Indiana leaders seek sex-trafficking crackdown
December 19, 2011INDIANAPOLIS — Indiana political leaders are looking to fast-track sex-trafficking legislation before football fans flood Indianapolis for the Super Bowl.
INDIANAPOLIS — Indiana political leaders are looking to fast-track sex-trafficking legislation before football fans flood Indianapolis for the Super Bowl.
INDIANAPOLIS — Helicopters, street-corner cameras and police officers carrying hand-held devices will be watching intently as tens of thousands of fans descend on downtown Indianapolis for Super Bowl week.
INDIANAPOLIS — An Indiana judge on Friday ordered Gov. Mitch Daniels to be deposed in two lawsuits over the state's cancellation of a $1.37 billion contract IBM received to modernize the state's welfare system, but the state attorney general said he would challenge the order.
CHESTERFIELD, Ind. — Police are searching for two men suspected of stealing a semitrailer rig carrying $1.7 million worth of tablet computers from a central Indiana truck stop.
FORT BRAGG, N.C. — President Barack Obama on Wednesday saluted troops returning from Iraq.
MUNCIE — Ball State University police say a school employee accused of stealing campus computers told police he was "hoarding" the equipment.
INDIANAPOLIS — The Indiana Commission for Higher Education is trying to make it easier for students to transfer between colleges and is giving money to colleges based on their performance.
INDIANAPOLIS — Presidents Abraham Lincoln and Benjamin Harrison are among the first 10 famous Hoosiers chosen to have their images and biographies displayed on 6-foot-high columns along a downtown Indianapolis street.
INDIANAPOLIS — Indiana continues to crawl out of the recession, ever so slowly.
INDIANAPOLIS — The Indiana Department of Revenue has ended its in-house electronic income tax filing system and has partnered with a group of private tax application vendors who provide e-file services to two dozen states and the IRS.
WASHINGTON — Texting, emailing or chatting on a cellphone while driving is simply too dangerous to be allowed, federal safety investigators declared Tuesday.
ATLANTA — It's a startling number: 1 in 4 women surveyed by the government say they were violently attacked by their husbands or boyfriends.
The driver of an SUV involved in a crash with a school bus Monday died at IU Health Methodist Hospital on Tuesday night.
Several dozen students from a project management class in the Miller College of Business staged a flash mob in the Atrium at lunchtime Monday to promote sustainability.
Several dozen students from a project management class in the Miller College of Business staged a flash mob in the Atrium at lunchtime to promote sustainability.
WASHINGTON — The U.S. Supreme Court agreed Monday to rule on a politically charged law in Arizona targeting illegal immigrants.
BLACKSBURG, Virginia — The man who authorities say killed a Virginia Tech campus police officer was described as a typical college student in many ways.
With holiday shopping underway, Ball State artists are hoping to sell their crafts to fellow students, peddling their wares from table displays at the Atrium.
Ball State's geothermal project — a massive cost-saving endeavor and the only one of its kind — is easing into Phase 2 with little fanfare as funding continues to wane, university officials said.
Construction on North Quad, which started in May 2010, will soon be complete, said Jim Lowe, director of Engineering, Construction and Operations.