TAMING OF THE SHREW: Our voice, our rights
By Bailey Shrewsbury / November 16, 2016America has had one of the biggest upsets in political history and has elected a man that has no background in politics or the military.
America has had one of the biggest upsets in political history and has elected a man that has no background in politics or the military.
In this wild and crazy election year, the standards for elections and candidate decorum has basically been thrown out the window.
Women have been behind some of the world’s greatest accomplishments, but to everyone’s surprise men have been taking their credit for centuries.
"When the Moon was Ours" by Anna-Marie McLemore is a story about a girl who came from a water tower and a boy struggling to be who he is. The story follows Miel and Sam closely — their struggles with finding themselves, finding each other and forgiving their past.
"The Boy Who Killed Grant Parker" by Kat Spears is the story of Luke, who gets moved from a prime DC school to live with his dad in a small town in Tennessee. The God-centered town doesn’t welcome him with open arms and he’s quite literally a fish out of water. But after a run-in with the town’s golden boy, Grant Parker, Luke is shoved to the top of the social food chain.
Bailey Shrewsbury is a sophomore journalism major and writes "Taming of the Shrew" for the Daily News.
In a small room on Meridian Street in downtown Indianapolis, people filed in with colored pencils, markers and glitter — all ready for a protest against the controversial abortion bill.
Bailey Shrewsbury is a freshman and writes "Taming of the Shrew" for the Daily News.