U.S. Central Command has said the crash happened while in “friendly” airspace as part of the war with Iran.
Arts & Culture
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Bloomington-based poet Joseph Kerschbaum reads "Years to Burn," "Weed Garden," "Detasseling," and "Now that we have nowhere to hide."
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In the 1940s a young jazz singer with a four-octave range and bebop chops burst onto the big-band scene with Earl Hines and Billy Eckstine before going on to establish herself as a solo star.
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We’re keeping on the sunny side of the street this week, as we explore some uplifting tunes like “Get Happy,” “I Want To Be Happy,” and “Put On A Happy Face.”
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Books allow us to communicate the deepest meaning between time periods, between cultures, between total strangers. Wherever it is, we can be there.
The State of Inquiry
More News
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Indiana pothole season lasts from February through early April.
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Waivers restricting the purchase of candy and soft drinks are being challenged by plaintiffs in five states.
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Governor Mike Braun announced a partnership between the State of Indiana and Turning Point USA with the goal of registering students to vote when they turn 18.
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Security footage shows multiple people stabbing J. Trinidad Ramirez in a prison dayroom last November.
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Some teachers in the Monroe County Community School Corporation are including lessons on media literacy to account for the rise of social media and misinformation.
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Housing and retail tenants in properties owned by the county south of the convention center project are sparking debate on why their leases aren’t being renewed.
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The ACLU of Indiana filed multiple lawsuits on behalf of three residential recovery homes alleging the state's attempts to classify them as something other than homes was discriminatory.
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The money will be distributed to sites in Indianapolis, Lafayette and Terre Haute.
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About 623,000 people are expected to fly out of the airport between March 10 and April 13.
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The City of Bloomington could move forward with changes to Indiana Avenue after public input Thursday night.
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Gov. Mike Braun is calling for a conservative, Christian-aligned organization to expand into Indiana’s public schools, a move critics say blurs the line between education and religion.
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Roughly a half dozen TSA agents in Indianapolis have left the job as the latest federal shutdown has left them without pay.