Thursday, Oct. 27, 2016 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
Male student reports peeping
3-2
From IDS reports
On Tuesday, a male student reported two incidents of peeping that occurred in the Ora L. Wildermuth Intramural Center men’s locker room, IU Police Department Capt. Andy Stephenson said. The student said a white man with curly red hair and a beard watched him shower midday Oct. 11 and Oct. 18. A similar incident in the Wildermuth men’s locker room was reported Sept. 24. A student described the peeper as a man in his forties with a shaved head, but the man left before IUPD’s arrival, Stephenson said. Officers searched the area but could not find anyone who matched the description. Emily Miles
IDS Bitter, but sweet
BLOOMINGTON HIGH SCHOOL NORTH
Students protest hate symbol
IU loses to Michigan in last game of regular season, but still clinches spot in Big Ten Tournament By Cameron Drummond cpdrummo@iu.edu | @cdrummond97
The result of Wednesday night’s match between IU and Michigan was supposed to determine whether or not IU reached its first Big Ten Women’s Soccer Tournament since 2013. However, it was the final score of a game in University Park, Pennsylvania, that actually decided IU’s fate. Ohio State’s 2-0 loss at Penn State ensured that regardless of what happened in Bloomington, IU would be returning to the postseason. This meant the result of the Hoosiers’ final match of the regular season would determine their seeding for the playoffs. As such, IU’s 3-2 loss to
By Alyson Malinger afmaling@indiana.edu | @aly_mali
PHOTOS BY REBECCA MEHLING | IDS
Michigan on Senior Night ensured it would be seeded eighth out of eight teams for the postseason conference tournament. While IU Coach Amy Berbary was pleased at qualifying for the postseason, she was also disappointed at her team’s execution in the final minutes against Michigan. “It’s great. I’m happy for the kids that we got in, but I thought we let this one get away from us, unfortunately,” Berbary said. “At this point in the season, it’s about attention to detail.” IU appeared set to clinch its playoff berth in style as it led Michigan 2-1 with six minutes to play, but a pair of late goals gave the visitors the victory. A
Early Wednesday morning, Tamara Brown, a junior at Bloomington High School North, walked through the hallways of her school, moving from class to class. As she walked, Brown was stopped by multiple students wearing Confederate flags as hats and capes draped across their bodies, embracing the red flag dashed with blue and white lines. They yelled things such as, “If you want to start stuff, then we’ll start stuff too,” and “The South will rise again,” to Brown and other students throughout the school’s campus. It angered Brown, along with a small group of friends, to no longer feel safe in her own school. “This is not just hurting our feelings, but it is putting us in danger,” Brown said. After voicing their concerns to
Top The Hoosiers celebrate after scoring their second goal during the second half of Wednesday evening’s game against Michigan. Bottom Meghan Scott runs the ball down the field during Wednesday night’s game against Michigan. This was the Hoosiers’ last regular season game ending in a Michigan win 3-2.
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Professor of rhetoric delivers Noon Talk frames his understanding of the world, he said. “Rhetoric typically focuses its The Eskenazi Museum of Art’s attention on words, written or spoNoon Talks offer presenters inter- ken, and the ways in which words ested in delving into the work of a and narratives and arguments afparticular artist an opportunity to fect audiences in one way or anothshare their observations with an au- er,” Lucaites said. Nan Brewer, curator of works on dience. The latest in the series dealt with the special exhibition “Vik paper, said Lucaites’ work revolves Muniz,” a mid-career retrospective heavily on analysis of photographs through his rhetoriof the artist’s work. cal training. Brewer “Images We “Taken collectively, said Lucaites has All Remember” ‘The Best of Life’ published a variety presented the perof works on the topspective of John is something of an ic of image culture Lucaites, associate analog for the family in liberal democratdean of arts and ic societies. humanities and un- album for America” “He is the codergraduate educa- John Lucaites, associate dean author of ‘No Caption, to a group of 21 of arts and humanities and tion Needed: Iconic students and com- undergraduate education Photographs, Pubmunity members lic Culture and Liberal DemocWednesday. At the beginning of the talk, he racy’,” Brewer said. “When I saw the stood to the right of a collection of amount of material in this exhibiMuniz’s recreated photographs tion and particularly the images of sketches based on famous Life from Life, I immediately thought of magazine images, called “The Best John for today’s Noon Talk.” Lucaites said Muniz comes from of Life.” Lucaites said he considers himself an advanced amateur a distinct perspective from other photographer. His scholarly back- photographers because of his ties ground in rhetoric, which he has SEE RHETORIC, PAGE 6 taught at IU for 30 years, is what
By Sanya Ali
siali@indiana.edu | @siali13
NOBLE GUYON | IDS
Senior Joel Chapman, in the orange vest, tells a ghost story to the attendees at Dunn Cemetery outside the Indiana Memorial Union, the third stop on the 2016 Ghost Walk put on by the IU Folklore and Ethnomusicology Student Association.
Folklore student group leads campus ghost tour By Bailey Cline baicline@iu.edu | @baicline
An eerie trumpet fanfare echoed through the air, silencing the crowd surrounding the Herman B Wells statue. In the darkness of Wednesday night, people clutched their lanterns. It was then that senior Joel Chapman, a folklore and telecommunications student, put down his instrument and issued a welcome to the 2016 Ghost Walk. Every year, the Folklore and Ethnomusicology Student Association gives a short tour of the campus to share some of IU’s ghost stories. The
walk is FESA’s big event each year, and it draws many different people from around Bloomington hoping to get spooked. “A lot of the stories come from the student archives over in the Wells Library,” lecturer and storyteller Robert Doler said. These archives are full of reports from students, oftentimes submitted by folklore professors. Doler himself sends students in his supernatural class out to document a paranormal account from someone they know. “Part of this is to figure out these things happen a lot more often than we generally think,”
Doler said. Ethnomusicology graduate student Jennie Williams began the night with four stories originating near the Herman B Wells statue. These folklores ranged from the romantic tradition behind the Well House gazebo to the story of a doctor performing illegal abortions and his suicide. After a short trek to the Indiana Memorial Union, Doler continued the ghostly tales, explaining the Union is perhaps the most haunted spot on campus.
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