EDITORIAL: Bias crimes law hits the right note for our state
There is no perfect legislation, particularly when the topic at hand drives the passions of so many diverse hearts and minds.
There is no perfect legislation, particularly when the topic at hand drives the passions of so many diverse hearts and minds.
A four-year starter at guard for Indiana, Wes Martin is now readying for this month’s draft, and to take the next step in his career.
Police are investigating three more incidents of racist graffiti found in Oklahoma, including the Cleveland County Democratic Party offices.
CHICAGO — Wrigley Field’s renovation has added wheelchair-accessible seats following a federal lawsuit filed last year.
VALPARAISO — Nearly two years after being accused of rape and sitting at the Porter County Jail, a now-20-year-old Valparaiso man has pleaded guilty to a lesser offense as a result of a change in the alleged victim’s story.
An Indiana school district has started a partnership with a non-profit to use excess cafeteria food to create to-go meals for students in need.
SEOUL — Ban Ki-moon, now that he’s no longer U.N. secretary-general, can offer frank views that would definitely have had North Korean diplomats screaming bloody murder in the U.N. headquarters had he expressed them there.
The new Democratic House majority has a lot on its plate. But even in the crisis-a-day atmosphere of the Trump era, Democrats must also make room for the more mundane, but equally vital, work of legislative policymaking.
“When you start at the back at Barber, it is really, really difficult. It’s just imperative to nail your qualifying setup.”