Skip to main content

Indiana Daily Student - Thursday, Jan. 16, 2025

Page 1

IDS Thursday, January 16, 2025

Jeff "Goose" Irving

James “Apple” Muncy

INSIDE

'GOODE TO BE HOME'

Ned Powell

Standing for

PEACE The quiet persistence of Bloomington’s locals

By Mackenzie Lionberger mlionber@iu.edu

The older men stand at the corner of the courthouse square, back at their endless vigil. It’s a late afternoon in August, and as always, the four men in their 70s to early 80s are holding signs adorned with the peace symbol. Students have just returned to Bloomington for the fall semester, and now they walk past staring at their phones. Some turn their heads to avoid making eye contact. Cars pass, too, mostly ignoring the men. A few drivers honk in solidarity, raising the peace sign out their windows. The men smile. “Peace!” they call out. “Love!”

For more than two decades, they’ve stood on this corner from 5-6 p.m. nearly every Wednesday, through an endless cycle of wars around the world.

"I find it hard to believe that we don’t have a whole bunch of young people there saying, ‘Yeah … we need peace." Tim Terry, peace advocate

They learned long ago to accept the indifference of strangers and recognize that it’s hard for people to stop whatever they’re doing to join the tiny vigil on behalf of a hope that may seem so

out of reach. However, that reach does not seem so far for them. Still, the men take their place at the corner every week and wave their signs, demanding peace in the world. They stand there in the rain, in the blistering summer heat, in the cruelest days of winter. They have no intention of stopping, even if almost no one pays attention. “We need peace in the world,” Tim Terry, one of the group’s original members, said. “It's not happening, but I'm going to stand here with these old guys and show them that I think it's worthwhile standing here.” SEE PEACE, PAGE 6

MIKAYLA OWENS | IDS

Tim holds the hand peace sign at passing cars Sept. 18, 2024, in at the downtown square Bloomington. He said he finds it unconscionable that there are not college students standing alongside them despite IU Bloomington having nearly 50,000 students total.

Mike Braun inaugurated as governor Braun is now Indiana's 52nd governor alongside Lieutenant Governor Micah Beckwith CASEY SMITH | INDIANA CAPITAL CHRONICLE

Governor-elect Mike Braun Is pictured campaigning. Braun and Micah Beckwith were sworn into Indiana’s governorship and lieutenant governorship Jan. 13.

By Andrew Miller ami3@iu.edu | @andrew_mmiller

Mike Braun and Micah Beckwith were sworn into Indiana’s governorship and lieutenant governorship at a ceremony starting 11 a.m. Jan. 13, the culmination of a three-day affair and hard-

fought campaign. Braun is now the state’s 52nd governor, solidifying four more years following two decades of Republican rule. Alongside Braun and Beckwith was Todd Rokita, who began his second term as attorney general. "I am optimistic that in

the next four years, we see a transfer of power not only between states, but from the federal government back to the states," Braun said at the ceremony. Who is Mike Braun? Before pursuing politics, Braun was a businessman

under his father’s wing down in Jasper who married his high school sweetheart. He grew the 15-person Meyer Body Company into Meyer Distributing, which employs hundreds in 105 locations in the U.S. and Canada. SEE BRAUN, PAGE 4

BRAUN'S PATH TO GOVERNORSHIP

1954 1978 1986 2014 2018 2025 Michael Kent Braun is born in Jasper, Indiana.

Braun graduates from Harvard Business School with an MBA and moves back to Jasper.

Braun purchases farm equipment company Meyer Body and would soon begin expanding its reach.

Braun is elected to the Indiana House of Representatives to represent the 63rd Congressional District.

Braun is elected to represent Indiana in the U.S. Senate.

Braun is inaugurated as Indiana's 52nd governor.

Former athletes allege trainer knew about abuse An amended lawsuit claims current trainer Tim Garl knew about Brad Bomba Sr.'s sexual abuse By Dalton James and Jacob Spudich sports@idsnews.com

Editor’s note: This story includes mention of sexual violence or assault. Former IU men’s basketball players amended their lawsuit against IU on Jan. 14, alleging the university systemically mishandled its

response to known routine and repeated invasive rectal exams by former team physician Brad Bomba Sr. The amended class action suit alleges current team trainer Tim Garl assigned players to Bomba Sr. knowing Bomba Sr. would sexually assault them, according to a filing obtained by the Indiana Daily Student. The amendment to the case, filed the morning of Jan. 14, comes more than a month after a judge ruled Bomba Sr. is competent to provide a deposition in the lawsuit. Garl was hired by Indiana as the head men’s basketball trainer in 1981, a position he still holds with the team. According to the filing, Garl was responsible for assigning each player to ei-

ther Bomba Sr., or his son, Dr. Bradford Bomba Jr., as IU did not allow the players to choose which physician they saw for their annual physical examinations. The suit states Garl continued to “condone, facilitate, and approve Dr. Bomba, Sr.’s constitutional violations of the IU men’s basketball players” by still assigning them to Bomba Sr. When Bomba Sr. invoked his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination in a deposition Dec. 4, he also testified that Garl was his supervisor. The suit states Garl had the authority to take corrective action to end Bomba’s sexual assaults. IU Executive Director of Media Relations Mark Bode said in a statement that IU does not comment on litigation and referred to a state-

ment on IU’s independent review.

The suit states Garl continued to “condone, facilitate, and approve Dr. Bomba, Sr.’s constitutional violations of the IU men’s basketball players." In the filing, John Flowers joins fellow former players Haris Mujezinovic and Charlie Miller as plaintiffs in the class action lawsuit. Another former Indiana men’s basketball player, who is anonymous, came forward with sexual abuse allegations against Bomba Sr. on Oct. 15 and retained Michelle Simpson Tuegel

of the Simpson Tuegel Law Firm to represent him in a potential civil claim against the university. Mujezinovic accused Bomba Sr. of sexual misconduct in a complaint released publicly by IU on Sept. 11. Mujezinovic and Miller then filed the class action lawsuit against IU on Oct. 15. The Jan. 14 filing alleges Bomba Sr.'s assaults were openly discussed by players in the presence of IU employees and that Flowers’ cousin, who also played for Indiana, suffered the same abuse. Flowers’ cousin is not identified in the suit. Flowers did not suspect Bomba Sr.’s examinations constituted sexual misconduct until early 2024 when he discussed the exams with his cousin, according to the filing.

Flowers played for Indiana from 1981-83, more than a decade before Mujezinovic (1995-97) and Miller (1994-98). Before he arrived at Indiana, Flowers was a McDonald’s AllAmerican in 1981. After Flowers’ first physical with Bomba Sr., his teammates told him he “passed” Bomba Sr.’s “test,” according to the suit. Garl also allegedly laughed at Flowers and his freshman teammates, making jokes pertaining to their examinations with Bomba. After the 1982-83 season, Flowers transferred to University of Nevada, Las Vegas and played there from 1983-86. He was drafted by the Sacramento Kings in the 1986 NBA Draft. SEE GARL, PAGE 4


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Indiana Daily Student - Thursday, Jan. 16, 2025 by Indiana Daily Student - idsnews - Issuu