IU Trustee Vivian Winston will not seek reelection
Vivian Winston, who holds one of three alumni-elected positions on the Board of Trustees, told the IDS in an email Monday that she would not be running again after her term is up June 30.
900 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Vivian Winston, who holds one of three alumni-elected positions on the Board of Trustees, told the IDS in an email Monday that she would not be running again after her term is up June 30.
Editor's note: All opinions, columns and letters reflect the views of the individual writer and not necessarily those of the IDS or its staffers.
The voice of Ella Fitzgerald’s “How High the Moon” filled the room Monday as students and faculty filed into Kirkwood Hall for a talk by Dyese Matthews.
A protester holds a sign up at the Indiana Graduate Workers Coalition rally Dec. 6, 2024, at Sample Gates in Bloomington. The IGWC has said the $1,000 minimum stipend raise is not enough after IU President Pamela Whitten was granted a 28% raise.
Two campaigns are vying for the presidency and vice presidency of IU Student Government — ACTION for IUSG and EMPOWER for IUSG. Voting will be open to the student body starting 10 a.m. March 3 until 10 p.m. March 5. Students can vote by logging in to their BeINvolved accounts.
Petra, the black lab, is naked. She doesn’t like to be naked.
Trump and Republican politics are beginning to dominate our digital spaces. This hasn’t happened by accident but is the result of a corrupt bargain with the tech industry. Elon Musk invested $277 million backing Trump and other Republicans this cycle, and it paid off for him and other Big Tech-billionaires that followed suit. Trump has adamantly defended the profitable and controversial H-1B guest visa program, even suggesting the extension of permanent residency to all foreign graduates of U.S. colleges. While Trump disciples have denounced guest worker visa programs, news of Trump’s pivot has his billionaire benefactors seeing dollar-signs.
To meet Indiana’s future nursing demand, it is estimated the state will need an additional 5,000 nurses by 2031, according to the Indiana Hospital Association. To reach that number, about an additional 1,300 nurses will need to graduate each year up until 2030. A state senate bill aims to loosen requirements to enter the field, as a start to fix the “cyclical” issue.
Editor's note: All opinions, columns and letters reflect the views of the individual writer and not necessarily those of the IDS or its staffers.
Editor's note: All opinions, columns and letters reflect the views of the individual writer and not necessarily those of the IDS or its staffers.
Eight people are running to fill the at-large Monroe County Council seat left vacant after Councilor Cheryl Munson’s death.
On Dec. 7, junior guard Henna Sandvik recorded a career high 30 minutes off the bench in Indiana women’s basketball’s 15-point victory over Penn State. Sandvik’s play was highlighted by strong defense and understanding her role when the Hoosiers picked up their first Big Ten win on the season.
The Indiana Graduate Workers Coalition held a rally Friday at Sample Gates after the IU Board of Trustees did not respond to the coalition’s Nov. 1 letter of demands. The letter demands union recognition, the termination of IU President Pamela Whitten and the removal of the university’s expressive activity policy.
A protester holds a sign up at the Indiana Graduate Workers Coalition rally Dec. 6, 2024, at Sample Gates in Bloomington. More than 100 people were in attendance.
The Indiana Graduate Workers Coalition issued a new demand letter to the IU Board of Trustees, seeking the termination of President Pamela Whitten.
Picketers hold signs reading "Let Us Vote for Union Recognition" on April 17, 2024, outside Ballantine Hall in Bloomington. The Indiana Graduate Workers Coalition issued a new demand letter Nov. 1 to the IU Board of Trustees, seeking the termination of President Pamela Whitten.
Editor’s note: This story includes mention of potentially triggering situations including abortion, sexual abuse and gun violence.
Election Day has begun.
If elected governor, Democrat Jennifer McCormick wants change in Indiana’s education system.
In total, the Dunn Meadow encampment lasted 99 days. Or 100, if you’re being generous. Perhaps to prevent the scenes we saw in April, when 57 students were arrested, or perhaps because the number of students still here during the summer is so low, protesters didn’t intervene when the IU Police Department and facilities operations workers removed the tents for the final time. Now, a fence surrounds the meadow indefinitely as the university completes “extensive repairs,” and the future of the campus pro-Palestinian student movement remains uncertain.