So long, farewell
By Casey Farrington | Dec 9, 2014 8:57 pmI don’t feel qualified to write one of these, a “goodbye column.” I need to be older, wiser.
I don’t feel qualified to write one of these, a “goodbye column.” I need to be older, wiser.
I’ve spoken to an on-duty police officer maybe three times in my life. Each time was a traffic stop. Outside those 15 minutes, my primary understanding of the police comes from television.
Indulge me, for a moment, in a thought experiment.Have you been assigned any readings by a woman this semester? How about by a person of color?
As a fertile human woman (not to brag, but an OB/GYN once told me my cervix is “perfect”), I sometimes worry about pregnancy.Usually my worries are irrational.
I’ve seen the bit several times at open mics and IU comedy shows. Comedian Jordan Mather-Licht jokes about a trip to Planned Parenthood and an STD scare that, thankfully, is just a scare.
For 18 years, the University of North Carolina forgot its own mission.
I’m enrolled at IU-Bloomington, but I’m not just an IU student.
Stop talking about your opinion of other women’s bodies like it matters.
Only one in four American millennials is “definitely” planning on voting this year, according to a Harvard University Institute of Politics poll.
Members of the editorial board join the conversation about sexual assault on college campuses, especially in light of the UVA Rolling Stone controversy and the IDS investigations series.
Members of the IDS Editorial Board discuss the controversy surrounding Girls actress Lena Dunham's recent memoir, including allegations of sexual abuse of her sister.
Members of the IDS Editorial Board discuss the recent coming-out of Apple's CEO, and the pros and cons of society's need for people to publicly disclose their homosexuality.
Members of the IDS Editorial Board identify some of the issues IU students who are transgender face, and question how LGBT-friendly the campus really is.
It's like, so totally accurate!
Muslims are a very real part of the Bloomington community
Feminist women of color respond to white solidarity with controversial figure Hugo Schwyzer.