NATIONAL COMING OUT DAY, OCT. 11
How Hoosiers came out to their families, friends IU and Bloomington celebrated National Coming Out Day on Tuesday through events at both GLBT Student Support Services and the Back Door, a queer bar. Read the coming-out stories of 4 Hoosiers, PAGE 6.
Minor attempts armed robbery
Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2016 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
IDS
From IDS reports
2-1
TRUMP CARD IU gets résumé-building win on the road Tuesday
Hoosiers keep their composure in road game
By Josh Eastern
By Zain Pyarali
jeastern@umail.iu.edu | @JoshEastern
zpyarali@yahoo.com | @ZainPyarali
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — With a ball up for grabs around the IU box and the clock ticking, senior Phil Fives put his body on the line in an attempt to preserve what could be the Hoosiers’ biggest win of the season. Louisville midfielder Tim Kubel bore down on Fives and, just outside the 18yard box, bulldozed his IU counterpart. Fives was down on the grass, but the victory was IU’s. “Phil Fives, just the play at the end of the game,” IU Coach Todd Yeagley said. “Small detail of him knowing he’s going to get hit, but it seals the game. Those are the types of plays we made tonight.” The ensuing penalty on Kubel helped No. 9 IU scratch out a 2-1 win against No. 4 Louisville, and gave the Cardinals their first home loss of the season. Yeagley said he looks for small details like Fives’ play in IU’s matchups, and, in one where Louisville had most of the quality possession, those details became the difference. The Hoosiers pressed the Cardinals early in the match, and junior defender Grant Lillard scored IU’s first goal in the 12th minute. After IU saved a ball from going out of bounds, the ball fell to Hoosier sophomore Jeremiah Gutjahr. Gutjahr flicked it back post to Lillard who did
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — After being pushed and shoved all night by the Louisville Cardinals, IU didn’t retaliate with its own physical play. Instead, the Hoosiers got their revenge on the scoreboard. With IU going up one goal in the 12th minute and Louisville only allowing three goals at home the entire season, the home squad was quickly put on the ropes. The Cardinals would tie the game up at the beginning of the second half, but just 52 seconds later their physical play backfired. Senior midfielder Tanner Thompson was taken down at the top of the penalty box to set up an IU penalty kick. Sophomore midfielder Trevor Swartz connected on the kick, and the Hoosiers held on, even as the Cardinals continued their physical play. “I wouldn’t say there were any dirty ones tonight, but they were physical, and there were some challenges I thought our guys could have got rattled on,” IU Coach Todd Yeagley said. “I always feel like our group is as disciplined as any team in the country when it comes to not retaliating.” The eventual game-winning goal off the penalty kick came after a no-call on senior midfield Phil Fives late in the first half. A Louisville defender shoved Fives to the turf in the penalty box after Fives
REBECCA MEHLING | IDS
Top Senior Tanner Thompson congratulates his teammate, Trevor Swartz after he scored the second goal during the Hoosiers’ match against Louisville on Tuesday evening. Bottom Senior Richard Ballard dribbles the ball toward the goal before getting pulled, resulting in Louisville recieving a yellow card. The match ended with a Hoosier win over Louisville on Tuesday evening.
Shots Saves Corners Offsides
INDIANA 7 3 0 3
SEE IU, PAGE 6
LOUISVILLE 13 0 7 1
SEE HOOSIERS, PAGE 6
Mathers leads talk on healing power of dance, art, music By Sanya Ali siali@indiana.edu | @siali13
The Mathers Museum of World Cultures’ exhibition “Siyazama: Traditional Arts, Education, and AIDS in South Africa” explores the role of art in the midst of a health crisis that still plagues the nation. On Tuesday evening, the museum had a series of presentations and a panel discussion titled “Health, Healing & the Arts,” which featured perspectives from a variety of professionals on the topic of arts and healing in other parts of Africa and African diaspora communities abroad. Molly Rosenberg, an assistant professor in the Department of Epi-
demiology in the School of Public Health, moderated the discussion and introduced the panelists, each of which focused on a different geographic area and the role art plays in the health and well-being of the people they have observed. “I feel a little like I snuck onto this panel because, as an epidemiologist, I have little to no experience with art, besides vigorous armchair appreciation and advanced doodling,” Rosenberg said. “I’ve always been interested in how our health is shaped by our communities, our socioeconomic status, and our social and cultural involvement.” Given this framework, the first SEE MATHERS, PAGE 6
MATT RASNIC | IDS
Molly Rosenberg, assistant professor in epidemiology and biostatistics for the IU School of Public Health, serves as the moderator for the question-and-answer session of a discussion on health, healing and the arts at the Mathers Museum.
A 17-year-old juvenile was charged with attempted armed robbery Monday after attempting to rob an apartment on Eastgate Lane with an unknown acquaintance. Both suspects are believed to be from Indianapolis and the Bloomington Police Department is still investigating the case. On Monday at about 12:40 a.m., police responded to a call about a disturbance at 2539 E. Eastgate Lane. Two male suspects, wielding a shotgun and a handgun, entered an apartment there. They immediately demanded the phones of the two residents and three visitors who were in the apartment. At this point, one of the visitors at the apartment made a call to 911 and alerted police to the situation. The residents of the apartment fought back against the suspects and one of them was struck in the head while he wrestled one suspect to the ground. The other suspect fled with several of the cellphones, and police are still searching for him. BPD Capt. Steve Kellams said it looked like the robbery was an attempted drug rip-off. There were signs, including marijuana and pills, of drug dealing in the apartment. The victim who helped wrestle one of the suspects to the ground was taken to the hospital for a cut on the left side of his head. He had been hit by the shotgun while trying to subdue the suspect. The suspect who was captured by residents was taken to the hospital for minor injuries before being taken to the police station. The suspect’s father arrived and the two refused to answer any questions, Kellams said. The youth was then charged with armed robbery and taken to Southwest Indiana Regional Youth Village, a youth at-risk center near Vincennes, Indiana. Dominick Jean
Protesters clash with traffic From IDS reports
A vehicle was reportedly vandalized at about 8:40 p.m. Monday, Bloomington Police Department reported. A 21-year-old man said he came across a large group of people in the street as he was driving home in his 2003 SUV. Those people were part of a Black Lives Matter demonstration that had begun earlier that night. The protesters were in the process of marching to BPD station when they came across the SUV. The man said he asked the protesters to get out of the way as he attempted to drive home. Instead, the protesters began to hit his car windows with their hands and yelled and cursed at him. Video footage from the march shows the complainant arguing with protesters and him driving further into the mass of protesters before they began beating on his car. According to the police report, the passenger side of the windshield was shattered after being hit multiple times and the passenger side mirror was broken as well. At about 10:30 p.m. Monday, the alleged victim called police to report the vandalism. Dominick Jean