invgradworkers020921-2.jpg
Abolfazl Alipour, 29, poses for a photo with a mask. Alipour is a supporter of the Indiana Graduate Workers Coalition who also joined the 2021 Committee for Fee Review.
854 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Abolfazl Alipour, 29, poses for a photo with a mask. Alipour is a supporter of the Indiana Graduate Workers Coalition who also joined the 2021 Committee for Fee Review.
Abolfazl Alipour, 29, is a neuroscience and psychology Ph.D student at IU. Alipour is a supporter of the Indiana Graduate Workers Coalition who also joined the 2021 Committee for Fee Review.
Abolfazl Alipour, a Neuroscience and Psychology Ph.D. student and supporter of the Indiana Graduate Workers Coalition, said he was hoping to represent graduate students when he joined the Committee for Fee Review this year. Alipour said he wanted to discuss how fees were allocated with other graduate students, since they were the ones who had to pay them.
As IU continues to raise tuition, subject workers to hazardous conditions and slash funding for ethnic studies departments, student leaders haven’t had the tools to properly push back. It’s time to change that.
I’m a graduate worker. The stipend I earn from IU, which is $15,750 before taxes for the 2020-21 academic year, covers all of my living expenses from rent and utilities to those obnoxiously priced textbooks (when they aren’t to be found online) to sustaining a pitiable diet.
A protester holds a “PAY RAISES 4 GRAD WORKERS” sign during a protest regarding inadequate pay Aug. 24, 2020, in Dunn Meadow. Each year, 8% of graduate workers' pay returns to IU.
Gov. Eric Holcomb announced Jan. 13 that Indiana residents 70 years of age and older are eligible to receive the COVID-19 vaccine. Previously, only those aged 80 and older were allowed to register for the vaccination.
The Indiana Graduate Workers Coalition announced a “fee strike” Monday in which its members will refuse to pay mandatory student fees. The group is encouraging other graduate students to join the boycott.
Democratic party candidates Reverend Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff will face off against incumbent Sens. Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue in a special runoff election for Georgia’s U.S. Senate seats on Jan 5.
In the back of an Amazon warehouse in Indianapolis, DaVondre Love whispers to himself.
When the new year begun, 2020 started the same as any other year. The first case of COVID-19 in the United States wasn’t detected until Jan. 20. Celebrations weren’t hindered by safety guidelines for those who wanted to ring in the new year together.
Terin J.D. starts his tattoo sessions by telling his client he’s going to waste more of their time than anyone else ever could.
Mere weeks of the fall 2020 semester remain, and students are panicking. We’ve done everything we can to adapt to this plague-ridden, godforsaken semester — all the while getting besieged by economic crisis, a divisive and bloody presidential campaign and whatever other existential threat you had on your 2020 bingo cards.
Forest Student Government introduced a new executive board role, Woodland Relations, after freshman and former Woodland Eatery employee Grace Desserich expressed her desire to increase transparency and communication between residents and IU dining staff.
Diversity in elected officials is critical to the inclusiveness of policy and governmental affairs.
Election Day has come and gone. As we wait for results, we should reflect on what this election won’t decide for us. It will not offer solutions to the political predicaments in which progressives find themselves. Neither former Vice President Joe Biden nor President Donald Trump has offered ethical ways to contend with anti-Black police violence, climate catastrophe, immigration or health care.
April Hennessey, Cathy Fuentes-Rohwer, Keith Klein and Jacinda Townsend Gides won the elections for Board of Trustees seats in district 2, 4, 5 and 6, respectively, for Monroe County Community School Corporation.
Bloomington and Monroe County were relatively quiet this Election Day. Lines were generally short. Polling places closed on time. No major disruptions were reported.
Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Incorporated was founded January 13, 1913, on the campus of Howard University in Washington, D.C., by 22 trail-blazing women. Since then, the sisterhood has expanded to more than 300,000 members of predominantly Black, college-educated women throughout the U.S., Canada, Japan, Germany, the Virgin Islands, Bermuda, the Bahamas, Jamaica and the Republic of Korea.
This month, the Bloomington City Council passed the 2021 city budget by a 7-1 vote. The budget includes plans to hire a second police social worker within the Bloomington Police Department.