women’s empowerment. All 10 Miss Indiana University candidates must promote a social service platform, and Ford’s was about women’s empowerment. They made statements about their Social Impact Initiative during the competition in front of a crowd of around 170. “As women, it’s easy to feel powerless,” Ford said for her social impact statement. “Now more than ever, we need to educate, elevate and empower the next generation of women to be confident in themselves and to take their seat at the table.” Ford will compete in Miss Indiana this summer. Ford is a senior at IU studying economic consulting and international business, and she said she wants college-aged women to mentor young girls. Ford also tied for Interview Winner and Talent Winner awards, two of eight awards distributed at the competition. Miss Indiana University is awarded a $1,500 scholarship from the IU Foundation. The event is supported by the IU Funding Board, the Miss America Foundation, the Kiwanis Club of Bloomington and South Central Indiana and local businesses. Runner-up Emily Axsom won $1,000, and 3rd place winner Vanesa Quiroga won $500. Winners in the Talent, Interview and One Can Make a Difference sections each won $250, and the People’s Choice Award winner got $100. All of the scholarships awarded at the competition
RAEGAN WALSH | IDS
Senior Alexandria Ford is crowned Miss Indiana University at the Miss Indiana University Scholarship Competition on Feb. 16 in Wilkie Auditorium. Along with a scholarship and prize package, Ford will go on to compete for the title of Miss Indiana this summer.
amount to almost $4,000. Five of the ten candidates had never participated in a pageant. Backstage, they hung their gowns on mobile racks and sifted through makeup and hair products. Quiroga, a senior candidate studying social work, just got her nails done. “It’s my first time having fake nails.” “They’re really pretty! Where’d you get those?” “Crimson Nails by Kroger. When they put them on, I was like, ‘woah.’” “It makes you feel like a whole different person.” Quiroga was second runner up, tied for Talent Winner and also won the One Can Make a Difference award. Another first-time competitor, Rachel Ramos, won Miss Congeniality and People’s Choice Award. She performed a magic routine
and said she was excited to use her prom dress for the competition because it was expensive. She also said the Miss America organization is stereotyped for emphasizing physical beauty over women’s personalities, and her experience disproved the stereotypes she had heard. “There’s a lot of stereotyping with Miss America and with this organization, and it’s not like that at all,” Ramos said. “It’s about scholarships. It’s very comfortable.” Claudia Hernandez, a third year student at the School of Optometry, won the competition last year. She said she came to the 2019 competition with two outfits on hangers and the rest in a duffel bag. She has been a baton twirler since elementary school, and used outgrown batons and a friend’s
costume for the talent portion of the competition. She said she’s sad her time in Miss America is ending, but she is ready to move on. “It feels good to feel special, and I’m doing more than just studying 24/7,” Hernandez said. “It’s been a good break.” Geneva Mazhandu, a sophomore studying public affairs, has participated in pageants since she was 15. This was her seventh local Miss America pageant this season. “I think of pageantry as being the most comprehensive job interview there is,” Mazhandu said. All candidates are interviewed by the judges before the show, answer onstage interview questions, discuss their Social Impact Initiatives in a gown and perform
a talent in 90 seconds. Candidate Kaitlyn Savage signed Carrie Underwood’s “Temporary Home.” She is a junior studying speech and hearing sciences. Axsom, a junior studying fashion design, sang the song “Rainbow” by Kacey Musgraves and discussed her support for LGBTQ+ rights. She finished in second place. Eight awards were distributed at the competition. While they were being tabulated, student a cappella group Resting Pitch Face performed covers of “Blame It On the Boogie” by The Jacksons, and “Best Part” by Daniel Caesar and H.E.R. The Hoosierettes Dance Team also performed at the event. Hernandez gave a farewell speech, expressing gratitude for her year as Miss IU 2019, for executive
director Teresa White and to other significant people in her life. Holding hands across the stage, the women awaited the results of the competition in their evening gowns. Axsom landed second place, and Quiroga came in third. Quiroga and Ford tied for Talent Winner, Axsom and Ford tied for Interview Winner and Ramos took home Miss Congeniality and People’s Choice Award. Miss America candidates must be 17-25 years old. Hernandez will spend her last eligible year on rotation at ophthalmology clinics around the U.S. to finish her degree at IU, but she said she will continue to encourage women to participate in the competition. “I’m definitely involved with Miss America forever,” Hernandez said.
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Indiana Daily Student
6
OPINION
Thursday, Feb. 20, 2020 idsnews.com
HILLS TO DIE ON
Editors Abby Malala and Tom Sweeney opinion@idsnews.com
OPINION
IU just raised room and board 3.5%. Why didn’t students have a say? Abby Malala and Tom Sweeney are the IDS opinion editors.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE
Parkland shooting survivors David Hogg, left, and Cameron Kaskey, right, hold signs during a press conference June 4, 2018, for the March for Our Lives movement in Parkland, Florida.
What we can learn from March for Our Lives Kaitlyn Radde, she/her is a sophomore in political science.
Valentine’s Day marked the second anniversary of the Parkland school shooting, in which 17 students and teachers were killed. Survivors created an organization following the shooting called March for Our Lives, which organized a national school walkout and a subsequent rally on March 24, 2018 in Washington, D.C. March for Our Lives has raised awareness and mobilized young people, and it was arguably a principal cause of the decline in support for the NRA. However, it has become more of an advocacy organization than a protest movement, and due to this change it has had few if any legislative successes. If gun control activists care about legislative change, they should organize more like the sustained, disruptive and enduring protests of the 1960s. Mainstream advocacy groups can be incredibly useful, but persistent boycotts, strikes, walkouts,
sit-ins and other forms of disruptiveness and combativeness are the most useful tools available to disenfranchised groups like the minors who suffer from school shootings. March for Our Lives has done commendable and crucially important work, and there have been more direct actions since the initial walkouts and rallies. Just last week, students occupied Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s office to demand he pass the gun legislation that has been passed by the House. It has inspired and lobbied for such legislation, notably the Bipartisan Background Checks Act of 2019. That sort of action should have been happening all along, rather than every anniversary. March for Our Lives should have maintained the momentum that launched the movement. I was about four months from graduating high school when the Parkland shooting happened and March for Our Lives was born. A group of my peers and I organized a school walkout and a trip to Washington, D.C., for the
national rally. My experience in the walkout was completely different from my experience in the rally. The walkout was fundamentally studentdriven and fundamentally a protest. The focus was student voices and experiences, with community leaders and activists supporting rather than superseding us. The rally, on the other hand, was a commercialized affair. The student speakers were inspiring, as was the turnout of about 800,000 people in D.C. It changed the terms and gravity of the debate around gun violence, but it did not feel like a studentled protest movement. It felt like a concert, which contradicted the grassroots character of the March for Our Lives. Waiting for the next celebrity act to come on stage felt like a waste of political capital and momentum and a distraction from the purpose and aims of March for Our Lives, which in turn undermined further grassroots action. A protest movement that wanted to remain a protest movement would have capitalized on the mo-
bilized rage present that day and seized an opportunity to launch more disruptive, effective direct action campaigns for the future and encouraged mobilization for next steps besides voting. I went to D.C. excited and hopeful, but after I came home and the glow wore off, I realized that I had expected more. I had expected a sustained campaign, but the March for Our Lives is no longer primarily a protest movement, even though it was born as one. As a participant and a supporter, I applaud its organizers and its successes. But March for Our Lives chose to stop being a protest movement and to redirect to town halls and forums, which strikes me as mistaken and far easier to ignore than direct action. If the goals of March for Our Lives are to be met, gun violence activists have to do more than ask nicely within established channels of dissent, and they have to regain the momentum they had in March of 2018. kradde@iu.edu
JONAH’S JUSTIFICATIONS
Candidates are wrong about Medicare for All Jonah Hyatt, he/him is a junior in political science and philosophy.
Following the New Hampshire Democratic primary race, several Democratic candidates took to Twitter to criticize “Medicare for All,” suggesting it would diminish labor unions’ longfought effort to expand employee health coverage. Sparking the Twitter conversation was a statement by secretary-treasurer of the Nevada Culinary Workers Union, Local 226, Geoconda Argüello-Kline, in which she condemned Sanders’ supporters for responding to union flyers which said if Sen. Sanders, I-Vt., were elected, he would “end Culinary health care.” In response to her statement, candidates such as former South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass. and Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., quote-tweeted her, claiming to stand with union workers on the issue of health care. Argüello-Kline’s statement was highly misleading about the effects of Medicare for All, but more importantly, the candidates’ responses only showed their ignorance on health care. Medicare for All legislation, sponsored by Sanders and Rep. Pramila Jayapal’s, D-Wash., are currently the only health care plans that really benefit labor unions. By separating the tie between employment and health care, labor unions can then devote more time to fighting for better wages and working conditions. Klobuchar and Buttigieg have been forthright in their support for a “public option” for health insurance, which would not solve the problem. As it stands currently, many labor unions spend
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE
The Culinary Workers Union, Local 226, a Nevada-based labor union for culinary workers, headquarters is located in Las Vegas.
a substantial portion of their time fighting for quality health care plans through their employer. This would not change with the implementation of a public government health care option. A public option does not provide universal health care coverage and leaves the for-profit health insurance industry in place. Workers already have enough to fight for, so we need to take the burden of health care off the backs of labor unions now. When workers have to bargain with their employers for good health insurance plans in addition to decent wages and working conditions, oftentimes they will have to sacrifice some gains in wages in order to have decent health coverage. A single payer system would grant everyone universal health coverage through the government, expanding labor unions’ collective bargaining power. Now that their fight for health care is not cutting into their gains on wages, unions
will likely be able to receive even more benefits from their employers. Although Warren has claimed to support Medicare for All, she has wavered on the issue several times in the past, and her response to Argüello-Kline’s statement should make labor unions question her support for workers. “No one should attack @ Culinary226 and its members for fighting hard for themselves and their families,” Warren tweeted. “Like them, I want to see every American get high-quality and affordable health care — and I’m committed to working with them to achieve that goal.” By siding with union bosses like Argüello-Kline, Warren is halting labor unions from fighting for actual reform, contributing to the notion that Medicare for All takes away earned union benefits. If Warren was truly in support of Medicare for All she would have not used the words “affordable health
care,” since it would be free at the point of service, and she would have defended single-payer health insurance as highly beneficial for labor unions. Warren, Buttigieg and Klobuchar are not siding with union workers. They are siding with union bosses and against the workers. Sanders’ position, on the other hand, is that every worker should receive full health care benefits and coverage, not just those in a union. So far, Sanders has a massive lead in major labor union endorsements at 29, significantly surpassing the next most-endorsed candidate, former Vice President Joe Biden, at nine and Warren at four. If Sanders’ opponents were honest, they would not have to use broad platitudes showing their support for labor unions. Instead, they would make policy-focused arguments about why their policies are more beneficial for union workers. hyattj@iu.edu
IU’s meal plans, which are required for all freshmen, will cost $100 more next year, and living in a residence hall will cost 3.8% more. The standard room and board rate will go up 3.5%, with similar increases planned annually for at least four years, adding up to a 15% increase by fall 2023. This is how it happens: the slow and steady rise of the cost of attendance faster than inflation. Blink and you’ll miss it. The university could, and should, have done more to solicit student feedback before making the decision. IU’s Board of Trustees voted Thursday to approve next year’s prices. The purpose of the rate hikes is to pay for renovation and expansion, according to presentation slides shown at the meeting. Next year’s increases were approved without a public hearing, unlike this year’s increases in tuition and mandatory fees, which followed a livestreamed open comment period at a Board of Trustees meeting. The Indiana Commission for Higher Education requires public hearings before increases in tuition and fees but not room and board, IU spokesperson Chuck Carney said. Thursday’s meeting occurred in Indianapolis. The agenda that listed the proposed changes was posted online earlier this month, according to the board’s website. Asking students to watch for online agendas or travel large distances to provide feedback on major rate increases shows a lack of interest in students’ voices. Students have lived through years of bed shortages, mold outbreaks and misleading meal plan marketing. Hiking rates without consulting students builds on bad faith. Students living or eating on campus will help pay for staggering new expenses, including a $99 million residence hall, a $45 million academic health sciences building and renovations of Foster and McNutt residence halls following mold damage, all of which are funded internally, according to IU’s capital planning and facilities website. Residence hall projects often receive state funding. But IU’s goal is to self-fund renovation and expansion projects, including related debt and interest accrued, according to the trustees’ presentation. Part of the burden will fall on students. The university’s bicentennial year rang in a surge of debt-funded renovation and construction. IU has planned $227.1 million in debt-funded projects between fiscal years 2020 and 2022, according to the presentation. The number was zero for fiscal years 2018 and 2019. At the very least, students might expect the rate increases would come with solutions to the biggest problems with IU’s housing and dining. But they have little to be optimistic about. The disingenuous sales scheme for I-BUCKS meal plans, which purport to have large discounts despite offering little or no savings, will
continue. Meal plan contracts for next year say the I-BUCKS 60 plan, the most popular plan, lets students “pay 40% of retail prices,” despite in fact having a zero percent effective discount. IU is removing the word “discount” from meal plan materials, Carney said. The misleading description, however, will remain. The only substantial change is the increase in prices, which doubles last year’s increase. All first-year students are required to purchase a plan unless given an exemption to live off campus. Another concern is the bed count. After multiple years of bed shortages and overcrowding in dorms, bed numbers will remain relatively static, forecasted to average 12,297 over the next four years, fewer than in the 20182019 year. One hopes the expensive renovations will settle IU’s perennial mold problem for good. Regardless, students would be right to ask why funding for mold-related renovations, something the university ought to take responsibility for, will come from students’ bursar bills. IU is joining a national trend of universities raising costs of attendance, outpacing inflation and contributing to a growing student debt crisis. The average cost of tuition, fees, room and board at public four-year universities, adjusted for inflation, has increased more than 20% in the last decade, according to a 2019 College Board report. Annual inflation has averaged less than 2% since 2015, U.S. government data show, much less than IU’s proposed 3% to 4% annual increases for room and board. National student debt has surpassed $1.6 trillion, making younger graduates become more susceptible to economic downturns. The trustees are aware of these facts. Patrick Shoulders, vice chairman of the board, said at the meeting Thursday, “None of us are thrilled with three point whatever when inflation is only 2%.” But the board voted to approve anyway. Large rate hikes are avoidable. Purdue University, for example, has maintained or decreased the cost of room and board, along with tuition and fees, for eight years. Although budget cuts are not always smart, IU should take note of Purdue’s priority to make education more financially accessible. Most importantly, IU should offer accessible and widely publicized public hearings before making decisions that could seriously inhibit students’ ability to attend the university. Students deserve to have a say on room and board, especially when costs rise sharply with few visible returns and cover renovations caused by IU’s own negligence. The university should not be allowed to charge its most controversial debt to our bursar bills. I hope the board does more to invite student feedback next year. abbridge@iu.edu tpsweene@iu.edu
KAREN CHENG | IDS
Kenzie Burgess, Reese Myers, Kacie Scales and Jada Collins play a game of euchre Sept. 17, 2019, in Teter Quad.
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 e-mail to letters@idsnews. com. Call the IDS with questions at 812-855-5899.
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Thursday, Feb. 20, 2020 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
» GPA
cessed inappropriately by another person. The other notified students whose grades had been accessed by another member of the IU community. But an Indiana Daily Student investigation found that at least one student may have been misled about whether anyone had accessed their information. An IDS staff member, whose grades were looked up by another editor for re-
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 reasons, such as the student requesting a transcript, making a bursar payment, registering for a course or making an academic advising appointment. IU sent two emails out to students Monday. One notified students that the university did not have evidence that their information had been ac-
» MEDAL
“We don’t live in a world by ourselves. We live in a world with other people — so we ought to care about other people,” Parker said. Johnson said having “activist” on your resume won’t help you get many jobs. He said he eventually took it off of his resume but looks for work that will allow him to help people. “Be intentional about the work that you do,” Johnson said. Donte Miller moderated the event. He is a Ph.D. student working on a dissertation about contemporary student activism. Mille said it was important to talk about history since the speakers were from different age demographics. It allowed students to see who came before them. He said in some cases, we are fighting for the same issues in a different context. “The university is supposed to be a place of democracy where students can voice concerns,” Miller said.
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 and three girls were the first black students to attend the school he went to. This was the same year the Supreme Court ruled racial segregation in public schools unconstitutional in Brown v. Board of Education. “We had families that said 'I want your life to be better than mine,'” Parker said about his upbringing. IU alumnus Leighton Johnson was also on the panel. Johnson was an IU student in the early 2010s and was the IU Student Association Chief of Diversity, Inclusion and Advocacy, according to a 2014 Indiana Daily Student article. Both panel speakers said it’s important to recognize the people who helped create opportunities for them. The speakers said they would not be where they are if someone had not opened the door for them.
» DANCE
throughout the piece. “Bill grew up during the civil rights movement so I think that is influencing how his lens is interpreting world events happening today,” Larson said. “I think he’s re-contextualizing a lot of those experiences from
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 ther King Jr. and also feature Jones on stage with the company. Larson described the importance of the figureeight pattern that reappears
Horoscope
porting purposes, received the email saying there was no evidence that her student records were accessed inappropriately. IU has yet to complete a records request filed Thursday for internal emails regarding the GPA calculator or to provide the reason they are not public. The calculator revealed records dating back to Nov. 26, 2013 and had been online since November 2018.
» COOKING
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 nellini beans. The other dishes were a swamp cabbage, also called Hearts of Palm, salad, calabasas and prickly pear cheese mousse. “This recipe actually got a guy and girl engaged,” Bitsoie said of the mousse. “Seriously.” While Bitsoie prepared the food, he taught the audience about food culture and talked through various cooking tips, some specifically relating to Native food ways. Salt is a tool, he said. It dehydrates the vegetables and helps them sweat, or release steam. Chilies should be sweet, not too spicy. Use water while you cook to help deglaze the bottom of the pan. “Does anybody know why we add tomatoes?” Bitsoie asked his audience. growing up into the struggles we’re having today.” During the tour, the company works to incorporate local performers in the third section of each of their performances, Larson said. Some of the performers for the Bloom-
To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) Today is a 7 — Peaceful meditation illuminates hidden thoughts, perks and motivations. An insight provides freedom from endless repetition. Envision a perfect outcome. You can choose your path.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) Today is an 8 — Share a dream or vision with a strong professional team and you're unbeatable. You can adapt to unexpected circumstances. Inspire others and pull together.
Cancer (June 21-July 22) Today is a 9 — Confirm intuition with facts and data, especially regarding family or shared finances. Changes necessitate budget revisions. You can see the way forward. Make practical moves.
Aries (March 21-April 19) Today is an 8 — Together, you're a powerful community force. Discuss a shared vision and coordinate actions. Adapt to unforeseen circumstances. Connect and hold on. Support each other.
Gemini (May 21-June 20) Today is a 7 — Explore a subject you've been dreaming about. Discipline with planning and preparation pays off. Stick to basics and fundamentals before advancing. Discover a hidden truth.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) Today is an 8 — Fortune follows disciplined collaborative efforts. You can see the prize that you and your partner have been working for. Strengthen foundational elements. Build bridges.
BLISS
HARRY BLISS
The university took down the GPA calculator Feb. 4 within an hour of being notified about the situation by the IDS. The tool, developed by the Office of the Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education, allowed students to calculate their GPAs for specific types of classes by selecting the courses that were factored into the calculation. The webpage was designed Audience member Harriet Castrataro, a retired IU adviser who attended because she wanted to learn new cooking techniques, said it was because of the acidity. Another attendee suggested they were for color. Tomatoes are used because their seeds help to thicken the stew, Bitsoie said. He said he likes to use ingredients that have traditionally been used to prepare Native foods. He said that the other part of his job, outside of cooking, is learning more about Native foods and teaching people about them. “I try to define Native cuisine, what it’s about and how it has changed in the past 20 years,” Bitsoie said. Hiland said it was important for IU to invite someone who works in indigenous culinary traditions. “We are living, working, creating on lands that originally belonged to indigenous peoples,” he said. “It’s imporington production include IU students. Community members take part in workshops before the performance. Larson described sharing basic dance moves and working with the community members as a theraVirgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today is a 9 — All that physical practice is beginning to pay off. Luck shines on your dream. Take practical steps to achieve a milestone. The prize is yours. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Today is an 8 — You can see a path to realize a long-term, heartfelt vision or dream. Go for substance over symbolism. Use your creativity. Grow what you love.
Crossword
to allow students access to only their own grades, Carney said. Grades, test scores and courses taken are education records protected under the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, which bars schools receiving public funding from releasing grades without prior written consent. “This is a clear FERPA violation,” said LeRoy Rooker, former director of the
IZZY MYSZAK | IDS
Native American chef Freddie Bistoie pinches salt into his dish Feb. 19 in the Bookmarket Eatery. Bistoie made four different dishes and gave the audience samples of each.
tant for us as a university to acknowledge our indebtedness to those traditions and those cultures, and I think a cooking demo like this is one way to sort of raising consciousness for our community and think a little bit about what we owe to indigenous peoples.” Nicky Belle, First Nations Educational and Cultural Cen-
ter director, said he enjoyed the presentation because it focused on the contemporary aspects of Native culture. “Bringing in Freddie is a perfect example of the way we are able to help educate through a modern lens,” Belle said. “Freddie presented perfect examples of how contemporary Native cuisine is that. It is cuisine.”
peutic experience for both community members and himself in preparation for the performance. "We're teaching them basic improvisational skills," Larson said. "There's a lot sensitivity and group-awareness
that we're building with the activities that we're doing." Tickets can be purchased at IU Auditorium’s website and the auditorium box office and start at $15 for students and $23 for general admission.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Today is an 8 — Household matters need attention. Make repairs. Consider long-range plans. Get inventive to find creative, cost-effective solutions. Find new purpose for something you already have.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Today is a 9 — You can make good money. It may require making a mess or overcoming an obstacle. Things could get chaotic. Get terms in writing. Collaborate.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Today is a 9 — You're especially clever and creative. Write your discoveries. Edit carefully and double-source public statements. Diplomacy can resolve a challenge. Find areas of common connection.
Publish your comic on this page.
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
su do ku
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
© Puzzles by Pappocom
BREWSTER ROCKIT: SPACE GUY!
1 6 10 14 15 16 17 19 20 21 22 23 25 28 30 31 32 33 36
40 41 43 46 47 48 53
Play with strings Blubber __ buco Want in the worst way Lounge around Place to talk shop? Tackled the job Passionate Second sequel's number Sacred chests Thrash Winter coat? Range for a manhunt Arizona landforms TourBook-issuing org. Designer monogram "Hasta la vista" Comic strip frames Tot's plaything ... and a feature of 17-, 25-, 48- and 59-Across Forklift load Stuffy-sounding Many AARP mems. Issa of "The Hate U Give" Dire Intercepting, as at the pass Christmas poem opener
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Today is a 9 — A personal ambition takes focus. New possibilities entice you to pursue something longdesired. Take charge for positive results. Energize a hot opportunity.
© 2020 By Nancy Black Distributed by Tribune Media Services, INC. All Rights Reserved
L.A. Times Daily Crossword
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 Feb. 29. Submissions will be reviewed and selections will be made by the editor-in-chief.
ACROSS
Department of Education’s Family Policy Compliance Office and a leading authority on educational privacy law. “There’s not any gray area here. You just can’t have that.” The email sent to students emphasized that this information was not downloaded en masse and was only available if a student or member of faculty or staff manually looked up a student’s name.
54 55 57 58 59 62 63 64 65 66 67
"Hasta la vista" "The Daily Show" host Nos. on driver's licenses Sharp turns Ready to start the day Succulent plant genus Gumption __ toast Sew a patch on, perhaps Possessive pronoun Roundup critter
18 "Grey's Anatomy" settings, for short 22 33-Down's purview 24 Path to the top 26 Charged 27 Normandy city 29 Trips where big cats are spotted 33 Ship owner who described Ahab as "ungodly, god-like" 34 Stand buy 35 "Good thinking!" 37 Custard dessert 38 Considering everything 39 Conduit created by volcanic activity 42 Cigarette ad claim 43 Superhero acronym involving Hercules, Zeus, Achilles and three others 44 Killian's, originally 45 Former Southeast Asian capital 49 Gave a shot, say 50 Studio sign 51 Formatting menu list 52 It's not hot long 56 Ones acting badly 59 "So gross!" 60 Ante61 Exacta or trifecta
DOWN 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Deep rifts New recruits Hobbyist's contraption Sch. founded by Jefferson Prefix with bytes or bucks Oddball Tons o' "The Rookie" actress Larter Club alternative Home of Minor League Baseball's Storm Chasers 11 Cooking show adjective 12 Covers with goop 13 Bud from way back
Answer to previous puzzle
TIM RICKARD
1
Indiana Daily Student
Luxury 2 BR/2.5 BA twnhs near dwntwn/Kelley. DW/WD/cov. Prkg. $1750- Aug 2020. 812333-9579 or
1314 N. Lincoln Street. 5 BR, 2 BA, 2 levels. Varsity Properties. livebythestadium.com 1315 N. Lincoln Street 5 BR, 3 BA, 2 levels. Varsity Properties. livebythestadium.com
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General Employment
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Attn: Early Risers! NOW HIRING Delivery of the IDS. Mondays & Thursdays. 5:30 a.m. to 7:30 a.m. Reliable vehicle required. $10.50/hr. + mileage. To apply send resume to: circulation@idsnews.com or fill out an application at the IDS office in Franklin Hall, Room 129.
Work Study Food service assistant job for Federal WorkStudy student applicants only! Must be punctual and reliable! $13/hr. chabad@indiana.edu
HOUSING Grant Properties 1, 2, 3, 4 & 5 Bedroom Outstanding locations near campus at great prices Leasing now 2020-21 Call 812-333-9579 leasinginfo@grantprops.com grantprops.com
New & Sealed Google Home Mini (Charcoal & Chalk Available). $20. thanania@iu.edu
Appliances Nintendo 3DS special Mario edition w/ carrying case. Games incl. $120. bradevan@iu.edu Razer gaming mouse with green light. $15. gmariano@iu.edu
Dirt Devil Simpli-Stik vacuum cleaner, $10. pw7@indiana.edu
Rechargeable Bluetooth Keyboard (for Mac), lightly used, $18. dahrendt@iu.edu
Galanz retro, light blue, mini fridge in good cond. $85 - rpioveza@iu.edu
Samsung 27’’ curved gaming monitor - good condition. $225,obo. mamurley@iu.edu
GE washing machine, top load w/free detergent. Great cond. $60. pw7@indiana.edu
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252 N. Walnut 3 BR, 2.5 BA apartment. Ready for an immediate move-in, $2550.00. Please call:812-333-0995
iPhone 4S - does not work. $10. umquresh@indiana.edu
Dirt Devil 3-in-1 vacuum, $10. pw7@indiana.edu
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.
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.
iPad 32GB and Apple Pencil, $250, obo. floresru@iu.edu
Sublet Apt. Unfurn.
MERCHANDISE
1395 N. Lincoln Street 5 BR, 2.5 BA, 3 levels. Varsity Properties. livebythestadium.com
2019 N. Dunn Street. Pet friendly, 3 BR, 2 BA, 1 level. Varsity Properties. livebythestadium.com
Ikea desk lamp, good condition, $10. most@iu.edu
Kinesis Freestyle2 split keyboard w/ MAC layout, ergonomic. $60. pw7@indiana.edu
1316 N. Lincoln Street 5 BR, 3 BA, 2 levels. Varsity Properties. livebythestadium.com 1336 N. Washington St. Pet friendly, 4 BR, 2 BA, 2 levels. livebythestadium.com
GoPro HERO5 Session and accessories. $100. grigutis@iu.edu
Surface 3 64GB 4G LTE $330. Can also include 64gb MicroSD. Contact: 317-983-3624. TC Electronics Ditto Looper Effects Pedal w/ac pwr adapter, $125. jbarbry@indiana.edu
Hello Kitty humidifier. Good cond. $20. pw7@indiana.edu
435 450
Ancient Greek culture textbook. In good cond. $10. whitekn@iu.edu
Serta Copenhagen charcoal sofa. 73’’. Used once or twice. $175. nicande@iu.edu
Biochemistry textbook. Great condition, $60. ahshafiq@iu.edu Brand new “Intermediate Algebra” book by Lynn Marecek. $40. ksstern@iu.edu Brand new MCAT 7-Subject Book Review. $100. ccaudy@iu.edu
Wood armoire, good condition. Missing bottom drawer. $50. bmmcswai@indiana.edu
ICORE Marketing Book $15, good cond. aadhawan@iu.edu
Misc. for Sale Math M118 Book Finite Mathematics $35 Each or Neg. xz57@iu.edu
“Rachael Ray 50” book. $10, brand new. dsmittal@iu.edu
Transnational Management 8th Edition- Book, $39. 352-566-1315
12 pc. dinnerware set w/ 4 dinner & salad plates, bowls, & silverware. $15. yafwang@hotmail.com 2 curtain panels w/ rods sets: $15. pw7@indiana.edu
Under Armour Coat, size 2X, never been worn. jkutche@indiana.edu
4 brand new Firestone “FR710” tires. $190. lewisjet@iu.edu Columbia women’s size 8.5 medium hiking boots. Brand new. 2 styles, $45 each. 812-322-0808 Family picture frame collage, 8 frames. Never used. $15. estier@indiana.edu
TRANSPORTATION
2015 Mercedes GLA 250 4 MATIC. 37K miles. $15,999. maanbo@iu.edu
New Ted Baker tri-fold wallet, $30. yiju@iu.edu
BMW 528i. Black/black leather int. 300K miles. $2,500 OBO. ecord@indiana.edu
North Face backpack, never been used, $95. jkutche@indiana.edu Philips LED light bulbs (4 pack), new, $8. yiju@iu.edu
Schwinn 420 Elliptical Trainer, excellent condition, $250. kalimov@indiana.edu
Automobiles 2015 Honda Accord LX Sedan, 25500 miles, $15,400. pw7@indiana.edu
Hands-On Machine Learningwith Scikit-Learn and TensorFlow, $25. sialsaff@iu.edu
PUR 18-cup dispenser w/ basic filter. Good cond. $5. pw7@indiana.edu
Clothing
Toyota Highlander-2004, FWD, miles 17,0000. $3,200. Contact: 202-297-5597.
Bicycles Womens Schwinn SR sun tour bike. Brand new. Aluminum frame. $299. 812-322-0808
TCL 32S327 32-Inch 1080p Roku Smart LED TV (2018 Model), $150, obo. bwerle@iu.edu
Sunbeam 0.9 cu ft 900 watt Microwave, $49. sseputro@iu.edu
Now Leasing for Aug 2021
Used Nintendo switch w/joycons, $225. If bought w/bundle, $275. kjmagee@iu.edu
Sunbeam 0.9 cu ft 900 watt microwave. $30. Very good cond. pw7@indiana.edu
Aug 2020 still available 1, 2, 3, 4, & 5 BR Houses, Townhouses, and Apartments
Xbox One S 500G w/ Tomb Raider: Shadow. Like new. $200. langchen@iu.edu
Computers
20-inch Mac, early 2008 model, working condition, bought in 2015, $50. tkbyrd@iu.edu
Queen mattress w/ box spring and frame. Free pillow and quilt. $150. pw7@indiana.edu
Upscale glass table Includes stools Contact: 904-502-7677.
Epson XP-440 printer with scanner and copier. $125, never used. Mackenna 260.999.3304
Textbooks Ancient Greece textbook, for intro level Greek culture class, good cond. $12. whitekn@iu.edu
Twin mattress and box spring, good cond. $350, obo. gnkhacha@iu.edu (317) 671-6090
Brand new PS4 1TB with 3 games, $200. xingl@iu.edu
Sublease avail. Great location, 1212 North Grant, May 1-Aug. 1.1 BR $500/mo. (317)503-4075
405
215
EMPLOYMENT
345
Houses
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for all the details. Entry Deadline: March 2nd, 2020. Good luck!
Brand new Airpods. $160. sbostak@iu.edu
HPIU.com Houses and apt. 1-4 BR. Close to campus. 812-333-4748 No pets please.
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Beats Solo Wireless 3 headphones, $165. spabla@iu.edu
omegaproperties@gmail.com
Womens Zigpulse Reebok running shoes. Size 8. Never worn. $20. devhoste@indiana.edu
Over the door mirror, dark brown. Good cond. $5. pw7@indiana.edu
Beats by Dr. Dre HD (white/ matte)WIRED headphones. $45. gmariano@iu.edu
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.
Large 1/2 BR apts. & townhouses avail. Summer & Fall, 2020! Close to Campus & Stadium. 812-334-2646
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Houses
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Beautiful Downtown apts. for rent. 2 BR, 1.5 BA. Starting at $1500.00. Please call: 812-333-0995.
Memory Foam Mattress with gel (Full XL), $100. vinitab@iu.edu
Alienware 17 gaming laptop & charger. $690 or neg. xz57@iu.edu
3-4 BR at 9th/Grant near Kelley, Kirkwd, dwntwn. DW/WD. $1725-2000. Aug 2020. 812-333-9579
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**REWARD** Missing student work, taken from IMU contact ktsarnas@iu.edu
32’’ Sanyo TV w/ remote, cable adapter, original remote. $150. youngjan@iu.edu
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3 BR/1 BA at 9th/Grant. DW/WD. $1575. Aug., 2020. 812-333-9579
Announcements
Brand new grey studded queen size head board. Great condition, $85. ivwilson@iu.edu
Electronics
Misc. for Sale Selfie stick. Max length 70cm. Control w/3.5 audio cable. $5. pw7@indiana.edu
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
leasinginfo@grantprops.com
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2 BR/1 BA next to Inform/Kelley. $1375. Aug 2020. Prkg & Laund. 812333-9579 or
42” granite table top, stainless steel parsons base, $400. jkolesky@iu.edu
Fire Emblem Fates Azura cosplay costume, $80. ani@iu.edu
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Furniture 2 piece couch cover. Great condition, $25. sasasser@iu.edu
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SOFTBALL
‘Road Warriors’ Hoosiers to travel 10,000 miles over first 26 games By Evan Gerike egerike@iu.edu | @EvanGerike
The first pitch of the IU softball season was thrown Feb. 6, but it will be over a month before the team plays at home. Since Indiana winters leave very few days where weather allows outdoor sports, IU is forced to start the season traveling across the country to play teams in warmer states. During that time, the Hoosiers will travel roughly 7,850 miles, or just a little less than the distance from Bloomington to London and back.Then, finally, there will be softball in Indiana. On March 10, IU will have its first home game at Andy Mohr Field against Miami University. When IU plays its first home game, it will already have played 19 away games. Over the 10 days following that first home game, IU will play another six games, all in Madeira Beach, Florida. Add another 2,000 miles to the tracker. If you are doing the math at home, that’s 25 of the Hoosiers’ first 26 games on the road. And nearly 10,000 miles. The first home series against Penn State, which doubles as IU’s Big Ten opener, is 43 days after IU starts its season. Over 43 days, the Hoosiers will travel to Florida twice, North Carolina twice and Arizona once. It isn’t easy to play an outdoor sport in Indiana in the winter. The average high temperature during February in Bloomington is 42 degrees. When the Hoosiers are home, it’s rare they are able to practice outside. The relatively warm January allowed IU to practice outside several times, but most of the team's 21 practices have been indoors. “Sure, would it be nice to be outside," IU head coach Shonda Stanton asked. "Absolutely. But it's part of the conditions and you just don't make any excuses.” During most of the winter, the team practices at the John Mellencamp Pavilion, an indoor training facil-
400 km 0
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Lincoln
West Lafayette
College Park
Urbana Bloomington
Durham Raleigh Tuscon
Women’s Softball Season Schedule Orlando, Fla. Feb. 6, 6 p.m. | UCF Feb. 7, 3 p.m. | Duke Feb. 7, 5:30 p.m. | UCF Feb. 8, 9 a.m. | St. John’s Feb. 8, 11 a.m. | Clemson Durham, N.C. Feb. 14, 5:30 p.m. | Duke Feb. 15, 10 a.m. | Syracuse Feb. 15, 12:30 p.m. | Duke Feb. 16, 10 a.m. | Syracuse
Madeira Beach
March 8, 11:15 a.m. | Arizona Bloomington March 10, 4 p.m. | Miami (OH)
March 27, 6 p.m. | Ohio State March 28, 2 p.m. | Ohio State March 29, 12 p.m. | Ohio State March 31, 4 p.m. | Notre Dame
Raleigh, N.C. Feb. 21, 10 a.m. | St. Joseph’s Feb. 21, 12:30 p.m. | Bucknell Feb. 22, 10 a.m. | Bucknell Feb. 22, 3 p.m. | NC State Feb. 23, 12 p.m. | St. Joseph’s
Madeira Beach, Fla. March 12, 12 p.m. | Creighton March 12, 2:30 p.m. | Toledo March 13, 2 p.m. | Central Michigan March 13, 4:30 p.m. | Brown March 14, 9 a.m. | South Dakota State March 14, 11:30 a.m. | Buffalo
College Park, MD April 3, 6 p.m. | Maryland April 4, 2 p.m. | Maryland April 5, 12 p.m. | Maryland
Tuscon, Ariz. March 6, 1 p.m. | SIUE March 6, 3:30 p.m. | South Dakota March 7, 12 p.m. | Boise State March 7, 2:30 | South Dakota
Bloomington March 20, 6 p.m. | Penn State March 21, 2 p.m. | Penn State March 22, 1 p.m. | Penn State March 24, 5 p.m. | Louisville
Bloomington April 17, 6 p.m. | Minnesota April 18, 2 p.m. | Minnesota April 19, 1 p.m. | Minnesota April 22, 5 p.m. | Morehead State
Lincoln, NE April 10, 6:30 p.m. | Nebraska April 11, 2 p.m. | Nebraska April 12, 1 p.m. | Nebraska
Orlando
April 22, 6:30 p.m. | Morehead State Urbana, Ill. April 24, 6 p.m. | Illinois April 25, 2 p.m. | Illinois April 26, 1 p.m. | Illinois West Lafayette April 29 | Purdue April 29 | Purdue
Bloomington May 1, 6 p.m. | Iowa May 2, 2 p.m. | Iowa May 3, 1 p.m. | Iowa
Urbana Ill. May 7-9 | Big Ten Tournament ILLUSTRATION BY CARSON TERBUSH | IDS
ity built with a $1.5 million donation by the singer and Bloomington native. “We all play so much better outside, especially when it's warmer,” senior pitcher Emily Goodin said. “Being in Mellencamp is fine and all but being able to be outside and be in the nice weather, doing our thing, I think we're
all super pumped.” Stanton said despite IU being forced to practice on turf so often, her team is prepared for when the action comes to grass. “Once you get in the game it's just about being confident in your preparation,” Stanton said. IU also has to learn how
to handle all the traveling as well. “There's times where it kinda catches up with you, but it just becomes your new normal for a while,” Goodin said. “In the past we've been really good with adjusting to that after the first couple weeks and getting used to it.”
But when they finally open at home, the Hoosiers will be ready, Stanton said. “It's awesome being able to play on our home field,” Goodin said. “Not having to worry about traveling, just being able to show up and do our thing on the field. Own it.” Stanton said she misses
the sunny and 60 degree weather at Andy Mohr Field. She mentioned how nice it is to not have to travel, to have one extra day of sleeping in your own bed. “Sure, those are things you could envy about a warmer weather sport, but there’s something about being road warriors too.”
Goodin adjusts to new role with Hoosiers By Evan Gerike egerike@iu.edu | @EvanGerike
Senior pitcher Emily Goodin always tries to give 150%. It’s something she learned from her dad when she was younger. He’d tell her, “One fifty! One fifty!” when she was in the pitcher's circle. IU softball head coach Shonda Stanton doesn’t like that. After all, how can you give more than 100%? You can’t, Stanton said. All she wants is as much effort as Goodin can give. Goodin listens to Post Malone or Morgan Wallen before games to keep out of her head. By getting pumped up and staying loose in the locker room, she keeps a smile on her face and stays ready to go. It’s when she’s relaxed that she does her best work. She'll have to be relaxed to take over the lead pitching role from one of IU's best pitchers in program history. Tara Trainer graduated from IU last season as one of the greatest pitchers in program history. She finished her career ranked second all-time in strikeouts, appearances and games started. She was third all-time in career wins and innings pitched. And for three years, Goodin has been right beside her. Now, as she enters her senior year, it’s Goodin who will be leading the Hoosiers from the circle.
SARAH ZYGMUNTOWSKI | IDS FILE PHOTO
Then-junior, now-senior Emily Goodin pitches the ball April 10, 2019, against Purdue. Goodin will lead the Hoosiers from the circle this year.
“It’s a challenge that I’ve been ready for since the end of the season last year,” Goodin said. Goodin hasn’t shied away from a challenge to lead a team yet. She led her high school team to its first state championship during
her junior year, only allowing two hits while striking out 11 over seven innings in a 1-0 victory. She finished the season with 21-4 recording, earning her All-State honors. Instead of returning for her senior year, Goodin took on a new challenge:
collegiate softball. Goodin came to IU after graduating from Mater Dei High School in Evansville, Indiana, a semester early. Now, in what should be her junior year, Goodin is a senior taking on a leadership role.
She’s been working on her endurance and doing cardio to make sure she can get through this season. Since Goodin will see a majority of the innings this year, she needs to be prepared to pitch almost double what she has in years past.
Goodin made 101 appearances during the same time Trainer made 134, and now she'll have to pitch a majority of those innings lost with Trainer's absence. She often worked with Trainer, getting pointers on what she could do better. Now she's working on being the senior leader that gives tips to the younger pitchers on the staff. Outside of Goodin, IU has a staff full of young, inexperienced pitchers. “She had that mentality where she’d just put her head down and fight through,” Goodin said of Trainer. “She was a fighter. She had a lot to give. I'm still trying to take on that role.” Stanton tries not to let Goodin feel the pressure of stepping into Trainer’s shoes. Stanton takes each player's strengths into account, setting a floor for each athlete instead of a ceiling. “I wouldn’t say she's stepping up, per se, in Tara Trainers role,” Stanton said. “Anytime we graduate any pitcher or any great hitter it's not like we're trying to replace what they've done.’” Stanton knows what the floor is for Goodin. Skill-wise, it's one strikeout per inning. Mentally, it’s about being in command. “We’re excited to see how she'll write her history,” Stanton said. “She has an opportunity to write her finish right now.”
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Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
TENNIS
New roster poses challenges, opportunities By Luke Lusson llusson@iu.edu | @LukeLusson
In many college sports, having five newcomers in one season isn’t anything crazy. With larger rosters in sports such as football and soccer, many players come and go each year. But for women’s college tennis, the team is only eight players deep. And for IU this season, newcomers make up more than half of the roster. The oldest of the newcomers is graduate transfer Annabelle Andrinopoulos, who spent her first four seasons at the University of Colorado. Andrinopoulos played most of her senior season at the University of Colorado in the No. 3 singles spot but has been the No. 2 singles player for IU early on this season. As for the other four additions to the IU roster, all of them are true freshman. Those four are Mila Mejic, Rose Hu, Alexandra Staiculescu and Lexi Kubas. With so many new players on the roster, the Hoosiers have done a lot of lineup tweaking, especially when it comes to finding the right doubles pairings. “It has been honestly pretty tough,” senior Caitlin Bernard said. “Every match we get better, so I feel like it's
IZZY MYSZAK | IDS
Graduate student Annabelle Andrinopoulous strikes the ball Sept. 29 at the IU tennis courts. Andrinopoulos spent her first four seasons at the University of Colorado before transferring to IU.
just more and more matches we need.” Bernard has been with IU longer than any player on the roster and is IU’s anchor at the No. 1 singles spot, putting her in a natural leader-
ship position. During singles matches, even when her match is going on, Bernard’s cheers on her teammates from her No. 1 singles court. Along with Bernard, senior Michelle McKamey and
junior Jelly Bozovic bring multiple years of experience in playing for IU. McKamey has spent the season in IU's No. 5 singles spot, whereas Bozovic has been in the No. 4. So far this season, IU
has tried out various strategies with doubles, including pairings with two returning players or pairings with two freshmen. However, in its last few matches, IU has been more consistent with its
pairings. Andrinopoulos and Bozovic have been continuously paired, as have Bernard and Staiculescu. Head coach Ramiro Azcui understands the challenges that come with coaching a younger and more inexperienced team. For him and his coaches, he said it’s been about keeping it simple and making things as easy as possible for his team. “It’s so much easier when you have an older team,” Azcui said. “So for the coaches it’s been a little bit harder. We need to kind of slow ourselves down to make sure that we take the time to explain why the system is going to work and why our culture is the way it is.” As the season continues to roll along, Azcui has been happy with the way his newlook team is playing. “The players are buying into it for sure,” Azcui said. “We still have a lot of learning to do. Every match that we play, we’re learning a lot about ourselves. It’s been challenging, but at the same time it’s been fun. Now at 6-4 on the season, IU hopes its build-up of matches will keep pushing its team full of new players ahead. Only two nonconference games remain before the Hoosiers open Big Ten play.
Fall success leads to high ranking for Bennett Crane By Joshua Manes jamanes@iu.edu | @TheManesEvent
He began his college career as a blue chip recruit, and senior Bennett Crane entered his final season with IU men's tennis as No. 66 in the country. It made him the highest ranked Hoosier in four years. His name was found on the Intercollegiate Tennis Association’s top-125 list twice last season, reaching as high as No. 96. Crane is the highest ranked Hoosier since Sam Monette in 2016, who opened the season at No. 27. “It was a very big honor, and hopefully I'll try and keep raising that ranking,” Crane said. Now, Crane is ranked No. 94, going 9-5 overall and 2-2 in dual matches. The way Crane closed out the fall may be the biggest factor in his ranking. He placed second at the ITA Ohio Valley Regional tour-
nament in October, defeating the tournament’s topseed and then-No. 40 Athell Bennett from Purdue. The finish qualified Crane for the ITA National Fall Championships. “He played so well in that tournament, came back from some pretty large deficits to win matches,” IU head coach Jeremy Wurtzman said. To Wurtzman, it was Crane’s showing at the regionals that sent a message to his team more than the ranking did. “I think it gave us a little bit of credibility of what we're doing,” Wurtzman said. Heading into the season, Crane was a combined 5344 overall in his previous three years, and 33-32 in dual match play. Crane recognized his earlier seasons haven't ended as well as they began. “I guess I'm kind of known for having a very good fall and then maybe my spring isn't as good,”
JOY BURTON | IDS
IU senior Bennett Crane leaps for the ball in a match against the University of Memphis on Jan. 17 at the IU Tennis Center. Crane is the highest ranked Hoosier since Sam Monette in 2016, who opened the season at No. 27.
Crane said. “So it was really cool to have qualified for nationals and done so well at regionals.” Aside from being the Hoosiers’ top singles player, Crane is part of the top doubles pair for IU alongside
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fellow senior Zac Brodney. Crane and Brodney came to IU their freshman year and were each other’s first doubles partners. As freshmen, the duo went 9-11 and then 6-6 as juniors. So far this season
they are 5-3 overall, 3-2 in dual match play and have taken down two ranked pairs, then-No. 21 David Stevenson and Oscar Cutting from the University of Memphis and No. 20 Pavel Motl and Stijn Slump of Middle
Tennessee State University. Crane and Brodney were roommates as freshmen, and continue to live together this season. “He's really become a much more well-rounded individual,” Brodney said. “It's paid dividends for him, both in the classroom, socially and on the tennis court. It's been great to be able to witness his growth over the past four years.” Before coming to IU, Crane was a prep-star in Huntersville, North Carolina, and a two-time National Doubles Champion. As a member of Wurtzman’s first recruiting class, Crane was an important part. “Bennett was a blue chip recruit coming in, and that's something that was rare at the time for us to get,” Wurtzman said. “He was kind of the top prospect that we went after, and he's proven to be that. He's been a proven winner over his four years here at any spot that we put him at.”
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Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
BASEBALL
Hoosier ties Tommy Sommer learns hard work and love for IU athletics from his dad By Sara Kress sekress@iu.edu | @sarakress4
Junior pitcher Tommy Sommer, 21, approaches the game of baseball with a philosophy of level-headedness and hard work. Sommer said he always tries to be one step ahead of everyone else on the field. Baseball is a mental game for him, which is what he loves about the sport. “Baseball is more cerebral, kind of a chess match where you’re trying to think two steps ahead,” Sommer said. A hard work ethic is another foundation of Sommer’s technique as an athlete. This mentality was instilled in him by his dad and his story. Sommer’s dad, Juergen, walked onto the IU men’s soccer team as a freshman in 1987. He received the starting goalkeeper position and went on to win a national championship with the 1988 Hoosier team the next year. He then worked toward professional success, becoming the first American goalkeeper to play in the Premier League. “That story of being a walk on and having absolutely nothing and just fighting your way to the top and being successful is something that he’s definitely instilled in me coming here,” Sommer said. Sommer said his dad’s legacy in the soccer program at IU is important to him. It’s part of the reason he decided to attend the university. “It’s exciting for me now that I get to come here and kind of follow in his footsteps in a little different way, but still have that tradition of being an IU student like my dad,” Sommer said. “I take a great responsibility because of what success he had here and definitely try to replicate everything that he’s done.” Sommer’s dad is also the reason he decided to play baseball. Growing up, Sommer played baseball, basketball and soccer, but around his freshman year of high school, his dad realized he felt more of a connection with baseball than the other sports. “He let me pursue baseball more than soccer or basketball,” Sommer said. “I really appreciate that because it was definitely a turning point in my life, just finding something I was really passionate about.” Sommer said his dad’s encouragement allowed him to give up soccer, a sport he
ALEX DERYN | IDS FILE PHOTO
Then-sophomore left-handed pitcher Tommy Sommer pitches the ball against the University of Louisville on May 14, 2019, at Bart Kaufman Field. Sommer said that his dad’s encouragement allowed him to give up soccer and pursue baseball.
felt he had a responsibility to continue because of his dad's legacy. He said his dad is his role model in everything he does and has taught him how to act as an athlete at IU. Sommer’s belief in the power of hard work is part of a culture head coach Jeff Mercer is working to instill in the baseball program. “There’s going to be an expectation to continue to improve,” Mercer said. Sommer said he has stepped into a leadership role this year to help younger players understand and adjust to the expectations the team has for them. He said he wanted to give younger team members the guidance he wished he had as a freshman. Mercer said Sommer is one of the upperclassmen who has helped freshmen assimilate to the culture of the team. “They understand the expectation but they also understand what it’s like coming in and being a new guy and really welcoming these guys in,” Mercer said.
ALEX DERYN | IDS FILE PHOTO
Then-sophomore left-handed pitcher Tommy Sommer pitches the ball April 16, 2019 at Bart Kaufman Field.
Dunham takes on leadership role with reshaped team By Matt Cohen mdc1@iu.edu | @Matt_Cohen_
Last year IU baseball head coach Jeff Mercer took over a group still built to play to the style of their former coach, Chris Lemonis. Lemonis, who left for the head coaching job at Mississippi State University, put together an IU roster hell-bent on winning by playing for home runs, and only home runs. It’s now Mercer’s second year in Bloomington now. IU's 10 player draft class last year was the largest in team history. After adjusting to coach the power hitters he had in year one, Mercer has begun to shape his roster around the small-ball style of play that garnered him national notoriety when he was the head coach at Wright State University. And that starts with junior outfielder Elijah Dunham. “Eli was a guy that was vocal especially down the stretch last year,” Mercer said. “That’s what I want a guy like Eli to rub off. Just teach young guys how to work. The outcome will take care of itself.” Dunham was among IU’s most reliable hitters at the end of the 2019 season. He finished with a team best .310 batting average among players with over 30 at bats. He started 42 of the 43 games he played and hit eight home runs and 29 RBIs. He hit .556 over the final week of the reg-
ALEX DERYN | IDS FILE PHOTO
Then-sophomore outfielder Elijah Dunham avoided a pitch April 16, 2019, at Bart Kaufman Field. Dunham was selected in the 40th round of the 2019 MLB Draft by the Pittsburgh Pirates but chose not to sign and returned to college instead.
ular season as IU clinched the Big Ten regular season title. “Last year at the beginning when I got into the lineup consistently, it was flying by,” Dunham said. “By the end of the season it started slowing down and coming to me easier. I feel like I can take that into this season because now I know what to expect.” Dunham was selected in
the 40th round of the 2019 MLB Draft by the Pittsburgh Pirates but chose not to sign and returned to college instead. He went to play with the Ocean State Waves of the New England Collegiate Baseball League over the summer. There, he would play every day against some of the top college pitching in the country and continue the momen-
tum from a strong close to the season. Dunham hit .360 with the Waves with six home runs and 27 RBIs in 34 games. Now he comes back to Bloomington having emerged from the shadow of Matt Gorski and Matt Lloyd. But with Gorski, Lloyd and the rest of a program record MLB Draft class out of the picture, Dunham is now IU’s star at the
plate, and its leader. But Dunham was recruited to IU under Lemonis. When Mercer got to IU he began to call Dunham “Eli” and Dunham never corrected him. In a way, it is a symbolization of Dunham adjusting to his new coach. Mercer has helped Dunham become a more balanced hitter and is the most
clear anbd successful example of the type of transition Mercer has tried to implement after Lemonis left. “I didn’t even really know what hitting was, I was just trying to go up there and swing and hit home runs before Mercer got here,” Dunham said. “He really taught me how to have an approach and set fundamentals to myself to know what I need to be successful.” Dunham has worked to reshape his approach at the plate to be more disciplined, to cut down on strike outs and look to put the ball in play, not just over the fence. Dunham will be relied on for his production, hittting in the core of IU’s lineup. But with such a young roster as Mercer tries to fill in his own players, experienced players like Dunham will be looked to as leaders. There’s ample young talent around Dunham, especially with sophomore outfielder Grant Richardson and freshman outfielder Ethan Vecrumba. After being the young player looking to the leaders in Gorski and Lloyd, the young players will now defer to Dunham. “It’s a change,” Dunham said. “Freshman year you walk in and everything is new to you. You’ve got older guys saying things you’ve never heard before. Now being the leader, it’s trying to get a culture that the coaches want and we want to be successful.”
SPRING 2020 SPORTS GUIDE
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Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
WATER POLO
Over half of IU's team has a California connection By Doug Wattley dwattley@iu.edu | @dougwattley
Once again, the IU water polo program will rely heavily on players from California. The water polo team is the only roster at IU that is comprised of a majority of athletes from a singular state not being Indiana. For the second year in a row, more than 50 percent of the roster is from the Golden State. Due to a lack of elite water polo clubs in Indiana, all nine freshmen in the class of 2023 are coming to IU from out of state. In fact, the water polo team is only one of three programs at IU with zero players from Indiana. Three of the newcomers, Zoe Crouch, Lauren Gaudry and Katherine Hawkins, are joining the Hoosiers all the way from California. From a place 2,000 miles away, three players might seem like a high number of recruits. But in reality, three is a minuscule total compared to past years. Just last season, the recruiting class landed a total of six athletes from California.
COURTESY PHOTOS
From left to right, Katherine Hawkins, Lauren Gaudry and Zoe Crouch. The three are new to the Hoosiers team and all from California.
The connection between IU water polo and the West Coast stretches further than just the players. All three coaches grew up in southern California. “In my eyes,” Gaudry said, “California is the center for water polo for the U.S.” The mix of beautiful weather and the history of the
sport in California creates a platform for young players to excel. The state anchors some of the most prestigious college programs in the United States. Since 2000, the only schools to win the NCAA women’s water polo championships are University of California at Los Angeles,
University of Southern California and Stanford. A substantial reason for IU's ability to recruit in California is the family-like environment that has been created in Bloomington. Senior Megan Abarta believes that having recruits from afar come into your program naturally creates a tight bond.
“It’s something that makes us stand out from other teams,” Abarta said. “We’re close because we California girls get to show off our sport in the Midwest and we take pride in that.” That bond is sparked even before recruits commit to play at IU. During campus visits, veteran players talk to
recruits about the positive aspects of playing water polo in Bloomington. Abarta specifically recalls hosting Tina Doherty, a sophomore who grew up on the other side of Los Angeles from her. “I got to share how great my experience has been here by moving so far away,” Abarta said, “and that has encouraged other girls to play water polo out here.” “It’s nice because we’ve already built connections to other coaches and youth development programs,” assistant coach Mackie Beck said. “It’s cool to show them that water polo is really similar at Indiana.” Moving forward, there are no signs showing that California will stop churning out strong players. The next step that coach Beck wants to watch is to spread that talent throughout the rest of the United States. “As water polo continues to spread to other areas, the level of competition will also improve,” Beck said. “But I’m sure California will never stop producing great players.”
Taylor Dodson lives out dream as new head coach By Doug Wattley dwattley@iu.edu | @dougwattley
This past June, Taylor Dodson was driving down 17th street on her way to grab lunch at Memorial Stadium when her phone began to ring. Dodson, the assistant coach for the IU water polo team, glanced down and saw an unsaved number. The only inkling of who was calling was the recognizable 812 area code. Not knowing who was on the other end, Dodson greeted the caller with caution. “Hi, this is Taylor. Can I ask who’s calling?” “Hey Taylor,” the voice responded. “This is Fred Glass. How are you?”
Not long before this call, Dodson had interviewed to take over the vacant head Dodson coaching role for IU water polo. If accepted, it would be her first head coaching job in her young career. After a quick chat, the IU athletic director gave her the opportunity that Dodson had always wanted: Glass offered her the IU water polo head coaching position. Looking back on that conversation, Dodson could not recall everything she said. But one thing she told Glass is cemented in her memory to this day.
“I told him, ‘I won’t let you down Fred,’” she said. “And to this day, even when he retires, the goal is to not let Fred down.” Dodson’s love of the game was established when she was a young girl. Growing up in southern California, water polo was the most popular sport in the pool. “At my high school, the swim program would not exist without the water polo program,” Dodson said. She played competitively in high school as well as on a club team, followed by a collegiate career at University of California, Berkeley. As a Golden Bear, Dodson led her team to a silver medal in the 2011 NCAA Champi-
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onships, the best finish in program history. Despite the success in the pool, the team camaraderie is what she cherishes most. “So much of what I remember is not the scores or the games, but the van rides to and from," Dodson said. "That's what I try to tell the girls.” After graduation, Dodson played professionally in Spain for one year before returning to the United States to give coaching a try. While taking classes for her MBA at Wagner College, she took a job as a full-time assistant. She credits those two years at Wagner for confirming that coaching was her passion. Now as the IU head coach,
Dodson is taking on a new set of challenges. Last season, the Hoosiers ended 6-17 and winless in the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation conference. It was the worst finish for IU in over 20 years. Assistant coach Mackie Beck believes that the two years Dodson spent as an assistant will be meaningful in turning the program around. “It’s been an easy transition,” Beck said. “Those that were here last year are comfortable with [Dodson] since she was already in the program and the newcomers have embraced it with open arms.” The Hoosiers have faced ranked teams in each of their eight games. The team is 3-5, already topping the amount
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of ranked games it won last season. Every match, Dodson always credits the players. “It’s so great to work with the group of girls that we have,” Dodson said. “They’ve bought into the changes we wanted to make as a program and it shows.” Despite an improved start, the Hoosiers still have a lot of work to do. IU has regular season games until April, followed by the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation Championships in San Jose, California. The focus is not on that yet. The message Dodson conveys is simple. “The main goal I tell the girls is to get better each and every day.”
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SPRING 2020 SPORTS GUIDE
TRACK AND FIELD
Adam Coulon soars to new heights with IU By Matt Smith mrs30@iu.edu | @mattsmith1401
The crowd begins silent but then a slow clap starts as IU senior Adam Coulon begins to run toward the pole vault pit. He jumps, then the celebration starts as he clears another height. Coulon, 21, has been pole vaulting ever since he was a little kid with the help of his father. Now as a senior, he's found success early on this season. He has a four-meet winning streak and a personal best mark of 5.65 meters. “My dad was a jumper in high school and went on to do it in college,” Coulon said. “In fifth grade, he started me with a pole in the backyard with some selfmade standards.” Coulon said that his success started when he was in seventh grade and continued into his freshman year of high school, where he won the Illinois state championship. However, he wasn’t always successful in high school. Coulon became interested in other sports such as basketball and marching band, so he began to back off track a little bit. When he got to college, it took Coulon a little bit to adjust to the training and new competition that the Division I level brought. But he hit his stride sophomore year. “He’s just awesome, because he goes about his business, he works hard every single weekend, he cares about the team and the people around him,” IU head coach Ron Helmer said. “He sets a good example for everybody.” A new opportunity that Coulon has found this year is mentoring freshman standout Nathan Stone. “Coming in my freshman year, I had teammates to look up to, and it’s huge to have a mentor, showing you what to do if you get banged up.” Coulon said. “Nathan is great and is going to be really good, and it’s awesome for him as a freshman to have people to jump with and push him.” Stone was an accomplished freshman coming
ALEX DERYN | IDS
Senior pole vaulter Adam Coulon puts his fist in the air after a teammate jumps Jan. 24 in Gladstein Fieldhouse. Coulon has a four-meet winning streak and a personal best mark of 5.65 meters.
in. He was ranked the number two pole vaulter, according to MaxPreps, and was the Indiana state champion. ”It’s nice that (Coulon) is bringing me along for the ride because if he jumps high, I jump high, and there's a common theme,
and it’s a really great environment,” Stone said. “It’s the most fun I’ve ever had competing.” The Hoosiers have three pole vaulters this year competing at a high level in Coulon, Stone, and junior Brock Mammoser.
“Meets are really fun with Brock and Nathan, and it’s not about how one of us does, it’s about how we do as a group,” Coulon said. Coulon has set many goals for himself as he ends his collegiate career including going to the NCAA
championships and going to the Olympic Trials. Coulon said that he believes that he, Mammoser and Stone can make the Trials this summer. As Coulon gets ready for the Big Ten Indoor Championship, he wants to continue his success from the
early part of the season. “I think as long as I keep working hard in practice and in the weight room that I can do something really special and get on that national stage and make a name for IU as a big vaulting school,” Coulon said.
Stanhope’s journey from homeschool to IU By Luke Christopher Norton lcnorton@iu.edu | @lcnorton31
IU freshman Elizabeth Stanhope's track career began in middle school. She tried basketball and soccer, trying to find what worked best for her. Playing soccer helped her discover a strength for running. It's what led to the start of her track career. Stanhope went from being a homeschooled athlete to enrolling in a single class to join the track and field team at Pike High School in Indianapolis, where she ultimately set a new state record in the 800-meter before arriving at IU. During her time at Pike, Stanhope was coached by IU alumni and former middle-distance athlete Courtney Brown. Brown emphasized that Stanhope is quiet and shy, but opened up out of her shell. “She wants to be the best,” Brown said. “I think with her, when she decides it’s go time, look out.” Stanhope’s defining moment was the state meet during her senior year, when she beat her previous personal record by three seconds in the 800-meter. “Everything worked out how it was supposed to,” Stanhope said. Stanhope did far more than simply beat her personal record with this time, but the Indiana High School Athletic Association state record itself, cementing herself as a top college prospect with a time of 2:06.62. Stanhope ultimately decided to stay within the state for college, feeling that she could improve at IU. “Elizabeth’s a typical freshman, except for the
COURTESY OF IU ATHLETICS
Freshman Elizabeth Stanhope runs Feb. 14 in Gladstein Fieldhouse. Stanhope began track in middle school.
fact that she came to us as the best Indiana high school 800-meter runner of all time,” IU head coach Ron Helmer said. Helmer noted the jump from high school to Big Ten competition is a large one, particularly for middle-distance events. But Stanhope has handled the transition with maturity. “As she’s worked her way through the process she’s starting to show us that, in fact, she is that high-level
athlete,” Helmer said "I love her work ethic, I love her attitude." Stanhope has competed in all of the team’s meets so far and had one of her best performance at the University of Notre Dame’s Meyo Invitational on Feb. 5, taking fourth place with a time of 1:30.61 in the 600-meter. “I’m really glad it happened,” Stanhope said “The couple weeks before that weren’t great, but I guess it was a breakout race.” Stanhope earned her
first victory as a Hoosier on Feb. 14, taking first place in the 600-meter at home during Hoosier Hills. Stanhope, who prefers running with others to being alone, credits her teammates for what has helped her improve. Brown said during her time at Pike, she would run by herself, passing by her teammates. Her teammates countered this by staggering themselves around the track as Stanhope ran. Whenever
she would get ahead, there would always be a teammate waiting to join her to ensure that she wouldn’t be running alone. The support from her teammates has continued during her transition to collegiate athletics at IU. Stanhope worked out on her own over winter break, but found that she preferred to practice with her teammates, who push one another to improve. “They’re just really encouraging,” Stanhope said.
“You’re having a bad day, and they’ll just push you to keep with them.” For Helmer, such support from teammates is an important point of emphasis for the program as an expectation among the team. With her past success at the high school level, development over her freshman season and the support of her teammates by her side, Stanhope hopes to continue her success going forward.
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Non-Denominational
United Methodist
Sherwood Oaks Christian Church
Open Hearts, Open Minds, Open Doors
St. Mark’s United Methodist Church
2700 E. Rogers Rd. 812-334-0206
100 N. State Rd. 46 Bypass 812-332-5788
socc.org/cya facebook.com/socc.cya Twitter: @socc_cya Instagram: socc_cya Traditional: 8 a.m. Contemporary: 9:30 a.m. & 11 a.m. Being in Bloomington, we love our college students, and think they are a great addition to the Sherwood Oaks Family. Whether an undergraduate or graduate student... from in-state, out of state, to our international community... Come join us as we strive to love God and love others better.
Sunday Morning Schedule 9:00: Breakfast 9:15: Adult Sunday School Classes 10:30: Sanctuary Worship 10:30: Children & Youth Sunday School Classes An inclusive community bringing Christ-like love, healing and hope to all. Jimmy Moore, Pastor Mary Beth Morgan, Pastor
First Methodist
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
219 E. Fourth St. 812-332-6396
fumcb.org jubileebloomington.org Instagram: jubileebloomington Fall Hours: 8:45 a.m. & 10 a.m. @ Fourth St. Sanctuary (Classic), 11:15 a.m. The Open Door @ Buskirk (Contemporary) Summer Hours: 9:30 a.m. @ Fourth St. Sanctuary (Classic), 11:15 The Open Door @ Buskirk (Contemporary) Wednesday: 7:30 p.m., Jubilee @ First Methodist Jubilee is a supportive and accepting community for college students and young adults from all backgrounds looking to grow in their faith and do life together. Meet every Wednesday night and also have small groups, hangouts, mission trips, events, service projects and more. Many attend the contemporary Open Door service on Sunday mornings. Lisa Schubert Nowling, Lead Pastor Markus Dickinson, Campus Director
High Rock Church 3124 Canterbury Ct. 812-323-3333
highrock-church.com Facebook: highrockchurch Instagram: highrockbtown
Cooperative Baptist University Baptist Church ubcbloomington.org facebook.com/ubc.bloomington #ITSYOURCHURCHTOO
Sunday: 11 a.m. We are a Bible-based, non-denominational Christian church. We are multi-ethnic and multi-generational, made up of students and professionals, singles, married couples, and families. Our Sunday service is casual and friendly with meaningful worship music, applicable teaching from the Bible, and a fun kids program. Scott Joseph, Lead Pastor
3740 E. Third St. 812-339-1404
Sunday Worship: 10:45 a.m. Meals & Other Activities: see our social media Come visit the most refreshing church in town. We love all students but especially reach out to LGBTQ+ students and allies longing for a college church where you are loved, welcomed and affirmed without fear of judgment or discrimination. You love the Lord already — now come love us too. Free coffee and wifi.
Episcopal (Anglican)
Rev. Annette Hill Briggs, Pastor Rob Drummond, Music Minister
Canterbury House Episcopal (Anglican) Campus Ministry at IU 719 E. Seventh St. 812-334-7971 • 812-361-7954
indiana.edu/~canterby canterby@indiana.edu • facebook.com/ecmatiu 812-361-7954
Sacramental Schedule: Weekly services Sundays: 4 p.m. Holy Eucharist with hymns followed by dinner at Canterbury House
Tuesdays: 6 p.m. Bible Study at Canterbury House 1st & 3rd Wednesdays: 7 p.m. Music & Prayers at Canterbury House Episcopal (Anglican) Campus Ministry is a safe and welcoming home for all people. We are a blend of young and old, women and men, gay and straight, ethnicities from different cultures and countries, students, faculty, staff and friends. The worshipping congregation is the Canterbury Fellowship. The mission of the Fellowship is to restore all people to unity with God and each other in Christ. We pray, worship and proclaim the Gospel. We also promote justice, equality, inclusion, peace, love critical thinking and acting as agents of change in our world.
Mennonite
Inter-Denominational Redeemer Community Church 111 S. Kimble Dr. 812-269-8975
redeemerbloomington.org facebook.com/RedeemerBtown @RedeemerBtown on Instagram Sunday: 9 a.m. & 11 a.m. Redeemer is a gospel-centered community on mission. Our vision is to see the gospel of Jesus Christ transform everything: our lives, our church, our city, and our world. We want to be instruments of gospel change in Bloomington and beyond. Chris Jones, Lead Pastor
Nazarene First Church of the Nazarene 700 W. Howe St. (across from the Building Trades Park) 812-332-2461 • www.b1naz.org
Sunday Worship: 10:30 a.m. Sunday Small Groups : 9:30 a.m., 4:30 p.m. & 6 p.m. We are Wesleyan in our beliefs, and welcome all to worship with us. We are dedicated to training others through discipleship as well as ministering through small groups. We welcome all races and cultures and would love to get to know you. Dr James Hicks, Lead Pastor
Mennonite Fellowship of Bloomington 2420 E. Third St. 812-646-2441 bloomingtonmenno.org • Facebook
Sunday: 5 p.m. A welcoming, inclusive congregation providing a place of healing and hope as we journey together in the Spirit of Christ. Gathering for worship Sundays 5 p.m. in the Roger Williams room, First United Church. As people of God's peace, we seek to embody the Kingdom of God. John Sauder mfbjohn@gmail.com
333 S. Highland Ave. 812-334-3432 studentview.lds.org/ Home.aspx/Home/60431 lds.org Facebook: Bloomington Institute and YSA Society Monday - Friday: 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Robert Tibbs, Institute Director
Disciples of Christ First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) 205 E. Kirkwood Ave. (corner of Kirkwood and Washington) 812-332-4459 • fccbloomington.org
Sunday Worship: 10 a.m. Jazz Vespers: 6:30 p.m. on first Friday of each month As God has welcomed us, we welcome you. With all our differences – in age, ability and physical condition, in race, cultural background and economic status, in sexual orientation, gender identity and family structure – God has received each one with loving kindness, patience and joy. All that we are together and all that we hope to be is made more perfect as the richness of varied lives meets the mystery of God’s unifying Spirit, and we become the Body of Christ. Helen Hempfling, Pastor
Wesleyan (Nazarene, Free Methodist) Central Wesleyan Church 518 W. Fourth St. 812-336-4041
4thstwesleyanchurch.org Facebook: Central Wesleyan Church of Bloomington, Indiana Sunday School: 10 a.m. Sunday Worship: 11 a.m. Evening Worship: 6 p.m. Wednesday Worship: 6 p.m. First Friday: 6 p.m. (Celebrate Knowing Jesus, open mic service)
Email: bloomingtonfirst@icloud.com Mother Linda C. Johnson+, University Chaplain Josefina Carcamo, Program Coordinator Ricardo Bello Gomez, Communications Coordinator Corrine Miller, Ben Kelly, Student Interns Rex Hinkle, Luiz Lopes, Nathan Stang, Music Ministers Jody Hays, Senior Sacristan Crystal DeCell, Webmaster
We have an Institute of Religion adjacent to campus at 333 S. Highland Ave. (behind T.I.S. bookstore). We offer a variety of religious classes and activities.
smumc.church
Ben Geiger, College Minister
Connexion / Evangelical Community Church
Latter-day Saint Student Association (L.D.S.S.A)
You've ended your search for a friendly and loving church. We are a bible believing holiness group similar to Nazarene and Free Methodist, and welcome all races and cultures. We would love for you to share your talents and abilities with us. Come fellowship and worship with us. Michael Magruder, Pastor Joe Shelton, Church Secretary
Quaker Bloomington Religious Society of Friends 3820 Moores Pike (West of Smith Rd.) 812-336-4581
bloomingtonfriendsmeeting.org Facebook: Bloomington Friends Meeting Sunday Worship: 10:30 a.m. Hymn Singing: 9:50 to 10:20 a.m. Our unprogrammed religious services consist of silent, centering worship interspersed with spoken messages that arise from deeply felt inspiration. We are an inclusive community, a result of avoiding creeds, so we enjoy a rich diversity of belief. We are actively involved in peace action, social justice causes, and environmental concerns. *Child Care and First Day School provided Christine Carver, Meeting Clerk
Lutheran (LCMS)
We strive to create an atmosphere where college students and local young single adults can come to play games, relax, study, and associate with others who value spirituality. Sunday worship services for young single students are held at 2411 E. Second St. at 11:30 a.m. We invite all to discover more about Jesus Christ from both ancient scripture and from modern prophets of God. During the week join us at the institute, and on Sunday at the Young Single Adult Church.
Catholic St. Paul Catholic Center 1413 E. 17th St. 812-339-5561 • hoosiercatholic.org
Facebook: Hoosiercatholic Twitter: @hoosiercatholic Weekend Mass Times Saturday Vigil: 4:30 p.m. Sunday: 8:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 12:30 p.m. (Spanish), 5:30 p.m., 9 p.m. (During Academic Year) Korean Mass 1st & 3rd Saturdays, 6 p.m.
Weekday Mass Times Monday - Saturday: 12:15 p.m. Monday, Wednesday, Friday: 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, Thursday: 9 p.m. St. Paul Catholic Center is a diverse community rooted in the saving compassion of Jesus Christ, energized by His Sacraments, and nourished by the liturgical life of His Church. Rev. Patrick Hyde, O.P., Administrator and Director of Campus Ministry Rev. Dennis Woerter, O.P. Associate Pastor Rev. Reginald Wolford, O.P., Associate Pastor
Unitarian Universalist Unitarian Universalist Church of Bloomington 2120 N. Fee Lane 812-332-3695
www.uublomington.org www.facebook.com/uubloomington Sundays: 9:15 a.m. & 11:15 a.m. We are a dynamic congregation working towards a more just world through social justice. We draw inspiration from world religions and diverse spiritual traditions. Our vision is "Seeking the Spirit, Building Community, Changing the World." A LGBTQA+ Welcoming Congregation and a certified Green Sanctuary. Reverend Mary Ann Macklin, Senior Minister Reverend Scott McNeill, Associate Minister
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints Latter-day Saint Student Association (L.D.S.S.A) 333 S. Highland Ave. 812-334-3432
studentview.Ids.org/Home. aspx/Home/60431 Facebook: Bloomington Institute and YSA Society lds.org Monday - Friday: 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. We have an Institute of Religion adjacent to campus at 333 S. Highland Ave. (behind T.I.S. bookstore). We offer a variety of religious classes and activities. We strive to create an atmosphere where college students and local young single adults can come to play games, relax, study, and associate with others who value spirituality. Sunday worship services for young single students are held at 2411 E. Second St. a 11:30 a.m. We invite all to discover more about Jesus Christ from both ancient scripture and from modern prophets of God. During the week join us at the institute, and on Sunday at the Young Single Adult Church.
Independent Baptist
University Lutheran Church & Student Center
Robert Tibbs, Institute Director
Lifeway Baptist Church
607 E. Seventh St. (Corner of 7th & Fess) 812-336-5387 • indianalutheran.com
Southern Baptist
facebook.com/ULutheranIU @uluindiana on Instagram
Bloomington Korean Baptist Church
7821 W. State Road 46 812-876-6072 • lifewaybaptistchurch.org Facebook • LifewayEllettsville
College & Career Sunday Meeting: 9 a.m. Sunday
Sunday Worship: 10 a.m. & 6 p.m. Wednesday Night Bible Study: 7 p.m. Lifeway Baptist Church exists to bring glory to God by making disciples, maturing believers and multiplying ministry. Matthew 28:19-20
Barnabas Christian Ministry Small Groups: Cedar Hall 2nd Floor Common Area, 7 - 8 p.m., meetings start Thursday, Sept. 5. We will meet every other Thursday during the school year. Steven VonBokern, Senior Pastor Rosh Dhanawade, IU Coordinator 302-561-0108, barnabas@indiana.edu barnabas.so.indiana.edu * Free transportation provided. Please call if you need a ride to church.
Sunday: Bible Class, 9:15 a.m. Divine Service, 10:30 a.m. The Best Meal You'll Have All Week, 6 p.m. Tuesday & Friday: Service of Morning Prayer, 8 a.m. Wednesday: Second Best Meal, 6 p.m. Midweek Service, 7 p.m. LCMS U Student Fellowship, 7:30 p.m. Thursday: Graduate/Career Study & Fellowship, 7 p.m. University Lutheran Church is the home of LCMS U at Indiana. Students, on-campus location, and our Student Center create a hub for genuine Christ-centered community that receives God's gifts of life, salvation and the forgiveness of sins through Jesus Christ. Sola Cafe is open 9-5 every weekday for coffee and a place to study. "We Witness, We Serve, We Love." Rev. Richard Woelmer, Campus Pastor
5019 N. Lakeview Dr. 812-327-7428
mybkbc.org facebook.com/mybkbc/ Sunday: 10:30 a.m. Friday: 7 p.m. Saturday: 6 a.m. Praise the Lord! Do you need a True Friend? Come and worship the almighty God together with us on Sunday, Fellowship included. We are a Korean community seeking God and serving people. Students and newcomers are especially welcome.
Jason Pak
8
SPRING 2020 SPORTS GUIDE
Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
ROWING
'It’s like a sibling rivalry' Hoosiers put trust at the bow of the boat By Bradley Hohulin bhohulin@iu.edu | @BradleyHohulin
The United States Department of Health and Human Services recommends that an active woman in her early 20s consume roughly 2,400 calories daily. In the case of IU senior rowing captain Abigail Bogovich, that number hovers somewhere closer to 3,300. Then again, Bogovich’s definition of active includes rowing upwards of 150 kilometers every week. This extensive training increases a competitor’s endurance in more than sheer distance. “I think rowing is a sport about who can endure the most pain,” Bogovich said. Just hours before each regatta, this looks like a bus load of young women shouting the lyrics to “This is Indiana” at the top of their conditioned lungs. Weeks of intense practices are devoted to meticulously cultivating robotic levels of synchrony, and the Hoosiers’ first test on race day is whether or not they can all stay in tempo. “We always play that on the bus ride to a race, and everybody gets really into it,” senior captain Paige Spiller said. During a race, that pain generally lasts about seven minutes stretched over 2,000 meters. Bogovich and her teammates put in hours of work this winter to shave off mere seconds come March. For a school nested in the Midwest, this means relying on indoor rowing machines called ergometers. As frost slowly blankets nearby lakes and rivers, Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall’s
ALLY MELNIK | IDS
The IU women’s rowing team practices Feb. 12 in Simon Skodjt Assembly Hall. To prepare for their competitions, the team uses indoor rowing machines called ergometers.
“erg room” is a cacophony of mechanical whirs punctuated by the occasional motivational shout. Many of those come from Steve Peterson, now in his 17th year as head coach. He said rowing presents the distinct challenge of being unable to contact his pupils with timeouts or sideline screams. This places responsibility on the shoulders of the coxswain, the sole forwardfacing crew member who
serves as a de facto coach. However, the rowers' faith is far from blind. Peterson works specifically with the coxswains so they can make tough choices when necessary, correct or not. “The key is they need to make decisions on the water,” he said. “Shy of killing somebody or crashing one of my expensive boats, there’s almost nothing that they can do wrong.” Each command issued
by the coxswain must then translate into a complete, uniform motion by the rowers. In a sport where an underperforming individual literally weighs her peers down, it’s crucial that each rower is in near perfect tandem. Peterson said that fortunately for his group, this cohesion is the natural result of friendly intrasquad competition. “It’s like a sibling rivalry,” he said. “They wanna beat
their sister.” In turn, the effort to outdo one another has forged a sturdy bond among the Hoosiers. “I want to work for my teammates,” Spiller said. “Camaraderie is really what keeps me going.” Peterson will not truly know how much his team’s months of preparation have paid off until IU casts off at the Cardinal Invite in Oakridge, Tennessee, on
March 14. Still, there are certain tell-tale signs of a unit that is primed to contend. “They’re warming up and it’s a relaxed vibe,” Peterson said. “There’s music playing and they’re dancing around and doing all the goofy stuff that college kids do.” When he sees this, a singular thought enters Peterson’s mind. “Okay, they’re ready,” he said. “We’re going to perform well today.”
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