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(06/14/08 8:39pm)
The Monroe County Sheriff’s Office is still trying to find the person who called Bloomington’s Wal-Mart Supercenter with a bomb threat, said Chief Deputy Scott Mellinger.\nThe threat came in at about 12:30 p.m. June 12, and within about 20 minutes employees and customers were evacuated, he said. The store was searched with bomb-detecting dogs, Mellinger said, and nothing was found. At about 6 p.m. the store reopened, he said.\nBecause Wal-Mart employees didn’t “red flag” the call, Mellinger said the Sheriff’s Office is sifting through about 100 or 200 calls to the store around the time the bomb threat was reported.
(05/25/08 10:04pm)
INDIANAPOLIS - Scott Dixon stayed ahead of the trouble, got a boost from his crew and drove to his first Indianapolis 500 victory Sunday.
(04/03/08 10:12pm)
DJ AM will not be performing during Little 500 week.\nKevin Hoiseth, a member of Lambda Chi Alpha who also runs A-List Entertainment Group, told the Indiana Daily Student that DJ AM would be part of the DMX concert held by Lambda Chi Alpha and Delta Upsilon fraternities to benefit Children Uniting Nations at 6:30 p.m. April 9. DJ AM''s publicist, Jenni Weinman, said DJ AM will not be part of the concert. "DJ AM will not be at that show or performing, as on that date he is not even in the state," Weinman said.\nHoiseth said there were several complications with the booking process.\n"(DJ AM) is already booked for a show in Houston, TX that\nhe has been confirmed with for over a year," Hoiseth said in an e-mail. He said the rest of the concert was not affected at all.
(01/10/08 5:32am)
WFIU, IU’s National Public Radio affiliate, is making available a plethora of CDs to \nits listeners.\nThe music sale, which will take place in the WFIU studio, features hundreds of CDs from all genres of music, according to a WFIU press release. The sale is open to the public and runs from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday.\nWFIU will only be accepting cash and all music is priced between $.25 and $2. All proceeds from the sale will benefit the station and the Robert Samels Memorial Fund, according to the press release.\nSamels died in April 2006, after his flight from West Lafayette, Ind., crashed outside of the Monroe County Airport. The fund, which also included WFIU staff donations, will establish a yearly Day of Dedication in his name, according to the WFIU Web site.\nBy-the-hour pay parking is available on the top level of the Jordan Avenue Parking Garage. Parking will be available in the Herman B Wells Library parking lot for those with A through C permits, according to the release. \nMore information about the music sale is available at wfiu.org.
(01/10/08 5:25am)
The IU Police Department has recovered some, but not all, of the nearly $45,000 in musical instruments that went missing from Simon Music Recital Building in early December.\nIUPD was notified Dec. 13 that the instruments were missing from the storage closet on 200 S. Jordan Ave. The items were last seen the previous evening on Dec. 12, when the closet was locked, according to the police report. \nIUPD officer Marty East and IU Det. Greg McClure discovered during investigation that some of the instruments had been pawned locally by IU custodian Sean Ray, according to the police report. \nIUPD worked with the establishment to recover the pawned instruments, but there are still 11 instruments missing. \nPolice were unable to find Ray at his home, and he is currently wanted on warrant for a D Felony Theft, according to the police report.\nRay is described as a white male, 5-foot-11, with brown straight shoulder length hair, brown eyes and a mustache with goatee. IUPD asks that if anyone knows the location of Ray or the remaining missing musical instruments to contact the IUPD investigation section at 855-4111.
(01/10/08 5:23am)
IU Provost Karen Hanson joined academic leaders of other Big Ten universities to affirm the importance of maintaining research programs on college campuses.\nHanson responded to Harvard University President Drew Gilpin Faust, who was quoted in BusinessWeek suggesting that universities that don’t receive Ivy League endowments should focus primarily on social science and humanities research instead of “ambitious” scientific research, according to an IU media press release.\nThe letter, which can be viewed online, was signed by the provosts of 10 Big Ten universities and the University of Illinois-Chicago, according to the press release.\nHanson wrote that as senior academic leaders of 11 public research universities, the group “emphatically rejects” that notion. \n“Collectively, our institutions educate more than 380,000 students, produce one in every eight American Ph.D.s and conduct more than $2.5 billion worth of research every year,” she wrote.\nThe provosts wrote that public universities have for the past quarter-century been “in the grip of a funding vise,” constrained by tight state budgets, growing enrollment and pressure to hold the line on tuition, according to the press release.\n“If we are to continue the extraordinary process of discovery and creativity that is the hallmark of our great research universities,” the provosts wrote, “we must be willing to provide the support our public institutions need to sustain their educational and scientific excellence. The ultimate stakeholder is the nation. And the stakes are high.”\nThe letter can be viewed online at www.businessweek.com.
(08/02/07 1:29am)
Indiana State police have determined that an Indianapolis man who reported he was shot by a hitchhiker near the Marion-Johnson county line fabricated the story. \nDetectives from the Indianapolis State Police Post followed up on the investigation and determined the report to be a hoax, according to a State Police press release.\nAfter officers interviewed the man, he acknowledged that the entire incident was fabricated, the release said. Detectives are still following up on the investigation and intend to present their findings to the Johnson and Marion county prosecutor’s offices later in the week for consideration of criminal false reporting charges.\nAdditionally, police are looking for a black handgun that has been discarded in the area. Police urge anyone who finds the weapon to report it to the Indiana State Police.\nQuestions regarding this incident should be directed to State Police Sgt. Ray Poole at (317) 694-7229.
(08/02/07 1:18am)
INDIANAPOLIS – Sharon Byerly showed up solo at her senior prom in spring 1967 because her date – the man she married months later – was half a world away serving in Vietnam.\nAnd it wasn’t the first time a prom was ruined. The year before, Byerly’s junior prom was staged at the stately French Lick Springs Hotel and it was a solo affair too because her future husband, Darrell, had just been called up for the draft.\nByerly’s tale of ruined proms won the couple a three-day trip to West Baden and adjacent French Lick through an online contest run by the state’s tourism agency. About 3,600 contestants competed for three free trips to Indiana tourist destinations.\nIn her brief story posted on the Indiana Office of Tourism Development’s Web site, Byerly told of her “40 year wish” to someday visit French Lick with her husband, writing, “I have always hoped to go there together.”\nThe 58-year-old and her 60-year-old husband will be staying at the West Baden Springs Hotel, not far from the French Lick casino, with Byerly’s brother and sister-in-law.\nByerly hopes the trip is memorable for her and her husband, both retirees from Greenville, who will celebrate their 40th wedding anniversary in November.\n“When we got married we immediately started a family, got busy and didn’t have the bucks to go down there or anything,” she said Tuesday. “I always thought it would be neat for him to get a chance to go, and now that’s going to happen.”\nThe contest’s two other winners collected trips for four to Indiana Beach in Monticello and nearby Lafayette and Holiday World & Splashin’ Safari and Evansville. Among other perks, the three winners receive a $500 gas card, a digital video camera and free local lodging.\nThe contest was the second part of an effort by the state tourism agency to familiarize people with its Web site – http://www.in.gov/visitindiana – that began with a challenge to Hoosiers to select their three favorite Indiana destinations.\nOut of 12 sites listed, about 92,000 online votes were cast before the top three sites the winners are headed to were chosen, said Curt Brantingham, a spokesman for the Indiana Office of Tourism Development.\n“The overarching theme is to get people interested in Indiana, especially Hoosiers and folks who are not wanting to travel far, whether it’s gas prices or economic reasons. It’s a chance for us to showcase the state,” he said.\nBrantingham said the agency’s latest research suggests that about 59 million people a year visit Indiana tourist sites each year, adding about $9 billion to the state’s economy.\nThe winner of the Holiday World/Evansville trip, Dawn Harper of Fort Wayne, said in her entry that she’s a single mother of three who was diagnosed with cancer a few years ago. Harper wrote that her illness has been hard on her children and she wanted something nice for them.\n“I would love to take my kids away for a special day together as a family that they would never forget,” she wrote.
(08/02/07 12:52am)
INDIANAPOLIS – Ball State University plans to name its new communication building after David Letterman, a 1970 graduate.\nLetterman has often mentioned Ball State on his CBS “Late Show” talk show. The school has had a Letterman Scholarship in the Department of Telecommunications since 1985.\nBall State President Jo Ann Gora said the idea to name the facility for Letterman was first mentioned among trustees about a year ago but he was reluctant because he didn’t want the attention.\n“It is entirely fitting that the university should respond in (this kind of way) with this public demonstration of our admiration and respect for such an accomplished and loyal alumnus,” Gora said.\nLetterman’s mother, Dorothy Mengering, attended Monday’s announcement by the board of trustees in his hometown of Indianapolis.\n“I’m so thrilled that David finally decided to let them do this for him,” said Mengering, 86. “He’s a very special young man, and I’m very proud of him.”\nLetterman and Mengering, who lives in the city’s northern suburb of Carmel, are expected to attend the building’s Sept. 7 dedication.\n“I am proud to have been a student at Ball State, and I’m deeply honored to have this recognition for me and my family,” Letterman, 60, said in a statement.\nThe $21 million communication and media center on the main campus in Muncie currently houses Indiana Public Radio. It will open for students at the beginning of the 2007-08 school year, though some construction work is in its final stages. The building is expected to provide much-needed space for the university’s emerging digital media content production facilities.\nThe 75,000 square-foot building brings the Center for Information and Communication Sciences, communication studies, journalism and telecommunications departments under one roof. It includes studio and office space and will be open to students 24 hours a day.
(08/31/04 5:07am)
MIAMI -- There was no Madonna-Britney Spears kiss, no partially-clad Howard Stern coming down from the rafters, and certainly no wardrobe malfunctions. The MTV Awards show Sunday featured typical frenetic energy and sexy style -- and a few musical surprises -- but it was mostly a kinder, gentler version of past shows.\nUsher showed as much skin as anybody, preening in front of the camera bare-chested as simulated raindrops fell on his chiseled body during the opening performance of "Burn." And the sometimes raunchy comedian Dave Chappelle even kept it relatively clean, despite teasing that he wouldn't.\n"It's the biggest mistake you made since Janet Jackson at the Super Bowl," he said. The comment alluded to the MTV-produced Super Bowl halftime flesh show that created a firestorm earlier this year. There may have been plenty of sex appeal on show in Miami -- cleavage was the main fashion trend for women, cool colors for men -- but there was little shock appeal on hand.\nMTV was ready, though, using a several-second tape delay for the first time. The audio delay, used for years, was in heavy use during the hip-hop medley, which featured Lil Jon, Petey Pablo and Fat Joe. The change of scenery for the awards, typically held in New York or Los Angeles, helped raise the decadence level at the celebrity-soaked affair, held at the downtown American Airlines Arena.\nOutKast's vivid "Hey Ya!," perhaps best described as the old Ed Sullivan show on acid, won four awards, including video of the year. Jay-Z's "99 Problems," the most-nominated video with six, also won four. The gritty black-and-white video depicts the singer's own killing as a metaphor for his much-ballyhooed retirement.\n"I felt like I was trying to push the envelope," said Jay-Z, dressed in a dapper white suit and hat. As he accepted the award, called a moonman after the channel's logo, for best rap video, he commented on it. \n"That was my punishment, and this is my reward," Jay-Z said. \nUsher won his first moonman, as he took best male video for "Yeah!," and expressed his happiness to fans with a beaming smile. \n"This is my first time coming up here. Let me take my time with this," Usher said. "I'm so damned happy right now, I don't wanna leave."\nAs usual, the awards were an afterthought to explosive performances and surprise cameos. Alicia Keys gave a dramatic, soulful spin of her hit "If I Ain't Got You" and was buoyed by Stevie Wonder on harmonica. Moments later, she joined Wonder and Lenny Kravitz as they sang a classic Wonder hit, "Higher Ground." Keys also appeared on stage to honor the late Ray Charles, who died in June.\nThe daughters of Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry and President Bush also made appearances at the celebrity studded award show. The Bush daughters, on videotape, urged people to vote. Even the Rev. Al Sharpton made an appearance connected to voting, not for the election, but for the viewer's choice award.\nAcclaimed rap newcomer Kanye West staged a dramatic version of "Jesus Walks," then instead of using a Chaka Khan sample for his hit "Through the Wire," brought the R&B veteran onstage to sing the real thing. In a strange stunt, Flaming Lips singer Wayne Coyne appeared on stage enclosed in a big plastic ball pushed by fans on the arena floor. But perhaps the most surreal, and bizarre, performance came from the Polyphonic Spree, the 20-something member rock choir that performed in multicolored, choir-like robes. They looked like members of a lost cult from the 1970s.\nThere also was an appearance by uber-twins Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen. Mary-Kate, who recently was treated for an eating disorder, alluded to her ordeal before introducing Jessica Simpson.\n"Thank you to everyone. You have been very supportive for the last couple of months," said Mary-Kate.\nIt was one of the few subdued moments during the lavish night.\nUsher and Simpson arrived on the red carpet not by car, but by luxury yacht. Simpson, glamorously attired in a white dress with a silver bodice, arrived with husband and "Newlyweds" co-star Nick Lachey in a 68-foot boat. The biggest entrance, of course, came from P. Diddy. Dressed in a white suit and with a Mohawk haircut, he arrived in a towering yacht along with Mase, Naomi Campbell and Bruce Willis.
(08/25/04 5:01am)
Today marks the beginning of Welcome Week, a series of days filled with events put on by the Office of Orientation Programs for new and returning students.\nThe festivities begin at 4:30 p.m. when President Adam Herbert and IU-Bloomington Interim Chancellor Ken Gros Louis preside over the annual Freshman Induction Ceremony at Assembly Hall. \nKevin Wanzer, an educational speaker, will talk about celebrating diversity at the opening of CultureFest at 4:30 p.m. Thursday in the IU Auditorium. Wanzer has previously addressed the United Nations, given presentations at the White House and worked with The Late Show with David Letterman. After the presentation, CultureFest moves outdoors and boasts food, music and games from around the world.\nFinally, a rally to teach new students everything from the IU Fight Song to athletic and classroom traditions is scheduled for 4:30 p.m. Friday in Assembly Hall.\nFor more information about Welcome Week events, contact Associate Director of Orientation Programs Melanie Payne at 855-6189.
(12/14/03 9:52pm)
The IU men's soccer team couldn't have created a better ending for legendary coach Jerry Yeagley. The team scored two first half goals and hung on amid a snowstorm to win 2-1 and give Yeagley his sixth NCAA Championship in 31 years.\nJunior forward Neb Grabavoy returned from the U20 National team to score the first goal of the game just 15 minutes into the contest. Freshman forward Jacob Peterson scored the game winner five minutes later on a run he started from the midfield.\nSt. John's fought back and scored with about 12 minutes remaining. Snow continued to cover the field, but IU held off the St. John's attack. The Red Storm had numerous shots, but junior goalkeeper and the IU defense held them out.\nIU ends the season on an 18-game unbeaten. Yeagley announced at the beginning of the season that he would retire. Yeagley ends his career with 541 wins, the winningest coach in Division 1 history.
(11/05/03 1:55am)
Democrat Mark Kruzan overtook Republican Fred Prall in today's election for Bloomington mayor, winning 63 percent of the vote. Kruzan will replace current mayor John Fernandez, also a democrat. Democrats also retained control of the Bloomington City Council.\nFull results (68 of 68 districts reporting):\nBloomington Mayor \n37% Fred Prall (R) \n63% Mark Kruzan (D) \nBloomington Clerk \n37% Matthew Stevenson (R) \n63% Regina Moore (D) \nBloomington Council At-Large \n14% Mark J. Brostoff (R) \n16% Doug Bruce (R) \n14% Gregory J. Dougherty (R) \n19% Timothy Mayer (D) \n19% Chris Gaal (D) \n18% Andy Ruff (D) \nBloomington Council Dist 1 \n37% Dax Norton (R) \n63% Chris Sturbaum (D) \nBloomington Council Dist 2 \n54% Jason R. Banach (R) \n46% Susan J. Sandberg (D) \nBloomington Council Dist 3 \n39% John C. Hurlow (R) \n61% Michael Diekhoff (D) \nBloomington Council Dist 4 \n40% Rodney Young (R) \n54% David R. Rollo (D) \nBloomington Council Dist 5 \n53% David Sabbagh (R) \n47% Bill Hayden (D) \nBloomington Council Dist 6 \n48% Chris Smith (R) \n52% Stephen Volan (D)
(10/30/03 4:45pm)
IU-Bloomington Chancellor Sharon Brehm announced her resignation to accept the role of senior advisor to President Adam Herbert, IU officials said Thursday.\nBrehm, who is also the University vice president for academic affairs, gave Herbert her resignation Wednesday.\nHer new position will take effect Jan. 1.\nIn her resignation letter, Brehm said she believes the new president must develop an administrative structure that will best serve him and the University.\n"I have decided to resign my administrative position effective Dec. 31, 2003, so as to give you (Herbert) as much administrative flexibility as possible," Brehm's letter said.\nBrehm said her new responsibilities can assist in making a contribution to the advancement of women in higher education.\nHerbert said he will name an interim chancellor soon after concluding the appropriate consultative process. The interim chancellor will serve until a search for a chancellor is completed during the 2004-05 academic year.\nBrehm will continue as a tenured member of the Department of Psychology.\nCheck idsnews.com for updates throughout the day, and read Friday's IDS for complete coverage.
(10/09/03 4:48pm)
A small ultralight aircraft crashed in southwest Lawrence County this morning. The aircraft was found around 7:46 am behind a rural house off of State Road 54 near the Crane area, said Master Trooper Jackie Taylor of Indiana State Police.\nTwo people died in the crash, but they have yet to be identified.\nCheck www.idsnews.com for more updates throughout the day.
(09/08/03 5:16pm)
CHICAGO - Indiana Gov. Frank O'Bannon was taken to a hospital Monday after falling ill at a Chicago hotel where he was attending a conference, officials said.\nThe Chicago Fire Department said O'Bannon, 73, was taken to Northwestern Memorial Hospital about 9 a.m. Hospital spokeswoman Kelly Sullivan said O'Bannon was being treated and undergoing tests in the emergency room. She had no detail on his condition, but added, "I know it's a very serious situation."\nChicago television station WMAQ reported that O'Bannon was unconscious when he was taken to the hospital.\nO'Bannon was at the Palmer House Hilton, where he was attending a conference of the Midwest U.S.-Japan Association.\nIn Indianapolis, the governor's office had few details.\nThe governor gets a yearly physical, and was deemed to be "as healthy as he could be," O'Bannon spokeswoman Mary Dieter said. "Clearly, something has occurred. But he has been very vibrant, very energetic."\nO'Bannon's wife, Judy, was en route to Chicago.\nO'Bannon, elected to his second four-year term in 2000, is barred by term limits from running again next year.\nLt. Gov. Joe Kernan also was at the conference. His office said he was on his way back to Indianapolis from Chicago.\nO'Bannon was elected to his father's seat in the Indiana Senate in 1970 and served 18 years. He first ran for governor in 1987, but when Evan Bayh got into the race, O'Bannon dropped his bid and became Bayh's running mate.\nAfter serving eight years as lieutenant governor, O'Bannon was unopposed when he sought the Democratic nomination for governor in 1996. He entered that race as an underdog to Indianapolis Mayor Stephen Goldsmith and campaigned largely on his down-home charm and Evan Bayh's record. Bayh, meanwhile, was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1998.\nO'Bannon is also chairman of the board of O'Bannon Publishing Co., which publishes weekly newspapers in Harrison and Crawford counties.
(09/03/03 5:08am)
MIAMI -- The chorus of Bacilos' hit song "Mi Primer Millon" makes it clear: "I only want to hit it on the radio, so I can have my first million."\nThe multinational rockers could have their first Latin Grammy when the awards show is broadcast live Wednesday on CBS at 9 p.m. EDT.\n"Mi Primer Millon" is a story about Bacilos' success, highlighting the risks of dropping everything to chase fame without compromising art. It's become an inside joke in the Latin music industry.\n"It's realistic and it's really honest," said Jorge Villamizar, who wrote the song with producer Sergio George. "It's so honest, it's beyond being tacky or hip. More than the market, it has touched the industry."\nThe Miami-based band is Colombian guitarist and lead singer Villamizar, 32, Brazilian bassist Andre Lopes, 26, and Puerto Rican percussionist Jose Javier "JJ" Freire, 31. They have three nominations, and Villamizar has three more on his own for his work as a songwriter. Jorge, a native New Yorker who produced two songs on the album, leads all nominees with six.\n"Mi Primer Millon" is from the eclectic CD "Caraluna," which won a mainstream Grammy in 2002 for best Latin pop album. Bacilos' debut eponymous album, released in 2001, netted two Latin Grammy nominations.\nThe name Bacilos literally means "bacillus," or bacterium in English, though there's also a reference to a "vacilon," or a big, wild party.\nDespite their recent success, the trio hasn't reaped big money yet. Critics fawn over their acoustic fusion, an alternative to the homogenized, prepackaged sounds of Ricky Martin-inspired Latin pop.\n"We're still alternative. We're not fully members of the top 10 club yet," Villamizar said.\nWhile Bacilos has joined Juanes, Molotov and acts from Surco records as part of a wave of alternative Latin rock, they began eight years ago as three young guys in a hard-sounding power trio. That's a far cry from their more mature, organic sound of today.\nThe band was forming a base that today fuses several musical styles -- rock, cumbia, ska, reggae, soca, bossa nova and others with layered sounds of the violin, cello and brass instruments.\nBacilos' musical diversity is born from the nuances of their cultures and the mixed salad of Latin American influences that permeate Miami.\n"Each one of us brings their own roots," Lopes said. "More than that, because we live in Miami, there's no way you can turn on a radio and not listen to maybe a Mexican ballad, Argentinian or Mexican rock, then there's a salsa or a merengue, then some pop. It's very hard not to be influenced by everything you listen to and hear."\nThe album turned into a Grammy, which "closed the phase of the unknown musician, the underdog trying to prove a point," said Villamizar. "It made me feel at peace with the sacrifices I've made in my life"
(04/08/03 12:04am)
The athletic department has a new permanent director of intercollegiate athletics, as was announced today by interim president Gerald Bepko during an afternoon press conference. \nTerry Clapacs will lose 'interim' from his title which he has held for the past six months.\nOn top of his athletic director position, Clapacs will stay on as vice president and chief administrative officer of IU, giving the majority of his everyday duties to deputy vice president for administration, Paul Sullivan.\nIn his acceptance speech, Clapacs said that he can now take on more responsiblity and move ahead with ideas that in the interim role he was just holding onto.\nDuring the almost one hour press conference, Clapacs talked about his history at IU and his love for Hoosier athletics. \nOne key element Clapacs stressed was making the Athletic Department\nharmonious, compared to what it has been in the past few years. \nAnother aspect he touched on was the improvement of athletic facilities, naming almost all of IU's facilities.\nMost notably, Clapacs talked about major improvements to Memorial Stadium.\n"We have a commitment to football," he said. \nKnown to be a football man, Clapacs talked extensively about what he wants to do concerning IU's football program. \nHe will be earning $290,000 for his two positions. His base of $250,000 will be supplemented by an annual $40,000 for as long as he holds both titles.
(03/13/03 11:00pm)
MARTINSVILLE -- Human remains discovered by a hunter last weekend have been identified as those of Jill Behrman, an Indiana University student missing for nearly three years.\nEric Behrman confirmed Thursday that FBI officials have identified bones found in Morgan County as his daughter, Jill Behrman.\nA news conference is scheduled for 5:30 p.m. in Martinsville.\nBehrman did not say why the investigation has shifted to Martinsville from an area in Salt Creek near Bloomington, where investigators have said they suspected Behrman was killed.\n"All we know at this time is that Jill has been found," Behrman told The Indianapolis Star. "It's just like as if it just happened. It kind of takes us back to the day and stuff like that. There's just been a long time in between."\nBehrman, 19, was last seen riding her bike alone just south of Bloomington on the morning of May 31, 2000.\nInvestigators have said she probably was hit by a pickup truck driven by someone under the influence of alcohol or drugs, and her body dumped.\nThe bones were discovered Sunday by a hunter who was scouting the countryside north of Paragon, about 30 miles southwest of Indianapolis, for the upcoming turkey season.\nBehrman said his family would not attend the news conference.\n"There's just so many unanswered questions right now," he said. "We just have to wait and see. Were taking some personal family time."
(03/11/03 2:41am)
Students in several dorms on campus were evacuated to the Main Library and Student Recreational Sports Center late Monday after power outtages struck their dorms.\nDorms south of Tenth Street, including Willkie, Ashton, Teter, Wright and Read residence centers experienced power outtages around 8:30 p.m.\nCheck www.idsnews.com for updates throughout the night and Tuesday's IDS for a full report.