Obama's many lies
President Barack Obama’s State of the Union address was ludicrous, at best.
President Barack Obama’s State of the Union address was ludicrous, at best.
The Great Orator has transformed before our eyes into the Great Ordinary. The man whose words caused him to soar above a thousand clouds has crashed down to Earth — just in time for his second launch.
The recent decision of the Vatican to establish a special diocese in the United States for Episcopal converts to Catholicism has re-opened discussion on several old points of contention.
Mitt Romney pays little in taxes.
Obama's SOTU speech spoke of “an economy built to last, where hard work pays off and responsibility is rewarded.” He undoubtedly struck a chord with many conservative thinkers. In almost every Republican debate and anywhere else conveying a conservative mindset, the idea that “hard work pays off” is among the most core values.
Wuterich ordered the soldiers under his command to shoot first and ask questions later, perhaps forgetting that mutilated corpses of children answer few questions. Seven years have passed since the massacre, and no justice has been served. Of the eight soldiers connected to the massacre, only Wuterich was convicted of a crime. The other seven were released without punishment.
The IU Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Alumni Association’s Celebration Weekend will launch Friday, Jan. 27 and conclude on Jan. 29.
Indiana legislators are expected to lobby for exempting bars and other locations from a proposed statewide smoking ban bill.
Professor of Anthropology, Richard Wilk, was recently appointed to the American Anthropological Association’s nine-member Global Climate Change Task Force.
An IU student reported a rape Tuesday that allegedly occurred Saturday at her campus apartment.
The No. 16/17 Hoosiers (16-4, 4-4) will take on No. 25 Wisconsin (16-5, 5-3) at 9 p.m. tonight in Madison.
Recent statistics released by the University have shown a spike in enrollment figures and an increase in the number of credit hours students are taking, setting records at three different IU campuses, including Bloomington.
Senior Matt Powless has been wrestling since he was six years old. This year, Powless will put everything on the line one last time in hopes of winning an NCAA title.Powless started wrestling when he was in first grade with every intention of becoming a WWE star. “I was ready to be the next Stone Cold Steve Austin,” Powless said.It didn’t take long for him to realize that wrestling at school wasn’t the same as wrestling for the WWE.
The Secular Alliance of IU, a student group of atheists, agnostics and humanists, will begin participating in biweekly service projects for Pages to Prisoners and Hoosier Hills Food Bank.
College Democrats, the Indiana Public Interest Research Group and Union Board co-sponsored a panel called “Hot Chocolate and Hot Topics: Income Inequality” on Wednesday with about 20 people in attendance
After nine years of exhibiting and selling the work of local artists, Gallery North is leaving its current location on the square in downtown Bloomington to move to a smaller space in Nashville, Ind.
With phase one of the repairs and renovations on Wildermuth Intramural Center coming to a close in late February, the building is on track to open this summer. Construction crews have made a number of improvements since the roof fire in late July 2011, which caused severe smoke and water damage to the intramural basketball courts, indoor track, ceiling and interior structure.
As the election year begins, student supporters of President Obama begin work on his reelection campaign.
After weeks of stalemate in the Indiana Statehouse, the General Assembly has passed the controversial right-to-work legislation.
Just because Wisconsin Coach Bo Ryan sticks to the same philosophy every year doesn’t mean it has become any easier to stop or any less effective.