Planned Parenthood formally files complaint to halt controversial abortion law
Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky is demanding a federal court halt implementation of Indiana’s controversial abortion law.
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Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky is demanding a federal court halt implementation of Indiana’s controversial abortion law.
Centerstone, a nonprofit organization, will increase access to quality mental health care and substance abuse treatment to combat high transient populations in southern Indiana.
ST. PETERSBURG, Fl. — A jury awarded $115 million in damages to Hulk Hogan on Friday after a salacious trial that tested the limits of the First Amendment in the world of celebrity journalism.
The United States Department of Veterans Affairs will be collaborating with Indiana’s Prescription Drug Monitoring Program (INSPECT) in order to curb opioid abuse among Hoosier veterans, Gov. Mike Pence announced Wednesday.
Since last summer, 24-year-old Abigail McKinney has had an abortion, traded her poor-paying part-time job for one that’s full-time and left her abusive ex-boyfriend.
In the Indianapolis Statehouse, the people wearing red prayed.
Amy Schlichter has spent her adult life dedicated to unborn children.
On a Wednesday night in November 2015, community members crammed into a small room in the basement of a Holiday Inn Express. The room was well past capacity, but people continued to file in.
Pharmacists may be legally allowed to prevent patients from purchasing cough medicine if the pharmacist suspects the patient may use the medicine to make methamphetamine, as outlined by a bill currently making its way through Indiana Congress.
A new grant program was announced Thursday to better equip first responders in an attempt to curb the increase in overdoses and death caused by opioids and heroin.
On her first day in Room L9 at Templeton Elementary School, Katie Russell is all soft smiles and soothing, soprano tones.
INDIANAPOLIS — Cathy Fuentes-Rohwer is in mama bear mode.
In the Franklin City Police Department, on large beige boards next to a whiteboard, 50 faces were taped up on rows of paper — suspects in a recent drug bust. On the whiteboard, their names were written in black ink.
Safiah Alhasan brings her children to the Monroe County YMCA three times a week. It’s the family’s routine. She drops off her 2-year-old, Sham, at the playground with the babysitters. Her 4-year-old, Nour, heads off to the YMCA’s preschool.
It was 7:30 p.m. on the Thursday of Little 500 week, so the line on Kilroy’s on Kirkwood was already out the door and down the sidewalk to the next crosswalk. Nearly everyone in line craned their necks to watch the protesters as they marched past on the opposite side of the street.
Jenny Gibson is wary. She’s Bloomington’s Animal Care Control volunteer coordinator, and the shelter is emptier than she’s ever seen it. It feels like something is waiting in the wings. She knows when there are a few more stretches of warm days, animals are going to come flying through the doors. Starting this time of year, the shelter counts on piles of kittens.
Bloominglabs members and community participants alike have the opportunity to make their own costumes this weekend.
Each fall semester at IU, roughly 1,000 students will transfer from other schools to the Bloomington campus, said Terry Knaus, IU’s senior assistant director for ?Recruitment and Outreach.