Thursday, Oct. 27, 2016

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Thursday, Oct. 27, 2016 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com

Male student reports peeping

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From IDS reports

On Tuesday, a male student reported two incidents of peeping that occurred in the Ora L. Wildermuth Intramural Center men’s locker room, IU Police Department Capt. Andy Stephenson said. The student said a white man with curly red hair and a beard watched him shower midday Oct. 11 and Oct. 18. A similar incident in the Wildermuth men’s locker room was reported Sept. 24. A student described the peeper as a man in his forties with a shaved head, but the man left before IUPD’s arrival, Stephenson said. Officers searched the area but could not find anyone who matched the description. Emily Miles

IDS Bitter, but sweet

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Students protest hate symbol

IU loses to Michigan in last game of regular season, but still clinches spot in Big Ten Tournament By Cameron Drummond cpdrummo@iu.edu | @cdrummond97

The result of Wednesday night’s match between IU and Michigan was supposed to determine whether or not IU reached its first Big Ten Women’s Soccer Tournament since 2013. However, it was the final score of a game in University Park, Pennsylvania, that actually decided IU’s fate. Ohio State’s 2-0 loss at Penn State ensured that regardless of what happened in Bloomington, IU would be returning to the postseason. This meant the result of the Hoosiers’ final match of the regular season would determine their seeding for the playoffs. As such, IU’s 3-2 loss to

By Alyson Malinger afmaling@indiana.edu | @aly_mali

PHOTOS BY REBECCA MEHLING | IDS

Michigan on Senior Night ensured it would be seeded eighth out of eight teams for the postseason conference tournament. While IU Coach Amy Berbary was pleased at qualifying for the postseason, she was also disappointed at her team’s execution in the final minutes against Michigan. “It’s great. I’m happy for the kids that we got in, but I thought we let this one get away from us, unfortunately,” Berbary said. “At this point in the season, it’s about attention to detail.” IU appeared set to clinch its playoff berth in style as it led Michigan 2-1 with six minutes to play, but a pair of late goals gave the visitors the victory. A

Early Wednesday morning, Tamara Brown, a junior at Bloomington High School North, walked through the hallways of her school, moving from class to class. As she walked, Brown was stopped by multiple students wearing Confederate flags as hats and capes draped across their bodies, embracing the red flag dashed with blue and white lines. They yelled things such as, “If you want to start stuff, then we’ll start stuff too,” and “The South will rise again,” to Brown and other students throughout the school’s campus. It angered Brown, along with a small group of friends, to no longer feel safe in her own school. “This is not just hurting our feelings, but it is putting us in danger,” Brown said. After voicing their concerns to

Top The Hoosiers celebrate after scoring their second goal during the second half of Wednesday evening’s game against Michigan. Bottom Meghan Scott runs the ball down the field during Wednesday night’s game against Michigan. This was the Hoosiers’ last regular season game ending in a Michigan win 3-2.

SEE SOCCER, PAGE 6

SEE RALLY, PAGE 6

Professor of rhetoric delivers Noon Talk frames his understanding of the world, he said. “Rhetoric typically focuses its The Eskenazi Museum of Art’s attention on words, written or spoNoon Talks offer presenters inter- ken, and the ways in which words ested in delving into the work of a and narratives and arguments afparticular artist an opportunity to fect audiences in one way or anothshare their observations with an au- er,” Lucaites said. Nan Brewer, curator of works on dience. The latest in the series dealt with the special exhibition “Vik paper, said Lucaites’ work revolves Muniz,” a mid-career retrospective heavily on analysis of photographs through his rhetoriof the artist’s work. cal training. Brewer “Images We “Taken collectively, said Lucaites has All Remember” ‘The Best of Life’ published a variety presented the perof works on the topspective of John is something of an ic of image culture Lucaites, associate analog for the family in liberal democratdean of arts and ic societies. humanities and un- album for America” “He is the codergraduate educa- John Lucaites, associate dean author of ‘No Caption, to a group of 21 of arts and humanities and tion Needed: Iconic students and com- undergraduate education Photographs, Pubmunity members lic Culture and Liberal DemocWednesday. At the beginning of the talk, he racy’,” Brewer said. “When I saw the stood to the right of a collection of amount of material in this exhibiMuniz’s recreated photographs tion and particularly the images of sketches based on famous Life from Life, I immediately thought of magazine images, called “The Best John for today’s Noon Talk.” Lucaites said Muniz comes from of Life.” Lucaites said he considers himself an advanced amateur a distinct perspective from other photographer. His scholarly back- photographers because of his ties ground in rhetoric, which he has SEE RHETORIC, PAGE 6 taught at IU for 30 years, is what

By Sanya Ali

siali@indiana.edu | @siali13

NOBLE GUYON | IDS

Senior Joel Chapman, in the orange vest, tells a ghost story to the attendees at Dunn Cemetery outside the Indiana Memorial Union, the third stop on the 2016 Ghost Walk put on by the IU Folklore and Ethnomusicology Student Association.

Folklore student group leads campus ghost tour By Bailey Cline baicline@iu.edu | @baicline

An eerie trumpet fanfare echoed through the air, silencing the crowd surrounding the Herman B Wells statue. In the darkness of Wednesday night, people clutched their lanterns. It was then that senior Joel Chapman, a folklore and telecommunications student, put down his instrument and issued a welcome to the 2016 Ghost Walk. Every year, the Folklore and Ethnomusicology Student Association gives a short tour of the campus to share some of IU’s ghost stories. The

walk is FESA’s big event each year, and it draws many different people from around Bloomington hoping to get spooked. “A lot of the stories come from the student archives over in the Wells Library,” lecturer and storyteller Robert Doler said. These archives are full of reports from students, oftentimes submitted by folklore professors. Doler himself sends students in his supernatural class out to document a paranormal account from someone they know. “Part of this is to figure out these things happen a lot more often than we generally think,”

Doler said. Ethnomusicology graduate student Jennie Williams began the night with four stories originating near the Herman B Wells statue. These folklores ranged from the romantic tradition behind the Well House gazebo to the story of a doctor performing illegal abortions and his suicide. After a short trek to the Indiana Memorial Union, Doler continued the ghostly tales, explaining the Union is perhaps the most haunted spot on campus.

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CAMPUS

Thursday, Oct. 27, 2016 idsnews.com

Editors Laurel Demkovich & Nyssa Kruse campus@idsnews.com

PHOTOS BY MARLIE BRUNS | IDS

TRICK-OR-TREAT Left Students pass out candy to children at Wednesday’s Safe Halloween, a greek-sponsored trick-or-treating event for local children. Top Right Students hand out candy to children outside of Delta Tau Delta on Wednesday evening. Bottom Right Kids gather around during Safe Halloween to pet a kitten. Safe Halloween took place Wednesday evening.

Discussion focuses on election Panel to discuss Islamophobia origins, effects

By Lydia Gerike lgerike@umail.iu.edu | @lydi_yeah

In an effort to highlight the importance of political responsibility across the board, the Political Science Club and Students for Equity in Public Affairs brought together four panelists to discuss minority representation Wednesday night. Topics for the panel included police, immigration and abortion issues. “We’re really excited that these issues are able to be discussed in a bipartisan way,” said Rebekah Molasky, senior and president of the Political Science Club. Molasky and senior Maya Fews of SEPA collaborated to bring the event together. The panelists included School of Public and Environmental Affairs professor Sean Nicholson-Crotty, SEPA member Miguel Palabrica, College Democrats at IU’s Paige Settles and College Republicans at IU’s Nicole Keesling. For a time, Molasky and Fews feared they might not see as much diversity of opinion as they had originally planned. The Democrats and Republicans cancelled a threeon-three debate last week over an organizational dispute and had not worked together since. Molasky and Fews said they thought the argument might cause one or both of the organizations to bow out. In the end, Keesling and Settles were both able to represent their respective parties at the panel. Both women said they were happy to be working with one another once again. “Part of civility is getting past disagreements,” Keesling said. It opened with discussion of stop-and-frisk, a controversial practice in which police officers stop suspicious individuals to question them and then search them for weapons. Nicholson-Crotty said law

By Emily Miles elmiles@umail.iu.edu | @EmilyLenetta

LYDIA GERIKE | IDS

Democrat Paige Settles (left) and Republican Nicole Keesling (right) discuss immigration issues at a panel on minorities Wednesday night. Settles argued against Keesling’s claim that building a wall across the country’s southern border would fix immigration.

enforcement needs to stop this policy because it was ruled unconstitutional due to disproportionate use on minorities. The effects of stop-andfrisk on a minority member’s psyche can be very different than what a white person experiences, Palabrica said. He attributed this to the possibility that minorities feel their race plays a role in the questioning. Palabrica also talked about his experience growing up in Chicago and the violence he saw there. He said at night he would either see white people being mugged or cops in his neighborhood targeting and torturing gang members. “The tendency is towards mutual distrust,” Palabrica said. Settles said a solution to the problem could lie in community policing. She cited an apartment complex in Florida where police involvement in the community brought down crime rates by 32 percent. Although the situation in Chicago might benefit from community policing, its inability to fix the underlying problems of poverty is prohibiting it from lowering crime rates, Keesling said. The panel also discussed immigration. Keesling took a

strong position in support of the wall Donald Trump proposed be built along the Mexican-American border. In addition to the wall itself, there would be additional patrol security, which is where she said the real border security would arise and limit illegal access to the country. “We have responsibility as Americans to help people come here through the right process,” Keesling said. Palabrica disagreed. People would be smuggled in by cars just as they were before, not by climbing a wall, he said. Nicholson-Crotty said he saw the issue as part of the Republican party’s recent inability to recognize how nuanced the Latino vote was. This religious, entrepreneurial group should be have a strong showing for Republicans, but policies like the wall turn them toward the Democrats, he said. Settles said he has noticed Trump is much more conservative than many of Republicans in Congress, and Trump’s conservatism keeps the Latinos away. After the group finished discussing the wall, Settles opened the discussion on abortion, which was the last topic of the night, and talked about the Hyde Amendment.

This amendment restricts federal funding for abortions unless the procedure is used to save the mother’s life or if the pregnancy was caused by rape or incest. Settles said the amendment should be repealed entirely, although other members of the panel disagreed. As a pro-life believer, Keesling said the government should stay out of it entirely. She did acknowledge the practice is legal, but thought it should be kept privatized. For Nicholson-Crotty, the issue is so closely tied to religious beliefs that the government’s involvement in the process hurts them. He said religious citizens should not have to use their tax dollars to pay for what they believe is murder. Palabrica said he did see where the funding could be useful, however. He thought it would help minority women gain access to a service which is much more affordable to whites and the middle class. This would improve equality, which he said the government is responsible for. “We don’t live in a world where reproductive health is equally distributed between blacks, whites and Latinos, and under- and middle-class people,” Palabrica said.

Students to build school in Nicaragua By Regina Mack regmack@indiana.edu | @regmack_

IU’s Panhellenic Association is in the midst of fundraising for what vice president of community involvement Sydney Twiggs said will be the biggest philanthropic project PHA has ever done. The project, which will build a school in rural Nicaragua, is a partnership between PHA and Circle of Sisterhood. Circle of Sisterhood is an organization that encourages sorority women across the country to make a difference in the lives of women and girls around the world. Twiggs said she wanted to partner with Circle of Sisterhood to raise awareness for a good cause and to get sorority women to come together and work with wom-

en from other chapters. “My goal was to make Circle of Sisterhood a widespread cause and a wellknown thing on campus,” Twiggs said. Director of service Maddi Lasson said they have raised $21,000 so far, and in order to build the school, they need to raise $40,000 by Jan. 15. The new school will be fully funded by the money PHA raises. Lasson said Circle of Sisterhood is the organization PHA is fundraising for and through, but Circle of Sisterhood is partnering with buildOn to construct the school. BuildOn is a nonprofit that constructs schools in rural villages with the goal of empowering and mobilizing the community members. Twiggs said the organi-

zation is important because it goes into the communities it serves to find out what real needs are. “We want to make sure what we’re doing in the country is actually useful,” Twiggs said. The $40,000 raised by PHA will be used partly to fund the building of the school and partly to sustain it for years to come, Lasson said. Lasson said there is a committee working on fundraising with representatives from each of the 23 chapters, and each chapter has been given the resources to devise a fundraising plan that works best for them. “All of the Panhellenic women are working together to accomplish this,” Lasson said. “The way it’s been able to bring everyone

together has surprised even us.” Twiggs said there are 14 spots for sorority women who want to go to Nicaragua to help build the school, and they will be chosen based on good standing with their chapter and involvement in fundraising for the project thus far. The women who are selected will have a preparation class through Student Life and Learning to help them learn more about service learning and find out how to get the most out of their experience, Twiggs said. “Our overall goal would just be to really unite the IU Panhellenic community,” Twiggs said. “We are women who have so much and are so fortunate, so we want to give back to women who may not be as fortunate.”

A panel of IU faculty and a graduate student plans to discuss Islamophobia 6 to 9 p.m. Thursday in the IU School of Global and International Studies auditorium. Bloomington Against Islamophobia organizer Amanda Lanzillo said the group has been planning “Islamophobia: Roots and Repercussions” since last semester. Panelists plan to address religious authority, the media, gender and the effects of 9/11. Lanzillo said she hopes people who don’t usually study these topics will attend and gain awareness of how Islamophobia might arise in their daily lives. “The thing that I’ve noticed here is that nobody tries to be racist or Islamophobic or misogynist,” she said. “I think most people are fairly aware that these are not good things.” Lanzillo’s hope is that

attendees think about the contexts in which prejudice is not quite as obvious. According to Lanzillo, Bloomington Against Islamophobia formed as a result of events in which the organizers felt like members of the Bloomington Muslim community were targeted. “That led to some rallies, but what we realized at the rallies was that people wanted education,” she said. “They wanted a chance to talk about these issues and to listen to people who are experts in these fields.” The group tried to invite speakers who hadn’t spoken at their previous events, as well as people who could examine different disciplines, areas of focus and time periods. “It’s interesting because it’s a local problem, and it’s a global problem,” Lanzillo said. “So how do we, here in Bloomington, fit into this global discussion?” Sponsors of the panel include a range of University departments and student groups.

Each panelist will give their own talk on an aspect of Islamophobia. “The Crisis in Religious Authority in Islam” Ron Sela - associate professor of Central Eurasian and international studies, director of the Islamic Studies Program “The Media Origins of Islamophobia” Mohamed El Marzouki doctoral student in journalism “‘Good’ and ‘Bad’ Muslims in the Post-9/11 World” Amali Ibrahim - assistant professor of religious studies and international studies “Fatima is Fatima: Miscon-

ceptions surrounding Islam and Gender” Seema Golestaneh assistant professor of Central Eurasian studies “Under the Tents of Ishmael: Diversity in Medieval Islam” Guadalupe González Diéguez – assistant professor of Jewish studies and Near Eastern languages and cultures. Moderator: Lee A. Feinstein, dean for the School of Global and International Studies

CORRECTION In the campus section of the Oct. 18 edition of the Indiana Daily Student, a story stated poachers believe rhino horn value will increase instead of stating syndicates in the East believe rhino horn value will increase. It also said the price of a rhino horn costs $70,000 on the black market, instead of $70,000 per kilogram, and rhino horns are used in South African culture instead of in Eastern culture. The IDS regrets these errors.

Alison Graham Editor-in-Chief Anna Boone Managing Editor of Presentation

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Public educated by talk on science of GMOs By Hussain Ather sather@umail.iu.edu | @SHussainAther

Genetic engineering might seem like a vision from a dystopian future, but it’s been with humans for centuries. Despite the thoroughly documented data of safety and benefits of genetic engineering technologies, the public has a very negative perception of them, said Kevin Folta, professor and chairman of the Horticultural Sciences Department at the University of Florida. Folta spoke last night in the Chemistry Building on the need for scientists to step in on the discussion surrounding genetically modified organisms to overcome misconceptions. “The discussion has got to get the science right,” Folta said. Folta recognized the importance of balancing explaining the science behind GMOs with worries about scientists appearing arrogant. “How do we talk about controversial topics in ways that resonate, in ways that change hearts and minds?” Folta said. “How do we do it in a way where we don’t just have a deal-breaker conversation with two people walking away angry?” Folta wanted to bridge the gap between scientists and the public in explaining the benefits and risks of GMOs. “I want to share with you the good things we can do with technology,” Folta said. Folta refrained from portraying scientists as arrogant and made sure to recognize priorities from the research lab to developing countries. GMOs would offer tremendous benefits that the world severely needs, Folta said. Opposition to golden rice, a genetically engineered form of rice that prevents blindness in children, cost $2 billion to farmers in developing countries, Folta

said. Healthier plants with greater yields that are more resistant to diseases are possible, but much of scientific research won’t see practical solutions due to misunderstandings with the public, Folta said. “Twenty-one thousand people die every day from malnutrition,” Folta said. “And in this nation, 50 percent of food is wasted.” Food costs are low, and one percent of the population produces food for the rest, Folta said. “However, when you talk to the public, the public gets a very different idea of what genetic improvement is,” Folta said. Consumers in the industrialized world are skeptical about food associated with science, Folta said. Some people say they just want the way Mother Nature intended things, but humans were hunters and gatherers for a long time, Folta said. While GMOs might seem like an issue that has arisen only recently, Folta said humans have been modifying crops for thousands of years. “Our argument is that we’re really doing what people have done for thousands of years, but today, we’re doing it with much more precision,” Folta said. When humans domesticated plants, they could modify them more efficiently, Folta said. “Plants have always been genetically manipulated by humans,” Folta said. “Not only have we changed the way they look and they taste, we’ve changed where they grow.” Folta showed where different crops were from, including potatoes and peanuts from South America and onions from India. “Tomatoes in their native form were small orbs on forest vines,” Folta said. “And their variation by humans was selected over time.” Taking plants from where

PHOTOS BY STELLA DEVINA | IDS

Top Students attend a lecture on genetic engineering Wednesday presented by Prof. Kevin Folta from University of Florida. Bottom University of Florida Professor Kevin Folta gives a lecture about genetic engineer technology Wednesday evening.

they are from to where they can be grown serves humanity better, Folta said. The way humans throughout history have introduced these natural variations by moving and modifying plants is similar to the way scientists modify crops. “The bacteria agrobacterium infects plants and does genetic transfer as part of its life cycle,” Folta said. “Scientists have simply engineered it to do what we want.” Folta studied how to use light to improve the quality of fruits and, in turn, the nutrition and life indoor

gardening and processes we use for plant restore. “Folta led the team that sequenced the strawberry genome,” said Jeremy Smith, associate professor of chemistry. “He’s well-known for his emphasis in science communication and being prepared to talk about controversial topics.” Through these controversial topics, Folta asks what’s important. “It’s important for us to put our values in the table — what’s important for us in where we’re trying to go,” Folta said.

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Trust journalists for credible information Cassie Heeke is a senior in journalism.

Fighting for music in schools STELLA DEVINA | IDS

(From left to right) Janis Stockhouse, Bailey Hull, Kathy Heise, Pete Miksza, Jon Hansen and Gwyn Richards talk about the value of music education in school Wednesday. Katelyn Haas haask@indiana.edu | @khaas96

A string quartet played in the background at the Monroe County Public Library to welcome people into the auditorium to talk about children just like the quartet members and how to keep those children playing in schools. Monroe County Community School Corporation teachers and IU community members were at the Monroe County Public Library on Wednesday night to discuss the value of music education in schools. The panel, titled “Beyond the Test Score,” focused particularly on getting students involved in music by middle school and preparing them to succeed in their lives beyond high school. Janis Stockhouse, a band teacher at Bloomington High School North, said MCCSC has given her the opportunity to build a program of her own design to help students learn. “Participating in any of our bands benefits students

with more than just music,” Stockhouse said. “It teaches responsibility, leadership, fun, equality for all, and unlocks this passion that helps students recognize greater things in the world.” The Indiana Coalition for Public Education put together a group of music educators for the panel, moderated by Cathy Fuentes-Rohwer, chair of the coalition, and Eric Smedley, associate director of bands at IU Jacobs School of Music. Fuentes-Rowher said it is important to make sure community members are empowered with information and support the idea of public education and the idea that every child should have access to music curriculum. She said the state measures success by language arts and math, but that is not the coalition’s definition of success. “Music education is not just about learning the mechanics of music, but leadership, collaboration and all the things students need to be citizens of our society,”

Fuentes-Rohwer said. Kathy Heise, a music teacher at Fairview Elementary School, said the school has special musical aspects infused into the classroom through their artful learning curriculum. She said the teachers take the curricular standards and find a way to look at what they teach through an artist’s eye. “How an artist looks and uses perspective, such as how an architect puts things together,” Heise said. “It’s not just used as an individual subject kids are sent to — we infuse it into all of our curriculum.” The panel discussed the Every Student Succeeds Act. The act contains new and revised language of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, with the new language supporting music education, according to a Department of Education press release. The new grant program in the ESSA emphasizes access to well-rounded education in music, the arts, environmental education and computer studies. With the passage of

ESSA, states can work on the characteristics of wellrounded education in a way that ensures access to all students, including lowincome families who do not have access to the arts, according to the release. Pete Miksza, IU Jacobs School of Music professor of music education, said music participation has also been shown to increase IQ and functioning in class, which is key for kids to focus and improve their reading and listening abilities. “Music students are likely to be on time, not skip school and have a more positive perception about school,” Miksza said. The panel discussed the lasting impacts of music education, past the actual music learning. He said music is a resource for students in school. He said he has seen students who go from shy and unsure of themselves their freshman year of high school to becoming drum major of the marching band their senior year. “It’s important to recognize that students come

with needs unfulfilled,” Miksza said. “We need to think about these programs that can satisfy needs before the music making can even happen, where they can find a sense of belonging.” Jon Hansen, a music educator at Jackson Creek Middle School, said over the years he has learned there are more parts to being a music educator than just teaching the students music. He said some of the most important conversations he has had with students have not been about music but were about being more of a soundboard for the students, someone they can trust. “I’m an advocate and an ally to my students,” Hansen said. “I believe teachers should be an extension of their students’ families.” Heise said it is essential for schools, including MCCSC schools, to continue to give students access to the arts and music education. “Music cannot just be thought as being special,” Heise said. “But music being special to our children.”

Latino community reacts to Trump’s policy By Austin Faulds afaulds@umail.iu.edu | @a_faulds9615

As of 2014, there were an estimated 11 million illegal immigrants living in the United States, according to the Pew Research Center. More than half of these are Mexican immigrants. In June 2015, Donald Trump discussed the dilemma of immigration in the U.S. and accused Mexico of sending drugs, crime and rapists to the country in his campaign announcement speech. This statement has caused controversy among members of the Latino community. Sylvia Martinez, director of the IU Latino Studies Program, said she was shocked by Trump’s comments on immigration. “It was completely ridiculous and out of touch with reality,” Martinez said. According to another study by the Pew Research Center, first-generation immigrants are less likely to engage in criminal activity than native-born citizens or second-generation immigrants. Martinez, whose own parents were once illegal immigrants from Mexico, said the accusations made by Trump affected her personally. “For me, it was impact-

ful because it was suggesting that my parents are criminals, rapists and murderers, which they are not,” Martinez said. “They came here illegally in the ‘70s to pursue opportunities.” Martinez’s parents are now U.S. citizens, she said. In his announcement speech, Trump also said he will build a wall along the Mexican border in order to prevent illegal immigrants from entering the country. Martinez said she believes this idea is too unrealistic and expensive to actually be successful. She said it may make the journey past the border more difficult, but not impossible, so it would also be unsuccessful at keeping out illegal immigrants. Last year, Trump said he would deport all illegal immigrants residing in the U.S. Martinez said she believes the deportation to be unfair to immigrants who have been productive during their time in the U.S. Martinez said she also believes the deportations would break up families where the children are citizens but not their parents and vice-versa. Overall, Martinez said she is not a fan of our current immigration policy, which she considers to be “broken” and in need of reform. “There needs to be some

ANDREW WILLIAMS | IDS

A campaign sign stands in the yard of a Donald Trump supporter. Part of Trump’s immigration plan is to build a wall at the southern border of the country to prevent illegal immigrants from entering the country.

legislation where if you’ve shown that you worked a stable job, you pursued education or military service or whatever that is that shows you’ve been a productive citizen, there should be a pathway towards citizenship,” Martinez said. In the 2016 presidential election, Martinez said she will be supporting Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton. While Martinez said she doesn’t know what Clinton will do specifically to help Latino culture, she said cannot allow herself to vote for Trump.

Martinez said she still doesn’t understand how the Republican candidate has been this successful with his campaign. Martinez said she believes these statements have had a negative influence on Trump’s supporters. She said a man shouted at her mother from his truck to “go back to her country,” and her husband was threatened by a man who said the government was going to build a wall. Martinez said one of the things she wants to teach people through the Latino

Studies Program is that the Latino community is composed of more than just illegal immigrants. “The Latino and Hispanic population in the U.S. is really diverse,” Martinez said. “So the majority of Latinos in the U.S. really are U.S.-born.” In order to better understand the Latino community and combat stereotypes, Martinez said she encourages others to expose themselves to its culture. “Read a book, take a class,” Martinez said. “Always be critical of what you read.”

WFIU adds new FM channel to radio station By Lyndsay Jones jonesly@indiana.edu | @lyndsayjonesy

WFIU has added a second FM radio channel for listeners who want to decide what programming they want hear. The station previously alternated between music, news and local programming. Now, if a listener prefers only music or only talk programs, they can dial between the two stations.

“We have audiences that either listen to mostly news or mostly music,” WFIU Operations Director John Bailey said. “They’re sizeable, but distinct.” Marketing director Laura Baich said the station’s channel went full-power early in October. “We’ve tested it out, and we found out that the signal can actually reach Seymour,” Baich said. The second channel will

offer complementary programming, meaning that when WFIU plays music, WFIU2 will have talk programming and vice versa. Previously, this feature was only available to listeners if they had a way to tune in to the station’s HD radio channel or the ability to stream the programs online. “FM is still the main way that people come to us,” Bailey said. “That’s about 90

percent of our audience.” Bailey said radio is a habit for many people, especially older individuals who make up a significant portion of the station’s 45,000 listeners who tune in at least once a week. He admitted the number of people who reach the station through radio is being chipped at little by little. “I ask my class every year if anyone woke up to a clock radio this morn-

ing,” Bailey said. “This year, in a class of 78, not a single hand went up.” The station’s list of complete programming for both channels can be found at wfiu.org. Additionally, the station is interested in receiving feedback on how WFIU2 sounds. Listeners can email wfiu@indiana.edu with their location and comments on the new station.

The closer we get to the Nov. 8 election, the more upsetting my Facebook feed gets. I’m going to make an assumption and say I’m not alone, especially among fellow Media School students. Just last week, a blog post kept reappearing on my news feed that was so maddening, I broke one of my own cardinal rules of social media: Thou shalt not comment on political posts. I couldn’t help it. I agonized over whether to hit the launch button on my already typed-out comment, but I knew all along it had to be done. Originally shared by someone I went to high school with, the post was already gaining traction among millennials from my hometown. The blog post is titled “Why I’m Voting for Donald Trump” and was written by Kelly Quelette, a 25-year-old mother who identifies herself as Republican, Christian and a victim of sexual abuse. In 1,400 words, Quelette managed to not only reiterate claims that have been proven dishonest or just false, but also make her opinions emotionally appealing. The young woman who shared it on Facebook had sold it as “informative” for anyone yet undecided. Most upsetting, I think, is that so many people have lost trust in journalists. They abhor what they call “the media,” but they don’t think twice before taking the opinions of any random person on the internet and accepting them as truth. It’s important to recognize that there are several critical differences between these people and reporters. For one, journalists are held to high ethical standards. Bloggers aren’t. Journalists have an obligation to attempt neutrality in their reporting. Bloggers don’t. Most importantly, journalists spend years learning to do thorough research, balance all sides of an issue and accept punishment if they make factual errors. In short, they have degrees in this stuff. Even opinion columnists aren’t allowed to make things up based on their own agendas. And while no one is denying the presence of bias in journalism, at least we know those biases are internal to the reporters themselves — meaning that we can be almost certain they aren’t getting paid by their employers to put a certain spin on things or write lies. Bloggers, Quelette included, don’t work for anyone, so there’s no telling what their motives are. It would be naïve to assume they are credible. In my comment on this Facebook post, I didn’t argue. I didn’t question the intelligence of anyone. I simply shared the website for PolitiFact, a non-partisan fact-checking organization, and said we can’t afford to be spreading lies. Not in this election. Not when the very definition of “American” is at stake. Please realize journalists are not the enemy. They don’t go into the news industry for fame or status, and they surely don’t do it for money. They work long hours. They talk to people they hate. In the end, journalists are doing us a public service by sorting through mounds of information to separate fact from fiction, tirelessly calling sources and being at important events when we can’t attend. Let’s do all journalists a favor and have a little faith in their ability to do their jobs — and not discount them by turning to random people for credible information. cnheeke@indiana.edu @cnheeke8


Indiana Daily Student

OPINION

Thursday, Oct. 27, 2016 idsnews.com

EDITORIAL BOARD

Editors Jessica Karl & Daniel Kilcullen opinion@idsnews.com

5

MULLING IT OVER WITH MERM

Embrace the nasty woman

ILLUSTRATION BY KATHRYN MEIER | IDS

Smart traffic lights make commutes easier A tech startup is revolutionizing the way traffic flows in cities Tech startup Surtrac aims to revolutionize the way traffic flows in major cities. The fledgling company has already installed its high-tech stoplights in over 50 Pittsburgh intersections. These traffic lights are able to analyze traffic patterns through cameras and radar, changing lights dynamically as traffic waxes and wanes throughout the day. Though it’s very promising technology, the Editorial Board does have a few key reservations. In Pittsburgh, Surtrac’s smart lights have been overwhelmingly effective. Since their installation in 2012, the traffic lights have managed to cut emissions by 21 percent and travel time by 25 percent. The intersections are each able to optimize their lightchanging schedule individually, which is a step up from centrally-controlled smart

traffic systems. With each stoplight operating at peak individual efficiency, the whole system flows much faster. This is astounding. If we could have this sort of efficiency in every American city, it would lead to more time spent with friends and family and at work. It would definitely mean less time worrying about exactly how late we can leave home to arrive at our jobs right as our shift starts. These results can’t be argued. However, any artificially intelligent system makes people nervous, and we worry about some of the potential problems with expanding Surtrac’s system further. First off, the system is incredibly expensive. It can cost up to $240,000 to equip an intersection with the smart system. Since each stoplight acts independently, they all require advanced computing

systems in order to function. Saving 15 minutes on the way to work is nice, but that’s a lot of tax dollars. Then comes the issue of computer failure. With our dumb traffic lights, it’s unlikely that a computer failure would occur at a major intersection. Although it does happen occasionally, current systems are too simple for it to be a widespread issue. If an intersection that sees thousands of cars per day were to experience a glitch in a complicated algorithm, it could cause major delays. No one wants more major intersections turning into four-way stops due to a complex error we can’t figure out how to fix. Our final concern — get your tinfoil hats ready — is that allowing an advanced computer system to control our traffic could create a Skynet-esque problem. The

Editorial Board doesn’t necessarily believe the system will become self-aware and cause mayhem, but anyone with control over these lights could wreak some major havoc. With all the recent fright over hackers, both domestic and foreign, we only hope that our government and Surtrac are doing everything humanly possible to protect their ambitious technology. We don’t need someone to get ahold of the system and make every Pittsburgh light red for eight hours straight. Overall, the Editorial Board is cautiously optimistic about the future of intelligent traffic lights. The cost absolutely needs to be trimmed down to be nationally feasible, and cybersecurity is paramount. If Surtrac and other companies can find a safe, efficient way to make traffic less maddening, we say go for it.

GETTING IN THE GROOVE

Cookie cereal highlights America’s sugar problem America, is it possible for us to keep anything holy? I know 2016 is — and has been for a while — going downhill as fast as Donald Trump’s recent poll numbers. But we didn’t have to drag Girl Scout cookies into the bloody melee that is 2016. If you’ve not heard, General Mills made a big announcement Monday. Starting in January 2017, two new cereal varieties will be gracing grocery store shelves: Thin Mint and Caramel Crunch. Yes, you read that correctly: Girl Scout cookie cereal. This move by General Mills is complete and utter blasphemy. It’s a threat to everything we stand for as a country. Why? The charm of Girl Scout cookies lies in the hoopla surrounding them. Girl Scout cookie season is a national time of celebration. It’s something to look forward to, a shining, chocolate-covered beacon of light in the cold bleakness of winter. It’s also a chance for us to

disguise our hedonism as altruism. One can easily rationalize buying ten boxes of Samoas because little Suzy from down the street would be so upset if she didn’t reach her target sales goal. In manufacturing Girl Scout cookies as a breakfast cereal, General Mills is robbing them of their specialness and replacing it with ubiquity. Girl Scout cookies are sacred items that only comes around once a year. Now, they’re being transformed into something else entirely: a manifestation of the gluttony and total lack of self-control in the American diet. Granted, there’s hardly anything unique about sweet treats being turned into breakfast cereals. Just take a look at Reese’s Puffs. Heck, there’s hardly anything unique about breakfast cereals being laden with sugar. We have Lucky Charms, Cinnamon Toast Crunch and Cocoa Puffs. In fact, the metamorphosis of Girl Scout cookies into

Girl Scout cereal serves as a perfect example of the transformation of the American breakfast into a glorified dessert, laden with added sugars. I’ve taken the liberty of searching IU’s nutritional database for the nutrition facts on a few breakfast foods that I and many other people enjoy on the daily. I was slightly horrified by what I found. A cup of Chobani fruiton-the-bottom yogurt has 15 grams of sugar in it. So does a serving of vanilla ice cream. Each blueberry muffin you’ll find in an RPS cafeteria or café has 21 grams of sugar. So does the average cupcake. A small glass of orange juice from RPS has 36 grams of sugar. That’s roughly the same as a Snickers bar. The bottom line is there’s an awful lot of sugar hidden in our breakfast foods. The American Heart Association recommends that we only consume between 25 and 37 grams of added sugar a day. It’s awfully hard to stick

ANNA GROOVER is a freshman in English and political science.

to that guideline if your daily glass of OJ maxes it out first thing in the morning. It should also come as no surprise that most Americans don’t, in fact, abide by this suggestion. There’s a host of reasons as to why sugar has become so pervasive in our breakfast foods — the power of food lobbyists in Washington being one of the main ones — but regardless of these, it’s clear that this takeover is a problem. A problem, it seems, only being made worse by our inability to keep our sweet tooth at bay until after lunch or dinner. Girl Scout cookies must be kept holy. Untainted. Sacred. Pure. Most of all, though, they need to be kept where they belong: cookie boxes, not the cereal aisle. acgroove@indiana.edu

LETTER TO THE EDITOR POLICY The IDS encourages and accepts letters to be printed daily from IU students, faculty and staff and the public. Letters should not exceed 500 words and may be edited for length and style. Submissions must include the person’s name, address and telephone number for verification.

Letters without those requirements will not be considered for publication. Letters can be mailed or dropped off at the IDS, 130 Franklin Hall, 601 Kirkwood Ave., Bloomington, Ind., 47405. Submissions can also be sent via e-mail to letters@idsnews.com. Questions can be directed to the IDS at 855-0760.

Indiana Daily Student, Est. 1867 Website: idsnews.com The opinions expressed by the editorial board do not necessarily represent the opinions of the IDS news staff, student body, faculty or staff members or the Board of Trustees. The editorial board comprises columnists contributing to the Opinion page and the Opinion editors.

The people you live with are supposed to be the people you can trust and feel safe with. They shouldn’t bring other people into your house or apartment that will make you uncomfortable. They definitely should not bring people into your house or apartment that will proceed to make rape and sexual assault jokes all night. And on top of all of that, you should be able to talk to your roommates about this. I received a text from a good friend of mine the other night about how upset she was that there were men in her house making rape jokes. These men were dating her roommates. I asked if there was any way she could explain to her roommates why this made her so uncomfortable. The atmosphere these men created made it so she didn’t feel right asking them to not talk that way in her own house. She believed that if she commented on it, then she would be the next girl they called nasty names and made rape jokes about. What’s wrong with a woman commenting on something that makes her uncomfortable? This is something I’ve been wondering for the last few weeks. What is it that makes women so afraid to discuss their discomfort? Honestly, I think it is the blatant apathy I have witnessed men express when it comes to rape culture. They can talk about rape so nonchalantly. They don’t bat an eye when they discuss what they would do to a woman if she was unconscious. They don’t miss a beat between talking about how much they love their mother and about how their ex-girlfriend was a “crazy bitch.” Rape culture isn’t the only issue America is barely acknowledging. Sure, domestic violence is taken seriously. But people have their own definitions of domestic violence. Violence doesn’t only

MIRANDA GARBACIAK is a junior in English.

come from a man or woman hitting their significant other. Violence can come in the form of threats or backhanded compliments meant to make you believe that no one else could love you like they do. The Twitter trend #MaybeHeDoesntHitYou tells the stories of many women and men who have encountered domestic abuse without the men ever laying a hand on them. I don’t only overhear rape jokes on the streets or in the classroom. I hear jokes about how a girl should “shape up or get hit.” Or sometimes “bros” will joke with each other about how they put their girlfriends down the night before. “She can’t feel too good about herself.” “I don’t like her to go out when she looks hot.” “I care about her, but I have to act like I don’t.” But why is that? Why can’t guys just treat girls the way they want to? Where did they learn to make fun of girls and crack jokes at their suffering? I think women learned to not voice their discomfort at the same time that men learned to say whatever they want about women. So long as women don’t feel comfortable in telling men to stop talking that way, they’re going to think it’s okay and keep doing it. Of course, this is no excuse. Men have no right to make jokes about rape, domestic violence, or the intelligence and worth of women. But I think we women should stand up for ourselves. If someone doesn’t like it, then that’s too bad. Embrace the nasty woman. mmgarbac@indiana.edu

THE COFFEE CHRONICLES

Doctor knows best A typical doctor receives four years of undergraduate education, four years of medical school, anywhere from three to ten years of training including residency, as well as a fellowship if the individual decides to specialize. Through these years of education, students obtain the knowledge and skills that are necessary for them to properly inform their patients and the general public on medical issues. They train in order to be the most informed people in their discipline. However, more and more, I see people who discredit this vast amount of education in order to follow rules from a book or even from the internet instead of following their educated physicians. If we demand such high standards from our health care professionals, we owe it to them to have some faith in what they say. Starting this fall, there has been an uptake in the number of doctors, the majority being pediatricians and doctors in family practices, refusing to see unvaccinated children. This is because they believe unvaccinated children may present a risk of outbreaks that could harm other patients. And while many parents support this decision, some argue the science is still shaky on vaccines and claim doctors are part of a conspiracy with pharmaceutical companies. One woman even claimed that after not agreeing with her pediatrician, she sought out an alternative-medicine doctor who echoed her fears. This is part of the problem. Doctors are educated, and their goal above all else is to keep their patients healthy. Those four years of additional schooling are not filled with countless nights

NEETA PATWARI is a junior in biology and Spanish.

drinking but a lot of time devoted to the inner workings of the body and the drugs that we are using to treat it. They will know more about any of these topics than any layman off the street. And they should. I, for one, want an educated doctor and know that I can’t make all the decisions without some form of guidance right now. This isn’t saying parents shouldn’t take an avid interest in researching medical options for their children. It also isn’t recommending to put blind trust your doctor. You should get second opinions, and maybe even third or fourth ones if you think it’s best. But at some point, we need to realize that we, as in the general public, are not trained to know. Someone with little to no scientific knowledge beyond a high school level may not be able to understand the complexities of a journal article. After all of my science classes, I still have difficulty understanding the long term effects of these studies. However, doctors are trained to do this. I don’t doubt people’s ability to think for themselves or parents’ love for their children. When I’m having a plumbing problem, I usually don’t trust myself to do more than plunge the toilet because I’m too scared of doing damage. And that’s just my plumbing. For my body and my health, I sure as hell am going to have as many professional opinions as possible. npatwari@indiana.edu


6

Thursday, Oct. 27, 2016 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com

» SOCCER

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

low shot by Michigan senior forward Nicky Waldeck tied the match 2-2 in the 84th minute, before Michigan junior midfielder Ani Sarkisian scored the winning goal with 136 seconds left to play. The defeat snaps a fivematch unbeaten run for the Hoosiers, their longest since the 2007 season. It was this run that helped propel IU into its spot among the Big Ten’s top eight teams, a position that extends the careers of IU’s three senior players. “We continued to work hard every day, and I think it’s finally paying off,” IU senior midfielder Veronica Ellis said. “I can say it’s really exciting for

myself, but I’m really excited also for the underclassmen. For the first time, they’re seeing that the work they put in really does pay off in the end.” A ceremony took place prior to Wednesday’s game on Jerry Yeagley Field to honor Ellis, along with senior defenders Marissa Borschke and Ari Kowalski. These three players are the only members of the IU team who were able to experience its last trip to the playoffs. When it came time for the match to start, though, it was a pair of IU sophomores who shone. Sophomore forwards Mykayla Brown and Maya Piper scored in the sixth and 78th minutes, respectively. On each occasion, the goals by

Brown and Piper put IU into the lead, although IU failed to hold the lead each time. Brown in particular has starred for IU this season, accounting for seven of the team’s 24 goals. Several of Brown’s goals have proved significant in terms of IU reaching the Big Ten Women’s Soccer Tournament as well. She scored the winning goal in extra time Sept. 18 to defeat Illinois 1-0 in IU’s first conference game, and she scored both IU goals in a 2-2 draw with Purdue on Oct. 22. “It feels great to be able to score seven goals,” Brown said. “It means a lot to me to be able to come back from an ACL tear last season and be able to help the team record

the wins we have.” As the eighth seed, IU will face the Big Ten regular season champion Minnesota on the road in its quarterfinal matchup in the conference tournament. With the quarterfinal to be played at a still-to-be-determined time on Sunday. Not all the logistical details are in place for the Hoosiers. But IU knows it’s in the playoffs, and there is still at least one more match left in its season. “Anything can happen in the postseason,” Berbary said. “You just have to get there. Getting there is the most difficult thing. It’s hard to wrap my mind around how much this team has progressed so quickly.”

NOBLE GUYON | IDS

Professor Robert Doler tells ghost stories Wednesday evening inside the Indiana Memorial Union as part of the 2016 Ghost Walk put on by the IU Folklore and Ethnomusicology Student Association.

» HAUNTED

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

“This is a common legend in a lot of universities that the tallest building is the one associated with the most supernatural activity,” Doler said. He explained the IMU was at one time the tallest building at IU, and tall buildings are generally associated with suicides. There are a lot of stories revolving around the elevator and fourth floor, perhaps because a woman leaped to her death from this floor at one point, Doler said. The tour

» RHETORIC

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

to the world of art, which lend him a perspective that differs from his contemporaries in the field because of the inclusion of his thoughts. “His work is different from the kind of work that I would do on the face of it, because what I want to suggest is that his work has more to do with the indexical reality of the image, and, in fact, it underscores the meaning that spectatorship plays in the meaning of a photographic image,”

moved to the Tudor room, where Doler introduced the painting “Halloween” with a young boy named Jacob holding a jack-o’-lantern and his hauntings. From there, the crowd transitioned to another room holding ghoulish secrets, such as a woman’s anger behind a stolen urn full of ashes. The graveyard was next, where graduate student Kristina Downs explained the history behind Dunn Cemetery and its paranormal activity. “When things are disturbed, it tends to make peo-

ple angry,” Downs said. After a few more minutes of walking, the group arrived in front of the IU Auditorium. A few more stories were shared by Downs and alumnus Kenneth Glynn. Their tales ranged from a large scorched circle in the middle of the Arboretum to hauntings in the Auditorium and Lilly Library. For the last story, Glynn talked about a woman named Emily working at the library. Emily thought she saw a lady as she was shelving books, but when she looked again, the lady was

gone. After reassuring herself it was merely her mind playing tricks, she continued working, Glynn said. When she saw the lady again, she didn’t react — until she was looking straight at a painting of the lady. This lady in particular has her and her family’s ashes encased in urns in the northern wall, along with a portrait of each family member. Yet again, a ghost stuck close to its urn, Glynn said. “Needless to say, if your urn’s around, people don’t like being near it,” Glynn said.

Lucaites said. Lucaites went on to describe Muniz’s work as a sort of “metapicture,” or a picture about pictures, created with the purpose to school the viewer about how to look at and interpret images they encounter. Later in the talk, Lucaites described the connection between photographs and memory, which he tied into the narrative of how Muniz himself used his memory and the memory of others to sketch out the photos in his “The Best of Life” series.

“Taken collectively, ‘The Best of Life’ is something of an analog for the family album for America,” Lucaites said. “If the albums in our house mark our personal families, Life, in a sense, has done this for the nation itself.” Lucaites told the story of how Muniz arrived in the United States and purchased the anthology of Life magazine photos and, once he lost it, felt the need to recreate the iconic images he found via sketch, including the moon landing, the Tianan-

men Square protest photo and more. Once Muniz completed the sketches, he took slightly out-of-focus photographs of them to create the illusion of connection with the originals, Lucaites said. These became the photographs in his series. “In conclusion, when I look at and think about Vik Muniz’s work, which I think is an incredible oeuvre, what I’m reminded of is that art can be about many things, but at its core it’s about inviting us to see the world differently,” Lucaites said.

» RALLY

involving physical violence. “It is imperative that CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 we take this message that the school administration, we have here today to creteachers and guidance ate safe schools where that counselors and not receiv- no student has to come to ing the change they saw school and feel afraid to as necessary, the group go through those doors,” formed a rally at the Mon- said Greg Chaffin, guidroe County Community ance counselor at BHSN. School Corporation district “No matter their sexual orientation, the color of their office later that afternoon. A group of about 30 skin, their religious belief or students — in addition to non-religious belief — this faculty members, students is why I work for Bloomingfrom Bloomington High ton High School North.” Chaffin said many of his School South and other community members — colleagues did not attend gathered in front of the the event in fear of losing district office to voice their their jobs. “That better send a mesconcerns. Following an hourlong sage to administration, to open forum led by the dis- the board,” Chaffin said. trict superintendent, Judith “These are educated, intelDeMuth, a letter was read ligent, caring teachers who aloud to the group that are afraid to come to this forum.” would be A s sent home “The safety and each perto the stuwell-being of all of son spoke, dents’ famithe room lies that our students is always sievening. at the forefront of our stayed lent minus The letschools and what we the freter stated quent gasps the Conworry about of disbelief federate every day.” from the flag was Judith DeMuth, stories of banned district superintendent discrimicompletely nation the from the school, school-sponsored students were sharing. “One person came up events and functions. “The safety and well- to me and said, ‘When being of all of our students the faggots can wear their is always at the forefront of flags, then so can we,’” our schools and what we Sarah Hannon, junior at worry about every day,” De- BHSN, said. Lat Joor Awa “LJ” Gaye, Muth said. Brown put her head junior at BHSS, heard about in her hands and started the rally. Once the school swaying back and forth as day ended, he immediately tears slowly started to drip went to the district office. “What I’m trying to down her face at the letter make people see in this reading. “Today was about get- community is that it’s ting our voice heard, and people that walk like us, that is exactly what hap- talk like us, eat with us, talk to us, that act like this,” pened,” Brown said. In addition to the letter, Gaye said. Gaye told a story to the the administration will create focus groups in all the group about when he was schools within the district told to leave the country to brainstorm educational in response to a lecture he programs to help amend was giving on racial equalthe current unhealthy ity, as the answer to solving the racial issues that the learning environment. Prior to the letter read- community faces. Gaye said he was also ing, various students, faculty members and commu- suspended from school nity members voiced their when he wore a traditional African head wrap because concerns in the forum. The day prior to the inci- he was told it could be a dent in the hallway, Brown “thug piece” or start gangs counted eight flags either in the school. “I really hope that this draped on people’s backs or attached as a sticker on community effects change, objects as she went through and I know we are capable her school day. of it because it needs to “These people were happen,” Gaye said. “We wearing this in statement have that strength.” to claim that there was inFollowing the open validity in in my feelings forum, the students exof this being a racist state- pressed feelings of utter ment,” Brown said. shock. This should be a corpo“This shows that there rate-wide stance, Brown is really power in groups,” said. At BHSS, the use of Hannon said. “You go to the flag had already been do something if you want banned after an incident something to happen.”

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WEEKEND@IDSNEWS.COM

LAST-MINUTE HALLOWEEN COSTUMES Halloween is fast approaching, and time is running out to put together a costume. But have no fear. Weekend has you covered.

alloweekend is is just a day away — or sooner, depending on when your festivities begin. If you’re scrambling to sort out your costume, we’ve got a handful of easy-ish last-minute costumes for you to choose from. Ken Tone He’s a musical version of Ken Bone who has no skeletons in his closet when it comes to Reddit. Materials: Red sweater, fake mustache and melodica (or other novelty instrument). Bill Clinton at the Democratic National Convention Okay, so maybe Ken Bone isn’t your election season costume of choice. Perhaps Bill Clinton at the DNC is more up your alley. His childlike wonder during the balloon drop is well worth some sort of tribute. Materials: Suit, red tie, balloon and pure joy. Rory and Lorelai Gilmore from “Gilmore Girls” In preparation for the return of everyone’s favorite mother/daughter duo next month, grab your best fast-

talking gal pal and make like a Gilmore. Bonus points if you can find a flannel-clad, hat-wearing grump to be your Luke. Materials: Luke’s Diner coffee cups, plaid school uniform (Rory), a flashy peak-2000s outfit (Lorelai) and a long list of obscure pop culture references to drop throughout the night. Eleven from “Stranger Things” After the breakout Netflix series debuted this year, there is nothing more fair than to give Millie Bobby Brown’s character a proper tribute. Also, it’s a great costume if you don’t want to go squadless. Materials: Blond wig, babypink dress, blue jacket and boxes of Eggo waffles. If you’d like to improve the look, a bit of blood in the nose is a must. However, a shaved head is optional. Brexit It’s nice to remind people that the United States isn’t the only country that’s having a rough 2016. Grab a friend and get ready to fight. Materials: One shirt that says “UK” and one shirt that says “EU.” Dunn Meadow Bagpipe Guy Bagpipe Guy played his way into our hearts this year —

ILLUSTRATIONS BY MIA TORRES | IDS

now it’s time to honor this Scottish-music-lovin’ Dunn Meadow regular with a Halloween costume. Materials: Kilt, bagpipe and an aura of stoicism and pride. Harambe Pay tribute to 2016’s most mourned gorilla friend, because nothing is scarier than a stale meme. Materials: Gorilla mask and DIY halo (angel wings optional).

The Required Class You’ve Been Putting Off Since Freshman Year Try as you might, you can’t ignore that final N&M credit any longer — at least, that’s what your academic advisor says. Materials: Dress up like you would for a dementor from “Harry Potter” (dark, hooded cloak) and hover menacingly over people’s shoulders all Halloween.

Snapchat filter Who needs cartoon dog ears or a flower crown when you can have the real thing? Get super meta and send snaps of your bangin’ costume. Materials: Pink and yellow flower crown, brown dog ears and nose. Yourself Get literal with this cliché. Materials: Confidence in the personality and individuality you bring to the party.

STAYING IN THIS WEEKEND? If you’re planning to have a low-key Halloween, consider watching one of these movies that spooked our Weekend writers.

“‘T Masque of the “‘The Red Death’ is a great old Re Halloween movie. One of my Ha favorite black comedies is fav ‘An American Werewolf in London.’ It’s a great balance Lo of o scary and funny. I’m also a fan of 1993’s ‘Hocus Pocus.’ It’s a silly and spooky cult classic with an eclectic cast.” JESSE PASTERNACK

“The scariest movie I ever saw was probably the ‘Texas Chainsaw Massacre.’ Everything feels so real that you often forget that it’s not a documentary. The ending still gives me serious chills. My favorite horror movie is ‘Psycho’ because of just how flawless and horrific it still is today.”

Weekend columnist

AUSTIN FAULDS

Weekend columnist

MOVIE STILLS DATABASE

“I watched ‘The Ring’ and ‘The Ring Two’ during Halloween when I was 13 and couldn't sleep for three weeks. Also, ‘Saw 5’ gave me nightmares for a month. My favorite horror movie though is ‘The Conjuring.’ I personally think it is a horror masterpiece.” RENATA GOMES

Weekend writer


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PAGE 8 | OCT. 27, 2016

‘TWD’ returns with tragic premiere *SPOILER WARNING* Perhaps we shouldn’t get attached to television characters. We shouldn’t spend hours binge-watching them and developing feelings of empathy, concern and even companionship for them. We shouldn’t do this because sometimes we become attached to characters on shows like “The Walking Dead.” And then we care about them. And then we watch them (fake) die. After watching “The Walking Dead” for six seasons, you would think we viewers would be used to the heart-wrenching deaths that routinely take place in the horror-drama television series. I mean, it is a show about a zombie apocalypse. But there I was, crying in my bed while watching as not one but two of the main characters on the show were bludgeoned to death by the newly introduced antagonist, Negan. Exactly who was going to meet their demise was part of a cliffhanger the show’s producers created last April. Viewers saw Negan pointing Lucille, his barbedwire-covered baseball bat, in the faces of all the members of Rick Grime’s gang, taunting them with a cruel game of “Eeny, meeny, miny, moe.” The worst part was that when he landed on his victim, it was from the point of view of that person, which made it impossible to know who it was. Well, we all got our answer last night, and then some. It turned out that Negan would claim two characters’ lives during the

MOVIE STILLS DATABASE

season premiere — Abraham and Glenn. While both deaths were upsetting and horrific to watch, it was the loss of Glenn, a character who has been on the show since the very first season, that really wracked the public. Not only was Glenn a fan favorite and a genuinely likable character, but his relationship with Maggie, another protagonist, was one of tenderness and depth — something beautiful to watch

blossom while everything else decayed around them. Watching Maggie sob and writhe with terror and pain as her soulmate was beaten to death was the most heartbreaking scene yet on the show. It doesn’t help that Maggie had lost her father and little sister to brutal killings as well or that Glenn was truly the last family she had outside the pseudofamily that the group has become. The rest of the episode

passed by in a fog, not unlike the fog in which Rick takes down a horde of walkers halfway through the premiere. The show’s creators did a fantastic job of keeping the action going while creating a haze that allowed fans to attempt to digest the loss of Abraham and Glenn and focus on what was to happen next, plot-wise. And what exactly will happen next? How does a group come

to terms with the fact that they are now stuck in an antsgrasshoppers relationship that parallels that of “A Bug’s Life” (with a lot more blood and guts), having to collect offerings for Negan’s gang, now with two less men to help gather and protect? What will become of Maggie’s psyche as she and Sasha take their beloved beaus to the Hilltop to lay them to rest and, if possible, reach some sort of peace? And who else can the

group lose without causing ratings to crash and fans to scream out in rage? All of these questions should be answered throughout the upcoming season, which promises much more excitement and, of course, sadness. So give it a watch — and try not to get attached to any characters. Nicole Krasean nkrasean@imail.iu.edu @NicoleKrasean

Gaga releases her American Football is most soulful record back after 17 years ‘JOANNE’ Lady Gaga

B Two years after Lady Gaga’s last album, and three years since her last pop record, “Joanne” finally hits the charts. And what’s the verdict of Mama Monster’s latest delicacy for her loyal fans? It’s pretty OK. I wanted to love this album. I wanted this album to be the best thing Gaga has released in her entire career and all her following albums to surpass it. I wanted this record to be a masterpiece. While it’s by no means a bad LP, it’s fair to say “Joanne” won’t be going down in history as Gaga’s most memorable release. You’re not going to go out of your way to listen to it over and over again like you did with “Born this Way” or “The Fame Monster.” It’s just not that kind of album, and it may have been intentional by Gaga. This is a record not from the mind or the heart but the soul. In a lot of ways, it’s the most vulnerable Gaga we have ever seen. We have seen glimpses

of this side of her before in songs like “Dope” and “Til It Happens to You” but never a whole album’s worth of content before. “Diamond Heart,” “Angel Down” and the title track show the world an uncensored, raw, true side of Gaga in the perfectly flawed flesh. It all sounds great, too. But when you have BloodPop and Mark Ronson, two of the best producers of the last 10 years, working on your LP, what else would you expect? Apart from the leading single, “Perfect Illusion,” maybe none of these songs will ever be played in a New York nightclub like the tracks on Gaga’s previous dance albums. With that said, “Joanne” is certainly not lacking in either rhythm or substance. Songs like “A-YO” and “John Wayne” are perfect examples of this with their sick thumps and hip-hop beats. These would be standard in a traditional Gaga album, but since this isn’t a traditional LP for her, these are the only songs of that style. This leaves more room for experimentation in “Joanne’s” instrumentation. The guitar in “Million

Reasons” has a Nashville twang, the synth in “Hey Girl” plays like a 1980s onehit wonder pop tune, the backup vocals and positive energy in “Come to Mama” recall to Motown music and the spaghetti western attitude of “Sinner’s Prayer” is like Ennio Morricone at a dance club. The stand-out song on this album is the final track, “Angel Down.” Dedicated to Trayvon Martin, the unarmed black man shot by George Zimmerman in 2012, it is a song about the social injustices being inflicted on the black community by police. It’s a rather odd topic for a song to be sung by a white woman. It appears that Gaga no longer wants to write songs simply about her personal experiences, but about issues greater than herself. Such a move can be career suicide for most artists, so seeing her take this step forward takes real courage. It’s the step forward that can make or break a pop artist — the difference between immortality and irrelevance. Austin Faulds afaulds@indiana.edu @a_faulds9615

‘AMERICAN FOOTBALL’ American Football

BIf there was one theme running through American Football’s 1999 debut, it wasn’t lost love, but nostalgia. Frontman and de facto head of the project Mike Kinsella’s lyrics dealt almost exclusively with past romances and teenage trysts from the perspective of a slightly wiser, if no less heartbroken, early 20-something. Though American Football’s been gone for 17 years, American Football’s sound is more present than it’s ever been on its second studio record, “American Football.” That makes their comeback (or is it homecoming?) record a bit of a mixed bag. In terms of songwriting, it’s more developed. Whereas the first LP tended to meander or chime away on the same hypnotic guitar figure for minutes on end, 2016’s “American Football” errs on the side of indie-rock verse/chorus/verses. That’s a strength and a

weakness. This second LP sounds more assured, less delicate. More rock, less post. Fans only looking to lose themselves again in a haze of crosshatch rhythms, twangy guitars and the odd trumpet will likely be disappointed. But those looking for a “where are they now” comeback record, one that doesn’t mine the past but builds upon it, should be pleasantly surprised. Opening track “Where Are We Now?” lays it all out — less ambience, but more hummable tunes; drums that pound a bit more than they skitter; and songs that develop with more purpose. Kinsella’s lyrics are probably the weakest part of 2016’s American Football, though they deal with more “mature” topics than the debut. It’s all about getting old this time around, not growing up. That’s fine — lives change and so do concerns over 17 years. What’s disappointing is, in those 17 years, Kinsella hasn’t gotten any better with words. “If killing time was a crime / We’d be on the ‘Most Wanted’ signs” is bad poetry no matter the age of the person writing it. This is a comeback

record, but American Football never really left. Mike Kinsella has kept a steady stream of solo records flowing since 2001 with solo project Owen and has drummed for Joan of Arc and a reunited Owls with ex-Cap’n Jazz members. Just as the house from the last album cover loomed over whoever took that iconic picture, American Football’s influence has towered monolithically over any “twinkly” emo or poppunk band of the last six or seven years. Not bad for a record that started as a lowkey cult album from a tiny Midwest label. “American Football” is a record that again deals in nostalgia, but this time, instead of plumbing the post-college blues of middle class white men, American Football reflects on its own legacy and how its members are dealing with middle age. This record probably won’t enjoy the same legacy as the first, but I could be wrong. No one predicted “American Football” would enjoy such a legacy in 1999, either. Bryan Brussee bbrussee@umail.iu.edu

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ARTS

Thursday, Oct. 27, 2016 idsnews.com

Editors Maia Rabenold & Brielle Saggese arts@idsnews.com

9

Folk artists to demonstrate traditional crafts By Sanya Ali siali@indiana.edu | @siali13

The Mathers Museum of World Cultures has invited a collection of Indiana artisans to demonstrate and tell the stories behind their specific craft form throughout the semester. The latest in this demonstration series, “The Beauty of Indiana Folk Arts,” will include Jan Boettcher sharing the rosemaling paint technique and Carol Powers sharing pysanky egg dying Thursday. The program includes demonstrations at 10:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. and a narrative stage presentation at 11:45 a.m. “I’m looking forward to sharing the love of the art and sharing what it’s all about,” Boettcher said. “It has a lot of history to it.” Boettcher will be demonstrating a form of Norwegian painting called rosemaling. Jon Kay, director of traditional arts at the museum, said the art form is strongly connected to its history. “It’s a very old art form that has been used traditionally to kind of decorate daily wear and daily items,” Kay said. “It’s become a strong identity marker for the Norwegian diaspora.” Powers will be practicing pysanky, a Ukranian form of egg dying that utilizes a waxresistant method to add layers of color to the eggs. The process is started with the lightest colors, applying layers of wax where the artist wants to maintain the color below. Each new layer of wax is covered in a darker dye, and can transition from the egg’s original coloring all the way down to black, Kay said. “It goes back many generations in Ukraine and has taken on new meaning and new aesthetics in Indiana,” Kay said. “(Powers) just made a special one for the bicentennial, done in the Indiana blue. She’s been very much making this old tradition relevant to today’s life.”

COURTESY PHOTO

Jan Boettcher holds an example of her work with rosemaling, a Norwegian painting technique. Boettcher will be one of two artists demonstrating her craft Thursday at the Mathers Museum of World Cultures.

These two artists represent a cultural background that stands out from the demonstrators who have presented at the museum before, Kay said. “The reason they’re here together is we’re really looking at ethnic tradition,” Kay said. ‘We’ve looked at African American quilting, instrument making, now we’re really looking at European

traditions that are reflecting cultural traditions that people continue even here in the U.S.” The presentations will unify the style of the crafts with the meaning behind certain aesthetic decisions, Kay said. “Both Carol and Jan represent true master artists within their respective traditions,” Kay said. “Stu-

dents are going to be able to watch the creative process from start to finish — see how a plate gets finished and all the colors — and that behind the colors and the symbols are significant meaning.” The opportunity to present alongside another artist with such a strong cultural tie is something Boettcher said she appreciates.

“I’m looking forward to being a part of this with the other artists — the whole experience is going to be very exciting,” Boettcher said. Kay said by the end of the series, the museum will have introduced the work of 16 artists who represent the diversity of art in Indiana to audiences of students and community members. “Often Indiana gets la-

beled as monocultural or without culture, and what we’ve tried to do with the Themester support is to paint a more diverse understanding of the state,” Kay said. “The students have really appreciated that and, now that we’re getting past the first eight weeks, really starting gain a fuller understanding of the greater landscape of the Hoosier state.”

THE FAULDS IN OUR STARS

Banks and Crowe feud reveals everyone’s insecurity Acclaimed actor Russell Crowe recently invited roughly 10 guests to his Beverly Hills Hotel suite for a relaxing evening of dinner, music and friends. What it turned into was a tense brawl full of alleged death threats, racist slurs and aggravated assault, according to a People magazine article. One of the guests was former Wu-Tang Clan leader RZA. As his plus-one, he brought rapper Azealia Banks, a choice that is probably haunting him more now than Wu-Tang’s decision last year to not release their latest record until the year 2103. Witnesses at the party said Banks, who was believed to be intoxicated, began laughing at Crowe’s choice in music and began mocking him and at least one other guest, calling them “boring white men.” The whole party fled a little south of heavenly when Banks told Crowe his upcoming film, a remake of “The Mummy,” would be terrible. Of course, the rest of the world probably agrees with her, but the Oscar-winning actor didn’t seem to like this criticism. He told her that since she was so young and hasn’t done anything with her career, then she had no room to talk. Crowe’s retort didn’t rest well with Banks either. She is basically the female equivalent to Ernest Hemingway in terms of super-small egos. So she fired back that his career was basically washed-up, and

Austin Faulds is a sophomore in journalism.

he was no longer relevant in Hollywood. It’s bizarre to try to imagine all this. People idolize these stars to be so comfortable in their own skin that they wouldn’t have to resort to such petty bickering among themselves. Despite this, it has become more obvious in recent years that eccentric artists like Crowe and Banks have become only more insecure with their fame, even though we would expect the opposite reaction. We have seen this with past artists like Brian Wilson, Judy Garland, John Lennon and Marilyn Monroe. It’s the curse that accompanies the blessing of total acclaim. One female guest allegedly attempted to step in by asking Banks to calm down. Banks allegedly lashed out, threatening the woman, Crowe and other guests. She also apparently threw around the N-word and grabbed a glass, with the intent of using it as a weapon. “You would love it if I broke my glass, stabbed you guys in the throat and blood would squirt everywhere like some real Tarantino shit,” Banks said to them, according to the article. It was at this point, according to Banks, that Crowe threw her out of the suite. This, however, is where the stories begin

TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

Russell Crowe makes a publicity appearance on May 22 in Milan, Italy. Crowe recently had a fight with rapper Azealia Banks.

to really diverge. Witnesses of the event claim Banks was about to toss the bottle in her hand before Crowe grabbed her in a bear hug and threw her out of the suite, then reportedly called hotel security to escort the rapper out. However, Banks herself denies any of the threats she was accused of making. Instead, she said Crowe attacked her after saying he was no longer relevant. Banks described the alleged attack as Crowe calling her the N-word, spitting on her, grabbing her by the neck and throwing her out of the suite. Banks proceeded to file battery charges against Crowe, which she has since dropped. She still is, however, looking for a public apology from Crowe. RZA made a statement of the incident on Facebook, denying that Crowe used the racial slur or grabbed Banks

neck but did confirm Crowe spat on her. “Seeing is believing, and I saw her behave as an obnoxious erratic individual, and in the circles I frequent, this was unprecedented,” he said in the statement. It’s honestly hard to decide who is in the right for this story. Banks has had a long history of violence and aggression, but so does Crowe, with at least six other incidents of alleged attacks against others. We may never know the truth, but more likely than not, it’s somewhere in the middle. Regardless of what may have happened, it is clear here that even in the “safe space” of social gatherings among the idols that populate the Hollywood Babylon, no one is safe from the eccentric and radical outbursts that come from our own insecurity. afaulds@indiana.edu @a_faulds9615

David Sedaris to present new work From IDS reports

On Thursday night, Comedian David Sedaris will perform various never-beforeseen pieces at 8 p.m. at the IU Auditorium. Sedaris is on tour previewing his new book, “Theft by Finding,” which is scheduled for publication next summer. According to a press release,

his books have sold more than 10 million copies and have been translated into 29 languages. Sedaris grew up in South Carolina and attended various universities around the country before graduating from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. The release described his writing as “selfdeprecating” and “sardonic.”

He has written both books and pieces for publications, such as The New Yorker. “It’s always a pleasure to host David Sedaris, and we could not be more pleased to welcome him back for the 2016-2017 season,” IU Auditorium Director Doug Booher said in the release. Booher said Sedaris’ writing is most funny when per-

formed live, and this advance exhibition of unreleased work will make for an unforgettable event. Sedaris is scheduled to sign books for fans in the auditorium lobby after the show concludes, and copies of his other books will be available for purchase. Jesse Naranjo

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10

SPORTS

Thursday, Oct. 27, 2016 idsnews.com

GOTT TAKES

Editors Jordan Guskey & Zain Pyarali sports@idsnews.com

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL

Veterans poised to lead IU By Jake Thomer jjthomer@indiana.edu @jake_the_thomer

TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

Paul George of the U.S. men’s basketball team makes a steal against Serbia in the gold medal game Aug. 21 at Carioca Arena 1 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

Paul George will be the NBA MVP this year On Aug. 7, 2014, Nike released a black-and-white Twitter advertisement with the Indiana Pacers’ All-Star Paul George holding a ball with a quote near him. “The worst has happened,” the ad read. “The best is next.” George broke his leg over the summer two years ago playing for USA basketball in such a gruesome way USA Coach Mike Krzyzewski ended the scrimmage without playing the fourth quarter. His lower right leg snapped as he awkwardly landed under the basket stanchion. Just looking at the still image of the injury sends chills down my spine. George ended up playing six games at the end of the 2014-15 season and 81 last year. He slowly rounded into form over the most recent campaign, and it seems like that injury is behind him. The best is no longer “next.” It is now. Here’s a take for you: Paul George will win the Most Valuable Player Award this year. Let’s go through the other competitors. Of course, in Cleveland, Ohio, there’s LeBron James, a worthy adversary. However, through years past, James has used the regular season as a warm-up for the postseason. He’s even taken games off to rest. The MVP is not for the best player in the league but for the best player that particular season. That eliminates James. Steph Curry and Kevin Durant of the Warriors are both cross-offs as well due to their stealing votes away from each other since they play together. There is also the overall animosity towards their respective team because of Durant joining the team that went 73-9 last season. Finally, there’s the darling choice of Russell Westbrook, who will have the freedom to put up as many shots as he wants, but his team will surely drop off with the loss of Durant and a top-three

BLOOMINGTON’S BEER AUTHORITY Weekend Specials

Greg Gottfried is a senior in journalism.

(maybe four) seed is needed for a player to merit the trophy. The Indiana Pacers have slowly rebuilt from Frank Vogel’s defensive juggernaut into a faster, smarter smallball team. The additions of point guard Jeff Teague and forward Thaddeus Young will be enormous boons for this Indiana squad that’s deep enough to make a run at one of the top three seeds in the Eastern Conference. In an analytics-driven league that has put an emphasis on defense, George is one of the best two-way players in the league and has the size to guard those on the perimeter and in the post. Also, the promotion of assistant coach Nate McMillan to head coach ensures that there will be an implementation of an up-tempo runand-gun style that will allow George to flourish. “It’s no secret (why Vogel was let go) — I want us to score more points,” Pacers President Larry Bird said to the IndyStar. “If you’d told me we’d score 84 points ... You can’t go very far in the playoffs if you don’t score.” Bird and the Pacers are expecting a scoring increase. That expectation will land squarely on George’s shoulders, who is up to the task. At 26 years old, George is at the age where superstars take that final leap. Bird, Kobe Bryant, James and Durant are all players who took another step forward at that age. Two years after a debilitating injury, George has the chance and capability to further improve on his already stellar reputation. With Cleveland winning an NBA Championship earlier this year, we already know that anything’s possible. Now’s the time for George to take home the trophy as “the real MVP.” gigottfr@indiana.edu @gott31

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They all remember it. Every one of the 10 returning players that walked off the court at Notre Dame in late March 2016 after being eliminated in the second round of the NCAA Tournament remembers how they felt. And it fuels them. IU Coach Teri Moren said she can tell the seasonending loss to No. 1-seed Notre Dame has stuck in the back of her players’ minds. It would be easy for the team to forget if the Hoosiers’ roster had completely turned over, but it hasn’t. They have all five starters returning and most of the key bench contributors. For Moren, the memories are a positive thing. After all, the Hoosiers won their first NCAA Tournament game in 33 years. Relative to recent history and expectations, it was a successful season. But even the bitter taste of how things ended will serve as a reminder of what it takes to get where IU really hopes to go this season. “It was a disappointing loss to Notre Dame, and that’s a feeling that hasn’t left our team, and that’s what motivates and inspires us,” Moren said during IU’s Big Ten Network media day Wednesday. “It’s only just given us an enormous amount of motivation to make sure that the goal is to get back in the tournament and advance.” With four seniors who played on last year’s squad, as well as graduate transfer Amber Deane, a senior guard who’s been to the Elite Eight with Dayton, there’s

NOBLE GUYON | IDS

Then Sophomore guard Tyra Buss goes up to the basket for a layup against Samford Dec. 11. Buss led the Hoosiers in scoring, putting up 21 points along with 9 rebounds to help IU beat Samford 65-56 in overtime.

plenty of experience and leadership to go around. Even the team’s two juniors, guard Tyra Buss and forward Amanda Cahill, have been starters since the day they arrived in Bloomington two years ago. Moren said the veteran leaders have taken to coaching up the freshmen on their own ambition. “The freshmen have actually transitioned really well, and I think having that veteran group has just helped them out,” Buss said. “I think they can learn from us a lot and I think they have been in practices so far.” If the Hoosiers are to advance to the Sweet Sixteen or beyond this season, it won’t be nearly as much of a surprise as last year’s success. On Monday, IU was picked to finish third in the Big Ten by both coaches and media. Buss said last year’s

somewhat unexpected trip to the Round of 32 was enjoyable because IU was able to come seemingly out of nowhere. But now, the Hoosiers have a clear target on their backs. No one will take the court against IU expecting an easy game. As the point guard and floor general, Buss said she knows a lot is expected of her. She and her teammates will be able to use last year’s March Madness experience to get themselves through tough challenges this year. Expect Buss to be at the forefront of that effort. “The point guard kind of has to tell everyone where to go and where to be at and when to get them the ball, so I think Coach Moren really expects that out of me,” Buss said. “Just to be that vocal leader and talk on the sideline during practices.”

Leadership, experience and talent will be clear strengths for IU this season. Those three ingredients seem like the perfect recipe for a successful team, but translating those factors into success is easier said than done. The Hoosiers will need to blend all three strengths together to create the perfect balance needed to ensure a deep tournament run. Driving it all will be the memory of last season’s conclusion, but Moren hopes to use the loss to Notre Dame as a sign of what can be done, rather than what could have been done. “After coming off such a great year last year, I think the expectations are high,” Moren said. “It’s a new season and what we accomplished a year ago is behind us. We know that we have a tremendous amount of work still to do.”

FOOTBALL

Hoosier looks to build on big game By Taylor Lehman trlehman@indiana.edu @TaylorRLehman

It took two years for Nile Sykes to record his first collegiate sack. The redshirt sophomore found his way into the backfield against Nile Sykes Florida International in Miami in the opening week of the season. And after what defensive coordinator Tom Allen said was the defensive end’s best game — two sacks and a tackle for loss in the loss against Northwestern loss Saturday — the Hoosiers are expecting consistency from the sophomore who is starting to find his stride. “He sure (put it together) Saturday and, to me, that was encouraging,” Allen said. “But, I will say I felt like the talent was there. It’s the consistent preparation that creates the consistent performance.” That’s been the story for Sykes’ collegiate career at IU

— the lack of consistency. The sophomore said it’s been learning to practice and play hard, and knowing what to expect of himself that has been the greatest challenge in his two years and change in Bloomington. “If you ask any coach, since I’ve been here, I’ve had to learn how to work hard and practice,” Sykes said. “I’ve really had to work to change my whole mindset, coming from high school and transitioning to college.” Sykes played special teams in 2015, recording just five tackles, and opportunities weren’t there for the former linebacker in 2015 with former Hoosiers Zack Shaw and Nick Mangieri coming off the edge. So he moved to defensive end with teammate Greg Gooch in 2016. The defensive line — a group attempting to find its identity with a new coach in Mark Hagan and the three top pass rushers gone from the team — began the season preparing nearly a dozen players to see the field. Sykes began behind

Gooch as the edge rusher of Allen’s new 4-2-5 defense, but it appeared Sykes might find a spot after he recorded the first sack of his career in the season opener. But in the next five games, the sophomore only statistically contributed seven tackles and a fumble recovery. Not the consistency the coaching staff was hoping for from a talented edge rusher that initially committed to Notre Dame. Now, after the Northwestern game, Sykes leads the team in sacks, with three, and is third on the team with four tackles for loss. “We tell our guys, ‘There are a lot of things you can accomplish with hard work and playing with a high motor,’” IU linebackers coach William Inge said. “The one thing you always have to do is play hard. He got his sacks from playing hard.” Working hard is something that has been an issue for the defensive end because, like many players at the Division I collegiate football level, he was better than his high school team-

mates and opponents in Illinois, Inge said. But when Allen came into Bloomington and took the reigns as defensive coordinator, Sykes said he made it clear that to play on this defense, he had to work harder than ever. “As soon as he came in, he told me what he expected in me,” Sykes said. “He won’t let me not achieve what he believes I can. It’s either 100 percent or don’t be on the field. I have no choice but to play hard and do what they expect of me.” It’s the effort the sophomore gave against Northwestern that Allen expects. More specifically, that effort at a consistent level. Not two sacks every game, but having a presence in a pass rush that ranks second-to-last in the Big Ten. “Along the heels of that (Northwestern performance) comes, ‘Hey, now you’ve put on film what I believed you had in you all along,’” Allen said. “Now we have to practice at a higher level to get that again and again and again.’”

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IU women’s golf battled inclement weather as the team finished tied for 11th with a team score of 577(+1) at the rain-shortened Las Vegas Collegiate Showdown on Tuesday at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Bad weather plagued the tournament. The second round was cancelled due to heavy rainfall Monday morning, and the start of the final round was delayed three hours due to fog. The Hoosiers finished 26 strokes behind tournament champion Baylor and five strokes ahead of Big Ten foe Nebraska. Senior Ana Sanjuan led the Hoosiers with a 141(3) for the tournament, including a 69(-3) in the first round. She shot the best score for IU in both rounds

and tied for 21st in the individual standings. IU Coach Clint Wallman praised Sanjuan’s senior leadership, work ethic and overall strong play at UNLV. He said her iron play and shots off the tee were great, but her struggles on the greens stopped her from posting a stronger score. Sanjuan echoed her coach and said her driving was solid, but her short game was not very good. “I missed a lot of putts, so that’s why my score was not the best it could be,” she said. “But I managed myself really well, and I’m happy about it, and I have some things to work on for the spring.” Freshman Elisa Pierre shot a 143(-1) for the tournament and shot a careerlow 70(-2) in the first round. Sophomore Erin Harper returned to play after sitting

out more than a month due to illness with a 145(+1), including an even-par 72 in the final round. The Hoosiers started out strong in the first round Sunday. They sat in sixth place with a team score of 283(-5), the third-lowest round in school history. Wallman said the cancellation of play Monday and the three-hour delay Tuesday were factors in the dropoff of the team’s play, but all teams were equally affected, and the team needed to be mentally tough enough to handle that obstacle and move on. Harper shot her two best rounds of a short season and said she thought she did OK in her return to tournament play. “The first day, I had firstround jitters again, which I haven’t had in a while be-

cause I haven’t played in a while,” Harper said. “But it definitely got better today. I had one mistake that cost me. but other than that. It was pretty good.” Wallman said the Hoosiers will use the winter break to look at where the team needs to improve and work on those areas. “You never really get it,” Wallman said. “You just keep working towards the best that you can be, and that’s really got to be at the heart of what we are doing. We will look at all aspects of the game, the roster, everything, and just address the needs that we need to address.” With the fall season coming to a close, the Hoosiers will not return to action until Feb. 26 when they travel to the Westbrook Spring Invitational in Peoria, Arizona.


weekend

PAGE 11 | OCT. 27, 2016

W | PASTERNACK ON THE PAST Once a week, Jesse Pasternack reviews a film made before 1980, hoping to expose readers to classics they might not normally watch.

‘Rosemary’s Baby’ still terrifies “Rosemary’s Baby” is a great Halloween film. The 1968 psychological horror film has a spooky atmosphere, and some of its best sequences remain frightening to this day. However, it sadly remains relevant in its portrait of misogyny and the lengths to which people will go to control women. This movie is about a young woman named Rosemary who is married to an actor named Guy. They move into a old, gothic apartment building down the hall from a genial yet annoying older couple named Roman and Minnie. Rosemary desperately wants to have a baby, and she is soon pregnant. But she starts to suspect her neighbors and her husband have made some sort of mysterious and supernatural pact. One of my favorite things about this movie is its visual style. Many scenes take place in one shot, with the camera expertly moving to follow the characters. One under-sung long take is a static shot early in the film that shows Rosemary and Guy undressing. It helps set a realistic tone that makes the horror to come all the more shocking. Another thing that helps set the initial, realistic tone is the filmmakers’ use of real

MOVIE STILLS DATABASE

New York City locations. One story has it that the director, Roman Polanski, had actor Mia Farrow walk in front of actual traffic for a sequence. That sequence, as well as

Horoscope Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is a 6 — Let your imagination run wild. Take time for daydreaming and nostalgia tomorrow and today. Relax in a hot tub or sauna, and melt your worries away. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) —

Today is an 8 — You have more friends than you realized. Get into a social whirl. Make valuable connections and share what you’re learning. Enjoy a party phase today and tomorrow.

several others, gives the film a kinetic charge that could not be achieved on Hollywood sound stages. This film is great to watch around Halloween

over the next two days. A little compassion goes a long way. Show each other respect and kindness. Discuss dreams.

To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is an 8 — There’s an opportunity for professional advancement over the next few days. Discuss developments with your partner. State your requirements clearly. Work out details. Crazy dreams seem possible. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) —

Today is an 8 — Get moving! Whether you’re on the road or exploring new terrain through another’s experience, today and

tomorrow favor discovery. Things fall into place in your research. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) —

Today is a 9 — Go over numbers with your partner over the next two days. Handle logistical tasks, and manage accounts. Get aligned on spending priorities. Work together to raise funds. Aries (March 21-April 19) —

Today is a 9 — Negotiate and compromise with a partner

BLISS

because of its increasingly creepy nature. It is not as gory or as reliant on jump scares as recent horror films, but it does achieve some great frightening moments

HARRY BLISS

Taurus (April 20-May 20) — To-

day is a 9 — Today and tomorrow get busy. Reduce stress by decreasing stimulus. Play gentle music to soothe mind and spirit. Exercise, feed and rest your body well. Create stability. Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Today is a 7 — Love is the goal and the prize. Romance blossoms, given half a chance. Plan something especially fun together. Spend time with someone who shares your passion.

Crossword

through its eerie score and supernatural situations. Rosemary’s paranoia becomes infectious as the film reaches its chilling conclusion.

Cancer (June 21-July 22) —

Today is a 7 — Make your nest cozier over the next two days. Repairs and modifications keep systems operating. Consider long-term plans. A lucky find inspires you. Play with color. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 9 — Words flow with greater ease today and tomorrow. Creative expression sparks. Your muses sing to you. Practice painting, writing and music. Capture what you’ve worked out. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a 9 — The next two days could be especially profitable. Find a way to increase revenue.

Publish your comic on this page.

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis

su do ku

ACROSS 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

NON SEQUITUR

1 Dench of “Philomena” 5 Alternative strategy 10 “Ladies First Since 1916” sneakers 14 Tourney format, briefly 15 Secretary Thomas Perez’s department 16 Chicken vindaloo go-with 17 Sister of Rachel 18 Jazz pianist Blake 19 Logician’s word 20 Sasquatch, for one 22 Rub the wrong away 24 Head covering 25 Walk of life 29 Home of the Oregon Ducks 32 Limited portions of 34 L.A. commuter org. 35 German coal region 37 New York Harbor’s __ Island 38 Large pears 41 Sing-along syllable 42 Colonial hero Silas 43 Home of the Imagination! pavilion 44 Cookout choice 46 Animation sheet 47 Extremely focused

Jesse Pasternack jpastern@indiana.edu @jessepasternack

Monitor the flow. Use brains, rather than brawn. Stash your winnings securely. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is a 9 — Chase a personal obsession over the next two days, with the Moon in your sign. Your energy inspires another. You’ve got the power to make something happen.

© 2016 By Nancy Black Distributed by Tribune Media Services, INC.All RightsReserved

L.A. Times Daily Crossword

The IDS is accepting applications for student comic strips for the fall 2016 semester. Email five samples and a brief description of your idea to adviser@indiana.edu by Oct. 28. Submissions will be reviewed and selections will be made by the editor-in-chief.

Difficulty Rating:

Films about the supernatural can often use their more fantastical features as metaphors for elements in society. “Rosemary’s Baby” follows in this tradition, as it uses the antagonists’ efforts to control Rosemary to comment on how society treats women. A lot of the troubles that befall Rosemary are still issues in our society. Guy often gaslights Rosemary, and his insults about her haircut feel petty. In one sequence, Rosemary is drugged and raped by a supernatural force. Almost every man that she trusts, aside from her friend Hutch, betrays her in some way. These sequences of gendered horror feel especially pertinent in a year where there is audio of a presidential candidate bragging about his ability to get away with grabbing women by their genitals. It’s a reminder that misogyny is just as scary as the film’s more supernatural elements. “Rosemary’s Baby” is a frightening film that is perfect for the Halloween season. Its cinematography and mastery of tone show that it is more ambitious than your average horror film. Its disturbing edge will haunt you long after you finish watching it.

49 Promising performers 52 Carpentry tool 53 “That’s so __!” 54 With 57-Across, negotiate ... and what needs to be done to make sense of this puzzle’s circles 57 See 54-Across 61 Poet Angelou 64 Dry up 66 Sing in the shower, say 67 Fivers 68 Bored with it all 69 Fingerprint feature 70 Skin condition 71 Sasquatch kin 72 Mid-month time

DOWN

12 Hammarskjöld of the UN 13 __-Caps: candy 21 One with a habit 23 Spotted 26 Wrap around 27 “This Is Spinal Tap” director 28 Motown flops 29 War zone journalists 30 Ideal setting 31 Lawn maintenance accessory 32 __ to go 33 Sleek horse 36 Abruzzi bell town 39 Payment required of known deadbeats 40 1943 penny metal 45 Grain cutters 48 Pay a call 50 Awe-ful sound? 51 Breakfast mix 55 Word with bake or fire 56 Logician’s “E” 58 Yummy 59 70-Across application 60 Boston __ 61 Spoil 62 Esq. group 63 Assent 65 CBS series with a N.Y. spin-off

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

1 Crystallize 2 Film beekeeper 3 Laptop screen meas. 4 “Anybody around?” response 5 Certain campus newbies 6 Renowned ’70s-’80s batting coach Charley 7 French friar 8 Roulette bet 9 Chicken serving 10 Desk space 11 Whisperer’s target

WILEY BREWSTER ROCKIT: SPACE GUY!

TIM RICKARD


Indiana Daily Student

Apt. Unfurnished

NOW LEASING

Dental assistant. Part-time. No experience necessary. 812-332-2000 P/T Leasing Agent needed for afternoons & Sat. Base pay + leasing bonus. Email or stop by for application.

P/T evening waitress and bartending. Pays cash and tips. Call/text Steve’s Place: 812-325-7115.

MERCHANDISE

Houses

***For 2016- 2017*** **1 blk. S. of Campus** 5 BR, 3 BA, W/D, D/W, A/C, trash, parking, $465/mo. each plus utils.

2015 DELL laptop w/ windows 10, 750 GB storage, 6Gb of ram. $350. adeleu@iusb.edu

Canon 600d T3i w/ lens, extra batteries, stabilizer & 32g SD card. $1000. maruwill@iu.edu

bestrentsrdw@yahoo.com

Biweekly pay. Flexibility with class schedule.

bestrentsrdw@yahoo.com

Apt. Unfurnished !!NOW LEASING!! August ‘17 - ‘18. Omega Properties 812-333-0995 omegabloomington.com

Grant Properties

2 BR. 415 N. Park. Prkg. Near campus. Aug., 2017. 925-254-4206 3-4 BR at 9th and Grant btwn Campus & dntwn. Aug. 2017. 812-333-9579

3 BR luxury house, east side of Campus. Aug. 2017. 812-333-9579

HP Envy 15.6” Touchscreen Laptop. $800. hlpitche@indiana.edu

4 BR, 2 BA, remodled. Fenced yd., Hhwd., new windows. Lg kitchen. 4 or 5 ppl. Avail Aug., 2017. 812-400-0438

iPhone 6, 64GB, gold. Looks new. Great cond. $399, neg. liucdong@indiana.edu

1, 2, 3, 4 & 5 Bedroom

All Majors Accepted.

Outstanding locations near campus at great prices

5,4,3,2 BR. All with W/D, D/W A/C. Near campus avail. Aug 2017. 812-327-3238

Seeking students with good organization, time management, and communication skills to work in advertising sales. Previous sales experience preferred but not required. Must own reliable transportation. Apply in person at: Franklin Hall,RM 130.

Call Today 812-333-9579 GrantProps.com

1-3 BR at 9th and Grant. W/D, D/W & water incl. Aug. ‘17. 812-333-9579

Email: rhartwel@indiana.com

for a complete job description. EOE

2-3 BR HUGE luxury twnhs., dntwn. Aug. 2017. 812-333-9579

6 BR, 3 BA, 2 kit., 2 laundry. 2 liv. rm., 3 levels, hdwd. 1 blk. North of 10th & Walnut. Avail. Aug., 2017. 812-400-0438 AVAIL. AUG. 2017. LIVE IN A HOME WHERE THE LANDLORD PAYS FOR ALL UTILS. GAS, ELEC., WATER, HIGH SPEED INTERNET!! FOR 3-PERSON; 3 BR HOMES. 812-360-2628 WWW.IURENT.COM

Nikon DSLR 55-200M lens. $80. 812-606-3733, sancnath@indiana.edu

Misc. for Sale

Canoe for Sale! 17 ft. OldTowne Discovery 174. Minor scratches. $500, obo. ciumm@hotmail.com

Dining table and 4 chairs. Dark cherry table w/ ebony legs. $350 neg. fbaskin@iu.edu

FREE CLASSIFIED AD

Place an ad 812-855-0763 for more information: www.idsnews.com/classifieds

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2014 Jeep Patriot, only 1750 miles. Sport utility SUV. 24 mph. $13,000. hgenidy@indiana.edu

Mazda3, 2007. Excellent condition. Gray color. 52,500 miles! $7700. maytlert@indiana.edu

PE Science Snickerdoodle Select Protein 1.85 lbs. $20. hrkyle@indiana.edu

Red 2002 Dodge Grand Caravan EX. Front Wheel Drive. $1200. daviscd@indiana.edu

Pup tents: $50 each, new! 812-824-7293 Sleeping bag and foam pad to put underneath it. $20 for both-$10 a piece. s.e.mosier1@gmail.com

SodasStream Source Sparkling Water Maker. Near mint condition. $65. meldye@indiana.edu The Beatles Anthology DVD set for sale. $45. daviscd@indiana.edu

Silver Honda Civic Hybrid 2007, clean title + great cond. 143,000 miles. $5500 dhoy@indiana.edu

Mopeds 2013 Viella Moped, 49cc. $350. 812-824-7293

Motorcycles

2013 Suzuki GW250 Inazuma motorcycle, less than 1500 miles. $3149. rnourie@indiana.edu

TRANSPORTATION Automobiles ‘11 Nissan Cube. 32+ miles per gallon. 93k miles. $7200, obo. oabdelga@indiana.edu

2017 Kawasaki Z125 Pro (LIKE NEW). Only 163 miles. $3000. sl32@indiana.edu

‘99 Dodge Caravan. Rebuilt transmission. Great for family or work. $1800. 812-876-9091 ‘99 Ford Mustang coupe. White, great condition. $2150. 4 new tires. 812-876-9091

Sell your stuff with a

2013 Kia Soul Extra w/ back up camera, sunroof and only 35,000 miles. $15000. staffor@indiana.edu

FIFA 15 (Xbox One) In good condition. $15. Text 260-449-5125, sadeluna@indiana.edu

Furniture

Black, wooden at-home bar stand w/2 shelves & 2 stools. $400, obo. djwynn@umail.iu.edu

2011 Infiniti G37x coupe w/ 44k miles. Well maintained. $18000. hasnainf@iupui.edu

Fairly new, blue tinted Ray Bans. In good condition. $80. htilly@indiana.edu

TI-84 Plus Silver Edition graphing calculator. Pink w/ cover, case & cord. lilgresh@indiana.edu

2 turquois sofas, 1 chair w/ oak trim, & eliptical work out machine. 812-824-4074

2010 Audi Q5. Premium plus pkg. 52,000 miles. $19,500. mohskian@indiana.edu

Eagle knife, carved handle, embossed blade. $75, obo. 812-219-2062

HP Elite Display 23” Dual Monitor Used only 3x. $250. awfultz@indiana.edu

3 - 8 BR under one roof. Aug., 2017. 812-400-0438

NO WEEKENDS!

Yamaha Guitar F720s + soft case. Rare blue design. $260. jk233@iu.edu

Gold iPhone 6. In great cond. 64GB, no scratches. $399. liucdong@indiana.edu

3-5 BR dntwn., newly remodeled, parking incl. Aug. ‘17. 812-333-9579

4 BR. On 2nd St., 2 blks. from Campus. Plenty of prkg. 925-254-4206

Real-world Experience.

Viola - 15.5” body length. Full sweet tone, great cond. $1800. beltc@indiana.edu

EVGA GTX 970 SSC. great for 1080p gaming. 2 months old. $200, obo. mohdzinm@iu.edu

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The IDS is accepting applications for Advertising Account Executives to start Fall, 2016.

For 2015- 2016 **1 blk. S. of Campus*** 4 BR apts. Utils. pd. except elec. $485/mo. each.

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SAVE A LIFE. New donors receive $150 in 3 plasma donations. Call 812-334-1405 or visit biolifeplasma.com New donors: Schedule your appointment TODAY. No appointment necessary on Fridays.

Apartment Furnished

Canon MG6821 wireless all-in-one printer/copier/ scanner. $90. liucdong@indiana.edu

2-3 BR home, close to Campus and downtown. Aug. 2017. 812-333-9579

Latin Percussion Gen. 2 Professional Bongos w/heavy duty steel stand, $400. amy.j.robinson@att.net

Electronics

15” late 2011 Macbook Pro. Great performance w/ minor wear. $500 neg. jamering@indiana.edu

terratrace@crerentals.com

HOUSING

Computers

2009 Infiniti EX35 Journey. All-wheel drive. 38k miles. $16,000, obo. gaoyuan@indiana.edu

Keefer Williams trumpet w/ case, lyre, 3 mouth pieces, valve oil. $100. s.e.mosier1@gmail.com

Appliances

Whirlpool washer! Service model 8525079. Works perfect. $400, neg. rcrooks@indiana.edu

3 BR twnhs. Clean, spacious & bright. Aug. 2017. 812-333-9579 Large 1 BR. Close to Campus. Free prkg. Avail. now. 812-339-2859

2008 Mercury Milan. 140,000 miles. Everything works great. $3400. mksilay@iu.edu

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Angela’s Ebony Hair Designs. Looking for Barber or Stylist: 812-331-2472.

Electric Bass for Sale. In good shape, new strings + strap & soft case. $100 obo. anneande@iu.edu

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General Employment

812.669.4123 EchoParkBloomington.com

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EMPLOYMENT

Mother Bear’s Pizza is currently accepting applications for its new location on SR37. Apply at 1428 E. 3rd St. Restaurant experience a plus. Hiring all front and back of house positions. Paid training begins early November. Cook and prep positions $10/hr. after 4 months.

2007 Toyota Corolla CE, great cond., one owner, 115k mi, gray, $6000. graemecwn@hotmail.com

Fender 5 String Banjo in TKL Case, never played, w/self teaching books. $350 amy.j.robinson@att.net

Brand New Luxury Apartments Studios & 1-3 BR Available GRAD STUDENTS RECEIVE $25 MONTHLY DISCOUNT

Dauphin DH80 guitar. Great for classical+South American style. $500, obo. dnickens@indiana.edu

06 BMW 325i. Carbon fiber hood, touch screen stereo.104k mi. $7500. chawarre@indiana.edu

2000 Pontiac Grand AM. New tires. Good condition. $1500, obo. djwynn@umail.iu.edu 2002 Ford Explorer Sport Truck. Sunroof. 2WD. Good cond. 130k mi. $4300. 812-369-4650 2003 Ford Focus ZX3. 183,000 miles. Runs well + great mileage. $1800. fordchry@indiana.edu

Suzuki GW250 Inazuma Motorcycle w/extended factory warranty. $3149. rnourie@indiana.edu 520

Interested in participating in a PAID research study about alcohol or drugs? Contact Finn Laboratory! (812) 855-7798 or finnstudies@gmail.com

Girl rmmte. sublet needed. Jan. ‘17 - July ‘17. $498/mo. + utilities. kamickel@indiana.edu

2-3 BR twnhs. Next to Kelly & Informatics. Newly remodeled. Aug. 2017. 812-333-9579

2007 Subaru Outback. ONLY 84,000 miles. AWD. $7800. hgenidy@indiana.edu

Instruments Dauphin classical nylon-string guitar w/ hardshell case. $400. jusoconn@indiana.edu

Automobiles

2006 PT Cruiser for sale. Contact for information. $2600, obo. jaysims@indiana.edu

pmmazzoc@indiana.edu

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2620 E. 10th St. NOW HIRING: Cook: $10.00/hr., Front Counter: $9.00/hr., Delivery Drivers: $5.50/hr. + tips + $1/delivery. Apply at store location or online at: wingsxtremeu.com

Announcements

Sublet Houses

Wood entertainment stand. Espresso. 22” H x 43” W x 17.6 D. $65 neg.

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2-3 BR luxury duplex. East side of Campus. Aug. 2017. 812-333-9579

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Now renting 2017-2018 HPIU.COM Houses and apartments. 1-6 bedrooms. Close to Campus. 812-333-4748 No pets please.

Furniture Glass display case in very good cond., composite wood. $35. btrimpe@indiana.edu

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

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Restaurant & Bar

Houses

Sublease! 3/4 BR, 1.5 BA. Avail. now $1000/mo. University St. Close to campus. 812-361-6154 *** 1 BR,10 mi E. Blgtn W/D, $550/mo. No pets. 812-361-6154

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

PAYMENT: All advertising is done on a cash in advance basis unless credit has been established. The IDS accepts Visa, MasterCard, Discover, American Express, cash, check or money order.

COPY ERRORS: The IDS must be notified of errors before 3 p.m. the date of the first publication of your ad. The IDS is only responsible for errors published on the first insertion date. The IDS will rerun your ad 1 day when notified before 3 p.m. of the first insertion date.

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

COPY CHANGES: Ad copy can be changed at no additional charge when the same number of lines are maintained. If the total number of lines changes, a new ad will be started at the first day rate.

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

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CLASSIFIEDS ADVERTISING POLICIES

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CLASSIFIEDS

Thursday, Oct. 27, 2016 idsnews.com

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To place an ad: go oline, call 812-855-0763 or stop by Franklin Hall 130 from 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Monday - Friday. Full advertising policies are available online. idsnews.com/classifieds

Bicycles 2010 Six 13 Cannondale Bike for sale. Excellent ride. $650. marsrric@indiana.edu

Diamondback Sorrento mountain bike. Size: 18. Color: Blue/Red. $200. 812-239-8226

Scanttante W570 road bike. Perfect cond. & super smooth ride. $850. rjrodger@indiana.edu

*excludes ticket sales NOW LEASING FOR 2017 1, 2, 3, 4 & 5 BR Houses, Townhouses and Apartments Quality campus locations

339-2859

Office: 14th & Walnut www.elkinsapts.com

“Everywhere you want to be!”


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