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NEARLY NAKED MILE - Indiana Daily Student

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2010<br />

INDIANA DAILY STUDENT<br />

VOLUME 143 • ISSUE 109<br />

HOMECOMING<br />

WEEK 2010<br />

WWW.INDIANA.EDU/~SAAA<br />

www.idsnews.com<br />

WOMAN’S DEATH DECLARED HOMICIDE,<br />

COUNTY SHERIFF STILL INVESTIGATING<br />

Crystal Grubb<br />

Murder victim,<br />

mother of two<br />

FROM IDS REPORTS<br />

The Monroe County Sheriff’s<br />

Offi ce announced Oct. 8<br />

that Crystal Grubb, 29, was<br />

murdered.<br />

She was reported missing<br />

Sept. 19, and her body was<br />

found Oct. 1 in a cornfi eld off of<br />

North Showers Road in northern<br />

Monroe County.<br />

Monroe County Coroner Nicole<br />

Meyer identifi ed the body<br />

as Grubb and said she was murdered,<br />

according to a press release<br />

from Chief Deputy Michael<br />

Pershing of the Monroe<br />

County Sheriff’s Offi ce .<br />

Bloomington Police Department,<br />

Monroe County Sheriff’s<br />

Offi ce and Monroe County Coroner’s<br />

Offi ce are investigating<br />

the homicide together .<br />

Police are looking for a<br />

white male who was driving<br />

a small red car in the area of<br />

North Showers Road in the late<br />

evening of Sept. 18 , according<br />

to the press release.<br />

If the public has any information<br />

regarding this or any aspect<br />

of the case, please call the<br />

Monroe County Sheriff’s Offi ce<br />

at 812-349-2780 or the Bloomington<br />

Police Department at<br />

812-339-4477 .<br />

Let’s talk about sex<br />

TIMELINE OF EVENTS IN GRUBB’S MURDER CASE<br />

The following timeline of events is according to Bloomington Police<br />

Department Lt. David Drake .<br />

SEPT. 19<br />

Crystal Grubb’s mother ,<br />

Janice , reported Crystal missing<br />

to BPD at 7:29 p.m.<br />

Janice Grubb told offi cers<br />

she had talked to Crystal’s<br />

boyfriend, who said he and<br />

Crystal had been at the dog<br />

park at Griffy Lake Nature<br />

Preserve with two other men<br />

on the evening of Sept. 18 when<br />

Crystal got mad and walked off<br />

into the woods. That was the<br />

last time he had seen or heard<br />

from her.<br />

Several offi cers went to<br />

the dog park area to conduct<br />

a search but were not able to<br />

locate anything .<br />

SEPT. 20<br />

Several offi cers returned<br />

in the morning to continue to<br />

search the dog park area and<br />

woods for several hours until<br />

there was a change in the story.<br />

A detective who interviewed<br />

the three men who were<br />

HOOSIERS EARN HISTORIC WIN<br />

IU volleyball<br />

claims fi rst-ever<br />

victory against<br />

No. 4 Penn State<br />

VOLLEYBALL: IU 3, PENN STATE 1<br />

ALYCIN BEKTESH | IDS<br />

Junior setter Mary Chaudoin and senior middle blocker Taylor Wittmer embrace after the fi nal point Saturday in University Gym. The Hoosiers defeated three-time<br />

national champions Penn State 3-1.<br />

BY SEAN MORRISON<br />

sm72@indiana.edu<br />

Until recently, sexual health<br />

educators and health professionals<br />

based their assumptions about<br />

sexual behavior on data from nearly<br />

two decades ago.<br />

The National Survey of Sexual<br />

Health and Behavior , a study<br />

by IU researchers that was published<br />

Oct. 1, changed that, giving<br />

both practitioners and the<br />

general public access to the latest<br />

information on American<br />

sexual practices.<br />

Church & Dwight Co., Inc., the<br />

producer of Trojan products, funded<br />

the study.<br />

“This large and important<br />

A kill by sophomore outside<br />

hitter Jordan Haverly bounced<br />

off the University Gym court and<br />

gave the IU volleyball team arguably<br />

the biggest win in the program’s<br />

history Saturday .<br />

The Hoosiers (14-4, 2-4) defeated<br />

No. 4 Penn State , the<br />

three-time defending national<br />

champions , for the fi rst time in<br />

study legitimizes all of the questions<br />

and concerns that we have<br />

about sex and about who we are<br />

and about where we fi t in this<br />

world,” said Logan Levkoff , a<br />

sexologist and relationship expert<br />

hired by Church & Dwight<br />

Co., Inc. to analyze the data<br />

IU compiled.<br />

The data includes 5,865 people<br />

from the ages of 14 to 94 . The survey<br />

asked questions about types<br />

of, frequency of and patterns of<br />

sexual acts performed, as well as<br />

if protection such as a condom<br />

was used.<br />

“We’ve never had enough data<br />

of this type that’s been conducted<br />

at multiple points across the history<br />

of the country to really make a<br />

the 40-match-old series between<br />

the two schools.<br />

IU surged to its breakthrough<br />

four-set victory on Haverly’s<br />

21 kills and a seven-ace performance<br />

at the service line , four of<br />

which came from sophomore setter<br />

Whitney Granado .<br />

For more information, read a<br />

complete match wrap on page 10 .<br />

ton of comparisons,” said Michael<br />

Reece , director of the Center for<br />

Sexual Health Promotion and a<br />

co-author of the study.<br />

This study, the fi rst of its kind<br />

done since the Internet began being<br />

widely used, gives a broader<br />

picture of sexuality in the U.S.,<br />

something Debby Herbenick , associate<br />

director of the Center for<br />

Sexual Health Promotion and an<br />

author of a book on sexual health,<br />

can appreciate.<br />

Herbenick has taught about human<br />

sexuality for IU in the past,<br />

and the information she provided<br />

students before didn’t really apply<br />

to them, she said.<br />

“I was teaching them about<br />

things that happened either be-<br />

NEXT GAME<br />

IU at Wisconsin<br />

WHEN 8 p.m. Friday<br />

WHERE Madison, Wisc.<br />

SEE MURDER, PAGE 4<br />

IU researchers release study offering<br />

detailed report on sexual behavior<br />

fore they were born or when they<br />

were babies,” Herbenick said of<br />

the only previously-available research.<br />

“That’s ridiculous.”<br />

Some important information<br />

provided included trends in adolescents<br />

from ages 14 to 17, women’s<br />

and men’s perspectives about<br />

sexual behavior and tendencies for<br />

sexual behavior across age groups.<br />

Dennis Fortenberry , a medical<br />

practitioner and professor<br />

of pediatrics at the IU School of<br />

Medicine , said the information<br />

on adolescents debunked many<br />

commonly-held myths about sex<br />

among young people.<br />

Sex among teens was shown<br />

SEE SEX STUDY, PAGE 7<br />

80<br />

70<br />

60<br />

50<br />

40<br />

30<br />

20<br />

10<br />

FREE • 16 PAGES<br />

Building a<br />

sense of<br />

community<br />

Willkie committee looks<br />

to improve communication<br />

BY DANIELLE RINDLER<br />

danrindl@indiana.edu<br />

On the third fl oor of Willkie<br />

Quad North Tower sits a dorm<br />

room with fresh paint on the<br />

walls and new tiles hanging on<br />

the ceiling, but just a few months<br />

ago the room had been completely<br />

dismantled.<br />

Months before that, the Willkie<br />

community had been thrown<br />

into turmoil by a sign on Gregory<br />

Willoughby’s closet door:<br />

“Warning H2S.”<br />

In April, Willoughby was<br />

found dead in his closet, seven to<br />

10 days after he inhaled hydrogen<br />

sulfi de, a toxic chemical that<br />

is lethal when inhaled.<br />

“We completely gutted the<br />

room,” said Jeanne Lady, Residential<br />

Operations Administration<br />

associate director for<br />

Willkie. “Because there were<br />

chemicals involved … the room<br />

had to be pretty much completely<br />

dismantled. They repainted, they<br />

pulled up fl oor tiles, they pulled<br />

down ceiling tiles, they pulled<br />

out all the furniture, everything<br />

from this room.”<br />

The task, which was undertaken<br />

by Residential Programs<br />

and Services maintenance staff,<br />

was only one component of the<br />

SEE COMMITTEE, PAGE 7<br />

<strong>Student</strong> death still causes<br />

misconceptions about dorm<br />

BY DANIELLE RINDLER<br />

danrindl@indiana.edu<br />

Near the end of last semester,<br />

Gregory Willoughby passed<br />

away in his closet after intentionally<br />

inhaling hydrogen sulfi<br />

de. The presence of the chemical,<br />

which is toxic when inhaled,<br />

caused the evacuation of Willkie<br />

Quad for several hours.<br />

During this time, students<br />

were asked to stay in the<br />

quad’s parking lot with no immediate<br />

explanation as to why.<br />

While the entire building was<br />

outside of their rooms, many<br />

students saw and talked to<br />

their neighbors, something that<br />

doesn’t seem to occur as often in<br />

Willkie, where there are no fl oor<br />

lounges and suite doors close<br />

automatically.<br />

The incident led to many<br />

SEE WILLKIE, PAGE 7<br />

Gregory<br />

Willoughby<br />

THE<br />

HISTORY<br />

On April 13,<br />

junior Gregory<br />

Willoughby<br />

was found dead<br />

in his room in<br />

Willkie Quad.<br />

Emergency<br />

respondents<br />

found<br />

Willoughby’s<br />

body in his<br />

closet along<br />

with a bucket<br />

believed<br />

to contain<br />

hydrogen<br />

sulfi de. He had<br />

been dead for<br />

seven to 10<br />

days.<br />

“By-andlarge,<br />

over<br />

the last<br />

12 years<br />

Willkie’s<br />

always<br />

been full.”<br />

Sara Ivey Lucas,<br />

assistant director<br />

of assignments<br />

for Residential<br />

Programs and<br />

Services<br />

0 14-17 18-24 25-34 35-44 45-60 61+<br />

<strong>NEARLY</strong> <strong>NAKED</strong> <strong>MILE</strong><br />

MONDAY, OCT. 11 10 P.M. DUNN MEADOW<br />

How often<br />

arecondoms<br />

used?<br />

Condom use<br />

percentages by<br />

age and gender<br />

men<br />

women<br />

GRAPHIC<br />

BY BIZ<br />

CARSON<br />

| IDS


CAMPUS EDITORS<br />

Bailey Loosemore<br />

bloosemo@indiana.edu<br />

BY HALLIE ROBBINS<br />

hlrobbin@indiana.edu<br />

Phi Gamma Delta reinvented<br />

“The Dougie,” dancing in<br />

Snuggies . Sigma Nu roasted<br />

other greek organizations. Four<br />

members of Beta Theta Pi sang<br />

a mash-up of songs. Two brothers<br />

from Phi Kappa Psi covered a<br />

classic Tom Petty tune.<br />

Zeta Tau Alpha — with the<br />

help of these acts and 18 others<br />

— raised $179,074 in this year’s<br />

Big Man on Campus all-male talent<br />

show, “Saving the World, One<br />

Woman at a Time.”<br />

“We always try to raise more<br />

money than the previous year, but<br />

everyone was really happy about<br />

the total,” junior and BMOC<br />

treasurer Jenny Krejsa said. “We<br />

raised the last $125,000 in the last<br />

three days.”<br />

Senior Bryan Flinn of Phi Delta<br />

Theta estimated he sent out 200<br />

e-mails asking friends and family<br />

for donations.<br />

With the help of the rest<br />

of Phi Delta Theta, he raised<br />

$22,000 dollars.<br />

Halfway through the show,<br />

I N D I A N A D A I L Y S T U D E N T | M O N D A Y , O C T O B E R 1 1 , 2 0 1 0<br />

he took the stage with Phi Delta<br />

Theta’s house band, singing a<br />

rendition of Del Amitri’s “Roll<br />

to Me,” a song he selected solely<br />

because it was two minutes long<br />

and fi t into the allotted time limit.<br />

Ultimately, he was named<br />

2010 Big Man on Campus .<br />

“It’s one of those things where<br />

we have a lot of talented guys<br />

in the house, and we take turns<br />

volunteering for these kinds<br />

of things,” Flinn said. “With<br />

BMOC, it was my turn to step<br />

up. I fi gured I’d take full advantage<br />

and work my ass off so that<br />

it pays off.”<br />

Flinn said it took him 10 hours<br />

to memorize the song, and he<br />

spent Friday before BMOC listening<br />

to it on repeat.<br />

Long after the other contestants<br />

packed up their props and<br />

the crowd cleared out, Flinn and<br />

his band, On the House , stood<br />

backstage talking, singing, joking<br />

and trying on his new crown.<br />

“I’m very ecstatic,” Flinn<br />

said. “It’d be very cliched if I said<br />

it didn’t hit me yet. But I think it’s<br />

hit me. I feel very accomplished.”<br />

Theta Chi junior Dustin Silverman<br />

won runner-up , an upset<br />

for the fraternity that has won the<br />

most BMOCs in the past . But he<br />

was still excited and supportive<br />

of the winner and the cause.<br />

“I was really proud of our<br />

Meg Ely<br />

mcely@indiana.edu<br />

house,” Silverman said. “But<br />

Brian deserved to win. Phi Delt<br />

raised the most money, and he<br />

played really well. In the end,<br />

it’s not so much about winning,<br />

it’s about how we’re helping a lot<br />

of people.”<br />

But it wasn’t just about the<br />

Big Man on Campus.<br />

Behind each act were coaches<br />

from sororities who encouraged<br />

the men, helped choreograph<br />

dance routines and campaigned<br />

for them.<br />

Junior Kaylee Baxter and<br />

sophomore Kaitlin Kennedy were<br />

elected by Phi Mu to be coaches.<br />

They won best coaches for their<br />

enthusiastic help with Ben Miller<br />

of Sigma Alpha Mu.<br />

“For them, it was about making<br />

them comfortable on stage,”<br />

Baxter said. “For us, it was about<br />

just making sure they knew what<br />

they were here for, the cause they<br />

were here for. We’re all here for<br />

a reason, not just to be on stage.”<br />

Molly Johnson<br />

mopjohns@indiana.edu<br />

‘saving the world,<br />

ONE WOMAN AT A TIME’<br />

BMOC raises<br />

money, awareness<br />

for breast cancer<br />

McRobbie takes<br />

citizenship oath<br />

FROM IDS REPORTS<br />

President Michael McRobbie<br />

will become a U.S. citizen today,<br />

on his 60th birthday.<br />

IU Spokesman Larry MacIntyre<br />

said the Australian native,<br />

along with his children Josephine<br />

, Lucien and Arabella ,<br />

will take the Oath of Citizenship<br />

in a private ceremony in the Bryan<br />

House on IU’s campus.<br />

McRobbie will take the<br />

Oath after living in <strong>Indiana</strong> for<br />

14 years.<br />

The Oath will be conducted<br />

by U.S. District Judge Sarah<br />

Evans Barker . Following the<br />

ceremony, McRobbie will have<br />

dual citizenship in Australia and<br />

the U.S.<br />

“He’s concluded this is his<br />

home,” MacIntyre said. “His<br />

family, children have grown up<br />

here. He wants to stay here.”<br />

— Margaret Ely<br />

2010 BMOC AWARDS<br />

MR. CONGENIALITY Alex Rich<br />

GREATEST PHILANTHROPIC<br />

CONTRIBUTION Bryan Flinn<br />

BIG MAN ON CAMPUS Bryan Flinn<br />

RUNNER-UP Dustin Silverman<br />

PEOPLE’S CHOICE Bryant Sparks<br />

BEST TALENT Mac Mulcahy<br />

IU alumnus honored by <strong>Indiana</strong><br />

Department of Education<br />

FROM IDS REPORTS<br />

This year, IU has stolen<br />

the education limelight.<br />

Both the winner and runner-up<br />

for <strong>Indiana</strong> Teacher of<br />

the Year are IU School of Education<br />

alumni .<br />

The announcement was<br />

made Thursday by the <strong>Indiana</strong><br />

Department of Education<br />

.<br />

Winner Stacy McCormack<br />

graduated from IU in<br />

1999 with a bachelor’s degree<br />

in science education .<br />

She is currently a physics<br />

teacher at Penn High School<br />

in Mishawaka, Ind .<br />

McCormack is now in<br />

the running for National<br />

Teacher of the Year — an<br />

award presented by the ING<br />

Foundation and a project of<br />

the Council of Chief State<br />

School Offi cers .<br />

Runner up Jamil Odom<br />

received his elementary education<br />

degree from IU<br />

in 2005 .<br />

He now teaches at Mary<br />

Bryan Elementary in the<br />

Metropolitan School District<br />

of Perry Township .<br />

Eight of this year’s 10 fi -<br />

nalists were IU alumni.<br />

“The IU School of Education<br />

has had a long history<br />

of preparing excellent<br />

teachers,” said IU School<br />

of Education Dean Gerardo<br />

Gonzalez in a press release.<br />

“We are very proud of<br />

our graduates and the difference<br />

they’re making in <strong>Indiana</strong><br />

classrooms. McCormack<br />

and Odom richly deserve<br />

the Teacher of the Year honors<br />

for which they have been<br />

selected. I extend them my<br />

heartfelt congratulations.”<br />

— Margaret Ely<br />

Even though BMOC is a greek<br />

philanthropic event, a tribute<br />

from Purdue University senior<br />

Adrienne Harlow — a breast cancer<br />

survivor — a silent auction of<br />

donated goods and performances<br />

from organizations such as InMotion<br />

and Phi Beta Sigma’s Step<br />

The<br />

Inaugural<br />

Ruth Clifford Engs<br />

Lecture Dr. Ruth C. Engs<br />

Thursday October 14 / 2010 / 7pm<br />

Neal Marshall Black Culture Center<br />

GRAND HALL 275 N. Jordan Ave.<br />

Making Health Whole:<br />

The Shift in Public Health<br />

Dr. Mark Bergel<br />

Featured Speaker: Dr. Mark Bergel<br />

Dr. Mark Bergel is the founder and Executive Director<br />

<br />

to serving children and adults challenged by poverty,<br />

homelessness, and abuse.<br />

The focus of his discussion will be contributing factors<br />

that promote health as individuals, as well as members<br />

of society. Health is not just about preventing disease,<br />

but also about the choices we make to foster well-being.<br />

www.hper.indiana.edu<br />

OLIVIA ELSNER | IDS<br />

Senior Bryan Flinn and his fraternity brothers from Phi Delta Theta celebrate his coronation as this year’s Big Man<br />

on Campus on Friday at the IU Auditorium. The event, which is Zeta Tau Alpha’s annual philanthropy that raises<br />

money for breast cancer research and awareness, earned $179,000 this year.<br />

Team contributed their support.<br />

Krejsa, who is still receiving,<br />

organizing and calculating last<br />

minute donations, said BMOC is<br />

so successful year after year because<br />

of all the support from the<br />

whole campus and the surrounding<br />

community.<br />

2<br />

“Everyone always talks about<br />

how there are only fraternities<br />

and sororities participating, Krejsa<br />

said. “But because so many<br />

people participate, we branch out<br />

to people who aren’t necessarily<br />

involved in other greek houses.<br />

That’s what really sets it apart.”<br />

IU ranked No. 39 in Trojan Sexual Health Report Card<br />

FROM IDS REPORTS<br />

For the fi fth year in a row,<br />

Trojan is putting a grade on sex<br />

— sexual health, that is.<br />

Trojan recently released its<br />

Sexual Health Report Card , a<br />

ranking of sexual health and sex<br />

education programs at American<br />

colleges and universities.<br />

For 2010, IU Bloomington<br />

received a 2.72 grade-point average,<br />

putting it in 39th place<br />

out of 141 schools.<br />

The research and rankings<br />

are based on a Trojan-sponsored<br />

study by the research fi rm Sperling’s<br />

BestPlaces .<br />

According to this year’s<br />

study, Columbia University<br />

scored highest for its consistent<br />

availability of on-site HIV testing,<br />

free condoms, anonymous<br />

advice capabilities and student<br />

peer groups.<br />

Bert Sperling , founder and<br />

CEO of the 16-year-old company,<br />

said the company chose<br />

universities that would make<br />

the biggest social impact. That<br />

meant including not just large<br />

universities but Ivy League<br />

schools.<br />

In total, Sperling said the<br />

study covered 30 percent of undergraduate<br />

students in the U.S.<br />

“It’s very encouraging to see,<br />

as researchers, that we help enable<br />

student dialogue with their<br />

universities to create positive<br />

change, if they aren’t getting<br />

what they need,” Sperling said.<br />

IU was ranked 49th in 2009 ,<br />

but the CEO said falling behind<br />

or moving up in the rankings<br />

does not necessarily indicate<br />

major progress. Each university,<br />

he said, is constantly in fl ow.<br />

To conduct the research,<br />

Sperling’s company considered<br />

12 factors, including<br />

school student peer groups,<br />

HIV testing and health center<br />

operating hours.<br />

IU received an A for its<br />

sexual assault programs but<br />

one D for its efforts to give<br />

away condoms.<br />

Overall, Sperling said he was<br />

impressed with IU’s sexual assault<br />

and harassment programs,<br />

but recommended improvement<br />

in other areas, including the accessibility<br />

of IU’s Health Center<br />

to students.<br />

“IU could encourage more<br />

drop-ins because we’ve seen<br />

students can’t always schedule<br />

appointments,” he said. “Updating<br />

the website would also<br />

be benefi cial.”<br />

The top fi ve schools also include<br />

the Big Ten’s Michigan<br />

State in second place, Ohio State<br />

University in third and the University<br />

of Michigan in fourth .<br />

Sperling said the fi ndings indicated<br />

that the schools in corresponding<br />

conferences might<br />

not collaborate on sexual<br />

health issues.<br />

For more information on<br />

the report visit www.trojancondoms.com/Articles.aspx<br />

.<br />

— Margaret Ely


I N D I A N A D A I L Y S T U D E N T | M O N D A Y , O C T O B E R 1 1 , 2 0 1 0 PAGE 3<br />

OLIVIA ELSNER | IDS<br />

<strong>Student</strong>s and Bloomington residents participate in the Free Palestine Walk on Saturday outside the IU<br />

Auditorium. The marchers joined activists across the country as part of the second annual Free Palestine Walks,<br />

sponsored by the American Association for Palestinian Equal Rights.<br />

Demonstrators march<br />

for Palestinian freedom<br />

BY NATHAN MILLER<br />

nm2@indiana.edu<br />

Twenty-one students and<br />

Bloomington community members<br />

marched Saturday as part<br />

of the Free Palestine Walk 2010<br />

in a nationwide effort to bring<br />

awareness to the Palestinian situation<br />

in Israel .<br />

The Free Palestine walks<br />

are a part of the American Association<br />

for Palestinian Equal<br />

Rights Foundation , an activist<br />

organization that pushes for<br />

a U.S. policy to advance freedom<br />

and equal rights for Palestinians.<br />

Similar demonstrations<br />

will be going on throughout October<br />

in more than 40 cities in<br />

28 states. In 2009 , the organization<br />

launched its fi rst walk campaign,<br />

which raised more than<br />

$25,000 .<br />

The local Bloomington walk<br />

began at 11 a.m. outside the IU<br />

Auditorium and ended at the<br />

Monroe County Courthouse on<br />

Kirkwood Avenue .<br />

“We are using this campaign<br />

and other activities to educate<br />

America about the situation<br />

in Palestine and help<br />

promote freedom and equality<br />

for Palestinians,” said Nada<br />

Akhras , this year’s Bloomington<br />

walk organizer .<br />

Akhras, who was born in Palestine,<br />

said the issue really hits<br />

home for her.<br />

“Since I came here to America,<br />

I have become more active<br />

about the confl ict,” she said. “I<br />

am trying to help Palestinians to<br />

get freedom and equality.”<br />

Senior Bridget Trent , coordinator<br />

of last year’s local walk,<br />

also marched Saturday .<br />

“I decided to do a walk for the<br />

movement because unfortunately,<br />

I know that in the U.S., the<br />

political climate makes it really<br />

hard to have open discussions<br />

about the confl ict overall,” Trent<br />

said. “I have had issues where I<br />

talk about Palestine, and people<br />

always assume that it is just terrorists,<br />

but there are very good<br />

“Since I came here<br />

to America, I have<br />

become more active<br />

about the conflict.<br />

I am trying to help<br />

Palestinians to get<br />

freedom and equality.”<br />

Nada Akhras, Bloomington Free Palestine<br />

Walk 2010 Organizer<br />

people there and very bad people<br />

just like everywhere else.”<br />

During the walk, drivers and<br />

pedestrians gave both waves and<br />

thumbs up to the walkers who<br />

carried a sign and wore shirts for<br />

the protest.<br />

Steve Gulyas , an IU graduate<br />

, greeted the walkers in Arbaic<br />

to show support.<br />

“I was saying what I have<br />

been told means ‘Hello, how are<br />

you? Have a nice day.’”<br />

Board of Trustees opens<br />

student member search<br />

BY KATIE DAWSON<br />

katdawso@indiana.edu<br />

The IU Board of Trustees has<br />

begun its search for the next student<br />

trustee. Applications for<br />

the position are now available<br />

online and are due Jan. 28, 2011.<br />

All full-time undergraduate<br />

or graduate students of all eight<br />

IU campuses can apply.<br />

The student trustee is an authorized<br />

member of the board<br />

with the rights, privileges and<br />

responsibility as any other member<br />

— the only difference being<br />

the student trustee only serves<br />

two years, while all other trustees<br />

serve three .<br />

“You are not treated as a student.<br />

You are treated as a member<br />

of the board of trustees,”<br />

said current student trustee and<br />

graduate student Abbey Stemler .<br />

Stemler said she, along with<br />

the board, will be looking for a<br />

candidate who has a passion for<br />

higher education and knows its<br />

purpose in society.<br />

“Deep knowledge of the<br />

<strong>NEARLY</strong> <strong>NAKED</strong> <strong>MILE</strong><br />

WHEN 10 p.m. today<br />

WHERE Dunn Meadow<br />

MORE INFO The registration fee<br />

for the race is two or more pieces<br />

of gently-used clothing, to be<br />

distributed to community shelters<br />

and programs. Check-in begins at<br />

8:30 p.m. , and the race will end at<br />

the Sample Gates .<br />

BLOOD DRIVE<br />

WHEN 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday<br />

WHERE DeVault Alumni Center<br />

MORE INFO Donation<br />

appointments are available every<br />

15 minutes for the annual Coach<br />

Hep Cancer Challenge Blood Drive.<br />

CORNHOLE<br />

TOURNAMENT<br />

WHEN 3 to 9 p.m. Wednesday<br />

WHERE DeVault Alumni Center<br />

MORE INFO Registration costs<br />

IU SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM<br />

Speaker Series<br />

The School of Journalism Speaker Series brings award-winning journalists<br />

to share commentary on our world. Prepare to be challenged and inspired.<br />

Lara Logan<br />

CBS News chief foreign correspondent<br />

7 p.m. Oct. 12<br />

Buskirk-Chumley Theater<br />

114 E. Kirkwood Ave.<br />

FREE AND OPEN<br />

TO THE PUBLIC<br />

University, strong willingness to<br />

learn about stuff you don’t know<br />

about, great time management<br />

skills,” Stemler said. “Maturity<br />

is a must.”<br />

Chairman of the Board William<br />

Cast said he encourages<br />

students who feel they can contribute<br />

to the board of trustee<br />

process to apply.<br />

“It is an honor, but it is also a<br />

learning experience and often a<br />

rigorous one,” Cast said.<br />

The student trustee, Cast<br />

said, will need to take the required<br />

time to read, research<br />

and become engaged in working<br />

with the board. “It requires<br />

that the student trustee understand<br />

the problems of the University<br />

— legal, fi nancial, academic<br />

and social,” Cast said.<br />

“The student trustee must represent<br />

the current needs and views<br />

of students.”<br />

The board of trustees is a<br />

nine-member organization that<br />

approves building plans, sets tuition<br />

and cites salaries, among<br />

other things.<br />

AROUND CAMPUS, HOMECOMING EDITION<br />

$10 per team, with proceeds<br />

benefi ting the United Way of<br />

Monroe County. The fi rst 300<br />

participants in the fourth-annual<br />

tournament will receive a free<br />

2010 Homecoming T-shirt.<br />

Register online at www.alumni.<br />

indiana.edu/events/homecoming/<br />

cornhole10.shtml .<br />

YELL LIKE HELL<br />

WHEN 7:30 p.m. Thursday<br />

WHERE Alumni Hall, <strong>Indiana</strong><br />

Memorial Union<br />

MORE INFO Register your threeminute<br />

act — with a theme related<br />

to or focused on Homecoming,<br />

football, IU or “Now & Then 2010”<br />

— and be judged on originality,<br />

creativity and more. Register online<br />

at www.alumni.indiana.edu/events/<br />

homecoming/yell.shtml .<br />

HOMECOMING PARADE<br />

WHEN 5:30 p.m. Friday<br />

APPLY ONLINE<br />

Visit www.indiana.edu/~trustees/<br />

student.shtml to access the<br />

application.<br />

“Thinking deeply about all<br />

the issues that affect students<br />

and faculty, and the way the<br />

University is going for years to<br />

come,” Stemler said. “It’s the<br />

general, overall, big picture direction<br />

of the University.”<br />

The committee will interview<br />

selected fi nalists in April 2011 .<br />

After, the 2011 IU <strong>Student</strong><br />

Trustee Search and Screen Committee<br />

— chaired by Stemler —<br />

will forward 10 candidate names<br />

to Governor Mitch Daniels to<br />

make the fi nal selection.<br />

Stemler said in 2009 there<br />

were about 25 applicants, but<br />

she urges students to apply for<br />

the job this year to help that<br />

number increase.<br />

“It’s an incredible opportunity<br />

and really an honor,” she said.<br />

WHERE Rose Avenue, outside<br />

Willkie Residence Center<br />

MORE INFO The 52nd annual<br />

Parade beings on Rose Avenue in<br />

front of Willkie Residence Center<br />

and will proceed to <strong>Indiana</strong> Avenue<br />

and then north to the Sample Gates .<br />

HOOSIER HYSTERIA<br />

WHEN 7:30 p.m. Friday<br />

WHERE Assembly Hall<br />

MORE INFO Men’s basketball<br />

coach Tom Crean along with<br />

members of the team and other<br />

guests will kick off the basketball<br />

season with the annual event.<br />

This event is free and open to the<br />

public.<br />

FOR MORE<br />

INFORMATION AND<br />

EVENTS<br />

Visit www.alumni.indiana.edu/<br />

events/homecoming/home2010.<br />

shtml .<br />

CBS News chief foreign correspondent Lara<br />

Logan has reported from war zones all over the<br />

world, making her mark on broadcast news<br />

with her coverage of Iraq both before and after<br />

U.S. troops moved into the country. She continues<br />

to report on international affairs for 60<br />

Minutes and other CBS news programs. Her<br />

work has earned several awards, including an<br />

Emmy, an Overseas Press Club Award and an<br />

RTNDA/Edward R. Murrow Award.<br />

Lara Logan’s appearance is arranged through<br />

Gotham Artists, LLC.<br />

To learn more about the Speaker Series:<br />

JOURNALISM.INDIANA.EDU/SPEAKERSERIES


CITY&STATE<br />

EDITORS<br />

Brooke Lillard<br />

I N D I A N A D A I L Y S T U D E N T | M O N D A Y , O C T O B E R 1 1 , 2 0 1 0<br />

blillard@indiana.edu<br />

Vince Zito<br />

vjzito@indiana.edu<br />

Bloomington gets little bit fruitier with new community<br />

ORCHARD<br />

» MURDER<br />

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1<br />

BY COLLEEN SIKORSKI<br />

csikorsk@indiana.edu<br />

An apple a day keeps the doctor<br />

away, the saying goes.<br />

Now residents can have all the<br />

apples they want in Bloomington’s<br />

new community orchard.<br />

On Saturday, over 100 volunteers<br />

gathered to plant 60 fruit trees<br />

in the Bloomington Community<br />

Orchard . The orchard is located<br />

on South Highland Avenue , across<br />

the street from the Monroe County<br />

YMCA .<br />

The Fruit Tree Planting Foundation<br />

and Edy’s Fruit Bars awarded<br />

Bloomington with the 60 fruit trees<br />

and provided a professional arborist<br />

to help plant the trees.<br />

The orchard will supply free apples<br />

, pears , cherries , persimmons ,<br />

blueberries , blackberries and gooseberries<br />

to anyone who stops in and<br />

picks a free snack from a tree.<br />

The fruit trees will start blossoming<br />

next spring and will be ready for<br />

picking next fall , Rico Montenegro ,<br />

Fruit Tree Planting Foundation arborist<br />

said.<br />

“You’re going to get several tons<br />

of fruit from this orchard,” Montenegro<br />

said.<br />

Any unpicked fruit at the end of<br />

the season will be collected by Hoosier<br />

Hills Food Bank .<br />

The orchard aims to encourage<br />

healthy eating, provide nutritional<br />

education and build community<br />

relationships.<br />

In order to win the grant that<br />

helped provide the fruit trees and<br />

the arborist, the Bloomington Parks<br />

and Recreation Department had to<br />

receive enough votes to place fi fth<br />

out of the 25 competing orchard<br />

sites across the country.<br />

“We want to plant orchards<br />

in communities that are passionate<br />

about it,” Edy’s spokeswoman<br />

Melanie Fitzgerald said, explaining<br />

why Edy’s used a voting system to<br />

award grants.<br />

For the fruit orchard to become a<br />

success, Bloomington had to come<br />

together.<br />

“This really started with the<br />

community,” City of Bloomington<br />

Urban Forester Lee Huss said.<br />

“We’ve seen other communities<br />

where they’ve planted fruit trees<br />

and then had to remove them because<br />

no one took care of them.”<br />

Bloomington won the grant because<br />

of vast community support,<br />

reportedly with Grubb the day she<br />

disappeared, said the men had<br />

changed their story. The men said<br />

they had actually been in the woods<br />

near an old water treatment facility<br />

in the 5500 block of North Business<br />

37.<br />

Offi cers then went to that area<br />

and searched for several hours,<br />

but failed to locate her. The area is<br />

densely wooded, with heavy brush<br />

and very rugged terrain, with deep<br />

ravines and steep drop-offs.<br />

SEPT. 22<br />

Offi cers returned to the area of<br />

North Business 37 with volunteers<br />

and search dogs at 8 a.m. and<br />

searched until approximately 2 p.m.<br />

without success.<br />

SEPT. 25<br />

An Ind. Conservation Offi cer<br />

searched Griffy Lake by boat.<br />

ALEX FARRIS | IDS<br />

A tree stands near a fl ag in the middle of the Bloomington Community Orchard<br />

near Winslow Woods Park. The new orchard, made of 60 peach, apple and<br />

plum trees, was planted through a grant from Edy's Fruit Bars and the Fruit<br />

Tree Planting Foundation.<br />

SEPT. 27<br />

Offi cers returned to the location<br />

in the 5500 block of North Business<br />

37 and expanded their search to the<br />

north and west. Nothing was found.<br />

Bloomington Community Orchard<br />

Treasurer Amy Countryman said.<br />

“It was one of those things<br />

where we got the ball rolling, and<br />

it took off on its own,” Countryman<br />

said.<br />

Bloomington brought more than<br />

a united community to the table,<br />

Montenegro said.<br />

“I haven’t seen an organization<br />

so put together,” Montenegro said.<br />

“What’s unique about this community<br />

is that you have a lot of highly<br />

skilled individuals.”<br />

Both IU students and local residents<br />

volunteered in the orchard<br />

on hot summer weekends to make<br />

compost and deer fencing.<br />

Junior Jaclyn Tolliver volunteered<br />

with her Community Nutrition<br />

SEPT. 30<br />

Offi cers and volunteers with<br />

dogs searched the area on the north<br />

side of Griffy Lake and the woods<br />

to the north of that location, from 8<br />

a.m. to 1 p.m.<br />

OCT. 1<br />

Grubb’s body was discovered in<br />

northern Monroe County.<br />

OCT. 8<br />

The Monroe County Sheriff’s<br />

Offi ce announced Grubb was<br />

murdered. Police are continuing to<br />

investigate the homicide.<br />

— Alex Benson<br />

class Saturday morning.<br />

“It’s about working with the<br />

community,” Tolliver said. “It’s a<br />

bonus that it’s something healthy.”<br />

Amanda Wanlass , Bloomington<br />

Community Orchard Secretary<br />

, thought the project was a great<br />

idea, even though she said she knew<br />

nothing about fruit trees.<br />

As she spoke, her two toddlers<br />

helped shovel dirt to fi ll in a hole<br />

where a new apple tree had just<br />

been planted.<br />

She said she brought her kids to<br />

help so they will feel the orchard is<br />

special to them.<br />

“Every time we come here,<br />

they’ll get to have their tree,” Wanlass<br />

said. “It will make it more<br />

meaningful.”<br />

4<br />

Suicide walk<br />

raises money<br />

for prevention<br />

BY MARY KENNEY<br />

mskenney@indiana.edu<br />

Red is for your spouse or<br />

partner. Gold is your parent.<br />

White is your child. Orange is<br />

for your sibling.<br />

Purple is for a friend or relative.<br />

Green is for your own<br />

struggle. And blue is because<br />

you support the cause.<br />

There was a huge turnout<br />

Sunday morning for Out of the<br />

Darkness , a walk to raise suicide<br />

awareness, which began at Memorial<br />

Stadium.<br />

According to the Out of the<br />

Darkness website, the purpose<br />

for the walk, which takes place<br />

in over 200 communities nationwide,<br />

is to raise money for<br />

research and educational programs<br />

dealing with suicide<br />

prevention.<br />

The American Foundation<br />

for Suicide Prevention partnered<br />

with other groups, such as the<br />

Monroe County Suicide Prevention<br />

Coalition , to make the walk<br />

possible.<br />

Those involved wore bead<br />

necklaces of different colors to<br />

show how suicide had affected<br />

them .<br />

Ed Schwartzman wore white<br />

beads and handed out fl iers for<br />

“My Suicide,” a movie premiering<br />

in Bloomington on Friday .<br />

Friday is also the third year<br />

anniversary of the death of<br />

Schwartzman’s son, Ben .<br />

Since then, Schwartzman has<br />

been involved in many groups<br />

dedicated to suicide awareness .<br />

He has worked for the last 45<br />

days to bring “My Suicide” to<br />

Bloomington. He said he hopes<br />

it will get people talking about<br />

this taboo topic.<br />

“Without question this is a<br />

movie my son and I would’ve<br />

seen. It makes you think,”<br />

Schwartzman said.<br />

He said he doesn’t know<br />

whether his son would still be<br />

alive if they had seen a fi lm that<br />

talks about suicide and its effects<br />

so openly, but he believes<br />

there is a good chance.<br />

James Uland , a part-time student<br />

at Ivy Tech , wore gold and<br />

blue beads to the event.<br />

He said he heard about the<br />

A QUILT SET UP OUTSIDE<br />

MEMORIAL STADIUM<br />

LISTED THESE VICTIMS<br />

OF SUICIDE:<br />

BILL KUPKE June 25, 1985 -<br />

May 13, 2008<br />

STEVE RUSHER Jan. 20, 1985 –<br />

Sept. 20, 2003<br />

MARK AMOS 1976 – 2008<br />

TYLER SCOTT LEITZMAN May 19,<br />

1990 – March 26, 2009<br />

ANTHONY JACKSON Feb. 28, 1984<br />

– June 24, 2006<br />

GREGORY HUTSON April 29, 1992<br />

– Sept. 19, 2005<br />

event in a campus-wide email.<br />

Uland said his father was<br />

a victim of suicide , and he believes<br />

that raising awareness is<br />

important.<br />

“This has gotten me aware of<br />

the help out there,” he said.<br />

Erin Gillingham stood at the<br />

booth for the non-profi t organization<br />

To Write Love on Her<br />

Arms . She said she interned<br />

there last spring, and the cause<br />

resonated with her so deeply<br />

that she chose to stay with the<br />

group.<br />

“We try to inspire hope. To<br />

tell people hope is real, help is<br />

real,” Gillingham said.<br />

She said her participation in<br />

the group helped her while she<br />

was struggling with emotional<br />

problems .<br />

To Write Love on Her Arms<br />

serves as a bridge to professional<br />

help, Gillingham said. They<br />

invest heavily in treatment and<br />

recovery, and often partner with<br />

groups for suicide prevention .<br />

Schwartzman said events<br />

such as these that bring the topic<br />

of suicide into the open are the<br />

fi rst steps toward prevention.<br />

“Every expert says the key<br />

is to start the conversation,” he<br />

said.<br />

For Schwartzman, the death<br />

of his son was a tragedy he will<br />

never forget. But he has learned<br />

to move forward.<br />

“There’s nothing I can do to<br />

bring my son back,” Schwartzman<br />

said, “But hopefully I can<br />

save others.”


BIDDLE HOTEL | GROUP & EVENTS | UNION BOARD | CATERING | SERVICES | DINING | RECREATION<br />

Andrew Sullivan<br />

Free Public Lecture<br />

Wednesday, October 13, 7pm<br />

“Explore new media and it’s effects on global politics.”<br />

<strong>Indiana</strong> Memorial Union, Alumni Hall<br />

HOOSIERS<br />

<br />

FREE ADMISSION<br />

OCTOBER 15 , 10pm-12am<br />

IMU Commons / IMU Bowling<br />

<br />

HOMECOMING DANCE<br />

“NOW & THEN”<br />

SEMI-FORMAL DANCE<br />

9PM-12AM<br />

ALUMNI HALL<br />

FREE ENTRY<br />

H’ORDERVES AND DRINKS PROVIDED<br />

UNIVERSITY I.D. PROVIDED<br />

DJ PHENOM FROM SPORTS<br />

& JAKE’S NIGHTCLUB<br />

I N D I A N A D A I L Y S T U D E N T | M O N D A Y , O C T O B E R 1 1 , 2 0 1 0 PAGE 5<br />

WHITE PRIVILEGE 101<br />

Whittenberger Auditorium<br />

Monday, October 11, 2010<br />

6-8 pm<br />

Open Bowling<br />

No experience necessary<br />

All are welcome<br />

Thursdays @ 7pm<br />

SIGN UP FOR IMU EVENTS & DISCOUNTS<br />

U CREW<br />

www.imu.indiana.edu<br />

“<br />

In every decision made,<br />

we further shape society.<br />

But only when we step<br />

outside of who we are to<br />

view life through the eyes<br />

of another, do we truly<br />

appreciate the great<br />

impact our decisions<br />

make on all. ~ART MUNIN<br />

UB FILM In a world where technology exists to enter the<br />

human mind through dream invasion, a highly skilled thief is<br />

given a final chance at redemption which involves executing his<br />

toughest job till date, Inception.<br />

Thursday – Saturday,<br />

October 14 – 16<br />

8 pm and 11 pm<br />

Admission to the film series is FREE for students with student ID and<br />

$2 for non-students. Concessions are sold from 7:45 pm -11:15 pm.<br />

Screenings start at 8 pm and 11 pm unless otherwise advertised.<br />

INTRODUCTION TO<br />

OUTDOOR PHOTOGRAPHY<br />

OCTOBER 14, 21, 28<br />

NOVEMBER 4<br />

<br />

<strong>Indiana</strong> Memorial Union on Facebook<br />

officialimu on Twitter<br />


I N D I A N A D A I L Y S T U D E N T | M O N D A Y , O C T O B E R 1 1 , 2 0 1 0<br />

OPINION 6<br />

SEX<br />

The literary is inherently political,<br />

and we have much to gain from a literary<br />

reading of politics.<br />

This year’s Nobel Prizes recognize<br />

the two spheres’ inseparability. Peruvian<br />

writer Mario Vargas<br />

Llosa received<br />

the Nobel Prize in<br />

Literature for his political<br />

and historical<br />

novels celebrated<br />

for their “cartography<br />

of structures of power<br />

” and “images of<br />

NICK<br />

WALLACE<br />

is a senior majoring<br />

in English.<br />

the individual’s resistance,<br />

revolt and<br />

defeat. ”<br />

Jailed Chinese literary<br />

critic Liu Xiao-<br />

bo was awarded the Peace Prize for<br />

“his long and non-violent struggle for<br />

fundamental human rights in China . ”<br />

The Chinese government recently<br />

sentenced the writer to 11 years in<br />

prison for publishing a 2008 manifesto<br />

calling for political reform and<br />

democracy .<br />

Mothers everywhere have been wondering<br />

what college has done to their<br />

daughters, or so I imagine.<br />

Choking back tears, they’ve expressed<br />

their frustration similar to this:<br />

“She went away a<br />

Glee -watching, bestie-hugging,<br />

Nicholas<br />

Sparks -reading angel,<br />

and now she’s posting<br />

‘I like it on the fl oor’<br />

as her Facebook<br />

status.<br />

Why would I agree<br />

TYLER<br />

CHERNESKY<br />

is a junior majoring<br />

in English, history<br />

and religious<br />

studies.<br />

to send her to that liberal<br />

cesspool anyway?<br />

I blame her father.”<br />

Don’t worry, mom.<br />

It’s not what you<br />

think. I promise.<br />

During the past<br />

few weeks, women across the country<br />

have been posting “I like it on [the fl oor,<br />

the chair, the kitchen counter, etc.]” in<br />

their Facebook status bars.<br />

THEN<br />

& NOW<br />

The fi rst comprehensive national survey of the sexual lives, attitudes<br />

and behaviors of Americans in 16 years was released last week by IU’s<br />

Center for Sexual Health Promotion. The new study found major shifts<br />

in attitudes and behaviors since the last major survey was conducted.<br />

An increase in the number of men who identify as being<br />

homosexual is only one of these shifts. Check out<br />

www.nationalsexsurvey.indiana.edu to read the entire study.<br />

In spite of the Nobel Prizes’ signifi -<br />

cant recognition of politicized writing,<br />

American society has largely come to<br />

accept the deceitful proposition that the<br />

two are unrelated.<br />

The digitalization of society, I believe,<br />

can explain their perceived<br />

disconnection.<br />

In this age of high-speed Internet access<br />

and online newspapers, a muchpublicized<br />

2007 poll revealed that<br />

25 percent of Americans had read no<br />

books in the previous year .<br />

And heady fi ction such as Vargas<br />

Llosa’s didn’t fare well even among the<br />

reading public , whose favored genres<br />

are romance novels and religious texts .<br />

As the reading public shifts to Internet-based<br />

text, the decline of the novel<br />

seems increasingly inevitable. After all,<br />

who reads extensive fi ction online?<br />

For better and for worse, the Internet<br />

moves us toward consuming smaller,<br />

bite-sized factoids. We can easily navigate<br />

between tabs, fi nding more information<br />

even while becoming increasingly<br />

less focused readers.<br />

But these suggestive statuses aren’t<br />

nearly as scandalous as they seem. Contrary<br />

to initial assumption, these women<br />

are, in fact, referring to where they like<br />

to put their purses once they get home.<br />

This status actually has noble intentions.<br />

It’s part of a Facebook campaign<br />

to raise awareness for breast cancer research.<br />

It’s designed to grab the attention<br />

of both men and women and get<br />

them asking questions. But it has a few<br />

fl aws.<br />

First, it’s ambiguous and requires interpretation.<br />

So, it’s likely this message<br />

of awareness and advocacy is going<br />

over the heads of half the population.<br />

Namely, men. Guys just aren’t always<br />

that sharp.<br />

Ladies, you know this; you tell us all<br />

the time.<br />

Why launch a publicity campaign to<br />

raise awareness for breast cancer that<br />

requires individuals to investigate the<br />

multiple meanings of a specifi c phrase<br />

and to determine which one is most<br />

EDITORS<br />

Zach Ammerman<br />

zammerma@indiana.edu<br />

SUI GENERIS<br />

Nobel’s novel idea<br />

The Internet’s superabundance of<br />

facts must be partially responsible for<br />

our quickly diminishing appreciation<br />

for the power of fi ction and sustained<br />

immersion in an imagined world.<br />

Yet fi ction testifi es to the world’s<br />

boundless possibilities. It uniquely predisposes<br />

us to call into question our assumptions,<br />

and thus, to deconstruct<br />

power and privilege.<br />

This is no small loss. When readers<br />

of fi ction disappear, so do the number<br />

of citizens predisposed to analyzing the<br />

political realm as if it were a<br />

scrutinizable text.<br />

Fiction’s inherent malleability instills<br />

an appreciation for the constructed<br />

nature of our society and our corresponding<br />

ability to change it. This we<br />

cannot do without a developed imaginative<br />

capacity.<br />

The 2010 Nobel Prizes are something<br />

of a rallying-cry. They take literature<br />

off whatever apolitical pedestal we<br />

have placed it on. Our belief that the<br />

two are separate entities does not preserve<br />

some sort of artistic integrity.<br />

NOT FROM CONCENTRATE<br />

I like it on the fl oor<br />

Stephen Hammoor<br />

schammoo@indiana.edu<br />

appropriate and accurate for the given<br />

context?<br />

Here’s a general rule of thumb: If it<br />

takes more than three seconds for a guy<br />

to fi gure something out, he’s already<br />

moved on.<br />

While this status certainly raises eyebrows,<br />

it might not raise true awareness.<br />

And a recent study suggests that it<br />

certainly doesn’t raise money either.<br />

Of the more than 350 nonprofi t organizations<br />

that focus on breast cancer,<br />

none has reported an increase in donations<br />

as a result of this campaign.<br />

While the Susan G. Komen for the<br />

Cure foundation , which is responsible<br />

for those well-recognized pink ribbons<br />

and numerous other fund-raising<br />

efforts , did see an increase in visits to<br />

its website in January (the last time such<br />

a campaign was launched) they did not<br />

witness a surge in donations .<br />

And that’s disheartening. Because<br />

breast cancer research certainly needs<br />

public attention, but it needs money<br />

MALE HOMOSEXUALITY<br />

SIXTEEN YEARS AGO TODAY<br />

About one in fi fty<br />

males identifi ed as<br />

homosexual.<br />

CASSIE XU | IDS<br />

About one in ten<br />

males identifi es as<br />

homosexual.<br />

On the contrary, it debilitates art’s<br />

immense potential to participate in<br />

public life.<br />

It must be said the Internet is a<br />

powerful tool, too.<br />

Its factual abundance demystifi es accepted<br />

assumptions and connects human<br />

rights activists on the other side of<br />

the globe.<br />

When information is readily available<br />

to people, they can challenge the<br />

factuality of the myths maintained by<br />

their repressive leaders. Controversial<br />

sites such as WikiLeaks make it easier<br />

to expose wrongdoing.<br />

But a complete loss in fi ction steals<br />

our ability to see what might be truly<br />

novel in the world.<br />

The recognition of Mario Vargas<br />

Llosa and Liu Xiaobo as Nobel laureates<br />

signals mixing fact and fi ction and<br />

the novel and the status quo can be a<br />

crucial part of transforming the world<br />

into a more just place.<br />

E-mail: wallacen@indiana.edu<br />

even more.<br />

However, there are online campaigns<br />

that succeed in raising those much<br />

needed funds.<br />

For example, the Komen foundation<br />

launched its own online campaign<br />

(#fi ghtbreastcancer ) that directs individuals<br />

to 69-seconds.org , where they can<br />

make pledges or become directly involved<br />

in breast cancer organizations.<br />

This campaign has proved itself as<br />

much clearer and much more fruitful<br />

in its contribution to the fi ght against<br />

breast cancer than innuendo-ridden<br />

Facebook statuses.<br />

So while you’re free to do what you<br />

want with your status, if you really want<br />

to make a difference, and not just a bold<br />

statement, there might be better ways<br />

to do it.<br />

And, your mom would sleep a whole<br />

lot easier at night.<br />

Email: tycherne@indiana.edu<br />

ON THE SAMPLE<br />

GATES BLOG<br />

CHRISTINE<br />

O’DONNELL<br />

IS STILL<br />

YOU.<br />

Watch her new ad—still starring<br />

you, whatever that means—on the<br />

Sample Gates blog<br />

idsnews.com/samplegates<br />

Racism is alive and kicking in this<br />

country.<br />

With all the rhetoric being thrown<br />

around it’s no wonder that white-minority<br />

relations are at a crippling low.<br />

It is the year 2010 .<br />

By now discrimination<br />

should be a dying<br />

breed.<br />

Blacks, whites, Hispanics,<br />

Asians and Inuits<br />

should be sitting<br />

around campfi res singing<br />

kumbaya — or<br />

DANIELLE<br />

FLEISCHMAN<br />

is a senior majoring<br />

in journalism.<br />

some equally modern<br />

equivalent of good<br />

will.<br />

Instead there’s anger<br />

and dissonance in<br />

regards to cultural<br />

integration.<br />

Many Americans sneer at the idea of<br />

providing a path to citizenship for migrant<br />

workers, but that won’t stop them<br />

from eating the local cuisine they brought<br />

here.<br />

A diverse nation fosters a more dynamic<br />

community, but there seems to be<br />

little confi dence that America is going to<br />

move past race-based prejudice.<br />

A Rasmussen Reports national telephone<br />

survey found that 50 percent of<br />

all voters believe that relations between<br />

whites and Hispanics are getting worse.<br />

This year alone saw 314 new immigration<br />

laws and resolutions passed.<br />

In Nebraska , Oklahoma , Mississippi ,<br />

Minnesota , Missouri and, of course, Arizona<br />

, harsher regulation of undocumented<br />

workers has taken place.<br />

The problem is not the effort of these<br />

states to protect our borders.<br />

Obviously something needs to be<br />

done about the migration status of<br />

workers in this country.<br />

Whether reform needs to be take place<br />

on a state or federal level is up for debate<br />

— but the framework in which this<br />

discussion takes place needs to change.<br />

Latinos are not only our neighbors —<br />

they are the largest racial minority in the<br />

United States .<br />

Such a strong cultural presence should<br />

be celebrated and developed, not considered<br />

a threat to national security or our<br />

very way of life.<br />

To change the discussion, the Hispanic<br />

community needs to start by getting the<br />

representation they deserve.<br />

Latinos are vibrant, contributing members<br />

of society who, unfortunately, are often<br />

treated like second-class citizens.<br />

The most effective way to change this<br />

disparity is to get the voice of the<br />

Hispanic community out there.<br />

Unfortunately, a recent Pew Hispanic<br />

Center poll found that Latino voter turnout<br />

is likely to be low this year.<br />

Only 51 percent of Latinos said they<br />

are likely vote in the midterm elections<br />

compared with 70 percent of all<br />

registered voters.<br />

It’s not just about immigration. From<br />

those polled, the topic of immigration<br />

wasn’t even their main concern. Like<br />

most Americans, the Hispanic community<br />

is most troubled by education , jobs and<br />

health care .<br />

But immigration continues to color the<br />

perception of the Hispanic community.<br />

The best way to fi ght back against racist<br />

rhetoric is to vote for representatives<br />

who will push for the interests of Latinos<br />

in Washington, D.C.<br />

Even though voter turnout amongst<br />

Hispanics is projected to be low, there is<br />

still hope.<br />

A coalition of Latino civil rights<br />

groups has just launched a campaign<br />

called Vote for Respect which will coordinate<br />

public service announcements,<br />

a national voter hotline and progressive<br />

get-out-the-vote efforts to encourage<br />

Latino participation.<br />

Hispanics are the fastest growing segment<br />

of the electorate . It’s about time<br />

this country recognizes the importance<br />

of that.<br />

E-mail: danfl eis@indiana.edu<br />

LETTER TO THE EDITOR POLICY<br />

The IDS encourages and accepts letters to be printed daily from IU students, faculty and<br />

staff and the public. Letters should not exceed 350 words and may be edited for length<br />

and style. Submissions must include the person’s name, address and telephone number<br />

for verifi cation. Letters without those requirements will not be considered for publication.<br />

Letters can be mailed or dropped off at the IDS, 120 Ernie Pyle Hall, 940 E. Seventh St.,<br />

Bloomington, Ind., 47405. Submissions can also be sent via e-mail to letters@idsnews.com.<br />

Questions can be directed to the IDS at 855-0760.<br />

<strong>Indiana</strong> <strong>Daily</strong> <strong>Student</strong>, Est. 1867<br />

Website: idsnews.com<br />

APATHETIC<br />

DISCOURSE<br />

Racist<br />

rhetoric<br />

The opinions expressed by the editorial board do not necessarily represent the opinions of the IDS news<br />

staff, student body, faculty or staff members or the board of trustees. The editorial board comprises<br />

columnists contributing to the Opinion page and the Opinion editors.


» COMMITTEE<br />

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1<br />

University offi cials’ response to<br />

the incident.<br />

BUILDING A COMMUNITY<br />

At the beginning of the semester<br />

RPS formed a committee<br />

to examine how to build a better<br />

sense of community within<br />

Willkie.<br />

“The things that we had decided<br />

we wanted to do toward<br />

the end of last semester, after<br />

this had occurred, a lot of it’s<br />

about sense of community,” said<br />

Bob Weith, director of Residential<br />

Operations Administration.<br />

“And a lot of it’s about the members<br />

of those communities and<br />

whether they feel a caretaking<br />

responsibility for saying something<br />

if they haven’t seen another<br />

community member for awhile.”<br />

Lady said both Weith and Patrick<br />

Connor, executive director<br />

of RPS, have talked about<br />

the idea of the committee for<br />

three years, but it became more<br />

of a priority after Willoughby’s<br />

death.<br />

“This gives students the ability<br />

to say what they need rather<br />

than what we think they need,”<br />

Lady said, adding that up until<br />

this point, RPS has relied on the<br />

Willkie student government to be<br />

the genesis of changes like this.<br />

“This brings a little more structure<br />

to it.”<br />

The committee is comprised<br />

of Weith, Lady, Willkie Residence<br />

Manager Doug Yeskie ,<br />

» WILLKIE<br />

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1<br />

misconceptions and rumors,<br />

both about the effects of Willkie’s<br />

environment contributing to<br />

Willoughby’s death as well as<br />

about the University’s actions<br />

in communicating with students<br />

during and after the buildings<br />

were evacuated.<br />

A ROOM WITH HISTORY?<br />

Although Willoughby’s death<br />

made many question Willkie’s<br />

secluded environment, this stereotype<br />

is not always correct.<br />

“I think that the biggest lesson<br />

we took from this is that<br />

the outside student perception<br />

of Willkie is that it’s quiet as a<br />

tomb, and nobody interacts, and<br />

nobody knows one another,”<br />

said Jeanne Lady, Residential<br />

Operations Administration associate<br />

director for Willkie. “What<br />

the staff inside of Willkie knows<br />

is that the students choose their<br />

level of participation, and it’s<br />

not necessarily the environment<br />

for every student.”<br />

Sara Ivey Lucas, assistant director<br />

of assignments for Residential<br />

Programs and Services<br />

said although Willkie may not<br />

be the place for some students, it<br />

remains a popular living space.<br />

“By-and-large, over the last<br />

12 years Willkie’s always been<br />

full,” she said. “There have been<br />

incidents in Willkie, but there<br />

have also been incidents in Teter<br />

and McNutt and Collins where<br />

students don’t feel connected.”<br />

Ivey Lucas said the Assignment<br />

Offi ce’s biggest response<br />

after an incident such as Willoughby’s<br />

death comes from<br />

I N D I A N A D A I L Y S T U D E N T | M O N D A Y , O C T O B E R 1 1 , 2 0 1 0 PAGE 7<br />

the Willkie center president,<br />

graduate student staff members<br />

and undergraduate fl oor presidents.<br />

Lady said the committee,<br />

which fi rst met Sept. 24 and<br />

again this past Friday , has yielded<br />

some “really great discussion”<br />

about how to reconfi gure public<br />

spaces in the building and also<br />

how to best monitor students and<br />

their mental health given Willkie’s<br />

higher student to staff ratio.<br />

Lady said the committee determined<br />

that students, even<br />

those in upperclassmen buildings,<br />

do want to connect with<br />

their community.<br />

This conclusion, she said, was<br />

based on the atypically high attendance<br />

at Willkie’s Welcome<br />

Week programs and students’ usage<br />

of what little public space<br />

Willkie does have.<br />

One of the goals of the committee<br />

is to strike a balance between<br />

encouraging students to<br />

connect with their living community<br />

and respecting their need<br />

for privacy, particularly in Willkie,<br />

where privacy is generally the<br />

expectation.<br />

“In any community … you<br />

want to have a balance between<br />

knowing who your neighbors are<br />

and being able to go to them if<br />

something bad happens in your<br />

own home … you want people<br />

to have that sense of ‘OK, I can<br />

come together and I can fi nd resources<br />

and people who will help<br />

take care of me,’ but you also<br />

don’t want your neighbor looking<br />

in your kitchen window ev-<br />

quelling rumors.<br />

“After the suicide in April,<br />

we had probably 30 or 40 students<br />

call us to say, ‘I’ve got to<br />

be moved because I can’t live in<br />

the room where this happened.’<br />

It’s like, ‘Okay, well you’re not,<br />

you’re in the other tower, or<br />

you’re on a different fl oor’ ...<br />

(But) it did cause some folks to<br />

call us and say ‘Hey, is this really<br />

the right kind of place for me<br />

to live?’”<br />

Ivey Lucas said when she was<br />

an undergraduate at IU in the early<br />

1990s there was a student who<br />

shot themselves in their room<br />

in Collins.<br />

“It took some time for the<br />

community to recover from that<br />

and heal from that ... but by the<br />

time we got to the next academic<br />

year there were very few of us<br />

left who remembered what had<br />

happened, so there wasn’t any<br />

stigma for the person of ‘you<br />

live in the room where this thing<br />

happened.’” she said.<br />

Ivey Lucas said there is currently<br />

someone living in Willoughby’s<br />

old room but that<br />

this person had not been offi -<br />

cially notifi ed by RPS of the<br />

room’s history.<br />

“No one even asked me if I<br />

should tell the student or not,”<br />

she said. “It’s just a room from<br />

the way my offi ce sees it.”<br />

CAUGHT IN BETWEEN<br />

As students waited in the<br />

Willkie parking lot last April,<br />

many grew frustrated with<br />

their situation; they were being<br />

locked out of their rooms, and<br />

they didn’t know why.<br />

However, they weren’t the<br />

only ones.<br />

ery day,” Sara Ivey Lucas, assistant<br />

director of assignments for<br />

RPS, said.<br />

Weith said RPS could do a<br />

better job of setting an expectation<br />

for students that they let<br />

somebody know if they’re planning<br />

on being away from the<br />

building for an extended period<br />

of time. However, he said this is<br />

not a simple solution.<br />

“My speculation is, in the situation<br />

that happened last April,<br />

that wouldn’t have made any difference,”<br />

he said. “Because of the<br />

manner in which that community<br />

existed and Greg’s not being real<br />

connected to that particular community,<br />

folks just didn’t notice<br />

that he wasn’t around.”<br />

Lady said generally, students<br />

will be in communication with<br />

their friends, even if those people<br />

don’t live in Willkie, and it’s<br />

those students who will get in<br />

touch with Willkie staff before<br />

the staff even recognizes that<br />

there might be something wrong.<br />

“The very nature of that building<br />

lends itself to the students<br />

needing to be much more forthcoming<br />

and responsible about<br />

what their needs are and what<br />

they want and what’s going on<br />

with them,” she said. “The staff<br />

have a responsibility to also keep<br />

a general eye on things — and<br />

they do that — but it’s a large<br />

community, and there’s always<br />

going to be those issues. They<br />

may seem, to the outside world,<br />

that they fell through the cracks,<br />

but that’s not necessarily how it<br />

all plays out.”<br />

“Nobody knew what<br />

was going on. It was hours,<br />

literally hours, before any of us<br />

knew what was going on,” said<br />

Bob Weith, director of Residential<br />

Operations Administration.<br />

Three days after the incident,<br />

Patrick Connor, executive<br />

director of RPS, sent an e-mail<br />

message to Willkie students addressing<br />

the “concerns residents<br />

have expressed about the limited<br />

amount of communications<br />

with Willkie students.”<br />

In terms of RPS’s internal response,<br />

Weith said word was out<br />

to all professional and student<br />

staff members that same day.<br />

“One of the fi rst things that<br />

we go into is to attempt to control<br />

rumors,” he said.<br />

Even once students had been<br />

allowed back inside their rooms,<br />

the Willkie staff gave students<br />

the option to move somewhere<br />

else for the night, but even at<br />

that point they still couldn’t say<br />

what had happened, not until<br />

there was a formal release given<br />

by the University.<br />

“Until the police and whoever<br />

supervises them, which is<br />

the dean of students, authorizes<br />

us to give a release, we can’t<br />

do anything. And that’s more to<br />

protect the investigation and to<br />

protect the information, so the<br />

accurate pieces of information<br />

are going out rather than the inaccurate,”<br />

Lady said. “Somewhere<br />

there’s that disconnect<br />

between what students believe<br />

they should know right in the<br />

moment and what procedure<br />

dictates what we have to do,<br />

and unfortunately, our staff gets<br />

stuck in the middle of that sometimes.”<br />

Want to know more about sex?<br />

Here are some of the<br />

highlights of the National<br />

Survey of Sexual Health<br />

and Behavior . View the<br />

full report online at www.<br />

nationalsexstudy.indiana.edu<br />

1 of 4 acts of vaginal<br />

intercourse in the U.S. are<br />

protected by condoms.<br />

About 85% of men report that<br />

their partner had an orgasm<br />

during their most recent sexual<br />

experience, while 64% of<br />

women report having had an<br />

orgasm.<br />

Men are more likely to orgasm<br />

when sex includes vaginal<br />

intercourse and women are<br />

more likely to orgasm when<br />

sex includes a variety of acts,<br />

including oral sex.<br />

» SEX STUDY<br />

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1<br />

not to be as prevalent as the media<br />

often portrays it to be, and<br />

condom use among this group<br />

is much higher than some would<br />

expect, researchers said.<br />

“That’s the important part,”<br />

Fortenberry said. “It suggests<br />

that the reality of adolescent sexual<br />

behavior is not that it’s such<br />

an overwhelming part of young<br />

people’s day-to-day lives. That<br />

doesn’t mean that it’s not important,<br />

but it does mean that a lot<br />

of our perceptions — that teenagers<br />

are just having sex with anybody<br />

all of the time — is simply<br />

untrue.”<br />

The study also showed that<br />

communication between sexual<br />

partners was crucial to pleasure<br />

during sexual acts.<br />

Herbenick cited that the data<br />

shows 30 percent of women experience<br />

pain in some form during<br />

sex, while only 5 percent of<br />

men feel discomfort.<br />

“We know from other research<br />

that about 10 percent of<br />

women have a diagnosable pain<br />

condition called vulvodynia, so<br />

you expect at least that,” she said.<br />

“But 30 percent is huge.”<br />

The pain symptoms could<br />

happen for a number of<br />

reasons, but communication<br />

Lectures 2010-11<br />

Jean Palutikof<br />

PERCENTAGE OF AMERICANS PERFORMING<br />

CERTAIN SEXUAL BEHAVIORS IN THE PAST YEAR<br />

18-19 20-24<br />

Men Women Men Women<br />

Masturbated alone<br />

81 60 83 64<br />

Masturbated with partner 42 36 44 36<br />

Received oral from women 54 4 63 9<br />

Received oral from men<br />

6 58 6 70<br />

Gave oral to women<br />

51 2 55 9<br />

Gave oral to men<br />

4 59 7 74<br />

Vaginal Intercourse<br />

53 62 63 80<br />

Received penis in anus<br />

4 18 5 23<br />

Inserted penis into anus<br />

6 11<br />

7% of women and 8% of men<br />

identify as gay, lesbian or bisexual,<br />

but the amount of people who<br />

have had same-gender sexual<br />

experiences is higher.<br />

between partners seems to be<br />

the most plausible, said Kathryn<br />

Brown , a sexual health educator<br />

at the IU Health Center’s<br />

Department of Health &<br />

Wellness Education .<br />

Brown said she thinks questions<br />

such as “How does that<br />

feel?” aren’t asked enough.<br />

“If these questions aren’t<br />

asked and discussion doesn’t ensue,<br />

then these issues of lack of<br />

satisfaction from not having an<br />

orgasm to actually feeling pain<br />

during a sexual encounter will<br />

likely continue,” she said.<br />

This information could give<br />

those across age groups, especially<br />

college-aged people, comfort<br />

in their sexual behaviors,<br />

whether they are not sexually active<br />

or highly active in sexual activities.<br />

“There is no one ‘normal,’ and<br />

I think that’s a really healthy perspective<br />

for college students to<br />

get,” Levkoff said.<br />

Studies such as these, Reece<br />

said, are often hard to conduct<br />

given the stigma given to sexual<br />

behavior research. This is why<br />

his group’s work is so vital.<br />

“The fi eld of sex research has<br />

always been controversial,” he<br />

said. “The Kinsey Institute has<br />

always found itself having to<br />

justify why it does the work it<br />

does. People have always been<br />

Climate Change Scientist<br />

National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility (NCCARF)—Griffith University, Australia<br />

“The Role of International Treaties in Tackling Climate Change”<br />

Monday, October 11, Fine Arts room 015, 7:30pm<br />

“Adaptation Strategies: A Poor Man’s Solution?”<br />

Tuesday, October 12, Fine Arts room 015, 7:30pm<br />

www.patten.indiana.edu<br />

GRAPHIC BY BIZ CARSON | IDS<br />

Adults using a condom during<br />

intercourse rated the experience<br />

positively, in regards to pleasure<br />

and orgasm, just as often as<br />

when having intercourse without<br />

a condom.<br />

skeptical of whether sex research<br />

is really important.”<br />

More than 35,000 people had<br />

downloaded the study as of press<br />

time.<br />

However, Reece said if this<br />

research is not conducted more<br />

regularly and better funded,<br />

problems similar to the one faced<br />

by practitioners before the survey<br />

will happen again.<br />

“I hope it doesn’t take 20 years<br />

before the next study is funded,”<br />

he said. “I’m hoping that people<br />

will see this as valuable and benefi<br />

cial and that will then encourage<br />

someone to do this again. I’d<br />

love to see this done every fi ve<br />

years, and if not every fi ve years,<br />

I’d love to see it done at least every<br />

10.”<br />

Levkoff said the research performed<br />

at the Kinsey Institute<br />

and within other departments<br />

was crucial to mapping the contemporary<br />

trends of sexual behaviors.<br />

“I think we’re starting to see,<br />

with respect to research, a really<br />

broad picture of sexuality,<br />

from the life span issues to<br />

health issues, as well as pleasure,”<br />

Levkoff said of research<br />

performed at IU. “That’s really<br />

starting to create this incredible,<br />

holistic perspective of sexuality<br />

that we really haven’t seen in a<br />

long time.”


PAGE 8<br />

I N D I A N A D A I L Y S T U D E N T | M O N D A Y , O C T O B E R 1 1 , 2 0 1 0


I N D I A N A D A I L Y S T U D E N T | M O N D A Y , O C T O B E R 1 1 , 2 0 1 0<br />

SPORTS 9<br />

BY CONNOR O’GARA<br />

cjogara@indiana.edu<br />

Questions arose about how<br />

healthy Terrelle Pryor<br />

would be after suffering a<br />

quadricep strain against Illinois last<br />

week .<br />

If Pryor was hurting, his performance<br />

did not show it.<br />

Pryor threw for a career-high in<br />

yards against IU in the fi rst half .<br />

The Ohio State quarterback led<br />

the Buckeyes (6-0, 2-0) to a 38-10<br />

win against the Hoosiers (3-2, 0-2)<br />

on Saturday at Ohio Stadium .<br />

What caught the Hoosiers off<br />

guard was how much the Buckeyes<br />

went to the passing game.<br />

“We expected them to run, and<br />

they passed a lot more than anyone<br />

could have expected,” IU<br />

sophomore defensive tackle Larry<br />

Black Jr. said. “We’ve got to adjust,<br />

and we’ve got to be quicker on<br />

Ohio State has built a winning<br />

football program.<br />

IU only hopes to do so.<br />

Saturday ’s<br />

meeting between<br />

the<br />

two teams at<br />

Ohio Stadium<br />

showed how<br />

large the gap<br />

between the<br />

two programs<br />

JUSTIN<br />

ALBERS<br />

is a sophomore<br />

majoring in<br />

journalism.<br />

EDITORS<br />

Drew Allen<br />

roballen@indiana.edu<br />

Nathan Hart<br />

nmhart@indiana.edu<br />

FOOTBALL<br />

Pryor has career day against IU defense<br />

our feet.”<br />

Similar to the game against<br />

Michigan , the Hoosier defense was<br />

scored on quickly to start the game.<br />

Four plays were all the Buckeyes<br />

needed to march down the fi eld<br />

for six .<br />

A 39-yard touchdown run by<br />

Ohio State tailback Dan Herron<br />

got the Buckeyes out to an early<br />

7-0 lead .<br />

A miscommunication between<br />

IU senior quarterback Ben Chappell<br />

and junior receiver Damarlo<br />

Belcher resulted in an interception<br />

by Ohio State’s Devon Torrence .<br />

Pryor then connected with receiver<br />

Dane Sanzenbacher on<br />

a post for a 22-yard touchdown<br />

pass , which gave the Buckeyes a<br />

14-0 lead .<br />

Sanzenbacher’s touchdown<br />

marked the fi rst of many occasions<br />

that Buckeye receivers were able to<br />

get open behind the IU secondary.<br />

After a series of scoreless drives<br />

by the IU offense, the Buckeyes<br />

gashed the Hoosiers for another<br />

big passing play early in the second<br />

quarter .<br />

Ohio State running back Brandon<br />

Saine beat IU senior safety<br />

Mitchell Evans deep on single<br />

coverage and scored on a 60-yard<br />

bomb from Pryor.<br />

“I was right with him, and Pryor<br />

just made a great throw,” Evans<br />

said. “He made a great play, so I<br />

got to hand it to him.”<br />

The score reintroduced the<br />

Hoosiers’ kryptonite of letting up<br />

big plays.<br />

“We’ve got to stop the big<br />

plays,” Black said. “We have to<br />

stop them because that’s what’s<br />

killing us.”<br />

A scoreless Hoosier offense<br />

could not get anything going<br />

against the Buckeyes, allowing<br />

them to widen their lead before<br />

the half. Another Chappell interception<br />

gave Pryor a short fi eld to<br />

work with at the IU 31 .<br />

Four straight running plays set<br />

up the Buckeyes to pass in the red<br />

zone. Pryor completed his third<br />

touchdown pass of the day with a<br />

17-yard back shoulder pass to receiver<br />

DeVier Posey .<br />

IU senior cornerback Adrian<br />

Burks , who had coverage on<br />

Posey on the play, admitted that<br />

there is not much defense for a<br />

perfect throw.<br />

“It was good coverage,” Burks<br />

said. “Any time you throw back<br />

shoulder, especially when you’re<br />

on the man with good coverage,<br />

it’s hard to turn around and use<br />

your body, which makes it hard to<br />

cover. But it seemed to work well<br />

for them.”<br />

A fi eld goal at the end of the<br />

second quarter capped off a 31-0<br />

fi rst half for the Buckeyes.<br />

The fi rst-half defensive woes<br />

for the Hoosiers quickly put a<br />

halt to any thoughts of pulling off<br />

an upset.<br />

While the Heisman Trophy candidate<br />

did not put up his usual rushing<br />

statistics, he still showed his<br />

mobility in the pocket.<br />

The IU defense had diffi culties<br />

bringing the 6-foot-6-inch Pryor<br />

to the ground when they were<br />

able to get through the Buckeyes’<br />

offensive line.<br />

Pryor’s ability to stay on his feet<br />

resulted in a career-high 334 passing<br />

yards before he was pulled in<br />

the third quarter .<br />

In a game where Pryor did not<br />

have any designed running plays,<br />

he showed the IU defense what he<br />

could do with his arm.<br />

“They totally dominated us in<br />

the fi rst half in every way that you<br />

can,” IU coach Bill Lynch said.<br />

“We can’t play a fi rst half like that.”<br />

THE ALBERS ANGLE<br />

Loss to Ohio State says Hoosiers have a long way to go<br />

truly is.<br />

The No. 2<br />

Buckeyes (6-0,<br />

2-0) played to<br />

win the game.<br />

They took<br />

shots down<br />

fi eld from their fi rst possession<br />

until their last one.<br />

The Hoosiers (3-2, 0-2) did<br />

not. They ran predictable plays<br />

on predictable downs all<br />

afternoon. First down usually<br />

consisted of a handoff to Trea<br />

Burgess , Nick Turner or Antonio<br />

Banks . More times than not, the<br />

play went for one yard or less.<br />

Second down featured a Tandon<br />

Doss end-around on more<br />

than one occasion. What about<br />

third down ? Either a swing pass,<br />

a short hitch or some other play<br />

that left the Hoosiers in a punting<br />

situation, whether they executed<br />

it or not.<br />

The IU coaching staff was<br />

content to keep the game close<br />

(how’d that work out?).<br />

Because IU has the football<br />

program it does, Bill Lynch and<br />

his staff seem happy to settle<br />

for the a respectable defeat rather<br />

than going for the a programchanging<br />

victory.<br />

“They totally dominated us in<br />

the fi rst half, in every way that<br />

TOO MUCH<br />

TERRELLE<br />

PHOTOS BY PETER STEVENSON | IDS<br />

Ohio State quarterback Terrelle Pryor (2) tore through the IU defense, including defensive end Darius Johnson (44) and defensive tackle Adam Replogle (98), during IU’s 38-10 loss to the Buckeyes on Saturday in Columbus, Ohio.<br />

you can,” Lynch said. “We were<br />

just trying to fi nd a way to get a<br />

fi rst down. It was really one of<br />

those games, and again, it’s really<br />

a credit to them.”<br />

The Buckeyes were fundamentally<br />

sound.<br />

The Hoosiers, much of the<br />

time, were not. They missed several<br />

tackles, blew multiple defensive<br />

assignments and didn’t<br />

seem to be on the same page offensively.<br />

Lynch said he keeps his team<br />

from practicing in full pads because<br />

he wants to keep his guys<br />

healthy.<br />

Not only has that been somewhat<br />

unsuccessful so far, those<br />

practices have led to poor form<br />

and missed tackles on the defensive<br />

side of the ball.<br />

How do you expect your guys<br />

to tackle in the game if they don’t<br />

tackle in practice?<br />

The Buckeyes’ secondary has<br />

the ability to shut down certain<br />

receivers.<br />

The Hoosiers’ secondary has a<br />

diffi cult time stopping any<br />

receiver.<br />

Not only did Ohio State quarterback<br />

Terrelle Pryor have about<br />

three days in the pocket when<br />

he dropped back, he could target<br />

any IU corner or safety and<br />

know his guy was going to make<br />

the catch.<br />

Running back Brandon Saine<br />

ran down the sideline against<br />

Mitchell Evans for a touchdown.<br />

Wide receiver Dane Sanzenbacher<br />

cut over the middle against no<br />

one in particular (zone coverage<br />

broke down).<br />

Receiver DeVier Posey came<br />

back for a ball in the corner of<br />

the end zone against Adrian<br />

Burks .<br />

This secondary is beaten up,<br />

yes, but something has to change.<br />

These guys have been gashed by<br />

almost everybody this season.<br />

Did I expect IU to beat the<br />

Buckeyes?<br />

No.<br />

But I didn’t anticipate a 31-0<br />

game — with Ohio State outgaining<br />

IU 320-68 in yards at the<br />

end of the fi rst half.<br />

“They’re a good team,” Burks<br />

said. “No. 2 in the country for<br />

sure.”<br />

It’s interesting how every IU<br />

player and coach we talked to alluded<br />

to Ohio State’s ranking.<br />

That tells a lot about where this<br />

program is in comparison to other<br />

schools. Most players and<br />

coaches would tell you they don’t<br />

pay any attention to the rankings.<br />

The Hoosiers can’t go 30<br />

seconds without mentioning it.<br />

Being outplayed by a team<br />

that has superior athletes is one<br />

thing, but that’s not the only area<br />

in which IU was overmatched<br />

Saturday.<br />

The Buckeyes were also a<br />

whole lot smarter and tougher<br />

than the Hoosiers.<br />

That’s why Ohio State is<br />

building toward another appearance<br />

in the BCS National Championship<br />

, and IU is on track for<br />

another fi nish at the bottom of<br />

the Big Ten .<br />

For years we have heard the<br />

IU football program is building.<br />

After a 38-10 loss to the<br />

Buckeyes, I can’t help but notice<br />

how far it is from the fi nished<br />

product.<br />

Ohio State has built a mansion.<br />

IU is still working on the<br />

foundation.


SPORTS<br />

EDITORS<br />

Drew Allen<br />

I N D I A N A D A I L Y S T U D E N T | M O N D A Y , O C T O B E R 1 1 , 2 0 1 0<br />

roballen@indiana.edu<br />

Nathan Hart<br />

nmhart@indiana.edu<br />

VOLLEYBALL<br />

high on<br />

fire<br />

@ 9 p.m.<br />

Keller<br />

Williams<br />

@ 9 p.m.<br />

The New Deal<br />

&<br />

Papadosio<br />

Dot Dot Dot<br />

with<br />

The Graduates<br />

Main<br />

Squeeze<br />

with<br />

40% sTEVE<br />

OCT. 18................Jackie Greene OCT. 24............... Umphreyʼs McGee<br />

Oct. 19................ Robert Randolph OCT. 27................ Bass Nectar<br />

and The Family Band OCT. 28................Dark Star Orchestra<br />

OCT. 20................Michael Franti OCT. 29................Guided By Voices<br />

and Spearhead OCT. 31.................Halloween Costume Contest<br />

OCT. 22................Ingrid Michealson<br />

$1000 in cash and prizes<br />

OCT. 23................Nappy Roots NOV. 11................ Corey Smith<br />

10<br />

PHOTOS BY ALYCIN BEKTESH | IDS<br />

LEFT Outside hitter Jordan Haverly is congratulated by her teammates after earning a point against Penn State on Saturday in University Gym. Haverly led the Hoosiers with 35 kills for the weekend as the team defeated both Ohio<br />

State and Penn State 3-1.<br />

RIGHT Setter Mary Chaudoin and middle blocker Taylor Wittmer embrace after the fi nal point Saturday in University Gym. The Hoosiers defeated three-time national champions Penn State 3-1. In the history of the program, IU had<br />

never defeated Penn State.<br />

IU records fi rst-ever win against Penn State<br />

BY AARON SIEGAL-EISMAN<br />

amsiegal@indiana.edu<br />

The University Gym crowd<br />

was silenced as No. 4 Penn State<br />

earned their 24th point in the<br />

fourth set , one point away from<br />

forcing a decisive fi fth set .<br />

However, the IU volleyball<br />

team didn’t want to let this one<br />

get away from them after winning<br />

the fi rst two sets in the<br />

match, 25-19 and 27-25 .<br />

The Hoosiers won the last<br />

three points of the fourth set, and<br />

the Hoosier fans went in an up-<br />

roar as the match concluded.<br />

IU defeated Penn State, the<br />

three-time defending national<br />

champion , for the fi rst time in<br />

school history after going 0-39<br />

in the last 28 years against the<br />

Nittany Lions .<br />

“Everybody came together<br />

and knew we were going to<br />

put everything out on the court,”<br />

said sophomore outside hitter<br />

Jordan Haverly .<br />

University Gym was packed<br />

with 1,741 fans cheering for the<br />

Hoosiers and also welcomed a<br />

good crowd of Penn State fans<br />

MEN’S SOCCER<br />

that made the trip.<br />

IU coach Sherry Dunbar said<br />

she thought the crowd was a factor<br />

in the Hoosiers’ win.<br />

“I felt they were living every<br />

point with us,” Dunbar said.<br />

“I feel like when you have a<br />

crowd that’s not large, but is really<br />

into it, then you have a really<br />

tough place to play for visiting<br />

opponents.”<br />

IU came out strong, winning<br />

the fi rst set, 25-19 , after Penn<br />

State’s Blair Brown had a service<br />

error to give the Hoosiers<br />

the set.<br />

IU upsets No. 11 Creighton<br />

BY KEVIN LOUGHERY<br />

kevlough@indiana.edu<br />

With backs against the proverbial<br />

wall, the IU men’s soccer<br />

team picked up arguably its biggest<br />

road win of the year, knocking<br />

off No. 11 Creighton in Omaha<br />

, Neb. and improving its record<br />

to 6-4-1 .<br />

Junior forward Will Bruin<br />

scored his ninth and 10th goals of<br />

the year, proving to be the difference<br />

maker Saturday as the Hoosiers<br />

knocked off the Blue Jays,<br />

3-2 .<br />

“This was a huge game,” Bruin<br />

said. “They just got done beating<br />

(No. 5) Tulsa , and they’ve<br />

had a great season. To go into<br />

their place and get a result, hopefully<br />

we can keep it going. If we<br />

don’t get a result, that’s a .500<br />

season. It’s good for morale and<br />

RPI come tournament time.”<br />

The road upset is a timely<br />

one for the Hoosiers as the<br />

season’s fi rst RPI rankings are<br />

released this week . IU recorded<br />

a tie against Wisconsin on Oct. 3<br />

and a loss to Notre Dame at home<br />

last Wednesday .<br />

“It’s defi nitely big, especially<br />

looking at our tournament resume,”<br />

junior goalkeeper Nate<br />

Mitchell said. “Coming on road,<br />

it’s big to get confi dence.”<br />

Mitchell got the start in place<br />

of usual starter sophomore Luis<br />

Soffner , handing Creighton its<br />

second loss of the year .<br />

The change at goal was a<br />

coach’s decision made earlier in<br />

the week, Mitchell said.<br />

“Whether it is myself, Louie<br />

or Bristol, whoever is in goal is<br />

not what is important to group,”<br />

he said. “Pushing each other to<br />

get better is the team aspect.”<br />

Junior forward Alec Purdie<br />

provided some offensive fi reworks<br />

off the bench, scoring midway<br />

through the second half .<br />

“We defi nitely needed a result<br />

tonight,” Purdie said. “At this<br />

point, it’s the biggest win we’ve<br />

had. We shuffl ed about seven<br />

guys deep tonight, so it’s good to<br />

have guys come in.”<br />

Purdie’s goal put the game out<br />

of reach as he ballooned the score<br />

to 3-1 in the 67th minute .<br />

Going into Saturday’s match,<br />

Creighton had outscored its opponents,<br />

19-6 .<br />

“It shows us what we can do<br />

if we bring it every game,” said<br />

Bruin, who leads the team with a<br />

career-high 10 goals on the season.<br />

“We’re a pretty damn good<br />

team. It doesn’t matter if we’re<br />

playing Evansville at home or<br />

Creighton on road.”<br />

Creighton’s Jose Gomez<br />

earned a red card with less than<br />

10 minutes to play in the fi rst<br />

half, which forced the Blue Jays<br />

to play a man down the remainder<br />

of the game .<br />

IU returns to Bloomington on<br />

Oct. 16 to face Michigan , who is<br />

1-1 in conference play .<br />

The Hoosiers stand at 1-0-1 in<br />

Big Ten contests .<br />

In the second set, the Nittany<br />

Lions rallied from a fi ve-point<br />

defi cit before IU sophomore setter<br />

Mary Chaudoin ’s service ace<br />

gave the Hoosiers the victory in<br />

the second set, 27-25 .<br />

However, the Nittany Lions<br />

showed their strength in winning<br />

the third set, 25-18 .<br />

In the fourth and fi nal set the<br />

teams were tied 10 times before<br />

the Hoosiers came out the victor<br />

off Haverly’s kill.<br />

The team then gathered in the<br />

middle of the court and celebrated<br />

as they made history as the<br />

CLUBS & INTRAMURALS<br />

IU Cycling team begins season with<br />

track nationals, upcoming fall series<br />

BY ALEX MCCARTHY<br />

alexmcca@indiana.edu<br />

The Fall Cycling Series allows<br />

Little 500 hopefuls to hone<br />

their cycling skills before teams<br />

formed for race day.<br />

“Fall cycling shows who’s<br />

been training hard during the<br />

summer,” IU Cycling Team<br />

coach Geraint Parry said. “A lot<br />

of people who do well in Little<br />

Five don’t start riding until this<br />

time of year, so they’re not very<br />

fast at the moment ... It’s almost<br />

a better judge of who’s a better<br />

only IU team thus far to beat the<br />

Nittany Lions .<br />

“I really thought that everybody<br />

stepped up,” Dunbar said.<br />

“We talked about that, in order to<br />

win everyone was going to play<br />

better.”<br />

Haverly led all players with<br />

21 kills on the match and also<br />

registered six digs .<br />

“Jordan just whaled on the<br />

ball,” senior middle blocker<br />

Ashley Benson said. “She knew<br />

SEE VOLLEYBALL, PAGE 11<br />

cyclist rather than who’s a better<br />

Little 500 rider.”<br />

The series has three events on<br />

Oct. 22 and Oct. 24 .<br />

The Street Sprints , which<br />

take place on Oct. 22 , are simply<br />

fast 200-meter races to determine<br />

the fastest riders.<br />

The Climb Trial, which is on<br />

Oct. 24 at Bill Armstrong Stadium<br />

, is simply a two-lap trial run.<br />

On the same day is the Cyclocross<br />

. It is a two-person relay<br />

race with stairs, bales of hay and<br />

other obstacles.<br />

“I think the fall series are<br />

SIMILAR STATISTICS<br />

IU and Penn State had comparable<br />

statistics Saturday except at the<br />

service line, where the Hoosiers<br />

nailed seven aces to down the<br />

Nittany Lions for the fi rst time.<br />

SCORE<br />

IU 3<br />

Penn State 1<br />

KILLS<br />

IU 53<br />

Penn State 61<br />

SERVICE ACES<br />

IU 7<br />

Penn State 1<br />

DIGS<br />

IU 46<br />

Penn State 45<br />

there to continue the excitement<br />

year-round,” senior and Little<br />

500 rider Eric Young said. “If<br />

you’re into Little Five and you<br />

know about the teams, it’s really<br />

fun.”<br />

Young is also a member of<br />

the IU Cycling Team, which<br />

won fi fth place at the National<br />

Cycling Championship in <strong>Indiana</strong>polis<br />

on Sept. 25.<br />

After three days of competition,<br />

the IU team had a<br />

slight lead over Colorado State<br />

SEE CYCLING, PAGE 11<br />

Girls Free Before 11 p.m.<br />

15¢ Drafts and $1.50 Wells<br />

dot<br />

dot<br />

dot


ALYCIN BEKTESH | IDS<br />

Sophomore setter Whitney Granado gets a hand from her teammates<br />

after missing a dig Saturday in University Gym.<br />

» VOLLEYBALL<br />

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 10<br />

where to hit the ball, and it just<br />

paid off tonight.”<br />

The Hoosiers also won their<br />

fi rst match of the weekend Friday<br />

against Ohio State by scores<br />

of 25-21 , 12-25 , 25-20 and<br />

25-20 .<br />

Haverly and sophomore<br />

right-side hitter Kelci Marschall<br />

led the Hoosiers in kills with 14<br />

and 10 , respectively.<br />

Sophomore outside hitter<br />

Ivie Obeime added eight kills<br />

off the bench.<br />

“Ivie did a great job in the<br />

Ohio state game,” Haverly said.<br />

“She’s been busting her butt in<br />

practice.”<br />

» CYCLING<br />

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 10<br />

University for fi fth place at<br />

the Championship . Fifth place<br />

would earn a medal; sixth place<br />

would not.<br />

But as Young won the fi nal<br />

sprint, he ensured the Hoosiers<br />

the coveted fi fth place medals.<br />

For the fi rst time since 2004 , IU<br />

had sent a team to compete in the<br />

National Championship and it<br />

paid off. Not only did Young help<br />

the team take home some hardware,<br />

but he also won the men’s<br />

points race, beating out some of<br />

the best cyclists in the country.<br />

“Apart from (Young ), the<br />

riders did enough of a good job<br />

WHEN THE<br />

HOOSIERS<br />

SCORE, YOU SCORE!<br />

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I N D I A N A D A I L Y S T U D E N T | M O N D A Y , O C T O B E R 1 1 , 2 0 1 0 PAGE 11<br />

IU offense struggles all day<br />

BY GEOFFREY MILLER<br />

glm@indiana.edu<br />

Having a player move the<br />

football 294 yards from the line<br />

of scrimmage can often yield<br />

positive results for an offense.<br />

Having those numbers come<br />

from the punter often means quite<br />

the opposite.<br />

Indicative of a day that saw IU<br />

offensive drives sputter, stall and<br />

stop with disappointing results,<br />

the statistics of junior punter<br />

Chris Hagerup ’s season-most day<br />

in terms of yards and punts — illustrated<br />

the ineffectiveness of<br />

IU’s high-fl ying offense against a<br />

stout Ohio State defense.<br />

“They disguise their coverage<br />

really well. They’re fast, physical,”<br />

IU senior quarterback Ben<br />

Chappell said. “They get up fi eld<br />

with the rush. All of that causes<br />

some havoc.”<br />

Sure, when IU’s defense allowed<br />

the then second-ranked<br />

Buckeyes (6-0, 2-0) to hang 31<br />

points on the scoreboard by halftime<br />

Saturday , an upset win appeared<br />

to be a dicey proposition<br />

at best.<br />

The prospects grew worse<br />

when the Hoosiers (3-2, 0-2)<br />

ran to the locker room staring at<br />

a goose egg on their side of the<br />

scoreboard after 30 minutes of<br />

play .<br />

In fact, the Hoosiers had<br />

gained just 68 fi rst-half yards<br />

on 29 plays — by far their worst<br />

offensive fi rst half output this<br />

season.<br />

“We just didn’t execute,”<br />

Chappell said. “Obviously that<br />

has a lot to do with them and how<br />

good they are, but we just didn’t<br />

play well enough.”<br />

Neither the running game nor<br />

the passing game could get off<br />

the ground for an offensive package<br />

that came into the contest as<br />

the fourth-best in the country:<br />

348.2 passing yards per game .<br />

Saturday, IU managed just<br />

210 total offensive yards with<br />

Chappell posting a highly-<br />

FIELD HOCKEY<br />

Hoosiers split pair of weekend matches<br />

BY MICAH MCVICKER<br />

mmmcvick@indiana.edu<br />

Somewhere along the way<br />

from Bloomington to Evanston,<br />

Ill. , the IU fi eld hockey team lost<br />

the momentum gained with its 3-2<br />

overtime victory against Louisville<br />

on Oct. 5 .<br />

IU squandered an opportunity<br />

to post its fi rst win in conference<br />

play , falling 4-2 to Northwestern<br />

on Friday . IU dropped to 0-3 in<br />

Big Ten play .<br />

Fifteen minutes into the contest,<br />

the Hoosiers trailed 0-2 .<br />

Ten minutes into the second<br />

half , IU tallied a goal by senior<br />

midfi elder Kelsey Kiper . However,<br />

the Wildcats caged two more<br />

goals and went on to win the game.<br />

Once again, penalty corners<br />

played a signifi cant factor<br />

“We know we can<br />

play with the best<br />

teams in the country.”<br />

Jordan Haverly, sophomore outside hitter<br />

IU hopes to build momentum<br />

from its victories against<br />

two top-30 opponents .<br />

“These two victories are<br />

great, and it defi nitely boosts<br />

up our self-confi dence,” Benson<br />

said.<br />

Haverly agreed.<br />

“It just helps us because we<br />

know we are a good team and<br />

got off to a bad start,” Haverly<br />

said. “We know we can<br />

play with the best teams in the<br />

country.”<br />

to put us in contention for fi fth<br />

overall,” Parry said. “We were<br />

able to compete in enough events<br />

to score points, but with more<br />

riders and more experience, we<br />

could have done better in those<br />

events and scored points in more<br />

events.”<br />

Although Young was the only<br />

rider with “substantial” track racing<br />

experience, the team of eight<br />

— four women and four men —<br />

exceeded expectations.<br />

Graduate student Kristen<br />

Metherd (who fi nished 19th<br />

overall in the women’s individual<br />

event ) said she enjoyed blending<br />

multiple teams of Little 500<br />

racers.<br />

as Northwestern earned 14 to the<br />

Hoosiers’ four .<br />

“It’s hard to put a fi nger on,” IU<br />

coach Amy Robertson said. “We<br />

looked tentative in the game. Then<br />

we sagged on defense and gave<br />

them more room to work with.<br />

They have a really strong forward<br />

line, and if you give them room<br />

and let them receive, they’re going<br />

to take advantage of it.<br />

“We had a lot of turnovers. Instead<br />

of taking the momentum, we<br />

were pretty happy to get the win<br />

against Louisville. It defl ated a little<br />

bit of our motivation.”<br />

Junior goalkeeper Becky Pany<br />

started in the cage for IU during<br />

the weekend.<br />

“It’s a matter of one, we have<br />

two great goalkeepers and two,<br />

Alex is not a 100 percent. Her<br />

knee had swollen up,” Robertson<br />

said. “That made the decision pretty<br />

easy to play Becky.”<br />

The Hoosiers quickly put<br />

the loss behind them. Less than<br />

24 hours later , they squared off<br />

against University of California-Davis<br />

. IU scored on a goal<br />

by sophomore forward Shareyna<br />

Chang . Freshman forward Mariella<br />

Grote earned the assist .<br />

Though Chang’s goal proved to<br />

be the lone score of the game , the<br />

Hoosiers created many more opportunities<br />

for themselves against<br />

the Aggies , outshooting them 17-<br />

7 and earning a 12-3 penalty corner<br />

advantage .<br />

“We came together as a team<br />

and set three specifi c goals that<br />

everyone on the team can focus<br />

on and so that we can ensure we<br />

can all execute them during the<br />

game,” Chang said.<br />

WWW.FACEBOOK.COM/TISIU<br />

average 16-for-26, 106-yard day<br />

with two interceptions .<br />

Chappell’s fi rst interception<br />

came when he and junior wide receiver<br />

Damarlo Belcher appeared<br />

to get their signals crossed on<br />

IU’s second drive of the game .<br />

“It was just miscommunication<br />

on the route,” Chappell said.<br />

“I thought he was going outside,<br />

he went inside.”<br />

The ball sailed deep down the<br />

left side while Belcher cut toward<br />

the middle, allowing Ohio<br />

State’s Devon Torrence to intercept<br />

the errant throw and return<br />

it 25 yards . Three plays later, the<br />

Buckeyes scored to take a 14-0<br />

lead .<br />

As Chappell mentioned, the<br />

Ohio State defense often put<br />

pocket pressure on the passheavy<br />

IU offense and forced<br />

Chappell to make quick, short<br />

throws.<br />

The longest passing play of<br />

the game for Chappell was a 25yard<br />

completion to senior wideout<br />

Terrance Turner , though it<br />

came in the third quarter when IU<br />

already was in a 38-0 hole .<br />

“It was more their overall defense.<br />

The defensive line, the<br />

linebackers, they were able to get<br />

a lot of pressure,” Turner said.<br />

“They’re a good team. (They<br />

were) the No. 2 team in the nation.<br />

They’re going to have a<br />

good offense, a good defense and<br />

it showed (Saturday).”<br />

IU came in to the game a bit<br />

undermanned in the blocking<br />

department.<br />

First, junior running back<br />

Darius Willis was ruled out just<br />

before the game with a groin injury<br />

sustained in practice. Willis,<br />

when not taking a handoff, serves<br />

as one of Chappell’s last lines of<br />

defense as a blocker during a pass<br />

rush.<br />

The non-active fate also befi t<br />

senior offensive lineman James<br />

Brewer thanks to an ankle injury<br />

. Then, just before the game,<br />

IU announced that sophomore<br />

offensive lineman Marc Da-<br />

FOOTBALL<br />

PETER STEVENSON | IDS<br />

Freshman wide receiver Kofi Hughes makes a catch over the middle during<br />

IU's 38-10 loss to Ohio State on Saturday in Columbus, Ohio.<br />

misch didn’t travel with the team<br />

due to the death of his father<br />

Wednesday.<br />

However, Chappell didn’t<br />

blame the circumstances for IU’s<br />

play.<br />

“We’re not going to make excuses,”<br />

Chappell said. “It was<br />

next guy up. That’s what its<br />

gotta be. It’s football.”<br />

All of it — a porous IU defense<br />

and an ineffective offense<br />

— allowed the Buckeyes to<br />

continue a 16-game win streak<br />

against IU while moving to the<br />

top spot in the national polls after<br />

former No. 1 Alabama lost to<br />

South Carolina later Saturday .


ARTS<br />

EDITORS<br />

Kelsey Finn<br />

BY KELSEY COLLISI<br />

kcollisi@indiana.edu<br />

Hotfox has a new den, and<br />

fans said they were in favor of<br />

the move.<br />

The young <strong>Indiana</strong>polisbased<br />

band was welcomed Friday<br />

at Rhino’s for their fi rst<br />

show in Bloomington.<br />

“When you’re new to a place,<br />

you have to fi nd your spot, and<br />

you have to realize you’re at the<br />

bottom of the food chain,” Hotfox<br />

bassist and freshman Marcus<br />

Tedesco said.<br />

However, the band members,<br />

who built quite a reputation for<br />

themselves after being on the<br />

cover of NUVO Newsweekly<br />

for winning the Record Store<br />

Day High School Battle of the<br />

Bands this past spring, said they<br />

do not plan to stay at the lower<br />

end of Bloomington’s musical<br />

hierarchy for long.<br />

“It’s exciting to see what’s<br />

down here. I mean you always<br />

hear about Bloomington in Indy,<br />

kmfinn@indiana.edu<br />

Jacobs celebrates<br />

composer’s 75th<br />

birthday in concert<br />

BY SAMUEL TALLMAN<br />

samtallm@indiana.edu<br />

Voices rang through Auer Hall<br />

like church bells Sunday in celebration<br />

of composer Arvo Part’s<br />

75th birthday . From Bloomington<br />

to Istanbul , people have<br />

been honoring Part and what he<br />

represents.<br />

Part’s name may not be as<br />

well-known in America as those<br />

of Beethoven or Mozart , but in<br />

Estonia and much of Europe, he<br />

is a powerful icon. His music is<br />

sutured to the soundscape of Estonia,<br />

Jeffers Engelhardt assistant<br />

professor of Music Anthropology<br />

at Amherst College said.<br />

Part’s prevalence as a musical<br />

icon has only grown in recent decades.<br />

The inclusion of his music<br />

in Hollywood fi lms and a<br />

wide range of modern European<br />

media has allowed him to reach<br />

much of the world.<br />

“It is incredibly moving to<br />

perform but very diffi cult,” vocalist<br />

and doctoral student of<br />

choral conducting Benjamin<br />

Geier said. “Singing the climatic<br />

parts can be overwhelming.<br />

You really have to control your<br />

emotions so you are not swept<br />

I N D I A N A D A I L Y S T U D E N T | M O N D A Y , O C T O B E R 1 1 , 2 0 1 0<br />

away.”<br />

The concert was the culmination<br />

of a weekend-long celebration<br />

of Part’s life and work.<br />

It was a collaborative effort between<br />

the Jacobs School of Music<br />

and the Department of Central<br />

Eurasian Studies .<br />

“His music conveys a moral<br />

message that is universal,” Carmen<br />

Tellez , music director of<br />

the Contemporary Vocal Ensemble,<br />

said. “It has inspired others<br />

to lift and carry on his moral and<br />

spiritual message.”<br />

Part is most famous for his<br />

composing technique called tintinnabuli,<br />

latin for “bells.” Tintinnabuli<br />

involves using a musical<br />

algorithm to create a<br />

harmonious droning effect, reminiscent<br />

of Gregorian chanting.<br />

The sound is similar to a bell,<br />

Tellez said. The melody rings<br />

within the confi nes of the chord.<br />

It’s more than paint-by-numbers<br />

composing. Part breaks his<br />

own rules even in his earliest<br />

work with tintinnabuli.<br />

“If all this is too intellectual,<br />

one can just relax in the warm<br />

bath of its sonority ,” Engelhardt<br />

said. “Just listen to the radiance<br />

to understand the song’s power.”<br />

Vanessa Valentin<br />

vanvalen@indiana.edu<br />

Hotfox band fi nds its<br />

new den in Bloomington<br />

and now we’re here,” lead vocalist<br />

and freshman Oliver Hopkins<br />

said.<br />

“We had a lot of good relationships<br />

back home, and now<br />

we want to build that here. It’s<br />

like sharing our music is an interesting<br />

way of shaking people’s<br />

hand musically. ”<br />

The recent release of their<br />

new album titled “You, Me, and<br />

the Monster,” which was recorded<br />

at Queensize Twin Air studios<br />

with Tyler Watkins of Margot &<br />

the Nuclear So and So’s, is gathering<br />

quite a following of curious<br />

listeners.<br />

However, unlike most bands,<br />

demos and fl yers are not being<br />

circulated by the masses<br />

around campus.<br />

“Promotion down here is a<br />

whole new ball game. There are<br />

so many great musicians down<br />

here. It’s like proving you’re<br />

the diamond in the rough,”<br />

said drummer and freshman<br />

SEE HOTFOX, PAGE 15<br />

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* excludes ticket sales<br />

NUTELLAFEST<br />

BY RACHEL TREES<br />

rtrees@indiana.edu<br />

Sophomore Emilce Sanchez<br />

spooned a gob of Nutella onto a<br />

slice of bread and tasted it for the<br />

fi rst time.<br />

“Bread and Nutella is a surprisingly<br />

tasty combo,” she said. “It<br />

just tastes like chocolate.”<br />

All around the Collins courtyard,<br />

amongst construction and<br />

live music, students such as Sanchez<br />

celebrated the cocoa-hazelnut<br />

spread at the third annual<br />

Nutella Fest .<br />

All day, drippy spoonfuls of<br />

Nutella were smothered onto ice<br />

cream and slices of bread.<br />

Fifteen performers and musicians,<br />

from crumpers to bellydancers,<br />

performed from 1 p.m.<br />

until midnight. <strong>Student</strong>s enjoyed<br />

bands from the Collins veranda in<br />

the midst of a clear, 80 degree day.<br />

Musicians including Chicago’s<br />

Lord of the Yum Yum and local<br />

band The Vallures gave students a<br />

chance to dance.<br />

“Lord of the Yum Yum was<br />

pretty awesome and a little crazy,”<br />

freshman Steve Ambrosini said.<br />

Nutella Fest was created to<br />

combine senior and IDS employee<br />

Ted Somerville’s love of<br />

Nutella with his love of diverse,<br />

“It’s not a product.<br />

I mean you don’t<br />

manufacture music,<br />

but when you achieve<br />

something that not<br />

only speaks to you but<br />

then has the potential<br />

to cross oceans to<br />

hit someone in the<br />

basement of some<br />

house miles and miles<br />

away from where you<br />

are, that’s just real.”<br />

Oliver Hopkins, freshman and lead vocalist<br />

of Hotfox<br />

SOUTH JORDAN BROADCASTS LIVE CONCERT.<br />

For the full story and coverage of the event go to idsnews.com<br />

talented musicians.<br />

Despite losing four bands the<br />

day of Nutella Fest, Somerville<br />

said he considered the festival a<br />

success.<br />

“This year has been a much<br />

greater challenge,” he said. “All<br />

of the groups really stepped it up,<br />

and I appreciate it.”<br />

This was the biggest Nutella<br />

Fest Somerville has helped organize,<br />

with 300 to 400 students<br />

coming and going throughout<br />

the day.<br />

“I went to the fi rst Nutella<br />

Fest, and it’s so funny to see how<br />

much it has grown,” freshman<br />

and Bloomington resident Alice<br />

Knipstine said. “It used to be<br />

a bunch of people around a table<br />

eating Nutella.”<br />

Although this is Somerville’s<br />

last year on campus to help organize<br />

the event, Director of Arts<br />

and Culture for the Residence<br />

Hall Association Marianna Eble ,<br />

who organized the event alongside<br />

Somerville, remains confi dent the<br />

event will continue as long as the<br />

ambition is there.<br />

“As long as you’re working<br />

with someone who appreciates<br />

music and wants to put it out<br />

there for people to enjoy, you’re<br />

going to have a good show,” she<br />

said. “It’s that ambition that makes<br />

Nutella Fest.”<br />

Jackass 3D Ping-Pong Event<br />

Date: Thursday, October 14, 2010<br />

Time: 8pm-12am<br />

Location: Nick’s English Hut, 423 E. Kirkwood Avenue<br />

12<br />

Big Sean leaves mark on Jake’s<br />

BY DERRICK NAYLOR<br />

dlnaylor@indiana.edu<br />

Big Sean’s performance Friday<br />

at Jake’s Nightclub was<br />

the last of his 35 shows on his<br />

promotional tour.<br />

Dope Couture and openers<br />

FreeSol and Mickey Factz<br />

played a crucial role in keeping<br />

SAM PARK | IDS<br />

Breakdancer and IU senior Quinnton Parker performs in one of the 21 acts<br />

of the 3rd Nutella Fest on Saturday at Collins Living-Learning Center. Acts<br />

as diverse as bellydancer Holly Chaplin , Green Room Rockers and ballerina<br />

Kelsey Breece performed, followed by a rave at 10 p.m.<br />

the audience entertained until<br />

Big Sean took the stage.<br />

What started as a bar scene<br />

turned into a club scene as Free-<br />

Sol’s hip-hop and rock-inspired<br />

music pulled audience members<br />

from the bar onto the dance fl oor.<br />

Crowd size and intensity increased<br />

when Mickey Factz<br />

came to the stage. A heckling au-<br />

dience member became a catalyst<br />

for his performance, encouraging<br />

him to freestyle for the<br />

crowd. Before he left the stage,<br />

the up-and-coming artist made<br />

an announcement that shocked<br />

and excited his followers.<br />

“I’ll be performing at the BET<br />

SEE BIG SEAN, PAGE 15


I N D I A N A D A I L Y S T U D E N T | M O N D A Y , O C T O B E R 1 1 , 2 0 1 0 PAGE 13<br />

SQUIRREL AND CROW KENDALL & KLOPPENBURG RALPH AND CHUCK TOMMY GROOMS<br />

GET FUZZY DARBY CONLEY<br />

NON SEQUITUR WILEY<br />

PHD COMICS JORGE CHAM<br />

The crossword solution is in today’s classifi ed section.<br />

BLISS HARRY BLISS<br />

HELP ME, HARLAN! HARLAN COHEN<br />

Dear Harlan,<br />

I’m really against organized<br />

religion. I consider myself agnostic/<br />

atheist, though I’m technically Jewish. I<br />

just don’t like religion, and it’s not a big<br />

part of my life. My boyfriend is really<br />

religious and his dad is a preacher,<br />

and I’m kind of worried because it’s<br />

bothering me already.<br />

Already Irritated<br />

Dear Already Irritated,<br />

This would be the equivalent of<br />

a PETA activist dating a man who is<br />

a butcher, hunts his own game and<br />

only feels comfortable wearing leather<br />

underpants (I can’t imagine that would<br />

be comfortable). The difference you’re<br />

talking about falls under the category<br />

of “fundamental differences.” But this<br />

doesn’t come as a surprise to you.<br />

Clearly, you’re on a path to a bad break<br />

up. Still, you have time and options. One<br />

option is to break up with him before<br />

the holiday season lights up. Given your<br />

current state of mind, there’s no way<br />

you’ll make it through the season of joy.<br />

You’ll be done right after the partridge<br />

in a pear tree. The other option is to<br />

talk to your spiritual leader about this.<br />

Yes, I know you hate religion, but these<br />

people actually are good at talking<br />

to people who hate religion. If you<br />

entrepreneurweek 2010<br />

in the big<br />

the comedy attic tues oct. 19 7pm<br />

TODAY’S THEME<br />

Birds<br />

Bluebird<br />

Canary<br />

Cardinal<br />

Chickadee<br />

Chicken<br />

Finch<br />

Flamingo<br />

Goldfi nch<br />

Loon<br />

Meadowlark<br />

Mockingbird<br />

Oriole<br />

Ostrich<br />

Owl<br />

Pelican<br />

Pheasant<br />

Quail<br />

Robin<br />

Turkey<br />

Wren<br />

what’s the<br />

To get the advantage, check the day’s<br />

rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most<br />

challenging.<br />

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)<br />

Today is a 7. Even if you have to work<br />

today, make time for recreational<br />

activities. You don’t need to push that<br />

stone uphill all day. Hand it off to<br />

someone.<br />

Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)<br />

Today is a 6. Allow your thinking to<br />

wander now. Blurred focus is just what<br />

you need, as you apply artistic talents.<br />

Use a light touch and broad stroke.<br />

Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)<br />

Today is a 6. When issues impinge on<br />

your core values, pay attention. You<br />

don’t want to give up something<br />

important to your philosophy. Others<br />

suggest solutions.<br />

Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)<br />

Today is a 7. The more you work within<br />

your sphere of comfort, the more you<br />

accomplish. Associates see broader<br />

possibilities for future consideration.<br />

Harlan Cohen<br />

is a syndicated advice columnist,<br />

author and an IU alumnus. If you want<br />

to ask Harlan a question, visit his web<br />

site at www.helpmeharlan.com.<br />

don’t have a rabbi, fi nd your nearest<br />

Hillel or approach any spiritual leader.<br />

If you just can’t do it, then talk to a<br />

therapist. Your lack of faith and deep<br />

distaste for religion might have less to<br />

do with religion and more to do with<br />

the emotions that come with it. When<br />

people hate something with such<br />

intensity, there is always a reason —<br />

make sure you understand it completely<br />

before breaking up. Once you can<br />

understand why you have this reaction,<br />

you can determine if you’re capable of<br />

dating a son of a preacher man.<br />

Dear Harlan,<br />

I do a lot of work mentoring<br />

teenagers. I often offer remarks to<br />

them about obtaining self-discipline<br />

as they become independent adults.<br />

I preach to them how important selfdiscipline<br />

is next to school work, social<br />

life and adjusting to independence.<br />

How can I articulate good methods for<br />

becoming disciplined to the students<br />

I work closely with? With so many<br />

distractions, it’s hard for college-age<br />

students to achieve. Could you provide<br />

Do you have a great idea for a new business, social, artistic or technical venture? We want to hear about it.<br />

Visit our website to submit your idea. If selected as a finalist, you’ll make a 3 minute pitch to a panel of judges (and a live audience) at the Comedy Attic<br />

in downtown Bloomington. The winner will also receive a scholarship and award at the 2010 Fuse Business Awards on Thursday, October 21.<br />

Remember, there are no bad ideas.<br />

Submission is free and anyone can enter.<br />

idea?<br />

Linda Black<br />

writes horoscopes for Tribune Media<br />

Services. Her daily column is read by<br />

more than 4 million readers in<br />

newspapers across the country.<br />

Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)<br />

Today is a 9. You need to clarify a<br />

philosophical point if the group’s to<br />

move forward. You may call in an expert<br />

to clarify specifi c details and concerns.<br />

Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)<br />

Today is a 9. No one knew what you’d<br />

say today, not even yourself. The big<br />

surprise is that everyone agrees and<br />

wonders why they didn’t think of it<br />

themselves.<br />

Aries (March 21-April 19)<br />

Today is an 8. Combine romance with<br />

work today by including your partner in<br />

social events involving clients and<br />

co-workers. Use creativity to make it<br />

really fun.<br />

Taurus (April 20-May 20)<br />

Today is a 6. Your many talents take<br />

me with any advice so that I could help<br />

them further?<br />

Teen Mentor<br />

Dear Teen Mentor,<br />

Preaching is preachy. But stories<br />

— stories are the way to connect.<br />

We love hearing about winning. We<br />

love hearing about losing. But we<br />

especially love hearing about strong<br />

people getting beat up, but somehow<br />

getting back up and fi nding their way.<br />

Teach them by sharing personal stories<br />

that reveal your most vulnerable and<br />

proudest moments. Then, invite close<br />

friends and leaders in the community<br />

to do the same. Encourage these teens<br />

you mentor to embark on a journey<br />

that will help the write their own<br />

stories. Encourage them to reach out<br />

to you and others along the way. Just<br />

be patient and forgiving. Give them<br />

room to make mistakes, give them<br />

time to think when they fall and give<br />

them resources to help them get back<br />

on their feet again. Connect them to<br />

experts who can encourage and support<br />

them along the way. Most importantly,<br />

model what it means to live a life of<br />

integrity, honesty and self-discipline.<br />

They might not always be listening to<br />

you or your stories, but they are always<br />

watching. Don’t just tell them — show<br />

them.<br />

Deadline is this Friday, October 15, 2010<br />

Enter online at fusebusinessawards.com<br />

you in different directions now. Follow<br />

the traditional wisdom as far as it will<br />

take you. Then be willing to branch out.<br />

Gemini (May 21-June 21)<br />

Today is a 7. Work closely with children<br />

and elders to produce better results.<br />

You share talents you may not know<br />

about. Listen and learn from each other.<br />

Cancer (June 22-July 22)<br />

Today is a 6. A friend or associate<br />

brings a gift to a social event at your<br />

place, sparking the interests and talents<br />

of all guests. Let others play fi rst.<br />

Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)<br />

Today is a 7. Work and play interweave<br />

in an unusual way today. Time away<br />

from a problem often allows a solution<br />

to emerge. Other imaginations provide<br />

the missing key.<br />

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)<br />

Today is a 6. Shop for supplies early in<br />

the day, so everyone has what they<br />

need to get their work done. Capture<br />

imagination with the right tools.<br />

clersrpirlehcirtso<br />

awurfaniscetrbtien<br />

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» BIG SEAN<br />

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12<br />

Hip-Hop Awards this year. Also,<br />

Nicki Minaj just asked me to go<br />

on tour with her,” Factz said.<br />

After a night of endless opening<br />

acts, intermissions and technical<br />

diffi culties, the audience fi -<br />

nally saw Big Sean on stage.<br />

Sean’s performance consisted<br />

of songs from his mix<br />

tapes as well as preview songs<br />

from his upcoming album,<br />

“Finally Famous.”<br />

No other act that night was<br />

able to get every person in the<br />

bar on their feet.<br />

Big Sean seemed to be eager<br />

to spread knowledge not only of<br />

his music, but also of his personal<br />

life. He explained to the audience<br />

what being “fi nally famous”<br />

really meant to him.<br />

“I come from the west side of<br />

Detroit. To make it out from that<br />

ain’t easy,” Big Sean said to the<br />

crowd.<br />

Big Sean performed hits such<br />

» HOTFOX<br />

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12<br />

Michael Preuschl. “We’re just<br />

trying to make good music for<br />

good people.”<br />

When it all comes down<br />

to the music, Hotfox is a<br />

plethora of infl uence and experience.<br />

Each of the four members<br />

comes from a different musical<br />

background, and it is evident in<br />

the composition of their music.<br />

“I think it brings our music to<br />

a different technicality,” Tedesco<br />

said. “We’re more precise about<br />

not only what we do, but the way<br />

we do it.”<br />

While Hopkins and Tedesco<br />

are currently studying at the<br />

Jacobs School of Music, Preuschl<br />

and fourth member Duncan<br />

Kissinger come from musical<br />

backgrounds as well.<br />

They are the band that listens<br />

to rock but also has classical<br />

music streaming out of their<br />

headphones.<br />

“They’re unique because in<br />

most respects they’re classically<br />

trained. It’s not often you get<br />

people who are classical guitarist<br />

and electric,” manager and<br />

freshman Chris Kauffman said.<br />

“When you see these guys<br />

live, it’s really cool to see the<br />

chemistry. It reminds you of why<br />

you like them, why you want to<br />

be a part of them and why you’re<br />

a fan. There’s just that element<br />

of honesty in their music.“<br />

When the band took the stage,<br />

their strong presence fi lled the<br />

room with contagious rhythms,<br />

and everyone seemed to be<br />

in tune.<br />

“The singer’s antics, his entire<br />

mannerism was just fun to<br />

watch,” freshman Sam Pruett<br />

said. “I think they gained quite a<br />

bit of fans tonight.”<br />

Hotfox has just started to integrate<br />

into Bloomington’s music<br />

scene, but the band’s presence<br />

is already starting to make<br />

an impact.<br />

“They have an original kind<br />

of sound, and I think it would be<br />

hard to place them in a genre,”<br />

I N D I A N A D A I L Y S T U D E N T | M O N D A Y , O C T O B E R 1 1 , 2 0 1 0<br />

“When you look back<br />

on life, all you really<br />

have are the best<br />

memories.”<br />

Big Sean, Hip-Hop Artist<br />

as “What U Doin,” “Million<br />

Dollars” and “Supa Dupa Lemonade.”<br />

Fans were able to enjoy<br />

his stage presence for nearly<br />

an hour.<br />

“It was a lot of fun,” senior<br />

Shanice Franklin said. “Big<br />

Sean has a lot of energy.”<br />

Big Sean performed two<br />

more songs before leaving that<br />

night. The audience begged for<br />

him to retake the stage, but they<br />

were left only with his parting<br />

words to end the night.<br />

“When you look back on life,<br />

all you really have are the best<br />

memories,” Big Sean said.<br />

sophomore Maria Konermann<br />

said. ”But their presence is just<br />

so natural that when they are<br />

playing, everybody seems to be<br />

moving.”<br />

Kissinger said the band<br />

has many infl uences across<br />

the board.<br />

“We take a little from a lot,<br />

instead of a lot from a little<br />

and sounding a lot like one person,”<br />

Kissinger said. “If anything,<br />

I’d have to call it abstract<br />

expressionism.”<br />

However, a style label has<br />

little signifi cance in the larger<br />

scheme of things. Hotfox is all<br />

about how people relate to what<br />

they hear.<br />

“It’s not a product. I mean<br />

you don’t manufacture music,”<br />

Hopkins said. “But when<br />

you achieve something that not<br />

only speaks to you but then has<br />

the potential to cross oceans to<br />

hit someone in the basement<br />

of some house miles and miles<br />

away from where you are, that’s<br />

just real.”<br />

As for aspirations, the<br />

band members said they remain<br />

grounded to their initial<br />

passion: music.<br />

“Long term goals are like<br />

catching smoke. You can’t really<br />

do it. I just want to keep making<br />

records,” Hopkins said.<br />

Meanwhile, Hotfox continues<br />

to strive to share their music<br />

with as many people as possible.<br />

On Oct. 16 the band will<br />

headline a performance at 7<br />

p.m. at Indy CD & Vinyl for the<br />

Broad Ripple Music Fest .<br />

After that, Hotfox will be<br />

back in Bloomington to play a<br />

Halloween show Oct. 30 at The<br />

Cheer Place as well as a second<br />

show at Rhino’s.<br />

Kissinger said it’s all about<br />

fi nding a niche.<br />

“We’re in Bloomington now,<br />

and this is where we want to be,”<br />

Kissinger said. “We’re really<br />

starting fresh. We have to build<br />

back up from the bottom, and<br />

we’d love for people to be a part<br />

of that journey. We’re simply little<br />

foxes in a new den.”<br />

SAM PARK | IDS<br />

A Fair of<br />

the Arts<br />

PAGE 15<br />

Ten-year veteran blacksmith Mark<br />

Cagle of Possum Tail Forge sells<br />

recycled metal made into crafts<br />

and animal fi gurines at A Fair of the<br />

Arts on Saturday at Showers Plaza .<br />

Saturday was the last Fair of the<br />

Arts of the year.


PAGE 16<br />

I N D I A N A D A I L Y S T U D E N T | M O N D A Y , O C T O B E R 1 1 , 2 0 1 0

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