A safe and civil city
Like it says in front of the Bloomington Police Department: Bloomington is a safe and civil city.
Like it says in front of the Bloomington Police Department: Bloomington is a safe and civil city.
It is hard to imagine the situation Indiana University currently faces could get any worse as it prepares for freshman orientation to begin.
This week we should remember our responsibility not just to our neighbors, but our families across the world.That responsibility starts with listening to the wind and spreading the word. To get a head start, here is some good news.
Lauren Spierer’s mother Charlene said she wakes up every day and asks herself what do I want to accomplish today.
Political commentator and Fox News star Glen Beck is set to make one of the biggest decisions of his professional career at the end of the month.
Although there have been no significant developments in the case of missing IU student Lauren Spierer, the Bloomington Police Department said that does not mean it will lessen its investigation.
"She's everywhere here to me, she's everywhere, but she's nowhere," Charlene Spierer said.
Bruce Edward Foster, wanted in connection to the murder of Bloomington resident Angela Holder, turned himself in to police Friday.
Carl Salzmann, attorney for IU student Cory Rossman, informed members of the media that his client had met with Bloomington Police today.
With Washington continuing to work on bills to help fund the country for 2012, the discussion on what needs to be eliminated in order to help the nation get back on track toward fiscal responsibility has been raging. One piece of spending that could be deemed unnecessary is the $320 million spent of military bands this year.
The third annual Luna Festival returns to Bloomington this weekend.
The search for Lauren Spierer is about to get bigger. Lauren’s case will be aired on America’s Most Wanted on Saturday.
Jason Casares has been named the new associate dean of students and director of student ethics, Dean of Students Harold “Pete” Goldsmith announced today.
Lauren Spierer’s friends were waking up to realize she never came home. A week later, at 2:30 a.m. on Friday, about 20 other volunteers sat outside the Copper Cup and Smallwood Plaza, the apartment Lauren never reached that morning.
The Bloomington Police Department led a traffic stop that questioned drivers, walkers and bikers traveling down North College Avenue at about 3:30 a.m. Friday morning.
At the 5:30 p.m. search for Lauren Spierer on Thursday, Sophomore Meranda Prince and Edgewood High School seniors Kristina Chambers, Alyssa Mounce and Lacee Plemmons were instructed to look around the downtown area.
At least 100 people showed up at the leasing space by Smallwood Plaza at 2 p.m. Thursday to help search for Lauren Spierer.
A Wednesday morning press conference with the Bloomington Police Department offered few revelations into the ongoing search for missing IU student Lauren Spierer. Police remained tight-lipped concerning reports of an altercation between Corey Rossman and other unidentified males at approximately 2:40 a.m. at Smallwood Plaza the morning Lauren disappeared.
Lauren Spierer suffers from Long QT syndrome, her mother said. It is an inherited condition, Bloomington cardiologist Dr. Louis J. Calli said. Its symptoms can be arrhythmic heart beats, passing out and in very rare cases, sudden cardiac death.
EDITOR’S NOTE: This is a timeline created based on facts that have been verified by the parents of Lauren Spierer, Bloomington Police Department and on-site reporting of the daily search parties.