THE IDS WILL NOT PUBLISH FRIDAY, OCT. 10, IN OBSERVANCE OF FALL BREAK. WE WILL RESUME PUBLICATION MONDAY. THURSDAY, OCT. 9, 2014
IDS
Weekend reviews Mary Lambert’s album, Page 7
INDIANA DAILY STUDENT | IDSNEWS.COM
Board of Trustees to meet at IUPUI By Ashleigh Sherman aesherma@indiana.edu | @aesherma
to keep pounding it in the fourth quarter because they’re a real good fourth-quarter team.” Led by junior running back Tevin Coleman, who has 168 yards per game on the ground, the IU rushing attack has accounted for 17 of the team’s 22 touchdowns this season. But IU (3-2, 0-1) also established an offensive balance last week that it had been lacking most of the season and a rhythm in the passing game that was non-existent against Maryland. Against North Texas, junior quarterback Nate Sudfeld was 23-of-29 for 230 yards and three touchdowns. He completed passes to seven
Affirmative action, Read Hall and the School of Public Health renovations and Chi Phi real estate are on the agenda for the IU Board of Trustees’ first meeting of the academic year. The IU Board of Trustees, IU’s governing board, legal owner and final authority, according to its website, meets today and Friday at IU-Purdue University Indianapolis. The University Relations Committee, chaired by James Morris, and the Academic Affairs and University Policies Committee, chaired by Patrick Shoulders, convenes Thursday, while the Finance, Audit and Strategic Planning Committee, chaired by Andrew Mohr, and the Facilities and Auxiliaries Committee, chaired by Philip Eskew, convenes Friday. On Thursday, the University Relations and Academic Affairs and University Policies approval is requested for the IU Non-Discrimination/Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Policy. The IU Non-Discrimination/ Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Policy prohibits discrimination based on characteristics such as age, disability, ethnicity, sex, gender identity, marital status, national origin, race, religion, sexual orientation or veteran status, according to the University. The Board of Trustees will vote to approve or disapprove of an updated version of the IU non-discrimination policy that has been in effect since 1969, said Jacqueline Simmons, IU vice president and general counsel. Simmons said the updated version references Title IX, which prohibits sexual harassment or discrimination on the basis of gender or sex in any educational institution that receives government funding. "(We want) to make it absolutely clear that our nondiscrimination policy, which has been in effect even longer than Title IX has been in effect, is intended to cover all of the same requirements that Title IX covers,” Simmons said. The IU NonDiscrimination/ Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Policy applies to the
SEE OFFENSE, PAGE 6
SEE TRUSTEES, PAGE 6
RACHEL MEERT | IDS
Senior safety Mark Murphy makes a tackle in the game against North Texas on Oct. 4 at Memorial Stadium. The Hoosiers will play Iowa at noon Saturday.
Ground warfare Hoosiers prepared to expect anything from Iowa offense By Sam Beishuizen sbeishui@indiana.edu | @Sam_Beishuizen
After last season, IU is used to a bit of mystery surrounding the quarterback situation. This week, it isn’t IU’s quarterback that’s in question — it’s Iowa’s. Junior Jake Rudock will start for the Hawkeyes. Sophomore C.J. Beathard will play, too. Beyond that, the Iowa quarterback situation when the Hawkeyes and the Hoosiers ( 3-2, 0-1) play at noon Saturday in Iowa City, Iowa, is unknown. Iowa Coach Kirk Ferentz has been holding the specifics of the two-quarterback situation close, saying Tuesday he still wasn’t sure how the two-quarterback system would work. Despite the possibility of facing two quarterbacks, IU Coach Kevin Wilson said the two are similar enough that preparing for two won’t be too different. He’s expecting the Iowa (4-1, 1-0) offense to look consistent no matter whether Rudock or
Beathard, who are both pocket passers, is taking the majority of the snaps. “They’re going to do what they do, and they execute it really well,” Wilson said. “And I’m sure that Coach (Greg) Davis and (Ferentz) will get the guy they think is going to give them the best chance to win, and it’s kind of nice they got two guys they can do it with.” Iowa’s offense ranks 91 among 128 Football Bowl Subdivision teams averaging 372.4 yards per game and is 97th in scoring offense, averaging 22.6 points per game. The quarterback debate began when Rudock got hurt in the first half against Pittsburgh and missed the entire second half as well as the Purdue game the following week. Rudock has thrown for 3,181 yards and 23 touchdowns in 17 games during the past two seasons for the Hawkeyes and has completed 85 of 127 attempts this season. SEE CLASH, PAGE 6
Top rush offense, defense clash in Big Ten matchup in Iowa By Grace Palmieri gpalmier@indiana.edu | @grace_palmieri
The IU rush offense and the Iowa rush defense are among the best in the nation. The Hoosiers’ 300 yards per game ranks ninth. The Hawkeyes’ 93 rushing yards allowed is seventh. The two powers clash at noon Saturday in Iowa City, Iowa. “They’re going to play right through people,” IU offensive coordinator Kevin Johns said. “They really squeeze down the running lanes. I think they’ll be the biggest, strongest team we’ve played to date.” Iowa (4-1, 1-0) claims the 16thbest defense in the country, allowing just 17.2 points per game. The Hawkeyes haven’t allowed more than 23 points in a game this season. Offensive lineman Dan Feeney compared them to the Michigan State defense. He said they are similar to what his team saw at Missouri three weeks ago. “They pride themselves on physicality,” he said. “We just have
FOOTBALL (3-2) at Iowa (0-1) Noon Oct. 11, Iowa City
Want more football? Watch IU Football Illustrated for a preview of Saturday’s game at idsnews.com.
Grunwald Gallery pairs City council approves $36 million with Kinsey to open 2015 budget after second reading photography exhibitions By Emily Ernsberger
emelerns@indiana.edu | @emilyernsberger
By Anthony Broderick aebroder@indiana.edu | @aebrodakirck
The Grunwald Gallery has teamed up with the Kinsey Institute to create a three-part photo exhibit that focuses on food and erotic imagery. There will be three exhibitions, with two of the galleries displaying a collection of work by photographer Robert Mapplethorpe from the Kinsey Institute collection. The third exhibit is a traveling exhibition of color still photographs by Laura Letinsky. “The primary objective of these galleries is to provide visitors the opportunity to see important photographic works that are more often seen in galleries and museums in major cities than here at IU in Bloomington,” Kinsey’s Curator of Art Catherine A. Johnson-Roehr said. Philip Gefter, a photo critic, will lecture on Mapplethorpe’s work at 5 p.m. Friday at the Henry Radford Hope School of Fine Arts. Following that, the Grunwald Gallery will open the exhibition
with a reception from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. “Audience members can expect a wide range of different experiences,” said Elizabeth Stirratt, director of Grunwald Gallery of Art. “People will come to learn and engage carefully with the photos done by Letinsky and Mapplethorpe. They will come out with a different take entirely.” The Kinsey Institute received a gift of 30 prints from the Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation in 2011. These photographs date from 1976 to 1985 and feature nude or clothed portraits and explicit homosexual and heterosexual imagery. “This exhibition is the first time we have shown this unique collection, which filled a significant gap in the Kinsey Institute’s photograph collection,” JohnsonRoehr said. “This exhibition at the Grunwald Gallery offers a rare opportunity for Indiana University students and others to see original SEE EXHIBIT, PAGE 6
The Bloomington City Council passed the 2015 budget Wednesday night. Six of the nine council members, enough for a quorum, were present at the meeting to approve the $36 million package. The budget includes increases in salaries for firefighters and police officers, appointed officers, nonunion and union city employees and elected city officials. The council also approved a tax levy to pay a shortfall in 2014, an increase in funding for the Water and Wastewater departments, both part of the Utilities Department, and the Parks and Recreation Department. The city is expected to have a surplus of $394,044 for 2015. The final approval meeting comes after a process that has taken more than a month to propose and approve. A series of four meetings were held in August for city departments to propose individual budgets to the council. Council members were not allowed to ask questions during the hearings and were instead advised
BARI GOLDMAN | IDS
Darryl Neher, the Bloomington City Council President and District 5 representative, presides over a vote to set wages for firefighters and police officers at the city council meeting Wednesday at City Hall.
to send questions to individual departments in writing within the following days of the hearings. The formal budget was proposed at a special session in September. Two meeting attendees commented that not allowing the questions during previous budget
meetings showed a lack of transparency. District 6 council member Stephen Volan commented on the efficiency of asking questions later in writing. SEE BUDGET, PAGE 6