Friday, March 24, 2017

Page 1

Friday, March 24, 2017

Little 500 qualifications preview, page 7

IDS Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com

Rappers will take stage for Little 500

For some clients, Meals on Wheels deliveries provide their only meals. But under proposed federal budget cuts, they could be left with

Jeremih and iLoveMakonnen will perform April 20

empty plates.

From IDS reports

A pair of high-profile singerrappers — Jeremih and iLoveMakonnen — will perform at this year’s Little 500 concert. The concert will be April 20 at the IU Auditorium and will kick off the Little 500 weekend before races start the following Friday. Union Board representatives confirmed the lineup Thursday afternoon. Earlier in the day, a Snapchat geofilter with the artists’ names appeared for people who used the app in the Indiana Memorial Union. Jeremih, who will headline the show, released his critically acclaimed third album, “Late Nights,” in 2015. That record featured hits including “Don’t Tell ‘Em,” “Planes” and “Oui.” Atlanta-based artist iLoveMakonnen made his name with the 2014 single “Tuesday” and its subsequent remix by Drake. He released mixtapes “Drink More Water 6” and “Red Trap Dragon” last year. Student pre-sale tickets will be available Friday using a promotional code, which will be sent out to student emails. General ticket sales begin March 31. Jack Evans

IUSA hopefuls wrap up election IDSNEWS.COM SOCIAL MEDIA | The IDS will continue coverage on the IUSA election during the weekend. The voting window closed 10 p.m. Thursday. Follow us on Facebook or Twitter at @idsnews for updates.

REBECCA MEHLING | IDS PHOTO ILLUSTRATION DESIGN BY LANIE MARESH | IDS

By Molly Grace mograce@indiana.edu | @MolloGrace

T

wo volunteers loaded up the trunk of a Toyota Corolla on a Wednesday morning in March with a container full of hot meals to be handed out to the recipients of Bloomington’s Meals on Wheels program. Bill Milroy and Pat Patterson do this together once a month. Bloomington Meals on Wheels provides two meals, one hot and one cold, a day to people who can’t cook for themselves. The majority of its clients are older than 65. With a new administration in the White House, some of these clients may have to worry about the future of their daily meal deliveries. In his recent budget proposal, President Trump suggested cuts to the Department of Health and Human Services, which has people who care about the Meals on Wheels programs worried. Meals on Wheels organizations across the country partly rely on funding from the Older Americans Act Nutrition Programs, which is run by HHS. It is currently unclear how OAANP will be affected by the cuts. However, the almost

18-percent decrease in HHS spending, as well as the gutting of the Community Development Block Grant program, has people spooked. Bloomington Meals on Wheels Director Kathy Romy said she thinks the budget cuts are short-sighted. “It saves the taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars every year from the health care industry,” she said about the program. Mick Mulvaney, Trump’s budget director recently made comments at a press conference that Meals on Wheels is “just not showing any results.” This bothered Romy, she said. “Nothing could be further from the truth,” she said. Meals on Wheels does a lot more than feed people, Romy said. It keeps people in their homes and out of hospitals or expensive nursing homes and provides a sense of security and daily socialization for its clients. This is very important for the elderly population, she said. Meals on Wheels Bloomington currently serves more than 60 clients and SEE CUTS PAGE 6

Meals on Wheels cuts breakdown Trump proposed cuts to the Department of Health and Human Services which runs the

Older Americans Act Nutrition Programs that helps fund

Meals on Wheels throughout the country

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL

IU defeats SMU, advances to WNIT quarterfinals By Josh Eastern

By Jesse Naranjo jlnaranj@indiana.edu | @jesselnaranjo

Campaigns took to tabling and handing out merchandise one last time Thursday, the last day of the 2017 IU Student Association election. Each ticket needed to reserve campaign spots on the days of the election, though tabling had taken place for weeks leading up to it this year. Engage’s presidential candidate, junior Michelle Long, was handing out fliers Thursday afternoon by the Ora L. Wildermuth Intramural Center. She said after weeks of tabling and outreach, her campaign was finally seeing the results it was looking for. It secured endorsements from the Muslim Student Association, College Democrats at IU and a personal endorsement from current IUSA President Sara Zaheer. Long said she was glad people were becoming more aware of IUSA’s role on campus. “I’m tired, but things are coming together really beautifully,” Long said. Freshman Gabriella Brannock stood next to Long and interacted with passing students. Brannock said she was originally contacted by another campaign for her marketing and outreach skills relating to design. “They approached me for my design skills,” Brannock said. “And I had to google what IUSA was because I had never heard of it, and I feel like that’s a big problem amongst freshmen.” She eventually chose to work with Engage because of its sustainability policy. She said climate change and campus recycling SEE IUSA PAGE 6

jeastern@indiana.edu | @JoshEastern

IU Coach Teri Moren said it wasn’t one of IU’s cleanest offensive performances. The Hoosiers knew the SMU Mustangs wanted to play slow, and that was the case early on. The Mustangs average about 58 points per game, and IU likes to get out and run and put points up on the scoreboard. To start off, it was a slow game. As it progressed, the Hoosiers started to increase the tempo and get the pace more in their favor. Behind a balanced scoring effort, IU advanced to the Women’s National Invitation Tournament quarterfinals with a 64-44 win against SMU on Thursday night at Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall. “Sometimes you just have to win ugly, and I thought that was the case tonight,” Moren said. “It didn’t seem like we had any kind of rhythm in the first quarter but had moments where we scored the ball when we needed to.” From the opening tip, things felt a bit off. No one won the tip. It just went out of bounds after it was bounced around between IU senior center Jenn Anderson and SMU junior forward Alicia Froling. From there, it wasn’t much better. SMU had a tough go of it from the field, and so did IU. The Hoosiers closed the first quarter on a 10-0 run. It was a little bit better for IU, but the Hoosiers were still just shooting 38.5 percent and had six turnovers. “We did get stuck there a little slower with their pace, but then we said, ‘That’s not our game,’” IU senior guard Karlee McBride said. “We got back and started hitting people in transition, hitting shots,

64-44 IDSNEWS.COM PAGE 4 | Defense was key in IU’s WNIT victory and it got us back into our groove.” Nothing exemplified the transition game more than McBride’s bucket with 1:45 left to play. It was her and junior guard Tyra Buss. They had a Mustang defender backpedaling, about to fall down. Buss and McBride passed the ball back and forth before the senior laid it in. The crowd was on its feet and about as loud as it had been all night. “Whoever was open at the end, whoever was closest to the basket was going to definitely shoot it,” McBride said. “Our fans are amazing right now, and I could hear the crowd roaring, and that got me really excited.” The Hoosiers eventually were able to put away the Mustangs as the game went on. IU led by eight after one, 10 after two, 16 after three and 20 when the final buzzer sounded. It wasn’t as if there was one player that was far and away the best, either. McBride led IU with 17 points, and junior forward Amanda Cahill was the only other scorer in double figures with 10. Buss, Anderson and senior guard Alexis Gassion had eight each. Off the bench, freshman guard Ria Gulley had seven, and sophomore forward Kym Royster had six to keep up her good play in the WNIT. “I try to remind our guys that they don’t have to do anything special,” Moren said. “All they have to do is play within the confines of what we’re trying to do, our offen-

BOBBY GODDIN | IDS

Senior center Jenn Anderson jumps for the tip-off against SMU on Thursday in Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall. Anderson had eight points and six rebounds in the Hoosiers’ 64-44 win against the Mustangs in the third round of the Women’s National Invitation Tournament.

sive system.” With the win, IU will be host to a quarterfinal matchup in the WNIT at 2:00 p.m. Sunday at Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall. That game will be against the Villanova Wild-

cats, which knocked off the James Madison Dukes in overtime of their round of 16 matchup. Moren said she was quite pleased the Hoosiers SEE BASKETBALL, PAGE 6


Indiana Daily Student

2

NEWS

Friday, March 24, 2017 idsnews.com

Editors Dominick Jean and Cody Thompson | campus@idsnews.com Sarah Gardner and Melanie Metzman | region@idsnews.com

COURTESY PHOTO

IU-Kokomo Chancellor Susan Sciame-Giesecke speaks during the 2016 Education-to-Employment Convergence at the IU-Purdue University Indianapolis Campus Center. The forum was designed to focus on how the state can build a stronger workforce by developing college graduates.

Educators set to meet employers From IDS reports

College graduates have a habit of leaving the state when they earn their degrees. Statewide educators and employers are set to meet next month to discuss strategies on curbing this habit. According to an IU press release, statewide representatives from the higher education, industry, nonprofit, government and economic and workforce development sectors were invited to attend the third annual Education-to-Employment Convergence forum at IU-Purdue University Indianapolis. Attendants will have an opportunity to discuss career readiness of Indiana college graduates. Joe Carley, the associate director for economic development for the IU Office of the Vice President for Engagement, is one of the organizers and said he was positive about the impact the conference would have on students. “Our goals are to advance conversations that will help employers and educators better understand each other’s needs and to identify opportunities for partnerships that will promote career readiness,” Carley said in the release. According to the release, topics of the 2017 E2E Convergence include innovating partnerships between employers and educators to develop career-ready students, training and integrating recent college graduates into the workforce and incentivizing college graduates to stay in Indiana. Carley said part of the

problem with retaining students in Indiana is the lack of necessary jobs and industries. “To some degree, Indiana does not have some of the industry opportunities that a student may be interested in,” Carley said. For example, he said Indiana has a strong technology sector, but it is still relatively small compared to cities like San Francisco or Austin, Texas. He said students need to have better opportunities for growth in Indiana. “We need to better align our education programming with the industry needs, and that’s the point of the conference,” Carley said. Although graduates leaving the state is an issue, Carley said there is also an issue of too many Hoosiers without necessary education. He said Indiana struggles to fill its workforce with workers with bachelor’s degrees. He said this trend makes Indiana and its workforce less inviting to employers. Carley said there are a few ways to put together activities and initiatives that help students. He said some activities that could help students are creating new courses and degrees, promoting earlier career counseling and bringing employers to campus to guest lecture or serve in an advisory role. The event will take place from 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. April 20 in the IU-Purdue University Indianapolis Campus Center 450, 420 University Blvd. Reservations are available through an RSVP form online. Larmie Sanyon

COURTESY PHOTO

Kabwende Primary School students in Rwanda display the “The World is Our Home.” The anthology is a collection of stories written by Bloomington and Rwandan elementary school students.

IU nonprofit opens library By Rachel Leffers rleffers@indiana.edu | @rachelleffers

Most American elementary schools have libraries and playgrounds, but for Rwandan students at Kabwende Primary School, their library is an old classroom and their playground is a field, where they play soccer with balls made of banana leaves, rope and plastic bags. Books & Beyond, a nonprofit IU organization, will open a library and playground for students at Kabwende this summer. Director Vera Marinova said she hopes this will free students’ minds and increase creativity and engagement in the classroom. “I think that because of the current political climate, it is important to see that IU has these kinds of organizations that are very inclusive,” Marinova said. The nonprofit organization collaborates with local elementary school children at the Project School and Harmony School by having six workshops throughout the year that teach them to be authors. Nancy Uslan, the program’s visionary, said she envisioned the program after her first trip to Rwanda in 2005 because, as a Jew, she said she felt a connection to the Rwandan people who had experienced the country’s genocide. “I believed by developing and providing a program

whereby one of the missions was to learn how to appreciate diversity through communication and relationship building, Books & Beyond could, in some small way, contribute its part toward helping history from repeating itself,” Uslan said. These stories, along with stories written by Rwandan students, are then published in an anthology, “The World Is Our Home.” Every year, there is a new volume, in which the stories are published sideby-side in both English and Kinyarwanda. In 2015, Books & Beyond started collecting materials to fill the library through local book drives. “This is a unique situation in Rwanda,” Uslan said. “Libraries — they’re nonexistent there. Having a library in a school is extraordinarily unique.” Although this library opening demonstrates the program’s progress, Marinova said it is only the beginning of a five- to ten-year plan. Because libraries are uncommon, IU students who travel to Rwanda teach the children how to use library resources. She said the collection of books is planned to expand, so students have access to books not only in English, but also in French and Kinyarwanda, the country’s predominant languages. To open the playground this summer, Books & Beyond

is collaborating with Play360. Play360 is a local organization, directed by IU Interior Design Lecturer Jonathan Racek, which helps organizations build international playgrounds. Marinova said the playground will come with a curriculum, so Rwandan teachers are able to incorporate the facility into their teaching. Because it can be difficult to keep young students focused throughout the school day, she said they’ve always had kinesthetic lessons increase engagement. “We’ve always struggled with creativity for writing the stories for our books in classrooms,” she said. ”It’s somewhat difficult to get those young students to stop being as nervous, as shy and to get more creative.” Earlier this month, Books & Beyond received the 2017 Best Practices in International Education Global Partnership Award from the National Association for Student Personnel Administrator International Education Knowledge Community, giving them national recognition for their work in the Bloomington and Kinigi communities. On April 4, the program will have Visions of Rwanda, its biggest event of the year. It aims to educate the Bloomington community about the positive aspects of Rwanda, while still remembering its past.

Marinova said many people around the world have a preconceived idea of Rwanda, which she said is possibly due to the Rwandan genocide. “Events like the Holocaust, the genocide are important to be remembered and learned from,” Marinova said. “Yet I think Rwanda is trying to create a new image of itself and be remembered for other, more positive aspects.” The event will showcase drawings that Rwanda elementary school children have drawn based on what they have learned about the country, as well as the stories they have written for “The World is our Home.” The event will auction off Rwandan items and provide Rwandan food. Assistant professor of political science Cyanne Loyle, who has studied the Rwandan genocide, will be the keynote speaker. Although Books & Beyond has received national recognition, those involved in the program are still striving to expand the program globally. Marinova said she has been contacted by elementary schools across the globe, but recognizes expansion would require resources the program does not currently have. “We’re dreaming, and we’re not saying no to this dream,” she said, “If time and energy and resources permit, I will be so very happy to make sure that happens. I’m working on it.”

Most area six residents sign petition against annexation By Emily Ernsberger emelerns@indiana.edu | @emilyerns

Though many of the 15,000 new potential residents of Bloomington are not pleased to be considered for annexation, one area has taken the biggest step to stop the process. At Wednesday’s city council meeting, area six resident and leader of the Area Six No Annexation Coordinating Group Scott Faris said he filed a petition with the city government for area six not to be annexed. “We respectfully request that our signed petition now become a matter of record and that area six somehow be removed from the annexation proposal and voted down by the city council,” Faris said. An area only needs 65 percent of its property

owners to petition against annexation for it to be considered by the city government. Faris said his petition has 125 signatures, which is roughly 90 percent of property owners in area six. Mayor John Hamilton proposed the addition of seven areas in and around the city of Bloomington last month, a total of 10,000 acres and 15,000 people. These seven areas, which are currently unincorporated, would be official parts of the city. City services do not currently extend to these areas, though Bloomington is the closest municipality to the people in the proposed annexation areas. If approved, annexation would take effect Jan. 1, 2020. Hamilton said at his public proposal Feb. 3 the annexation “will allow all those households and businesses in the community to be a

part of the same future of Bloomington.” Area six residents have been vocal about their disinterest in being annexed since the announcement of the project. The first city council meeting regarding annexation had a significant portion of time taken up by public comment from area six residents protesting the proposal. The area reaches out from the northeastern city borders to East Lanam and North Russell roads. Area six would bring 269 new residents, 557 acres and 4.69 miles of county roads to the city. The area is currently part of Bloomington township. Everyone in the annexed areas will see property tax increases. Bloomington township tax rates will reach to $2.03 for every $100 of property value. Area six is the wealthiest

IDSNEWS.COM PAST COVERAGE | This is part of a series on proposed city annexation. Other stories can be found online. area with many properties worth more than $1 million. The average home value in Monroe County is $158,700. Adding area six to the city of Bloomington will cost between $353,334 and $392,646 for the first year, making the area one of the most expensive of the seven areas. “Our hope is to have this resolved as soon as possible to minimize the time and cost put on all of us,” Faris said. If you are not sure whether you live in the proposed annexation areas, look at our map at idsnews.com or go to bloomingtonon.in.gov/annex to search by name, address or parcel number.

Proposed scheduling for the annexation process

May 31 Public hearings on proposed annexations

Feb. 17 Notice of public outreach program will be mailed to landowners and publicized

July 7 Notice of adoption of annexation to be publicized and mailed to landowners outlining the remonstrance process. Landowners in the annexation areas will have 90 days from this day to file a petition against the annexation.

March 24 Public information meetings, 6-8 p.m. in City Hall March 25 25 Public information meetings, 11 a.m.-1 p.m. in City Hall March 31 Notice of public hearings to be publicized and mailed to landowners

Man arrested on theft, fraud charges could face more From IDS reports

A man arrested after a suspicious activity complaint Wednesday could face several more charges because police believe he’s responsible for several vehicle break-ins. Maliky Smith, 25, already faces felony fraud and drug possession charges and misdemeanors for theft, drug possession, vehicle entry and drug paraphernalia possession. Bloomington Police Department Capt. Steve Kellams said Smith will likely face

additional charges as police return stolen property to owners and those owners file reports. Police responded at about 8:15 p.m. to the intersection of 17th and North Washington streets, where a caller complained of a man trying to enter cars. An officer found Smith nearby. After Smith identified himself, he was arrested on a 2016 marijuana possession warrant out of Hamilton County. He was also the suspect of a check fraud case being investigated

in Bloomington. He matched the description of a suspect in a string of car break-ins. In a search of Smith after the arrest, the officer found loose pills and pill bottles with names other than Smith’s on the labels, marijuana and paraphernalia, a wallet containing at least four credit cards with different names, two checkbooks and several checks with different names. Police identified one of the credit cards as having been fraudulently used. Smith told police he’d found some of the

items in a dumpster and had been given others by friends, though he could not identify the dumpster or the friends. Smith, who is transient, told police he’s been in Bloomington for several months. Kellams said he’s not sure how long Smith is suspected to have been breaking in to cars. Smith was taken to Monroe County Correctional Center. Kellams said police are in the process of returning stolen property to victims.

June 28 Consider adoption of annexation ordinances and any fiscal plan updates

Oct. 6 Annexation ordinances could be eligible for recording and filing Jan. 1, 2020 Annexation takes effect

Hannah Alani Editor-in-Chief Emily Abshire Managing Editor of Presentation

Vol. 150, No. 18 © 2017

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Indiana Daily Student

4

SPORTS

Friday, March 24, 2017 idsnews.com

BASEBALL

Editors Jake Thomer and Jamie Zega sports@idsnews.com

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL

IU to kick off Big Ten play at Northwestern IU (10-8-1) at Northwestern (5-14) 1 p.m., Friday, Evanston, Ill.

By Spencer Davis spjdavis@umail.iu.edu @spencer_davis16

IU baseball is 10-8-1 with wins in six of its last seven games, but it hasn’t been easy for the Hoosiers lately. Four of the Hoosiers’ last five games have concluded with slim one-run margins. As his team prepares to play its 2017 Big Ten opener Friday in Evanston, Illinois, during a weekend series against 5-14 Northwestern, IU Coach Chris Lemonis faces the challenge of trying to create lineups and pitching opportunities for his versatile roster. Three IU players – sophomore Luke Miller, and juniors Matt Lloyd and Kade Kryszko – have the necessary skill sets to play their spots on the field, succeed in the batter’s box and get guys out on the mound when pitching. “It’s confusing when you’re doing the lineup cards, I don’t know if you see me out there talking,” Lemonis said with a laugh. “But it’s nice to have position players out there because there’s a real competitiveness to them.” Lloyd, who is listed as an infielder, has gotten the most work in different spots this year. He has struggled

a bit at the plate and is hitting just .200 through 35 at-bats, but he has made up for it with his performance when handed the ball on the bump. In his four pitching appearances, Lloyd is 2-0 with a save and a 2.25 earned-run average. He was credited with a save Wednesday after being called upon with two outs in the eighth inning and recording the final four outs in IU’s 3-2 victory against Cincinnati. Lemonis said Lloyd is his guy at the end of games right now. “He’s not hitting right now — not because of his pitching, but because we’ve been hot in other areas,” Lemonis said. “But I need him to hit. He started the year as my 3-hole hitter, so he can DH and close the game.” Lloyd entered the game in relief of Miller, who started the game at third base and got the nod from Lemonis to take over pitching duties at the beginning of the eighth inning. When Miller slid over to the rubber, Kryszko entered SEE BASEBALL, PAGE 12

BOBBY GODDIN | IDS

The IU bench claps during the game against SMU on Thursday night in Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall. The Hoosiers defeated the Mustangs 64-44 in the third round of the Women’s National Invitation Tournament to advance to play Villanova on Sunday at home.

Defense carries IU to WNIT win By Jake Thomer jjthomer@indiana.edu @jake_the_thomer

IU women’s basketball continued rolling through the Women’s National Invitation Tournament on Thursday night by relying on defense for the third game in a row. The Hoosiers haven’t allowed more than 58 points in a game on their run to the

quarterfinals of the 64-team WNIT, but Thursday’s game in Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall featured a lockdown performance that has rarely been seen from IU’s defense this season. Playing SMU, the Hoosiers were willing to let the Mustangs shoot themselves out of the game, and IU coasted to a 64-44 win while holding its opponent to just 28.3-percent shooting.

SMU is a notoriously low-scoring and slow-paced squad and entered the game averaging fewer than 60 points per game, which caused IU to come out of the gates sluggish as well. IU Coach Teri Moren said despite the fact her team played down to the level of the Mustangs in the early going, the Hoosiers’ defense was consistently sharp. “What I was really,

SOFTBALL

cpdrummo@iu.edu | @cdrummond97

After winning eight of its last nine games, IU softball has positive momentum as it starts conference play at home this weekend. Friday’s doubleheader against Rutgers at Andy Mohr Field opens the Big Ten season and provides another opportunity for IU to display its growth. The Hoosiers closed nonconference tournament play strong after starting the season 2-7 and posted winning records in three of their final four tournaments. IU has a 14-14 record entering the three-game series and has scored the same number of runs, 118, as it has allowed. “Going through our ups and downs helps a lot,” junior infielder Taylor Uden said. “We haven’t given away many games. Having the confidence that we are good is finally coming around.” The arrival of Big Ten play marks the end of fivegame weekends for IU. The

Hoosiers played five games in a weekend four different times in four different states during nonconference tournament play. Instead of preparing for up to five different opponents, IU Coach Michelle Gardner uses last year’s Big Ten games and scouting reports to get a feel for conference foes. Rutgers, 7-19, is continuing a 34-game road trip with its visit to Bloomington. Gardner said she will focus on IU’s defensive shape when preparing for the Scarlet Knights. “They have predominantly slappers who try to put the ball in play and run,” Gardner said. “We’re going to practice extra slap defense and slap bunt defense to take them out of their game.” The Scarlet Knights have four players hitting above .300, and all of them bat left-handed. Freshman infielder Taryn Atlee leads this group with a .375 average and 33 hits, including two triples. Rutgers’ speed out of the batter’s box and on the base

IU set for first home conference matches of season this weekend By Dylan Wallace dswallac@iu.edu | @D_wall1

REBECCA MEHLING | IDS

Freshman utility player Gabbi Jenkins leads off first base during IU’s game against Bowling Green on March 18. IU beat Bowling Green, 11-3, during its first game of the Hoosier Classic.

paths is another reason why Gardner is having IU practice defensive drills. “They’ve got a lot of running and slapping things going on, which sometimes makes you have to make plays quicker,” Gardner said. “It’s making sure defensively we’re not panicking.” However, if sophomore pitcher Tara Trainer can replicate her performance from the Hoosier Classic, the IU defense may not have to do much. Trainer averaged more

SEE BASKETBALL, PAGE 12

WOMEN’S TENNIS

Hoosiers begin Big Ten play Friday By Cameron Drummond

really happy with, though, was defensively,” Moren said. “I thought we guarded really well. I thought we were playing tremendous.” Moren said the discussions during timeouts barely mentioned the defensive side of the ball. Her team knew exactly what to do and when to do it, she said. In the first half in particular, it showed.

IU (14-14) vs. Rutgers (7-19) 3 p.m., Friday, Andy Mohr Field than 1.3 strikeouts per inning in 15.2 innings of work last weekend. “She has a great work ethic, she understands the game and she has command of the mound,” Gardner said. “Tara Trainer is a dominant pitcher.” The Scarlet Knights will SEE SOFTBALL, PAGE 12

After playing their last two matches on the road and enjoying a spring break trip to Las Vegas, the IU women’s tennis team returned to campus last Friday and have had a week’s preparation for this weekend’s home matches against No. 10 Michigan and unranked Michigan State. IU is 10-6 on the season and 1-1 in Big Ten conference play after suffering a 6-1 loss to Iowa and bouncing back with a 5-2 victory against Rutgers last week in Las Vegas. This weekend the Hoosiers’ hands will be full, and IU Coach Ramiro Azcui said his team needs to come out strong for the 11 a.m. matches Saturday and Sunday. “We have to play lights out,” Azcui said. “We are not going to be able to make errors against good teams like Michigan and Michigan State.” The Wolverines will come

IU (10-6) vs. Michigan (9-3) 11 a.m., Saturday, IU Tennis Center into Bloomington at 9-3 on the season. The last time these two teams met while Michigan was ranked No. 10 was in 2013 when IU went to Ann Arbor, Michigan, and pulled off a 5-2 upset. Azcui said his team has always managed to play well against the Wolverines despite their high rankings. Michigan brings in the NCAA’s No. 2-ranked doubles team of Kate Fahey and Alex Najarian, and they will play IU’s No. 41-ranked team in sophomore Madison Appel and senior Kim Schmider. Appel and Schmider have already beaten two ranked doubles pairs this season against duos from Kentucky and Notre Dame. “This is a great SEE TENNIS, PAGE 12

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The monastery serves as a community center for the study and practice of Tibetan Buddhist philosophy with a regular schedule of classes each week. The intention is offering the different level of classes from advanced to beginners. We offer Meditation class, retreats, summer camps, cultural events (Taste of Tibet and Losar celebration), celebrate Buddhist holy days and invite guest speakers from time to time. Events at monastery draw people from many other countries as well as local and national residents. Our intention is to assist others who are seeking to attain lasting happiness and peace.

Christian (Disciples of Christ) First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) 205 E. Kirkwood Ave. 812-332-4459 • fccbloomington.org

Sunday: 10 a.m. As God has welcomed us, we welcome you. With all our differences – in age, ability and physical condition, in race, cultural background and economic status, in sexual orientation, gender identity and family structure – God has received each one with loving kindness, patience and joy. All that we are together and all that we hope to be is made more perfect as the richness of varied lives meets the mystery of God’s unifying Spirit, and we become the Body of Christ.

Helen Hempfling, Pastor

Lutheran (LCMS) University Lutheran Church & Student Center 607 E. Seventh St. (Corner of 7th & Fess) 812-336-5387 • indianalutheran.com

facebook.com/ULutheranIU @ULutheranIU on twitter Service Hours: Sunday: Bible Class, 9:15 a.m. Divine Service, 10:30 a.m. & 7 p.m. The Best Meal You'll Have All Week, 6 p.m. Tuesday & Friday: Service of Morning Prayer, 8 a.m. Wednesday: Second Best Meal, 6 p.m. Midweek Service, 7 p.m. LCMS U Bible study, 7:30 p.m. Thursday: Graduate Study/Fellowship, 7 p.m. Pizza Talk in rotating campus living areas, 9 p.m. University Lutheran Church (U.Lu) is the home of LCMS IU at Indiana, the campus ministry of the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod. Students, on-campus location, and our Student Center create a hub for daily, genuine Christ-centered community that receives God's gifts of life, salvation, and the forgiveness of sins through Jesus Christ.

Episcopal (Anglican) Canterbury House Episcopal (Anglican) Campus Ministry at IU indiana.edu/~canterby canterby@indiana.edu • facebook.com/ecmatiu Sacramental Schedule: Weekly services Sundays: Holy Eucharist with hymns, followed by dinner 4 p.m. at Canterbury House

Tuesdays: 6 p.m. Bible Study at Canterbury House Thursdays: 5:15 p.m. Holy Eucharist at Trinity Church (111 S. Grant St.) Episcopal (Anglican) Campus Ministry is a safe, welcoming and inclusive Christian community; it is an inter-generational nesting place for all who pass through the halls of Indiana University. All people are welcome. All people get to participate. There are no barriers to faith or participation. There are no constraints — gender, sexual orientation, ethnicity, country of origin, disability or ability, weak or strong. In the end, it’s all about God’s love for us and this world. Mother Linda C. Johnson+, University Chaplain Evan Fenel, Communications Driector Josefina Carmaco, Latino/a Community Outreach Intern Samuel Young, Interfaith Linkage Coordinator

First United Methodist The Open Door 114 E. Kirkwood Ave. 812-332-6396

fumcb.org Facebook • fumcbopendoor Sunday: 11:15 a.m. @ the Buskirk Chumley Theater Wednesday: 7:30 p.m. @ Bloomington Sandwich Co (118 E. Kirkwood) - College Students A contemporary worship service of First United Methodist Church, upholding the belief that ALL are sacred worth. The Open Door is a safe place to explore faith and rebuild relationships. As we reach out to mend broken places in the world. The Open Door, Open to All. Mark Fenstermacher, Lead Pastor Stacee Fischer Gehring, Associate Pastor Travis Jeffords, Worship Leader

Inter-Denominational Redeemer Community Church 600 W. Sixth St. 812-269-8975

redeemerbloomington.org facebook.com/RedeemerBtown @RedeemerBtown on twitter Sunday: 11 a.m. Redeemer is a gospel-centered community on mission. Our vision is to see the gospel of Jesus Christ transform everything: our lives, our church, our city, and our world. We want to be instruments of gospel change in Bloomington and beyond.

Christian Science Christian Science Church 2425 E. Third St. 812-332-0536

facebook.com/e3rdStreet/ BloomingtonChristianScience.com Sunday: 10 a.m. Sunday School: 10 a.m. (up to age 20) Wednesday Testimony Meeting: 7 p.m. Stressed about classes, relationships, life? The heart of Christian Science is Love. Feel and understand God's goodness.

Daily Lift christianscience.com/christian-healing-today/ daily-lift Prayer Heals christianscience.com Pulitzer prize winning international and national news. csmonitor.com Christian Science churches and Reading Rooms in Indiana csin-online.org Noëlle Lindstrom, IU Christian Science Organization Liaison brownno@indiana.edu

Mennonite Mennonite Fellowship of Bloomington 2420 E. Third St. 812-339-4456 bloomingtonmenno.org • Facebook

Ross Martinie Eiler rossmartinieeiler@gmail.com

Orthodox Christian

333 S. Highland Ave. 812-334-3432

All Saints Orthodox Christian Church

studentview.Ids.org/Home. aspx/Home/60431 Facebook: Bloomington Institute and YSA Society lds.org

Wednesday: Vespers 6 p.m. Saturday: Great Vespers 5 p.m. Sunday: Matins 8:50 a.m. Divine Liturgy: 10 a.m. A parish of the Antiochian Archdiocese of North America – our parish welcomes Orthodox Christians from all jurisdictions around the globe and all Christians of Protestant and Catholic backgrounds as well as seekers of the ancient church. We are a caring and welcoming family following our Lord Jesus Christ. Rev. Fr. Peter Jon Gillquist, Pastor Rev. Lawrence Baldwin, Deacon Marcia Baldwin, Secretary

Sundays: Service: 9:30 a.m. & 11 a.m. Connexion: 6 p.m.

Cooperative Baptist University Baptist Church Church 3740 E. Third St. 812-339-1404

ubcbloomington.org Service Hours: Sunday: 9:30 a.m. (Bible study) 10:45 a.m. (worship) If you are exploring faith, looking for a church home, or returning after time away, Welcome! We aim to be a safe place to "sort it out" for those who are questioning, and a place to pray, grow, and serve for followers of Jesus. All are welcome - yes, LBGTQ too. Rev. Annette Hill Briggs, Pastor Rob Drummond, Music Minister

Non-Denominational Sherwood Oaks Christian Church 2700 E. Rogers Rd 812-334-0206

socc.org https://www.facebook.com/socc.cya Twitter: @socc_cya Instagram: socc_cya Traditional: 8 a.m. Contemporary: 9:30 a.m. & 11 a.m. Being in Bloomington, we love our college students, and think they are a great addition to the Sherwood Oaks Family. Wether an undergraduate or graduate student... from in-state, out of state, to our international community... Come join us as we strive to love God and love others better. Jeremy Earle, College Minister

City Church For All Nations 1200 N. Russell Rd. 812-336-5958 • citychurchfamily.org

Twitter • @ourcitychurch Facebook • City Church For All Nations Saturday: 5:30 p.m. Sunday: 9 a.m., 10:30 a.m. & noon At City Church we are a movement of all races and backgrounds, coming together to love people, build family, lead to destiny. Join us at one of our weekend worship experiences! David, Pastor Sumer Norris, Pastor

Connexion / Evangelical Community Church 503 S. High St. 812-332-0502

eccbloomington.org • cxiu.org Sundays: Service: 9:30 a.m. & 11 a.m. Connexion: 6 p.m. Join with students from all areas of campus at ECC on Sundays at 6 p.m. for Connexion — a Non-denominational service just for students, featuring worship, teaching, and a free dinner. We strive to support, encourage, and build up students in Christian faith during their time at IU and we'd love to get to know you!

Monday - Friday: 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. We have an Institute of Religion adjacent to campus at 333 S Highland Ave {behind T.I.S. bookstore). We offer a variety of religious classes and activities. We strive to create an atmosphere where college students and local young single adults can come to play games, relax, study, and associate with others who value spirituality. Sunday worship services for young single students are held at 2411 E Second St. a 1 p.m. We invite all to discover more about Jesus Christ from both ancient scripture and from modern prophets of God. During the week join us at the institute, and on Sunday at the Young Single Adult Church. Robert Tibbs, Institute Director

Join with students from all areas of campus at ECC on Sundays at 6 p.m. for Connexion — a Non-denominational service just for students, featuring worship, teaching, and a free dinner. We strive to support, encourage, and build up students in Christian faith during their time at IU and we'd love to get to know you! Josiah Leuenberger, Director of University Ministries Bob Whitaker, Senior Pastor Dan Waugh, Pastor of Adult Ministries

Non-Denominational Vineyard Community Church 2375 S. Walnut St. 812-336-4602

bloomingtonvineyard.com Facebook: Vineyard Community Church Bloomington, Indiana @BtownVineyard on twitter Sunday: 10 a.m. Haven't been to church lately? Join us Sunday mornings at 10 a.m. for coffee and a bagel as you soak in God's message for a thirsty world. Relevant, contemporary worship and message in a casual setting. Vineyard is part of an international association of churches sharing God's word to the nations. Check out our website or call for more information. We are located on S. Walnut St. behind T&T Pet Supply. See you Sunday! David G. Schunk, Senior Pastor D.A. Schunk, Youth Pastor Lisa Schunk, Children’s Ministry Director

Presbyterian (USA) First Presbyterian Church 221 E. Sixth St. (Sixth and Lincoln) 812-332-1514 • fpcbloomington.org

Facebook • @1stPresBtown Sunday: 9 a.m., 11 a.m. Worship Serivce We are a community of seekers and disciples in Christ committed to hospitality and outreach for all God’s children. Come join us for meaningful worship, thoughtful spiritual study and stimulating fellowship. Ukirk at IU is a Presbyterian Church for all students. Contact Mihee Kim-Kort at miheekk@gmail. com Andrew Kort, Pastor Kim Adams, Associate Pastor Katherine Strand, Music Director Christopher Young, Organist

Roman Catholic St. Paul Catholic Center 1413 E. 17th St. 812-339-5561 • hoosiercatholic.org

Facebook: Hoosier Catholic Students at St. Paul Newman Center Weekend Mass Times Saturday: 4:30 p.m. Sunday: 8:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 5:30 p.m., 9 p.m. (During Academic Year) Spanish Mass Sunday, 12:30 p.m. Korean Mass 1st & 3rd Saturdays, 6 p.m.

Weekday Mass Times Monday - Thurday: 7:20 a.m. Monday, Wednesday, Friday: 5:15 p.m. We welcome all; We form Catholics in their faith, We nurture leaders with Christian values; We promote social outreach and justice, We reflect the face of Christ at Indiana University. Fr. John Meany, O.P., Pastor Fr. Patrick Hyde, O.P. Fr. Raymond-Marie Bryce, O.P., Associate Pastor

United Methodist

Josiah Leuenberger, Director of University Ministries Bob Whitaker, Senior Pastor Dan Waugh, Pastor of Adult Ministries

Open Hearts * Open Minds * Open Doors

The Salvation Army

100 N. State Rd. 46 Bypass 812-332-5788

111 N. Rogers St. 812-336-4310 • bloomingtonsa.org

stmarksbloomington.org

Sunday: 5 p.m. A welcoming, inclusive congregation providing a place of healing and hope as we journey together in the Spirit of Christ. Gathering for worship Sundays 5 p.m. in the Roger Williams room, First United Church. As people of God's peace, we seek to embody the Kingdom of God.

Rev. Richard Woelmer, Campus Pastor

allsaintsbloomington.org

503 S. High St. 812-332-0502 eccbloomington.org • cxiu.org

Chris Jones, Lead Pastor

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints Latter-day Saint Student Association (L.D.S.S.A)

6004 S. Fairfax Rd. 812-824-3600

Connexion / Evangelical Community Church

719 E. Seventh St. 812-334-7971 • 812-361-7954

Facebook: The Salvation Army Bloomington Indiana Twitter: @SABtown & @SABtownStore Sunday: Sunday School for All Ages, 10 a.m. Coffee fellowship, 10:30 a.m. Worship Service, 11:00 a.m. We are a multi-generational congregation that offers both contemporary and traditional worship. We live our our mission: "To preach the Gospel of Jesus Christ and meet human needs in His name without discrimination." Everyone is welcome at The Salvation Army.

St. Mark’s United Methodist Church

Sunday Schedule 9:30-10:30 a.m.: Breakfast 9:15-10:15 a.m.: Adult Sunday School Classes 9:30-10:15 a.m.: Celebration! Children’s & Family Worship 10:30-11:30 a.m.: Sanctuary Worship 10:30-11:30 a.m.: Children & Youth Sunday School Classes Jimmy Moore, Pastor Mary Beth Morgan, Pastor

Unitarian Universalist

Lt. Sharyn Tennyson, Pastor/Corps Officer

Unitarian Universalist Church of Bloomington

Christian

2120 N. Fee Lane 812-332-3695

Highland Village Church of Christ 4000 W. Third St. 812-332-8685 • highlandvillage@juno.com

Sunday: Bible Study, 9:30 a.m. Worship, 10:25 a.m., 6 p.m. Wednesday: Bible Study, 7 p.m. *On the second Sunday of each month services are at 10:25 a.m. & 1 p.m. A place where the pure Gospel is preached. Where a dedicated body of people assemble to worship, and where souls are devoted to the Lord and His word.

Phil Spaulding and Mark Stauffer, Elders Justin Johnston and Roy Wever, Deacons

www.uublomington.org www.facebook.com/uubloomington Sundays: 9:15 a.m. & 11:15 a.m. June & July Sundays: 10:15 a.m. A liberal congregation celebrating community, promoting social justice, and seeking the truth whatever it's source. Our vision is Seeking the Spirit, Building Community, Changing the World. A LGBTQA+ Welcoming Congregation and a certified Green Sanctuary. Reverend Mary Ann Macklin, Senior Minister Reverend Scott McNeill, Associate Minister Orion Day, Young Adult/Campus Ministry Coordinator


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Friday, March 24, 2017 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com

Âť CUTS

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 has more than 200 volunteers. According to Meals on Wheels America, 83 percent of Meals on Wheels recipients in Indiana report that the deliveries improve their health, and 92 percent say it enables them to remain living at home. Milroy, 75, knows firsthand about the benefits of the program. When he contracted a bad case of pneumonia five years ago, he was hospitalized. When he left the hospital he was homebound, so Meals on Wheels brought him food every weekday for a year while he recovered. Milroy was impressed with how dependable the service was. “They never missed a day,� he said. For about half of the program’s recipients in Bloomington, the Meals on Wheels delivery people are often the only people they get to see every day, Romy said. Client Alice Vaughn, who is home-bound and wheelchair-bound, reiterates the importance of the socialization brought by Meals on Wheels deliveries. “I really appreciate you guys,� she said to Patterson, 69, on a recent delivery. “I live here in this house by myself.� Last week, Romy sat in her office when a volunteer came in to tell her that one of the clients hadn’t opened the door when she knocked. The volunteer had called the woman’s son, who said he would go and check on his mother. Romy assured the volunteer that the client in question, a dementia patient, often sleeps very soundly. “You did the right thing,� Romy said. Romy stressed the importance of Meals on

Âť IUSA

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 were important issues for her since one of her areas of study is sustainable business. Across the cement path from the two stood junior Eryicka Wesley and freshman Emily Tong , who handed out fliers for Empower IU’s ticket. Wesley has been in leadership positions in two residence halls and is running to be IUSA’s co-chief of diversity and inclusion. She said she likes how her ticket looked for two people with different perspectives for the position. “Everyone’s ideas are taken into consideration and used,� Wesley said. “One thing that I really love about

MOLLY GRACE | IDS

Meals on Wheels volunteers Pat Patterson and Bill Milroy retrieve a hot meal for one of their deliveries. The two men met through the program and now get together once a month to deliver meals to clients.

Wheels not just as a meal delivery service but as a daily check-in for their clients. Eighty-seven percent of clients in Indiana say the service makes them feel more safe and secure. Romy also argued that it would be more economical to put money into programs like this, rather than take it away. “I can feed a senior for a whole year for what it costs for a day in the hospital,� she said. Romy said it costs her around $1,500 per year to feed one client.

Bloomington Meals on Wheels currently relies completely on private donations, thanks in part to a partnership with the Bloomington Hospital Foundation, which does the majority of their fundraising. However, many Meals on Wheels programs in other parts of the country rely on federal funding. Romy said she believes that the budget cuts could create a domino effect that will put additional stress on the programs, including in Bloomington. The local Area 10 Agency on Aging, which provides

resources to the elderly population, relies heavily on funding from the Older Americans Act, according to Romy. If HHS funding is cut, the agency may have to start turning people away, and in turn those people would rely on services from programs like Meals on Wheels. However, Bloomington Meals on Wheels can only take on so many clients. Its current maximum capacity is 84 clients per day. If programs that benefit the elderly are severely cut, they may have nowhere to turn. On one of their stops

this month, Milroy and Patterson dropped off food to Lawrence Reagan, a former Meals on Wheels volunteer. Patterson walked up the ramp on the big blue deck in front of Reagan’s house and knocked on the door, calling out “Meals on Wheels!� Milroy waited at the car. Reagan answered the door with a big smile on this face. He finds grocery shopping for himself to be too difficult, so he relies on the meals for good nutrition. “I wouldn’t eat as well without this program,� he said.

After chatting for a moment, Reagan thanked Patterson and Patterson headed back to Milroy’s car. Patterson voted for Trump. He said he doesn’t agree with everything the president has done, but he thinks the United States needed a change that Trump was able to bring. Patterson said he believes, however, that there should be help available for the more vulnerable people in the country. “We should take care of the people who can’t take care of themselves,� he said.

Empower is that we are not just fighting for justice for the student body but for justice for anyone that may step foot on this campus.� Tong was part of IUSA’s 2016-17 freshman internship program, so working on a campaign was a natural progression for her. She said she chose Empower for its detailed and bold policy plan. Tong is running for co-chief of academic affairs and said her priorities include educational accessibility. Halfway across the Arboretum from the Engage and Empower campaigners stood sophomores Alison Sandoval and Adam Pierce, who were tabling for IGNITE. The two went to the same high school as presidential

candidate sophomore Will McKinney, and Pierce said they joined IGNITE’s policy team after seeing the good campaign their peers were running. Sandoval said policies such as the ticket’s “Transparent IU� platform made her want to get involved in student government. She said IU students should hold their administration accountable. “I really like the idea of transparency just because I feel like there’s a lot of things that IU promises, but there’s a lot of things that they’re doing that I think if a majority of the student body knew, they’d probably be in opposition to,� Sandoval said. At the entrance to the

Arboretum on 10th Street and Fee Lane, Focus’ presidential candidate, junior Brandon Sakbun, held his dog, Buddy-Kumar, who was wrapped in a campaign Tshirt like a superhero cape. He and his staff members sat across the entrance space from and exchanged friendly greetings with Empower’s chief of staff Olivia Malone, sophomore, and candidate for vice president of administration, sophomore Molly Connor. In Ballantine Hall, Focus’ candidate for vice president of Congress, junior Michael Schommer, sat at a condomand lollipop-covered table with sophomore Liz Evans. Schommer currently serves in IUSA Congress and chairs

the Student Life Committee. In the past he’s worked with Sakbun, who is adviser to the current vice president of Congress. “I think we had a great idea for change that we want in IUSA because we’ve seen it in the past,� Schommer said. “But we also knew the potential it had and what we could build off of with IUSA.� He said part of why his ticket invested in promotional condoms was their relevance to college students. Instead of handing out policy fliers, students could see proof of Focus’ commitment to preventing sexually transmitted diseases. Like other campaigns tabling Thursday, it also handed out lollipops. Evans studies political

science and worked on a campaign in last year’s Indiana gubernatorial race. She said she was looking to get more involved on campus and the ticket’s platform represented her values best. “I looked at all the groups,� Evans said. “I looked at Focus’ policy, and that’s what spoke to me the most, so that’s why I started to help out a little bit.� The Psych Up ticket reserved places for tabling on both days of the election. Despite their candidate for treasurer, sophomore Kyle Yohler, saying his ticket planned to gain support through word of mouth, the ticket was not campaigning when the IDS spoke with the other four.

BOBBY GODDIN | IDS

Senior guard Alexis Gassion attempts a shot against SMU on Thursday in Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall.

Âť BASKETBALL

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 get to play at home again. “I love that we get to sleep in our own beds and don’t

have to get on an airplane and go through all that,� Moren said. “It’s a tremendous thing for our players. I know they get excited just to be here at home in front of our home crowd.�

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7

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FILE PHOTO

Black Key Bulls rider Charlie Hammon cheers after placing BKB’s qualifying time on the board during qualifications March, 26, 2016. BKB earned a third place starting spot in the Little 500 race. with a qualifying time of 2:19.95.

Time for quals Women’s teams Men’s teams prepare for brace for intense qualifications day of cycling By Patrick Wisdom pwisdom@indiana.edu | @wiskhalifa17

Thirty-three teams. Four laps. One goal. On Saturday the women’s cycling teams will ride four laps around the track at Bill Armstrong Stadium with the common goal of taking home the pole. While only one will succeed, the others will fight to better their positions in qualifications for the 30th running of the women’s Little 500. Given that exactly 33 teams qualify for the Little 500 race, no women’s team will miss the cut unless it faults on all three attempts. Although it’s likely that all the teams will qualify, Andrea Balzano, the director of the Little 500 race, said she believes there is a lot at stake. “There are definitely a lot of teams that ride hard because they want to be on the pole,” Balzano said. “They don’t just want to be in the race. They want to be in the top 10, top five or maybe even finish first.” This year, four new women’s teams — the Sweet Potato Club, Phi Gamma Nu, Sigma Kappa and Camp Kesem Cycling — will participate in qualifications. Four teams will not be returning — Pi Beta Phi, Delta Delta Delta, Chi Omega and reigning champion Phoenix. Because Phoenix will not be present, there will be no yellow jersey in this year’s race.

The rules for qualifications, per the Little 500 rulebook:

“They had a mission, they accomplished their mission, and they’re done for now,” Balzano said. Qualifications times were chosen Monday evening as part of a semi-random draw. The top three women’s teams from the fall cycling series were able to choose their time slots, while the rest drew from a hat. While it may seem arbitrary to some, timing can actually be a big deal for many teams. “We didn’t really care whether we were going to ride in the morning or afternoon,” said sophomore Caitlin Kamplain, a rider for Theta Phi Alpha. “We really just wanted a time close to when the track is prepped.” With rain in the forecast for Friday night and Saturday during the day, weather will become a concern. Riders must brake during exchanges. The rain could present some issues. For instance, if the track is wet, riders will have to brake earlier than they otherwise would. “The track has a very finicky way of reacting to water,” Balzano said. “If it’s wet and soggy, then that will slow riders down, which isn’t ideal.” Despite the possibility of rain, it shouldn’t affect team performance too much, Balzano said. With less than a day to go, many teams are just trying to focus on their goals. “Our goal for qualifications is to get the best time possible, beat our time last year and have a good spot in the race,” Kamplain said.

In qualifications, each team will ride four laps total with each rider riding one lap. A team can ride with as few as two riders and as many as four. In addition, they can opt for one of two types of exchanges. The first, a bike-to-bike exchange, involves one rider hopping off the bike and another jumping on it. The other type, a full-bike exchange,

By Tyler Sorg tjsorg@indiana.edu | @t_sorg

Rain or shine, the men’s Little 500 qualifications are set to begin early Saturday morning at Bill Armstrong Stadium. The field of 40 men’s teams will compete to qualify for the 33 spots available to race in this year’s 67th running of the Little 500. There are concerns about the weather conditions this Saturday that could cause poor track conditions. Saturday’s forecast calls for scattered showers and storms with a 60-percent chance of rain. Race director Andrea Balzano said she is prepared for whatever weather may come. “As long as there’s not thunder and lightning, we’ll be riding,” Balzano said. “If there’s thunder or lightning within a 10 mile radius we cannot hold activities. If there’s not standing water on the track then we’ll be riding. If our 8 a.m. team has to go at 11 then that’s what we’ll do.” Balzano and her team of about 60 volunteers from the IU Student Foundation are using this as their first large-scale opportunity to prepare for Little 500. During qualifications, Balzano will depend on her volunteers to help run registration, bike check out, warm up, calling faults, timing and scoring. “Regardless of what the weather’s like, they’ll be out there

involves one teammate riding into the designated exchange area and tagging another rider, who then hops onto a different bike. This type of exchange is commonly used when teammates are of considerably different heights. Each team will have a maximum of three attempts to record their best time. Each team’s top time

just like the riders are,” Balzano said. Senior Ian Kelly, a third-year rider and captain of the Pi Kappa Alpha team, sees qualifications as an opportunity to improve his team’s starting position from last year but knows not to take qualifications for granted. Last year, Pi Kappa Alpha placed in seventh in qualifications and 16th in Little 500. This year, with all four riders from last year’s race returning, Kelly expects smooth sailing. “To be 100-percent honest, when you get to a point when you’re trying to be a little bit more competitive in the actual race and qualifications has gone pretty well for you in the past, quals is more of a formality,” Kelly said. For Kelly and the Pi Kappa Alpha team, earning a starting position near the front is important to avoid a potential early crash. Kelly said many recent races have had early crashes in the middle and back of the pack as teams try to separate from one another. “If you want to be a competitive team, like we do, it puts you in a compromising position if you have to start at the back and work your way up,” Kelly said. “It makes life much easier if you can start near the front.” If it does rain Saturday, Kelly said his team will be cautious to SEE QUALS, PAGE 12

during qualifications will be used to determine if they will ride in Little 500. Additionally, each team’s top qualifying time will determine their starting position in the race. If a team commits a foul during their attempt, that attempt is forfeited. In the event, there must be an exchange of the bike from one rider to another between each lap.

Times 8 a.m.-8:25 a.m. Phi Gamma Delta, Melanzana, Theta Chi, Alpha Omicron Pi, Delta Gamma, Phi Delta Theta 8:40 a.m.-9:05 a.m. Alpha Epsilon Pi, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Sigma Kappa, Young Life (Men), Phi Sigma Kappa 9:20 a.m.-9:45 a.m. Independent Council, Acacia, Cru (Women), Zeta Beta Tau, Pi Kappa Phi, Camp Kesem 10 a.m.-10:20 a.m. Kappa Sigma, Phi Kappa Tau, Tau Kappa Epsilon, Sigma Chi, Lambda Chi Alpha 10:40 a.m.-11:05 a.m. Delta Sigma Phi, Kappa Alpha Theta, Alpha Epsilon Phi, Delta Chi, Alpha Kappa Lambda, Wing It 11:35 a.m.-12:05 p.m. 3PH, Black Key Bulls, SKI, Evans Scholars, Bears, Beta Theta Pi, Black Ice Cycling 12:20 p.m.-12:45 p.m. Pi Lambda Phi, Sigma Pi, Delta Sigma Pi (Men), Phi Mu, Delta Zeta, Forest Cycling 1 p.m.-1:25 p.m. RideOn, Delta Phi Epsilon, Alpha Sigma Alpha, Phi Gamma Nu, IU Nursing, Gamma Phi Beta 1:45 p.m.-2:05 p.m. Sigma Alpha Mu, Delta Upsilon, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Theta Phi Alpha, Alpha Phi 2:40 p.m.-3:05 p.m. Pi Kappa Alpha, Sigma Nu, Beta Sigma Psi, Kappa Delta, Delta Sigma Pi (Women), Sweet Potato Club 3:20 p.m.-3:45 p.m. CSF (Men), Alpha Gamma Delta, Teter, Alpha Sigma Phi, Phi Kappa Sigma, Young Pioneers 4 p.m.-4:20 p.m. Alpha Xi Delta, Alpha Delta Pi, Zeta Tau Alpha, JETBLACH, Sigma Delta Tau 4:40 p.m.-4:55 p.m. CSF (Women), Gray Goat, Cutters, Alpha Chi Omega 5:10 p.m.-5:55 p.m.: Third Attempts


Indiana Daily Student

8

OPINION

Friday, March 24, 2017 idsnews.com

MOORE TO SAY

Editors Dylan Moore and Zack Chambers opinion@idsnews.com

EDITORIAL BOARD

Jeff Sessions misjudges marijuana Attorney General Jeff Sessions has decided to turn a cold shoulder to the millions of Americans who want relaxed marijuana laws in favor of increased law enforcement and regulation. He’s spoken on record against legalization, spread misinformation about marijuana and incited fear into a budding industry. He must be stopped. First off, Sessions is acting in direct opposition from the interests of most Americans. 2016 Gallup poll shows that support for legalization of marijuana in the United States has reached 60 percent. This is the highest level of support legalization has received since Gallup began tracking the statistic 47 years ago. The majority of U.S. citizens want marijuana to be legal, but Sessions would rather spout untruths in an attempt to pander to his base. In a Senate hearing last April, Sessions accused marijuana of being a gateway drug. When asked about legalization, he said “you’ll see cocaine and heroin increase more than it would have” if marijuana remains an illicit drug. The tired argument of the gateway drug has obviously run its course. Looking back to 1999, I found a report commissioned by Congress and conducted by the National Academy of Sciences finding “no conclusive evidence” that using marijuana leads to other drug use. Marijuana is not merely benign — it proves extremely beneficial when it’s legalized and taxed. The U.S. will miss out on a large revenue stream if it ignores the economics of regulated marijuana. Currently 28 states boast some form of legal marijuana, be it recreational or medical. These states are seeing positive economic impacts of legalization. Colorado alone reported $1.1 billion

Dylan Moore is a sophomore in business and English.

in legal marijuana sales in 2016, up more than 10 percent from 2015. Considering that Colorado’s state government is taxing retail marijuana at a base rate of 10 percent before any sales or local taxes, the government is also benefiting off legalization. A firm called ArcView Market Research projects that the national, legal cannabis market could reach almost $22 billion in annual sales by 2020. This means more jobs, more tax revenue and more happiness for Americans everywhere marijuana is legal. Forbes compares this $22 billion revenue projection to the National Football League, which is aiming to reach annual revenues of $27 billion by 2027. Marijuana could be bigger than football. Despite debunked myths about marijuana, current statistics of its economic value and future projections of its profitability, Sessions wants to restrict the market. This is a man who referred to marijuana as “only slightly less awful” than heroin while speaking before law enforcement earlier this month. It troubles me that this is the message Sessions wants to project to our law enforcement officers. Petty drug laws are already out of control, and this mindset will only make the problem worse for Americans. Sessions probably goes home after a long day at work and watches reruns of Nancy Reagan’s “Just Say No” videos from the 1980s. He’s simply a man from a time passed. He harbors ridiculous notions about marijuana, and he is blind to the economic benefits it offers. Supporting his viewpoint will only take us backward. dylmoore@umail.iu.edu

KARL’S KORNER

Visiting truth’s grave Time Magazine asked a pressing and disturbing question on its cover Thursday morning: “Is truth dead?”. I thought long and hard about the unfortunate situation we’ve found ourselves in — Trump’s false claims on Twitter have seamlessly eradicated the border that previously existed between liars and truth-tellers. Truth and trust go hand in hand. Regardless of whether you believe what Trump says, one must admit that after he assumed office, the country has revolved around him. The wiretap claims, the staff shakeups, the size of his inauguration crowd, the ongoing war with the press, the golfing trips to Florida, the dwindling performance of his daughter’s clothing line — it’s all about Trump with a capital T. Truth has gone out the window. He is a 70-year-old with a 14-year-old’s ego, he acts as if he knows everything, and, as Nancy Gibbs stated in her article ”When a President Can’t be Taken at his Word,” in Time Magazine, “shamelessness is not just a strength, it’s a strategy.” To Trump, an apology is as fictional as a unicorn. The worst part is that social and political scientists have proven that correcting incorrect information can prove to be detrimental. “The repetition of a false statement, even in the course of disputing it, often increases the number of people who believe it,” wrote Gibbs. Take this article that ran on Politico in November: ”Trump’s baseless assertions of voter fraud

ILLUSTRATION BY AUSTIN VANSCOIK | IDS

Google fights for user privacy Tech giant rightly refuses to hand over the identities of its users Google is refusing to hand over the identities of users who searched a specific name to a Minnesota police department. A world where police can access our search histories on a whim is terrifying, and Google protecting the privacy of its users is a step in the right direction. A resident was allegedly robbed, and in an effort to find the perpetrator, the Edina Police Department is demanding that Google report who typed the victim’s name into the Google search engine between the dates of Dec. 1, 2016, and Jan. 7, 2017. The demand is in the form of a search warrant and Google claims that it is not required to comply with its terms. Google is concerned that this is a breach of privacy. While the Editorial Board initially wondered why this

mattered to Google, once more details were found, we can see why the company would want to fight this. The EPD discovered a fake passport containing information about the victim only appears on the Google search engine, which is enough information for the department to issue a search warrant. Not only does the police department want the names of people who searched the specific term, it also wants their social security numbers and IP and MAC addresses. This is a breach in security. Social security numbers are extremely important aspects of our identities and even though the police are the ones asking for it, government positions get hacked all the time. Suddenly, not only do the police know your social security

number, but so does anyone who can pass their firewalls. The Editorial Board believes that if the government and Google are going to partner up to tackle crime, they should be more concerned with serious internet crimes — such as people who look up child pornography or frequently search for sex trafficking. This type of data probe could speed investigations up but if it becomes commonplace, people are going to stop using Google as often. Maybe a few encyclopedias will be cracked open. Or worse, we will resort to Bing. Tony Webster asked important questions on his blog in regard to the method of finding people who searched for relevant information: “Could this type of search warrant be used to ensnare innocent people?

If you bought a pressure cooker on Amazon a month before the Boston bombing, do police get to know about it?” Many innocent internet users could be at risk just because they were curious about an old high school buddy they hadn’t seen in a few years. The process to narrow down who was actually responsible would be ridiculously intricate and time consuming. Media sites are not revealing the last name of the victim. This is probably smart because then we would all Google his name, which would further complicate the process. Law enforcement needs to go through due process to obtain its information. It shouldn’t try to make backdoor deals with companies to skirt around citizens’ privacy rights.

Jessica Karl is a senior in English.

called ‘stunning.’” The effect of this headline should be that people realize his voter fraud allegations are wrong, but people that always agree with Trump will simply see these three words: Trump. Voter fraud. It simply reinforces people’s existing beliefs. The heart of the problem lies with the fact that his false claims are the ones that are being talked about the most. When Trump tweets a falsehood, TIME reported it was retweeted on average 28,550 times, as opposed to his other tweets, which average 23,945 times. Those tweets that were the most false were quoted on television more than twice as often as Trump’s truthful tweets. It all comes down to controversy. If a tweet isn’t controversial, people are more likely to glaze over it and consider it old news. But when Trump makes a claim out of left field, people are going to be talking about it. A lot. The same thing can be said about the wiretapping claims among many other statements Trump has made, absent of truth. To Trump, being proven false is just a precursor to being proved right. When a steadfast liar begins to honestly believe his own falsehoods, there’s no convincing him otherwise. If truth is in fact dead, we better start working on a speedy resurrection because there’s no way this country can survive on such shaky grounds. jlkarl@umail.iu.edu

COFFEE CHRONICLES

President Trump should not cut NIH funding President Trump’s proposed cuts to the National Institute of Health will only harm the health of U.S. citizens and send us backwards in terms of medical technology. For patients with Alzheimer’s, a drug named Memantine can slow down clinical deterioration. Human Papillomavirus has been linked to cervical cancer, and the resulting Gardasil vaccine helped diminish the risks. Both of these studies involved funding from the NIH. The NIH also provided funding for clinical trials for cancer treatments and detecting and repairing DNA damage. The cuts to the NIH that were in Trump’s proposed budget could inhibit the research community and could have hazardous ef-

fects on a multibillion-dollar industry. Trump’s proposed budget would cut 20 percent of the NIH’s budget; the highest priority areas would be “suicide prevention, serious mental illness and children’s mental health” according to NPR. This cut seems to ignore the fact that scientific research is an extremely costly processes that takes years and often does not occur in a linear fashion. For example, Memantine, which blocks a receptor in nerve cells and prevents them from overstimulation, was originally supposed to be a diabetes treatment. Yet, it is now the only drug that has been approved for Alzheimer treatment in moderate to severe cases. We may not stumble upon treatments like this if funding is curbed so

severely. Ignoring the scientific implications, cutting this funding would cut jobs. The NIH and its grants have created more than 300,000 full and part-time jobs through research. These research grants led to the purchase from biotechnology companies that provide chemical and scientific supplies, the majority of which are in the United States. Less research equals to less money being spent on these product. Additionally many pharmaceutical companies partner with the NIH in order to fund their research and development for new drugs. Drug research can cost upwards of one billion dollars for a new drug, so without NIH funding companies would be severely limited in how much they could spend

Neeta Patwari is a junior in biology.

treating new diseases. Eli Lilly worked with the NIH in order to help eliminate multi-drug hesitance tuberculosis and provide funding for cures to rare diseases like hypoparathyroidism. This can have multiple effects in the future of healthcare. Cancer treatments, drug cures and pharmaceutical treatments are all supported by funding through the NIH. They help support multibillion-dollar companies and can provide relief to citizens. Cutting this research could diminish the possibilities of future cures and resolve some of the worst health crises that plague our country. npatwari@umail.iu.edu

A NOTE FROM THE EDITORIAL BOARD The Editorial Board is made up of the Opinion section editors and columnists. Each editorial topic is selected and discussed by the Board until we reach a consensus, and a member of the board volunteers to write the article. The opinions expressed by the Editorial Board do not necessarily represent the opinions of the IDS news staff, student body, faculty or staff members or the Board of Trustees. Spring 2017 Editorial Board: Dylan Moore, Zack Chambers, Kaitlynn Milvert, Miranda Garbaciak, Becca Dague, Neeta Patwari, Anna Groover, Maddy Klein, Emma Getz, Colin Dombrowski, Jessica Karl, Steven Reinoehl, Austin VanScoik, Julia Bourkland, Kathryn (Katie) Meier, Lucas Robinson, Sam Reynolds, Mercer Suppiger, Brian Gamache, Justin Sexton

LETTER TO THE EDITOR POLICY The IDS encourages and accepts letters to be printed daily from IU students, faculty and staff and the public. Letters should not exceed 500 words and may be edited for length and style. Submissions must include the person’s name, address and telephone number for verification. Letters without those requirements will not be considered

for publication. Letters can be mailed or dropped off at the IDS, 6011 E. Kirkwood Ave. Bloomington, IN 47405. Send submissions via e-mail to letters@idsnews.com. Call the IDS with questions at 855-0760.

Indiana Daily Student, Est. 1867 Website: idsnews.com


Indiana Daily Student

ARTS

Friday, March 24, 2017 idsnews.com

Editor Sanya Ali arts@idsnews.com

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Renowned oud player returns to Bloomington By Madeline Dippel @MadelineLDippel mldippel@indiana.edu

In his second visit to the Bloomington community, Rahim AlHaj said he came to invoke a discussion and to improve knowledge about different cultures around the world with his public and private performances through the program Lotus Blossoms. Lotus Blossoms, spanning five weeks, takes different artists from cultures around the world and brings them to the public and school children of Monroe and surrounding counties. AlHaj, a Grammy-nominated oud player and political refugee from Iraq, said Bloomington has provided a welcoming environment for his performance. “It’s a culturally rooted city, more progressive and understanding,” he said. “The people are familiar of world music, very educated with a great school and smart students.” The oud is a string instrument in the same family of the guitar. “The oud is a great

concept,” he said. “You have to hug it to be able to play it. The sound vibrates inside your body. It’s incredible.” Though he focuses on performing, AlHaj said he prefers to concentrate on talking to people over the performance. “Music is important to understand,” he said. “I’m interested to send a message of peace, love and compassion.” By playing his own compositions, he said he relates his songs to stories of Iraq and other parts of the world. His composition “Letters from Iraq” uses this technique and translates actual letters written by Iraqi women and children to music with the oud, percussion and a string quartet. The most difficult part of this translation was remaining faithful to the letters, he said. AlHaj said he had to set his ego aside and decided to let the story flow over putting his instrument at the forefront. “I let the stories be in the front and come in when is necessary,” he said. He said it is important to

get the message out there to people who believe in change to make the world a better place for generations to come, reaching people through song. AlHaj said he wants to give these women and children a voice. “Always they have their voices weak because of the masculine domination of the world,” he said. “It’s all about men, not about women.” AlHaj, who began playing the oud at the age of nine, did not begin his activism through giving people voices solely with his instrument. After the first Gulf War, AlHaj’s activism against the Saddam Hussein regime forced him to leave his country. He moved to Jordan and Syria before beginning his life as a political refugee in the United States in 2000, according to his website. He said people should focus on nurturing, love and compassion instead of war, violence and displacement. This is why he said the current political situation worries him. One of his bands,

COURTESY PHOTO

Rahim AlHaj is a Grammy-nominated oud player and political refugee. The oud is an Iraqi instrument in the same family as the guitar. He is coming to Bloomington for the second time for Lotus Blossoms, a program which spans five weeks and takes different artists from cultures around the world and brings them to the public and school children of Monroe County.

consisting of him, an Iranian, a Palestinian and a Korean musician, had to cancel its tour in Europe and different places around the world because his Iranian friend was not a citizen and only

had a green card, he said. AlHaj said they had to be canceled because they were not sure if the U.S. would let his friend in again when they came back. “It’s inconceivable to

me,” he said. “What difference does it make living in Central versus North America? Somebody can live in Africa or Asia but . . . all of us live in one globe, so why do we need to discriminate?”

Student-penned play explores different sides of town By Alison Graham akgraham@indiana.edu @alisonkgraham

Rex and Jacob have a seemingly perfect life. They own a picture-perfect house in Bloomington with a white picket fence border. The blue walls are decorated with college diplomas and pictures of them smiling together. They’re married and Rex, a retired pharmaceutical sales rep, is supporting Jacob’s inhome therapy practice. But their relationship is on the rocks. Rex is growing tired of his husband, and they’re both dealing with the homophobia of Jacob’s Mennonite father. Then Ethan shows up. Rex, Jacob and Ethan are the three characters who comprise the story of “Prospect Hill,” the newest play put on by IU’s Department of Theatre, Drama and Contemporary Dance. The play, written by MFA candidate Bruce Walsh, opens 7:30 p.m. Friday. Walsh said the play started as an idea to bring

together the two different circles he sees within Bloomington. In town, he sees many wealthy people, often associated with the University. On the other side, there are locals who are trying to get by and can often be put at a disadvantage because of the University. Representing the Bloomington side in the play is Ethan. He’s a young kid who dropped out of Ivy Tech and is working as a delivery driver for Pepsi. “He’s demographically a straight, white guy from Indiana without a college education,” Walsh said. “He’s in a certain camp, and he’s hyperaware of that. He’s got a lot of anger and frustration, and a lot of that has come from having those labels.” Ethan is also struggling with a narcotics addiction and has a baby on the way with his girlfriend. He starts as Jacob’s therapy client but begins showing up outside of appointment times to seek advice from Jacob’s husband, Rex, on finances and how to become a

pharmaceutical sales rep for Cook Medical. This drives a deep wedge between the couple, who were already struggling with their own personal lives and outside problems. The main inspiration for “Prospect Hill” came from Walsh’s time working and living in Philadelphia. He was working bluecollar jobs and struggling to make ends meet. He tried everything — UPS warehouse worker, waiter at a myriad of restaurants, tour guide. He eventually was able to stabilize himself long enough to work for a couple of different newspapers and work on his playwriting. Then he said he saw the city from a different side of the tracks. The economic differences are easy to see in almost every town, he said. “When you’re in those places, you see starkly different lives people are leading within the same small town,” he said. “No matter where you’re at or how privileged you are, or the lack of

privilege you have, we come to the end of our resources at some point.” The focus of the play is similarity, not difference. Walsh describes the play as an examination of the way we all plan our lives and try to do the right thing, but those ideas always break down. Especially at this time in the United States people are being categorized in one camp or another. This could be politically or demographically, Walsh said. He wrote the play to help people question those labels. Are we taking demographics too seriously? Is that really who we are? “I hope people walk out of it feeling less alone with whatever they’re going through,” composer Kimberly Osberg said. “We’re all going through this crazy thing called life together.” Osberg worked with the sound team to compose the music and soundtrack for the beginning and end of the play and during the scene transitions. Because

MARLIE BRUNS | IDS

Chris Handley plays Jacob, Joshua Robinson plays Rex, and Josh Smith plays Ethan in IU Theatre’s At First Sight Series production of “Prospect Hill,” a new play by Bruce Walsh. The play will run in the Wells-Metz Theatre March 24, 25, 28-31 and April 1.

the show is so intimate and personal, she said she wanted the music to be simplistic. The transition music between scenes is sparse. The idea is that it leads the audience in no direction — they don’t know whether what just happened was good or bad and they have no inclination of who is the protagonist or antagonist. “Making the mood more

“PROSPECT HILL” Tickets $15-25 7:30 p.m. March 24, 25, 28-31 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. April 1 ambiguous makes the audience not see the play in black and white,” she said. “A lot of this play presents the struggles and challenges of being a modern-day human being, especially in a place like Bloomington that has so many particular quirks.”

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E.J. Dionne 5:30 p.m. March 28 Presidents Hall, Franklin Hall E.J. Dionne is an author, political commentator and syndicated columnist whose work appears in more than 100 news outlets in the U.S. and abroad. mediaschool.indiana.edu/speakerseries


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SEASONAL JOBS Available NOW! Do you have Food & Beverage experience? Are you looking for a great summer job in a family-friendly setting? Look no further! gearing up for another summer season and is seeking servers, bartenders, hosts, cooks, kitchen prep and utility positions. Requirements: t to stand on your feet for long periods oftime • Ability • Ability t to at least 30 pounds • Able to work in a fast-paced environment x ble to work nights, weekends and alll summer holidays • Flexi • Must have a natural smile • Must display a positive and Can-Do attitude • Experience preferred. If you’re not afraid of work that can be ancially rewarding and you are a team player, apply now at the Fourwinds Lakeside Inn & Marina, or complete an online application at FourwindsLakeside.com.

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Large 1 or 2 BR, avail. now. $499/month. Includes utils. Free prkg. Close to Campus. 812-339-2859 Large 1, 2 & 4 BR apartments & townhouses avail. Summer, 2017. Close to Campus & Stadium. 812-334-2646 Large apt., downtown. Houses 3-5 / 2 BR + loft. 812-333-9579 Now leasing Fall, 2017! 1 & 2 BRs. Hunter Ridge 812-334-2880

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1304 S. Grant. Spacious 3 BR, 2 BA. Garage, backyard. Avail. 08/06. $1,200/mo. Dan (812) 339-6148 or damiller@homefinder.org 3 BR house- A/C,W/D, D/W. 319 N. Maple, for Aug. $900/mo. No pets. Off street parking. 317-490-3101

2015 Toshiba Chrome Book 2 w/ charger. Fully functional. $220, obo. siewilli@indiana.edu

Now renting 2018-2019. HPIU.COM 812-333-4748 No pets please.

Beats Studio Wireless w/ great sound quality. $100- neg. jamcaudi@indiana.edu

Rooms/Roommates

32” Insignia TV. Comes with remote. $150, obo. 651-210-0485 telbert@indiana.edu

Bose SoundLink mini Bluetooth speaker. Good cond. $139. liucdong@indiana.edu

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Canon Laser Multifunction Printer. Print, scan, copy & fax $75. aaalshal@indiana.edu

4 BR, 4.5 BA townhouse avail. til July. Discounted to $475/mo., furn., cable & internet. 208-221-5382

HP Envy Laptop. 15.6’ Touchscreen. 2015 model. Great cond. $650 njbaranc@indiana.edu

Aug 17-18 sublease. Priv. BR w/BA in furn. 2 BR apt, $710/mo + elec. Call/text: 317-519-3055

Mid 2010, 13” Macbook Pro w/ 8GB ram and 256GB SSD. $500. rforgas@indiana.edu New Samsung Galaxy Alpha Gold. Includes charger. Still in box. $200 sojeande@iu.edu

Sublet Apt. Unfurn. 1 BR/1 BA available May 18. Unfurn., close to downtown & campus. $600/mo. 574-536-5670

Sublet Condos/Twnhs. 1 BR avail in 5 BR, 3 BA twnhs. on 14th & Indiana. $510/mo. + utils. Guys only. cw94@indiana.edu

Sublet Houses 7th & Dunn. 1 BR avail. W/D, hrdwd. & parking. 1st mo. rent paid, $550, obo. Arbogdan@indiana.edu

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Now renting 2017-2018 HPIU.COM Houses and apartments. 1-2 bedrooms. Close to Campus. 812-333-4748 No pets please.

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Electronics 2 Klipsch Reference Premiere floor standing speakers. $699 kruschke@indiana.edu

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2013 13” MacBook Pro w/ charger & cable. Great condition. $675 neg. bbraunec@indiana.edu

LiveByTheStadium.com 218.5b East 19th S.t 2 BR, 1 BA.

Room w/garage avail. across from College Mall.

Houses

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Computers 14” Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon 4th Gen laptop. Barely used. $1200 obo. chongch@iu.edu

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Hiring Part Time Direct Support Professionals TSI’s mission is to create a system of care that will provide individuals with complex behavioral or medical conditions options for living in the community. We’re currently looking for compassionate & caring, high energy individuals who want to make a positive impact in their community. We offer flexible schedules starting at $11/hr., mileage reimbursement & paid training. Valid driver’s license & auto insurance preferred. Openings throughout the Bloomington area. Apply at: www.in-mentor.com

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

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Dental assistant. Part-time. No experience necessary. 812-332-2000

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

Lease 1 BR of 3 BR house. SE neighborhood, $490/mo. For more info: lnicotra@indiana.edu

Nikon D3200 Camera w/ 2 lenses, memory card(s), bag & charger. $500. danilebo@iu.edu Nintendo Mario Kart 8. Deluxe set Wii bundle. $249, neg. leile@indiana.edu Panasonic 50 in. 1080p TV. Good condition. $300. TV stand avail. fuyudi@indiana.edu Razer Deathstalker Expert Game Keyboard. $45, neg. 812-369-7857 iishak@indiana.edu Samsung Smart TV 60. $400 neg. 812-272-9166 zhaok@indiana.edu Sony BDP-S1100 Blu-ray disc player w/ 3 movies. $40 crmedina@indiana.edu

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11

Twin XL bed frame and box mattress. Great condition. $70 for both. psaravan@iu.edu

Black futon in good condition. Folds into full-size bed. $35. wanlin@indiana.edu

Used coffee table for sale. Little wear and tear, but good condition. $25. mtbarr@indiana.edu 430

Black futon in very good condition. Removable legs. 2 yrs old. $150. smmarchu@indiana.edu Brand new IKEA “Kungsmynta“ full/double mattress protector. $35, obo. nirobert@indiana.edu

61-key digital electronic piano. Like new. $60 571-599-8472 shuhou@iu.edu

Designer glass dining table w/ micro-suede chairs. $150, obo. Cash only. meldye@indiana.edu

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

Dresser, good cond. Black. Must be picked up. $50. kabakken@indiana.edu

Traynor custom valve YCV50 guitar tube amplifier. $400. jusoconn@indiana.edu 435

FREE full-size blue sleeper sofa. Removable seat covers. Must pick up. 812-527-7473

rnourie@indiana.edu

AB Lounger for working abdominal muscles. $40 obo ccowden@indiana.edu

Memory foam king-sized mattress. Used 10 mo. 812-671-5853 binggong@indiana.edu

Horoscope

Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 7 — Allow extra time for shipping and transportation. Professional challenges keep you on your toes. Coordinate and communicate to maintain momentum. Take care of busi-

Misc. for Sale 2 Yakima bike carriers. carry bikes w/front wheel still on. $65

Glass and wood computer desk in great condition. $50, obo. chang74@indiana.edu

Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 7 — Adapt with your team to unexpected news. With organization and collaboration, you can surpass challenging circumstances. Keep calm and carry on.

Instruments

Free: Vintage wooden cabinet record player/ radio. slskinne@indiana.edu

Selling 70lb. Everlast punching bag and stand. $200. macfishe@indiana.edu

Unopened box of 100 “Donut Shop” Keurig cups. $40. krhiers@indiana.edu

10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.

Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Today is an 8 — Your wanderlust is getting worse. Nearby obligations clash with distant fantasies. Not everyone agrees. Provide motivation. Handle urgencies. Come up with an inspiring possibility. Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Today is a 7 — Manage finances to adapt to a surprise. Work with your partner to come up

BEST IN SHOW

with backup plans. Be careful and thorough to advance. Give thanks. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is an 8 — Spend time with someone attractive. Strategize and organize. Partnership is required with all the changes going on; support each other and delegate what neither can do. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a 7 — Bad news could impact your health. Take things

PHIL JULIANO

GREEN APPLES

520 505

2003 VW Passat GLS. 70k mi. $4500. lmurray@indiana.edu 812-391-1407

Clothing

Motorcycles Suzuki GW250 Motorcycle w/extended factory warranty. $2650. rnourie@indiana.edu

easy. Disciplined coordination navigates a surprise. There’s a silver lining, if you look for it.

Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is a 7 — Look at the big picture and watch for hidden agendas. Observe and document the changes. Write and prepare for later posting. Get the word out.

Crossword

Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is a 9 — Negotiate the numbers carefully. Handle business at home before expanding. Hammer out details before signing. A profitable deal could prove controversial. Consider consequences. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is a 9 — You’re ready for a personal change; a new

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis

su do ku

Difficulty Rating: How to play: Fill in the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 grid contains the digits 1 through 9, without repeating a number in any one row, column or 3x3 grid.

Answer to previous puzzle

© Puzzles by Pappocom

NON SEQUITUR

1 Device used with a planchette 6 Hail in old Rome 9 2000s Israeli prime minister Sharon 14 Rip out stitchwork in 15 “The Louisville __”: nickname for Ali 16 “Five Weeks in a Balloon” novelist 17 Last line of Dale Evans Rogers’ “Happy Trails” 20 Puget Sound swimmer 21 Bull pen locale 22 Sci. subject 23 Recipe directive 25 Cat of many colors 27 Got laughs, hopefully 31 Stately 32 Tomato type 33 Bird __ 36 Scottish countryside sight 37 Northern Kentucky county 39 Complain 40 Dancer Charisse 41 Stew veggies 42 Kid around with 43 Alternative for beef avoiders 46 Prepare for cooking, as sole

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style, perhaps? Take care not to lose things. Replace something that’s broken. Keep costs down. Take charge. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is a 6 — Hide out in your castle and consider your message. Investigate your case, and clarify it for others. You gain more now through wit.

© 2017 By Nancy Black Distributed by Tribune Media Services, INC.All RightsReserved

L.A. Times Daily Crossword

JEFF HARRIS

ACROSS

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Bicycles 24” orange 7 speed HotRock mountain bike. Good for beginners. $150 obo shadrumm@iu.edu

Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is a 6 — Discuss changes at home with family. Gather more information before making a decision. Listen for what’s wanted. Keep confidences. You can get whatever you need.

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2010 Hyundai Genesis Coupe. 3.8L V6. 106,500 mi. $13,000. junchung@indiana.edu

DigiTech RP200 Guitar. Multi-effects pedal, great cond. Power supply incl. $30. jusoconn@indiana.edu

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is a 7 — Relax and discuss recent changes. Practice your arts and sports together. Discipline reaps surprising results. Express your appreciation for someone you love.

Trek Madone 3.1 road bike. In great condition. Less than 2000 mi. $900. trgold@indiana.edu

2009 Kia Sportage LX. 135k mi. 4 cyl. $4900 812-929-0038 cjbland@indiana.edu

Size 9.5, black, Steph Curry shoes. Barely used. $85, obo. johndeck@indiana.edu

Music Equipment

Raleigh Detour 2.5 Cruiser Bike. Upland Brewery decals. 7 speed. $100 neg kieramey@iu.edu

2008 BMW 335xi. 87k mi., clean title. Tuned. $16,200. kishah@iupui.edu

Plato’s Closet pays cash on the spot for trendy, gently used clothing. 1145 S. College Mall Rd. 812-333-4442

Inversion table by Elite Fitness. Only used once. Can drop off. $100, obo. strshort@indiana.edu

Bicycles

2002 Toyota Highlander Limited 4x4, great offer! 210k mi. $3988, neg. zhan6@iu.edu

New Turtle Dove Yeezys. Size 9.5 US w/ Yeezy socks. Price neg. richuang@indiana.edu

Full set of men’s and women’s scuba gear in great cond. $450/ea. clekitch@gmail.com

The Complete Earth. Douglas Palmer pub. Quercus, London. Like new. $50. 812-585-5749

Jewelry

Swarovski crystal heart necklace. Perfect gift for girlfriend. $30, obo. ssoundra@iu.edu

Canon zoom lens. 75300 mm. Never used. Price for best offer. carewall@indiana.edu

Automobiles 09 Black Honda Accord LX model. 71k mi w/ perfect condition. $8700, neg. 812-391-2542

Stainless steel silver watch. Looks brand new. Adjustable size. $20. laumlewi@indiana.edu

Canoe for Sale! 17 ft. OldTowne Discovery 174. Minor scratches. $450, obo. ciumm@hotmail.com

To get the advantage, check the day’s rating:

ness.

GRE Manhattan prep books & Essential Words flash cards. Like new. $75 alarmann@indiana.edu

Bontager Solstice helmet: Black, $20. sancnath@indiana.edu Bulwer’s works 9 vol. Edward Bulwer Lytton Good Cond. pub 1880. $75. 812-585-5749

Textbooks

TRANSPORTATION

515

Solid oak drop-leaf dining table w/ 2 free chairs. $50. besmer@indiana.edu

Large IU shirt, collar, and boots for dog. Brand new condition. $25 jesweet@iu.edu

462

Furniture

Pets

520

Pro-line pool table w/ accessories. 99”x55”38”. Great cond. $800.

Beautiful dark oak golf ball holder. Looks like new. $45. laumlewi@indiana.edu

tombethschro@gmail.com

3-level TV stand w/ 2 glass shelves. $50. 812-606-1144 cdohman@indiana.edu

445

Battlefield Hardline for Xbox One. Disc is in good shape. $20. dstarche@iue.edu 450

Off white leather couch. Great condition, no rips or tears. $100, obo. bhuntzin@indiana.edu

465

420

Western Digital 250GB 7200 RPM internal hard drive. $20, obo. camamart@indiana.edu

Misc. for Sale

441

Unlocked Dualism Huawei Honor 5x Smart Phone, $120. dhoy@indiana.edu

Furniture

435

Electronics

420

415

Friday, March 24, 2017 Indiana Daily Student idsnews.com

49 One getting under your skin 50 From the top 51 Time server, usually 54 Block in a barn 57 What’s left by an ace investigator ... and in each of the four longest puzzle answers 60 Mischievous 61 Gloucester’s cape 62 “The Heart of Georgia” 63 MS. enclosures 64 Strings for Israel Kamakawiwo’ole 65 Legislative assemblies

DOWN 1 See 59-Down 2 Combined, in Cannes 3 Capital NW of New Delhi 4 Type of cat in “Cats” 5 “How cute!” 6 Marzipan staple 7 Competed 8 Parrier’s tool 9 Clark’s “Mogambo” co-star 10 Entertain lavishly 11 Tabriz native 12 “Giant Brain” unveiled in 1946 13 Slowly, to Salieri 18 Point Pelee’s lake

WILEY BREWSTER ROCKIT: SPACE GUY!

19 In the future 24 Jag model 26 Dossier shorthand 27 “Squawk Box” airer 28 2016 FedExCup winner McIlroy 29 Came up 30 “The Daily Show” host before Trevor 33 Chanel offering 34 Whack a mole? 35 Lyft competitor 37 Deprived (of) 38 Whiskey barrel wood 39 Highbrow 41 “The lowest form of humor— when you don’t think of it first”: Oscar Levant 42 Prom rental 43 Many an offcampus local 44 ’60s Batgirl portrayer Craig 45 At an angle 46 Some North Sea fishermen 47 Name on a historic B-29 48 Squawks 52 Genesis brother 53 Blockhead 55 “Coming Home” singer Bridges 56 Krabappel of “The Simpsons” 58 Add-__ 59 Caller of 1-Down

Look for the crossword daily in the comics section of the Indiana Daily Student. Find the solution for the daily crossword here. Answer to previous puzzle

TIM RICKARD


12

SPORTS

Friday, March 24, 2017 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com

SWIMMING & DIVING

Hoosiers end first full day at NCAAs in 5th By Ben Portnoy bmportno@indiana.edu @bportnoy15

In the first full day of competition at the 2017 NCAA Championships, the IU men’s swim and dive team sits in fifth overall with a total of 121 points. “It’s a battle,” head swim coach Ray Looze said. “We had a good day today — wasn’t a perfect day but we found a way to get the job done.” IU kicked off the night in the 200-yeard freestyle relay with a seventh place finish, the best finish for an IU team in history.

» BASEBALL

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 4 the game to cover third-base responsibilities. Kryszko is listed as a pitcher and sees more action there, while Miller is listed as an infielder and spends most of his time at third base. Miller went 2-3 with a run

Senior Sam Lorentz and juniors Ali Khalafalla, Blake Pieroni and Josh Romany finished with a time of 1:16.78. Senior Marwan Elkamash and sophomore Vini Lanza followed the 200 free relay in the 500-yard freestyle and the 200-yard individual medley, respectively. Lanza finished 14th. Elkamash finished seventh and broke the IU record while swimming against two of his former South Carolina teammates, Fynn Minuth and Akram Mahmoud. Mahmoud was also teammates with

Elkamash on the Egyptian National Team. “I’m always next to my Egyptian teammate, and whenever we’re always next to each other we always just go for it from the beginning of the race,” Elkamash said. Elkamash was in a record-breaking 500 free final that saw Texas’ Clark Smith set the American, U.S. Open, NCAA, meet and pool records. “Marwan’s time was incredible,” Looze said. “I just can’t believe it was seventh. That was one of the most epic heats of that event; it is the fastest. That time a year ago, two years ago would’ve

been second or third.” Khalafalla closed out the individual swims for the Hoosiers with a third-place finish in the consolation 50yard freestyle and placed 11th overall. Khalafalla was named an honorable mention All-American for his performance. “Ali really stepped up and got it done on the 50 free,” Looze said. “We need him to go a little faster on relays, though.” In the final relay of the night, the 400-yard medley, the team of senior Bob Glover, Pieroni, and sophomores Ian Finnerty and Lanza

finished sixth, the best finish for the Hoosiers in the event in 37 years. On the diving side, junior Michael Hixon and sophomore James Connor finished second and third respectively in the championship final of the 1-meter springboard, with first place being Purdue’s Steele Johnson. “It’s nice, obviously tonight would’ve preferred Steele not being there, but no, he’s a great guy, and we all get along really well,” Connor said. Hixon came close to defeating Johnson on his final dive with a score of 91.80,

but it wasn’t quite enough to pull out the win. “It was good. A little too little too late, but no, it’s always good to finish strong,” Hixon said. This was also the first time two Hoosiers placed in the top three of the 1-meter since 1969. The Hoosiers will be back in the pool starting at 10 a.m. Friday. “Tomorrow morning is going to be really important that we do a really thorough job of physical warmup, and then just being mentally ready to go ‘cause it’s a grind, this meet,” Looze said.

batted in and a run scored at the plate but struggled a bit in the first pitching experience of his college career. He tossed 12 pitches and gave up one run on two hits in two-thirds of an inning pitched. When Lloyd came in to relieve Miller, the thenpitcher returned to third

base to finish off the game where he started. Miller said switching between third base and pitching is obviously different. “I haven’t done it at all for the Hoosiers, but back in high school I did it all the time,” Miller said. “I had time to go warm up in the pen beforehand, so it’s not like my

arm wasn’t fresh at all.” On the injury front, freshman shortstop Jeremy Houston is day-to-day with a hamstring injury. Sophomore pitcher Jonathan Stiever will see more action this weekend after rehabbing from an upper body injury, Lemonis said. Northwestern has had a

less-than-impressive beginning to the season overall and has fared even worse at home with a 1-5 record at Rocky and Berenice Miller Park. Due to inclement weather in the forecast for the end of the weekend, IU and Northwestern will play a doubleheader Friday and

wrap up the series Saturday afternoon. The Hoosiers are currently an even .500 on the road, with a record of 5-5-1. Winning outside of Bart Kaufman Field has been an issue for IU in recent years, as it hasn’t finished a season with a winning record on the road since 2014.

» QUALS

» BASKETBALL

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 7

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 4

avoid sliding but is confident that the track will be well taken care of. “You gotta ride a little more cautious and do your exchanges a little more cautious but I think the biggest impact is that the times will be slower across the board,” Kelly said. “So what we want is either rain for nobody or rain for everybody, as long as everybody’s on the same playing field it’s not too bad.” Ultimately, the Pi Kappa Alpha team aims to qualify among the top 11, which would earn them a single colored jersey on race day. “I don’t think you can take it for granted, you still have to go in expecting that anything can happen, including — god forbid — not qualifying for the race,” Kelly said.

SMU came out of the gates with a dismal 1-15 shooting performance in the first quarter and scored just four points in the opening frame. The Mustangs didn’t make a 3-pointer until the final frame, when they unleashed a barrage of four consecutive 3s that made the game interesting, but only slightly. IU never led by fewer than double digits in the second half and continued to pressure SMU both in and out of the paint. Four Mustangs are listed at sixfoot-two or taller, and junior forward and leading scorer Alicia Froling is one of them, so the Hoosiers relied on a trio of forwards to stop the SMU post players. Senior Jenn Anderson,

sophomore Kym Royster and freshman Darby Foresman each played at least 16 minutes in the victory and held SMU’s three tallest players to just 20 points combined. Moren said she was impressed with the way her team played in the low block. “Those are some big kids, so you were going to give up some points, but I thought for the most part, we kept Froling pretty well in check throughout the night,” Moren said. The 44 points allowed were the third-fewest in any game this season for IU, which gave up just 37 in a win against Presbyterian in November and 38 in a February victory against Northwestern. Even with SMU’s four made 3-pointers that sparked a 17-point fourth

quarter, IU was able to keep its opponent at bay by matching the tempo in a fast-paced final period. Both teams produced their highest scoring totals in the fourth. The Hoosiers put up 21 points to put the game away for good. Senior guard Alexis Gassion said IU followed the gameplan well against SMU and came into the game knowing the Mustangs would likely do most of their damage down low. When the Villanova Wildcats visit the Hoosiers at 2 p.m. Sunday for a quarterfinal matchup, expect IU to continue to rely on its defense. “That really boosts our self-esteem,” Gassion said. “Defense leads to offense, so once we play that great defense that leads into our transition.”

» TENNIS

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 4

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opportunity for us,” Schmider said. “We’ve been practicing at being more aggressive because if they are aggressive first they’ll have the advantage. So, we’re going to try and make the first move.” Since their big wins against Notre Dame and Kentucky, the duo has dropped a couple of matches but has a record of 23-4 on the season. “I think they got a little intimidated after beating Kentucky,” Azcui said. “The bullseye was on their back, and they felt it. I think now

» SOFTBALL

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 4 counter Trainer with senior pitcher Shayla Sweeney. As the only Rutgers pitcher with an ERA less than five and more than one win, Sweeney has a 6-5 record and has carried the starting rotation. Including Sweeney, three of Rutgers’ four pitchers were part of last year’s team that swept IU in three games in Piscataway, New Jersey. “Those pitchers were mainly slower and outside, so we’ll make adjustments

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Sophomore forward Kym Royster goes to the basket against SMU on Thursday in Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall. Royster had six points in the Hoosiers’ 64-44 win against the Mustangs in the third round of the Women’s National Invitation Tournament.

they are excited and back to knowing what they need to do to win.” They were ranked as high as No. 19 this season, and a win Saturday could boost them back up to where they were. The day after the Hoosiers play the Wolverines, they’ll welcome the 10-4 Spartans to town. Michigan State will play Saturday at Purdue. “Michigan State is a very good team, and they are well-coached,” Azcui said. “I think we just have to execute what we’ve been doing in practice.” IU beat Michigan State

4-3 in East Lansing, Michigan, last year but lost to the Spartans 4-1 in the Big Ten Tournament. Azcui said he wouldn’t be surprised if this were another 4-3 matchup between the two squads. Schmider said the team is looking for that one big win that will propel them to the next level, and this weekend presents the Hoosiers with that opportunity. “We know that we all have the potential to do really well,” Schmider said. “I don’t think we’ve had that one big win yet, but we just need that one result that is proof practice is paying off.”

as we go,” Uden said. “We’ll scoot up on the plate a little bit and drive the ball to the right side.” Beyond on-field performances, IU was forced to adjust to weather this weekend. Because of the chance of rain, IU and Rutgers will play at 3 p.m. and 6 p.m. Friday and at 1 p.m. Saturday. “We need to get in as many Big Ten games as we can because it determines seeding in the Big Ten Tournament,” Gardner said. “If we lose a weekend, it could affect where we are seeded.”

While IU hasn’t had a winning Big Ten record since 2012, it has improved its record each year in conference play after going 3-19 in 2013. IU is just 1-5 against Rutgers since it joined the Big Ten in 2014, but the two teams are trending in opposite directions currently, which is something Gardner will look to exploit at the plate. “We have a bigger scoring potential offensively,” Gardner said. “We can only go one game at a time, and take care of business.”


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