Thursday, October 10, 2019

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Thursday, Oct. 10, 2019 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com

HOMECOMING

GUIDE INSIDE

IU signs DACA brief sent to Supreme Court By Grace Ybarra gnybarra@iu.edu | @gynbarra

ALEX DERYN | IDS

Redshirt freshman quarterback Michael Penix Jr. peers over Michigan State’s defensive linemen Sept. 28 in Spartan Stadium. IU is heavily favored to win against Rutgers on Saturday.

IU favored to win against Rutgers By Caleb Coffman calcoffm@iu.edu | @CalCoff

It’s no longer hot in Bloomington, the leaves are just starting to change colors and it’s finally homecoming weekend at IU. The Hoosiers are set to take on Rutgers this weekend and find themselves in unfamiliar territory. The Hoosiers are favored to win by 28 points over the Scarlet Knights — the largest margin in over 20 years — and are looking to earn their first Big Ten win of the season. Rutgers who is 1-4 on the season and 0-3 in conference play hasn’t won a Big Ten game since Nov. 4, 2017, and have been outscored a combined 130-7 against conference opponents so far this season. Despite being heavily favored, IU head coach Tom Allen refuses to take anything for granted as he prepares his team for Saturday’s matchup. “Been in this league long enough to know those things are irrelevant,” Allen said. “I know that we’re playing a Big Ten football team all Saturday. We’ll have to be at our very best. That’s the absolute truth.” Two weeks ago in East Lansing, Michigan, as IU took on Michigan State, the Hoosiers showed what their best could possibly look like as they took the then-No. 25 Spartans down to the

PHOTOS BY ALEX DERYN | IDS

Senior defensive lineman Allen Stallings IV and fifth-year linebacker Raekwon Jones look toward the sidelines in the first quarter Sept. 28 in Spartan Stadium. IU battled against Michigan State and lost 40-31.

wire before falling 40-31. This week, IU faces a very different challenge. While the Spartan’s theme has been in place since 2007 when head coach Mark Dantonio took over at Michigan St., Rutgers comes in with a fresh coaching

staff led by interim head coach Nunzio Campanile. Campanile was given control after only three games when Chris Ash was fired earlier this season and has already had to face his fair-share of problems. Before stepping onto the field

to call his first game, Campanile was thrown a curveball as his two best players junior running back Raheem Blackshear and sophomore quarterback Artur Sitkowski asked to not play so they could

mlie@iu.edu | @Michell74176828

SEE BUILD, PAGE 5

SEE OSTROM, PAGE 5

clapete@iu.edu | @claire_peterss

CLAIRE LIVINGSTON | IDS

A sub-contractor sits on a metal beam Oct. 9 at North Fee Lane. The sub-contractors aren’t affiliated with Habitat for Humanity, but they help with some of the more complicated tasks.

pool, we couldn’t do this without Habitat, so we make a great team.” She said since the late 90s, Whirlpool has donated a refrigerator and a range for every Habitat home built in America, including this one. “This is our 10th house,” Meyer-

By Michelle Lie

Niederman said. “Both the Whirlpool Habitat Build and KISI are celebrating ‘a decade of difference’ this year.” For the past week and a half, volunteers come to the construc-

SEE FOOTBALL, PAGE 5

By Claire Peters

Social Impact. The Kelley students and staff work with experienced crew leaders from Habitat for Humanity as well. “We help provide the people power,” Meyer-Niederman said. “We couldn’t do this without Whirl-

IU honors Nobel Prize winner IU professor Elinor “Lin” Ostrom was a woman of many firsts: the first woman to win the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, the first person honored at IU-Bloomington with an Bicentennial Historical Marker for her achievements and the first woman to have her own statue at IU. The dedication, which took place at 1:30 p.m. Monday at Woodburn Hall, marked the 10th anniversary of Ostrom being selected to receive the Nobel Prize. Ostrom was not there to see the honor: She passed away on June 12, 2012, in Bloomington. Ostrom was one of the leading forces behind the development of the academic studies of the commons, IU President Michael McRobbie said. He said her work examined the power of civil society, the development of social laws and the voluntary collective actions of citizens to solve problems. “Lin came to IU, and the university was incredibly fortunate to have had the benefit of her outstanding work as a teacher, researcher, adviser, and an administrator for nearly half a century.” McRobbie said. Ostrom was defined by her curiosity, and she cared about answering questions like most people care about breathing, Provost Lauren Robel said. She said Ostrom’s discipline shaped her questions, and she never let boundaries define her. “There was never anything conventional about Lin and her thinking,” Robel said. “That’s how you get to a Nobel Prize.” Ostrom influenced many junior faculty members, including Lauren MacLean, the Arthur F. Bentley Chair and professor in the Department of Political Science, who is affiliated with the Ostrom Workshop. MacLean said

Habitat for Humanity completes annual build Alice Wilmoth, a lifelong Bloomington resident, has never been to an IU football game. At the first one she’ll ever attend, she is receiving the keys to her new house on the field before the Homecoming game begins. The 10th annual Habitat for Humanity build on IU’s campus began Oct. 1 and concludes Friday, starting with nothing and ending with a home for a family. This project is a partnership between Habitat for Humanity, the Kelley School of Business and the Kelley Institute for Social Impact. The partnership is being sponsored by Whirlpool, a home appliance company whose former CEO, Jeff Fettig, was a Kelley School graduate. “It’s a great way for students to give back to the community in a real tangible way,” said George Vlahakis, associate director of communications and media relations at the Kelley School. “Someone who is going to be living in a new home this winter as a result of all these students and faculty.” The Kelley Institute for Social Impact recruited around 300 students, faculty and staff to volunteer to work on the project, said Shawna Meyer-Niederman, assistant director of the Institute for

IU expressed its support for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals recipients in an amicus brief, which urged the Supreme Court stand in support of DACA recipients. President Donald Trump decided to terminate DACA, a program created during the Obama Administration designed to give work permits to undocumented immigrants that arrived in the United States as children, in September 2017. The program has given more than 700,000 immigrants the ability to work legally in the U.S. and provided temporary protection from deportation. The program also provides recipients with a driver’s license and a Social Security Number. With a Social Security Number, students can fill out a Free Application for Federal Student Aid to help with the cost of higher education. The Supreme Court is set to hear an oral argument Nov. 12 in challenge to the decision to end DACA. “DACA recipients contribute to our campuses, communities and our country’s economy every day,” IU President Michael A. McRobbie said in a press release. “IU remains strongly committed to supporting DACA recipients, and we believe it is vital that our nation continue to maintain its support – and remove any question of uncertainty – for those protected by the program.” IU joined 165 other colleges and universities in signing the amicus brief in support of the DACA program. “IU will not waver in its longstanding commitment to the diverse and inclusive environment that is essential to an excellent education and that enables all of its students – regardless of their background or country of origin – to succeed in a place where they feel valued, respected and at home,” McRobbie said the release.


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