IUSA offers Freshman Internship Program for ‘valuable experience’
The IU Student Association, government of the IU student body, is now accepting applications for its Freshman Internship Program through Oct. 15.
The IU Student Association, government of the IU student body, is now accepting applications for its Freshman Internship Program through Oct. 15.
Thursday’s Neo Unity event brought all four greek councils together for the first time to promote diversity in the community. The idea came to Ruchi Shah, the president of the Multi-Cultural Greek Council, two years ago when she saw a need to network with other councils outside her own.
The ACC held its 10th Anniversary Banquet on Friday evening in the Indiana Memorial Union’s Alumni Hall.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on Sunday rejected any suggestion that U.S. efforts to build closer ties to this former Soviet republic are meant to undermine Russian influence in Central Asia.
Two people wounded in a suspected U.S. missile strike in Pakistan’s northwest have died, bringing the death toll to 24 in an assault that has deeply angered the Taliban, intelligence officials said Sunday.
Mortgage finance company Fannie Mae said it is forgiving the mortgage debt of a 90-year-old woman who shot herself in the chest as sheriff’s deputies attempted to evict her.
In a city where luck means everything, O.J. Simpson came out the big loser – and his unlucky number in a case full of bizarre twists was 13.
Declined. At first, I didn’t believe it. “Could you try again?” I asked, but the answer came back unchanged. There I stood, in the checkout line at Target, ashamed.
Let me preface my letter by pointing out that I haven’t seen or heard anybody compare Barack Obama to Ronald Reagan, so I think the question is rather pointless. But since Krista Lafree exploits the fact that some chump on some Web site makes the comparison as an excuse to write a bitter, vapid attack on Obama’s qualifications, let me address her argument.
I’m sitting at my laptop staring at three empty cups of coffee standing proudly at the edge of my desk and mocking me for my dependency. I’ve heard caffeine is a drug, and I’m sad to report I’ve recently become an addict. I wake up every morning – only a few hours after I went to sleep – and the anticipation of the climb to the caffeine high is my motivation for opening my eyes. My parents tell me to get more sleep, my friends tell me to better manage my time, and my agenda tells me to suck it up. I have no choice – and I’m not the only one.
Let the games begin. It’s election season again, which means it’s time for presidential debates chock-full of grammatical errors and bad personal hygiene and often lacking in the information department.
It’s public knowledge that former North Carolina Sen. John Edwards had an extramarital affair while he was running for president in the 2008 Democratic primaries. However, that is not why IU is paying him $35,000 to speak in November. IU’s Union Board hired Edwards to speak Nov.11 about America’s economic and political future. As a man who was almost vice president, he might have something relevant to say. Some might be dismayed that IU is financially supporting a speech by Edwards, not least of all because of his lack of fidelity. But the University is simply doing its part as an academic institution.By having Edwards speak, IU acknowledges Edward’s might have a unique political understanding. In no way is IU supporting his questionable licentious actions.In truth, IU is fostering academic discourse about Edwards and his speech. The Union Board should be lauded for not pandering to people who are upset by Edwards’ actions.
IU police arrested two men outside the Wells Library Friday night in connection with the break-in of four vehicles.
MINNEAPOLIS - Converting on only one of 10 third downs and only recording a single score, the IU football team’s offense puttered to a 16-7 defeat on the road at Minnesota. Marcus Thigpen was the lone star for the Hoosiers, who for the second straight game scored a touchdown of more than 77 yards. This score came courtesy of a Ben Chappell loft, which found Thigpen wide open for a 77-yard touchdown reception.But unfortunately for the Hoosiers, Thigpen’s reception was the only time they would force the scoreboard technician to punch any buttons in the frame for their scoring
WASHINGTON – With the economy on the brink and elections looming, Congress approved an unprecedented $700 billion government bailout of the battered financial industry on Friday and sent it to President Bush for his certain signature.
Baggy jeans: check. Tall white T-shirt: check. XXL hoodie: check. Scuffed sneakers: check. If this is the process you find yourself going through each morning when you wake up, I urge you to change up your wardrobe routine. As young men, we often get much too used to the same ol’ thing, whether it’s clothing or the two-step.
Jake’s Nightclub and Bar will open its doors on Saturday to people hoping to have their lives taped 24 hours a day and broadcast on national TV. From 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., there will be an open casting call for the 22nd season of the MTV reality show, “The Real World.”
Just days after one of the biggest downfalls in the stock market’s history, James Bullard, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, told an IU crowd that little was known about how the fallout would ultimately affect ordinary people. Bullard, an IU Ph.D. economics graduate of 1990, spoke to about 100 students and faculty Thursday night at Alumni Hall in the Indiana Memorial Union.
After Union Board members announced Wednesday that former Sen. John Edwards will speak at IU in November, many in the IU community questioned why he was speaking after admitting to an extramarital affair while his wife battled cancer. Those same discussions took place among Union Board members long before Wednesday’s announcement.
A recent bout of television spots featuring Republican presidential nominee John McCain have led some to believe the presidential nominee is starting to pay more attention to Indiana. With less than five weeks until the election, the Republican National Committee decided to spend $5 million on the ads in six total states, including Indiana. While Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama’s campaign has poured millions of dollars into this historically conservative state, Republicans had yet to respond until this week.