Monday, October 28, 2019

Page 1

Monday, October 28, 2019

IDS Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com

From memory, page 6

Collins to close in fall to be improved By Mel Fronczek mfroncze@iu.edu | @MelissaFronczek

‘Rain or shine, it’s

powder time!’ Attendees and volunteers battle the elements to take part in the 20th annual Jill Behrman 5K run By Madi Smalstig msmalsti@iu.edu | @madi_smals

The clouds dulled the sky to a rolling grey, and the rain poured onto the concrete. The droplets dripped from the roof of the SRSC, slid down the top of multicolored umbrellas and bounced off the rain ponchos of the volunteers and attendees of the 20th Jill Behrman 5K Run. The JB5K, which was created 20 years ago in remembrance of IU student and Campus Recreational Sports employee Jill Behrman, took place Saturday at the SRSC. The money raised from the race contributes to the Jill Behrman Emerging Leaders Scholarship, which awards $1,000 each to two full-time undergraduate stu-

dents who have been involved in Campus Recreational Sports for at least one year and have exhibited leadership on campus or in their community. Jill’s parents wrote the criteria for the scholarship, race director Chris Geary said. At 10:30 a.m. SRSC staff members led the runners in a Zumba warm up. While some dancers stood huddled under the shallow edge of roof in front of the double doors, others followed the leaders in green ponchos as they stepped out and together, rolled their hips, grape-vined to the left, then to the right, jumped up and down and encouraged people to get moving. “Everyone come out!” said Jim Jamriska, assistant director for member services and parking operations and emcee for the day, into a

microphone. “You’re not not gonna get wet today!” After 30 minutes of either dancing in the drizzle or shivering under the SRSC entryway, the participants were ushered down the steps to watch the a cappella group Ladies First perform the National Anthem and then start the race with the announcement, “Let’s get this party started!” The participants, followed by Marilyn Behrman, Jill’s mother, filed through two flags with IU Recreational Sports onto the course. Throughout the race, runners ran through five color zones, where they were splashed with cakey chalk dust. They also ran past various entertainers such as the Pizza X music truck and student groups such as the Hoosierettes and D-Force

ANNA TIPLICK | IDS

An IU student runs through the last color station on her way to the finish line Oct. 26 at the Student Recreational Sport Center. The race was shortened from 2.8 to 2 miles due to rain, race director Chris Geary said.

Dance Club. The race was shortened from 2.8 to 2 miles due to rain, Geary said. “We decided to cut off the central campus part for safety reasons,” Geary said. “It’s always a risk when you do outdoor events. Twenty years and this is the worst weather we’ve ever had, though.” About 400 of the around 1,000 registered participants showed up for the race, which was

Collins Center will close next school year for a $23 million renovation to fulfill IU’s Bicentennial Strategic Plan. The renovation will include central heat and air, a card-reader security system, handicap-accessible restrooms and elevators, hardsurface flooring and repairs to the electrical system and roofs, said IU spokesperson Chuck Carney. While Collins is renovated, the living-learning center will be moved to Foster Quad, which will be newly renovated by that time, Collins director Padraic Kenney said. The Hillcrest Apartments and Collins’ arts facilities will still operate. Carney said the Collins renovation was scheduled for the 2021-2022 school year but was moved up when the McNutt and Foster quadrangles renovations were also moved up to this year. “It’s a beautiful, old building that needs some renovations,” Carney said. IU sophomore Aaron Sizemore is living in Collins for his second year and is the Collins Student Government historian. The building opened in 1924, and Sizemore said it was the first living-learning center in Indiana. “We’re really old, and a lot of cool things have happened here,” he said. Sizemore said some notable IU alumni lived in Collins, such as Laverne Cox, "Orange Is the New Black" actress, and Meg Cabot, author of "The Princess Diaries" series. Once known as the Men’s Residence Center, Collins has also been the home to military SEE COLLINS, PAGE 4

FOOTBALL

IU leaves Nebraska ready to go bowling IU’s postseason hopes in jeopardy after loss SEE 5K, PAGE 4

WOMEN’S SOCCER

By Caleb Coffman

By Will Trubshaw wtrubsha@iu.edu | @Willtrubs

IU women’s soccer got off to the exact start it wanted Sunday, but it went downhill from there. The Hoosiers scored in the seventh minute, but in-state rival Purdue answered with goals in the 21st and 59th minutes to stun a big IU crowd and keep the rivalry trophy, the Golden Boot, for a fifth straight season. Purdue’s first win since Sept. 22 also put the Hoosiers’ playoff hopes in danger despite having one more game in hand. “First 15 minutes we have total control, we scored a goal, we should have scored another one, and then we just dropped our standard, our level of intensity,” said head Coach Erwin van Bennekom. “With all respect to them, I think we cost ourselves that game.” Junior midfielder Melanie Forbes put the Hoosiers in front early with a strike in the seventh minute.

CLAIRE LIVINGSTON | IDS

Senior Chandra Davidson tries to move the ball across the field Oct. 27 at Bill Armstrong Stadium. IU lost its last home game of the regular season to Purdue, 1-2.

Freshman forward Jacelyn Smith crossed a pass from right to left that was settled down by freshman midfielder Avery Lockwood. Lockwood then touched a pass to Forbes, who did a half spin and sent a bullet into the top right cor-

ner of the net for her second goal of the season. IU had another great opportunity not five minutes later off of Lockwood’s foot, but her shot trickled wide left of the goal. After their initial flurry, the

Hoosiers were playing on their heels for most of the remaining first half. Purdue sophomore midfielder Grace Walsh was able to take advantage of her team’s constant pressure, as she lined up for a free kick in the 21st minute. Walsh sent a sinking shot on net that IU junior goalkeeper Bethany Kopel stopped initially, but she could not hold on and the ball rolled into the net to tie the game at 1-1. Heading into halftime, what the scoreboard indicated and how the Hoosiers felt about their chances suggested two very different things. “Suddenly we start losing the ball and people stop wanting to get on the ball,” van Bennekom said. “We just got worse as the game went on, and never felt we had a good grip of the game.” Purdue dominated the first 15 minutes of the second half and culminated its sustained pressure SEE SOCCER, PAGE 4

calcoffm@iu.edu | @CalCoff

LINCOLN, Neb — As the final whistle sounded and the Hoosiers poured onto the field, IU head coach Tom Allen breathed a sigh of relief as he ran to the “N” at the center of the field to shake hands with Nebraska’s head coach Scott Frost. To his right, the moment Allen has spent three years building began. The IU players jumped up and down hugging each other and danced their way to the corner of the endzone to share their 38-31 victory with the IU fans that made the trip to Nebraska. “It was awesome,” junior quarterback Peyton Ramsey said. “These are the reasons we come to Indiana, to play games like that. It was just fun, and we’re going to celebrate it.” For IU, the celebration with the fans in the corner of the endzone didn’t always feel like an inevitability. SEE FOOTBALL, PAGE 4


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.