Community rally unites 13 organizations
Toddlers, former drug addicts, lesbians and more than 100 other people filled the the space around the Sample Gates from the bus stop to the Franklin Hall sign.
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Toddlers, former drug addicts, lesbians and more than 100 other people filled the the space around the Sample Gates from the bus stop to the Franklin Hall sign.
INDIANAPOLIS — A statue of George Washington overlooks the statehouse lawn. The words engraved below him are “First in War. First in Peace.”
For the second night in a row, a crowd began to gather in the Fine Arts Plaza.
Saad Tawfeeq was at the statewide Democratic watch party at the Indianapolis Convention Center on election night when he realized Hillary Clinton was not going to be the country’s next president.
Silence.
Students and other Bloomington citizens huddled together to protect themselves against the cold Wednesday evening around Showalter Fountain and carried signs on cardboard and pieces of cloth.
There were not enough chairs for everyone who gathered 7 p.m. Wednesday in La Casa Latino Cultural Center for a discussion about election results.
As election night wore on into the early hours of the morning, hope turned to disbelief, which then turned to fear. Small pockets of students lingered in Franklin Hall well after Tuesday, Nov. 8, had turned into the first Wednesday of the next four years.
Before the election was decided, before the United States knew who would take control of the highest office in January, Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller was already focused on helping IU move forward.
More than 100 people, old and young, walked into the Monroe County Public Library auditorium Wednesday night to discuss their concerns with bringing refugee families into Bloomington.
People will tell us to accept it. They will tell us to move on, that we will stay united as a country regardless of who is president. They’ll say it’s not alright to keep bemoaning this defeat.
The first woman ever to be nominated to run for the presidency of the United States stood before the nation delivering her concession speech.
Hillary Clinton walked on to the stage at the New Yorker Hotel with a smile on her face, but her words had a different message.
Squeezed among adults and older teens at Opie Taylor’s, a pair of elementary school-aged girls snaked between legs as the crowd at the Monroe County Democratic Party watch event waited for Shelli Yoder, who ran for 9th District United States Representative, to arrive after her final day on the road.
Carrie Fischer took a break from her book, “The Friday Society,” to take a Snapchat video of RaiQuelle Luster. Fischer began to record then asked which candidate Luster voted for.
The Russian government has stated it’s willing to work with anyone, but doctoral student Diana Sokolova said it favors Republican candidate Donald Trump. A recent poll showed about 40 percent preferred the Republican candidate as opposed to 10 percent for Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton, Sokolova said.
Todd Young is projected as Indiana’s next senator, defeating Democratic candidate Evan Bayh with 51.6 percent of the vote against Bayh’s 42.9 percent, according to the Indiana Daily Student’s results as of press time.
Poll workers
Here are the up-to-the-minute updates for each of the national, state and local races. These are preliminary results gathered from each Indiana county.
Indiana voters will have the chance to decide today whether or not hunting and fishing are constitutional rights.