Jordan River Forum
Condit vs. Clinton column right on the mark Column shows writer's hypocrisy Good girls really do exist
Condit vs. Clinton column right on the mark Column shows writer's hypocrisy Good girls really do exist
WASHINGTON -- President Bush called Wednesday for nearly $50 billion in additional military spending for the war on terrorism, the largest increase for the Pentagon in two decades. Privately, he assured Republican and Democratic leaders that he has "no ambition whatsoever" to exploit the war on terrorism for political gain in this election year.
President Myles Brand's decision to continue to hold classes amid the national tragedy that took place Sept. 11 was a deplorable act of inconsideration and lack of compassion for the students.
It's official: The new millennium is hot. With final December numbers now in, 2001 ranked as the second warmest year on record on planet Earth, according to the government's National Climate Data Center. For all those fretting over global warming and the end of snow as we once knew it, this is disturbing. The five warmest years since record-keeping began in 1880 all occurred after 1990. In the other four years - including the warmest, 1998 - strong El Ninos, significant warming of surface waters in the tropical Pacific, contributed to the high temperatures.
The opinion page of the Indiana Daily Student is no longer a legitimate forum for social and political discourse.
The volleyball team lost each of its two matches in Michigan last weekend in four games. The losses conclude the season for the Hoosiers, who finished 8-20 overall and 5-15 in the Big Ten. Friday, the Hoosiers were defeated by the Michigan Wolverines 30-27, 30-28, 19-30, 30-24. Saturday night brought about another four games, this time against the Michigan State Spartans. Scores on Saturday were 30-22, 30-23, 25-30 and 30-24.
For many college students, the prospect of rising out of bed before 7:30 a.m. on a Saturday is not particularly pleasant. Fewer still would be prepared to climb up a 25-foot vertical wall soon thereafter. This experience is one that was shared by the 46-member pledge class of Kappa Delta. Last week, the group went to Hoosier Heights for a rock climbing outing designed to build unity within the class.
There is only one word which can be used to describe Afroman's third release, The Good Times: awful. The album is 11 tracks of sex, drugs, alcohol and misogyny, with not one useful lyric to save it from mediocrity.
During a crucial trip to the United States that begins Sunday, Colombia's President-elect Alvaro Uribe expects to find support for his plans to fight drugs and a decades-old guerrilla war.
Negotiating not a sign of weakness IDS editorial board leftist
Almost a year after being named head coach for the men's basketball team, Mike Davis signed a formal four-year contract Friday. The terms of the contract include an annual salary of $225,000 beginning July 1. His annual income will reach about $500,000 a year with outside income and bonuses tallied up. This contract is binding until May 2005.
The Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology in Terre Haute recently expanded its K-12 Homework Hotline to the Bloomington-Ellettsville area. A conference was held in Bloomington for local teachers, administrators and the Indiana Board of Education Wednesday to kick off the extension of the system. Rose-Hulman began the Homework Hotline in Terre Haute in 1991 and gradually expanded to Clay County. The biggest expansion was in 1999 when it was extended to Indianapolis with funding from a $1 million grant from Eli Lilly.
Last week, IU President Myles Brand announced that after a seven-year campaign, the University raised $504 million, putting IU first among Big Ten public universities in endowed faculty positions. The largest campaign in University history, it increased endowed faculty positions -- where campaign donations are used to pay faculty salaries -- by 178 percent. It also left the University with 333 endowed chairs, professorships and curatorships, more than other Big Ten public institutions.
With tuition increasing steadily throughout the Big Ten, many students are left wondering where their money's going. And this year, after the IU Board of Trustees' approval of an unprecedented 7.5 percent increase, those students' concerns have escalated. Yet IU administrators want students to know the impetus behind the increase. They want students to know how their tuition is being spent.
IU Student Association officials are optimistic about Bank One ATMs returning to campus, although the process has taken longer than originally expected. Locations that have been discussed include the Main Library, Business School, Ballantine Hall and the Indiana Memorial Union. The ATM would likely be placed at the IMU first, officials have said. IUSA will hold a town hall meeting to address ATMs from 5 to 7 p.m. Sept. 6 at the IMU State Room West. The goal of the meeting is "to get a general feel of where students want the ATMs and if they really want the ATMs," said Jolene Carper, a co-director of services for IUSA. "We've been waiting for all the students to get back," she said. "We wanted the whole student body to be involved."
Are you looking to start little change in your life? Would you like to add a little spice, a little intrigue? We all do. But what would you do to get it? Some might go skydiving or take up needlepoint. For some though, that isn't enough. Some need it so badly, that they could kill.
It's truly amazing how watching a few episodes of the The Learning Channel's Trading Spaces can delude someone (namely me) into thinking he or she is the next Martha Stewart (minus the one-way ticket to jail of course).