Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Monday, June 15
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

‘Other’ colleges gaining popularity

·

IOWA CITY, Iowa – With orientation season well underway across the country, many students are taking campus tours and registering for classes at colleges. That is, community colleges – an increasingly popular option for recent high school graduates.


The Indiana Daily Student

The end is nigh

I was heavily distressed by the attitude expressed toward Earth First! in your opinion section on Monday (“Earth First! Common Snese Last!” July 16). We’re facing major catastrophic consequences due to destruction of and estrangement from the natural environment at levels never before seen in history.


The Indiana Daily Student

Soldiers are murderers

·

Loren Steinfeld’s letter to the editor, “Soldiers not Terrorists” (July 5), supporting the slaughter of civilians in Iraq is a typical opinion of those who think the end justifies the means.


The Indiana Daily Student

Earth First! radicals a necessary evil

·

I was very amused to read the IDS editorial titled “Earth First! Common sense last!” (July 16). My first smile appeared when I read “... radical environmentalists/anarchists ...”

The Indiana Daily Student

Grow up, people

Classes on Friday? Getting up for an 8 a.m. class? Waaaahh? Folks, this is the real world we are preparing for - a five-day work week with most jobs starting at 8 a.m. My prior schools (University of Texas and Texas A&M) had classes on Friday, and I believe it was good discipline


The Indiana Daily Student

Either all lives are sacred, or none

·

In her letter “Soldiers not terrorists” (July 5) Loren Steinfeldt responds to an editorial by Grace Low, “Wake Up!” (June 25), in which Low criticizes the U.S. military for the deaths of seven teenagers in an air strike that targeted Abu Laith al-Libi, al-Qaida’s leader in Afghanistan.


The Indiana Daily Student

Letter proves white privilege is the future of racism

·

I write in response to Joe Bialek, whose letter to the editor on July 5 (“Affirmative action unnecessary, improper”) championed the recent ruling by the conservative majority in the U.S. Supreme Court limiting the use of race in assigning students to public schools.


The Indiana Daily Student

A return to national greatness

·

Columnist George Will once said that you can tell who the real conservative is by asking, “Who would you have voted for in 1912?” (The conservative’s answer, by the way, is Taft.) Republicans failed to nominate Theodore Roosevelt, who subsequently launched the “bull moose” ticket and split the Republican vote, ceding the election to Democrat Woodrow Wilson.


The Indiana Daily Student

Moore facts

·

The Internet’s been all a-titter lately over the Michael Moore-CNN feud. The fight began after Moore objected on live television to a report by dreamy CNN neurosurgery correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta about his film “SiCKO,” which directly preceded Moore’s interview by Wolf Blitzer.


The Indiana Daily Student

Going public

·

Last week, the New York Stock Exchange’s Dow Jones industrial average saw its greatest “one-day percentage gain in four years,” and this week it climbed past an index value of 14,000, which means it’s worth a whole lot of samoleons.


The Indiana Daily Student

Gender threads

·

People have many good reasons for wearing clothes. Not getting arrested, for instance. But sexual advertisement? Not so much.


The Indiana Daily Student

Borrowing from the future

At long last, the student loan industry is getting a much-needed kick in the pants after a bill passed by the House that will most likely be scooted through the Senate with little delay.


Dean of Honors College named to provost post

·

Karen Hanson, dean of the Hutton Honors College, will be IU’s first permanent provost once she is approved by the IU board of trustees. Hanson’s appointment ends a summer-long search for the first permanent provost, and Bloomington’s first such leader within the administration since Sharon Brehm stepped down from the chancellor position in 2003.


The Indiana Daily Student

Dean of the Honors College to become next IU provost

·

Karen Hanson, dean of the Hutton Honors College, will be IU’s first permanent provost once she is approved by the IU board of trustees. Hanson’s appointment ends a summer-long search for the first permanent provost, and Bloomington’s first such leader since Sharon Brehm stepped down from her chancellery in 2003.


Chris Pickrell

High schoolers practice passion for journalism

·

The IU High School Journalism Institute officially began its 61st year this month, allowing high-school students to attend workshops to brainstorm and interact with others who share the same passion for journalism.



Ronni Moore

Tree of life

·

Wade Steffey’s parents were among the first to arrive at Bloomington High School South where the North-South track meet was to be held, and where the first tree in honor of their son’s life was to be planted. The ceremony attracted a congregation of family, friends, members of the community and other athletes.


The Indiana Daily Student

True story

·

This morning I got a call from my publisher informing me he was pulling my new book “Ex-aggeration,” which details the hellish nightmare that was my previous girlfriend. “WTF, mate?” was my obvious reaction – that he was a kangaroo rancher before moving to New York made the joke funny.


Aaron Bernstein

Body found in Griffy Lake identified Friday

·

Authorities confirmed a body found Wednesday afternoon in the northeast portion of Griffy Lake to be that of Miles Halstead, 17, of Bloomington, Ind. Halstead’s family contacted police the day before to report him missing. Upon completion of an initial search, authorities discovered Halstead’s bicycle near the lake.


The Indiana Daily Student

Monroe County courts might not provide a true 'jury of peers'

·

IU students facing trial in Monroe County might not be opposite a jury of their peers. A Jan. 1, 2003, Indiana Supreme Court ruling changed how jury pools were selected within the Hoosier state. Before, jurors were drawn solely from voter registration.