LETTER: Zika and spring break
Stay safe during the Zika outbreak
Stay safe during the Zika outbreak
Fight climate change by shifting investments
Boredom is the sparrow: opportunistic, resilient, and found everywhere.
Make your dining choices on the basis of whether the establishment complies with fair labor practices.
It should be more than just pre-employment training.
After toiling for months, putting our homework on the backburner, and losing sleep over this resolution, Students Supporting Israel at Indiana University Bloomington would like to applaud the Indiana University Student Association for voting in favor of condemning anti-Semitism, but more importantly for acting in the interest of our Jewish community here on campus.
Should IU be supporting and profiting from the very industry that poses one of the greatest threats to your future?
ISIS is a monster and must be gone. Fighting terrorism has to be a No. 1 priority. Sadly though, instead of closing ranks, we have a raging political imbroglio going on.
This past Wednesday, the auditorium of the School of Global and International Studies was packed for a teach-in by various IU faculty regarding the Paris terrorist attacks. Professor Leslie Lenkowsky spoke about his role as the CEO of the Corporation for National and Community Service during George W.
Robert L. Dear entered a Planned Parenthood clinic in Colorado Springs on Friday, Nov. 27 and opened fire.
In the days following the terrorist attacks in Paris, students flocked to social media to show their solidarity and compassion for the French people as they reeled from the worst assault on the Western World since 9/11.
If we can learn anything from the events of the past few weeks here in Bloomington, the attack at Sofra Cafe in particular, it’s that not even the ideal liberal college town is immune from the insidious racial hatred that underlies U.S.
I am sharing my deepest sentiments with Yaolin’s Mom as the article in 10/27/2015 IDS got me overly emotional.
Our campus was most fortunate Wednesday evening (11/11/2015) to listen to a knowledgeable and widely known scholar and author, Dr. Joy DeGruy, share her work on “post-traumatic slave syndrome”. The event was in the IMU’s Solarium and attended by hundreds of students, faculty and staff. It was sponsored by CAPS/IU Health Center and the Union Board among others. Dr. DeGruy is a well-published scholar who has spoken at Oxford, Harvard and many other colleges. Her three hour talk was highly informative and inspiring. It was one of those provocative intellectual and emotional experiences that have sparked lively follow-up discussion. We have found our thoughts and feelings returning again and again to Dr. DeGruy’s remarks since Wednesday. We wanted to share our disappointment that her lecture was not reported by the IDS. We know what it is like to miss a lecture on campus and then at least have the opportunity to read the highlights in the newspaper. Depriving your readers the opportunity to learn more about Dr. DuGruy’s work was most unfortunate, to our minds. Sincerely, Nancy Stockton, Director, CAPS Pete Grogg, Executive Director, IU Health Center
I’m a native of Bloomington and graduate of IU. I’m writing to say, very respectfully, that I’m opposed to IU’s proposal to build an outdoor amphitheater in the green space between Bryan House and Ballantine Hall.
The fraternity and sorority system, both at IU and across the nation, is undergoing a facelift.
I urge the editors at the Indiana Daily Student to call on Senator Joe Donnelly, D-Ind., to support the Clean Power Plan (CPP) and reject the Congressional review joint resolution that threatens this important response to climate change.
The United States should repeal the Second Amendment to its Constitution.
My hijab is a part of my life and spiritual beliefs.