Senate committee hears testimony on old forest area bill
At the center of a sweaty and steamy room packed with many more people than it was built for, Chris Marks, an Indiana Forest Alliance member, held up a slice of pound cake.
58 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
At the center of a sweaty and steamy room packed with many more people than it was built for, Chris Marks, an Indiana Forest Alliance member, held up a slice of pound cake.
Across Indiana Avenue and to the left of Franklin Hall, there’s a small, maybe lesser-known office called the Visitor Information Center at IU-Bloomington. Its staff gets asked all kinds of questions from all types of people — sometimes it even gets asked where to buy a prom dress. The IDS sat down with the director at the center and some of the students who work there and asked them about the place and their experience there.
The Indiana House education committee passed a bill Thursday to replace the controversial ISTEP with a new test, ILEARN.
Dozens of people filled the Statehouse early Thursday morning and lined the walls of the Senate chambers to testify against a bill that would eliminate net metering, a big incentive for using solar power, in Indiana.
The forum began, predictably, with a Betsy DeVos joke.
The trees are David Seastrom’s home.
Debate about charter schools and school vouchers — hot topics in recent years — dominated much of a state house education committee hearing Tuesday that stretched from 8:30 a.m. into the early evening.
When oil spills in the ocean, it can cause devastating pollution. The resource does damage to its surroundings, but when sunlight spills down from the sky, it’s not a disaster.
Pro-life and pro-choice protesters clashed at the Bloomington courthouse square Sunday afternoon after an inauguration weekend filled with pro-women, anti-Trump protests.
Diana Hadley was teaching high school journalism when the Supreme Court of the United States dealt a crushing blow to student reporters around the country.
INDIANAPOLIS — Gov. Eric Holcomb again focused on funding infrastructure and pre-K and tackling the state’s drug epidemic in a well-received, though unspecific, Tuesday night address to Indiana.
Gov. Eric Holcomb announced one of his priorities for the 2017 legislative session will be passing a bill to make Indiana’s superintendent of public schools a governor-appointed position rather than an elected one.
State lawmakers and Indiana’s new governor have laid out their agendas for the 2017 legislative session. The agendas emphasize expanding funds for infrastructure improvements and preschool programs and tackling the drug epidemic. The session began last week.
Despite warnings from legislators that other issues would be the focus of the 2017 session, a state representative filed a new bill Wednesday morning that would make abortions completely illegal in Indiana if passed.
When moving to your own place after a year spent in the dorms, it’s now your responsibility to set up the utilities. Luckily, local property manager Scott Gilbert said a good owner won’t leave you to fend for yourself.
Amid controversies, Brown County logger defends responsible practice of his profession.
When he finally saws through the last fibers, the great beast starts to fall.
Freshmen at the Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center now have the opportunity to be paired with upperclassmen mentors through one of many of new programs and events IU’s culture centers are implementing this semester.
Glenda Ritz is standing in front of a room full of people who herald her as a savior.
When “The Bachelor” star Ben Higgins tried to explain Little 500 to his fiancée, Lauren Bushnell, she said she just couldn’t picture it.