Students to fill up on pizza for charity
For $7, students will be able to stuff themselves full of pizza from 1 to 4 p.m. Friday during the second-annual pizza-tasting competition put on by the student group Pizza Mania.
For $7, students will be able to stuff themselves full of pizza from 1 to 4 p.m. Friday during the second-annual pizza-tasting competition put on by the student group Pizza Mania.
Professor Steve Weitzman and departing IU Foundation President Curt Simic could not have taken more different roads to get where they are today. For the past seven months, they have headed opposite sides of a debate about investing in companies linked to funding the genocide in Darfur.
If you’re tired of talking about “America’s Greatest College Weekend,” the ploys of the two remaining Democratic presidential primary
On Monday, the IDS published its usual report of Little 500 judicial infractions. The numbers are always stunning: a few dozen arrests, a couple hundred drinking tickets, etc. But I bet if you asked all those minors who got caught with booze what precisely it was they did wrong, they would answer in unison: “getting caught.”
American Idol” controversies continue, from a gay stripper to Jesus. I’m uneasy about “American Idol’s” recent singing-for-Christ theme nights. Two weeks ago, one contestant sang
Freedom of speech. Where is the line drawn? At what point does controversial content become dangerous? This debate has raged for years, and two college students in Colorado have entered the ring. After seeing a feminist and gender studies newsletter called “The Monthly Rag” lying around campus, Colorado College student Chris Robinson and a fellow student decided to make a newsletter of their own. “The Monthly Bag,” as they named it, was created as what the Denver Post called a “satirical response to a feminist publication.” Surely they were expecting the newsletter to cause a stir, but Robinson and his colleague got more heat than they were probably looking for.
Five years after the war began, the situation in Iraq still remains fragile and uncertain. These five
I would like to thank the IDS for covering the issue of divestment and respond to the Foundation’s allegation in the article that divestment’s logic is flawed and that it is a “feel-good measure.” Divestment is designed to exert economic pressure on the Sudanese government where diplomatic pressure has been slow or ineffective. Nine companies have already ceased their operations in Sudan as a result of the divestment movement, and the Sudanese government has been visibly distressed by this. Divestment is a strategy designed to apply international pressure where it will be most effective, and I therefore fail to see the flaw in its logic. There is another kind of logic at work here, however – that which maintains that a university’s sole role is to dispense education, and our sole role as students is to receive it. I would not contest that the Foundation’s primary responsibility is to maximize the financial resources available to IU, nor that it has done an outstanding job in providing scholarships to students. I would contend, however, that the logic of the IU community cannot be reduced solely to resource maximization and passive education. Rather, I see a university as a dynamic institution in which we as students have a role as actors. Moreover, the University has a public face and a place in the global system of relations, and to preclude any serious discussion of the ethical implications of our investments in companies operating in Sudan is to deny these considerations. If the administration and the Foundation were arguing that divestment from Sudan would hurt IU financially and affect either the quality or the cost of our education, this would be a stronger case against it. The argument being advanced so far, however, is that faculty and students should confine themselves solely to the roles of the educator and the educated – that both their voices and their ethical concerns, no matter
This letter is in response to Nathan Dixon’s April 2 column, “Green Debates.”
Are those hideous recycling bins on campus really necessary? I realize we’re “going green,” and I’m fine with recycling, but must they be covered in hippy
This is a response to Chase Cooper’s position in the recent conversation on climate change in the IDS (“Global warming or misinforming,” April 16). You’ll have to forgive me if I find the logic
Cheryl Thomas’ article “Confused? Me Too” (IDS, April 8) decrying the Beaties’ decision for
In Robert Granger’s column on April 11 (“Politics, never right”), he makes a well-reasoned point that there
John McCain hangs his presidential hopes on a remarkable act of courage. Americans love a war hero. McCain might even
According to a recent report published by the Every Child Matters Education Fund, in 2006, 7.8 percent of Indiana children were not covered by health insurance at any time.
A group of students is selling Mother’s Day cards to benefit the Middle Way House Rape Crisis Center as part of a group project for the IU course, Principles of Public Relations.
Listen to this week's episode to hear IDS sports editors Matt Dollinger and Lee Hurwitz interview IU football coach Bill Lynch. PODCAST: That's What He Said
Ike Reilly, respected in indie rock circles and unknown elsewhere, has released an album of unreleased material. His Dylanesque lyrics buttress a sound that spans the gamut from garage rock to folk blues, and despite its wide smattering of his work, Hit Parade provides another access point into a great career.
Leona Lewis won a British talent show. Apparently, Britain needs better talent. Her album Spirit sounds every bit as ridiculous and nauseating as anything else a teenage girl would listen to. It’s amazing that the record industry still puts out complete pre-packaged shit like this album, yet millions still eat it up like candy.
Tapes ’n Tapes hits the sophomore slump after its excellent debut, The Loon, with a more straightforward sound and little sonic experimentation. The brashness and scrappiness has been replaced by complacency. Despite fat bass-lines, catchy guitar riffs, playful drums and dabs of psychedelia, Walk It Off can’t disguise its true weakness: bad songs.