Wednesday, Oct. 28, 2015

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I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | W E D N E S D AY, O C T. 2 8 , 2 0 1 5 | I D S N E W S . C O M

WOMEN’S SOCCER

IDS

Seniors play in final IU match

BORN AGAIN

By Danny White danswhit@indiana.edu | @DannyWhite617

The IU women’s soccer team has yet to win a game at Bill Armstrong Stadium this season. In its last game of 2015, IU plays rival Purdue at 7 p.m. Wednesday, the final match of the Hoosier seniors’ careers. IU (3-9-6, 0-6-4) has been in a tailspin for much of its season. Its struggles continued with a 3-1 loss at Michigan State on Sunday. But the IU-Purdue grudge match is not just another soccer game. “It is a ton of emotion,” IU Coach Amy Berbary said. “Their fans are crazy and right above you, and it’s an awesome atmosphere to be in. I’m just glad to be playing on our home field against them.” In the non-conference part of its schedule, IU started the season by posting a 3-3-2 mark. However, in Big Ten play, its record plummeted to an 0-6-4 record going into Wednesday. The Hoosiers will be looking to earn their first conference win against the Boilermakers. Purdue (8-8-1, 3-6-1) is coming off a 1-0 overtime loss at Michigan and is 2-4 in away matches. The IU seniors have never lost to Purdue in their collegiate careers and will try to keep their emotions in check and focus despite the emotional toll of playing their last game, Berbary said. “I never like senior night to begin with,” Berbary said. “We’re going to have the celebration in the middle of our warm up, hopefully get back and focus and try to finish out our season.” IU will not only look for a win against its arch rival, but it will look to send five seniors out with a win. “It’s just gone by so fast.” Berbary said. “I came in and those

Planned Parenthood protester reconciles her past with her new faith By Erica Gibson ecgibson5@gmail.com | @ericagibson_596

Jane Miller and other pro-life advocates pray outside Planned Parenthood centers across the country as part of the 40 Days of Life Campaign which ends Nov. 1. They don’t confront anyone who enters the clinic. They pray, as Jane prays, for mercy. At the Bloomington Planned Parenthood, Jane glides her fingers across the beads of her rosary. Her slender, almost translucent hands move down the strand, blue veins against blue beads. She said she believes in the Holy Spirit, the Holy Catholic Church, the communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the body and the life everlasting. Amen. Jane is not a Catholic yet, but after 65 years of struggling with her Lutheran faith, she said plans to become one. On the sidewalk in front of the Bloomington Planned Parenthood clinic, Jane prays to end abortion. She prays for the babies, she prays

SEE SENIORS, PAGE 9

for the workers inside the clinic, and she prays for the women who she says just aren’t thinking ahead. * * * Our Father, who art in Heaven, hallowed be thy name. It’s Wednesday — St. John and St. Jude’s day. Two Catholic churches, one in Bloomington and one in Spencer, Indiana share a pastor, Father Daniel Mahan. He asked his parishioners to sign up for one-hour shifts of prayer and vigil from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. A volunteer paces the perimeter of Planned Parenthood. In her hand are several pamphlets about contraception and chastity: Ru-486: What You Don’t Know. Chastity & Purity – An Invitation to Love. If Sex Feels So Good, Why do I Feel So Bad? No one takes a pamphlet.

Jane will officially convert to Catholicism on All Saint’s Day, the day St. John Paul II was ordained as a priest. St. John Paul II is Jane’s favorite saint. He’s one of the reasons she said she’s converting. She said she liked his openness and his morals as Pope. She finds comfort in Catholicism and its rigidity. “There’s freedom in boundaries,” Jane says. She’s happiest when she follows rules. It isn’t always fun, but Jane said it helps know she’s doing the right thing. Jane brought a sign that reads, “Aren’t you glad your parents were pro-life?” The sign is plastered with pictures. Some are Jane’s family, some are celebrities. There’s a young Leonardo DiCaprio and a picture of Miley Cyrus from when she was Hannah Montana. * * * Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against

* * * Thy will be on Earth as it is in heaven.

IU (3-9-6) vs. Purdue (8-8-1) 7 p.m., Wednesday, Bill Armstrong Stadium

SEE BORN, PAGE 9

PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY KATELYN ROWE AND MICHAEL WILLIAMS | IDS

Behind the Score project combines performance, study

Zombie apocalypse seminar prepares for emergencies

By Brooke McAfee

Food and water. Batteries and charging cables. Toilet paper and hygiene products. All are resources needed to survive a zombie apocalypse, emergency management coordinator John Summerlot of IU Emergency Management and Continuity told residents and staff at the new Hoosier Den in Read Center on Tuesday evening. It was all a part of a zombiethemed emergency preparedness seminar put on by Summerlot to help teach preparedness for other disasters like severe weather, pandemics and massive power outages. In an idea first initiated by the Centers for Disease Control, Summerlot said people are more open to discussing preparation for a zombie apocalypse than they are to discussing a pandemic because people often say, “This will never happen to me.” In his position, Summerlot makes building-level plans for different types of emergencies, including fire safety, earthquakes and active shooters. He was approached about a year ago with questions about planning for a zombie apocalypse. “Well, I’m sure we’ve got a plan for that. A to Z, active shooter to zombie apocalypse, we’ve got a plan for everything,” Summerlot responded at the time. Summerlot developed IUEMC’s own zombie apocalypse emergency management plan, reading books, government reports and

bemcafee@indiana.edu | @bemcafee24601

Behind the Score allows musicians to look beyond the performance so they can understand the history and significance of the music, project curator and professor of violin Jorja Fleezanis said. “It’s imperative to be able to cross these disciplines,” Fleezanis said. “It requires deviating from how we normally do things.” Jorja The Behind the Score project focuses Fleezanis on Johannes Brahms’ composition “Symphony No. 1 in C Minor, Op. 68.” The Symphony Orchestra will perform the piece at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Musical Arts Center. The performance features guest conductor Cliff Colnot. The project is dedicated to teaching the musicians about more than simply performing the piece, Fleezanis said. Their curriculum includes two guest speakers who gave the orchestra extensive biographical and musical information about Brahms and his work. The concert will begin with a video that illustrates the project for the audience, Fleezanis said. Cellist Styra Avins presented her research on the life and historical background of the composer in her lecture, “Brahms: The Making

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to the ALE

By Carley Lanich clanich@indiana.edu | @carleylanich

BEHIND THE SCORE Free 8 p.m. Wednesday, Musical Arts Center of the First Symphony.” The lecture highlighted what the symphony meant to the genre, Fleezanis said. The knowledge of Brahms’ biography and the composition of the work will contribute to the Symphony Orchestra’s understanding of the piece, Fleezanis said. University of Minnesota professor Michael Cherlin spoke about the harmonic behavior of the piece in his lecture “Liminal Space and the Uncanny in Brahms’ First Symphony.” His presentation was an unusual blend of literature and translation of musical thoughts, Fleezanis said. Musicology, or the scholarly analysis and research of music, is important for the orchestra members to understand, and it should not be separated from the performance of music, Fleezanis said. Colnot said his experience of working with the Symphony Orchestra on Behind the Score has been overwhelmingly positive. “The students are serious, interested in learning and happy to donate their discretionary time to getting better,” Colnot said in an email. SEE SCORE, PAGE 9

TIANTIAN ZHANG | IDS

A zombie-themed emergency preparedness presentation was led by John Summerlot on Tuesday evening at Read Center to prepare students for emergency situations.

various websites to stay in the know of zombie happenings. Going through his personal survival kit, which contains a handcrank powered radio, flashlight, cell phone charger and more, Summerlot’s red backpack of zombie survival essentials mirrored what would be needed for a 24-hour emergency preparedness kit. “Having a cell phone is a key piece to have,” Summerlot said. “You’re going to want to get those IU-Notify messages, you know, if zombies have been spotted somewhere near the Auditorium.” Summerlot said he has fully embraced his role on the zombie outbreak response team. His boss gave him a zombie calendar for Christmas. His laptop sports a zombie apocalypse sticker. He has even created a zombie template

for fun within the IU-Notify alert templates. In his presentation, Summerlot incorporated as much of IU’s zombie culture as possible by referencing materials from a book by an IU professor, a short film by an IU student and even a song called “Zombie Lover,” performed by Elmo Taylor, a band of IU Police Department officers. Junior Brandon Newson, a resident assistant in Read Hall, said he took away practical lessons from the seminar. “You watch a lot of zombie movies and stuff, and they are all about we have to have weapons and you have to have X, Y and Z, and a lot of that stuff I would not already have with me.” Newson said. “So I feel like if you want a real kit, you need to have prepared that already.”

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