Get off the bandwagon!
There are two groups of people in the world: those who pull the wagon and those who ride in it.
There are two groups of people in the world: those who pull the wagon and those who ride in it.
For those of you that don't recognize the name Gregory Scott Johnson, here's the deal: a death row inmate is supposed to be executed this Wednesday, and he wants a little more time to be alive.
Recent "anti-American" protests in Afghanistan claimed the lives of about 15 people.
LAWRENCE, Kan. -- Kansas sophomore guard J.R. Giddens was stabbed in the leg during a fight in the parking lot of the a bar early Thursday morning. Though the injury was labeled non life-threatening, Giddens was taken to the Lawrence Memorial Hospital for treatment.
COLUMBUS, Ohio -- For the second time in two weeks, an Ohio State football player has been arrested on drug charges.
INDIANAPOLIS -- Former Indy 500 winner Kenny Brack got his comeback off the ground in a big way Saturday, qualifying for the May 29 race with a faster speed than pole-sitter Tony Kanaan.
For 18 seasons, every game night was "Miller Time."
ATHENS, Ohio - Spanish professor and former journalist Nelson Hippolyte opened his photography exhibit "Re/Trato, Mirrors of a Postmodern World" May 13 at Adleta Galleries in Canaanville, just outside Athens.
Woe to every man in Bloomington: a woman is seeking her freedom at the John Waldron Arts Center from the patriarchal shackles of rigid gender role conformity in the misogynist home and glass-ceiling workplace.
CAIRO, Egypt -- Egyptian authorities arrested the fourth-highest official in the powerful Muslim Brotherhood early Sunday, one of 25 members of the outlawed movement picked up in a major crackdown ahead of a referendum on presidential election rules the group opposes.
Indianapolis continues to inhale secondhand cigarette smoke within many capital city restaurants and entertainment venues, despite the four-month-old Hoosier outcry for smoke-free public indoor air.
As stories of protests are quickly winding down in the American press, some local Muslims are confused as to why Newsweek's article about abuses at Guantanamo Bay was considered "news" when it was published May 9.
Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels appeared in Bloomington Friday with a committee attempting to save Crane Naval Surface Warfare Center from closing.
BUCHAREST, Romania -- Three Romanian journalists and their Iraqi-American guide were freed Sunday after nearly two months in captivity in Iraq, the president's office said.
MEXICO CITY -- President Vicente Fox on Sunday defended his commitment to minorities and human rights on a U.S. radio program, in his first public response to his controversial comment that Mexicans take the U.S. jobs that "not even" blacks want.
BAGHDAD, Iraq -- A British tabloid published more surreptitiously taken prison pictures of Saddam Hussein Saturday, and Iraq's once-dominant Sunni Muslim minority sought to break out of its deepening isolation by forming an alliance of tribal, political and religious groups.
JERUSALEM - Protesters besieged Laura Bush during her visit Sunday to two of Jerusalem's most sacred sites, with Israeli police locking arms to restrain the crowd and Secret Service agents packed tightly around America's first lady.
In response to a January amendment to the Indiana Constitution banning non-traditional marriages, some Indiana residents formed the Rock Indiana Campaign for Equality and began the $2 bill campaign in protest of the resolution they say is unconstitutional.
INDIANAPOLIS -- Although state lawmakers failed to approve his plan to move Indiana's ISTEP test from the fall to the spring, Gov. Mitch Daniels could soon reshape a panel that is capable of making the switch itself.
A 19-year-old female student was raped March 22, she reported to the IU Police Department Wednesday.