Monday, Feb. 11, 2019

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Monday, February 11, 2019

IDS Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com

Race car grandma Page 7

Man charged in 2006 rape By Alex Hardgrave ahardgra@iu.edu | @a_hardgrave

A 47-year-old Heltonville man was arrested by Bloomington police Friday for an alleged 2006 rape. Jamison Beedie is the suspect believed to have entered a woman’s East Second Street home and raped her while armed with a knife, according to a Bloomington Police Department press release. Police were able to make the arrest because of a Feb. 5 DNA match. The woman was showering on March 28 when Beedie entered the house through the unlocked front door. The woman told police she left the door unlocked because she knew her boyfriend would arrive soon. Beedie came into the bathroom holding one of the woman’s kitchen knives and told her to get out of the shower, police said. The woman told police she tried to escape, but the man grabbed her arm and forced her into a bedroom. The woman’s boyfriend arrived and saw the suspect on top of his girlfriend. Beedie then left the apartment. The woman went to the hospital where she had a forensic exam. Beedie's DNA was collected when he was arrested on a felony charge in Lawrence County in late 2018. Evidence collected from almost 13 years ago resulted in a DNA database match Feb. 5. The Indiana State Police Laboratory notified BPD of the match. Detectives traveled to Lawrence County on Feb. 8 to arrest Beedie. After an interview, he was booked into the Monroe County Jail on preliminary charges of rape and burglary.

Senators address Myanmar crises By Sydney Tomlinson sydtomli@iu.edu | @sydpt

A bipartisan group of 22 U.S. senators, including Sen. Todd Young, RInd., introduced a resolution Jan. 29 calling for the Myanmar government to make it safe for Rohingya refugees to voluntarily return to their homes in Myanmar and extend them citizenship. “With all of the crises in the world, some Americans might ask why we should care,” a spokesperson for Young said in an email. Young believes the U.S. has a responsibility to respond to global atrocities like the violence in Myanmar, the spokesperson said. The United Nations and the United States Holocaust Museum have called the conflict a genocide. The Rohingya people are an ethnic Muslim minority in Myanmar, but they are not recognized by the government as one of the country’s more than 135 ethnic groups. The U.N. considers the Rohingya a stateless group, meaning they are not legally recognized as being part of any nationality, and has called them “the most persecuted minority in the world.” “Burma is maybe the most ethnically complicated country on earth,” said David Williams, a professor in the IU Maurer School of Law and executive director of the Center for Constitutional Democracy at Maurer. The IU center, including Williams, is helping advise peace talks in Myanmar to end the violent conflict that began in 1948 when the country became independent and revise their constitution, Williams said. He said the feelings of hostility between ethnic groups in Myanmar are common when there is political

‘Hail and welcome’ Local Pagan group honors the coming of spring By Ty Vinson vinsonjo@iu.edu | @ty_vinson_

Sidney Bolam, 35, began by centering herself. Being completely prepared is the first step to any Black Bear Grove ritual, Bolam said. She focused on getting rid of all her anxiety. She let go of worries about leaving her kids at home for a few hours and of her new role in leading the ritual. Bolam is part of Black Bear Grove, a Druid fellowship that meets in Bloomington twice a month and organizes rituals every six weeks. Druidry, a branch of paganism, believes in the spiritual nature of life itself. Groves, or branches, of the Druid Fellowship identify themselves as a group or congregation. All their rituals are public, and they have a strict rule of no blood sacrifices during public ritual, though some may practice that privately. “There are elements of the occult in all pagan rituals, including ours,” Bolam said. “But the occult and a cult are totally different. But I think perhaps uninformed people just lump all of that together.” Isaac Bonewits, who founded A Druid Fellowship in 1983, wrote the guidelines for identifying cults, and Black Bear Grove does not meet them. The guidelines have been used by the FBI. The group’s main purpose and belief is wildlife conservation, and all of their rituals are in public spaces where anyone can attend, according to the Black Bear Grove website. “It’s very open, and everyone is very eclectic,” said Pat Robertson, 70, a participant of Black Bear Grove. Robertson attended IU as an undergraduate and graduate student, but dropped out to pursue writing mystery novels before she received her master’s degree. Robertson and her husband lived in a log cabin they built on the outskirts of Monroe County while they pursued their undergraduate degrees in the 1980s. Robertson, who

ALEX DERYN | IDS

Top Sidney Bolam has tattoos on both hands. The one on her left hand symbolizes the earth, and the one on her right symbolizes the sun. JENNIFER LEE | IDS

Above Brigid’s crosses sit on the table for the ritual. Brigid’s crosses are usually made from rushes, and they are used to symbolize the hearth and the melding of paganism and Roman Catholicism.

identifies as an animist and an atheist witch, said she felt bad for cutting down the trees, so she went to each stump to apologize. Like Robertson, Bolam identifies as an animist, which is the belief that objects, places and creatures all possess a distinct spiritual essence. Black Bear Grove is a mixture of people who are open and people who don’t want their names to be known. Bolam said she tries to be as transparent as possible about her beliefs and what she’s involved in. The people who are open in the group want others to know there is nothing to be afraid of. Anyone is welcome to come to a meeting or ritual to see what it’s all about, but they aren’t expected to stay. “We don’t care if people leave during the meetings,” Bolam said. “We tend to be transparent.” Bolam has always been fascinated by the

natural world. Her uncle believed in Shamanism, a popular tradition in Native American history that focuses on human connection to nature, which is very similar to paganism. When Bolam was 11, she told her uncle she was sad that the rituals and beliefs of Native Americans were virtually lost, so he suggested she buy some books on the subject. Those books ended up being her first glimpse into the world of paganism. Bolam’s religion has created tension between her and her mother. Her mother doesn’t like how open Bolam is with her beliefs. After a ritual with Black Bear Grove, Bolam posted on Facebook about how she enjoyed her day with the Druids. Soon after, SEE PAGAN, PAGE 5

MEN’S BASKETBALL

Hoosiers drop another, lose to Ohio State By Cameron Drummond cpdrummo@iu.edu | @cdrummond97

IU Head Coach Archie Miller and his staff had two tries to get it right. With 46 seconds left in Sunday afternoon’s 55-52 home loss to Ohio State, IU had the ball with the game tied at 52. Only seven seconds remained on the shot clock for the Hoosiers, whose season craved the stabilizing force of a home win. IU called a timeout to set up an in-bounds play underneath its own basket. It was then forced to use another right away after the flailing limbs of Ohio State defenders prevented a successful entry pass. So IU, now 13-11 overall and 4-9 in conference play, did it all again, but the execution of the new play left plenty to be desired. The pass went to senior forward Juwan Morgan. He then tried to pass the ball to freshman guard Ro-

meo Langford, who was posted up in the paint near the basket, as the shot clock dwindled down. The ball never got there. Ohio State junior forward Andre Wesson stole it. “You can put that on me,” Miller said. “We tried to get the ball right at the basket with Romeo, maybe get fouled, maybe get a quick bucket, but it was a big turnover.” An Ohio State timeout then created the game’s winning play, a slip set that caught IU sophomore forward Justin Smith out of position and allowed Wesson to drive to the basket and dunk the ball unimpeded. A pair of missed 3-pointers, one a deep attempt for the lead from Langford that rimmed out and the other a prayer from junior guard Devonte Green in the closing seconds, rounded out IU’s fourth straight home loss. It was a fitting way to commemorate a sluggish offensive perfor-

ANNA TIPLICK | IDS

Freshman guard Romeo Langford goes up for a dunk against Ohio State on Feb. 10 at Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall. IU lost to OSU, 55-52.

mance in which the Hoosiers miss 32 of their 53 shots and trail by nine points inside the game’s first five minutes. The reduced scoring output was felt across the board — Mor-

gan’s three points were his fewest in a game since January 2018, while sophomore guard Al Durham scored just two points and attemptSEE IUBB, PAGE 6


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