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(02/24/14 5:21am)
____simple_html_dom__voku__html_wrapper____>The whistle blew and a ref threw the ball to the middle of the pool. Swimming strongly, the water polo players churned the water as they dashed for the ball.Wrestling, kicking and swimming back and forth across the 25-meter long pool, IU’s women’s water polo team gets no breaks. They tread water and swim non-stop all throughout the 32-minute game. No holding the edge. No touching the bottom.Saturday, the Hoosiers played Michigan, one of their biggest rivals. They won 12-5.Rebecca Gerrity, junior utility — an all-purpose position, both defense and offense — said the team’s training prepares it for the physical challenges of the game.“We build a lot of stamina up actually,” she said. “In the heat of the moment you don’t realize how tired you are because of the adrenaline you have going.” The grueling nature of the sport — no pauses during games, the brutal physical battles between players and the unshakable time commitment — requires the Hoosiers practice three hours, six days a week.The women of the IU water polo team sacrifice body and mind for a sport that demands dedication and sacrifice for players to stay competitive.IU Coach Barry King said the difficulty of the sport can be hard to grasp by those who haven’t tried it. Aerobic demand and wrestling bouts occur on each end.“It’s a wholly encompassed physical experience that not many people can relate to,” he said.In water polo, players get only two-minute breaks between quarters. King said players compete for at least 25 minutes with no real rest.“In every other American-ized sport, the whistle blows, we stop, we reset and then the action starts again,” King said. “Here the whistle blows and the most important action starts when the clock’s not running.”Because of water polo’s physical nature, fouls are called often. It’s normal during a game for players to get bloody noses or have their caps pulled off.But unlike football or basketball, fouls don’t stop the action. A whistle is blown, the players in error back off, all while play continues. In some cases, a player will shoot a penalty while the rest of the players from both teams swim to the other side to reset.Practices, though long in duration, aren’t as physical. It’s time for honing skills.“The game is a lot more violent than the practices,” Gerrity said. “It’s a lot easier to take the aggression out on the other team. It’s a very aggressive sport and it’s a good release of emotions sometimes.”The team’s lengthy practices involve conditioning and weight training two days a week during the regular season. “It’s pretty intense, and doesn’t change really much from the fall to spring,” Schroeder said. “Our weight carts generally get harder throughout the year.”Sophomore goalkeeper Jessica Gaudreault said her position requires a great deal of leg conditioning, including reps with medicine balls and weight belts. “It’s a lot of technical skill work, too,” Gaudreault said. “We all do hand-eye coordination drills pretty much twice a week.”Amid juggling practices and training, school and a social life sometimes fall by the wayside. King said the hardest part of being a college athlete is time management. “The better you are at it, the more resilient you are because you are finding those places where you get downtime or you’re making sure you’re eating correctly and re-hydrating,” King said. “We’re probably not terrific at it, but we’re not below average at it either.” Time management is especially important for the team because most of its season is spent on the road. Samantha Dewig, the team’s sports information director, said water polo is meant to be an outdoor game. “Technically, most of the time water polo is an outdoor sport, that’s why we go to warmer weather to play,” Dewig said. “There aren’t very many Midwest teams. So it makes a lot more sense for a Big Ten university who has a larger travel budget to go to the smaller California schools.”Gerrity has been playing water polo since fourth grade and said being conditioned in time management her whole life helped her prepare for college.“The social life can be lacking,” she said. “I’m premed so I do a lot more studying than the typical student. But it’s the life I’ve chosen. You make sacrifices for things you care about and water polo has been a really big part of my life, so it’s worth sacrificing for.”Follow visual reporter Jennifer Sublette on Twitter @Jennysub.
(05/03/13 1:44am)
____simple_html_dom__voku__html_wrapper____>Samantha Harrell is a typical graduating senior. She is studying for finals, preparing for graduation and embracing the last few days of her undergraduate education. However, unlike most seniors, Harrell is also spending the last moments of her undergrad career starting a homeless shelter. “I’m not doing this for charity,” she said. “I’m doing this because when people don’t have shelter, that hurts me. That’s what drives me. Some people might see it as unhealthy that I think this way, but when 60 or 70 people I have been working with suddenly don’t have shelter, it motivates me to make change.”Harrell and her classmates are starting Ubuntu in response to the closure of Genesis House, a previous summer shelter servicing Monroe County. Genesis House closed due to lack of funding. Harrell was a volunteer at Genesis House all three seasons it was open. When she found out the shelter was not reopening, she said she figured someone would do something. “Everyone thought that someone else would take care of it,” Harrell said. “It wasn’t until late February that me and my friend realized no one was doing anything about it. So, we did.”In late February, Harrell sent out email messages asking for volunteers to gauge community interest. She received a generous response. “We wanted to resist the media and the churches’ sentiment that every volunteer was burned out and we wouldn’t have the capacity for the shelter,” she said. “We received so many people enthusiastically saying ‘yes.’ The community really wanted to do this and needed someone to take charge.”Harrell said she wants the shelter to be focused more on working with people and less on charity. This is the reason they named their organization “Ubuntu,” a humanistic philosophy concerning people’s relations with each other.“There isn’t really a definition, but I see the meaning behind Ubuntu as this message of solidarity of community,” she said. “It reflects the social work backing of the shelter. We want to be on the same level, have empathy that goes so far it turns into solidarity.”Jon Dauterman, also a graduating senior from the School of Social Work, is one of 15 students working with Harrell to open Ubuntu. Dauterman will be one of the site leaders.“I’ve been involved with homeless shelters since my freshman year,” Dauterman said. “Social work taught me valuable skills like how to empower people. I think empowerment is important when working with homeless people.” Harrell also emphasized empowerment as a core belief of the shelter. “We want to let the guests put their own cots up and take them down in the morning,” she said. “It helps them feel like they are part of it. It won’t be a requirement, but allowing people to help if they want to, I think, will be empowering.”Rod Gesner has been a homeless citizen of Bloomington for two years. He lives in a van with his dog, Kiaayo, and sells his artwork on Kirkwood Avenue.“I’ve never been a big fan of shelters,” Gesner said. “I’ve talked to people who have had to suffer through the night with a drunk lying next to them, and they ended up not getting any sleep.” He was pleasantly surprised about Ubuntu. “I think students reaching out and trying to help long-term is a great thing,” Gesner said. “I’d like to shake their hand.” Dauterman and Harrell are both students with experience working with the homeless and say their background with social work will offer valuable credibility with the community.“Our emphasis on leadership is big,” Dauterman said. “It’s not run by students, but by professional social workers.”The group has the volunteer force they need lined up, as well as donated materials from Genesis. However, the group currently does not have a space for the shelter and find this to be its biggest obstacle. Harrell said Interfaith Winter Shelter has also been trying to expand its space unsuccessfully.“We’re having trouble getting our foot in the door,” Harrell said. “Our offer is different from Interfaith’s though. They were trying to convince people to run the shelter.” The difference is that Ubuntu has eight social workers and an abundance of volunteers that are willing to run the shelter by themselves as well as donations and materials to aid in the set up. “We simply need space, but we feel like we’re getting closer everyday,” he added. Harrell said they currently have enough donations for a barebones shelter. They would not be able to offer food or laundry services, only a bed. They have had offers of more donations if the shelter finds a home. “It’s kind of a catch-22,” she said. “People are interested in helping, but will only donate if we have space.”Harrell said she and her classmates are determined to find a place for the shelter, and are continuing to spread the word of its imminent opening. While Ubuntu’s budget is more than half of their surrounding shelters, Harrell has one luxury she said she hopes to offer. “I’d like to be able to offer coffee,” Harrell said. “Coffee is a huge thing because coffee makes you feel like you are home.”