MONDAY, NOV. 10, 2014
IDS
Hoosiers still winless in Big Ten, page 7
INDIANA DAILY STUDENT | IDSNEWS.COM
3 men in custody for rape Sunday
9
From IDS reports
and counting Grammy winner Janis Siegel to perform on campus By Audrey Perkins audperki@indiana.edu | @AudreyNLP
For Janis Siegel, nine-time Grammy winner and 17-time Grammy nominee, music did not come easy. It’s been a 42-yearlong, ongoing career of experiences that brought her to her music of today. “I was looking for a challenge,” she said. “Jazz is a journey of personal discovery ... it’s not just music.” Made famous by her work with The Manhattan Transfer, a jazz group that rose in popularity in the 1970s, Siegel will be celebrated in a tribute performance hosted by the Jacobs School of Music. “A Tribute to The Manhattan Transfer” will be featured as IU Vocal Jazz Ensemble’s Fall Concert, beginning at 8 p.m. today in Auer Hall. Siegel will perform with students and faculty and sponsor a master class the same day. Both the concert and master class are free and open to the public. This will be Siegel’s first time working with IU students. For those interested in the upcoming master class, Siegel said the session would be broken into two parts. The first half will be more technical. Siegel will listen to individual singers to provide them critiques in hopes of opening them up to tweaking their respective musical styles. The second half will have a question-and-answer session. She said this portion of the event
Three men are in custody following an apparent home invasion that took place early Sunday morning. Shots were fired at the scene of a call reporting a possible sexual assault in progress in the 500 block of East 12th Street early Sunday morning. BPD officers responded to the call at approximately 4:30 a.m. Sunday, according to a press release from the Bloomington Police Department. Upon arrival, an officer went to the front door, which was left ajar and then saw a male in SEE SHOOTING, PAGE 6
IU urged to stop investing in fuel By Ashleigh Sherman aesherma@indiana.edu | @aesherma
from the students,” Siegel said. “They make you think more.” Looking back on her start in the music industry, Siegel said the key was to make mistakes. That was how she found her personal voice. Good luck, hard work, listening and the ability to learn from mistakes led to her success, she said. Above all, for students aim-
If the Earth’s current surface temperature is increased by just two more degrees Celsius, it could cause catastrophic and irreversible damage, according to the intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Such catastrophes include increased exposure to extreme weather, forest fires, drought and disease, all to take place by the end of the century. The IU Graduate and Professional Student Organization wants IU to help stop the damage. GPSO has proposed that the IU Foundation divest from the top-200 fossil fuel companies within the next five years. To divest is to withdraw an investment. “We’re trying to put pressure on these fossil fuel companies, on these largest 200 fossil fuel companies, to change their practices,” GPSO sustainability officer Andrew Bredeson said. Bredeson said approximately 400 universities have campaigned to divest or partially divest from the top-200 fossil fuel companies. “Universities need to do something,” he said. “Universities have a moral obligation to do something. They’re leaders in society. I don’t think anyone would dispute that. They’re centers of
SEE SIEGEL, PAGE 6
SEE FOSSIL FUEL, PAGE 6
COURTESY PHOTO
Jazz vocalist Janis Siegel is coming to campus today for a free tribute concert and master class at the Jacobs School of Music.
will be relatively flexible. In a way, Siegel wants the students to lead the discussion, she said. She wants to hear about students’ interests. With her 42-yearlong career, Siegel said there are a lot of subjects to cover. “I’m not going to write out a list (of discussion subjects),” she said. “That doesn’t sound fun.” In her opinion, working with students is “very stimulating.” “The teacher learns things
MEN’S SOCCER
State revenue in Oct. surpasses Hoosiers advance with win against Northwestern that of Oct. 2013 by $13 million From IDS reports
By Michael Hughes
Who scored the goal?
michhugh@indiana.edu | @MichaelHughes94
Defensive midfielder Dylan Lax scored IU’s lone goal in the win. Read more, page 8 NO. 2 IU (11-3-5, 3-3-2) at Northwestern (9-3-6, 4-1-3) W, 1-1 (5-4)
Goalies are always mentally preparing for penalty shootouts. In Sunday’s Big Ten quarterfinal match against Northwestern, IU sophomore Colin Webb was forced to put that preparation to the test. Typically goalies try to remain focused on stopping opponent’s shots, blocking off other potential distractions. However, in the sixth round of penalty kicks, a sudden death round, Webb was called upon to take a penalty. Webb stepped up to the spot and converted. Then, he walked to the goal, turned and tipped a penalty shot off the crossbar to give IU a 1-1 (5-4) win in penalties, sending IU to the Big Ten tournament semifinals. “It’s psychologically great to have that,” IU Coach Todd Yeagley said. “On any run to a
championship it’s not that uncommon to have a couple of penalty scenarios.” Webb said he was prepared for taking a penalty, and he knew if it came to a sixth round he would be called upon. “Obviously we want to take care of a penalty shootout in the first five,” Webb said. “But once I realized that I was up next I knew I had to take care of business.” It is not unusual in college soccer to see goalies take penalties, Yeagley said. He also said goalies have a better understanding of SEE MEN’S SOCCER, PAGE 6
Indiana surpassed last October’s revenue by more than $30 million, according to Indiana’s monthly revenue report for the month of October released last week. State general fund revenues in October of this year were $1.4 million more than the estimates from December 2013, according to a press release from the Indiana State Budget Agency. The general fund received $45.5 million more in revenue last month compared to numbers for October 2013. Sales tax collections and individual income tax also surpassed totals from last October, earning $609.3 million and $370.9 million, respectively. Corporate income tax collections for October were less than the totals from last year, bringing
Monthly revenue for Indiana
Monthly actual revenues compared with estimated revenues, in millions 5
July 2014
Aug. 2014
Sept. 2014
Oct. 2014
0
-5
-10
-15 -20
-25
SEE REVENUE, PAGE 6 -30
SOURCE IN.GOV GRAPHIC BY KATELYN ROWE