100 years of stories. - Indiana Daily Student
100 years of stories. - Indiana Daily Student
100 years of stories. - Indiana Daily Student
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FRIDAY, SEPT. 16, 2011<br />
IDS<br />
INDIANA DAILY STUDENT | IDSNEWS.COM<br />
Spierer<br />
case lands<br />
local bar<br />
in trouble<br />
FROM IDS REPORTS<br />
Kilroy’s Sports Bar was cited on<br />
two alcohol-related charges in relation<br />
to missing IU student Lauren<br />
Spierer by the <strong>Indiana</strong> State Excise<br />
Police on Th ursday .<br />
Sports was cited for allowing a<br />
minor to loiter and furnishing alcoholic<br />
beverages to a minor , according<br />
to a State Excise press release .<br />
Excise issued the violation due<br />
to discrepancies between Spierer ,<br />
20 , and the physical description<br />
on the identifi cation she used<br />
to get into the bar , according to<br />
the release .<br />
Spierer, who was last seen June<br />
3 , was at Sports that night with a<br />
friend until about 2:30 a.m. , according<br />
to video surveillance . After going<br />
to a friend’s apartment , she left<br />
at about 4:30 a.m . and was last seen<br />
walking south on College Avenue<br />
from 11th Street , toward her apartment<br />
in Smallwood Plaza .<br />
A report will be sent to the Alcohol<br />
and Tobacco Commission for<br />
review, and Sports could face a fi ne<br />
and suspension or revocation <strong>of</strong> its<br />
permit to sell alcoholic beverages .<br />
Cpl. Travis Th ickstun said<br />
there is no fi ne or fee in place , and<br />
there is also a range for how long<br />
the suspension could last , both<br />
<strong>of</strong> which will be determined by<br />
the commission .<br />
Sports was previously cited in<br />
2006 , 2007 and 2008 by Excise police<br />
, which might aff ect any penalties<br />
the bar could face . Th ickstun<br />
said the outcome will depend<br />
on a variety <strong>of</strong> factors , including<br />
the severity <strong>of</strong> the citations and<br />
past violations , but revocations<br />
are generally rare .<br />
Excise will increase its presence<br />
in Bloomington but not as a result<br />
<strong>of</strong> this case , Th ickstun said. He said<br />
it is part <strong>of</strong> a statewide increase in<br />
college towns to prevent underage<br />
possession and consumption<br />
<strong>of</strong> alcohol.<br />
“We’re going to continue to<br />
do the job we’ve always done,”<br />
Th ickstun said.<br />
Th ickstun said there is no timeline<br />
for the citation process , and it<br />
could be months before the commission<br />
comes to a decision .<br />
— Lindsey Erdody<br />
YES NO<br />
See page 13. Try again.<br />
SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM CENTENNIAL<br />
<strong>100</strong> <strong>years</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>stories</strong>.<br />
BY JESSICA WILLIAMS | jrw20@indiana.edu<br />
You won’t fi nd many typewriters in Ernie Pyle<br />
Hall today.<br />
Since its founding <strong>100</strong> <strong>years</strong> ago, techniques in<br />
the School <strong>of</strong> Journalism haven’t changed, but the<br />
tools have, trading the pens for typewriters and, eventually,<br />
the computers 21st century students use.<br />
“We’ve been around a long time,” said Owen Johnson ,<br />
a journalism school pr<strong>of</strong>essor since 1980 . “We’re one <strong>of</strong> the<br />
oldest journalism schools in the country.”<br />
THE EARLY YEARS<br />
Journalism instruction at IU began in 1893 with three<br />
students, according to the school’s website.<br />
“Classes in writing and reporting were taught at intervals<br />
during the next few <strong>years</strong>, supplementing the students’<br />
liberal arts background in English, history and economics,”<br />
the site said.<br />
Th e College <strong>of</strong> Arts and Sciences launched the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> Journalism in 1911 , but students couldn’t major in<br />
journalism until 1932.<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Joseph Piercy served as the fi rst head <strong>of</strong> the<br />
department until 1938 . Pyle left school in 1923 for a report-<br />
MORE INSIDE ON PAGE 2<br />
Letters by Ernie Pyle, one <strong>of</strong> the School <strong>of</strong> Journalism’s most<br />
famous alumni, were released this month. The letters tell<br />
<strong>stories</strong> about Pyle’s life and the University as it was when<br />
he was a student.<br />
ABOVE Ernie Pyle’s typewriter, which is located in the Ernie Pyle<br />
Lounge in Ernie Pyle Hall.<br />
COURTNEY DECKARD | IDS<br />
A camera man fi lms the introduction <strong>of</strong> the 9/11 commissioners during the event “10 Years Later: The 9/11 Commissioners Refl ect”<br />
on Thursday at the IU Auditorium. The event was broadcast live via radio, TV and Internet.<br />
Unpaid<br />
IUSA<br />
bills left<br />
to Big Six<br />
BY MATTHEW GLOWICKI<br />
mglowick@indiana.edu<br />
A timing issue seems to be the<br />
consensus problem.<br />
Th e Big Six administration will<br />
be responsible for paying approximately<br />
$7,500 in rollover expenses<br />
from last year’s iUnity administration,<br />
it was announced at the Sept.<br />
6 IU <strong>Student</strong> Association Congress<br />
meeting .<br />
However, the new expenditures<br />
aren’t expected to have a negative<br />
eff ect, IUSA treasurer Kyle Straub<br />
said.<br />
Th e nine costs , ranging from an<br />
$18 picture frame to a $4,363.68<br />
charge from Markey’s Rental and<br />
Staging , totaled $7,436.94.<br />
Recent developments, however,<br />
have knocked that total down to<br />
about $3,000 .<br />
Th ese rollover costs were submitted<br />
to <strong>Student</strong> Organization Accounts<br />
this year by mid-April , the<br />
cut-<strong>of</strong>f for reimbursement requests.<br />
It was also during this time that<br />
IUSA passed from iUnity to the Big<br />
Six . Th is timing issue led to the current<br />
rollover costs.<br />
IUSA runs on an operating<br />
budget, which is an estimated<br />
forecast <strong>of</strong> both expected income<br />
— student funding, for example —<br />
and expenditures.<br />
Th ese rollover costs were most<br />
likely earmarked in last year’s operating<br />
budget, but reimbursement<br />
requests were fi led late and<br />
thus were passed on to the next<br />
administration, IUSA Advisor R.J.<br />
Woodring said.<br />
Neil Kelty , former chief <strong>of</strong> staff<br />
for the iUnity administration , confi<br />
rmed Woodring’s thoughts and<br />
said members had budgeted for the<br />
costs but procrastinated on submitting<br />
their reimbursement requests.<br />
Past administrations and other<br />
student organizations also deal with<br />
rollover payments, as some college<br />
students aren’t always timely,<br />
Woodring said.<br />
Th e bulk <strong>of</strong> the rollover costs,<br />
the $4,300 payment due to Markey’s<br />
Rental and Staging for a November<br />
2010 event, will not need to be paid<br />
by IUSA. Th is is due to the fact that it<br />
is, in fact, not IUSA’s bill in the fi rst<br />
place.<br />
Straub, who received the bill<br />
9/11 Commission refl ects on a divided America<br />
BY KATIE METTLER<br />
kemettle@indiana.edu<br />
In 2002 , they had the weight <strong>of</strong><br />
history on their shoulders.<br />
In 2004 , they passed that weight<br />
to Congress.<br />
Six-hundred-and-twenty-four<br />
pages <strong>of</strong> answers and a decade <strong>of</strong><br />
questions later, the members <strong>of</strong> the<br />
National Commission on Terrorist<br />
Attacks Upon the United States , better<br />
known as the 9/11 Commission ,<br />
reunited yesterday at IU to refl ect<br />
upon their fi ndings and evaluate<br />
Congress’ response to their advice.<br />
Welcomed by IU President Michael<br />
McRobbie and introduced by<br />
moderator and journalist Ken Bode ,<br />
the commissioners found their respective<br />
seats center stage in the IU<br />
Auditorium . It was the fi rst time the<br />
commissioners had reunited since<br />
the commission report was released<br />
in 2004.<br />
Th e applause subsided as Lee<br />
Hamilton , former congressman for<br />
<strong>Indiana</strong>’s 9th District and vice chairman<br />
<strong>of</strong> the commission , thanked the<br />
University for its hospitality.<br />
He casually spoke <strong>of</strong> the need for<br />
a public <strong>of</strong>fi cials hall <strong>of</strong> fame, where<br />
he would induct Th omas Kean ,<br />
chairman <strong>of</strong> the commission . Kean<br />
spoke admirably <strong>of</strong> Hamilton as “one<br />
<strong>of</strong> the most extraordinary public servants<br />
I know.”<br />
Former <strong>Indiana</strong> Congressman<br />
Timothy Roemer summarized the<br />
introductions in a light-hearted<br />
manner, boasting about meeting IU<br />
mens’ basketball coach Tom Crean<br />
earlier in their visit.<br />
But the tone swiftly shifted to<br />
that <strong>of</strong> a more serious note as Kean,<br />
Hamilton and Roemer spoke <strong>of</strong> the<br />
extraordinary signifi cance <strong>of</strong> the<br />
commission’s bipartisan eff orts.<br />
“Th is is the fi rst time we have<br />
been together since we wrote the report,<br />
but when I read the report now<br />
I can still hear your voices,” Kean<br />
said.<br />
Moderator Bode noted that the<br />
commission was created to fail based<br />
Want to get down on Friday?<br />
SEE CENTENNIAL, PAGE 7<br />
on its combination <strong>of</strong> fi ve Democrats<br />
and fi ve Republicans , a bipartisan effort<br />
many doubted could succeed.<br />
Th e commission exceeded expectations.<br />
“Th e country saw for the fi rst time<br />
in a long time a group <strong>of</strong> Republicans<br />
and Democrats working together in<br />
the interest <strong>of</strong> the American people,”<br />
Kean said.<br />
Roemer was quick to clarify that<br />
their success need not be credited<br />
to the commissioners’ ability to set<br />
aside their own political interests.<br />
Rather, he said it was the resolve<br />
<strong>of</strong> the 9/11 families, which had<br />
lost so much and craved the truth,<br />
that propelled the commissioners<br />
to investigate the attacks for the<br />
American people.<br />
SEE 9/11, PAGE 7<br />
WHAT THE 9/11<br />
COMMISSION SAID<br />
SEE IUSA, PAGE 7<br />
CYBERSECURITY<br />
“The institutions most vulnerable to<br />
cyber attack are in the civilian sector<br />
... The danger is great. The military<br />
has advanced a great deal, but how<br />
you transfer that protection to the<br />
civilian sector is an extremely diffi cult<br />
question.”<br />
— James Thompson , commissioner<br />
IRAQ<br />
“Our actions in Iraq infl amed a situation<br />
that needed to be calmed. But our<br />
presence in Iraq turned a swath <strong>of</strong><br />
the world against Al Qaida . That is<br />
something we have to remember.”<br />
— Jaime Gorelick , commissioner<br />
DEATH OF OSAMA BIN LADEN<br />
“It made me feel better. It sends the<br />
message, ‘You kill Americans and you<br />
may die as a consequence.’ I don’t care<br />
what your grievances are against the<br />
United States. Once you decide that<br />
killing Americans is the means to the<br />
end, you’re not safe anymore.”<br />
— Bob Kerrey , commissioner<br />
AIRPORT SECURITY<br />
“There are steps that may be<br />
discomforting. But (terrorists) only have<br />
to be right once. We have to be right<br />
<strong>100</strong> percent <strong>of</strong> the time.”<br />
— Fred Fielding, commissioner
2 INDIANA DAILY STUDENT | FRIDAY, SEPT. 16, 2011 | IDSNEWS.COM<br />
CAMPUS<br />
EDITORS: CLAIRE ARONSON, MICHAEL AUSLEN & COLLEEN SIKORSKI | CAMPUS@IDSNEWS.COM<br />
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2620 N Walnut Suite 200<br />
Bloomington, IN 47404<br />
newoutlook.vpweb.com<br />
Your face is IU history.<br />
Graduating seniors to freshmen —<br />
We want all students in the book.<br />
Contact the Arbutus in Ernie Pyle Hall.<br />
812-855-9737 or selkins@indiana.edu<br />
September 19-23<br />
Ernie Pyle Hall | 940 E. Seventh St. | 812-855-0763 | www.myseniorportrait.com<br />
A CLASS DESERVING OF MERIT<br />
Eighty-fi ve National Merit Scholars began<br />
classes at IU last month . The scholars are from<br />
nine states and represent the school’s largest<br />
class <strong>of</strong> National Merit Scholars to date.<br />
The average GPA <strong>of</strong> the students was 3.97,<br />
October 15, 2011<br />
Showers Common at City Hall<br />
(next to Farmer’s Market)<br />
Free t-shirt for first 1,000 to register<br />
Bloomington’s<br />
BREAST CANCER<br />
AWARENESS WALK<br />
8:30 a.m.: Registration (day <strong>of</strong> walk)<br />
9:00 a.m.: Walk begins<br />
Well-behaved pets welcome<br />
Registration forms, sponsor information and more at:<br />
www.siraonline.com/walk.htm<br />
Vol. 144, No. 91 © 2011<br />
www.idsnews.com<br />
Newsroom: 812-855-0760<br />
Business Office: 812-855-0763<br />
Fax: 812-855-8009<br />
and they had an average SAT score <strong>of</strong> 1490.<br />
IU awards a $4,000 scholarship for four<br />
<strong>years</strong> to all National Merit fi nalists that list<br />
IU as their fi rst choice college through the<br />
National Merit Scholarship Corporation.<br />
‘the most famous student’<br />
Letters from journalism alumnus Pyle shed light onto college career, University during early 20th century<br />
BY CLAIRE ARONSON<br />
cearonso@indiana.edu<br />
Before coming to Bloomington<br />
in September 1919 ,<br />
Ernie Pyle had never been<br />
outside <strong>Indiana</strong> and Illinois .<br />
Four <strong>years</strong> later, he had<br />
become a world traveler<br />
during his time at IU.<br />
“Pyle blossomed as an<br />
individual while at IU,” said<br />
Ernie Pyle historian Owen<br />
Johnson , associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
<strong>of</strong> journalism . “His perspectives<br />
from Dana (Ind.) were<br />
limited. IU opened his eyes<br />
to the world, bigger ideas<br />
and ways <strong>of</strong> getting along<br />
with people.”<br />
Johnson’s collection <strong>of</strong><br />
unpublished letters, written<br />
by Pyle during his college<br />
days at IU, was published<br />
in the September issue <strong>of</strong><br />
the <strong>Indiana</strong> Magazine <strong>of</strong><br />
History.<br />
Th e collection, titled “‘It’s<br />
In Th e Air’ Ernie Pyle’s IU<br />
Letters,’ ” provides insight<br />
into college life in Bloomington<br />
in the early 20th<br />
century .<br />
“Th e letters give a wonderful<br />
taste <strong>of</strong> his life here,”<br />
Johnson said. “IU became<br />
a university that is much<br />
broader in outlook. For me,<br />
these letters wrap up how<br />
great an experience this was<br />
for him.”<br />
Th e letters come from<br />
two collections from the<br />
Lilly Library and the <strong>Indiana</strong><br />
State Museum in Dana, Ind.<br />
Pyle writes about coming<br />
to IU, joining a fraternity ,<br />
attending campus events<br />
and working for the <strong>Indiana</strong><br />
DISCOVERIES AT IU<br />
“LIGHTLY ENFORCED”<br />
CAMPUS SMOKING BANS<br />
EFFECTIVE<br />
Comparing IU and Purdue<br />
University hasn’t gotten old<br />
for School <strong>of</strong> Health, Physical<br />
Education and Recreation researchers.<br />
A recently released report<br />
revealed that schools without<br />
smoking bans (Purdue)<br />
are not as eff ective at changing<br />
students’ attitudes toward<br />
smoking as schools with<br />
smoking bans (IU) .<br />
Th e study concluded that<br />
two-year, “lightly enforced”<br />
smoking bans contributed to<br />
a 3.7 percent decrease in student<br />
smokers.<br />
INDIANA EXPORTS SET NEW<br />
RECORD<br />
Th e <strong>Indiana</strong> Business Research<br />
Center at the Kelley<br />
School <strong>of</strong> Business found that<br />
<strong>Indiana</strong> set a new<br />
<strong>Daily</strong> <strong>Student</strong> .<br />
“Th e second semester<br />
starts on Monday,” Pyle said<br />
in a letter to his aunt on Jan.<br />
6, 1922 . “I haven’t been able<br />
to get much news for the<br />
‘(<strong>Indiana</strong> <strong>Daily</strong>) <strong>Student</strong>’<br />
this week as campus activities<br />
have not yet gotten back<br />
into full swing. From now on<br />
though, I expect news will be<br />
more abundant. I am working<br />
in my spare time on a<br />
bulletin, which the fraternity<br />
is putting out the fi rst <strong>of</strong> February.”<br />
While the publication<br />
<strong>of</strong> the letters in the <strong>Indiana</strong><br />
Magazine <strong>of</strong> History happened<br />
in the same month as<br />
the IU School <strong>of</strong> Journalism’s<br />
Centennial Celebration ,<br />
Johnson said it was purely<br />
coincidental, as he sent the<br />
letters over a year ago.<br />
“Th e brief description<br />
identifi es Pyle as the most<br />
famous student, and because<br />
the letters are <strong>of</strong> his<br />
days at IU, it couldn’t be<br />
more timely,” Johnson said.<br />
Th e letters appeal to all<br />
IU students and alumni,<br />
Johnson said.<br />
“It does tell us what it was<br />
like to be a student at the<br />
time, and today’s students<br />
and living alumni can see<br />
what is the same and what<br />
has changed at IU,” he said.<br />
In addition to being an<br />
infl uential student in his<br />
own right, Pyle was a classmate<br />
<strong>of</strong> former IU President<br />
Herman B Wells .<br />
Th e publication <strong>of</strong> this<br />
collection sheds light on the<br />
University as a whole during<br />
the early part <strong>of</strong> the century,<br />
record for exports, totaling<br />
$28.7 billion . Exports in 2010<br />
increased from 2009 by 25.2<br />
percent .<br />
In 2009 , <strong>Indiana</strong>’s exports<br />
decreased by 13.6 percent due<br />
to the nationwide economic<br />
downturn .<br />
According to the report,<br />
<strong>Indiana</strong>’s exports increased<br />
more than the nation’s overall<br />
exports.<br />
CALIFORNIA STUDY<br />
RECOGNIZES FOUR IU<br />
FACULTY<br />
A study conducted by the<br />
University <strong>of</strong> Southern California<br />
named four Kelley School<br />
<strong>of</strong> Business entrepreneur pr<strong>of</strong>essors<br />
among the most infl uential<br />
in their fi eld.<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essors Dean Shepherd ,<br />
Patricia McDougall , Jeff rey<br />
Covin and Donald Kuratko<br />
published a total <strong>of</strong> 82 articles<br />
between 2005 and 2010 .<br />
said James Capshew , associate<br />
pr<strong>of</strong>essor in the Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> History and Philosophy<br />
<strong>of</strong> Science, who has<br />
studied the University for a<br />
biography <strong>of</strong> Wells he wrote .<br />
“He was around with<br />
Herman so they shared<br />
some <strong>of</strong> the same undergraduate<br />
experiences,” he<br />
said. “It is a great thing to<br />
have more information.<br />
Pyle was a very well-known<br />
journalist. Wells gave him an<br />
honorary degree in 1944, a<br />
year before Pyle died.”<br />
At a dinner before the<br />
world premiere <strong>of</strong> the movie<br />
“Th e Story <strong>of</strong> G.I. Joe ,” Wells<br />
said IU helped ready Pyle for<br />
his career as a journalist.<br />
“We feel that his <strong>years</strong> at<br />
<strong>Indiana</strong> prepared him for<br />
his active newspaper career,<br />
which reached climax <strong>of</strong> acclaim<br />
and <strong>of</strong> tragedy,” he<br />
said.<br />
In his editorial, titled “It’s<br />
in the Air” and published in<br />
the IDS in 1922 , Pyle writes<br />
about the beauty <strong>of</strong> IU.<br />
“Nearly everyone who<br />
has ever attended <strong>Indiana</strong><br />
University will tell you there<br />
is no place in the world like<br />
<strong>Indiana</strong>,” Pyle said. “Th ey<br />
sometimes attempt to explain<br />
that statement but they<br />
cannot ... Ex-students recognize<br />
the value <strong>of</strong> all these<br />
things, recognize their argumentative<br />
value ... Th ese<br />
are the feelings <strong>of</strong> those who<br />
have been here and have<br />
left. Perhaps it is foolish and<br />
sentimental, but they will affi<br />
rm it is the truth.”<br />
THIS WEEK<br />
ON THE POLICE SCANNER<br />
HARASSMENT<br />
AT FRANKLIN (1)<br />
A harassment and<br />
intimidation incident<br />
was reported Wednesday<br />
afternoon at Franklin Hall .<br />
It reportedly occurred<br />
between 11:10 a.m. and 1<br />
p.m.<br />
VANDALISM AT<br />
EIGENMANN AND UNION<br />
STREET (2) Two vandalism<br />
cases were reported in the<br />
eastern part <strong>of</strong> campus late<br />
Monday night.<br />
One occurred on Union<br />
Street south <strong>of</strong> 10th Street<br />
near the Eigenmann Hall<br />
parking lot between 8<br />
p.m. Monday and 12:05<br />
a.m. Tuesday . The other<br />
occurred between 12:05<br />
a.m. and 12:15 a.m. in the<br />
Eigenmann Hall parking lot.<br />
COURTESY PHOTO<br />
Ernie Pyle is one <strong>of</strong> the School <strong>of</strong> Journalism’s most recognized alumni. He left IU and wrote columns from<br />
the front lines during World War II.<br />
RESISTING LAW<br />
ENFORCEMENT AT<br />
SEMBOWER FIELD (3)<br />
Sunday at 9:26 p.m. ,<br />
an arrest was made at<br />
Sembower Field on a<br />
charge <strong>of</strong> resisting law<br />
enforcement.<br />
BURGLARY AT GAMMA<br />
PHI BETA (4) There was an<br />
attempted forcible entry<br />
burglary at Gamma Phi<br />
Beta sorority Sunday at 3<br />
a.m. , which was reported<br />
that day at 12:41 p.m. There<br />
is no ongoing investigation.<br />
THEFT AT COOK HALL (5)<br />
A larceny was reported at<br />
Cook Hall on Wednesday<br />
at 11: 44 a.m. The theft<br />
reportedly occurred<br />
between noon Sept. 6 and<br />
noon Sept. 13.<br />
Dunn Street Dunn Street<br />
South Henderson Street<br />
<strong>Indiana</strong> Avenue<br />
<strong>Indiana</strong> Avenue<br />
Franklin<br />
Law<br />
Parking<br />
Swain<br />
Ninth Street<br />
Eighth Street<br />
Seventh Street<br />
Third Street<br />
Atwater Avenue<br />
Woodlawn Avenue<br />
IMU<br />
Ernie Pyle<br />
Optometry<br />
Chemistry<br />
17th Street<br />
Parking<br />
McNutt<br />
Business<br />
Science<br />
HPER<br />
Radio/<br />
TV<br />
Art Fine<br />
Museum Arts<br />
Ballantine<br />
Jordan<br />
5<br />
Psychology<br />
Briscoe<br />
3<br />
Business<br />
SPEA<br />
MAC<br />
Music<br />
School<br />
Library<br />
Auditorium Neal<br />
Marshall<br />
Woodburn<br />
Black<br />
Lilly<br />
Culture<br />
Library<br />
Center<br />
Bill<br />
Armstron<br />
Stadium<br />
IU <strong>Student</strong> Media is proud to be a sponsor.<br />
Mary Jane Slaby<br />
Editor-in-Chief<br />
Mary Kenney and Adam Lukach<br />
Managing Editors<br />
Sarah Thacker<br />
Art Director<br />
Tim Beekman, Morgan McClure<br />
and Caity McNicholas<br />
Advertising Sales Managers<br />
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INDIANA DAILY STUDENT | FRIDAY, SEPT. 16, 2011 | IDSNEWS.COM 3<br />
<strong>Student</strong> service may<br />
bring in grant money<br />
FROM IDS REPORTS<br />
In honor <strong>of</strong> the tenth anniversary<br />
<strong>of</strong> 9/11 , the Corporation<br />
for National and<br />
Community Service issued<br />
a challenge urging organizations,<br />
universities included,<br />
to engage in community<br />
service projects from Sept.<br />
1 through Sept. 14 .<br />
Participating organizations<br />
kept track <strong>of</strong> the number<br />
<strong>of</strong> volunteers engaged<br />
in community service during<br />
that time.<br />
Organizations demonstrating<br />
the highest levels <strong>of</strong><br />
volunteer engagement will<br />
be awarded grants ranging<br />
from $10,000 to $<strong>100</strong>,000 .<br />
Th e challenge had been<br />
a work in progress at IU<br />
since June.<br />
It was then that Leslie<br />
Lenkowsky , a pr<strong>of</strong>essor in<br />
the School <strong>of</strong> Public and<br />
Environmental Aff airs and<br />
chair <strong>of</strong> the 9/11 faculty<br />
committee , submitted a<br />
concept paper to the Corporation<br />
for National and<br />
Community Service.<br />
Chinese group to sponsor<br />
Moon Festival on campus<br />
FROM IDS REPORTS<br />
As Bloomington begins its<br />
transition to fall, the Chinese<br />
<strong>Student</strong>s and Scholars Association<br />
will celebrate with its<br />
annual Moon Festival Garden<br />
Party on Sunday from 3<br />
to 6 p.m. in Dunn Meadow .<br />
“Moon Festival is one <strong>of</strong><br />
the biggest traditional festivals<br />
in China,” CSSA Director<br />
<strong>of</strong> Marketing Xuemeng<br />
Wang said.<br />
Th e Moon Festival began<br />
gaining popularity in the<br />
Tang Dynasty , and the exact<br />
date on which it is celebrat-<br />
In it she outlined some<br />
<strong>of</strong> the service ideas that<br />
might be organized at the<br />
University for the challenge<br />
and how the proposed<br />
events would commemorate<br />
the lives lost Sept. 11,<br />
2001.<br />
Based on this proposal,<br />
IU was named a challenge<br />
fi nalist in mid-August .<br />
If IU is the recipient <strong>of</strong> a<br />
grant, it will be used to fund<br />
future service projects,<br />
Lenkowsky said.<br />
One <strong>of</strong> the proposals<br />
would help answer the<br />
needs <strong>of</strong> Bloomington’s<br />
growing diversity.<br />
“We get requests from<br />
the hospital to see whether<br />
there are any students<br />
around that speak a certain<br />
language so they can help<br />
translate,” he said. “Right<br />
now, it’s very spontaneous,<br />
but we’re going to try to formalize<br />
it ... Th at’s what we’ll<br />
do if we get this grant, if in<br />
fact a lot <strong>of</strong> students show<br />
they’re interested.”<br />
In the weeks leading up<br />
to the tenth anniversary <strong>of</strong><br />
ed varies from year to year,<br />
she said.<br />
“It’s based on the lunar calendar,<br />
so each fi fteenth <strong>of</strong> October<br />
in the lunar calendar is<br />
the Moon Festival,” Wang said.<br />
Th is year’s actual Moon<br />
Festival was Sept. 12, but CSSA<br />
plans to help Bloomington<br />
celebrate this weekend.<br />
In China there are 56 ethnic<br />
groups, and each group<br />
celebrates the Moon Festival<br />
in diff erent ways, Wang said.<br />
Th e Dunn Meadow<br />
celebration will include<br />
games, music, dancing and<br />
free moon cakes, a dessert<br />
9/11, Lenkowsky said service<br />
took many forms.<br />
Some IU projects were<br />
not traditionally what people<br />
thought <strong>of</strong> as volunteer<br />
work, she said.<br />
Jacobs School <strong>of</strong> Music<br />
students spent hours<br />
preparing for the remembrance<br />
service that took<br />
place Sept. 11 at the IU<br />
Auditorium.<br />
It was a somewhat nontraditional<br />
service contribution<br />
that counted toward<br />
the challenge, Lenkowsky<br />
said.<br />
“Service comes in a variety<br />
<strong>of</strong> ways,” Lenkowsky<br />
said. “Obviously, we think<br />
service is good throughout<br />
the year, but especially in<br />
this time <strong>of</strong> year when we<br />
can think about the tragedies<br />
that happened a decade<br />
ago. To move forward<br />
in a constructive way is very<br />
important.”<br />
Winners <strong>of</strong> the challenge<br />
will be announced<br />
Sept. 23 .<br />
— Kirsten Clark<br />
traditionally eaten during<br />
Moon Festival in China.<br />
“Chinese people believe<br />
that the whole world, we<br />
share the same moon. And<br />
wherever you are, if you’re<br />
looking at the moon, you<br />
can see your family members,”<br />
Wang said. “So with<br />
moon cakes, you kind <strong>of</strong> experience<br />
your missing family<br />
members.”<br />
For more information<br />
about CSSA or the Moon<br />
Festival, visit indiana.<br />
edu/~iucssa .<br />
— Kirsten Clark<br />
IS THAT A CAMEL?<br />
Juniors Camille Harris and Alexa Chaskes pose with a camel Thursday in front <strong>of</strong> the Alpha Epsilon Phi house.<br />
Phi Psi fraternity brothers rented the camel and used it to accompany them as they delivered invitations to<br />
sorrorities for Barbary, the fraternity's biannual formal.<br />
Thefts reported in housing parking lots<br />
FROM IDS REPORTS<br />
Th ree thefts were reported<br />
to IU Police between 9 and 10<br />
p.m. Wednesday in the Hillcrest<br />
Apartments parking lots.<br />
According to an IU Police<br />
Department report, all three<br />
thefts occurred Sept. 1 in the<br />
Hillcrest parking lot at the intersection<br />
<strong>of</strong> Cottage Grove<br />
and Fess avenues .<br />
IUPD Chief Keith Cash<br />
said all three alleged victims<br />
reported their parking passes<br />
stolen.<br />
Th ere were also thefts from<br />
cars reported in the Read Hall<br />
parking lot early Tuesday.<br />
—Justin Shockey<br />
MATT CALLAHAN | IDS
4 INDIANA DAILY STUDENT | FRIDAY, SEPT. 16, 2011 | IDSNEWS.COM<br />
REGION<br />
EDITORS: ZACH AMMERMAN & JAKE NEW | REGION@IDSNEWS.COM<br />
BY BAILEY LOOSEMORE<br />
bloosemo@indiana.edu<br />
Th e black rock with a<br />
scooped center sat a little larger<br />
than Beth Schroeder ’s palm.<br />
It could have been from<br />
another state, it could have<br />
been from another country,<br />
but in 10 archaeologists’ views,<br />
it remained a mystery .<br />
“Oh, it’ll stump the archaeologist<br />
,” said Patrick Munson ,<br />
research scientist in the IU<br />
Department <strong>of</strong> Anthropology .<br />
“Th is is unlike anything I’ve<br />
ever seen.”<br />
Patrick and his wife, Cheryl<br />
Munson , visited the Monroe<br />
County History Center on<br />
Th ursday for an Archaeology<br />
Roadshow as part <strong>of</strong> the center’s<br />
Th ird Th ursday Series .<br />
Th e roadshow, coinciding<br />
with Archaeology Month , allowed<br />
community members<br />
to bring up to 10 artifacts for<br />
expert identifi cation .<br />
After a lecture on the archaic<br />
history <strong>of</strong> Monroe County,<br />
Cheryl Munson invited<br />
members <strong>of</strong> the crowd to bring<br />
their artifacts forward .<br />
“Th is is a smaller crowd<br />
than we sometimes have, ”<br />
she said. “Once, Pat and I<br />
had about 150 people at a<br />
roadshow. We had to give<br />
them numbers. Th is is a<br />
good crowd for getting to<br />
look at the material. ”<br />
Cheryl Munson encouraged<br />
the visitors to record their<br />
artifacts and report them to<br />
the State Archaeologist Offi ce.<br />
“If someone wants to put<br />
a state highway in an area,<br />
they know something about<br />
that area, ” she said. “Archaeologists<br />
going through before<br />
construction only have a few<br />
hours get as much information<br />
as they can. ”<br />
Beth Schroeder carried<br />
the black rock and other items<br />
forward in a Pabst Blue Ribbon<br />
cardboard box. She has<br />
nearly 1,000 artifacts at home,<br />
but she only brought the ones<br />
she and her husband, Tom,<br />
questioned .<br />
“Of the 1,000, about 200 are<br />
fake, ” she said.<br />
Most <strong>of</strong> the artifacts came<br />
from her father, Beth Schroeder<br />
said, and as Patrick Munson<br />
analyzed the items, she wrote<br />
down notes on a stack <strong>of</strong> white<br />
envelopes .<br />
At Cheryl Munson’s table<br />
on the other side <strong>of</strong> the room,<br />
second year master student<br />
Nathaniel Pockras paused before<br />
pulling out his camera.<br />
Another visitor had just<br />
put away a human tooth that<br />
Cheryl Munson said most likely<br />
came from a Glacial Kame<br />
burial site in Delaware , Ohio .<br />
Pockras wanted a picture.<br />
“Excuse me, may I take a<br />
picture? ” he asked.<br />
Th e man pulled the tooth,<br />
wrapped in cotton in a plastic<br />
tin, from his bag, and Pockras<br />
placed it on the table, trying<br />
to fi nd the best lighting for a<br />
photo .<br />
Th ough Pockras is currently<br />
studying history and library<br />
science , he said he fi nds anthropology<br />
interesting and has<br />
traveled to multiple archaeological<br />
sites .<br />
“I like to park next to the<br />
sites and stand as close as possible<br />
to get a picture, ” Pockras<br />
said. “I suppose I could get<br />
better photos if I asked someone<br />
to go inside, but it’s easier,<br />
and I can just drive on to the<br />
next one. ”<br />
Bloomington City Council complies with state gun law<br />
BY CELIA GRUNDMAN<br />
celgrund@indiana.edu<br />
Permit holders across the<br />
state <strong>of</strong> <strong>Indiana</strong> have been<br />
allowed to bring their guns<br />
to most public places since<br />
the beginning <strong>of</strong> July . Th e<br />
Bloomington City Council<br />
passed an ordinance<br />
Wednesday night to comply<br />
with the new state law since<br />
it supersedes municipal gun<br />
restrictions .<br />
“I think this is a step backwards,<br />
but I understand our<br />
city council attorneys wanting<br />
to be in compliance, ”<br />
council member Dave Rollo<br />
said at the meeting.<br />
<strong>Indiana</strong> residents may<br />
now bring guns with valid<br />
permits to parks , libraries<br />
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and many city council chambers<br />
across the state .<br />
Updating local law<br />
seemed to be a formality ,<br />
Council Member Stephen<br />
Volan said .<br />
Bloomington Police Department<br />
Capt. Joe Qualters<br />
said to his knowledge, the<br />
local police have never had<br />
problems with fi rearms at<br />
public buildings.<br />
“Th e vast majority <strong>of</strong> people<br />
probably do not take fi rearms<br />
into public buildings, ”<br />
Qualters said.<br />
And, added Qualters,<br />
nothing prohibits the police<br />
from asking someone to display<br />
their permit .<br />
Th e <strong>Indiana</strong> legislature<br />
included exemptions for<br />
schools and buildings with<br />
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36 USC 220506<br />
courtrooms, Qualters said.<br />
More volatile situations<br />
could obviously arise in the<br />
courtroom setting, he said,<br />
thus the exemption was<br />
necessary .<br />
Qualters described the legislature’s<br />
challenge as fi nding<br />
a balance between Second<br />
Amendment rights and the<br />
preservation <strong>of</strong> security .<br />
“Hopefully, there will be<br />
no incidents that show that<br />
the legislature went too far<br />
in that extension, ” Qualters<br />
said.<br />
Th e Monroe County Public<br />
Library updated the language<br />
<strong>of</strong> its policies to comply<br />
with the law, Community<br />
Relations Coordinator Margaret<br />
Harter said in an email.<br />
Th e library has also ad-<br />
US POVERTY<br />
STATISTICS<br />
1959 - 2010<br />
SOURCE: US CENSUS BUREAU<br />
Roadshow examines local artifacts<br />
BAILEY LOOSEMORE | IDS<br />
Patrick Munson examines an artifact belonging to Beth and Tom Schroeder on Thursday at the Monroe<br />
County History Center during the Archaeology Roadshow.<br />
opted a new, one-sentence<br />
policy, which reads, “Th e<br />
Monroe County Public Library<br />
prohibits the intentional<br />
display <strong>of</strong> a fi rearm<br />
or other weapon at a public<br />
meeting .”<br />
Library Director Sara<br />
Laughlin said the policy<br />
regulates behavior, which is<br />
still within the library’s purview.<br />
Its policy has also been<br />
updated to prohibit library<br />
employees from carrying<br />
weapons into work, an exception<br />
that is allowed under<br />
the law, Laughlin said .<br />
“We’re concerned. We<br />
don’t like the law one bit, ”<br />
Laughlin said. “But it’s a<br />
state law, so we changed our<br />
policy in June to comply. ”<br />
Qualters said he hopes<br />
40<br />
30<br />
20<br />
10<br />
Number in poverty (millions)<br />
Poverty rate<br />
1959 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010<br />
people will not display their<br />
weapons or use them for<br />
intimidation .<br />
“Hopefully, people will<br />
use appropriate discretion<br />
and common sense, ”<br />
Qualters said.<br />
At the city council meeting<br />
Wednesday, Rollo<br />
deemed the state law signifi<br />
cant, as members have<br />
received threats in the past .<br />
“We don’t have any type<br />
<strong>of</strong> fi ltering to try to prevent<br />
people from coming in, and<br />
I like that and I prefer that, ”<br />
Rollo said. “But this is a concern<br />
<strong>of</strong> mine, because it is<br />
clearly a major change. ”<br />
Assistant City Attorney<br />
Patty Mulvihill also spoke<br />
at the city council meeting,<br />
where she said she doesn’t<br />
Download our app at the iTunes Store.<br />
think the matter is fi nished.<br />
Th e <strong>Indiana</strong> Association <strong>of</strong><br />
Cities and Towns is attempting<br />
to change portions <strong>of</strong> the<br />
state law through lobbying .<br />
“We do the public’s business<br />
in a public forum, and<br />
so I think that our concern<br />
for everyone in that forum<br />
should be obvious, ” Volan<br />
said.<br />
To find out more information, visit www.deloitte.com/us/careers<br />
46. 2 million<br />
15.1 percent<br />
Kroger collects $219,366<br />
in fundraiser for Riley<br />
FROM IDS REPORTS<br />
Kroger Co . has raised<br />
more than $200,000 to<br />
benefi t the Riley Hospital<br />
for Children in <strong>Indiana</strong>polis<br />
this year , the<br />
grocery chain announced<br />
Th ursday .<br />
Th rough various fundraising<br />
events , Kroger collected<br />
$219,366 for the hospital<br />
in 2011 , bringing its<br />
15-year fundraising total to<br />
$1.8 million .<br />
“Every year, Kroger associates<br />
and our vendor<br />
partners put forth an incredible<br />
volunteer eff ort on<br />
behalf <strong>of</strong> Riley Children’s<br />
Foundation,” Kroger President<br />
Bob Moeder said in<br />
a press release. “Our work<br />
for the children and families<br />
served by Riley Hospital<br />
generates more passionate<br />
employee volunteerism<br />
than any other event we are<br />
involved in.”<br />
One <strong>of</strong> the primary<br />
fundraisers this year was<br />
Kroger’s annual balloon<br />
scan promotion .<br />
Now in its 27th year,<br />
the balloon scan promotion<br />
allows customers and<br />
associates to donate $1 to<br />
$3 to the Riley Children’s<br />
Foundation in exchange<br />
for a paper cutout <strong>of</strong> a hot<br />
air balloon . Th e promotion<br />
lasted from July 11 through<br />
Aug. 20 .<br />
One <strong>of</strong> Bloomington’s<br />
Kroger stores , located on<br />
South Old State Road 37 ,<br />
led the fundraiser with<br />
$2,675 raised.<br />
More money was raised<br />
through a partnership with<br />
cereal company General<br />
Mills , the release stated.<br />
Th ere was a speciallydesigned<br />
two pack <strong>of</strong> Trix<br />
and Cheerios that featured<br />
packaging detailing the<br />
story <strong>of</strong> the hospital . For<br />
every package sold, General<br />
Mills donated $1 to Riley<br />
Hospital.<br />
Th is resulted in $20,000<br />
for the hospital.<br />
In addition, the 15th annual<br />
Kroger Race for Riley<br />
raised $2,800 from fans.<br />
Th e race featured appearances<br />
by NASCAR drivers<br />
John Andretti and Clint<br />
Bowyer , with a chance<br />
for fans to race against<br />
Andretti .<br />
“Riley Hospital is an extremely<br />
impressive health<br />
care institution,” Moeder<br />
said, “and we were very<br />
pleased to focus our efforts<br />
on helping the hospital<br />
raise critical funds to<br />
help children across the<br />
region, nationally and even<br />
globally. We do this in part<br />
because Riley has helped<br />
so many members <strong>of</strong> the<br />
Kroger family.”<br />
— Jake New<br />
“We’re concerned. We<br />
don’t like the law one<br />
bit. But it’s a state<br />
law, so we changed<br />
our policy in June to<br />
comply. ”<br />
Sara Laughlin, Monroe County Public<br />
Library director
America’s got a new poet laureate:<br />
an angry white man from the<br />
poetic city <strong>of</strong> Detroit .<br />
Philip Levine spent most <strong>of</strong><br />
his life working various industrial<br />
jobs (such as the night shift at the<br />
Chevrolet Gear and Axle factory )<br />
throughout the Detroit area. He<br />
spent his <strong>of</strong>f -hours reading and<br />
writing poetry.<br />
Sound familiar? It’s a nearidentical<br />
story to that <strong>of</strong> Marshall<br />
Mathers , or as he’s better known<br />
today, Eminem . Marshall , an angry<br />
white man from Detroit , studied<br />
rap in his <strong>of</strong>f -hours until he began<br />
to break into the industry.<br />
It was this observation that reinforced<br />
a point I have considered for<br />
<strong>years</strong>: why isn’t rap held in the same<br />
esteem as poetry? When you boil it<br />
down, rap is the common man’s<br />
poetry.<br />
Th is is the reason Levine has<br />
achieved such fame — he writes<br />
the everyday woes <strong>of</strong> factory life in<br />
Detroit . He crafts beautiful words<br />
for the common man’s battle<br />
through daily life.<br />
Isn’t this the same thing that ’Ye,<br />
Jay and Dre do?<br />
Rap tells us the plight <strong>of</strong> the<br />
common man in today’s society<br />
through well-crafted verse and has<br />
recently developed into more <strong>of</strong> an<br />
art than we recognize.<br />
A recent, high-selling example<br />
INDIANA DAILY STUDENT | FRIDAY, SEPT. 16, 2011 | IDSNEWS.COM<br />
OPINION<br />
EDITORS: NICK JACOBS & EVIE SALOMON | OPINION@IDSNEWS.COM<br />
DECONSTRUCTING THE DISSONANCE<br />
Government contractors and<br />
the false choice <strong>of</strong> defense cuts<br />
Th e Defense Department is cannibalized<br />
by the defense industry.<br />
As a result, our active duty military<br />
personnel and national security are<br />
compromised.<br />
U.S. military spending is at an alltime<br />
high; the national defense budget<br />
for 2011 is $549 billion , not including<br />
war spending <strong>of</strong> $159 billion .<br />
Facing cries for austerity, the president<br />
and Congress have issued a mandate<br />
to reduce our spending in all sectors<br />
<strong>of</strong> government. For defense, this<br />
may seem to be a simple task if one is<br />
just looking at the numbers.<br />
Total military spending in 2001<br />
was $316 billion , and in only 10 <strong>years</strong><br />
the total military budget increased 124<br />
percent .<br />
Certainly the terrorist attacks <strong>of</strong><br />
2001 triggered some necessary spending<br />
increases by the military, but I am<br />
skeptical <strong>of</strong> a 124 percent increase<br />
being wholly vital to our security.<br />
I am not questioning the motives<br />
<strong>of</strong> our top military brass or acquisitions<br />
departments; I do not doubt their<br />
intent is to provide the military with<br />
suffi cient means to defend us.<br />
I do believe, however, that the private<br />
sector defense industry, which<br />
would not exist without taxpayer<br />
money, has exploited the increase in<br />
defense spending through cost overruns,<br />
contractor waste and an outright<br />
abuse <strong>of</strong> the system.<br />
An important piece <strong>of</strong> context to<br />
consider when looking at these numbers<br />
is the type <strong>of</strong> threat we currently<br />
face and expect to face for quite some<br />
time. War fought against terrorism is<br />
asymmetrical by nature.<br />
Asymmetric warfare brings with it<br />
a unique set <strong>of</strong> requirements from our<br />
military.<br />
It does not require usual spending<br />
— as the Cold War did — or a conventional<br />
military threat, such as Germany<br />
during World War II .<br />
Th ese requirements tend to fall<br />
on the cheaper side in relative military<br />
spending. For instance, a tank is<br />
not eff ective in an urban asymmetric<br />
is Kanye West and Jay-Z’s collaboration<br />
album, “Watch the Th rone .”<br />
Th roughout all <strong>of</strong> the tracks we see<br />
pain and suff ering that many must<br />
endure exposed through metaphor,<br />
allegory, hyperbole, rhyme (<strong>of</strong><br />
course) and more.<br />
Th e duo spit rhymes about fatherhood,<br />
the idea <strong>of</strong> power in today’s<br />
society, brotherhood and the<br />
role <strong>of</strong> organized religion in our<br />
world.<br />
What does the common man<br />
worry about? Representatives in<br />
Congress making laws that hinder<br />
the people, being the best man he<br />
can for his children, how he can aid<br />
his friends without hurting himself<br />
and who exactly he should pray to.<br />
I would venture to say that Yeezy<br />
and Jay rival Levine .<br />
While rap achieves the same goal<br />
many poets strive for, it achieves<br />
it in the same traditional means,<br />
as well.<br />
In “No Church in the Wild,”<br />
Jay-Z has a knack for imagery<br />
and symbolism, heard in his fi rst<br />
verse: “Tears on the mausoleum<br />
fl oor/ Blood stains the coliseum<br />
doors/ Lies on the lips <strong>of</strong> a priest/<br />
Th anksgiving disguised as a feast.”<br />
In multiple tracks, the two make<br />
allusions to the slaying <strong>of</strong> Julius<br />
Caesar through fi gures like Brutus<br />
and Cassius Longinus . Th ese are<br />
the same poetic devices “real” po-<br />
CHRIS<br />
BABCOCK<br />
is a junior in<br />
environmental<br />
management.<br />
environment — an armored Humvee<br />
is.<br />
A billion-dollar stealth bomber<br />
may be utilized at times, but not nearly<br />
as <strong>of</strong>ten as a Predator drone or remote<br />
spy plane.<br />
Th rough reason, then, it would<br />
seem the acquisitional requirements<br />
for our current and long-term threats<br />
are relatively cheaper than they were<br />
during past confl icts or times <strong>of</strong> war.<br />
One could also argue that increases<br />
in technology and the reduced costs<br />
associated with the mass production<br />
<strong>of</strong> innovations would drive military<br />
spending costs further down.<br />
Th is is not, apparently, how the<br />
private defense industry works,<br />
which brings us to our current<br />
predicament.<br />
Tasked with reducing government<br />
spending, the Congressional Super<br />
Committee will undoubtedly look at<br />
defense.<br />
It will be faced with diffi cult questions<br />
about where exactly to cut.<br />
Should there be reductions in total<br />
active duty force or reduction in research<br />
and development, reductions<br />
in acquisition <strong>of</strong> new military equipment<br />
or reductions in replacement <strong>of</strong><br />
aging fl eets?<br />
Th ere will be a zero sum answer,<br />
but those questions pose a false<br />
choice. What really must be considered<br />
is defense contracting and<br />
acquisitions reform.<br />
We can and should have more for<br />
less when the reduced costs associated<br />
with technological advancement and<br />
military threat types are considered.<br />
If we do not demand reform,<br />
we all could pay the price <strong>of</strong> a<br />
weakened military.<br />
— cdbabcock@indiana.edu<br />
#CULTURED<br />
O Kanye! My Kanye!<br />
MCT CAMPUS<br />
SAM OSTROWSKI<br />
is a sophomore in English and theater.<br />
ets use to make successful works.<br />
Th e track “Made in America”<br />
conveys the long process it took for<br />
minorities to gain success in America<br />
due to the eff orts <strong>of</strong> “Sweet<br />
Brother Malcolm,” “Sweet King<br />
Martin,” etc., while juxtaposing the<br />
lives <strong>of</strong> many minorities.<br />
Th is is bigger than how many<br />
see it. Th is is poetic.<br />
I believe so much in what rappers<br />
have to say, and how they say<br />
it, that I think poetry classes should<br />
be devoted to it.<br />
Current and future educators,<br />
you’re sitting on an untapped gold<br />
mine <strong>of</strong> verse. Th ink <strong>of</strong> the interest<br />
in the students. Th ink about the<br />
connection to today’s culture.<br />
Rap is more than cheap pop<br />
culture. It’s true that a lot <strong>of</strong> rap<br />
about the “bitches in da clubs” is<br />
churned out quickly in an eff ort to<br />
get it mainstreamed and reap the<br />
benefi ts, but that doesn’t mean we<br />
have to stigmatize the whole genre.<br />
We don’t look at Sylvia Plath’s<br />
works and say that all poetry is<br />
depressing verse stemming from<br />
daddy issues, so why do so many<br />
do that with rap?<br />
RADISH TWEET OF THE DAY<br />
@IDS_RADISH<br />
Archie the Anthrodogogist under fi re by students and several unnamed faculty<br />
members after discovering he’s tenured<br />
— sjostrow@indiana.edu<br />
RATIONAL OBSERVER<br />
We’re all in this together<br />
I was driving home this weekend,<br />
listening to my iPod on<br />
shuffl e when a song came on<br />
that I hadn’t heard in awhile.<br />
It was a song by Ben Lee<br />
called “We’re All in Th is Together.”<br />
Th e basic premise <strong>of</strong> the song<br />
is we all share this chunk <strong>of</strong> rock<br />
we call Earth for a short time,<br />
and we might as well treat each<br />
other well while we’re here.<br />
I had always liked the song.<br />
It has a catchy beat, and it’s fun<br />
to listen to, but I had never really<br />
stopped and thought about<br />
the signifi cance <strong>of</strong> the idea<br />
behind it.<br />
You, me, the guy who cut you<br />
<strong>of</strong>f on the way to work, the girl<br />
talking loudly on her phone in<br />
front <strong>of</strong> you — we’re all in the<br />
same boat at the most basic level.<br />
We’re all human. We all feel.<br />
We all face a lot <strong>of</strong> the same<br />
stresses, joys and failures.<br />
Th e guy who was a jerk to you<br />
in line at Starbucks ? Maybe his<br />
dog died this weekend, or he and<br />
his girlfriend just had a fi ght.<br />
Th e girl who is obviously hungover<br />
in class? Maybe she’s still<br />
trying to forget the awful conversation<br />
with her mom from the<br />
night before.<br />
Or maybe they’re just messed<br />
up people. But does it really matter?<br />
I don’t think it does. I think<br />
it’s better to give people the benefi<br />
t <strong>of</strong> the doubt.<br />
But there’s more to it than<br />
that. I think we can take it one<br />
step further. I think we can treat<br />
each other well.<br />
I’m sure I’ve amazed you<br />
with this tremendously novel<br />
idea. Treat each other well? Who<br />
would have thought <strong>of</strong> such a<br />
concept?<br />
It’s an obvious thing to say<br />
we should be good to one another,<br />
but how <strong>of</strong>ten do we<br />
Th e article on e-textbook<br />
adoption at IU left out an important<br />
point: the school is creating<br />
a system where pr<strong>of</strong>essors<br />
can force students to pay an etextbook<br />
fee to take their course<br />
— no shopping around for textbooks<br />
(electronic or otherwise),<br />
you just have to buy this e-book<br />
to take the course.<br />
Of course, the publishers<br />
love this because it means<br />
no competition for them, and<br />
<strong>100</strong> percent <strong>of</strong> the students<br />
have to pay the fee (even if<br />
they didn’t want to read the<br />
textbook).<br />
So they can collude with the<br />
University to make students pay<br />
more than the e-book would be<br />
worth on the free market.<br />
LETTER TO THE EDITOR<br />
A free market<br />
for textbooks<br />
CONVERSATION STARTERS<br />
ONLINE COMMENTS HERE<br />
BOOTYDROP.COM:<br />
BOOTYLICIOUS OR<br />
BOOTYFAIL?<br />
As a member <strong>of</strong> a highly<br />
regarded fraternity on campus, I<br />
took <strong>of</strong>f ense to the way in which<br />
you characterized “frat guys.” We<br />
do a lot <strong>of</strong> philanthropy events<br />
including participating in IUDM<br />
which raised $1.6 million last<br />
year.<br />
Posted by James Downing at 04:40 PM on<br />
Sep 14, 2011<br />
<strong>Indiana</strong> <strong>Daily</strong> <strong>Student</strong><br />
Est. 1867<br />
idsnews.com<br />
5<br />
actually do it?<br />
My challenge to you this<br />
week — do something nice for<br />
someone else unexpectedly.<br />
Does your roommate have a big<br />
test next week? Help him with<br />
household chores or cook him<br />
dinner.<br />
Have a friend who’s going<br />
through a rough time? Tell her<br />
you’re willing to listen — and<br />
mean it.<br />
You might be thinking, “Jon ,<br />
that sounds hard.” It isn’t, but I’ll<br />
give you an out anyway because<br />
those things do require some<br />
semblance <strong>of</strong> actual eff ort, and<br />
maybe that’s beyond your reach<br />
this week.<br />
Here’s an easy one. Simply<br />
smile at someone as you walk by<br />
them on campus or downtown.<br />
Not the creepy “I’m trying to hit<br />
on you” smile, but the one that<br />
conveys genuine warmth.<br />
I was having a crappy day last<br />
week and had someone smile at<br />
me like that. Immediately I felt a<br />
rather gloomy day brighten, even<br />
if just a little.<br />
Call me a pushover, a hippie<br />
or a delusional dreamer, but<br />
honestly, how much brighter<br />
would this world be if we all<br />
had the goal to try to make the<br />
people around us a little better<br />
<strong>of</strong>f ?<br />
Maybe nothing would<br />
change. Th en again, maybe it<br />
would change everything.<br />
I think it’s worth a shot.<br />
— jontodd@indiana.edu<br />
I urge pr<strong>of</strong>essors who are<br />
deciding whether to use this<br />
program to opt out. I’m a senior<br />
at <strong>Indiana</strong> University, and<br />
I started a free comparison site<br />
(textyard.com ) for students to<br />
get the lowest prices because I<br />
suff ered the costs <strong>of</strong> textbooks<br />
myself.<br />
Th e problem <strong>of</strong> expensive<br />
textbooks will end when<br />
there is a free market on ebooks,<br />
not when students<br />
are forced to pay for overpriced<br />
books (electronic or<br />
otherwise) in a new way.<br />
— Ben Greenberg<br />
<strong>Indiana</strong> University<br />
Super-Senior<br />
Co-Founder, TextYard.com<br />
BOOTYDROP.COM:<br />
BOOTYLICIOUS OR<br />
BOOTYFAIL?<br />
James, “doing philanthropy<br />
events” is great and all, but it<br />
doesn’t guarantee that you’re<br />
a good person or suggest that<br />
you’re not a “frat guy” the other<br />
99.99% <strong>of</strong> the time you’re alive.<br />
Also, if you entered a fraternity<br />
unaware <strong>of</strong> frat stereotypes and<br />
lack the ability to laugh them <strong>of</strong>f<br />
if you don’t fi t them, you need<br />
to reassess the thickness <strong>of</strong> your<br />
skin.<br />
Posted by File Thirteen at 07:17 PM on Sep<br />
14, 2011<br />
LETTER TO THE EDITOR POLICY<br />
JON TODD<br />
is a senior in<br />
history and<br />
political science.<br />
The IDS encourages and accepts letters to be printed daily from IU<br />
students, faculty and staff and the public. Letters should not exceed<br />
350 words and may be edited for length and style. Submissions<br />
must include the person’s name, address and telephone number for<br />
verifi cation. Letters without those requirements will not be considered<br />
for publication. Letters can be mailed or dropped <strong>of</strong>f at the IDS, 120<br />
Ernie Pyle Hall, 940 E. Seventh St. Bloomington, Ind., 47405.<br />
Submissions can also be sent via email to letters@idsnews.com.<br />
Questions can be directed to the IDS at 855-0760.<br />
The opinions expressed by the editorial board do not necessarily represent the opinions<br />
<strong>of</strong> the IDS news staff , student body, faculty or staff members or the Board <strong>of</strong> Trustees. The<br />
editorial board comprises columnists contributing to the Opinion page and the Opinion<br />
editors.
Religious Events<br />
Every Wednesday<br />
Connexion/ Evangelical Church<br />
Event: WholyFit<br />
Time: 7 p.m.<br />
Beginning Sept. 21 and running through<br />
Oct. 26, Connexion/ Evangelical Community<br />
Church will hold WholyFit classes<br />
every Wednesday. WholyFit provides all<br />
the proven health and fitness benefits <strong>of</strong><br />
Yoga, Pilates, & Tai Chi, presented from<br />
a biblically Christian worldview. This<br />
class features powerful physical exercise,<br />
scripture memorization, worship, & prayer.<br />
Registration required.<br />
Contact Lori Mangrum at 812.961.2977<br />
or Lori@WholyFit.org to register or for more<br />
information.<br />
Unity <strong>of</strong> Bloomington<br />
4001 S. Rogers St.<br />
812-333-2484<br />
www.unity<strong>of</strong>bloomington.org<br />
Sunday: 10 a.m.<br />
Unity<br />
Welcome to Unity <strong>of</strong> Bloomington, a center for<br />
Spiritual Growth. Unity <strong>of</strong>fers practical,<br />
spiritual teachings that empower abundant<br />
and meaningful living. We are an inclusive,<br />
GLBT friendly community, encouraging personal<br />
growth and a positive path for spiritual<br />
living. Check out our website or our Facebook<br />
group: Unity <strong>of</strong> Bloomington.<br />
Rev. Lauri Boyd, Minister<br />
Free Methodist Church<br />
1121 S. Lincoln St.<br />
812-332-6425<br />
www.bloomingtonfreemethodist.org<br />
Sunday: 10 a.m. & 6 p.m.<br />
Sunday School/Adult Bible Study: 9 a.m.<br />
Bible Study: Various studies during the week.<br />
Our vision is a unified body <strong>of</strong> believers gathering<br />
to worship in spirit and truth, while at the<br />
same time seeing the church grow in Christ<br />
and go out in love.<br />
Melvin R. Nead, Senior Pastor<br />
Zack Martin, Associate Pastor<br />
Lee and Sara Busick, Youth Directors<br />
St. Mark’s United Methodist<br />
<strong>100</strong> N. State Rd. 46 Bypass<br />
812-332-5788<br />
(Just north <strong>of</strong> Best Buy)<br />
Sunday Worship: 9:30 a.m. & 11 a.m.<br />
Sunday College Group: Noon<br />
Open Hearts<br />
Open Minds<br />
Open Doors<br />
Ned Steele, Pastor<br />
Mary Beth Morgan, Pastor<br />
Lutheran (LCMS)<br />
University Lutheran Church<br />
& <strong>Student</strong> Center<br />
607 E. Seventh St.<br />
812-336-5387<br />
www.indianalutheran.org<br />
Sunday:<br />
Divine Service, 10:30 a.m. & 5 p.m.<br />
<strong>Student</strong> Meal, 6 p.m.<br />
College Bible Class, 9:15 a.m. & 6:30 p.m.<br />
Wednesday:<br />
Lutheran <strong>Student</strong> Fellowship, 7:30 p.m.<br />
Vespers, 7 p.m.<br />
Thursday:<br />
Grad and young adult meal, 6:30 p.m.<br />
Bible Study, 7 p.m.<br />
“U. Lu” is home to Lutheran <strong>Student</strong> Fellowship/<br />
Christ on Campus. Our on-campus facility<br />
across from Dunn Meadow at the corner <strong>of</strong><br />
Seventh & Fess, is open daily and supports<br />
being “In Christ, Engaging the World” through<br />
Bible studies, mission trips, retreats, international<br />
hospitality, music and leadership.<br />
Rev. Richard Woelmer, Campus Pastor<br />
Buddhist<br />
Tibetan Mongolian Buddhist<br />
Cultural Center<br />
3655 S. Snoddy Rd.<br />
812-336-6807<br />
www.tmbcc.net<br />
Meditation Instruction: Mon., 6 p.m.<br />
Meditation: Mon. & Wed., 6:30 - 7:30 p.m.<br />
Sunday Dharma Teachings:10:30 a.m.<br />
& Noon<br />
Founded in 1979 with the three-fold mission<br />
to foster and preserve Tibetan and Mongolian<br />
cultures, provide Buddhist teachings in<br />
the Bloomington community, and promote<br />
interfaith peace and harmony. Our grounds are<br />
open to visitors during daylight hours, seven<br />
days a week. Check our website for special<br />
events and activities.<br />
Arjia Rinpoche, Director<br />
Sunday, Sept. 18<br />
St. Charles Catholic<br />
Event: Ministry Fair<br />
Mark your calendars for the<br />
2011 Ministry Fair at St. Charles Catholic<br />
Church, following each Mass this<br />
Sunday. The theme this year will<br />
be “What is God calling you to be?” Join<br />
your fellow-parishioners after the 5 p.m.<br />
Mass for hot dogs and refreshments;<br />
after the 8 and 10 a.m. Masses<br />
for a pancake breakfast, and<br />
after the noon Mass for refreshments.<br />
Come one, come all!<br />
For more information, contact<br />
St. Charles Catholic Church at<br />
812-446-6846.<br />
Non-Denominational<br />
Vineyard Community Church<br />
Sunday: 10 a.m.<br />
High Rock Church<br />
1925 S. Liberty Drive<br />
812-323-3333<br />
www.highrock-church.com<br />
Sundays: 11 a.m. at the Bloomington<br />
Convention Center<br />
302 S. College (3rd & College)<br />
High Rock is a newish church in B-Town that<br />
loves students. While the church is for everyone,<br />
we really want to see loads <strong>of</strong> students<br />
get involved. The c<strong>of</strong>fee is strong, the dress<br />
is casual, the music rocks, the teaching is<br />
relevant and God is real. Come check it out.<br />
Scott Joseph, Pastor<br />
2375 S. Walnut St.<br />
812-336-4602<br />
www.btnvineyard.org<br />
Our small group meets weekly — give us a call<br />
for times & location. On Sunday mornings,<br />
service is at 10 a.m. We are contemporary and<br />
dress is casual. C<strong>of</strong>fee, bagels, and fruit are<br />
free! Come as you are ... you’ll be loved!<br />
David G. Schunk, Senior Pastor<br />
Loving God, Serving People, Changing Lives<br />
Pentecostal<br />
Abundant Life Tabernacle<br />
...Where there’s more to Life!<br />
4988 N. Brummetts Creek Rd.<br />
812-824-1560<br />
www.abundantlifetoday.org<br />
Sunday: Sunday School & Evangelistic, 10 a.m.<br />
Wednesday: Bible Study, 7:30 p.m.<br />
Abundant Life Tabernacle is a Christ-centered<br />
Apostolic church founded upon the infallible<br />
Word <strong>of</strong> God. As such, we believe and teach<br />
the Apostle’s doctrine, endeavoring to preach<br />
the Gospel <strong>of</strong> Jesus Christ with love, mercy,<br />
and compassion. For transportation or other<br />
information, call 812-824-6913.<br />
Dexter J. Elkins, Pastor<br />
Highland Village Church<br />
515 S. Curry Pike<br />
812-336-7224<br />
www.highlandvillagechurch.com<br />
Sunday Morning: 11 a.m.<br />
Wednesday Evening: 7:30 p.m.<br />
Our Church is made up <strong>of</strong> people from many<br />
walks <strong>of</strong> life. While we are far from perfect,<br />
we invite you to join us on a journey towards<br />
Jesus. We believe that church should be<br />
powerful, exciting, relevant and life changing.<br />
Rev. B. Andrew King, Lead Pastor<br />
Manuel Hernandez, Worship Pastor<br />
Presbyterian (USA)<br />
First Presbyterian Church<br />
221 E. Sixth St. (Sixth and Lincoln)<br />
812-332-1514<br />
www.fpcbloomington.org<br />
Sunday:<br />
Worship Services: 9 a.m. & 11 a.m.<br />
Church School for all ages: 10 a.m.<br />
We are a community <strong>of</strong> seekers and disciples<br />
in Christ committed to hospitality and outreach<br />
for all God’s children. Come join us for<br />
meaningful worship, thoughtful spiritual study<br />
and stimulating fellowship. Complimentary<br />
home-cooked meal served to university students<br />
most Sundays following the 11 o’clock<br />
worship service.<br />
Andrew Kort, Pastor<br />
Rachel Pedersen, Associate Pastor<br />
Sadie Carter, Administrative Assistant<br />
Katherine Strand, Music Director<br />
Quaker<br />
Bloomington Friends Meeting<br />
3820 E. Moores Pike<br />
PO Box 2303<br />
812-336-4581<br />
www.bloomington.in.us/~quaker<br />
Meetings for Worship:<br />
Sunday: 10:30 a.m.<br />
Sunday School: 10:45 a.m.<br />
(Children join in worship from<br />
10:30 to 10:45)<br />
Join in hymn singing at 9:50 a.m.<br />
*Childcare is provided. The meeting is<br />
handicapped accessible.<br />
All seekers are welcome.<br />
For membership in the <strong>Indiana</strong> <strong>Daily</strong> <strong>Student</strong> Religious Directory,<br />
please contact us at ads@idsnews.com.<br />
Submit your religious events by e-mailing: idsmrktg@indiana.edu<br />
or visiting www.idsnews.com/happenings.<br />
The deadline for next Friday’s Religious Directory is Monday at 5 p.m.<br />
INDIANA DAILY STUDENT | FRIDAY, SEPT. 16, 2011 | IDSNEWS.COM 7<br />
» CENTENNIAL<br />
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1<br />
ing job one semester shy <strong>of</strong> a<br />
degree. He received an honorary<br />
degree in 1944.<br />
From 1938 until his retirement<br />
in 1968 , alumnus John<br />
Stempel served as head <strong>of</strong> the<br />
department .<br />
“It was in the Stempel <strong>years</strong><br />
that journalism, after moving<br />
through various <strong>of</strong>fi ces on<br />
campus, found its home in Ernie<br />
Pyle Hall in 1954,” the site<br />
said.<br />
Succeeding Stempel as<br />
department chair in 1968 was<br />
Richard Gray .<br />
Th e program became a<br />
school in 1974 . And eight <strong>years</strong><br />
later, journalism became a<br />
fi eld <strong>of</strong> study at all eight IU<br />
campuses. Th e Bachelor <strong>of</strong><br />
Arts in Journalism has been<br />
available since 1990 .<br />
After <strong>100</strong> <strong>years</strong>, there are<br />
now more than 10,000 alumni<br />
worldwide.<br />
ALUMNI REMEMBER<br />
Marjorie Blewett , a Bloomington<br />
native and 1948 graduate,<br />
started school in 1944 with<br />
the world at war and most <strong>of</strong><br />
the male IU students in the<br />
service.<br />
Journalism education isn’t<br />
the same as when Blewett was<br />
in school.<br />
Blewett said she could still<br />
write and create headlines today,<br />
but making the product is<br />
questionable.<br />
“I wouldn’t have the faintest<br />
idea how to put out a paper<br />
today,” she said. “Th ere<br />
have been a lot <strong>of</strong> changes, but<br />
that’s life.”<br />
But one aspect has stayed<br />
the same for Blewett — how<br />
the IU School <strong>of</strong> Journalism<br />
has put a continuous emphasis<br />
on writing.<br />
“We have always been<br />
strong in journalism and<br />
» 9/11<br />
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1<br />
“Th ey put America fi rst.<br />
Unity, fl ying fl ags, giving<br />
blood ... Th e American people<br />
rallied, and they weren’t going<br />
to be terrorized,” he said.<br />
Challenging their fi ndings<br />
and demanding accountability,<br />
the 9/11 families served<br />
as some <strong>of</strong> the commission’s<br />
toughest critics. But the commissioners<br />
said their responsibility<br />
to the American people<br />
diminished any natural tendency<br />
they had to be partisan.<br />
“I recall vividly the day we<br />
released the report,” Commissioner<br />
Fred Fielding said. “I<br />
think we were more nervous<br />
than anything, because we<br />
met with the families before<br />
we had the public hearings<br />
and the release. We were so<br />
nervous they would turn on us<br />
or wouldn’t be happy, and it<br />
was the greatest relief to all <strong>of</strong><br />
us when they walked up and<br />
asked us to sign their books. “<br />
Th e bipartisan strategy and<br />
genuine inspiration allowed<br />
the 9/11 Commission to me-<br />
» IUSA<br />
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1<br />
early in September , was<br />
originally under the impression<br />
that the bill somehow<br />
escaped the attention <strong>of</strong> last<br />
year’s administration and<br />
had intentions to pay the<br />
company.<br />
By Sept. 13 , however,<br />
Straub and the IUSA <strong>Student</strong><br />
Organization Funding Board<br />
determined that the Markey’s<br />
charge stemmed from the<br />
board’s IU Dance Marathon<br />
funding.<br />
Danny Schuster , co-director<br />
<strong>of</strong> Funding Board , said he<br />
believes there may have been<br />
miscommunication between<br />
IUDM and Markey’s with respect<br />
to payment, he said.<br />
Th e board gives money<br />
to student organizations to<br />
spend as they see fi t. Any fees<br />
from vendors that organizations<br />
deal with should then<br />
be directed to the student<br />
organization, not Funding<br />
Board or IUSA. Th is is the<br />
case with IUDM, Schuster<br />
said.<br />
PHOTO COURTESY OF IU ARCHIVES<br />
IU student journalists in Ernie Pyle Hall circa 1954.<br />
writing throughout the <strong>100</strong><br />
<strong>years</strong>,” she said.<br />
Current faculty member<br />
Tom French is a 1981 graduate<br />
and won a Pulitzer for reporting<br />
in 1998 .<br />
French said the students<br />
are sharper than ever as the<br />
fi eld changes.<br />
“Journalism is constantly<br />
evolving, so the school is constantly<br />
evolving,” French said.<br />
THE FUTURE OF IU<br />
JOURNALISM<br />
“It’s a fascinating time for<br />
journalism and journalism<br />
education,” IU School <strong>of</strong> Journalism<br />
Dean Brad Hamm said.<br />
“Journalism will always be vital<br />
to any community.”<br />
Th is year, the school will<br />
honor 15 graduates with the<br />
Distinguished Alumni Award .<br />
Th e fi rst class, which includes<br />
graduates from throughout<br />
the century, several <strong>of</strong> whom<br />
are Pulitzer Prize winners, will<br />
be honored Friday at a banquet<br />
and ceremony .<br />
For more information, visit<br />
journalism.indiana.edu .<br />
ticulously comb through the<br />
events leading up to the attacks<br />
on the United States on<br />
Sept. 11, 2011, and formulate a<br />
plan to prevent such acts from<br />
occurring ever again.<br />
But Commissioner Slade<br />
Gorton said their’s was merely<br />
a procedural success.<br />
“We started something,” he<br />
said. “We didn’t fi nish it. We<br />
showed that diff erent parties<br />
and administrations can work<br />
together.”<br />
And they expect Congress<br />
to follow their example.<br />
Commissioner Jamie<br />
Gorelick said Congress’ response<br />
to the 9/11 Commission’s<br />
report was one <strong>of</strong> the<br />
quickest in U.S. history.<br />
Th e administration implemented<br />
national security policies<br />
that prevented another attack<br />
on the United States over<br />
the last decade, and they took<br />
down Osama Bin Laden.<br />
Th e only thing Congress<br />
didn’t react to, however, was<br />
itself, she said.<br />
“I don’t think we can be<br />
safe if we are as divided as we<br />
are now as a country,” Gore-<br />
Schuster has yet to speak<br />
with IUDM representatives,<br />
though he said he suspects<br />
the situation is a product <strong>of</strong><br />
a misunderstanding <strong>of</strong> how<br />
funding <strong>of</strong> the board works.<br />
“I doubt they would maliciously<br />
defer a payment to<br />
us,” he said. “Th ey’re going to<br />
have to pay it out <strong>of</strong> their budget<br />
at some point, if that turns<br />
out how it happened.”<br />
All other rollover expenses<br />
will be covered by Big Six’s<br />
operating budget <strong>of</strong> $91,400 ,<br />
which passed last spring , specifi<br />
cally from the $10,000 new<br />
initiatives fund.<br />
“Since we tend to overbudget,<br />
that doesn’t necessarily<br />
mean we only have<br />
$2,500 left,” Straub said. “We<br />
can partition money from<br />
other sources.”<br />
Th e Big Six also has the<br />
option to use money that<br />
doesn’t come from the operating<br />
budget.<br />
“IUSA has quite a bit <strong>of</strong><br />
money that rolls over from<br />
academic year to academic<br />
year,” IUSA historian John<br />
Gillard said. “Any money that<br />
has been accumulated gets<br />
DISTINGUISHED<br />
ALUMNI<br />
The IU School <strong>of</strong> Journalism<br />
has announced its inaugural<br />
class to receive the<br />
Distinguished Alumni Award.<br />
Ernie Pyle (honorary degree<br />
1944).<br />
Donald Ring Mellett (BA 1914)<br />
Florence Myrick Ahl (BA 1899)<br />
Nelson Poynter (BA 1924)<br />
Kent Cooper (honorary degree<br />
1941)<br />
Madelyn Pugh Davis (BA 1942)<br />
Gene Miller (BA 1950)<br />
John Stempel (BA 1923)<br />
John Hill (honorary degree<br />
1971)<br />
I. Wilmer “Will” Counts<br />
(MS 1954)<br />
Paul Tash (BA 1976)<br />
James Polk (BA 1964)<br />
Marjorie Blewett (1948)<br />
Thomas French (BA 1981)<br />
Michel du Cille (BA 1985)<br />
COURTNEY DECKARD | IDS<br />
The entire 9/11 Commission reunites for the fi rst time since the commission disbanded for the event "10<br />
Years Later: The 9/11 Commissioners Refl ect" on Thursday at the IU Auditorium.<br />
lick said. “You cannot look at<br />
New York and not see that resilience<br />
... We need that sense<br />
that together we can prevail<br />
against almost anything.”<br />
Th e commissioners listed<br />
several security measures they<br />
say Congress has yet to act<br />
upon, including reorganizing<br />
and enhancing a communication<br />
network amongst the<br />
intelligence agencies.<br />
“Th e 9/11 Commission is a<br />
high point <strong>of</strong> public life,” Commissioner<br />
James Th ompson<br />
said. “Th ere are key areas left<br />
undone. Lives were lost on<br />
9/11 because police and fi remen<br />
were not able to talk to<br />
each other properly.”<br />
Hamilton said the commissioners<br />
still fear complacency<br />
throughout the government<br />
and the nation 10 <strong>years</strong><br />
after the attacks.<br />
“I think we learned an awful<br />
lot about America,” Hamilton<br />
said. “Where else in the<br />
world can we sit down with<br />
the President and Vice President?<br />
I came out <strong>of</strong> it all with<br />
a whole lot more faith in our<br />
government.”<br />
co-mingled.”<br />
Th is account, which Kelty<br />
estimated contained more<br />
than $60,000 as <strong>of</strong> his departure<br />
from <strong>of</strong>fi ce, can be used<br />
by administrations if they<br />
seek to work on large-scale,<br />
more expensive projects.<br />
Gillard expressed confusion<br />
concerning the Big Six’s<br />
choice to use money from<br />
its own operating budget<br />
instead <strong>of</strong> the continuous<br />
account.<br />
“I didn’t know that we<br />
were allowed to do that, and I<br />
think our main intention was<br />
to stick with what we were<br />
initially given,” Straub said.<br />
Regardless <strong>of</strong> the source <strong>of</strong><br />
the payment, Straub said he is<br />
confi dent that the new charges<br />
won’t be an issue.<br />
“It’s not a big problem at<br />
all, and it’s not that big <strong>of</strong> an<br />
inconvenience,” Straub said.<br />
“I’ll let this be a learned lesson,<br />
that come the end <strong>of</strong> our<br />
administration, we will have<br />
all <strong>of</strong> our reimbursement<br />
payments in. You just have to<br />
be understanding. I guess it<br />
just comes with the territory.”
A C E N T U R Y O F J O U R N A L I S M<br />
at INDIANA UNIVERSITY<br />
Congratulations<br />
to our inaugural class<br />
<strong>of</strong> Distinguished Alumni<br />
Award recipients<br />
Ernie Pyle LHD’44<br />
Pyle won the Pulitzer Prize<br />
in 1944 for distinguished war<br />
correspondence during World<br />
War II.<br />
Donald<br />
R. Mellett ’14<br />
Mellett was murdered for<br />
reporting on corrupt government<br />
and police while editor and<br />
publisher <strong>of</strong> the Canton <strong>Daily</strong> News in Ohio. His<br />
paper won the Pulitzer Prize for public service.<br />
Florence Reid<br />
Myrick Ahl BA 1899<br />
Myrick was the first female editor<br />
<strong>of</strong> the <strong>Student</strong> (now the <strong>Indiana</strong><br />
<strong>Daily</strong> <strong>Student</strong>) newspaper in 1897.<br />
Nelson<br />
Poynter BA’24, LLD’76<br />
Poynter founded the Modern<br />
Media Institute (now the Poynter<br />
Institute for Media Studies) and<br />
led the St. Petersburg Times for more than 30 <strong>years</strong>.<br />
Kent<br />
Cooper LHD’41<br />
Cooper worked his way up<br />
to executive director <strong>of</strong> the<br />
Associated Press and is<br />
credited with inventing the way photographs<br />
could be sent by wire.<br />
Madelyn<br />
(Pugh) Davis BA’42<br />
Davis was the co-creator and<br />
co-writer <strong>of</strong> I Love Lucy. The<br />
show won two Emmy awards for<br />
situation comedy and comedy writing.<br />
Gene<br />
Miller BA’50, LLD’77<br />
Miller’s reporting at the Miami<br />
Herald led to the freeing <strong>of</strong> three<br />
wrongfully convicted death row<br />
inmates and two Pulitzer Prizes.<br />
John E.<br />
Stempel BA’23<br />
Stempel led the Department <strong>of</strong><br />
Journalism for 30 <strong>years</strong>, longer<br />
than any other leader, and<br />
established the High School Journalism Institute.<br />
John W. Hill LHD’71<br />
Hill created the public relations<br />
agency Hill & Knowlton in 1927.<br />
It is one <strong>of</strong> the largest public<br />
relations agencies in the world.<br />
I. Wilmer “Will”<br />
Counts MS’54, EdD’67<br />
Counts’ photographs defined<br />
the civil rights movement. Later,<br />
Counts revolutionized the<br />
teaching <strong>of</strong> photojournalism as a faculty member<br />
for more than 30 <strong>years</strong>.<br />
Paul Tash BA’76<br />
Tash has risen through the ranks<br />
<strong>of</strong> the St. Petersburg Times to<br />
CEO <strong>of</strong> the Times Publishing<br />
Company and chairman <strong>of</strong> the<br />
Poynter Institute for Media Studies.<br />
James<br />
Polk BA’64 (Government)<br />
Polk uncovered financial<br />
irregularities <strong>of</strong> a committee to<br />
re-elect President Nixon and<br />
received a Pulitzer Prize for the coverage in 1972.<br />
Marjorie (Smith)<br />
Blewett BA’48<br />
Blewett has been involved with<br />
IU journalism longer than any<br />
other person — as student,<br />
instructor and placement director. She continues<br />
today as school historian and a columnist for the<br />
alumni magazine.<br />
Thomas<br />
French BA’81<br />
French won the 1998 Pulitzer<br />
Prize for feature writing for his<br />
series that chronicled the murder<br />
<strong>of</strong> an Ohio woman and her two teenage daughters.<br />
He is the Riley Endowed Chair in Journalism.<br />
Michel<br />
du Cille BA’85<br />
Du Cille has won two Pulitzer<br />
Prizes and contributed to a<br />
third. He is the director <strong>of</strong><br />
photography at the Washington Post.<br />
JOURNALISM.INDIANA.EDU/<strong>100</strong>
9<br />
INDIANA DAILY STUDENT | FRIDAY, SEPT. 16, 2011 | IDSNEWS.COM<br />
SPORTS<br />
EDITORS:STEPHANIE KUZYDYM & MAX MCCOMBS | SPORTS@IDSNEWS.COM<br />
EDITORS:STEPHANI NI NIE E KU KUZY ZY ZYDY DY DYM & MA M X MCCOMBS | SPORTS@IDSNEWS.COM<br />
Wide receiver Duwyce Wilson scores a touchdown for IU against Virginia on Saturday at Memorial Stadium. The Hoosiers lost to Virginia 31-34.<br />
PAID ADVERTISEMENT<br />
CATCHING ON<br />
Return <strong>of</strong> Wilson, Bolser bolster receiving corps<br />
Even before redshirt sophomore<br />
wide receiver Duwyce Wilson<br />
made a leaping touchdown<br />
grab to give IU a 31-23 lead<br />
against Virginia last Saturday, it was<br />
clear to many that No. 81 was a valueable<br />
asset to the team.<br />
When Wilson played for Coach Bob<br />
Gaddis at Columbus (Ind.) East High<br />
School , he was named Mr. <strong>Indiana</strong> at<br />
wide receiver in 2008, and Scout.com<br />
ranked him as No. 38 wide receiver in<br />
the country.<br />
After former IU Coach Bill Lynch’s<br />
staff recruited him, Wilson then<br />
stood out in his redshirt freshman<br />
Th e Hoosiers needed somebody<br />
to make a play.<br />
Th ey led Virginia 24-23 in the<br />
fourth quarter , but they couldn’t afford<br />
to give the Cavaliers the ball<br />
back.<br />
Th ey needed to keep the pressure<br />
on.<br />
It was third down, and sophomore<br />
quarterback Edward Wright-<br />
Baker was under pressure. He had to<br />
fi nd a receiver fast.<br />
Wide receiver Duwyce Wilson<br />
broke through the middle. He was<br />
well covered by Virginia’s defense.<br />
But with few options left, Wright-<br />
Baker threw it anyway.<br />
Wilson stopped in his tracks,<br />
reached back for the throw that was<br />
a little <strong>of</strong>f , and made a catch as he<br />
went to the ground.<br />
Moments later, in a similar situation,<br />
Wright-Baker threw it up for<br />
campaign , fi nishing in the top three in<br />
catches , yards and touchdowns by a<br />
rookie wide receiver in IU history .<br />
At Big Ten Media Days in July , senior<br />
wide receiver Damarlo Belcher said<br />
the situation in 2011 was going to help<br />
Wilson reach even greater heights as a<br />
receiver.<br />
“I expect a lot <strong>of</strong> double coverage<br />
since Tandon (Doss )’s gone,” Belcher<br />
said. “Th at’s why I think Duwyce Wilson<br />
is going to have a breakout season this<br />
year.”<br />
Th ose expectations were somewhat<br />
tempered when Wilson was hurt during<br />
fall camp. He quickly fell behind and<br />
THE ALBERS ANGLE<br />
Duwyce Wilson could<br />
be future top receiver for IU<br />
Wilson in the end zone. Again, he<br />
was well covered, but Wilson left his<br />
feet and went up to get it for a late<br />
touchdown.<br />
It was a remarkable example <strong>of</strong><br />
Wright-Baker trusting a young receiver.<br />
Wright-Baker knew if he gave<br />
Wilson a chance, he’d come through<br />
in a big way.<br />
“We would always talk and throw<br />
extra back in the summer,” Wilson<br />
said <strong>of</strong> his relationship with Wright-<br />
Baker. “We’re just good buddies. He<br />
BY ALEX MCCARTHY | alexmcca@indana.edu<br />
JUSTIN<br />
ALBERS<br />
is a junior in<br />
journalism<br />
SEE ALBERS, PAGE 16<br />
began the season absent from the depth<br />
chart .<br />
He wasn’t the only sophomore to<br />
follow a breakout freshman season<br />
with an injury-plagued preseason.<br />
Redshirt sophomore tight end Ted<br />
Bolser missed more than two weeks<br />
<strong>of</strong> practices due to nagging health<br />
problems.<br />
“He missed a boatload — about 18<br />
— practices, so he’s kind <strong>of</strong> playing his<br />
way back in,” IU Coach Kevin Wilson<br />
said. “He’s got some catching skills if we<br />
can protect and deliver it to him. He’ll<br />
SEE RECEIVERS, PAGE 16<br />
Hoosiers ready for<br />
undersized Bulldogs<br />
BY MAX MCCOMBS<br />
mccombsm@indiana.edu<br />
Th e Hoosiers need only to look<br />
within their conference’s recent<br />
history for a reminder to not overlook<br />
Football Championship Subdivision<br />
teams such as South Carolina<br />
State.<br />
“College football is so competitive<br />
now that any team can beat<br />
any team on a given day,” junior defensive<br />
tackle Adam Replogle said.<br />
“Appalachian State beat Michigan<br />
when they were top-fi ve, so everyone<br />
knows that everyone can play<br />
ball.”<br />
IU Coach Kevin Wilson knows<br />
from experience that FCS teams,<br />
including Mid-Eastern Athletic<br />
Conference opponents such as the<br />
Bulldogs , can be dangerous. Wilson<br />
DUWYCE<br />
WILSON<br />
» Wide receiver<br />
» Sophomore<br />
» Columbus, Ind.<br />
» East High School<br />
» 5 catches , 60 yards , 1 touchdown<br />
» High school teammate <strong>of</strong> IU<br />
quarterback Dusty Kiel<br />
spent 1988 as the <strong>of</strong>f ensive coordinator<br />
and <strong>of</strong>f ensive line coach<br />
at North Carolina A&T, a MEAC<br />
school.<br />
“It is a very athletic conference<br />
and in a great region, and because<br />
it is FCS, they get a lot <strong>of</strong> bouncebacks,”<br />
Wilson said. “Whether they<br />
get disenchanted where they are<br />
or they don’t like where they are at,<br />
(players) will sign with a Division I<br />
program and then transfer. And so,<br />
if they transfer down to an FCS program,<br />
you can play right away without<br />
sitting out a year.<br />
“Th e MEAC gets some bouncebacks<br />
or some guys that didn’t do<br />
well in school or had an issue or it<br />
didn’t work out and he wanted to<br />
play right away.”<br />
SEE FOOTBALL, PAGE 16<br />
MARK FELIX | IDS
10 INDIANA DAILY STUDENT | FRIDAY, SEPT. 16, 2011 | IDSNEWS.COM<br />
Seniors prepare for Big Ten<br />
BY MICAH MCVICKER<br />
mmmcvick@indiana.edu<br />
Th e six seniors on <strong>Indiana</strong>’s<br />
roster began their playing<br />
career in 2008 , a year after<br />
IU last reached the NCAA<br />
Tournament.<br />
Senior forward Carly<br />
Samp said it’s sad this is her<br />
last opportunity to help earn<br />
the Hoosiers an appearance<br />
in the NCAA Tournament .<br />
Despite that, she will begin<br />
her fi nal season <strong>of</strong> Big<br />
Ten play as the center forward,<br />
something she said<br />
made her happy after the<br />
match against Xavier on<br />
Sept. 9 .<br />
“I’ve been a forward my<br />
whole career here — except<br />
for last year a little bit,” she<br />
said. “I played outside mid.<br />
I like being around the goal<br />
as a forward. It’s my natural<br />
position.”<br />
Samp will enter Sunday ’s<br />
match against Michigan<br />
looking to capture fi fth place<br />
on IU’s all-time points list .<br />
She currently has 48 .<br />
Senior midfi elder Kaylin<br />
Clow has learned to appreciate<br />
Big Ten conference play<br />
as her career has progressed.<br />
“Coming in as a freshman,<br />
I didn’t realize how big<br />
Big Ten season was, how big<br />
the conference was,” Clow<br />
said.<br />
Now that she has experience,<br />
she’s looking for better<br />
results than the 7-20-3 record<br />
IU has compiled in conference<br />
play in her prior three<br />
seasons.<br />
Top runners sitting Friday, multiple freshmen to race<br />
BY MATT SPEARS<br />
matspear@indiana.edu<br />
IU Coach Rod Helmer’s<br />
team still won’t be completely<br />
at full strength, but the<br />
cross country team expects to<br />
pick it up a notch at Friday’s<br />
<strong>Indiana</strong> Intercollegiate .<br />
After sitting the top seven<br />
runners for last week’s <strong>Indiana</strong><br />
Open , all the women will<br />
compete in this week’s aff air.<br />
Th e men, though, will sit<br />
their top six runners for this<br />
competition, according to the<br />
roster.<br />
Despite not racing the full<br />
team for a second straight<br />
week, IU Coach Ron Helmer<br />
said the team is taking this<br />
race more seriously. Scores<br />
and standings are on the line.<br />
“Last week, it was just a<br />
matter <strong>of</strong> get out, get through<br />
it and give those youngins<br />
a chance to race for the fi rst<br />
time and have that experience,”<br />
he said. “Th is week,<br />
they are keeping score. And<br />
“I want to (defeat) every<br />
team in the Big Ten and<br />
make it to the tournament,”<br />
she said. “We were kind <strong>of</strong> at<br />
the bottom last year. I really<br />
want to make our way up the<br />
line.”<br />
Samp said the team must<br />
continue to work on one specifi<br />
c aspect.<br />
“Our defense is a work in<br />
progress,” Samp said. “We’re<br />
trying to make sure that we<br />
don’t give up goals after we<br />
score. We’re still working on<br />
the defensive part.”<br />
IU Coach Mick Lyon said<br />
his team must buckle down<br />
after a goal.<br />
“After a goal is scored<br />
for or against, the next fi ve<br />
minutes is critical,” he said.<br />
“Statistically, there are a ton<br />
<strong>of</strong> goals scored in those fi veminute<br />
periods.<br />
“For example, against<br />
South Florida, they scored in<br />
the fi rst fi ve minutes <strong>of</strong> the<br />
game and the fi rst fi ve minutes<br />
<strong>of</strong> the second half. And<br />
lose the game. We’ve done a<br />
much better job <strong>of</strong> that.”<br />
Neither IU nor its rival<br />
from Ann Arbor, Mich. play<br />
a match on Friday . Still, Lyon<br />
said playing only one match<br />
will benefi t his team.<br />
“On Tuesday, Wednesday<br />
and Th ursday, we can train<br />
a little bit longer and not<br />
have to worry about the fatigue<br />
in preparation for two<br />
games on the weekend,” he<br />
said. “We made the Big Ten<br />
season over seven weeks so<br />
what we don’t have is fi ve<br />
weeks where we played two<br />
when you keep score, you<br />
want to try to win.”<br />
One <strong>of</strong> those runners who<br />
wants experience and the opportunity<br />
to run is redshirt<br />
freshman Evan Esselink , who<br />
will be running in his fi rst <strong>of</strong>fi<br />
cial IU race .<br />
“I’m really confi dent that I<br />
could fi nish top fi ve and help<br />
the team win the title,” he<br />
said. “Everyone’s been training<br />
really well, so I think we<br />
could come out on top even<br />
though our top guys aren’t<br />
racing.”<br />
Helmer said he isn’t concerned<br />
about the absence <strong>of</strong><br />
his top runners on the men’s<br />
side. Th is will give the younger<br />
runners a chance to reveal<br />
their potential and show<br />
what kind <strong>of</strong> training they<br />
have been putting in, he said.<br />
“Whoever we line up is<br />
going to race very, very hard,”<br />
Helmer said, “And we’re<br />
going to hope that’s good<br />
games every weekend. Th at<br />
was very tiring on the student<br />
athletes.<br />
“Now it’s stretched out<br />
over seven weeks. It makes it<br />
better for the games. Th ere’s<br />
more preparation time and<br />
we’re well-rested.”<br />
Team to face 10 ranked teams<br />
at 3-day Illinois tournament<br />
BY ABBY LIEBENTHAL<br />
abbylieb@indiana.edu<br />
After placing third last<br />
week at the Northern Intercollegiate<br />
, the IU men’s golf team<br />
will compete Friday, Sept. 16 ,<br />
through Sunday, Sept. 18 , at<br />
the Olympia Fields/Fighting<br />
Illini Invitational .<br />
Th e 15-team fi eld includes<br />
10 teams ranked in the Preseason<br />
Top 25 , including sec-<br />
Golfers to compete in fi rst ranked<br />
competition <strong>of</strong> year in Michigan<br />
BY ABBY LIEBENTHAL<br />
abbylieb@indiana.edu<br />
Senior co-captain Kristtini<br />
Cain said one major element<br />
makes the IU women’s golf<br />
team stand out: chemistry.<br />
Th e Hoosiers will take this<br />
chemistry to the Mary Fossum<br />
Invitational on Saturday,<br />
Sept. 17 and Sunday, Sept. 18<br />
in East Lansing, Mich .<br />
“Th ere’s a lot <strong>of</strong> confi -<br />
dence in our team now that<br />
the fi rst tournament is under<br />
our belt,” Cain said. “As a<br />
team, we enjoy each other’s<br />
company and work well together.”<br />
ond-ranked Oklahoma State<br />
and third-ranked Alabama .<br />
IU Coach Mike Mayer said<br />
the team needed to improve<br />
its performance around the<br />
greens, but he is confi dent after<br />
its last experience at Olympia<br />
Fields Country Club.<br />
“It’s a golf course we like<br />
to play. It’s diffi cult, but we’re<br />
the kind <strong>of</strong> team that can handle<br />
it,” Mayer said.<br />
Senior co-captain Chase<br />
Th e team will enter its fi rst<br />
ranked event with a victory<br />
at the IU Fall Kick<strong>of</strong>f , where<br />
junior Rosie Davies fi nished<br />
fi rst . Davies posted an evenpar<br />
144 for the tournament.<br />
She said she hopes to lead the<br />
team again in Michigan.<br />
“I hope to have the same<br />
mind-set coming <strong>of</strong>f a really<br />
good tournament, and hopefully<br />
I’ll be in the same position<br />
after the fi rst day,” Davies<br />
said.<br />
IU will be among 11<br />
teams , including Eastern<br />
Michigan , Ohio State , Toledo ,<br />
Kent State and the University<br />
<strong>of</strong> Michigan , who will com-<br />
WOMEN’S SOCCER<br />
SEE CROSS, PAGE 15<br />
MEN’S GOLF<br />
WOMEN’S GOLF<br />
COURTNEY DECKARD | IDS<br />
Freshman midfi elder Monica Melink prepares to shoot the ball during<br />
the second half <strong>of</strong> the IU vs. Oakland University match Sunday at Bill<br />
Armstrong Stadium. The Hoosiers defeated the Grizzlies 1-0.<br />
Wright , who tied for sixth<br />
place last week with a fi nal<br />
round three-under-par 68 ,<br />
said previously playing the<br />
challenging course will be a<br />
major advantage. Th e North<br />
Course at Olympia Fields<br />
Country Club will have a similar<br />
setup as the U.S. Open,<br />
which was there in 2003.<br />
Th ere will be identical tee and<br />
pete in the 54-hole stroke<br />
play event at Forest Akers<br />
West Golf Courses , a par-72<br />
course .<br />
IU Coach Clint Wallman<br />
said this weekend’s event will<br />
be diff erent because the team<br />
has to put three good rounds<br />
together. Th e team was two<br />
strokes back <strong>of</strong> fi rst place after<br />
the fi rst round <strong>of</strong> the IU<br />
Fall Kick<strong>of</strong>f and came back<br />
for the win .<br />
“We have to take advantage<br />
<strong>of</strong> the opportunities and<br />
not give a shot away,” Wallman<br />
said. “Th e arm <strong>of</strong> that<br />
will be our short game, putting<br />
and conversions.”<br />
CROSS COUNTRY<br />
As conference play is<br />
about to begin, Lyon said his<br />
team is progressing well.<br />
“We’re very happy with<br />
what the girls are doing,” he<br />
said. “How this team is developing<br />
is top-level. It’s a joy<br />
to coach right now.”<br />
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Thriving <strong>of</strong>f ense<br />
to be tested on<br />
East Coast trip<br />
BY DENNIS GLADE<br />
dmglade@indiana.edu<br />
Th e IU men’s soccer team<br />
heads to the East Coast for its<br />
fi rst true road test looking to<br />
continue hot <strong>of</strong>f ensive play.<br />
Th e No. 9 Hoosiers (4-0-<br />
1) have scored 14 goals in<br />
their fi rst fi ve games , a large<br />
spike from last year’s fi rst fi ve<br />
games .<br />
Th rough fi ve games last<br />
season, IU was 2-3 and had<br />
scored only nine goals .<br />
Senior Alec Purdie and<br />
freshman Eriq Zavaleta have<br />
led the team <strong>of</strong>f ensively, accounting<br />
for seven <strong>of</strong> the 14<br />
goals .<br />
For IU Coach Todd<br />
Yeagley, the team has used<br />
its aggressive play to create<br />
some good opportunities on<br />
goal for itself.<br />
“Th e guys are being effi<br />
cient,” Yeagley said. “Th e<br />
focus on the fi nal third has<br />
been sharp and we have<br />
taken our chances well, and<br />
when you do that, you can<br />
score some goals. I like the<br />
mindset <strong>of</strong> the group. We just<br />
have to keep going.”<br />
Th e Hoosiers have played<br />
only one true road game ,<br />
the season opener at Notre<br />
Dame , but will be taken out<br />
<strong>of</strong> their element this weekend<br />
when they travel to New<br />
York and New Jersey for con-<br />
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MEN’S SOCCER<br />
tests against No. 14 St. Johns<br />
(4-1) and Rutgers (3-1) , respectively.<br />
Yeagley said he thinks the<br />
team will fi nd out what they<br />
are made <strong>of</strong>, and it should<br />
be a good test for the entire<br />
team.<br />
“It is going to be very diffi -<br />
cult,” Yeagley said. “St. Johns<br />
is an excellent team, and<br />
Rutgers is young, and they<br />
have had some turnover.<br />
You’re leaving your region,<br />
leaving your comfort. Notre<br />
Dame was more familiar to<br />
us. Th is will be a completely<br />
diff erent test — traveling and<br />
playing in a hostile environment.<br />
Th ese will be very diffi<br />
cult games.”<br />
While this road trip sends<br />
the Hoosiers farther from<br />
home than they’ve been this<br />
season, competing against<br />
the Northeast schools is<br />
nothing new to the <strong>Indiana</strong><br />
program.<br />
<strong>Indiana</strong> holds an all-time<br />
record <strong>of</strong> 74-16-9 against<br />
the schools currently in the<br />
Big East , including a 4-1-1<br />
record against Rutgers and<br />
2-3-1 against St. Johns .<br />
As a fi fth-year senior and<br />
one <strong>of</strong> the Hoosier captains ,<br />
Purdie said it will be important<br />
for the team to keep<br />
its focus on the challenge<br />
SEE SOCCER, PAGE 15<br />
IDS FILE PHOTO<br />
Junior Sarah Pease tries to pull ahead in the pack during the NCAA Cross Country Championships on Nov. 22, 2010, at the Wabash Valley Family<br />
Sports Center in Terre Haute. IU began its 2011 season Sept. 10 at the <strong>Indiana</strong> Open in Bloomington.<br />
SEE GOLF, PAGE 15<br />
Atwater Eye Care Center<br />
744 E. Third St.<br />
812-855-8436
BY MICHAEL NORMAN<br />
mdnorman@indiana.edu<br />
With the Big Ten season<br />
one week away , the IU women’s<br />
volleyball team will<br />
travel to San Diego and play<br />
three games this weekend,<br />
including two against undefeated<br />
teams.<br />
“We are going to have to<br />
bring our game every single<br />
day and every single minute<br />
<strong>of</strong> the day in order to compete<br />
at that high level,” IU<br />
Coach Sherry Dunbar said.<br />
After sweeping the<br />
INDIANA DAILY STUDENT | FRIDAY, SEPT. 16, 2011 | IDSNEWS.COM 11<br />
Hoosier Classic at home last<br />
weekend, the Hoosiers will<br />
begin their California road<br />
trip with a matchup against<br />
undefeated George Washington<br />
on Friday night.<br />
George Washington is<br />
led by outside hitter Lauren<br />
Whyte , who is tied for 22nd<br />
nationally in kills per set<br />
with 4.42.<br />
To combat Whyte and <strong>of</strong>fenses<br />
this weekend, Dunbar<br />
said the team’s blocking<br />
needs to build <strong>of</strong>f last week’s<br />
aggressive play.<br />
“I think the biggest part<br />
<strong>of</strong> what we were talking<br />
about (last weekend) was attack<br />
blocking,” Dunbar said.<br />
“I thought they did a much<br />
better job <strong>of</strong> lining up with<br />
the hitters and then just being<br />
really aggressive with<br />
their hands, which I thought<br />
helped a lot.”<br />
On Saturday, the Hoosiers<br />
will continue with an<br />
early match against UC-Santa<br />
Barbara and a late game<br />
versus the host team, No. 17<br />
San Diego.<br />
San Diego’s <strong>of</strong>f ense,<br />
which led the nation in kills<br />
VOLLEYBALL<br />
STEPH AARONSON | IDS<br />
Freshman outside hitter Chanté George and senior outside hitter Lindsay Enterline jump to reach for the ball during a volleyball match against Southeast Missouri State University on Friday at the University Gymnasium.<br />
IU beat SEMO in all three sets.<br />
Hoosiers head to California for fi nal tuneup<br />
per set and assists per set<br />
last year , is led by a trio <strong>of</strong><br />
hitters that all have each<br />
more than <strong>100</strong> kills for the<br />
season.<br />
Senior libero Caitlin Cox<br />
said the team needs to start<br />
this weekend with the same<br />
energy it fi nished with last<br />
weekend.<br />
“We are playing some<br />
pretty good teams and if we<br />
are not ready, we are going<br />
to have our eyes opened really<br />
quick,” Cox said. “Getting<br />
focused and prepared is<br />
something we really need to<br />
“We are playing some pretty good teams and if<br />
we are not ready, we are going to have our eyes<br />
opened really quick.”<br />
Caitlin Cox, libero<br />
keep working on.”<br />
Th e Hoosiers’ trip to California<br />
will be the second<br />
road trip <strong>of</strong> the year so far.<br />
Dunbar said the weekend<br />
in San Diego will be a<br />
good challenge for the team,<br />
while also giving it time<br />
to build chemistry <strong>of</strong>f the<br />
court to create an identity<br />
on the road.<br />
“We need to really challenge<br />
ourselves to create our<br />
identity <strong>of</strong> energy without<br />
our fan base behind us to<br />
help us fi gure it out,” Dunbar<br />
said.<br />
“We are going to have to<br />
learn how to do that on the<br />
road in the Big Ten.”
12 INDIANA DAILY STUDENT | FRIDAY, SEPT. 16, 2011 | IDSNEWS.COM<br />
ARTS<br />
EDITORS: CORINNE LAMBERT & CASEY ENGELMAN | ARTS@IDSNEWS.COM<br />
Two nights full <strong>of</strong> local tunes<br />
BY CELIA GRUNDMAN<br />
celgrund@indiana.edu<br />
XRA-Fest began in much<br />
the same way as its label<br />
Crossroads <strong>of</strong> America<br />
Records — friends helped<br />
friends and produced good<br />
music together.<br />
Th is weekend the annual<br />
XRA-Fest returns to Bloomington<br />
for its fourth year .<br />
What started as a low-key<br />
barbecue is now a full-blown,<br />
two-day music festival.<br />
Th e barbecue aspect<br />
has been kept alive as a way<br />
for the label’s musicians<br />
to reunite with each other,<br />
organizer Tim Felton said.<br />
Bryant Fox <strong>of</strong> Alexander<br />
the Great described XRA-Fest<br />
as a community <strong>of</strong> people<br />
who care about music and<br />
want to share it.<br />
“XRA-Fest is usually sold<br />
out,” Fox said. “It’s a really<br />
good time.”<br />
BREA JOHNSON<br />
is a junior in apparel<br />
merchandising and Italian.<br />
I have a riddle for you.<br />
What do the government,<br />
business majors and 70 percent<br />
<strong>of</strong> all straight males<br />
hate? Art.<br />
Th roughout America it<br />
has become less important<br />
through the <strong>years</strong>. True to its<br />
rebellious roots, America is<br />
going in the opposite direction<br />
<strong>of</strong> the world’s most developed<br />
countries.<br />
One country in particular<br />
is far more adept at highlighting<br />
the importance <strong>of</strong><br />
this expressive way <strong>of</strong> communication:<br />
Italy . As a junior<br />
studying Italian abroad at the<br />
University <strong>of</strong> Bologna in Italy,<br />
I’ll be exposed to various<br />
types <strong>of</strong> art that are either not<br />
available, neglected or both<br />
in the United States.<br />
Attending the oldest university<br />
in the world is not<br />
without its perks. You’ll travel<br />
with me as I tour some <strong>of</strong> the<br />
top museums in the country,<br />
attend class at one <strong>of</strong> the<br />
most prestigious universities<br />
in Europe and discover<br />
the city’s most beloved landmarks.<br />
Th e best part? You get<br />
to avoid the increased tuition<br />
costs and dodge an infuriating<br />
exchange rate.<br />
Although I like to think<br />
<strong>of</strong> myself as a capable writer,<br />
I’m not sure what I could do<br />
to fully share the experience<br />
<strong>of</strong> freshly baked Italian bread<br />
or creamy gelato.<br />
As the fourth week <strong>of</strong><br />
BOLOGNA BY BRE<br />
You mean art is still around?<br />
classes comes to a close at<br />
<strong>Indiana</strong> University and students<br />
return to late nights in<br />
Wells Library, I’d like to share<br />
a few details about this statue<br />
I will pass on my walk to the<br />
library when (but more likely,<br />
if) I choose to study.<br />
IU’s Fine Arts Circle<br />
boasts the beloved Showalter<br />
Fountain .<br />
Similarly, Piazza Nettuno<br />
is the home <strong>of</strong> Fontana del<br />
Nettuno , a bronze statue depicting<br />
the Roman sea-ruling<br />
god, Neptune . Th is statue<br />
was designed by Giambologna<br />
, the French -born Jean<br />
<br />
open 7 days a week for info call 855-4337<br />
Boulogne , who studied for<br />
many <strong>years</strong> in Rome .<br />
Best known for pioneering<br />
the Mannerist style, which<br />
focused on the movement<br />
and limbs <strong>of</strong> the body alongside<br />
the emotion <strong>of</strong> the face,<br />
Giambologna eventually became<br />
a sculptor for the powerful<br />
Medici family. Giambologna<br />
works can be seen<br />
around the world, so it is likely<br />
that someone reading this<br />
article has done the ‘re-enact<br />
a statue next to it and take a<br />
photo with your friends’ routine<br />
more than once around<br />
his work.<br />
angles<br />
Cafe & Gift Shop<br />
in the IU Art Museum<br />
Rarely straying from Roman<br />
and Greek gods or ancient<br />
biblical characters, he<br />
made a name for himself in<br />
the sculpting world by being<br />
one <strong>of</strong> the fi rst to focus on the<br />
beauty <strong>of</strong> movement. And he<br />
was one <strong>of</strong> few to perfect it.<br />
Unimpressed? Giambologna<br />
found a way to make<br />
the depiction <strong>of</strong> a woman’s<br />
breasts so real that the papacy<br />
began a surveillance <strong>of</strong> the<br />
statue after dark. Now, why<br />
is it that straight men are so<br />
opposed to art?<br />
— johnsbrl@indiana.edu<br />
Nine hours <strong>of</strong> historic fi lm at the Cinema<br />
BY BRIAN WELK<br />
bwelk@indiana.edu<br />
It is a grueling documentary<br />
about the Holocaust .<br />
It includes no footage<br />
from the time <strong>of</strong> the war.<br />
It is more than nine hours<br />
long.<br />
It is “Shoah, ” and at 11:00<br />
Metavari , Bro. Stephen<br />
and husband&wife will play<br />
Friday at Russian Recording .<br />
Frank Schweikhardt , Black<br />
Cat , Rodeo Ruby Love , Sleeping<br />
Bag and Alexander the<br />
Great will perform Saturday<br />
at the Bishop . Doors open at<br />
8 p.m. both nights.<br />
Frank Schweikhardt and<br />
his eponymous band have<br />
performed at XRA-Fest since<br />
its inception.<br />
“It’s my favorite holiday <strong>of</strong><br />
the year,” Schweikhardt said.<br />
Th e music festival has<br />
grown in number <strong>of</strong> attendees<br />
and excitement since it<br />
began, he said. Friends travel<br />
from afar to reunite and celebrate.<br />
“It’s centered on music,<br />
but it’s about more — our relationships<br />
with people,” Schweikhardt<br />
said.<br />
Like Schweikhardt, Scott<br />
Kirkpatrick <strong>of</strong> Bro. Stephen<br />
has played at every XRA-Fest<br />
a.m. Sunday it will be shown<br />
in the IU Cinema , which may<br />
be the last chance to see it.<br />
IU Cinema Director Jon<br />
Vickers seized the opportunity<br />
to stage a cinematic event<br />
with French director Claude<br />
Lanzmann ’s 1985 fi lm. A<br />
print was re-released for its<br />
25th anniversary last year.<br />
to date. Th is year, his band<br />
will perform four songs live<br />
for the fi rst time. Th ese songs<br />
had been recorded for XRA’s<br />
exclusive Laminar Excursion<br />
CD series .<br />
“For my musical style,<br />
they’re all just personal, refl<br />
ective songs for the most<br />
part,” Kirkpatrick said. “Stylistically,<br />
it changes a lot.”<br />
Bro. Stephen has a record<br />
to be released Nov. 8 and a<br />
full-length album, “Baptist<br />
Girls,” coming out Jan. 25 .<br />
As old and new bands<br />
come together, Alexander the<br />
Great will perform for the last<br />
time.<br />
Since its beginnings six<br />
<strong>years</strong> ago, Fox said, everyone<br />
in the band is at a diff erent<br />
place and ready to move on.<br />
“It’s going to be a big<br />
blow-out celebration,” Fox<br />
said.<br />
Tickets can be purchased<br />
in advance at Landlocked<br />
Despite its troubling subject<br />
matter and length, Vickers<br />
hopes students and community<br />
members alike make<br />
an eff ort to see “Shoah.”<br />
“It is a nine-hour documentary<br />
on the Holocaust.<br />
It’s a tough sell,” Vickers said.<br />
“Th is is probably your one<br />
chance to ever see this in a<br />
MUSICAL<br />
THROWBACK<br />
STILL ON THE RADIO<br />
Bloomington label Crossroads <strong>of</strong> America gives fans fourth XRA-fest<br />
Music , 202 N. Walnut St. , for<br />
$8, which covers both nights.<br />
Th ey can also be picked up at<br />
the door for $5 each night.<br />
While this will be her fi rst<br />
XRA-Fest, sophomore Erika<br />
Fisher has attended Rodeo<br />
Ruby Love’s shows since<br />
her sophomore year <strong>of</strong> high<br />
school.<br />
“Th eir music is very upbeat,<br />
and they have a variety<br />
<strong>of</strong> instruments like the marimba<br />
and trumpet,” Fisher<br />
said. “Every show is diff erent.<br />
I’m really excited to go.”<br />
For the fi rst time this year,<br />
XRA-Fest will also include<br />
live band karaoke at the free<br />
after-party, which will begin<br />
at 11:30 p.m. Friday at the<br />
Bishop. Felton said he’s heard<br />
much excitement about it.<br />
“One <strong>of</strong> my favorite things<br />
is when people new to XRA-<br />
Fest come away feeling that<br />
this is a really positive label,”<br />
Felton said.<br />
BREA JOHNSON | IDS<br />
The Fontana del Nettuno stands in the Piazza Nettuno in Bologna, Italy. The statue represents the Greek God<br />
<strong>of</strong> the Sea Neptune.<br />
public setting. If you are interested<br />
in fi lm or fi lmmaking,<br />
and you want to see a<br />
serious piece <strong>of</strong> documentary<br />
fi lm, this is something you<br />
should see.”<br />
Alvin H. Rosenfeld , an IU<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Jewish Studies<br />
SEE SHOAH, PAGE 15<br />
HAPPENINGS<br />
CALENDAR<br />
Find more<br />
events online.<br />
idsnews.com/happenings<br />
After taking a glance at<br />
the Billboard <strong>100</strong> archives, we<br />
noticed some <strong>of</strong> the songs that<br />
were popular a year ago today<br />
still frequent the radio waves.<br />
Have these hits overstayed<br />
their welcome? Or are they on<br />
their way to timeless fame?<br />
FOOD LIFE<br />
IDS FILE PHOTO<br />
The reuben sandwich is one <strong>of</strong> many diff erent vegetarian options<br />
<strong>of</strong>f ered at The Owlery located on South Rogers Street.<br />
The Owlery:<br />
Where’s the fi sh?<br />
Th e Owlery is an establishment<br />
that defi nes itself<br />
by the clear, orange handwriting<br />
on the door: ‘Vegetarian<br />
Restaurant .’<br />
Because <strong>of</strong> this, diners<br />
shouldn’t be confused.<br />
But when I saw fi sh and<br />
chips <strong>of</strong>f ered on the menu,<br />
I didn’t understand. What<br />
was Th e Owlery hiding behind<br />
that careful orange<br />
sign?<br />
As a vegetarian, I was<br />
skeptical. As a non-meat<br />
eater, I was hesitant.<br />
But with the arrival <strong>of</strong><br />
my meal, the diff erence between<br />
the door’s claim and<br />
the menu’s <strong>of</strong>f ering became<br />
very clear.<br />
T<strong>of</strong>u is bean curd made<br />
with coagulated soy milk,<br />
originally conceptualized in<br />
China.<br />
Th ere are a variety <strong>of</strong><br />
types, and each kind harbors<br />
a rubbery, bland fl avor<br />
that leaves one with the<br />
sensation <strong>of</strong> eating an eraser<br />
(albeit, an eraser with 10<br />
grams <strong>of</strong> protein).<br />
Th e Owlery’s recommended<br />
dish is the fi sh and<br />
chips, and it is served as<br />
fried t<strong>of</strong>u with fresh-cut fries<br />
and coleslaw.<br />
Toby Foster , the joint<br />
owner and chef at Th e Owlery,<br />
attributes the omnivore<br />
categorization <strong>of</strong> his menu<br />
to his customers’ preference<br />
for specifi city.<br />
Following this philosophy,<br />
Th e Owlery prepares<br />
its interpretation <strong>of</strong> fi sh and<br />
chips in a classic English<br />
style.<br />
Th ey batter the bean<br />
curd, season with black<br />
pepper and deep fry to the<br />
point <strong>of</strong> failed recognition:<br />
hopefully the diner will forget<br />
they ordered that t<strong>of</strong>u<br />
curd thing.<br />
Although I still knew I<br />
was eating fi shless fi sh and<br />
chips, Th e Owlery’s skill<br />
with this dish erased my<br />
1. “Love the Way You Lie ,”<br />
Eminem featuring Rihanna<br />
2. “Teenage Dream ,” Katy Perry<br />
3. “Dynamite ,” Taio Cruz<br />
4. “I Like It ,” Enrique Iglesias<br />
5. “DJ Got Us Falling In Love ,”<br />
Usher featuring Pitbull<br />
NONA TEPPER<br />
is a senior in journalism and<br />
English.<br />
association <strong>of</strong> t<strong>of</strong>u with a<br />
plain taste.<br />
Th e eraser-like consistency<br />
<strong>of</strong> t<strong>of</strong>u was transformed<br />
into a tender, silky<br />
fi lling nestled within the<br />
dish’s trademark fried<br />
exterior.<br />
Th e fried batter provided<br />
a necessary contrast to the<br />
s<strong>of</strong>t bean curd and overpowered<br />
its usual bland<br />
taste.<br />
Th e breading was slightly<br />
under-seasoned, yet was<br />
made more fl avorful once<br />
lemon and tartar sauce were<br />
added.<br />
I still understood I was<br />
eating t<strong>of</strong>u, but I momentarily<br />
savored the ingredient<br />
I would normally hesitate to<br />
order.<br />
Th e fi sh and chips were<br />
garnished with fresh-cut<br />
fries and coleslaw.<br />
Both sides were fresh,<br />
but I found the portions a<br />
little big.<br />
Aside from the fi sh and<br />
chips, Th e Owlery <strong>of</strong>f ers<br />
diners a Philly cheesesteak ,<br />
fried chicken dinner and<br />
Reuben sandwich .<br />
All are fi lled with either a<br />
t<strong>of</strong>u, seitan or tempeh meat<br />
substitute, which compensate<br />
for customers’ meatless<br />
preferences.<br />
Foster has been a vegetarian<br />
since his sophomore<br />
year <strong>of</strong> high school, but he<br />
still misses the cooking <strong>of</strong><br />
his youth.<br />
He has not forgotten the<br />
taste <strong>of</strong> chicken strips or the<br />
bite <strong>of</strong> a BLT, and his memories<br />
<strong>of</strong> family dinners have<br />
manifested in Th e Owlery.<br />
But behind the menu’s<br />
orange print, I still was<br />
served a bland taste <strong>of</strong> fried<br />
fi sh without the fi sh.<br />
— ntepper@indiana.edu
Upland Brewing Company Siam House<br />
Yes<br />
Pourhouse Café<br />
Thai<br />
Soma<br />
C<strong>of</strong>fee<br />
House<br />
Thai or<br />
Turkish?<br />
Guinness<br />
Yes<br />
Lennie’s<br />
No<br />
Do you want to<br />
sit outside?<br />
Scotty’s<br />
Craft<br />
beers<br />
Do the<br />
‘rents prefer<br />
Guinness, or<br />
craft beer?<br />
Yogi’s Bar<br />
and Grill<br />
Anatolia’s<br />
Irish<br />
Lion<br />
No<br />
Yes<br />
Turkish<br />
Yes<br />
Wells Library<br />
Yum<br />
Feeling<br />
adventurous?<br />
Friends<br />
Are you going to<br />
be there a<br />
long time?<br />
Yes<br />
Yes<br />
This page is produced by Inside magazine, a publication <strong>of</strong> the<br />
<strong>Indiana</strong> <strong>Daily</strong> <strong>Student</strong>. In addition to planning your social life<br />
for you, we also create a quarterly magazine and online content.<br />
Look for the Dirty Issue on newsstands Oct. 11.<br />
INDIANA DAILY STUDENT | FRIDAY, SEPT. 16, 2011 | IDSNEWS.COM<br />
Gross<br />
Yes<br />
Who are you<br />
Parents eating dinner Date<br />
with?<br />
Are you 21?<br />
Do you like<br />
fried pickles?<br />
Is the game<br />
on?<br />
No<br />
No<br />
No, but I’m hungry.<br />
Need caffeine?<br />
No<br />
Are you doing<br />
research?<br />
Yes<br />
Trojan Horse<br />
No<br />
No<br />
Are you a<br />
cheap date?<br />
DINNER<br />
Scholar’s Inn<br />
STUDYING<br />
No<br />
Check out an interactive version <strong>of</strong> this awesome graphic online<br />
at idsnews.com/inside.<br />
Want Greek?<br />
Kirkwood<br />
Kirkwood or<br />
College Mall?<br />
Yes<br />
Noodles<br />
No<br />
<strong>Indiana</strong> Memorial<br />
Union<br />
Casa Brava<br />
College Mall<br />
No<br />
Do you have<br />
meal points?<br />
Sports<br />
Yes<br />
Cover charge?<br />
Yes<br />
Want<br />
Mexican?<br />
Yes<br />
Brothers<br />
Mr. Hibachi’s<br />
Really? Don’t<br />
expect a<br />
second date.<br />
Gotta get<br />
down on<br />
Friday?<br />
Falafel<br />
No<br />
No<br />
In the mood<br />
for Italian?<br />
Laughing Planet<br />
No<br />
Mediterranean<br />
Show time!<br />
Yes<br />
Mexican<br />
Finch’s Brasserie<br />
Bluebird<br />
Go to a show<br />
or something<br />
more laid-back?<br />
Dancing<br />
Live music<br />
Do you want<br />
dancing,<br />
live music or<br />
hanging out?<br />
Grazie!<br />
Rhino’s<br />
Probably best<br />
to start with<br />
dinner<br />
INSIDE has your<br />
gu guide on what to do<br />
in<br />
Bloomington for<br />
ffun,<br />
fun, fun, fun<br />
Sandwich,<br />
Mediterranean or<br />
Mexican?<br />
Sandwich<br />
Dagwood’s<br />
Laid-back<br />
Yes<br />
Hanging out<br />
Date<br />
Something<br />
different<br />
Content by Caitlin Peterkin, Chrissy Ashack, Biz Carson and Michela Tindera<br />
Design by Biz Carson | Photo courtesy <strong>of</strong> MCT Campus<br />
Just me<br />
Just you<br />
or with friends?<br />
No<br />
Are you 21?<br />
Friends<br />
Fortune Cookie<br />
Sink the Biz at Nick’s<br />
Yes<br />
Drinking games?<br />
Of course<br />
Pizza X<br />
Friends<br />
Dinner<br />
Chinese<br />
Crazy Horse<br />
No<br />
Want to spend<br />
money on...<br />
Date night,<br />
out with friends<br />
or late night<br />
munchies?<br />
NIGHTLIFE<br />
STAYING IN<br />
Chinese, pizza<br />
or wings?<br />
Pizza?<br />
No thanks<br />
Jimmy John’s<br />
Are you hungry?<br />
Yes<br />
Dinner<br />
or dessert?<br />
Pizza<br />
Yes<br />
Beer enthusiast?<br />
Munchies<br />
Delivery<br />
No<br />
Comedy?<br />
Yes<br />
Delivery or out<br />
on the town?<br />
Wings<br />
Rent from<br />
Redbox<br />
Mother Bear’s<br />
Yes<br />
No<br />
Dessert<br />
Kilroy’s on Kirkwood<br />
No<br />
Check the IMU<br />
Comedy Attic<br />
On the town<br />
Hot dog stand<br />
Wings Extreme<br />
No<br />
Ice cream<br />
No<br />
Movies?<br />
Do you own<br />
a car?<br />
Yes<br />
Do you live in the<br />
dorms?<br />
Ice cream or<br />
cookies?<br />
Have any<br />
money left?<br />
Yes<br />
Flicks at the Whitt<br />
IU Cinema<br />
No<br />
Catch up on<br />
shows or movies<br />
from Netfl ix<br />
Yes<br />
Cookies<br />
Jiffy Treet<br />
No<br />
No<br />
Concerts<br />
Yes<br />
Jacobs School <strong>of</strong> Music<br />
Rhino’s<br />
$1 pizza at<br />
Rockits<br />
13<br />
Baked! Rent movies or<br />
games from the<br />
Movies, Music<br />
and More
14<br />
INDIANA DAILY STUDENT | FRIDAY, SEPT. 16, 2011 | IDSNEWS.COM<br />
CLASSIFIEDS<br />
CLASSIFIEDS ADVERTISING POLICIES<br />
AD ACCEPTANCE: All advertising<br />
is subject to approval by the IDS.<br />
HOUSING ADS: All advertised<br />
housing is subject to the Federal<br />
Fair Housing Act. Refer to<br />
www.idsnews.com for more info.<br />
REFUNDS: If you cancel your ad<br />
before the final run date, the IDS<br />
will refund the difference in price.<br />
A minimum <strong>of</strong> one day will be<br />
charged.<br />
ANNOUNCEMENTS<br />
110<br />
220<br />
235<br />
Announcements<br />
What you need to know.<br />
See: http://itsthejob<br />
sstupid.com A New Book.<br />
EMPLOYMENT<br />
General Employment<br />
!BARTENDING! UP TO<br />
$300/day. No exp. nec.<br />
Training avail.<br />
800-965-6520, x.112 .<br />
Earn $<strong>100</strong>0-$3200 a<br />
month to drive our brand<br />
new cars with ads.<br />
www.FreeCarJobs.com<br />
NEED MONEY?<br />
SAVE A LIFE.<br />
Schedule a plasma<br />
donation. For a limited<br />
time, receive $20<br />
on a first donation and<br />
$40 on a second donation<br />
in the same week.<br />
Call 812-334-1405 or visit<br />
www.biolifeplasma.com<br />
to make anappointment.<br />
Parker RealEstate Management<br />
is now hiring!<br />
Looking for outgoing, dependable,<br />
hardworking,<br />
part-time leasing staff for<br />
the Fall and Spring. Flexible<br />
schedule Monday-<br />
Saturday. Must have<br />
own car. Please send<br />
resume and ref. to P.O.<br />
Box 1112 or see us at<br />
parkermgt.com.<br />
<strong>Student</strong>Payouts.com<br />
Paid survey takers<br />
needed in Bloomington.<br />
<strong>100</strong>% FREE to join! Click<br />
on Surveys.<br />
Swim Coach,<br />
part-time.<br />
Immediate opening.<br />
Inquiries/resumes:<br />
lcaswimclub@<br />
comcast.net.<br />
Restaurant & Bar<br />
Dairy Queen in<br />
Bloomington is now hiring.<br />
Apply in person at:<br />
2423 S. Walnut St.<br />
COPY CHANGES: Ad copy can be<br />
changed at no additional charge<br />
when the same number <strong>of</strong> lines<br />
are maintained. If the total<br />
number <strong>of</strong> lines changes, a new ad<br />
will be started at the first day rate.<br />
PAYMENT: All advertising is done<br />
on a cash in advance basis unless<br />
credit has been established. The<br />
IDS accepts Visa, MasterCard,<br />
Discover, American Express, Cash,<br />
Check or Money Order.<br />
SAVE THE DATE<br />
Wednesday, Nov. 9 • IMU<br />
Score a place to live, prizes and more.<br />
It’s the easiest way to shop for housing!<br />
245<br />
305<br />
310<br />
325<br />
Sales<br />
www.idsnews.com/housingfair<br />
ADVERTISING<br />
SALES REPS<br />
Looking for students<br />
interested in<br />
Sales Rep positions.<br />
Sales exp. preferred.<br />
Must be available<br />
to start now and<br />
commit through the<br />
2011-2012 school year.<br />
Stop by IDS <strong>of</strong>fices in<br />
Ernie Pyle Hall,<br />
Room 120, or email<br />
ads@idsnews.com<br />
for a job description<br />
and application.<br />
Deadline to apply is<br />
Friday, September 23rd.<br />
EOE<br />
Apartment Furnished<br />
2-3 BR furnished or<br />
unfurnished.<br />
bradfordplace.info<br />
812-323-7365<br />
Apt. Unfurnished<br />
********************<br />
VarsityVillas.com<br />
VarsityVillas.com<br />
VarsityVillas.com<br />
********************<br />
**Now Leasing**<br />
August 2012<br />
Omega Properties<br />
812-333-0995<br />
OmegaBloomington.com<br />
1 BR, ideal for senior or<br />
grad. Close to campus.<br />
No pets. Parking.<br />
812-332-2520<br />
Hoosier Court Apts.<br />
2-3 BR Apts.<br />
AVAILABLE NOW!<br />
Starting at $825/mo.<br />
812-330-0528<br />
Apartmentsbloomington.com<br />
Regency Court Apts.<br />
2, 3, 4 BR townhomes.<br />
AVAILABLE NOW!<br />
$905-1225/mo.<br />
812-331-1616<br />
Apartmentsbloomington.com<br />
Houses<br />
HOUSING<br />
!!!! Need a<br />
place to Rent?<br />
RentBloomington. NET<br />
**Now Leasing**<br />
August 2012<br />
Omega Properties<br />
812-333-0995<br />
OmegaBloomington.com<br />
1205 S. Lincoln, 3 BR, 2<br />
Bath, Close to campus.<br />
391-2600<br />
3 BR, 1 Bath, Updated,<br />
Apartment, W/D, A/C,<br />
$1050 per month,<br />
Behind TIS on Atwater.<br />
317-507-4050<br />
COPY ERRORS: The IDS must be<br />
notified <strong>of</strong> errors before 3 p.m. the<br />
date <strong>of</strong> the first publication <strong>of</strong> your<br />
ad. The IDS is only responsible for<br />
errors published on the first<br />
insertion date. The IDS will rerun<br />
your ad 1 day when notified before<br />
3 p.m. <strong>of</strong> the first insertion date.<br />
ONLINE POSTING: All classified<br />
line ads are posted online at<br />
www.idsnews.com/classifieds at<br />
no additional charge.<br />
325<br />
Demming Properties<br />
Demming<br />
415<br />
Houses<br />
Cute, pink 5BR/3BA<br />
house, 24-pair shoe<br />
organizer. New<br />
energystar applns.<br />
D/W, W/D, A/C.<br />
Downtown/close to<br />
campus. Off-street prkg.<br />
A shape $525-$575/ea.<br />
Call for waitlist:<br />
812.272.7381.<br />
Demming<br />
4 & 5 BR<br />
upscale houses &<br />
townhouses.<br />
Best locations -<br />
All between campus and<br />
the bars. Remodeled!!!!<br />
Decks, hdwd floors, free<br />
prkg, D/W, W/D & A/C.<br />
216 N. Lincoln<br />
316 E. Seventh<br />
213 N. Grant<br />
416 N. Grant<br />
418 N. Grant<br />
323 N. Grant<br />
223 E. Eighth<br />
314 E. Tenth<br />
316 E. Tenth<br />
318 E. Tenth<br />
320 E. Tenth<br />
411 E. Tenth<br />
718 E. Hunter<br />
409 E. Second<br />
3 BR HOUSE<br />
449 S. Henderson<br />
near Law & Optometry<br />
schools.<br />
Cutest bungalow<br />
in Btown!<br />
Hdwd floors, fireplace,<br />
2 BA, D/W, W/D, A/C<br />
& parking. New kitchen,<br />
lg. round stone proch.<br />
6 BR HOUSE<br />
Grant & 10th<br />
Near Yogi’s & B-school.<br />
Lg. house - 2 living rms,<br />
BR, large deck, parking,<br />
D/W, W/D, A/C.<br />
August 2012-13<br />
Won’t Last Long!<br />
View all properties at:<br />
demmingproperties.com<br />
Call 812-331-7633<br />
Now Renting<br />
August 2012<br />
HPIU.COM<br />
Houses and Apartments.<br />
1/14 Bedrooms.<br />
Close to Campus.<br />
812-333-4748<br />
No Pets Please.<br />
MERCHANDISE<br />
Electronics<br />
Scanner-HP Scan Jet<br />
4200C, like new, with<br />
power & computer cords.<br />
$15. Call 812-929-8996.<br />
To place an ad: go online, call 812-855-0763 or stop by<br />
Ernie Pyle Hall 120 from Monday - Friday 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.<br />
Full advertising policies are available online.<br />
www.idsnews.com/classifi eds<br />
420<br />
435<br />
440<br />
Furniture Clothing<br />
505<br />
Loveseat, chair and<br />
ottoman. $50 for all<br />
or best <strong>of</strong>fer.<br />
You move. 335-1293.<br />
Misc. for Sale<br />
125 gal. aquarium<br />
w/stand and lights.<br />
812-331-7380,<br />
leave message.<br />
2011 Colts Cheerleader<br />
Calendars On Sale.<br />
4th and Rogers at<br />
Charley’s Barber Shop.<br />
Buying/selling portable<br />
window A/C and dorm<br />
refridgerators. Any size.<br />
Cash paid.<br />
812-320-1789<br />
auldoc11@att.net<br />
Custom Greeting Card<br />
Made to Order, $3.00<br />
Amanda 260-388-2418.<br />
Great condition, 15-inch<br />
tires. $70 each<br />
237-8369<br />
Marlboro collectibles for<br />
sale. 812-679-6552<br />
Used golf balls.<br />
$4/dozen; your choice.<br />
VG condition.<br />
danmkirwan@netscape.net<br />
Misc. Wanted<br />
Now Buying<br />
$$ Gold & Silver. $$<br />
333-9300.<br />
465<br />
441<br />
505<br />
Plato’s Closet<br />
pays cash on the spot<br />
for trendy, gently used<br />
clothing.<br />
812-333-4442<br />
Music Equipment<br />
Mitchell MD<strong>100</strong> acoustic<br />
guitar, mint condition,<br />
$95.<br />
812-929-8996 (don’t text)<br />
TRANSPORTATION<br />
Automobiles<br />
‘97 Buick LeSabre<br />
85k miles, V6, 26 mpg.<br />
New battery, belts, oil.<br />
$2500. 219-713-5103<br />
1986 Mercedes Benz<br />
300E class. $2000, runs<br />
but needs work.<br />
679-6642<br />
1998 Nissan Altima<br />
$2200. If interested<br />
call (317)372-9563.<br />
sanmiles@indiana.edu<br />
2001 Nissan Altima.<br />
New tires, brakes,<br />
battery, $7195.<br />
Zinmanlaw@aol.com<br />
2003 Jeep Liberty<br />
74,449 miles. $8,995.<br />
(812) 876-0060<br />
www.bellsautos.com<br />
Automobiles<br />
2009 SCION TC<br />
63,000 miles. $13,000,<br />
obo. 812-988-4110<br />
Honda S2000, 60k<br />
miles, Red and Black interior,<br />
6 speed, $18,000<br />
obo. 317-512-4002.<br />
1 pair cycling gloves, size<br />
XS. Very Good cond. $3.<br />
danmkirwan@netscape.net<br />
Newish Comfort Bike,<br />
$390 invested,firm,<br />
$215, 812-272-1437.<br />
SERVICES<br />
Computer Clubhouse<br />
Serving You Since 1991.<br />
Parts & Service for<br />
Laptops, iMacs, and<br />
Desktops.<br />
Virus/Spyware Removal,<br />
Broken Screens, and<br />
Power Jacks.<br />
812-333-4484<br />
Broken car window?<br />
Call American Eagle.<br />
(812) 332-6400<br />
for fast service!<br />
Pet Sitter Available<br />
E-mail Regina at:<br />
wrightrm@indiana.edu.<br />
Empty fridge?<br />
There are more than<br />
pizza places<br />
in town that deliver.<br />
Find what you’re craving<br />
at the Dining Scene.<br />
idsnews.com/dining<br />
520<br />
665<br />
Bicycles<br />
Misc. Services
» SOCCER<br />
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 10<br />
ahead.<br />
“Right now we’re just focused<br />
on St. Johns and ourselves<br />
— work hard and hopefully<br />
knock another one out,”<br />
Purdie said.<br />
Zavaleta said it will be a<br />
good test for the Hoosiers to<br />
see how they react to travel<br />
when they leave the Midwest<br />
this weekend.<br />
“We haven’t had a plane<br />
trip yet, and we’ll see how we<br />
handle the legs after a road<br />
trip and hostile environments<br />
against good teams,” Zavaleta<br />
said. “So far, we have played<br />
in neutral environments, so I<br />
think it’s a good test for us, and<br />
I think we can do well.”<br />
» GOLF<br />
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 10<br />
hole locations.<br />
Th e Hoosiers placed 13th<br />
at the invitational in 2010<br />
with the same lineup as this<br />
weekend <strong>of</strong> Wright, senior<br />
co-captain David Erdy, junior<br />
Brant Peaper , sophomore<br />
David Mills and junior Corey<br />
Ziedonis .<br />
INDIANA DAILY STUDENT | FRIDAY, SEPT. 16, 2011 | IDSNEWS.COM 15<br />
RALPH AND CHUCK TOMMY GROOMS<br />
KINSEY CONFIDENTIAL THE KINSEY INSTITUTE<br />
Question: I have been raised<br />
in a Christian household, and<br />
have certain views towards sex.<br />
One in particular is abstinence.<br />
I am a virgin, and plan to be<br />
when I marry. However, I also<br />
have no interest in marrying<br />
someone who isn’t a virgin.<br />
What is the best way to learn<br />
about my girlfriend’s past without<br />
being too confrontational?<br />
Answer: People have different<br />
views and values about<br />
sexuality and it can be helpful<br />
for men and women to spend<br />
time thinking about the values<br />
that are important to them.<br />
You happen to place value on<br />
abstinence until marriage as do<br />
some other men and women.<br />
As you may know, scientifi c<br />
research shows that – at least<br />
in the United States – the vast<br />
majority <strong>of</strong> men and women<br />
choose to have sexual intercourse<br />
before they get married,<br />
if indeed they ever get married.<br />
This doesn’t mean that “everybody<br />
is doing it,” as the saying<br />
goes.<br />
Rather, I point that out simply<br />
so that you have realistic expectations.<br />
If dating or marrying<br />
a woman who has never had<br />
sex before is important to you,<br />
then you may fi nd it helpful<br />
to date with this in mind. And<br />
while I wouldn’t recommend<br />
being confrontational, it may be<br />
helpful to you and to those you<br />
date to be honest and direct<br />
such as by saying early on while<br />
dating that you are a virgin and<br />
» CROSS<br />
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 10<br />
enough for us to come out<br />
on top in the team standings<br />
and at the same time<br />
give us a chance to gain<br />
experience we need and<br />
grow.”<br />
Junior Samantha Ginther<br />
said with the group <strong>of</strong><br />
girls who are running, she<br />
is convinced IU will compete<br />
well. Ginther said she<br />
expects the team’s top seven<br />
runners to place in the<br />
top 15 overall and achieve<br />
a team win.<br />
“We’ve been training all<br />
summer, and we’re defi -<br />
nitely ready to see what our<br />
legs can do,” she said.<br />
Erdy also emphasized the<br />
team’s need to practice its<br />
short game after last week’s<br />
performance.<br />
“We need to make more<br />
putts and work on getting up<br />
and down more <strong>of</strong>ten,” Erdy<br />
said. “We play this course<br />
quite a bit. It’ll be challenging,<br />
but we have a good team and<br />
can play well.”<br />
Kinsey Confi dential<br />
is a service <strong>of</strong> The Kinsey Institute<br />
Sexuality Information Service for<br />
<strong>Student</strong>s at IU. Visit the web site<br />
at kinseyconfi dential.org or e-mail<br />
them at kisiss@indiana.edu.<br />
hope to date or marry a woman<br />
who is also a virgin and shares<br />
your values. At the very least,<br />
this conversation might come<br />
up naturally as things begin to<br />
progress physically between<br />
you.<br />
There are many ways to go<br />
about this. Some people who<br />
hold certain religious values<br />
fi nd it helpful to meet other<br />
single men or women through<br />
their place or worship. Perhaps<br />
getting involved in your church<br />
would be one way to meet<br />
women who may be more likely<br />
to share your values and perhaps<br />
more likely to be virgins.<br />
Of course, many Christian<br />
women and men have sex<br />
without being married so this is<br />
not a guarantee and still something<br />
you may want to discuss.<br />
Being clear about your values<br />
in online dating pr<strong>of</strong>i les may<br />
also help to narrow your dating<br />
pool to those you are interested<br />
in dating.<br />
When you talk to women<br />
about this issue, try to frame<br />
this in terms <strong>of</strong> your needs and<br />
interests rather than making<br />
them feel bad, shameful or sinful<br />
if they have values or sexual<br />
interests other than yours. Just<br />
as you probably don’t want to<br />
be made to feel diff erent or<br />
» SHOAH<br />
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12<br />
teaching a course about Hitler<br />
and Anne Frank , spoke<br />
to the fi lm’s overwhelming<br />
might.<br />
“It is among the most powerful<br />
fi lms ever made on the<br />
Holocaust,” Rosenfeld said.<br />
“It grabs you by the throat and<br />
doesn’t let go.”<br />
He agrees with Vickers<br />
that “Shoah” is an experience<br />
worth enduring, as it serves<br />
as a heart-wrenching historical<br />
document for the Jewish<br />
community.<br />
“Th e trauma <strong>of</strong> those <strong>years</strong><br />
» RECEIVERS<br />
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 9<br />
be in our one tight end set<br />
and (senior tight end) Max<br />
(Dedmond) will complement<br />
him.”<br />
Both Duwyce Wilson and<br />
Bolser played in extremely<br />
limited roles in the season<br />
opener against Ball State ,<br />
but both made increasingly<br />
signifi cant contributions<br />
during the Virginia game .<br />
embarrassed for your decision<br />
to abstain from sex, it would be<br />
kind to approach women and<br />
their choices in compassionate<br />
ways as well.<br />
I would also like to suggest a<br />
few things for you to consider.<br />
I would encourage you to consider<br />
whether it is absolutely important<br />
to you that your future<br />
wife be a virgin and, if so, why<br />
that is important. Some women<br />
have previously had sexual<br />
intercourse and then later<br />
decided that they didn’t want<br />
to have intercourse again until<br />
marriage – a sort <strong>of</strong> “born again<br />
virgin”. Other women have had<br />
vaginal intercourse against their<br />
will. Some people have chosen<br />
to have sex, and enjoyed it, and<br />
might still make excellent, loving<br />
partners for you.<br />
Scientifi c research has also<br />
demonstrated that people have<br />
diff erent defi nitions about what<br />
it means to be a virgin. Some<br />
people say they are a virgin if<br />
they have had oral sex, but not<br />
vaginal sex. Others say they are<br />
a virgin if they have had anal<br />
sex, but not vaginal sex. Still,<br />
other people feel that a virgin<br />
is someone who has not had<br />
oral, vaginal or anal sex. This<br />
begs the question: to what standard<br />
<strong>of</strong> virginity do you hold<br />
yourself? And to what standard<br />
would you hold a woman? Also,<br />
are these the same standards?<br />
If not, why not? Choosing<br />
someone to date and marry are<br />
important decisions and we<br />
certainly wish you the best.<br />
Find what you’re craving<br />
at idsnews.com/dining.<br />
The crossword solution is in today’s classifi ed section.<br />
has not been diminished in<br />
the case <strong>of</strong> numbers <strong>of</strong> these<br />
people,” Rosenfeld said. “It’s<br />
probably as up-close and cinematically<br />
truthful as fi lms<br />
about the Holocaust can get.<br />
It’s unsparing in its depiction<br />
<strong>of</strong> those crimes. It doesn’t<br />
have one second <strong>of</strong> sentimentalizing<br />
or romanticizing.<br />
Th ere’s nothing commercializing<br />
about the fi lm. It just<br />
goes right to the heart <strong>of</strong> the<br />
catastrophe.”<br />
Th e fi lm is being shown as<br />
part <strong>of</strong> the ongoing Th emester<br />
series, “Making War, Making<br />
Peace,” within the College<br />
<strong>of</strong> Arts and Sciences.<br />
Wilson led the team with<br />
60 receiving yards and a<br />
touchdown .<br />
Although Bolser’s impact<br />
wasn’t seen on the box score,<br />
Coach Wilson noticed his effort.<br />
“(Bolser) did well last<br />
game,” Kevin Wilson said.<br />
“He didn’t have catches, but<br />
he did, from a blocking perspective,<br />
(play) extremely<br />
hard. I think he had about<br />
half a dozen ... knockdowns<br />
BREWSTER ROCKIT: SPACE GUY! TIM RICKARD<br />
NON SEQUITUR WILEY<br />
JENNA AND RILEY JEFF HARRIS<br />
BEST IN SHOW PHIL JULIANO<br />
10 is the easiest day, 0 the most<br />
challenging.<br />
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 )<br />
Today is a 7. Keep your objective<br />
in mind, and prioritize actions.<br />
Make a change for the better.<br />
The right words come easily<br />
now. Dare to talk to strangers.<br />
Listen and learn.<br />
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22 )<br />
Today is an 8. Financial planning<br />
comes easily now. It may be the<br />
perfect time to complete a<br />
project or to handle<br />
procrastinated paperwork. Get<br />
it done, and treat yourself to a<br />
movie.<br />
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 )<br />
Today is a 9. You’re very<br />
persuasive now. Go for an<br />
income increase. You’re<br />
becoming more interesting to<br />
another. Call a distant friend to<br />
renew a connection that<br />
benefi ts both.<br />
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 )<br />
Today is an 8. Entering a busy<br />
two-day phase. Make a list and<br />
check it twice to avoid<br />
forgetting anything. Combine<br />
your muscle and your brain for<br />
extreme productivity. Then<br />
enjoy a great meal.<br />
“To this day, though, we’re still asking major<br />
questions as to why.”<br />
- Alan H. Rosenfeld, Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Jewish Studies<br />
English and theater and<br />
drama Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Steve Watt<br />
said he is pleased to have the<br />
fi lm associated with classes<br />
about the war and Holocaust.<br />
“It is an initiative for which<br />
we have lots <strong>of</strong> wonderful<br />
partners across campus,” Watt<br />
said. “We have a lot <strong>of</strong> great<br />
partners both within the University<br />
and within the community.”<br />
But Rosenfeld said he feels<br />
“Shoah” can serve more than<br />
and whatnot.”<br />
Coach Wilson stressed<br />
the importance that tight<br />
ends are going to play as the<br />
season moves along and said<br />
they are <strong>of</strong>ten an overlooked<br />
part <strong>of</strong> the <strong>of</strong>f ense by fans.<br />
“Th e line gets all the credit<br />
and blame. Th e quarterback<br />
gets all the credit and<br />
blame,” Coach Wilson said.<br />
“But those complementary<br />
pieces really help them or<br />
hurt them, and we need our<br />
Nancy 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 />
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19 )<br />
Today is an 8. Complete a<br />
contract or other document. An<br />
investment in your home is<br />
okay now. Others fi nd you<br />
charming, so get out and play<br />
with your friends. Include great<br />
music.<br />
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18 )<br />
Today is a 7. You and your<br />
partner have more in common<br />
than you realize. This<br />
relationship sustains you,<br />
especially now. Share the love<br />
and your silly senses <strong>of</strong> humor.<br />
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20 )<br />
Today is a 7. There may be a<br />
tendency to be overwhelmed<br />
today. Don’t worry about the<br />
future. It’s really always now.<br />
Take one step at a time, and<br />
you’ll be surprised at how<br />
quickly it goes.<br />
Aries (March 21-April 19 )<br />
Today is a 9. Exert power gently,<br />
with charm and persuasion. It’s<br />
a lucky moment for love. Ask for<br />
what you want. Concentrate on<br />
just academic purposes.<br />
“We know a great deal<br />
about the Holocaust in terms<br />
<strong>of</strong> what happened, where it<br />
happened, who caused it,<br />
who the victims were and<br />
how they were victimized,”<br />
Rosenfeld said. “To this day,<br />
though, we’re still asking major<br />
questions as to why. Th is<br />
fi lm will raise those questions<br />
in you, and it may just<br />
help the students get some<br />
answers.”<br />
tight end group to keep coming<br />
along.”<br />
As they both return to the<br />
lineup, the pair <strong>of</strong> sophomore<br />
receiving threats look to make<br />
the IU <strong>of</strong>f ense — headed in<br />
part by Co-<strong>of</strong>f ensive Coordinator<br />
Rod Smith — more<br />
potent.<br />
“We’re starting to get a<br />
mix <strong>of</strong> guys healthy again,”<br />
Smith said. “Hopefully we<br />
can get a little bit more pop to<br />
our <strong>of</strong>f ense.”<br />
serving others, and your own<br />
needs get met.<br />
Taurus (April 20-May 20 )<br />
Today is a 9. Clear out space,<br />
and grow something beautiful.<br />
Focus on the love all around to<br />
grow it faster. It’s okay to have<br />
more than you need. Throw a<br />
party to celebrate.<br />
Gemini (May 21-June 21 )<br />
Today is an 8. A new revelation<br />
helps you understand a puzzle.<br />
You’re surrounded by<br />
abundance at home. If you don’t<br />
have what you need, someone<br />
nearby does, and folks want to<br />
help.<br />
Cancer (June 22-July 22 )<br />
Today is an 8. You’re earning<br />
generous rewards. Discover,<br />
study and explore something<br />
familiar to deepen your<br />
understanding. Distant<br />
connections contribute. Listen<br />
to a friend about romance.<br />
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22 )<br />
Today is an 8. Assume more<br />
responsibility for the next two<br />
days. Success can be yours.<br />
Remember that love is the most<br />
important part, as you go ahead<br />
and step up to the next level.
16 INDIANA DAILY STUDENT | FRIDAY, SEPT. 16, 2011 | IDSNEWS.COM<br />
» ALBERS<br />
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 9<br />
trusts me and all the other receivers<br />
out there.”<br />
Few people were talking<br />
about Wilson before the season.<br />
I know I wasn’t.<br />
He played sparingly in the<br />
season opener against Ball<br />
State because <strong>of</strong> an injury , but<br />
he was key (fi ve catches , 60<br />
yards , one TD ) in the Hoosiers’<br />
attempted comeback against<br />
Virginia last Saturday .<br />
Wilson isn’t a player that<br />
gets a lot <strong>of</strong> attention. His reserved<br />
personality doesn’t demand<br />
it. But his play against<br />
the Cavaliers opened a lot <strong>of</strong><br />
eyes — including mine. Maybe<br />
Wilson isn’t the third option<br />
after all. Maybe a guy that<br />
opened the season absent<br />
from the depth chart will thrive<br />
in his new role.<br />
“I’ve just seen him grow a<br />
lot as a player,” Belcher said.<br />
“He’s been out there making<br />
plays since he got here. It defi -<br />
nitely paid <strong>of</strong>f on Saturday. I’m<br />
really proud <strong>of</strong> him.”<br />
If the Hoosiers are going<br />
to compete with the Big Ten’s<br />
top teams this season, Wilson<br />
must continue to grow as a receiver.<br />
He can’t be inconsistent<br />
like young players tend to be.<br />
He can’t have seven catches<br />
one week and two the next.<br />
Chances are, Wilson is<br />
going to get more opportunities<br />
like the ones against<br />
Virginia if teams start trying<br />
to take Belcher away on the<br />
opposite side.<br />
Belcher said teams haven’t<br />
played him any diff erently<br />
than they did last year, but he<br />
knows it’s coming.<br />
» FOOTBALL<br />
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 9<br />
SC State entered the season<br />
as the preseason favorite<br />
in the MEAC after winning<br />
the conference crown the<br />
past three seasons.<br />
“South Carolina State will<br />
come in as athletic and fast<br />
and solid on defense as most<br />
folks we are going to play,”<br />
Wilson said. “Th ey have a<br />
running-style <strong>of</strong>f ense and a<br />
punt returner who averages<br />
22 yards a pop. We don’t have<br />
22 yards total in punt return<br />
yardage this year, and their<br />
guy is averaging 22 yards a<br />
Wilson has to be ready<br />
when it does.<br />
“I defi nitely feel like (I can<br />
put the team on my shoulders),”<br />
Wilson said. “So does<br />
everybody else on the team.<br />
If they double Damarlo, K<strong>of</strong>i<br />
feels like he can put the team<br />
on his shoulders. I feel like<br />
that. Even the freshmen feel<br />
like that. If it comes down to<br />
that, we’ll defi nitely be ready.”<br />
Wilson still has plenty <strong>of</strong><br />
room to improve. He makes<br />
spectacular catches on a regular<br />
basis, but he sometimes<br />
fails to make easier ones. His<br />
6-foot-3-inch , 196-pound<br />
frame is a little slight to be a<br />
featured player in the Big Ten.<br />
And he’s sometimes struggled<br />
to stay healthy.<br />
But all <strong>of</strong> a sudden, Wilson<br />
looks like the next big thing<br />
for the IU <strong>of</strong>f ense. Maybe<br />
he’s even the next Damarlo<br />
Belcher.<br />
“Hey, he could be,” Belcher<br />
said, with Wilson listening in.<br />
“But he may want to be his<br />
own man and make his own<br />
footprints for himself, like I<br />
did. We’ll see.”<br />
PREDICTION<br />
Th e Hoosiers have been<br />
close in each <strong>of</strong> the fi rst two<br />
weeks, but they are 0-2 . Th is<br />
time around, they’ll fi nally win<br />
in a big way to earn Kevin Wilson<br />
his fi rst victory as a head<br />
coach.<br />
Look for Dusty Kiel and/or<br />
Tre Roberson to get a look at<br />
QB if it’s a blowout in the second<br />
half.<br />
IU 34, South Carolina State<br />
14<br />
—jmalbers@indiana.edu<br />
pop. It will be a challenge,<br />
and we better be up for it or<br />
we will be embarrassed.”<br />
Perhaps the greatest difference<br />
between the Bulldogs<br />
and other teams IU<br />
faces this season is their lack<br />
<strong>of</strong> size. Th e SC State starting<br />
defensive line averages about<br />
263 pounds.<br />
“Th ey might be smaller,<br />
but to me it looks like they’ve<br />
got some strength to them,”<br />
Wilson said. “Th ey are not<br />
going to be 300 pounds<br />
across the front and be<br />
this big wall that you can’t<br />
move, but they are going to<br />
MARK FELIX | IDS<br />
Wide receiver Duwyce Wilson runs the ball against Virginia on Saturday at Memorial Stadium. The Hoosiers lost to Virginia 31-34.<br />
be strong. Th ey may not be<br />
the most overwhelming size<br />
guys, but they are going to<br />
have strength and they are<br />
also going to play with some<br />
speed. Th ey’ve got speed on<br />
the front and also on the back<br />
end.”<br />
SC State employs their defensive<br />
speed by frequently<br />
switching between a multitude<br />
<strong>of</strong> formations and necessitating<br />
a week <strong>of</strong> heavy<br />
fi lm study for the IU <strong>of</strong>f ense.<br />
“Th ey’re all pretty small<br />
guys, but they move a lot.<br />
Th ey stunt a lot,” junior center<br />
Will Matte said. “For<br />
Redefining what a smartphone should be.<br />
defenses like that, you just<br />
watch fi lm and pick out when<br />
and where they’re going to<br />
move. Th ey don’t really have<br />
big interior guys, but they<br />
have a lot <strong>of</strong> defensive formations<br />
and blitzes. Every snap,<br />
it’s almost like they’re moving<br />
to a diff erent gap.”<br />
Th e Bulldog secondary<br />
features safety Christian<br />
Th ompson , a former Auburn<br />
Tiger who leads the defense<br />
with 15.5 tackles and a pair <strong>of</strong><br />
interceptions .<br />
However, the Hoosier receiver<br />
corps is bolstered by<br />
the reemergence <strong>of</strong> sopho-<br />
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more wide receiver Duwyce<br />
Wilson , who caught a touchdown<br />
pass last week against<br />
Virginia. He joins a group<br />
that already included senior<br />
Damarlo Belcher and sophomore<br />
K<strong>of</strong>i Hughes.<br />
“With Duwyce and Damarlo,<br />
you have to feel like<br />
you’re playing at a high<br />
level,” Off ensive Co-coordinator<br />
and Wide Receivers<br />
Coach Kevin Johns said.<br />
“K<strong>of</strong>i Hughes is really playing<br />
good, solid football for us.<br />
Right now we feel good about<br />
them and bringing the freshmen<br />
along and some <strong>of</strong> those<br />
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younger guys.”<br />
Kevin Wilson said he believes<br />
that, despite the Bulldogs<br />
playing in a lower classifi<br />
cation, they match up fairly<br />
well against the Hoosiers.<br />
He also said they utilize<br />
their athletes in such a way to<br />
be competitive with anyone.<br />
“Th ey know that they are<br />
going to have good enough<br />
athletes that they don’t try to<br />
over-coach them,” Kevin Wilson<br />
said. “Th ey are very solid<br />
and solid in their structure.<br />
You watch their kids, and<br />
they cut it loose and play really<br />
good football.”<br />
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additional AT&T services or other requirements may apply for discount eligibility. Discounts may not be combined. Actual service discount varies monthly depending on your employer’s aggregate volume <strong>of</strong> qualified charges. Offer subject to change. Additional conditions and restrictions<br />
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