I N D I A N A D A I LY S T U D E N T | T H U R S D AY, O C T. 2 3 , 2 0 1 4 | I D S N E W S . C O M
HUMAN REMAINS FOUND ON LOT
IDS
From IDS reports
Human remains were found on a vacant lot at Arlington Valley Mobile Home Park at approximately 11 a.m. Wednesday. The lot, located in the 1600 block of North Willis Drive on the north side of Bloomington, has been vacant since sometime this summer and was being cleaned by property owners when the discovery was made, according to the Bloomington Police Department. It appeared that a plastic storage bin had been placed over the remains, located at the rear of the lot. Upon arrival at the scene, Bloomington Police detectives were able to identify the remains as human and in the advanced stages of decomposition. The BPD estimates the remains may be approximately two to three months old. As of Wednesday evening, there is no indication of the victim’s gender, race or age. The BPD is also working with the Monroe County Coroner’s Office. The remains have been taken to the University of Indianapolis to be examined by members of the Anthropology Department, where a cause of death could potentially be identified. Results may not be available for another four to six weeks, according to the police department. The investigation is ongoing. Holly Hays
ELECTIONS 2014 LUKE SCHRAM | IDS
Senior midfielder Dylan Lax and teammates mob senior defender Patrick Doody after his first-half goal put Indiana up on Notre Dame on Wednesday at Bill Armstrong Stadium.
IU knocks off No. 1 1-0
Off icials discuss Ind. voter ID law By Neal Earley
By Andrew Vailliencourt availlie@indiana.edu | @AndrewVcourt
IU senior defender Patrick Doody lined up to take the corner kick. He got his footing and looked in from the far side of Jerry Yeagley Field. With a running start, he kicked a curving line drive that hit the far post and bounced straight into the net for the Hoosiers’ lone goal of the game. It was his third goal of the season and was enough to lead the No. 8 IU men’s soccer team to a 1-0 win against the No. 1 Notre Dame Fighting Irish on Wednesday. It was only the second time Doody had scored directly off of a corner kick. “I did it once when I was like 12,” Doody said. “Obviously I wasn’t trying to do that, I’m trying to do something close to that and make it hard
for the goalie and everyone, but the mosh play you just want to whip in a hard ball closer to the goal than on a normal corner kick. I knew I hit it well, and then when no one hit it, I had a nice view of it so it was pretty cool.” The goal came in the 19th minute and gave the Hoosiers (9-2-3, 2-2-1) a good feeling at the break against the Irish (8-4-2). “When we went in to halftime we were feeling good,” Doody said. “Granted we were only halfway done, but we felt really good about the way we were playing.” IU Coach Todd Yeagley said the mosh play on a corner kick is something the team had been working on. “Rarely do you see it go directly in,” Yeagley said. “But you kind of freeze the keeper, and it’s hard to make plays there. We train that particular play, and we thought it would be effective.”
More on IU’s shutout, page 5 IU goalie Collin Webb had three key saves for IU against the Irish. IU was the aggressor from start to finish, controlling both tempo and possession, something Maryland was able to do Sunday when the Terrapins beat the Hoosiers. IU put more pressure on Notre Dame attackers, forcing more turnovers. “The boys refocused, and we did a lot better job with the details tonight,” IU sophomore goalie Colin Webb said. Yeagley said the team’s performance in the first half was the best period of play he’s seen all season. “Notre Dame is a top team,” Doody said. “I think it was a really, really SEE SOCCER, PAGE 6
Cardinal Stage hosts ‘Rocky Horror’ event By Amanda Marino ammarino@indiana.edu | @amandanmarino
The Cardinal Stage Company will celebrate its ninth showing of “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” at 8 p.m. and midnight Saturday at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater. There will be two showings of the cult classic as well as a variety of other activities. Tickets cost $15 without costumes and $10 with costumes. “We use it as a fundraiser for different education initiatives,” IU graduate student Elizabeth Faranda said. Faranda works with Cardinal Stage Company.
She said the event funds programs such as the Community Ticket Initiative, which brings local school students to matinee performances of shows at Cardinal at discounted prices of up to 80 percent off of original ticket prices. Megan McMonigle, an IU sophomore and volunteer at Cardinal, said she and her friends went to the midnight showing last year and can’t wait to come back this year. She said she has been obsessed with the movie since she first saw it in junior high school. “It was a night where everyone had something in common,” she
said, describing waiting outside for the doors to open. Faranda said the ritual and preshow activities are hosted by Daniel Petrie, who will be the emcee. “He said that he’s done this for four or five years,” she said. Once people were let inside, there was music, dancing, a costume contest and a “de-virginization ritual,” including a sex noise contest, for first-time attendees. McMonigle said her friends were kind of shocked by the experience at first, but by the end everybody had had a great time. The theater was full of excite-
ment by the end of the showing, and people stood outside for hours talking about the movie. Faranda said the midnight show sold out last year and the 8 p.m. viewing was close to full as well. The audience size and participation are a huge part of the experience, McMonigle said. The crowd’s energy and excitement are what make the night so much fun. Adding to the audience participation are prop bags that will be sold for $5 at the door, Faranda said. They contain things such as water SEE ROCKY HORROR, PAGE 6
Speaker discusses psychology of suicide bombings By Aly Malinger afmaling@indiana.edu | @aly_mali
A 14-year-old girl named Rayna woke up one morning to find her father had been kidnapped. Her mother, forced to provide for the family, had no way other than to sell her daughter into marriage, forcing her to marry a man she had never met. He was 11 years older than her. Nine months later, she was brought to the house of her husband’s cousin and was fitted for a belt around her waist in the presence of her husband. Rayna was being sized for her bomb vest with intentions of
being sacrificed in a suicide bomb. She was one of few women in her situation to escape. The IU Psychology Club and the IU chapter of Students Supporting Israel co-sponsored a speaker event Wednesday, titled “Inside the Mind of a Terrorist,” with Dr. Anat Berko. Berko is a criminologist and counterterrorism consultant for the Institute for Counter-Terrorism. The event focused on the psychology behind women and children involved in suicide bombings.
TIANTIAN ZHANG | IDS
Anat Berko, author of “The Smarter Bomb: Women-Children as Suicide Bombers,” SEE TERRORISM, PAGE 6 discusses the psychology behind suicide bombing Wednesday in Hodge Hall.
njearley@indiana.edu
Voters heading to Indiana polls will have to show a photo ID this Nov. 4, like every election since 2005. Midterm election voters will be required to bring an official government photo ID in order to vote. The name on the ID must match one’s voter registration card and have an expiration date. Student IDs that meet the four requirements listed by the Indiana Election Division can be used to vote, but only if they are from public intuitions such as IU or Ivy Tech. For the last nine years, the state’s voter ID law is still controversial because some see it as unnecessary. “I think it’s disenfranchising to have such a law,” Monroe County Clerk Linda Robbins said. “It is difficult for several of our older people, for example, to get voter IDs.” In addition to serving as clerk, Robbins serves as secretary of the Monroe County Election Board. She said Indiana’s law creates a burden for people who are not as likely to have a photo ID card, such as the elderly who may not have a valid driver’s license. She said there are cases in the county where people show up to vote without a valid ID and cannot vote. “It’s a small percentage, but out of 30,000 or 40,000 people we have vote, for example, in one of our elections we may have 20 or 30 that have been turned away for one reason or another,” Robbins said. Robbins clarified that no one is actually turned away, just that potential voters without an ID must fill out a provisional ballot, which means they have 10 days to produce a valid photo ID to the county election board. Indiana’s voter ID law, officially Public Law 109-2005, was passed in the Indiana legislature in 2005 and was one of the first among a nationwide trend of laws that required voters to show proof of their identity before they cast a vote in person. The Bureau of Motor Vehicles offers free IDs that meet requirements. Indiana’s law was challenged and upheld in the 2008 Supreme Court case of Crawford v. Marion County Election Board. In a 6-3 decision, the U.S. Supreme Court said the state had the right to protect itself against potential voter fraud and preserve the people’s confidence in the process, according to the IIT Chicago-Kent College of Law. Justice John Paul Stevens wrote in his opinion that even though at the SEE VOTER, PAGE 6