Thursday, April 25, 2019 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
More mumps cases at IU By Joey Bowling
jobowl@iu.edu | @jwbowling08
IU’s mumps outbreak has grown to 20 cases as of April 22, Beth Rupp, medical director for IU Health Center, said. The first case was diagnosed Feb. 12, and an outbreak was declared by the Indiana State Department of Health on March 12 after three cases were documented. Officials from the Indiana State Department of Health and IU spoke Monday about the mumps outbreak. Rupp said 17 cases were diagnosed at the center and three of them were diagnosed at an outside facility. Sixteen students have recovered and returned to classes, while three cases are still in quarantine. No students currently have major complications from the infection, she said. Many of the students were immunized. There had been 19 cases of mumps, and the 20th was confirmed a few minutes before the press conference began. Because of this, Rupp’s numbers are based on 19 cases of mumps. Two of the students were international students, while the other 17 were domestic, she said. Seven students were dormitory residents. Rupp said last week an average of three to four tests were performed per day, and the center is expecting more cases. In 2016, 74 cases of mumps were reported at IU. In 2017, 17 were reported and none were reported in 2018. The telltale sign of mumps is swollen salivary glands, though many students will experience other symptoms akin to the flu, Rupp said. Graham McKeen, public health manager for IU Environmental Health and Safety, said one area for the mumps outbreak has been an on-campus fraternity house. Some of the cases have come from house members and others from exposure. The fraternity isn’t being identified because the university doesn’t want students to target the fraternity or feel as if they have a false sense of security if they haven’t been to its house, Rupp said. If students were exposed to mumps through dormitory living, classes or close contacts, they will SEE MUMPS, PAGE 6
Work on SR 37 may cause delays By Kaitlin Edquist
kedquist@iu.edu | @kaitlinedquist
Lane closures and shifts affecting traffic on State Road 37 in Martinsville, Indiana, started Wednesday and are likely to run through mid-May. There will be a northbound lane shift and a lower speed limit starting on or after May 3 on the road during IU’s graduation weekend. The lane shift should not affect traffic in and out of Bloomington for graduation weekend since all lanes will still be open, said Natalie Garrett, spokesperson for the Indiana Department of Transportation. The speed limit for the construction zone is 45 miles per hour. “Hopefully people will allow for extra time going to and from Bloomington,” she said. This is one of three traffic changes that will be made in Martinsville in the coming weeks, according to a press release from INDOT. The work is part of a larger plan to add lanes, connector roads and an overpass. It cannot be put off, Garrett said. “We are trying to keep on schedule as best we can,” she said. Those wanting to avoid the traffic changes can use State Road 67 as a detour, Garrett said. The first of the traffic changes, which started Wednesday, reduces southbound traffic to a single lane for about one mile. The lane closure begins just south of State Road 252 near IU SEE CONSTRUCTION, PAGE 6
IDS
Growing into it
Freshman outside hitter Breana Edwards prepares to pass Oct. 31 in University Gym. IU defeated Michigan, 3-1.
ALEX DERYN | IDS
Breana Edwards continues to build her confidence and skills as she prepares for her sophomore season. By Stefan Krajisnik
stefkraj@iu.edu | @skrajisnik3
B
reana Edwards woke up late to take her SAT, and it was just the start of what she said was one of the worst days of her life. IU Athletics announced Dec. 2, 2017, that volleyball Head Coach Sherry Dunbar-Kruzan’s contract would not be renewed. The person who recruited Edwards from the small town of Rainier, Oregon, would never get a chance to coach her. “It was a little scary,” Edward’s mother Tina Edwards said. It left the Edwards family wondering what was next. For 25 days the family was left with uncertainty, but on Dec. 27, 2017, IU made a hire. Steve Aird took over at the helm of the program. “There were nerves all throughout because I didn’t know who the coach was going to be,” Edwards said. “I didn’t know if he was going to want to keep me, so that was awful.” Then-IU commit Courtney Buzzerio made the decision Edwards was afraid she would have to make herself. Buzzerio decided to change her commitment and instead play at the University of Iowa. “I had felt like we developed a little bit of a relationship,” Edwards said. “So, it sucked not getting to play with her.” But Lexi Johnson, another IU commit, had the same vision as Edwards. After much discussion between themselves, both decided to continue the path to IU and were later joined by setter Abigail Westenhofer in creating the first freshman class under Aird’s tenure. “I loved the school, and I didn’t really want to go anywhere else,” Edwards said. “As soon as Steve got hired, my first conversation with him, I knew I wanted to stay here.” Nearly a year and a half later, Edwards was more than 2,000 miles away from home, shopping on Kirkwood Avenue. Tina sat inside Nick’s English Hut eating a veggie supreme pizza. Edwards' father, Mike Edwards, ate chicken fingers as the couple reflected how they got to where they were. The group was in town for IU’s spring matches
against Butler University and Miami University, and it was the first opportunity for Edwards’ friends to watch her play live. “Even though it was spring, it was nice to have the support,” Edwards said. It was her first spring season with the Hoosiers after a fall in which she flashed her potential. After a torn ACL forced IU’s top outside hitter Kendall Beerman to miss half the season, Edwards' role grew with a lack of depth at the position. Battling a stress fracture in her foot, a calf injury and having to get a cortisone shot in her shoulder just to finish out the season, Edwards continued to grind her way to a team-high 360 kills. The shy freshmen quickly had to develop into a leader, a role that Tina Edwards knew her daughter could handle.
“Even if she’s not a captain, she usually just leads by her play. She’s a work-horse.” Tina Edwards, mother of Breana Edwards
“Leadership is definitely there for her,” Tina Edwards said. “Even if she’s not a captain, she usually just leads by her play. She’s a work-horse.” Tina Edwards is no stranger to collegiate volleyball. She played at the University of Oregon in the 1980s. Having lived through what Edwards is experiencing now, Tina Edwards was by her daughter's side throughout the recruiting process. “Going in as a high schooler, I romanticized the whole thing and then found out, ‘Wow, this is real,’” Tina Edwards said. “I feel like I had been keeping her eyes open through the recruiting process about the reality of the difficulties that you can face.” Edward’s mother went to Oregon after growing up in Southern California, while her father has spent his entire life in Rainier. Living in a small town, Edwards knew she wanted to venture out and find something new. “When you come from a small town, there’s kids that are afraid to leave,” Tina Edwards said.
“Hey, I still haven’t left,” Mike Edwards laughed. As a freshman in high school, Edwards was 5 feet, 9 inches tall. But she hit a growth spurt soon after, and now stands at 6 feet, 2 inches — a much more fitting height for an outside hitter in the Big Ten. “She’s always been that late bloomer as far as physical goes,” Mike Edwards said. “She’s always had big hands and big feet.” “And she grew into it,” Tina Edwards said. Edwards remembers walking beneath the men’s nets during practices without having to duck. Despite not going to college, Mike Edwards spent his entire life playing volleyball as well at the club level. It was at a volleyball tournament in Oregon that Edwards' parents met and paved the way for a life filled with the sports for Edwards. “I went up to play and fell in love with Oregon and fell in love,” Tina Edwards said while pointing at Mike Edwards. As a third grader, Edwards was cut by her parents from a team in an older age group. “You weren’t my daughter in that game," Miked Edwards told his daughter after a spring game with IU in which she struggled. Edwards' parents have always been her biggest supporters, but throughout her playing career, they have not hesitated to point out her flaws. That is something they appreciate about Aird’s coaching style. “You know what you did good,” Mike Edwards said. “But you need to hear what you did not do right.” Soon after Aird got the head coaching job, came a hire that was close to home for the Edwards family. In January 2018, Krista Vansant was brought in as an assistant coach under Aird. Vansant was the 2013 National Player of the Year at the University of Washington, and the Edwards family was in attendance for plenty of her Pacific-12 Conference matches. “I feel like it wasn’t even that long ago watching her play,” Edwards said. “She’s just such a huge role model.” When Edwards struggled to handle the enviSEE VOLLEYBALL, PAGE 6
Student ballet showcased at Buskirk-Chumley By Madison Smalstig
msmalsti@iu.edu | @madi_smals
Ballet majors from the Jacob School of Music danced, leaped, crawled, rolled and jumped on the stage Tuesday night at the BuskirkChumley Theater. The show, titled “Ballet at the BCT: The Choreography Project,” contained 21 different dances choreographed and performed by students. The dances ranged from jazzy, contemporary pieces to traditional ballet routines. One of the pieces, “Might as Well,” featured an original song composed by former music school student George Schatzlein. The dance was choreographed by Claire Donovan and featured four dancers jumping, making repetitive movements and swaying in a circle while Schatzlein strummed his guitar. The 21 student-choreographed dances were chosen by the ballet professors out of 28 submitted pieces. Originally, there were only supposed to be 20, but the professors decided to add one more. The dances are selected based
COLIN KULPA | IDS
One dancer is lifted by another Wednesday during “Ballet at the BCT: The Choreography Project ” in the Buskirk-Chumley Theater. The dance was called, “Winter Sun,” written by Bradley Streetman.
on a specific score given by the professors, and the ones with the highest scores got to be featured in the performance. One of the dances scored just below the mark, however the professors decided the dance had to be included, said associate
professor of music in ballet Carla Körbes. “There were supposed to be 20 because we don’t have that much time in the theater, but we couldn’t cut it,” Körbes said. “I was like, ‘Uh uh, we need this in.’ So, it’s in.”
After the pieces were judged and selected for this showcase, the dancers and student choreographers had two weeks to finalize the dance and prepare for the showcase, a long SEE BALLET, PAGE 6
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City debates transportation amendments By Lilly St. Angelo lstangel@iu.edu | @lilly_st_ang
The first 32 proposed amendments to Bloomington's Transportation Plan were released more than a week ago and aim to fix many of the large problems city council members and the public had with the original plan’s proposed street widths and add specificity to its ways to improve public transit. The Bloomington City Council was first introduced to the Transportation Plan in late January by the city’s Transportation and Planning Department. The plan is an amendment to the Comprehensive Plan, the city’s latest long-term strategy for land use and development. Council members and residents were frustrated with the original plan because it did not consider many of the space restrictions of residential streets and the need for better bike and public transit infrastructure. District 1 council member Chris Sturbaum said the plan was more of a topdown approach to implementing change because the consultants did not talk to neighborhood residents while formulating the plan. He said he thinks this is wrong.
SARAH ZYGMUNTOWSKI | IDS
The first 32 proposed amendments to Bloomington’s Transportation Plan were released more than a week ago.
“It’s really important to get buy-in from the people who live along these streets,” Sturbaum said. Sturbaum authored one amendment that, if passed, would ensure existing residential streets will not be widened. In the plan, every street in Bloomington is labeled
with a new street type depending on the consultants’ vision for the street. Connector streets are 14 feet wider than residential streets. Many of the existing residential streets are labeled as connector streets in the plan, meaning they would have to be widened substantially, cutting into
yards and, in some cases, houses. The city’s Planning and Transportation Department co-authored an ordinance with Sturbaum that relabels 47 street types, 33 of which are residential streets currently labeled as these connector streets. “It just wasn’t the right
fit,” Sturbaum said. “It was as though some of these consultants hadn't been out on these streets.” Sturbaum said he thought the Transportation and Planning Department’s action to remedy residents' concerns about the proposed street widths was responsible.
Many of District 5 council member Isabel Piedmont-Smith’s amendments focused on making the plan more in-line with the city’s goal to decrease fossil fuel usage. “According to our Comprehensive Plan, we want to increase non-car ways of travel,” Piedmont-Smith said. She wrote an amendment to include covered bike parking in the plan as well as an amendment to increase funding for Bloomington Transit. PiedmontSmith said she thinks the city should use Tax Increment Finance money, which takes some tax money to fund large public projects, to expand the transit system’s capacity. District 6 council member Steve Volan’s amendments included the improvement of the bus system with the possibility of creating a separate bus lane and better seating, lighting and shelter by bus stops. Other amendments submitted by council members would change the original plan’s details for specific streets based on requests by residents. Full amendments can be read here. Citizens can continue submitting proposals to their council members until noon on April 29.
Andy Ruff campaigns for sixth term Susan Sandberg runs for fourth city council term By Joy Burton joyburt@iu.edu
Andy Ruff is a father, husband, nature enthusiast and lead guitarist for the band Dew Daddies. But many in Bloomington know the 56 year old as an at-large city council member. With five terms under his belt, Ruff is the longest sitting member on the council. Dorothy Granger, Bloomington city council vice president, said Ruff 's 20 years of experience on council have equipped him with the skills to make good, informed decisions. Granger also said Ruff is good collaborator and easy to work with. “He thinks about the future of Bloomington, not just the here and now,” Granger said. Ruff is a Bloomington native who graduated from Cornell University in 1987 with a degree in natural resources. He received his teaching certification through the IU School of Education and his master’s through the IU School of Public and Environmental Affairs. Ruff has a 29-year-old daughter and a 20-year-old son. Hank Ruff, 20, is a sophomore at IU studying political science. He is spending the
ANDY RUFF | IDS
Andy Ruff, 56, is up for reelection for one of the at large seats on the Bloomington City Council. Ruff is the longest sitting member.
semester in Washington, D.C. as a congressional intern for Maryland Rep. Elijah Cummings. He said he looks up to his father’s motivation to make change in the community. “He taught me it’s not about making the most money,” Hank Ruff said, “But working hard for the things you care about.” He said he admires his father for creating change not only through local legislation but also music. The city councilman’s band Dew Daddies
plays at fundraisers every year for the Shalom Center and Democracy for Monroe County, among others. Ruff is lead vocalist and guitarist for the band and writes all of the music, which is influenced by country musicians such as Hank Williams and Ray Price. “Being able to play is such an enriching experience,” he said. “It’s a great creative outlet.” His son has been playing guitar with the band since he was in sixth grade.
Besides working for city council, Andy Ruff is an academic adviser for the the College of the Arts and Sciences, specifically with human biology majors. Ruff worked for the Monroe County planning department for more than a decade prior to working at IU. Ruff has also served as special projects outreach coordinator for former Rep. Baron Hill’s Bloomington office and was a teacher at North Central High School in Indianapolis. Ruff said he spends his free time canoeing, kayaking and fishing. Ruff said he's a nature enthusiast and many of his decisions are made with the environment in mind. Ruff said he receives emails every day from people expressing their opinions and arguments about the environment and other issues. He said he appreciates it. “Bloomington people are very engaged and well-informed,” Ruff said. “They want to push opinions.” He said he feels very fortunate to live in a culturally rich city like Bloomington where the people are open-minded and value the community. “Being on city council is the best way to return the favor for what this community has done for me,” he said.
City reacts to possible zoning changes By Lilly St. Angelo lstangel@iu.edu | @lilly_st_ang
Peter Dorfman lives in the Near West Side neighborhood. He owns and lives in a small single-family home surrounded by other small single-family homes. But when Dorfman read the proposed updates to the Unified Development Ordinance, a document that regulates zoning and other aspects of city planning, he began to worry about his quaint neighborhood. City residents like Dorfman are worried that the proposed zoning rules — which would allow varying sizes of multiplexes in neighborhoods throughout Bloomington — will create crowding in neighborhoods, expensive rental housing and more students in residential neighborhoods. Dorfman said crowding was one of his main concerns. Space for driving and parking in his neighborhood tight already. “The thing about this neighborhood is that the street grid was made over 100 years ago,” Dorfman said. “You can’t drive two abreast.” District 1 council member Chris Sturbaum and other council members
made speeches at last week’s city council meeting about the threat the UDO changes would make to single-family housing. More than 10 residents also used the public comment period to speak against the zoning changes. “In any other town, changing single-family zoning would be front page news,” Sturbaum said in an interview. Sturbaum said he’s seen the transformation of core neighborhoods from their decaying state in the 1980s to the thriving neighborhoods they are now. He said he believes single-family zoning, which was implemented in the 80s, led to more homeownership, stabilization of core neighborhoods and a promise to buyers that they would have other single-family houses all around them. “I know deeply what that zoning meant in the first place,” Sturbaum said. Some say Sturbaum has a conflict of interest on the topic of preserving singlefamily homes because he has a construction and renovating company that specializes in older houses. Sturbaum doesn't agree. "I would get plenty of jobs turning these into duplexes,"
Sturbaum said. "There is so much work out there. This is not about work." Much of the core neighborhoods’ proposed zoning says property owners would not have to consult neighbors before building a duplex. However, triplexes and fourplexes would have would have to be proven not to be a detriment to the neighborhood before being built. Across town, allowance of multiplexes varies. Some residents, like council candidate Vauhxx Booker, said they are not completely against the zoning changes. Booker said density is necessary and re-zoning can work with some regulation. He said he wants to see the UDO require new multiplexes to be owner-occupied or owned by small, local developers. “I want to make sure no neighborhood goes through radical change,” Booker said. “The density should be spread throughout the city.” Booker, who is also a member of the Monroe County Affordable Housing Advisory Commission and a renter himself, said mixing singlefamily houses and duplexes would create more equitable, inclusive neighborhoods.
“We need to be creating housing for all levels of income,” Booker said. But Sturbaum and Dorfman, who said they also want the city to have more affordable housing, aren’t convinced allowed multiplex housing would be affordable because owners would most likely not rent out their properties for cheap. Sturbaum said the current UDO changes go against the city’s Comprehensive Plan, which says housing for working class people should be built on the edges of neighborhoods and undeveloped areas along commonly used streets. He said he also thinks the IU Health Bloomington hospital site, which the city bought for redevelopment, will be an ideal place for dense, affordable housing because people can be close to downtown. “We want them to be close and we want them to ride a bike,” Sturbaum said. “But don’t tear up single-family housing to do it.” The public comment form for the current UDO draft closes April 30. The final draft will be presented this summer to the Plan Commission and city council.
By Joey Bowling jobowl@iu.edu | @jwbowling08
At-large city council member Susan Sandberg celebrated her birthday, April 10, by going to work. She went to IU’s Paul H. O’Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs where she's a career consultant first. Then she went to Bloomington City Council. Sandberg, 67, is running for reelection for one of three at-large seats on the council. If elected for a fourth term, Sandberg said she’d continue fighting for housing affordability and arts visibility. “I feel very strongly that I have another four years,” she said. Sandberg said she’s concerned about the impoverished people of Bloomington. Bloomington’s cost of living is higher than other areas, and many people are left out. Sandberg said the development of workforce housing units also needs to be looked into. Visibility for the arts is another cause she would fight for, Sandberg said. “Bloomington’s got a lot to be proud of in respect to our arts community,” she said. Sandberg herself is a musician and plays the ukulele in a band called the UkeTones. Band member Kathy Romy, 64, said she met Sandberg because of music, and the pair has played in the UkeTones together for about five years. Romy said she admires Sandberg’s drive and commitment. Her integrity stands out, Romy said. “If she says she’s gonna
do something, she does it,” Romy said. Romy said there’s a running joke in their band that it was bankrolled by Sandberg because every member has an amp or instrument she let them borrow. “She will loan you anything,” Romy said. Romy said Sandberg is invested in the arts, and she used to volunteer with New Leaf-New Life, an organization that would visit jails and sponsor enrichment programs. Sandberg would read plays to the inmates. “She’s not a one-issue candidate, and I like that about her,” Romy said. Gabe Colman, owner of Colman Art Appraisal Services, 37, said he first learned about Sandberg through her advocacy for the arts. Later on, she encouraged him to enter Bloomington politics, and he went on to serve on the Bloomington Arts Commission for four years. Colman said Sandberg listens to people. In May 2017, she came to him for his opinion on public safety in the downtown Bloomington area. Later on, she incorporated what he said into her own arguments. “It really showed to me a strong connection between the public and her,” Colman said. Colman said he thinks of Sandberg as someone who takes part in the community, from her involvement in the UkeTones to going to local events. “I know her to be an invested citizen,” Colman said. “She’s incredibly empathetic to her community.”
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Thursday, April 25, 2019 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
Startup targets city’s parking inefficiencies By Lilly St. Angelo lstangel@iu.edu | @lilly_st_ang
Parking has been a divisive topic in Bloomington since the city council decided to rebuild the Fourth Street garage. A startup that has been getting state and national recognition wants to be part of the solution. FlexePark was developed to offer more parking in metro areas. It works with lot owners to make parking available in private lots after business hours or any time the lot is not in full use. The company was recently named a finalist in the 2019 Parking Today Awards and 2019 TechPoint Mira Awards. “It finds inefficiencies and overcomes them,” said Alex Crowley, director of the city’s Economic and Sustainable Development Department. “It’s an innovative way to help with this parking problem.” One of FlexePark’s four cofounders, Marc Ebtinger, said he got the idea for the startup four years ago when he was driving around Indianapolis one night looking for parking. He drove past three empty private lots and called Michael Dowden, another co-founder. Ebtinger told Dowden he had an idea. Two years ago, the company tried its new idea in a lot on College Avenue. Since then, it has added locations in Broad
EMILY PUTMAN | IDS
A FlexePark sign stands at the entrance of a parking lot on Kirkwood Avenue. Parking costs $6 daily, according to signs posted in the lot.
Ripple, Fountain Square and Massachusetts Avenue in Indianapolis, as well as the lot next to the CVS on Kirkwood Avenue. Dowden said FlexePark is working to open a new lot in a week or two in Bloomington. It will be the company's largest yet. "We’ve targeted places with a lot of nightlife without a lot of parking,” Dowden said. Dowden said Bloomington is a good community to
implement FlexeParking because of the fluctuating traffic caused by large events and resulting lack of parking as well as the absence of the Fourth Street garage. Users scan a QR code or go to FlexePark’s website where they enter a parking lot number and pay a flat rate based on location. The Kirkwood Avenue lot’s flat rate is $6, and it closes at 4 a.m. The College Avenue lot’s rate is $2.50, and
it closes at 4:30 a.m. The flat fee covers a vehicle’s time in the lot until it closes for the day, even if the person leaves and comes back with the vehicle. Dowden said from December to March, FlexePark has gained 2,000 users overall. Randy Lloyd, a local real estate developer and owner of the Kirkwood lot, said he likes the company because of the flexibility it offers users and lot owners. Lloyd
bought the lot to redevelop into condos, but construction won’t begin until later this year. FlexePark offers some revenue in the meantime. Each lot is different, and Lloyd said FlexePark’s technology lets each lot owner set hours of availability and pre-authorize people who can park there for free. Lloyd said FlexePark staff have been responsive to glitches in the system and
said both he and staff manage the lot and sometimes tow cars whose owners park there multiple times without paying. “It’s really quite a lowmaintenance arrangement with them,” Lloyd said. Crowley said the only downside to FlexePark is it encourages more car usage downtown. Decreasing car use is one of the city’s goals to cut down on carbon emissions. Dowden said, however, FlexePark can be a compromise between those who did not want the Fourth Street parking garage rebuilt for environmental concerns and those who did want it rebuilt for more parking. By increasing established parking’s efficiency, FlexePark expands available parking while not using new materials to build or rebuild parking structures. The company is planning to open a lot in a new Indiana community in the near future, going beyond its current locations in Indianapolis and Bloomington. Dowden said he thinks the business model would work in many small cities like Bloomington, but for now, they’re just expanding within Indiana. “I think all of us here love to see innovative technologies working to solve city problems,” Crowley said.
IU celebrates World Book and Copyright Day on Tuesday By Jenna Williams jnw9@iu.edu | @jnwilliams18
Tuesday marks World Book and Copyright Day, a day designed as a tribute to reading. IU celebrated the occasion with a pop-up library in the School of Global and International Studies building and an exhibit in the Herman B Wells Library. Miguel de Cervantes, William Shakespeare and Inca Garcilaso de la Vega — three
of the most well-known writers in the world — all died April 23, 1616. In 1995, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, chose this symbolic day to acknowledge writers, books, copyright and the cultural and social progress that accompanies them. The day celebrates literature and copyright and their importance internationally. It is tied to progress, research and knowledge, according to the UN website.
“Technology is altering the ways in which we teach, study, do research and distribute new knowledge,” said Naz Pantaloni, the head of the IU Libraries Copyright Program, in an email. The move toward online resources has changed the way students use books and research. Though many students grew up with the internet, it has significantly changed research, said Cindy Dabney, associate librarian for outreach services and ad-
junct lecturer in law. “I think students by and large do almost everything online these days,” she said. Digital technologies affect styles of teaching, research and creative activities and make copyright law a more significant issue in higher education, Pantaloni said. He voiced concerns about the costs of research. “We have reached a crisis point in scholarly publishing especially where the products of research are only available
to those people who have access to expensive databases of academic journals,” Pantaloni said. Dabney said access to databases — and even individual books — can cost thousands of dollars. Students can use government websites to do some research for free, she said. Legal research is particularly expensive, she said, but individuals should always be able to find the basic law for free. Research remains key to
acquiring knowledge whether it is online or in print, Dabney said. With its focus on knowledge, progress and copyright, World Book and Copyright Day serves as an important cautionary tale in human history, Pantaloni said. “Information and potential answers to global problems, such as climate change, should be freely and readily available to anyone with potential solutions to the crises that humanity is facing,” he said.
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TRACK AND FIELD
Inspired, broken and
Rikkoi Brathwaite keeps promise to himself by battling back from injury in pursuit of his professional dreams By D.J. Fezler djfezler@iu.edu | @DJFezler
On your mark. Inside Harry Gladstein Fieldhouse, a pair of colorless track spikes load into the starting blocks and offset the warm, yellow light that tints the air. At the starter’s signal, eight athletes are just moments away from competing in the fastest event in track and field: the 60-meter dash. Get set. Those white shoes are a personalized canvas to reference and remember the moments that got its owner to this point. They are peppered with black inscriptions to remind one runner of his upbringing, his hardships and his goals. Every athlete raises their rear to the ceiling, fingers gripping the polyurethane granules underneath them. Their eyes are now pointed toward the finish line. Bang! Like they were fired from a loaded gun, the sprinters quickly explode further from the start line. First place was decided in just 6.68 seconds. Redshirt freshman Rikkoi Brathwaite won the race, setting a new personal record at the Hoosier Open on Dec. 7. In the same moment, he became a national record-holder in his home country. “God please protect me,” Brathwaite has written on the forefoot of his right shoe. The journey that brought Brathwaite from the British Virgin Islands to southern Indiana is scripted over his feet. Running once broke him to the point of surrendering his hopes. Now, it fuels a hunger to continue striving for the dream he set when he was 13 years old. Brathwaite was born in Road Town, the capital of Tortola. There, he participated in numerous recreational sports. He played rugby, baseball, soccer and basketball, but running is a cultural pastime in the Caribbean islands. “I’ve always been running my whole life,” Brathwaite said. “It was kind of the thing to do back home.” A passion for sprinting bloomed inside the Tortola native while he attended school. Brathwaite and his
classmates were divided into four teams: red, blue, yellow and green. Those teams participated in an annual, two-day competition called “sports day” that featured track and field events. Brathwaite’s intentions as an athlete became serious when he began training under an official sprint coach, Willis “Chucky” Todman, at 8 years old. However, his youth and a decrepit track surface left him susceptible to injury. When he was 13 years old, the aspiring sprinter developed a soft spot in his knee as a result of the tattered lanes. A runner’s most valuable assets are their legs, and Brathwaite’s gave out under the tension of rigorous exercise. To prevent further injury and risking his career before it even began, the adolescent was forced to take a threeyear hiatus from the sport he obsessed over. When he was 16 years old, after his knee had solidified, he was scared to return to the sport he loved. His friends and competitors had accelerated ahead of him, running the 100-meter dash in nearly 11 seconds. The delay left Brathwaite one second behind, with the recovery process looming over him. If not for his family of supporters and their impending sacrifices, he may have quit on himself. “My parents, my coaches, my friends,” Brathwaite said. “My dad, for one, he always pushed me even when I was injured. The minute I got better, he was like, ‘All right, you need to start building up that knee strength.’” He said his father was responsible for much of his revitalized motivation. He told Brathwaite if he stopped worrying about everyone else’s progress and focused on himself, eventually he would catch up. Now, he was like a horse behind a cage: ready to gallop when the gate – the opportunity – opened in front of him. While his father and his coaches planned athletic practices, his mother and uncle catered to his improvement in the classroom. Brathwaite scoffed at himself when he remembered his poor academic habits but said he turned that around in prepa-
ration for college. Providing nutrition was his sweet grandmother, who kept food on the table after workouts. “Remember the sacrifices made by my loved ones,” said another writing on Brathwaite’s right shoe at the Hoosier Open. “Family means everything to me.” When he returned from his injury, Brathwaite competed in the CARIFTA Games, an annual track meet founded by the Caribbean Free Trade Association, in March 2016. As a high school junior, Brathwaite placed fourth in the Boy’s 100-meter dash finals with a time of
“I feel proud. I’m proud that I can go home and say I’m the recordholder of my country. I feel like it’s a good thing, but it’s also a driving factor for me.” Rikkoi Brathwaite, redshirt freshman
10.69 seconds. His fourth-place finish caught the attention of IMG Academy. The private boarding school located in Bradenton, Florida, extended an invitation to Brathwaite’s family. It presented the opportunity to stay in the U.S. to compete with their track and field program during his final year of high school. If not for the chance to attend the high school athletics powerhouse, he would have finished his secondary education at home and then gone to college. Was Brathwaite’s goal always to become a collegiate athlete? His response came without hesitation. “The goal was for me to be pro,” Brathwaite said. “When I got hurt, I made a vow to myself that I would become pro, that I would get over my injury.” The rigorous development plan at IMG extracted speed and explosion from its athletes. Brathwaite did lowweight, high-resistance lifting and plyometric exercises. Workouts were low volume, but fast-paced to strengthen his fast-twitch muscles. He
never ran in increments larger than 200 meters. IMG became a catalyst in striving for his childhood dream. In one season, he broke four institutional records in the 100- and 200-meter dash, and as a member of the 4x100 and 4x200 relay teams. With the country’s No. 16 time in the 100-meter at 10.34 seconds, he began looking at colleges in June 2017. Among the colleges that recruited him were IU, Iowa, University of Kentucky and University of Arkansas. Brathwaite said he wanted a school that had an academic program for exercise science and offered a coaching staff that was caring. He wanted to be pushed without jeopardizing his ability. For all of those reasons, Brathwaite came to IU. “I liked Rikkoi from the start,” IU associate head coach Ed Beathea said. “At IMG, the way they train looks a little different, so we were hopeful that he would be able to transition from that kind of environment to ours. There weren’t any concerns at all, only positives during the recruiting process.” Brathwaite said training at IU focuses on speed endurance. Sprinters for both the men’s and women’s team run in increments of up to 300 meters with shorter breaks between sets. In practice, he lies down and gets back up. Lies down again, and gets back up again. He said if anyone wants to become a professional athlete, they need to continue to motivate themselves. The sprinters study film of themselves with Beathea two or three times each week during practice. Brathwaite watches his start as he ejects himself from the starting blocks. He watches his knees driving his frame toward the finish line. When practice is over, his eyes are glued to personal race tapes. “I guess I get more film time when I do that because I personally go home and watch my own film,” Brathwaite said. “And I watch it 200, 300 times. I just like finding mistakes to become that type of athlete.” Back at home, Brathwaite utilized his resources. He ran
hills with a weighted vest and used the sand as a surface for resistance training. If he wanted to run in higher altitudes, he ran to the tops of those hills. Any terrain Tortola provided, he took advantage of it. “Rikkoi is a very good teammate,” Beathea said. “He tends to come into practice most days pretty happy and pretty energetic. He is a guy who wants to make everybody laugh and wants to make practice feel lighter, but when we start to train, he’s also the one that wants to get as much out of the workout as anybody.” Brathwaite had to get the most out of each workout. As a freshman last season, he was redshirted, and his scores didn’t offer points for the men’s team. Before his sophomore year, he met with Beathea and set a goal of running 6.60 in the 60-meter dash before the season started. After running 6.74 as a freshman, he said the goal was realistic. On Dec. 7, in the first meet of the indoor season, Brathwaite loaded his spikes into the starting blocks, gazing at his pale track spikes riddled in symbolic messages. At the starter’s signal, he raised his rear and peered toward the finish line. Bang! Exploding out of the blocks, he ran a blistering 6.68 to take first place. In his collegiate debut, he broke the British Virgin Islands’ national indoor record. Brathwaite accomplished his short-term goal after just one race, another stepping stone on the journey toward his long-term goal of becoming a professional athlete. “I feel proud,” Brathwaite said. “I’m proud that I can go home and say I am the record holder of my country. I feel like it’s a good thing, but it’s also a driving factor for me. It’s not a burden, I actually kind of like it because it keeps me in check.” Even in the brightest of spotlights, the sprinter from Road Town stays level-headed and critical of himself. He said his mentors and his father told him to stay the same. Don’t change. “To me, that’s the route you have to go,” he said.
SPORTS
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Thursday, April 25, 2019 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
NATIONAL SPORTS COLUMN
Why the Arizona Cardinals should trade out of No. 1 draft overall pick Dan Black is a senior in sports media.
The 2019 NFL Draft gets underway Thursday, and with it comes plenty of drama and storylines. Whose combine had them moving up the draft board and whose had them sliding down? Who will be the first quarterback taken? Could this be a recordsetting year for number of defensive players taken in the first round? How many times will a member of the Alabama Crimson Tide hear their name called? That all is part of the fun and drama that is the three day NFL draft. But, without a doubt, every year there is one storyline that everyone keeps their ears and eyes on. This year, it surrounds the Arizona Cardinals and what the team should do with the first overall draft pick. Arizona finished the 2018 season with the worst record in the league, a measly 3-13. Because of this, it fired head coach Steve Wilks after just one season, replacing him with former Texas Tech Head Coach Kliff Kingsbury, who went 35-40 in his six seasons at the helm for the Red Raiders. Kingsbury takes over a Cardinals team with holes basically everywhere, except one: quarterback. Arizona selected quarterback Josh Rosen at No. 10 overall in last year’s draft with the hope that he’d be the star under center for years to come. However, throughout the offseason,
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE
Former UCLA Bruins quarterback Josh Rosen, now a starter for the Arizona Cardinals, takes classes at University of California, Los Angeles. The 2019 NFL Draft begins Thursday.
it had been reported that Kingsbury was keen on drafting Oklahoma University star Kyler Murry, the 2018 Heisman trophy winner, a move that would leave Rosen in the dust. That may not be the best idea. Murray is fast and flashy, but he barely stands at 5 feet, 10 inches. Playing
for Oklahoma grants you many things, but most importantly it grants you the best offense in the Big 12 with some of the worst defenses in the country. Rosen may not have the star power of Murray, but the Cardinals won three games with the former University of California, Los An-
geles star under center and none without him. They finished dead last in the league in almost every major offensive and defensive category. While Kingsbury may not be a defensive guru, he did place Texas Tech in the top 25 of total FBS scoring offense in five of his six years, finishing second in 2015.
The Cardinals would be better off trading back in the draft, acquiring more picks to fill all the gaps they have on both sides of the ball and letting Josh Rosen develop as a professional quarterback. They could use another wide receiver as Larry Fitzgerald ages and creeps closer toward retirement.
The team needs a whole new offensive and defensive line. Arizona basically needs a new team, and Kyler Murray does not get them that. The Cardinals are in rebuild mode and need a leader to help them with that. That leader’s name is Josh Rosen. drblack@iu.edu
BASEBALL
Senior Matt Lloyd injured in IU’s win over Ball State By Stefan Krajisnik stefkraj@iu.edu | @skrajisnik3
Victory Field in Indianapolis was just that for the IU baseball team as it took down Ball State University on Tuesday for the second time this season, this time with a final score of 9-3. The win came one week after IU, now 28-13 overall and 9-3 in the Big Ten, defeated Ball State 14-3 at Bart Kaufman Field, but it was a much more entertaining matchup the second time around. Unlike the first battle, it was the Cardinals that jumped out to an early lead. Playing as the home team, Ball State attacked IU freshman starter Gabe Bierman with a run in the bottom half of each of the first three innings. But it was only a matter of time until the IU offense, which averages more than nine runs per game, came to life. In the fourth inning, ju-
nior infielder Scotty Bradley got the Hoosiers on the board with a two-out single. Then, it was time for IU to show off its power. As the nation’s top home run-hitting team, IU got its 72nd home run of the year when sophomore outfielder Elijah Dunham sent his fourth of the year to right field to tie the game at three apiece. IU grabbed the lead by scoring a run for a third consecutive inning when freshman Grant Richardson singled with one out to score senior utility player Matt Lloyd in the sixth inning. Richardson continues to add to his strong freshman campaign as he now has 28 runs batted in this season. Following the slow start, Bierman was able to settle in to finish with a line of five innings pitched while striking out six batters, which set a new career high. IU’s bullpen shut down Ball State in relief of Bierman, highlighted by the outing of
ALEX DERYN | IDS
Senior utility Matt Lloyd chest bumps his teammates April 16 at Bart Kaufman Field. IU beat Ball State University at Victory Field in Indianapolis.
sophomore Connor Manous. Manous struck out five batters in three scoreless innings while setting the table for Lloyd. IU added five insurance runs in the ninth inning to give Lloyd some comfort as
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he looked to close out the game. After striking out the first batter he saw and getting a 1-2 count on the next batter, Lloyd was taken out of the game with back tightness. Sophomore Braden Scott was
able to finish out the inning and give IU the win, but in the meantime, IU will hope for Lloyd to miss minimal time as he is a contender for Big Ten Player of the Year. IU will now get set to welcome Minnesota this week-
end to Bart Kaufman Field for a crucial three-game series for the Big Ten standings. The Hoosiers currently sit atop the conference with a 0.750 winning percentage while the Golden Gophers are fifth with a 0.583.
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» MUMPS
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be notified via email, she said. It is important for students to report if they think they have the mumps so people they came in contact with can be notified and the patient can be monitored, Rupp said. McKeen said his department provides guidance and coordination with different governmental agencies during outbreaks. Public safety advisories are sent out by his department. One was sent to notify students of the first case and then another one when an outbreak was declared, McKeen said. McKeen said a webpage has been set up to keep people updated on prevention tips, case count and general information about the virus. Students with confirmed cases in dormitories have been given single rooms with single bathrooms. All floormates have also been notified, McKeen said. Members in the unnamed fraternity have been notified as well. The fraternity has suspended all social activity for the rest of the semester, McKeen said. McKeen said vaccination documentation is required for students attending IU. However, state policy allows students to self-report vaccination records, which means this documentation doesn’t come from a medical provider. In outbreak situations, self-reported documentation isn’t allowed. Only a handful of students are exempt from vaccinations, and most come from religious exemptions. McKeen said the outbreaks are not stemming from those students. Pam Pontones, Indiana State Department of Health deputy health commissioner and state epidemiologist, said students aren’t recommended to get a booster shot unless extenuating circumstances occur. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, a telltale sign of mumps is puffy cheeks and a swollen jaw. The disease could also lead to loss of appetite, fever, headaches, muscle aches and fatigue. Symptoms of mumps generally appear more than two weeks after infection, and people with mumps typically recover in about two weeks, according to the CDC. Mumps most commonly affects unvaccinated people in a close-contact setting such as a college campus, according to the Mayo Clinic. There is no specific treatment for the viral disease, and it’s highly contagious for about nine days after symptoms begin to appear.
» CONSTRUCTION
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Health Morgan Hospital. A second lane opens again just south of Grand Valley
PHOTOS BY COLIN KULPA | IDS
Dancer Lilly Leach is carried by a male counterpart April 23 at “Ballet at the BCT: The Choreography Project,” a student coreographed ballet showcase at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater. The dance was titled, “Enjoy Your Rabbit” and was written by Andrew Rossi. Natalie Hedrick and Bradley Streetman perform April 23 in the “Ballet at the BCT: The Choreography Project” at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater. The piece pictured, “Out of Reach,” was written by Lily Bines.
» BALLET
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 time by professional ballet standards. “In the ballet world, people work really fast," Körbes said. "You don’t have the luxury of rehearsing things for months. So, the fact that sometimes we push them to get it together sooner is part
» VOLLEYBALL
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 ronment playing at Nebraska, she turned to Vansant on the bench. Vansant reminded Edwards of her importance to the team especially with minimal depth. Vansant’s experience at the collegiate level allowed Edwards to power through the match and gain knowledge of handling those environments moving forward. Boulevard near Martinsville High School. Northbound lanes remain open. The first phase is expected to be completed by Saturday, Garrett said.
of their education.” In addition to choreographing the dances, those with selected pieces also had to select lighting, costumes and dancers for their pieces. Then, choreographers had to coach their cast into getting the pieces just right. The choreographers also could dance in the showcase.
In fact, 19 of the choreographers also danced at least once during the showcase. Before the show began, ballet professor Michael Vernon gave a quick introduction to the show and the intimate nature of choreography to the audience. “Choreography is a very particular art because it’s
filled with steps, music, emotions, pictures and least of all are words," Vernon said. "So, what you will see is actually part of the dancer who choreographed it. There’s a slight part of them that will live on stage for each of the 21 ballets, so it’s a very special process.” For the very last piece in
the performance, “Link,” the performers executed a series of body rolls and soulful movements to the tune “Otis” by Kanye West and Jay-Z featuring Otis Redding. Six dancers got in two lines of three people for the end of the song. Moving to the music, they exited stage right.
“I definitely hit some lows throughout the season,” Edwards said. “It gave me a feeling that I never want to have again.” Her first Big Ten match came Sept. 21 against Northwestern, a match she said she doesn’t fully remember because of how nervous she was. Still, she was able to collect 11 kills en route to the team’s 3-1 victory.
Edwards' biggest enemy at times has been herself as she continues to look for more confidence while playing in the toughest conference in the nation. “I find myself having a lot of negative talk with myself after practice,” Edwards said. “That’s my biggest thing that I need to work on.” The 2019 spring games for IU served as a reminder for Edwards — who struggles to
believe in herself — that the support of those that believe in her most is never too far away. She has made her presence felt in the conference as she moves into her sophomore year. She knows teams will continue to attack her on the serve because her biggest weakness is her passing skills. But those around her have not been afraid to acknowledge what her struggles are.
Edwards will have time back home in May, but it will not be to relax. Instead, it will be to continue improving her game and make the next stride in becoming a top outside hitter in the Big Ten. “We know she has the potential at that level,” her father said. “I think she’ll have a good year. I’m looking forward to watching her.”
can be expected following these three phases, but specific plans are still in the works, Garrett said. Motorists are urged to drive with caution in the
construction zone, according to the press release. “Our goal is to keep drivers and motorists safe as well as workers safe,” Garrett said.
Starting on or after Saturday, a second traffic change will affect both northbound and southbound traffic in the area, reducing both directions to one lane, Garrett
said. INDOT aims to finish the three phases by May 12 as it continues to convert State Road 37 into an interstate. Additional pattern changes
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FEATURE Editors Emily Isaacman, Lexi Haskell and Caroline Anders news@idsnews.com
Joe Banchik, who is on the autism spectrum, uses cooking to move toward independence. By Emily Isaacman eisaacma@iu.edu | @emilyisaacman
J
oe Banchik wasn’t supposed to have adventurous taste. On a recent afternoon, he swayed side to side, stooped over a white cutting board and chopping basil. Although Banchik has cooked ostrich, he had never made minestrone. “I like to open myself up,” he said. The people he is cooking for aren’t nearly as daring. Banchik knows his creations will stretch their palates. Banchik is 25 and on the autism spectrum. He moved from Long Island, New York, eight years ago to join College Internship Program Bloomington, a center on North College Avenue to help young adults with autism, Asperger’s, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and other learning differences achieve independence. He tests recipes in the center’s kitchen, writes reviews and shares his final product with peers and staff. He brings leftovers to the front office of his apartment building. “They’re huge fans of my cooking,” Banchik said. People on the autism spectrum tend to be picky eaters, but Banchik’s love for foods such as blowfish and guinea pig don’t match the stereotypes attached to him at birth. He has loved gourmet food since he was a child and read his mother’s cookbooks for fun.
“I like to open myself up.” Joe Banchik, chef and student in the College Internship Program
To try to increase the likelihood that his peers will try — and maybe even enjoy — his food, Banchik makes adjustments when he cooks. For the minestrone, he chose a mild Italian sausage because he wasn’t sure how much spice his audience could handle. Once, he even persuaded some of his friends to eat kale. Banchik doesn’t care about his peers liking his food as much as he wants to help them step out of their comfort zones, like he has. He wants them all to defy expectations. * * * Banchik likes to share that his high school teachers declared him unteachable and expected him to drop out at 16. Most students find their way to CIP Bloomington after a setback, program director Jake Steinmetz said. Some come right from high school, but many have tried attending college or working on their own before realizing they need more assistance. Banchik graduated high school and started at CIP Bloomington when he was 17. CIP staff holds students accountable for schoolwork and jobs. Life skills coaches teach tasks like cook-
PHOTO BY TY VINSON | IDS
Joe Banchik, 25, is on the autism spectrum. Banchik tests recipes such as a recipe for paleo-friendly granola as seen in the photo for required internship experience at the College Internship Program in Bloomington.
ing, cleaning and budgeting. A therapist helps with day-to-day anxiety. Initial interviews and consistent contact with family members help staff define each student’s goals, which they break into manageable steps and assess at weekly staff meetings. “We’re a safety net,” Steinmetz said of the program. The Bloomington program is one of five such centers in the United States, and it draws students from across the country. The program has a tiered system of support to gradually lead students toward self-sufficiency. At first a student might spend 20 hours a week working with staff, but as they progress, that could decrease to as few as five hours, Steinmetz said. People in the program live alongside college students in Smallwood on College Apartments or, if they’re ready for more responsibility and less supervision, a “Graduate Living Community” on their own. The students are required to attend a weekly get-together in the CIP building’s spacious annex. This typically involves video games. They must also participate in at least two social events on weekends. The average stay is two to three years, Steinmetz said. Some families prefer their kids stay until they finish their degree, which can take much longer than a traditional four-year path. Banchik has three semesters left at IU studying cinema and media psychology. He watches a lot of movies — his favorite is the “Die Hard” series — and he is considering using his degree to become a food or travel critic. Teresa Colby has worked with Banchik since he arrived in Bloomington. She started as his tutor before becoming his job coach. Banchik had a lot to learn. He had to communicate with roommates at Smallwood on College Apartments. He had to navigate IU’s academic bureaucracy. He had to request accommodations and clarifications from professors. “That transition to independent living on your own after high school is always hard,” Colby said. To advocate for his needs, Banchik needed to learn to understand others’ perspectives. Research has shown people on the autism spectrum struggle with
cognitive empathy, meaning they have trouble imagining others’ thoughts and feelings. “That takes a certain finesse,” Colby said. “It will always be a struggle for Joe.” He loves rare steak and can’t fathom how anyone could like it otherwise. One of his biggest achievements was using his specialty brown sugar wasabi marinade to convince his dad to eat rare to medium-rare steak. Steaks and chops are Banchik’s specialities. Banchik’s sense of adventure is not confined to his taste buds. He has taken advantage of almost every trip offered by the national CIP organization, traveling to Ecuador, Tokyo, Belize and more. He is often the only student from the Bloomington center to go on these trips. CIP students follow either an academic or career track. Once their academic and work schedules are set, staff members build individualized programs for career coaching, academic advising, therapy, fitness and life skills. Banchik currently receives about 10 hours of support each week, career coordinator Charles Culp said. Some students need daily wake-up calls and medicine checks. Banchik is past all that. “He’s been in our program long enough that he knows what we expect of him,” Culp said. Banchik has come a long way since he came to Bloomington. Now, his passion for cooking may be the strongest force propelling him toward an independent life. * * * Last summer, Banchik started posting recipe reviews on America’s Test Kitchen, a media company with TV shows, magazines, online recipes and books geared toward home cooks. Fifteen reviews later, the technical language Banchik uses to describe food has improved, Culp said. So have his academic assignments. He writes faster and more concisely now, Culp said. The staff doesn’t have to hover over him as he completes his work. Banchik says having autism is part of what motivated him to become a serious cook. He mentions he has autism in his online
reviews to show his palate is not one-dimensional. For Banchik, the kitchen is a place to express himself. “You’re allowed to be who you are,” he said. His weekly test sessions have boosted his confidence in and out of the kitchen, Culp said. He always adds a personal flair to professional recipes. Sometimes that means adjusting ingredients to make the recipe fresher. Other times, Banchik makes edits simply to be creative.
“Some of our students are really afraid to step outside of that comfort zone. Failure is scary.” Charles Culp, career coordinator
The minestrone called for dried cannellini beans, but Banchik could only find them in cans. Canned ingredients don’t cut it for him, so he swapped the beans for pasta. “He’s learning to trust himself,” Culp said. In the kitchen, Banchik makes decisions for himself, on his own terms. He saves just enough of the final product to review whether the dish turned out as planned. The rest he shares. Sometimes things work, and sometimes they don’t. Culp said not all CIP students are willing to take this kind of risk. “Some of our students are really afraid to step outside of that comfort zone,” Culp said. “Failure is scary.” Writing about his passion is the key, Culp says. Banchik’s love for cooking, and his ability to engage it, is helping him grow. * * * In Brian Franklin’s nearly two years as a spokesperson for America’s Test Kitchen, many fans have emailed him asking for cookbooks. When he received a note from Culp earlier this semester describing Banchik’s story, Franklin sent a company-wide email describing Joe, a “superfan,” and asked all the chefs to meet in the kitchen to sign a 1,030page cookbook.
He’s never done something like this. “It made everyone’s day,” Franklin said about Banchik’s story. The chefs wrote notes like “Joe — cook smart,” “Cheers! Happy cooking,” and “Cook on!” At the program’s convocation May 2, CIP will present Banchik with this cookbook, a note from the chefs and a portfolio of recipes, photographs and reviews he and Culp assembled. “He’s compiled his skillset and then expanded on it,” Culp said. “Not every student does that.” Next year at this time, Banchik plans to receive another honor: his diploma. He is currently enrolled in three classes and has three semesters left, including a summer term. Banchik tracks his degree progress himself, which not all CIP students do. Colby, who has worked with Banchik since he started the program, wants him to go back to New York to show his high school teachers he proved them wrong. He was even inducted into the Phi Theta Kappa honors society. “You will slap them with your diploma,” Colby said to him, laughing. “Yep,” Banchik replied. “I should bring my Phi Theta Kappa certificate.” Staff often wander in to check on Banchik while he’s cooking, but he rarely needs help. Banchik says the reviews were the hardest part of the test sessions, but he has developed a system. He rates the prep work, then the final product and notes any variations he made or skills he used. Sometimes he points out technical mistakes in the recipe. In his review of the minestrone, Banchik ranked the prepwork a seven out of 10. “While I loved getting to show off my knife skills, the other steps required constant attention and adjustments to make sure it came out right,” he wrote. The final product was a hit among his peers. “It was so delicious that they smelled it while it was cooking, like when you visit relatives and smell something good coming from their kitchen,” he wrote. They kept asking him when it would be ready. He gave the final product a perfect 10.
Indiana Daily Student
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ARTS
Thursday, April 25, 2019 idsnews.com
Editors Annie Aguiar and Joe Schroeder arts@idsnews.com
IU Auditorium announces 2019-20 season By Grace Ybarra gnybarra@iu.edu | @gnybarra
The IU Auditorium unveiled its 2019-2020 season last week to mark the university’s bicentennial celebration. The 14-show season kicks off in October and finishes off in April. “We at IU Auditorium are thrilled to present the 2019-20 season as part of Indiana University’s bicentennial celebration,” said IU Auditorium executive director Doug Booher in a press release. “This milestone season is packed with something for everybody including four Bloomington Broadway premieres.” Béla Fleck, Zakir Hussain & Edgar Meyer The ensemble of three virtuosos will perform classical, bluegrass and world music at 8 p.m. Oct. 5. Fleck is widely considered the world’s premier banjo player with 14 Grammy Award wins. Percussionist Hussain won the Grammy Award for Best Contemporary World Music Album. IU alumnus and bassist Meyer has worked with YoYo Ma
TY VINSON | IDS
The IU Auditorium’s 2019-20 season was unveiled last week. The 14-show season begins in October ends next April.
perform eight shows from Oct. 29 to Nov. 3 at the IU Auditorium. The show won the Tony Award for Best Musical in 2011. The comedy follows two Mormon missionaries sent from Salt Lake City to preach in a Ugandan village.
Trevor Noah Emmy Award-winning Trevor Noah is best known as the host of “The Daily Show” on Comedy Central. He will return to Bloomington to kick off Homecoming weekend with two stand-up comedy performances at 7:30 p.m. and 10 p.m. Oct. 11. “Dennis James Hosts Halloween” Cinema organist and IU alumnus Dennis James will return for this annual show at 7 p.m. Oct. 24. He will bring the classic silent film “The Lost World” to life on the IU Auditorium’s 4,543 pipe organ.
“STOMP” The stage show will return to Bloomington at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 14 at the IU Auditorium. The group uses the body and ordinary objects to create a physical theater performance and musical experience through rhythms, acrobatics and pantomime. The energizing beats in the show are created with objects such as matchboxes, brooms and garbage cans.
“The Book of Mormon” The nine-time Tony Award-winning musical will
“Chimes of Christmas” The Jacobs School of Music’s Singing Hoosiers will
Horoscope
perform in this festive event at 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Dec. 7 at the IU Auditorium. Directed by Assistant Professor of Music Chris Albanese, the annual concert features contemporary songs, favorite carols and classic choral arrangements. Straight No Chaser The a cappella group was formed at IU in 1996 and will return back to Bloomington for a holiday performance at 8 p.m. Dec. 13 at the IU Auditorium. The show is filled with pop hits, holiday classics and humor. Minnesota Orchestra The Grammy Award-winning orchestra will perform at 8 p.m. Jan. 22 at the IU Auditorium. The group is led by Osmo Vänskä and ranks among the top symphonic ensembles in America. They perform about
To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 7 — Anticipate an educational change. The completion of a project opens time for something more fun. Reinforce foundational structures. Learn the rules before attempting to break them.
Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Today is a 9 — Coordinate efforts with your partner. Keep your side of the bargain. Go above and beyond. Take care of practical priorities and then celebrate the results together.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is an 8 — Experience is the best teacher. Listen to elders and young people. Investigate your passion for deeper understanding. Learn about love. Creativity flowers with disciplined practice.
Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Today is an 8 — Financial discipline pays off. Collaborate for a shared venture. Contribute what you can. Review budgets and plans together. Put your money where your heart is.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 9 — Practice with mental as well as physical discipline. Build and strengthen foundational basics before advancing to more difficult moves. Your work is in demand.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is a 7 — Take care of domestic chores and responsibilities. Take out the trash, and do the dishes. Clean bathrooms and floors. Plan the upgrades you'd love.
BLISS
HARRY BLISS
175 programs yearly. “Les Misérables” The musical will return to the IU Auditorium for eight shows from Feb. 4 through Feb. 9 after its first visit in 1989. The show is based on Victor Hugo’s 1862 novel and follows the life of an ex-convict in the aftermath of the French Revolution in 19th century France. The musical has won eight Tony Awards, including Best Musical in 1987. Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Company The company, based out of Chelsea, New York, will perform at 8 p.m. Feb. 22 at the IU Auditorium. The group has performed in over 200 cities in 40 countries. It has been acknowledged for its collaborative method of creation and regarded as an innovative force in the world of dancetheater.
“The Color Purple” The musical will makes its Bloomington debut at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 24 and 25. The show won the 2016 Tony Award for Best Musical Revival and is based on Alice Walker’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel. The musical spans 35 years in the life of Celie, a teenage AfricanAmerican girl living in Georgia who was given to an abusive husband by her abusive father.
“Waitress” The Broadway hit musical will make its Bloomington debut at 7:30 p.m. March 31 and April 1 at the IU Auditorium. The Tony Award-nominated musical is based on the 2007 film and features music from seven-time Grammy nominee Sara Bareilles. The show follows Jenna, a waitress and expert piemaker, who dreams of getting out of her small town and marriage.
Ladysmith Black Mambazo The five-time Grammy Award-winning singing group will perform at 7 p.m. March 10 at the IU Auditorium. The group assembled in the 1960s in South Africa and was influenced by traditional South African music. They have collaborated with some of music’s biggest artists over the years, such as Dolly Parton and Stevie Wonder.
“Beautiful: The Carole King Musical” The Tony and Grammy Award-winning musical will play four shows from April 17 to April 19 at the IU Auditorium. The show tells the story of the early life and career of American singer Carole King. The musical uses King’s songs as well as other contemporary songs by Barry Mann, Cynthia Weil and Phil Spector.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is a 7 — The dynamics of a conversation change. Context is decisive. Keep your word, and stay respectful. Communicate and exchange resources with friends and allies.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is a 9 — Rely on your own talents and efforts. Take charge, and do what it takes. Use best quality materials. Self-discipline serves you well. You're growing stronger.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is an 8 — Your team's discipline is admirable. Together, you're formidable. Keep your promises rigorously. Integrity provides optimal workability. Play your part with all your heart.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is an 8 — Stick to tested and reliable suppliers, methods and partners. Profit through providing excellent service. Keep your financial agreements. Deliver on time and on budget.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is a 5 — You're especially sensitive. Take quiet time for yourself. Recharge and rest. Consider where you've been and where you're going. Review plans to increase ease and comfort.
Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is an 8 — Keep practicing. Discipline with your work builds the infrastructure for a successful career. Plan and do the homework. Take new territory. A revelation illuminates new possibilities. © 2019 By Nancy Black Distributed by Tribune Media Services, INC. All Rights Reserved
Crossword
L.A. Times Daily Crossword
Publish your comic on this page. The IDS is accepting applications for student comic strips for the summer & fall 2019 semesters. Email five samples and a brief description of your idea to adviser@indiana.edu by May 1. Submissions will be reviewed and selections will be made by the editor-in-chief. Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
su do ku
ACROSS
Difficulty Rating: How to play: Fill in the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 grid contains the digits 1 through 9, without repeating a number in any one row, column or 3x3 grid.
Answer to previous puzzle
© Puzzles by Pappocom
1 6 10 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 23 25 26 27 28 30 31 32 33 34 37 39 40 41
Color in a darkroom “May I say something?” Flat for an artist Lake named for a tribe Folk hero Crockett Song for one Olympics infrastructure project One not found on a violin Communist icon Former U.N. leader Annan “Dude, nice triatomic molecule!” “Dude, nice metered text!” Free bakery treat? Letters after T? Get a lode of this Muddy home Scabbers, in the Potterverse Nonprofit URL ending Like Producer of cones and needles “Dude, nice root vegetable!” Oompa-Loompa creator Tear Conan’s network Novelist Umberto
42 Cyclops organ 43 Animal that sounds like a musical note 44 Sports bar fixtures 47 Open, as oysters 49 “Dude, nice riding crop!” 51 “Dude, nice buzzer collection!” 54 Aid in battling blazes 55 Yoda trainee 56 Many millennia 57 “Sesame Street” woman for 44 years 58 Broiling spot 59 Crumb carriers 60 Yoga pose similar to a push-up 61 “Sesame Street” Muppet 62 Mexican coin 63 Bad spells
DOWN 1 2 3 4
Salt dispenser Where Andorra is In or out, at times Jefferson Memorial column type 5 Gasteyer of “Lady Dynamite” 6 Like some subscriptionbased sites
7 Word from Arabic for “sacred, inviolable place” 8 Party times, often 9 Bit of folklore 10 2018 Pulitzer Prize for Music winner Kendrick 11 “Messiah,” e.g. 12 Relief pitcher, in baseball lingo 13 IRS table column 21 Fake 22 Method 24 Opening on a sweater? 28 __-mo replay 29 Parlor pictures 31 Hermes, in the Potterverse 32 Handy program 33 NBA stats 34 Place to pull over 35 Rare NFL result 36 Genesis casualty 37 Office position 38 Accomplish 42 __ out a living 43 Playground retort 44 Insect midsection 45 Rednessremoving brand 46 Appeals (to) 48 Director Eastwood 49 They’re beside the point 50 Pod member 52 Bring in 53 Study, with “up” 57 Indy 500 stat
Look for the crossword daily in the comics section of the Indiana Daily Student. Find the solution for the daily crossword here. Answer to previous puzzle
Connect with members of many diverse faiths at idsnews.com/religious Paid Advertising
Methodist
Non-Denominational
First United Methodist Church - Jubilee
Sherwood Oaks Christian Church
219 E. Fourth St. 812-332-6396
2700 E. Rogers Rd. 812-334-0206
fumcb.org Facebook: jubileebloomington.org Instagram: jubileebloomington Email: jubilee@fumcb.org
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Contemporary: 9:30 a.m. & 11 a.m.
Wednesday: 7:30 p.m. @ Bloomington Sandwhich Company (118 E. Kirkwood Ave.)
Being in Bloomington, we love our college students, and think they are a great addition to the Sherwood Oaks Family. Wether 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. Jeremy Earle, College Minister
Mark Fenstermacher, Lead Pastor Markus Dickinson, Campus Director
Connexion / Evangelical Community Church
Inter-Denominational
eccbloomington.org • cxiu.org Facebook: Connexion ECC Twitter: @connexionecc
111 S. Kimble Dr. 812-269-8975
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
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. Bob Whitaker, Senior Pastor Dan Waugh, Pastor of Adult Ministries
Nazarene
The Salvation Army
First Church of the Nazarene 700 W. Howe St. (across from the Building Trades Park) 812-332-2461 • www.b1naz.org bfcn@sbcglobal.net Sunday Worship: 10:30 a.m. Sunday Small Groups : 9:30 a.m., 4 p.m. & 6 p.m.
111 N. Rogers St. 812-336-4310 • bloomingtonsa.org
Sunday: Sunday School, 10 a.m. Worship Service, 11:00 a.m. Bible Study, 3 p.m. The Salvation Army, an international movement, is an evangelical part of the Universal Christian Church. Its message is based on the Bible. Its ministry is motivated by the love of God. Its mission is to preach the gospel of Jesus Christ and meet human needs in His name without discrimination.
Mennonite Mennonite Fellowship of Bloomington 2420 E. Third St. 812-646-2441 bloomingtonmenno.org • Facebook
Gordon Hoag, Captain Cindy Hoag, Captain
City Church For All Nations 1200 N. Russell Rd. 812-336-5958
citychurchbloomington.org Instagram • Twitter • Facebook @citychurchbtown
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
Saturday: 5:30 p.m. Sunday: 9:30 a.m., 11 a.m. & 12:30 p.m. We are a movement of all races and backgrounds, coming together to love people, build family, and lead to destiny. Join us at one of our weekend worship experiences, and visit our young adults ministry, 1Life at 7 p.m. on Mondays. David Norris, Pastor Sumer Norris, Pastor
Episcopal (Anglican) Canterbury House Episcopal (Anglican) Campus Ministry at IU 719 E. Seventh St. 812-334-7971 • 812-361-7954
Open Hearts, Open Minds, Open Doors
St. Mark’s United Methodist Church 100 N. State Rd. 46 Bypass 812-332-5788
Sacramental Schedule: Weekly services Sundays: Holy Eucharist with hymns, followed by
smumc.church
dinner 4 p.m. at Canterbury House
2nd & 4th Wednesdays: 7 p.m. Taizé Chants & Prayers at Canterbury House
Sunday Morning Schedule 9:00: Breakfast 9:15: Adult Sunday School Classes 10:30: Sanctuary Worship 10:30: Children & Youth Sunday School Classes
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.
An inclusive community bringing Christ-like love, healing and hope to all.
Mother Linda C. Johnson+, University Chaplain Ricardo Bello Gomez, Communications Director Josefina Carcamo, Latino/a and Community Outreach Intern Rex Hinkle, Luiz Lopes, Nathan Stang, Music Ministers
7821 W. State Road 46 812-876-6072 • lifewaybaptistchurch.org Facebook • LifewayEllettsville
Jimmy Moore, Pastor Mary Beth Morgan, Pastor
Independent Baptist Lifeway Baptist Church
College & Career Sunday Meeting: 9 a.m. Sunday
Sunday Worship: 10 a.m. & 6 p.m. Wednesday Night Bible Study: 7 p.m.
PC (USA) United Presbyterian Church 1701 E. Second St. 812-332-1850 • upcbloomington.org
Email: upcbloomington@gmail.com Sunday: Pastor's Class: 8:45 a.m. Worship: 10 a.m. Fellowship: 11 a.m.
Tuesday: Bible Study: 12:15 p.m. Book Study/Discussion: 6 p.m. We are a diverse, inclusive people of God. Social justice, a welcoming spirit and focusing on Christ are integral to our congregation. We are students and non-students, native and non-native English speakers, young and old, who come together to worship in the name of Christ and to enjoy fellowship. John Napoli, Pastor Melanie Mathis-McBride, Education Director
Presbyterian (USA)
First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)
First Presbyterian Church
205 E. Kirkwood Ave. 812-332-4459 • fccbloomington.org
Sunday: 10 a.m. 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
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. 6. We will meet every other Thursday during the school year.
Callout Meeting: Aug. 30, IMU Redbud Room 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.
221 E. Sixth St. (Sixth and Lincoln) 812-332-1514 • fpcbloomington.org
Worship Times: Sunday: 9 a.m., 11 a.m.
Christian Ed: Sunday: 9:50 - 10:45 a.m.
Summer Worship Times: Sunday: 10 a.m. We are a community of seekers and disciples in Christ committed to hospitality and outreach for all God’s children. Come join us for meaningful worship, thoughtful spiritual study and stimulating fellowship. Ukirk at IU is a Presbyterian affiliated group open to all students. Andrew Kort, Pastor Kim Adams, Associate Pastor Grant Farmer, Music Director Christopher Young, Organist
Orthodox Christian All Saints Orthodox Christian Church 6004 S. Fairfax Rd. 812-824-3600
www.allsaintsbloomington.org Email:frpeterjon@allsaintsbloomington.org Wednesday: Vespers 6 p.m. Saturday: Great Vespers 5 p.m. Sunday: Matins 9 a.m. Divine Liturgy 10 a.m. Come experience the sacred rhythm and rituals of the timeless Christian faith, a faith with a future, yet ancient and tested. Living the traditional worship of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit; as a sacred community of people striving to manifest the kingdom, on earth as it is in heaven. We, together with the saints throughout history, learn to live the love and compassion of Christ. Come and see, and put your roots down deep. Rev. Fr. Peter Jon Gillquist, Pastor Howard & Rhonda Webb, College Coordinators Church Van Pickup on Sundays - Call 314-681-8893
Cooperative Baptist
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. Fr. John Meany, O.P., Pastor Fr. Patrick Hyde, O.P. Associate Pastor & Campus Minister Fr. Joseph Minuth, O.P., Associate Pastor
University Baptist Church 3740 E. Third St. 812-339-1404
Unitarian Universalist
ubcbloomington.org facebook.com/ubcbloomington
Unitarian Universalist Church of Bloomington
United Methodist
indiana.edu/~canterby canterby@indiana.edu • facebook.com/ecmatiu
Tuesdays: 6 p.m. Bible Study at Canterbury House
Sunday: 9 a.m. & 11 a.m. Chris Jones, Lead Pastor
Christian (Disciples of Christ)
Facebook: SABloomington Twitter: @SABtown
Thursday: 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
111 S. Kimble Dr. 812-269-8975 redeemerbloomington.org facebook.com/RedeemerBtown @RedeemerBtown on Twitter & Instagram
503 S. High St. 812-332-0502
Redeemer Community Church redeemerbloomington.org facebook.com/RedeemerBtown @RedeemerBtown on Twitter & Instagram
Redeemer is a gospelcentered 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.
Traditional: 8 a.m.
Sunday: The Open Door, 11:15 a.m. @ The Buskirk-Chumley Theater (114 E. Kirkwood Ave.)
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 for opportunities through small groups, hangouts, mission trips, events, service projects, and more. Many attend the contemporary Open Door service.
Redeemer Community Church
Sunday: 9:30 a.m. (Bible study) 10:45 a.m. (worship) If you are exploring faith, looking for a church home, or returning after time away, Welcome! We aim to be a safe place to "sort it out" for those who are questioning, and a place to pray, grow, and serve for followers of Jesus. All are welcome - yes, LBGTQ too. Rev. Annette Hill Briggs, Pastor Rob Drummond, Music Minister
Lutheran (LCMS) University Lutheran Church & Student Center 607 E. Seventh St. (Corner of 7th & Fess) 812-336-5387 • indianalutheran.com
facebook.com/ULutheranIU @ULutheranIU on twitter 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 Study/Fellowship, 7 p.m. University Lutheran Church (U.Lu) is the home of LCMS U at Indiana, the campus ministry of the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod. Students, on-campus location, and our Student Center create a hub for daily, genuine Christ-centered community that receives God's gifts of life, salvation, and the forgiveness of sins through Jesus Christ. Rev. Richard Woelmer, Campus Pastor
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. Robert Tibbs, Institute Director
Indiana Daily Student
10
OPINION
Thursday, April 25, 2019 idsnews.com
Editors Evan Carnes and Ally Melnik opinion@idsnews.com
FULL OF FULFORD
IAN’S INSIGHT
How to rent smart on and off campus
Nothing but empty condolences from the U.S. for Sri Lanka
Gillian Fulford is a senior in journalism, political science and sustainability.
Renting in college towns sucks sometimes. From skeezy landlords to leaky ceilings and roommate drama, I’ve lived through it all. In order to persevere, here are some of my tips for making renting as painless as possible. First, look up reviews for rental companies around town. A lot of realtors can put on a good face for the people who are coming to look at their properties, but you should never blindly trust someone selling you something. Make sure the reviews you’re reading are genuine. Take pictures of everything when you move in and when you move out. If you want your security deposit back, make sure you document the state the property was in before your move-in inspection and the state you left it in. Brush up on landlordtenant law in your state. Tenant rights vary from state to state — in Indiana, for example, you can sue your landlord for up to $6,000 — but there are some universal rights. Hold your landlord to his or her end of the bargain, and make sure you’re living in a healthy environment. Student Legal Services can help you understand the law — check out their tips for renting before you sign your lease. Consider renting somewhere with complimentary 24/7 maintenance. You may not think it’s necessary, but on the off chance your pipes burst in the middle of the night, you’ll wish you had one less headache to deal with and that the bill was already taken care of. A longer commute means cheaper rent in some circumstances. If you’re OK with biking or learning how the city buses work, you can find some cheap places to rent. Generally speaking, the further off campus you get, the cheaper it is to find housing, unless you live in one of Bloomington’s luxury apartments. Luxury apartments are their own beasts. The changes in cost of living due to luxury apartments damage the neighborhood around them when they don’t bring more than just living spaces. Renting small means your money goes to local companies rather than multi-city conglomerates that hurt the communities they land in. Living with roommates comes with its own drama. To help, make a roommate agreement and follow it. Bed times, guests and cleanliness may seem like non-issues when you’re living with other adults, but it’s better to have written documentation to come back to if problems arise. Make sure all roommates agree to the terms, and refer to it when you need to enforce rules. Save yourself stress by setting a budget and following it. Prioritize rent, groceries, tuition and other expenses, then put aside fun money. Tracking every expense may seem tedious, but keeping your finances in order makes life less stressful in the long run. Don’t be that guy who always racks up late fees for missing rent payments. Living on your own in college can be stressful, especially with all the rental horror stories out there. As long as you know what you want in an apartment, what you can afford and what your rights are, you’ll be able to make it through. Don’t settle, though — you wouldn’t want to be living in a mold-infested dorm or anything. gfulford@iu.edu
Ian Nowlin is a freshman in international studies.
Hopefully you have heard by now that eight explosions rocked the nation of Sri Lanka Easter Sunday and took the lives of 321 people and injured over 500 more. Six suicide bombers carried out a series of coordinated attacks on churches and hotels and was the worst violence the island nation has experienced since the end of its civil war 10 years ago. Data retrieved from Google Trends and reported by Al-Jazeera shows that Google searches for the Notre Dame Cathedral fire outnumbered the Sri Lanka attacks seven-to-one. Despite the hundreds of deaths, the countless more lives tragically altered forever and the destruction of three churches, Sri Lanka has received significantly less attention by the public than the Notre Dame fire. When the 850-year-old Notre Dame Cathedral caught fire last week, thousands on social media posted their condolences and their solidarity with the French. However, no such massive empathetic movement has been directed toward the Sri Lankans. Furthermore, the lack of outcry and empathy from Americans is more perplexing, because four Americans perished in these attacks as well as the citizens of 11 other countries. Does this mean that even though Americans died it happened in a far away country so we stop caring? Other than the Eiffel Tower turning its lights off to honor the victims and a speech by Pope Francis, there has been
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE
Fathers from a local church carry the coffins for the religious mass at St. Sebastian Church on April 23 in Negambo, Sri Lanka. At least 320 people were killed with hundreds more injured after coordinated attacks on churches and hotels on Easter.
very little of a unified outcry against these attacks in Sri Lanka. In fact, in the wake of the attacks, many conservatives such as Newt Gingrich and Fox News personality Brit Hume condemned former President Barack Obama’s and Hillary Clinton’s tweets of condolences because they used the phrase “Easter worshippers” instead of Christians to refer to the victims of the attacks. Moreover, President Trump, after the attacks, tweeted about the Mueller report and “No Collusion” six times compared to the two tweets related to the Sri Lanka attacks.
To make the optics worse Trump’s first tweet mistakenly gave the wrong death toll, stating that millions died in the attacks, and in his second tweet he mistook Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena for Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe. Trump later corrected both tweets, but the lack of sincerity within these condolence messages clearly demonstrates that Trump’s condolence is a practice of custom that is not actually backed by actions or sincerity. Instead of dividing one another on something that should be a nonissue such as the difference between Easter
Worshipper and Christian, we should be maintaining unity to show our solidarity with the people of Sri Lanka. If this atrocity occured closer to home in the Western Hemisphere there would be a meaningful, unified movement to memorialize this tragedy. Instead these attacks are recognized almost in passing by the public and some members of the media as if attacks of this scale are the norm in that region. Furthermore, according to the New York Times, ISIS has recently claimed responsibility for the attacks, so instead of writing a couple of empty condolence tweets, Trump should devote re-
sources to take serious action on this threat to global security. These attacks are more alarming than a fire in the Notre Dame Cathedral and should be treated as such. The more or less apathy towards casualties of terror attacks in faraway places like Sri Lanka has to be stopped because an American life is not worth more than another. This kind of violence for less developed countries is not the norm, and seeking justice for the victims of these atrocities is crucial to preventing further terrorist attacks around the world. ianowlin@iu.edu
NARROWING IN WITH NISHANT
E-scooters are something we have to live with Nishant Mohile is a junior in economics and international studies.
There are few things more unexpectedly painful than having someone riding an e-scooter clip you in the stomach as they go zooming past with a barely audible “sorry” hanging in the air. These e-scooters, though their riders often less so, are essential in the fight against climate change, and it is crucial for lawmakers to understand that. Bloomington has been intensely debating the role of and regulations on escooters ever since they arrived in September 2018. The issue of regulating the e-scooters at its core is that they exploded in popularity before anyone could write effective regulations for them. In 2018, Lime and Bird, two major e-scooter companies, crossed the 10 million ride mark each and dubbed 2018 the ‘year of the scooter.’ It was also the year when e-scooter companies were essentially kicked out of cities such as Beverly Hills and Boston. Riders love them, regulators hate them.
In all this talk, however, the mission in which these e-scooters were launched is often missed: to make cities greener and more livable. One might wonder how escooters littering the sidewalk make the city more livable, and the answer lies in the last mile problem. The last mile refers to the section of a journey that usually needs to be made on foot after taking some sort of transit. For example, if you want to go to dinner on Fourth Street, you could take a bus to Dunn’s Woods and walk, or you could drive and park somewhere closer. The last mile is much shorter if you drive as opposed to if you take the bus. Here lies the problem. Cars are terrible for the environment, but they tend to be convenient. According to a Duke University study, if a 70-passenger bus is taken by 11 or more people, the amount of emissions generated per person are less than those created by someone driving themselves. But individuals are likely to have to walk a little bit after getting off the
bus. E-scooters have the potential to change this dynamic. Their promise lies in the fact that individuals can take these to catch a bus as well as after getting off one. The Natural Resources Defense Council, an environmental advocacy group, at least believes in this promise as it requests city governments to remember the potential of e-scooters in combating climate change. It is not a guarantee that e-scooters will help complement public transit in Bloomington. In Portland, Oregon, they boosted the use of other public transit whereas in Austin, Texas, they have put the squeeze on a bike-based rental company. This is why it is so important that the City Council not dampen e-scooters’ futures. However, this is not to say that no regulation is needed. At a recent City Council meeting, Kaleb Crain, a Bloomington resident who requires an electric wheelchair, shared his frustrations with scooters as they block his path, some-
times dangerously so. IU policy dictates that “Scooters may never be parked in pedestrian pathways, vehicle parking spaces, ADA ramps, stairwells, inside buildings, or locked to signs, light poles, fences, benches, handrails or other fixtures.” Many a scooter has been impounded for violating this policy. Bloomington’s policy is that scooters should be parked in a bike rack and not block the rightof-way for anyone. It often goes unenforced, and the city should crowdsource it to be more effective. The city should make it so that if you record yourself putting a scooter back in the right spot, you get a reward. Even a minor reward could be incentive enough.
CLAIRE LIVINGSTON | IDS
E-scooters are no panacea for the fight against climate change. However, they may just help soften the blow a little, and it is worth having them around long enough to find out. nmohile@iu.edu
FULL OF FULFORD
Billions spent rebuilding Notre Dame shows lack of morality Gillian Fulford is a senior in journalism, political science and sustainability.
A massive fire burned parts of the 850-year-old Notre Dame on April 17. In hours, more than $1 billion were pledged toward a fund to rebuild the church. The millionaires and billionaires who pledged that money to fix up a church could have given money to fix worldwide problems like chronic hunger, but instead they spent it on a building. This shows how little the rich care about the poor. The $1 billion that was
pledged toward Notre Dame repairs is a lot of money. If you had a monthly income of $20,000, it would take you 4,167 years and no spending of that money to become a billionaire. The median household income of an American is $56,516. For the average American to become a billionaire off that salary, it would take 17,695 years, if he or she never spent money on anything and saved all the money earned. Estimates to end world hunger are between $7 and $265 billion a year, and surely with 2,208 bil-
lionaires in the world, a few hundred could spare some cash to help ensure people aren’t starving to death. There aren’t billionaires in the news rushing to give money toward food aid, but even the richest man in Europe donated to repair the church. Repairing churches is not a life and death matter. Churches, while culturally and religiously significant, are not necessary for life in the way that nutritious food is. Being an absurdly wealthy person who only donates money for things you find aesthetically pleas-
ing is morally bankrupt in a world where money could literally fund the end of world hunger. This isn’t to say that rebuilding the Notre Dame is bad — preserving culturally significant places is important. But the Roman Catholic Church is the richest religious organization in the world — it can probably manage repairing a church without the help of wealthy donors. At a time when there are heated protests in the streets of France over taxes that unfairly effect the poor, pledging money toward buildings seems fraught.
Spending billions on unnecessary buildings is a slap in the face to French people fighting for equitable wealth and tax distribution. There is nothing wrong with rebuilding structures that have important meaning to citizens. However, the world is full of societal issues that money can help solve. When outrageously wealthy people focus their money on buildings and not on life-saving donations, they are morally bankrupt. gfulford@iu.edu
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1, 2, 3, 4 & 5 Bedroom
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EMPLOYMENT
Locally owned roofing company looking for motivated, physically fit workers for summer of 2019 (May 13-Aug 23). Outside work on or near Campus, no experience needed, starting pay $15/hr. Send resume or inquiries to Betty at: steves@bluemarble.net LOOKING FOR SUMMER WORK? Full-time positions avail. at Nature’s Way Inc. Call: 812.876.7888 or email: victoria@naturesway.net for more information. Seeking person to take dictation for TV and movie scripts. Paid per completed script. Call 812-320-3689 for info. Terry’s Catering is hiring part-time catering staff. $11/hr. starting pay. Must have reliable transportation & Saturday availability. Please call 812-333-0999 or email sales@terryscatering.com
***Now leasing 19-20*** HPIU.COM 2 BR apt for $860. Water incl. 3 blocks from Informatics. 812-3334748 No pets please. **Avail. August!** 203 S. Clark 313 N. Clark ALL UTILS. INCLUDED www.iurent.com 812-360-2628 1-5 BR. Close to Campus. Avail. immediately. Call: 812-339-2859.
3 BR, 1 BA. Close to Campus. $800/2 person, $900/3 person. + util. Avail. 8/20. 812-824-9735 3 BR, REMODELED, W/D, D/W, A/C, BASEMENT, GREAT YARD, PRKG., 104 N. BRYAN. $395 EACH. CALL 812-322-0931.
PAVILION 1 – 5 Bed Apts/ Houses AVAILABLE NOW
Apt. Unfurnished 718 1/2 E. 8th Street $850/mo., studio. Call Logan at: 812-598-8308.
S 1"35 5*.& JOB
Available NO8 Do you have Food & Beverage experience? Are you looking for a great KPC in a family-friendly setting? Look no further! We have a job for you! Fourwinds Lakeside Inn & Marina is Teeking servers, cooks, kitchen prep and utility positions.
Requirements: • Ability to stand on your feet for long periods of time • Ability to MJGU Bt least 30 pounds • Able to work in a fast-paced environment x ble to work nights, weekends and alll summer holidays • Flexi • Must have a natural smile • Must display a positive and Can-Do attitude • Experience preferred CVU XJMM USBJO UIF SJHIU QFSTPO *G ZPV SF OPU BGSBJE PG XPSL UIBU DBO CF GJOBODJBMMZ SFXBSEJOH BOE ZPV BSF B UFBN QMBZFS BQQMZ OPX BU 'PVSXJOET -BLFTJEF *OO .BSJOB PS DPNQMFUF BO POMJOF BQQMJDBUJPO BU XXX 'PVSXJOET-BLFTJEF DPN
2014 Volkswagen Jetta Sedan, white, < 84K miles. $9,750, obo. bbuwalda@iu.edu
Vintage board games. Incl., Sorry, Life, Clue, Monopoly, and Scabble. $100 for all. jtitzer@iu.edu
2015 Lincoln MKZ Hybrid, 18K miles, luxury functions. $18,888. zehuang@iu.edu
Clothing Nike Vapor Untouchable Pro menâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s football cleats. Size 8, Never worn. $30. s.e.mosier1@gmail.com
2016 white Jeep Cherokee Limited SUV, 30K miles. $19,800. 812-327-4960
Womenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s size 8.5 Columbia hiking boots. Never worn. $60. 812-322-0808
Mazda RX7 FC, 1990. 142K miles on body, good cond. $3,500. dgalants@iu.edu Old Mercedes Benz, 201K miles, good cond., defective air con. $1,650. jhryu@indiana.edu
Full size bed and elevated metal frame. Perfect cond. $60 each. hsaed@iu.edu
TRANSPORTATION Automobiles 2005 Mazda 3 Hatchback, 130K miles, excellent cond. $3,000. songseun@iu.edu
Bicycles 2008 Trek 2 series model 2.3 bike. 20.5 in. or 52 cm. $450 specsorff@gmail.com
SUMMER JOBS AVAILABLE
APPLY NOW Fourwinds Lakeside Inn & Marina is seeking friendly, service-oriented individuals for our Paradise Boat Rental Operation. What better, then a job on the lake, taking reservations, pumping gas, assist in maintaining a fleet of 50+ boats, providing genuine customer service...and you get to work outside! Requirements: â&#x20AC;˘ Ability to stand on your feet for long periods of time â&#x20AC;˘ Ability to lift at least 30 pounds â&#x20AC;˘ Able to work in a fast-paced environment â&#x20AC;˘ Flexible to work nights, weekends and all summer holidays â&#x20AC;˘ Must have a natural smile â&#x20AC;˘ Must display a positive and Can-Do attitude â&#x20AC;˘ Experience not necessary, we will train the right individuals. If youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re not afraid of work that can be financially rewarding and you are a team player, apply now at the Fourwinds Lakeside Inn & Marina, or complete an online application at www.FourwindsLakeside.com
Full size mattress and bed frame. Pick up only. $200. lduggins@iu.edu
ENTERTAINMENT OPINION IN-DEPTH NMENT OPINION IN-DEPTH & FEATU New hammock with OPINION IN-DEPTH & FEATURES M stand, never used. $60. Sublet Apt. Unfurn. udjoshi@iu.edu ON IN-DEPTH & FEATURES MULTIM 1 BR Tenth & College Apt Oversized tan chair, very N-DEPTH & FEATURES MULTIMEDIA Renovated, $1200/mo. comfortable and in Prking includ., avail. Jan. H & FEATURES MULTIMEDIA NEWS good cond. $50. Contact: 630-396-0627. limarche@iu.edu URES MULTIMEDIA NEWS SPORTS A Summer subleases avail! Queen size mattress, LTIMEDIA NEWS SPORTS ARTS & E 1-5 BR. Negotiable. 812great cond. Barely used, 333-9579 or very comfy. $115. DIA NEWS SPORTS ARTS & ENTERT leasinginfo@grantprops.lbonaiti@iu.edu com WS SPORTS ARTS & ENTERTAINMEN Shabby chic white ORTS ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT OP Sublet Condos/Twnhs. cabinet. 30â&#x20AC;?x78â&#x20AC;?x17.5â&#x20AC;? $300, obo. ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT OPINION Avail May: 1 BR in 4 BR storyk@indiana.edu twnhs. 7th & Washington. ENTERTAINMENT OPINION IN-DEPTH High-speed internet, w/d. Small, brown, wooden NMENT OPINION IN-DEPTH & FEATU $1000/mo. 201-739-7398 desk with a pull out keyboard tray. $35. OPINION IN-DEPTH & FEATURES M aboruffy@indiana.edu Avail. Summer: 3 BR/ 4 BA twnhs., S. Lincoln ON IN-DEPTH & FEATURES MULTIM Tan loveseat couch that & University. $462.50+ N-DEPTH & FEATURES MULTIMEDIA comfortably fits two. utils. 812-454-1184 Slightly worn. $70. H & FEATURES MULTIMEDIA NEWS criedy@iu.edu Sublet Rooms/Rmmte. URES MULTIMEDIA NEWS SPORTS A Twin mattress & box 1 furn. BR in 4 BR/2.5 BA spring, good cond. $100, LTIMEDIA NEWS SPORTS ARTS & E apt. $925/mo., neg. neg. krchiu@indiana.edu Reserved prkg., balcony. DIA NEWS SPORTS ARTS & ENTERT 786-473-7413 Wooden, hand made table. Must be picked up WS SPORTS ARTS & ENTERTAINMEN Avail. Summer 2019: by May 4th. $100. ORTS ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT OP 1 BR of 2 BR top floor rcogen@iu.edu apt. in Evolve. Amenities ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT OPINION incl. apirovan@iu.edu Instruments ENTERTAINMENT OPINION IN-DEPTH 22â&#x20AC;? Remo Powerstroke 3 NMENT OPINION IN-DEPTH & FEATU Clear Bass Drum Head (batter): $25. OPINION IN-DEPTH & FEATURES M tedkunkel@yahoo.com ON IN-DEPTH & FEATURES MULTIM Nearly new Evans G2 N-DEPTH & FEATURES MULTIMEDIA Clear Drum Heads MERCHANDISE (10â&#x20AC;?/12â&#x20AC;?/14â&#x20AC;?/16â&#x20AC;?): $30. H & FEATURES MULTIMEDIA NEWS tedkunkel@yahoo.com Appliances URES MULTIMEDIA NEWS SPORTS A Used 18â&#x20AC;? Sabian HH 1955 Philco Refrigerator Medium Thin Crash LTIMEDIA NEWS SPORTS ARTS & E w/coral pink trim. Outside Cymbal: $175, obo. needs paint job to be DIA NEWS SPORTS ARTS & ENTERT tedkunkel@yahoo.com special. 812-345-8945 WS SPORTS ARTS & ENTERTAINMEN Used 20â&#x20AC;? Paiste Giant Black microwave, Beat Multi-Function (ride/ ORTS ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT OP works perfectly. $30. crash) cymbal. $225 obo. bonaiti@iu.edu tedkunkel@yahoo.com ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT OPINION ENTERTAINMENT OPINION IN-DEPTH NMENT OPINION IN-DEPTH & FEATU OPINION IN-DEPTH & FEATURES M APARTMENTS ON IN-DEPTH & FEATURES MULTIM N-DEPTH & FEATURES MULTIMEDIA NOW LEASING H & FEATURES MULTIMEDIA NEWS for August URES MULTIMEDIA NEWS SPORTS A 2019 and 2020 LTIMEDIA NEWS SPORTS ARTS & E 1, 2, 3, 4 & 5 BR DIA NEWS SPORTS ARTS & ENTERT Houses, Townhouses WS SPORTS ARTS & ENTERTAINMEN and Apartments ORTS ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT OP Quality campus locations ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT OPINION 339-2859 ENTERTAINMENT OPINION IN-DEPTH NMENT OPINION IN-DEPTH & FEATU APARTMENTS www.elkinsapts.com OPINION IN-DEPTH & FEATURES M
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338 S. Madison St. $1200/mo. 3 BR/2 BA. Call Logan at: 812-598-8308.
FOR RENT: 5 BR/2 BA 719 W. 15th Street. No Pets. $2000/mo. Text or call 812-327-8005.
Like-New Lenovo Yoga 730, only used 4 months, great cond. $630. zhou18@iu.edu
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4 BR, 2 BA house. 621 N. Lincoln, 6 blocks to Campus, $1400/mo.+ utils. 812-334-8819
2013 Volkswagen CC Sport. 35K miles. Excellent cond. $13,500. jamlconn@indiana.edu
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319 N. Park St. $900/mo,. studio. Call Logan at: 812-598-8308.
Dark blue IKEA couch, good cond. Used for 2 years. $100. rajicg@indiana.edu
Summer Sublet: 2 BR, 1 BA, Downtown, $1,800/mo., avail. May 13 (317) 612-4119
121 S. Jefferson St. $1200/mo. 3 BR/2 BA. Call Logan at: 812-598-8308.
pavprop.com 812-333-2332
Apartment Furnished
Coffee table and 5â&#x20AC;&#x2122; x 7â&#x20AC;&#x2122; red and white rug. $25 each or $50 for both. ssamal@iu.edu
Avail. now- July â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;19: 1 BR in 4 BR apt. w/ 3 male rmmtes. in Deluxe at the Monroe. Utils. & internet incl. Reduced rate $434/mo. 317-557-7394
1 to 2 blocks from Campus
HOUSING
Brown bonded leather lounge sofa sets, reclining. $399. salsakak@iu.edu
4/30 - 7/31: Beautiful, lg. 1 BR w/ in-unit laundry, balcony. Great location. (847) 226-0321
sparky1tartan@msn.com
Furniture
Black leather reclining futon, good cond. Pickup only. $45. aolovich@indiana.edu
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Houses
Electronics
Black armchair w/ matching cushion. Pick-up ASAP. $80. maalam@indiana.edu
1 BR/1 BA @ Elvove. Gym, Prkg., Tanning, Pool $500/mo,. includes electric. 219-561-6703
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Bicycle Garage, Inc. is seeking enthusiastic, passionate, part-time Bicycle Mechanics and Sales Team members. We offer flexible hours and special savings on the products we carry. Apply online at: bikegarage.com
Prime location: 2 BR apt. (from $655) & 3 BR twnhs. (from $825). Hdwd. floors, quiet. 812-333-5598 325
Averâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Pizza Now Hiring. Bloomingtonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Original Gourmet Pizza To Go, Since 1995. Managers, Servers, Delivery Driver, Cooks & Dishwashers. Apply Online: averspizza.wyckwyre.com
IRobot Braava Jet 240, used twice, great cond. Supplies incl. $150. markinde@iu.edu
Air hockey table, good cond. 6 paddles, 4 pucks. $150, obo. sendiaz@indiana.edu
1 BR in 2 BR apt. Incl. indiv. bathroom, applns., TV, W/D. $250/mo. neg. neimarkn@gmail.com
General Employment
Insignia 3.0 cubic feet compact mini fridge/freezer. $130. Call 516-660-2237.
Printer DCP-L2450DW printer, photocopier, scanner. $150. vstan@iu.edu
Stonetop to IU. Atw Ave $550 mo. Wifi + utils. Avail Aug. W/D onsite. 812-361-6154 call/text 340
Large 1, 2 & 4 BR apartments & townhouses avail. NOW! Close to Campus & Stadium. 812-334-2646
2013 Toyota Camry XLE $9,999. Excellent cond. 1 owner; garaged; 164K
Magnavox 39â&#x20AC;? Class 1080p LED HD TV, good cond. Works great. $90. cnachman@indiana.edu
Rooms avail in lrg. 5 BDRM house now thru July. $650 incl utils. Prkg. 812-333-9579 or leasinginfo@grantprops.com
Outstanding locations near campus at great prices Leasing now 2019-2020
Dining set: 2 wooden chairs, tile-lined table. Pick-up ASAP. $120. maalam@indiana.edu
Bose Companion 5 computer speaker system, great cond. $250. dk14@iu.edu
Rooms/Roommates Furn. rms. avail. summer + fall sem. Incl. utils., W/D, kit., pkg. $490/470. 812-369-5484
Honeywell 450 sq. ft. portable air conditioner. Digital & remote control, $360. 516-660-2237
55 inch TV + Insignia soundbar. Great cond. $350. nebhatt@indiana.edu
Prime 3-8 BR. W/D. Aug. â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;19 1 blk from Campus on Atw. Ave. $700/BR 812-361-6154
Grant Properties
2008 Prius Hybrid 4 door Hatchback. 113K miles. $6,000, obo. jwahlen@indiana.edu
465
LiveByTheStadium.com 301 E. 19th Street 5 BR, 2 BA
Ride Exchange Ride-share INDIANA. Bus station, airport. Reasonable rates. Licensed/insured. Brian Gray 812-320-5026 or raznet2003@gmail.com
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Great Location! The Omega 252 N. Walnut St. 2 BR, 1.5 BA, twnhs. W/D, D/W, A/C. Water and internet incl. Secure building. Call 812-333-0995. Omegabloomington.com
Automobiles
12 pc. dinnerware set w/ 4 dinner & salad plates, bowls, & silverware. $15. yafwang@hotmail.com
2018 iPad Mini 4, almost new, good condition. $320. tuho@iu.edu
LiveByTheStadium.com 1385 N. Lincoln Street 5 BR, 2.5 BA
350
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area51ufousaf@gmail.com
LiveByTheStadium.com 1336 N. Washington St. 4 BR, 2 BA
Misc. for Sale
11
Grill for sale. 5 burners, side stove. Less than a year old. $150. jeastern@iu.edu
520
Wanted: Scooter or motorcycle w/ title or original bill of sale for disabled veteran.
1 BR/1BA on Atwater. Front porch, hdwds, prkg, laundry. 1 blk to Optom or Law Sch. Avail Aug 2019. 812-333-9579 or leasinginfo@grantprops.com
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CONGRATULATIONS 2018-2019 Student Recreational Sports Association Award Winners:
Campus Scholarships
Jill Behrman 5K
Robert Stumpner Outstanding Senior Award Jozie Barton William H. Lindley Participant Scholarship Jennifer Maluso
JB5K Outstanding Committee Member Jill Behrman Emerging Leader Jill Behrman Emerging Leader
Rachel Ott Charlotte Ahls Caroline Duchette
Campus Representatives Terry Clapacs All Campus Manager Award Sorority Council Representative of the Year Fraternity Council Representative of the Year Residence Hall Representative of the Year
Luke Hallett Ronnie VanBuskirk Christopher Anthony Emma Stier
Informal Sports
Shelby Miles Christian Schurmann-Colicchio Charlotte Ahls Chris Cook Michael Nettleton Swim Club
Aquatics
Participant of the Year Participant of the Year Supervisor of the Year Team Leader of the Year
Emily Heldman Victoria Evans Rilee Jolivette Avery Quinlan
Club Sports Female Athlete of the Year Male Athlete of the Year Outstanding Club Leader Advisor of the Year Rookie of the Year Club Sport of the Year
Lifeguard of the Year Lead of the Year Instructor of the Year
Haley Hrosik Julia Manion Ashley Mark
Marketing Employee of the Year
Intramural Sports Female Athlete of the Year Male Athlete of the Year Female Official of the Year Male Official of the Year Assistant Supervisor of the Year Head Supervisor of the Year Council Member of the Year
Amanda Suleski Jared Kaiser Ashley Schmidt Luke Uribe Jay Krebs Abi Thompson Alec Pena
Fitness/Wellness Jamison, Hillary, and Hannah Schell Fitness Inspiration Award Williams Cyclefit Leader of the Year Award Allmayer Yoga Leader of the Year Jennifer Meece Group Exercise Leader of the Year Group Exercise Participant of the Year Personal Trainer of the Year
Malik Hale
Richard F. Mull Awards Club Sports Fitness/Wellness Informal Sports
Emily Kronick Gabi Nolan Jessica Valentine
Tennis Center Instructor of the Year Member Services Associate of the Year
Emma Lipe Bob Brenner
Member Services Nick Rapp Hannah Wilson Hannah Bates
Member Services Associate of the Year Equipment Operations Attendant of the Year Parking Operations Attendant of the Year
Ivy Glaser Jeffrey Ting Jacob Barton
Facility Support Laborer of the Year
Brianna Frye Charity Allen Ben Wright
Ivan Hudson
Student Recreational Sports Association
Risk Management First Responder of the Year
Ashley Christie
SRSA Outstanding Junior Award SRSA Outstanding Director SRSA Outstanding Board Member
Emily Kronick Kyra Dasovich Jessica Valentine
COUNCILS, COMMITTEES & BOARD VOLUNTEERS Club Sports Federation Charlotte Ahls Kinsey Allen Jeremy Ambrosio Elise Anderson Zaid Ansari Eric Benenson Abigail Brow Carissa Carter Giovanni Ciaccio Jacob Cohen Charles DeCesaris Evan Davis Rylan Deer Dan Devlin Jeremy Drexler Joe Dweck Megan Eble Aaron Farquhar Tess Fasteen Tayler Fitts Amrit Garcha Maggie Jackson Tom Kim Emily Kronick Lauren Lad Yuwang Liu Josh Martinez Cameron McNamara Elizabeth Merritt Remi Musselman Sagar Panchal Matthew Pearcy Pranith Polavarapu Jonathan Postweiler Faisal Rasooli Reagan Roberson Nathan Russell Summer Samuels Abbie Stark Alley Stock Claire Taylor Annika Tharp Michael Werle Hayden Wiest Mobeen Zahid
Aquatics Council
Sorority Council
Drew Armfield Brooks Hohman Anna Holden Jarren Keck Ian Kessler Bailee Koi Julia Manion Courtney Peel Will Riggert David Swearingen Noel Widup David Williams
Emily Affeld Danielle Buser Faye Dunbar Alexa Ennis Allie Frieberg Sofia Godinez Paige Gubbe Claire Hilgemann Grace Korn Tori Lents Emily Levitt Makena Lopez Clare Majchrowicz Jessica Randall Hannah Raus Emma Rosenblatt Maddi Schmucker Shea True Ronnie VanBuskirk Zoe Vreisman Jenna Weber Rachel Widenhofer Colette Young
Fitness/Wellness Council Mya Anderson Emma Fitterling Taylor Slayback Jessica Valentine Jake Wilson
Intramural Sports Council Mehek Kalra John Mason Christopher Mcgough Albin Sebastian
Residence Hall Council Jackson Beckham Alishi Berkey Brynn Bosstick Imani Breckenridge-Peete Jared Chandler Megan Chapman Valentin Emmanuel Alondra Flores Simon Hong Jared Hunt Tiffany Lu Abdel Moustafa Chris Reed Johnathan Romo Shelby Schnuck Emma Stier Keelin Walser
Fraternity Council Christopher Anthony Blake Bieniek Jack Callahan Raphael Catalan Paul Centanni Cliff Dickman Brandon Escandon Ryan Foody Mitch Gilbert Will Gunst Luke Hallett Jacob Holtcamp Andrew Inman Luke Johnson Tyler Johnson Keaton Lents Logan Nein Harley Pugh Matthew Sabatini Javy Salazar Mason Shaffer Brendan Sheehan
Jill Behrman 5K Student Committee Abby Bojrab Nick Broyles Susan Danik Tyler DeLon Victoria Fosha Conner Franke Alondra Galvan Ge Ge Blaize Hiatt Elyse Johnson Patrick Leppert Rachel Ott Morgan Scanlon Taylor Slayback Melissa Slome Abby Stauffer Qiqi Tang Chase Throop Sydney Tierney Shuyao Wang Hannah Wilson Lauren Zotz
Campus Recreational Sports Advisory Board Members (cont.) Sarah Beggs Sharon Chertkoff
Campus Recreational Sports Advisory Board Members LP Ailes Debby Allmayer Jozie Barton
Donetta Cothran Chuck Crabb DeeDee Dayhoff Deb Dunbar Kutina England Nancy Evans Linda Gales Cathlene Hardy Hansen Mary Lou Hosek James Kinser Melody Lynch-Kimery Jon Macy George Malacinski Jocelyn Maul Alexander McCormick Jay Mercer Darla Myers Sara Nagy Kyle Newnum Judith Ouimet Gamze Ozogul Leah Savion Kate Selivanovitch Pat Steele Andrea Wiley Annie Willis Chase Wilson
STUDENT RECREATIONAL SPORTS ASSOCIATION (SRSA) Executive Committee
President: Jozie Barton
Vice President Ian Kessler
Board of Directors
Brynn Bosstick Kyra Dasovich Luke Hallett Camryn Jansen Emily Kronick John Mason
William Riggert Taylor Slayback Chase Throop Anna Ujdak Jessica Valentine Veronica VanBuskirk
THANK YOU FOR YOUR COMMITMENT TO RECREATIONAL SPORTS!
RECREATIONAL SPORTS