Team meeting sparks Hoosiers
After a 58-0 loss to Michigan last weekend, coach Cam Cameron said he should be held responsible for the Hoosiers' poor performance. But after IU's 51-43 win against Minnesota, the players feel otherwise.
After a 58-0 loss to Michigan last weekend, coach Cam Cameron said he should be held responsible for the Hoosiers' poor performance. But after IU's 51-43 win against Minnesota, the players feel otherwise.
The results of Sunday's NFL contests proved one of two things. Either the league is so balanced that each week anything can happen, or I don't know much about football.
The volleyball squad began hastily bouncing balls off the practice floor just before 2 p.m. Monday afternoon, sending noisy echoes throughout University Gym.
Keyless vehicle entry devices are designed as a convenience to drivers. But at the Student Recreational Sports Center, these devices have been a convenience to a car thief. Two cars were taken from cars in the SRSC parking lot in early October. Police said the thief snatched the unattended keys from the complex and then located the vehicle via the keyless entry device.
College Republicans President Anne Scuffham, a senior political science major, knows a little about political campaigning -- she's been perfecting the skill for 16 years.
The IDS reported Oct. 19 that a Residential Programs and Services committee is considering closing underperforming dining halls to improve service at other locations. RPS mentioned Teter, McNutt and Forest quads as low-performing cafeterias that might be closed a last resort to help balance its budget. The committee needs to find another solution to its economic woes. RPS should not limit students' choices because it cannot manage the food system. Doing so would inconvenience students and further downgrade the service IU provides to students living in the dorms.
Dear Sexpert, Do you have any suggestions for cheap "toy substitutes" that can be found around the house, and which would keep my mom from learning too much about my sex life? Hands Are Tied
Why should you vote for Libertarians this year? Libertarians will treat you like an adult. Republicans want to be your father. Democrats want to be your mother. Greens want to be your bossy stepmother. Libertarians just want to be your neighbor.
For some reason, the University cannot make a meal plan work. Instead of working against Residential Programs and Services by protesting changes that are only a possibility at this point, students should work with RPS to figure out why the system isn't working.
If you care about basic human rights in the workplace and the rights of working Americans to a dignified existence, then you're already a better person than George W. Bush and Al Gore. But government, the media and other institutions keep telling us to pick between only two options, Democrat or Republican. This is tragic if you value democracy, because more and more, these two options agree with each other on a host of issues.
The Natural Law Party and its independent coalition are fielding four candidates in Indiana -- John Hagelin and Nat Goldhaber at the presidential and vice presidential levels, and myself and Richard A. Crawford for governor and lieutenant governor. You can vote for all four by requesting a paper ballot at your polling site.
I would like to remind the IDS staff that the primary purpose of a University is to educate its students. The conditions in the existing science buildings hinder the pursuit of education in the sciences. I cannot understand why the IDS criticizes IU President Myles Brand for making it a priority to build a building that would rectify this pressing and most distressing problem.
I would like to respond to Jonathon Schuster's letter ("Pro-life mailing offends students," Oct. 17) by informing him that he missed the entire idea motivating the distribution of the pro-life pamphlet that was mailed to students on campus. The so-called "horrific picture of a dead fetus" was not meant to be a pleasant sight -- it was supposed to be disturbing.
I'm writing in response to the letter "Pro-life mailing offends students" (Oct. 17). What is the difference between that mailing and other mailings, television commercials or all the information written on the sidewalks of the IU campus? Nobody is required to look at them or read them.
I was just directed to the article in the Oct. 16 issue of the IDS that discusses the petition that calls for the resignation of the board of trustees of Indiana University as well as Myles Brand, Christopher Simpson and Clarence Doninger ("Alumni draft petition").
I whole-heartedly agree with Nate Wolf when he says that a vote for a third party candidate is not a vote wasted ("A vote for Nader is a vote for change," Oct. 17). Not only do popular third party positions help influence both major parties, but voting for someone you actually believe in has some merit in itself.
Brian Hartz's column in the IDS regarding newspapers giving good press to advertisers certainly rang a bell ("Selling out or just the facts?" Oct. 17). During the 1990s I was a general manager of a company that had more than 30 restaurants and brewpubs in the Pacific Northwest. At that time we did not buy advertising from either of the two biggest newspapers. It mystified me that, in spite of our obvious success, we were rarely mentioned by either newspaper. In fact, less successful competitors were regularly given positive press.
While I certainly think third-party candidates are a good thing to have in any presidential election because they offer yet another alternative, it is dangerous for Ralph Nader and his supporters to say there are no significant differences between Al Gore and George W. Bush.