5 things to know (July 10)
By The Associated Press / July 9, 2014Read five things to know for July 10.
Read five things to know for July 10.
Read the University Police Department arrest log for July 5 and July 6.
A Colorado judge today struck down the state's gay marriage ban, making him the 16th judge to invalidate a state's prohibition on same-sex marriages in the past year.
Gov. Mike Pence's office is telling all executive agencies to ignore any of the same-sex marriages that had been filed in late June after a federal judge's order.
Ball State's treasuer and vice president for business affairs announced today that he will move on to Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University.
On the order of Gov. Mike Pence, Ball State will lower its flags for the official period of mourning this week after the death of three law enforcement officers in the line of duty.
Paul Ferguson signed his contract with Ball State on May 25 to be the university’s president, taking office Aug. 1 after Terry King’s short time as interim president.
They were dubbed the “forgotten souls” — the cremated remains of thousands of people who came through the doors of Oregon’s state mental hospital, died there and whose ashes were abandoned inside 3,500 copper urns.
Michelle Obama has jumped into perhaps her biggest battle yet.
When the U.S. National Security Agency intercepted the online accounts of legally targeted foreigners over a four-year period, it also collected the conversations of nine times as many ordinary Internet users, both Americans and non-Americans, according to a probe by The Washington Post.
A veteran Indianapolis police officer died after he and another patrolman exchanged gunfire with a suspect in an alley Saturday night.
Find out the top news for July 7.
A shooting in a bar-hopping Indianapolis neighborhood that injured seven people may have been set off by two people bumping into each other in the street, police said Saturday.
The United States turning 238 isn’t the only American milestone in July.
This month, hundreds of bills and acts signed into law by Gov. Mike Pence during the 2014 legislative session come into effect. New laws include stopping police officers from downloading or looking at accused criminals’ cellphones without a search warrant, protecting minors who are reporting a sex crime from alcohol-related offenses and allowing the production of industrial hemp in the state.
British regulators are investigating revelations that Facebook treated hordes of its users like laboratory rats in an experiment probing into their emotions.
The university signed a five-year contract with Papa John’s to bring a franchise to the Atrium with an anticipated opening of Aug. 18.
Bypassing the popularity of Silicon Valley, an alumni-owned Hungarian software company looks to open a location in the Midwest.
The majority of Americans base their decisions of what food to buy based on natural food labels, a new survey from Consumer Reports shows.
Business owners who don’t want to pay for their employees’ birth control are ending that coverage after the Supreme Court said they could choose on grounds of religious belief not to comply with part of the health care law.