Monday, August 26, 2019

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Monday, August 26, 2019

IDS Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com

IU welcomes 2023 class, page 7

MENS’ SOCCER

Hoosiers win against DePaul 3-1 By Sam Bodnar Sbodnar@iu.edu | @sgbod13

A renovated field and team were key ingredients to a 3-1 exhibition victory for IU men’s soccer against DePaul University on Saturday. The No. 2 Hoosiers won their first home game of 2019 and closed out the preseason with a 2-1 record. It took just four minutes for IU to adjust to the new environment and get on the board with a goal off a corner kick by junior forward Thomas Warr. The forward scored in all three of IU’s preseason games and will look to be a leader for those new to the team. Seventeen minutes later, another ball was buried in the net. Junior forward Ian Black scored the second goal of the game in the 21st minute and doubled the lead for the Hoosiers. Following a goal by DePaul which cut the lead in half, the IU defenders advanced the ball up the field for the last highlight of the game. Junior defender A.J. Palazzolo headed in the third and final goal of the night for the Hoosiers from just outside the goal box. Freshman defender Brett Bebej earned the assist on the play with a left cross from the sideline area. IU will begin the regular season Friday, Aug. 30, against the University of Pittsburgh. The University of California, Los Angeles and Northwestern will play before the IU match at 5 p.m. to start off the Adidas/IU Credit Union Classic at Bill Armstrong Stadium.

USC hit with subpoena in admissions scandal Tribune News Service

LOS ANGELES — In a new twist to the college admissions scandal, a father accused of resorting to fraud and bribery to get his daughter into the University of Southern California has subpoenaed the university for records detailing its admissions process and to what degree, if any, it is influenced by donations. The subpoena is an early indication that parents charged in the college admissions scam intend to take aim at a sensitive – and to this point secretive – calculation: how presumably meritocratic decisions on whom to admit or reject can be weighted by an applicant’s wealth. USC has asked a judge to quash the subpoena, saying the demand from Robert Zangrillo, a Miami financier whose daughter was admitted to USC in 2018, amounted to “an impermissible fishing expedition.” The university’s retort, which includes an affidavit from its dean of admissions, sheds light on the private school’s opaque and increasingly selective admissions process and, in particular, its practice of flagging certain applicants as “special interest.” Zangrillo’s subpoena, which USC received July 11, requests records related to how the university flags some applicants as “VIP” or “special interest,” records of the university president’s involvement in such designations, a database of donors and the percentage of applicants admitted within a year of their families donating $50,000 or more, among other records. The subpoena was filed under seal, but USC included a copy of the document in its request to SEE USC, PAGE 5

TY VINSON | IDS

Members of the Bloomington community, Antifa and No Space for Hate march toward the Bloomington Community Farmers’ Market on Aug. 24 to protest the continued presence of the vendor Schooner Creek Farm. The market has been under scrutiny as of late, due to the continued presence of Schooner Creek Farm, which is allegedly run by white supremacists.

CONFLICT AT THE FARMERS’ MARKET

Man drives SUV at market protesters Saturday The driver and protesters disagree on some of what happened during the altercation. By Lydia Gerike lgerike@iu.edu | @LydiaGerike

A man drove his SUV through a group of protesters Saturday morning as they marched down Sixth Street waving signs against white nationalism at the Bloomington Community Farmers’ Market. No one was seriously hurt, even after the driver got out of his SUV to confront the 40 or so antifascists, also called antifa, and No Space for Hate demonstrators who were still a couple blocks from their final destination of the market. They stopped traffic as they walked down streets from the Monroe County Courthouse to the farmers market in protest of the presence of Schooner Creek Farm, a vendor whose owners have been connected to white nationalism through the American Identity Movement, formerly called Identity Evropa. As the marchers walked down the middle of Sixth Street, Brad

Clapper drove a GMC Terrain toward the protesters near Bloomingfoods before slamming on his brakes. He started yelling at the group to get out of the street and onto the sidewalk. “I got little kids, and you’re scaring them to death,” Clapper said. The 41-year-old from Judah, Indiana, said in a Saturday evening interview that he knew generally the recent farmers market controversy but said his actions weren’t about politics. He said he turned onto the street looking for a place to park for the market, and suddenly he saw a “mob” of people, about half of them dressed in the antifa uniform of all black clothing and covered faces, blocking the street and scaring his 6- and 8-year-old sons. If they had been on the sidewalk, he said he would have likely ignored them, but they were in his way and he felt he had no choice but to keep going forward. Abby Ang, who is an activist in No Space for Hate and was not

TY VINSON | IDS

Members of Antifa hold a large banner stating “Nazis out of our town” Aug. 24 outside the courthouse. The group, along with members of No Space for Hate, marched to the Bloomington Community Farmers’ Market to protest Schooner Creek Farm.

dressed in black with antifa, said the SUV seemed to appear out of nowhere. Because the protesters were walking down the middle of streets, Ang said she thought traffic could be a problem but figured any issue would be more likely near the square where there are

more cars. Although Clapper said he was only going 5 to 10 mph when he drove toward the group, it seemed fast to Ang. “I did not see his car until he was right there,” Ang said. “It’s SEE PROTEST, PAGE 5

WOMENS’ SOCCER

IU ‘wins ugly’ in home opener against UIC By Will Trubshaw wtrubsha@iu.edu | @Willtrubs

After being shut out in the season opener, the IU women’s soccer team came determined for a different result Sunday, and it showed. The Hoosiers did just enough to edge the University of Illinois-Chicago Flames, 1-0, in the 2019 home opener at Bill Armstrong Stadium. The win was also the first for new IU head coach Erwin van Bennekom as it put the Hoosiers at 1-1-0 on the year, while the Flames fell to 0-1-1. “Today was far from what our standard is,” van Bennekom said. “I knew it was going to be tough, but we made it hard for ourselves. I think winning ugly is also a quality, and we didn’t really give away that many opportunities.” The Hoosiers allowed just three shots the entire game but only scored one goal on 12 shots of their own. Senior forward Chandra Davidson opened the game with a chance right on net in the second minute but was denied point blank by the Flames graduate goalkeeper Lena Kurz. Davidson continued to lead the charge on offense with several impressive runs and crosses, including another chance in the 31st minute. Davidson finished the game with four shots and was a catalyst for the offense despite its struggles otherwise. Freshman midfielder Bria Telemaque and freshman midfield-

CLAIRE LIVINGSTON | IDS

Freshman Jaimie Tottleben passes the ball in an attempt to score a goal Aug. 25 at Bill Armstrong Stadium. IU beat the University of Illinois at Chicago.

er Allie Schlom had consecutive chances to score in the 24th minute but could not convert either, with Telemaque sending a shot off the crossbar and Schlom sending a rebound shot wide right.

At the half, the Hoosiers had outshot the Flames 7-2, yet remained in a scoreless tie with 45 minutes to go. Van Bennekom was not pleased with the amount of opportunities that his squad had squandered in

the first half. “In preseason we spent a lot of time on defensive transition, and we haven’t really spent too much SEE SOCCER, PAGE 5


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