Indiana attorneys are fighting a lawsuit to allow public university-issued student IDs for voting ahead of the upcoming May 5 primary election.
Arts & Culture
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No live scoreboard for this week's game. Check your answers at home with our playlist.
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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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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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Court fight continues over challenge to same-last name candidate in Republican state Senate primary
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The Bloomington Redevelopment Commission is closer to closing agreements for a new hotel in the Trades district.
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Pitties and Pals will offer Bloomington a second veterinary urgent care option.
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Indiana has the worst foreclosure filing rate of all states in the U.S., according to new property data, contributing to a gradual upward trend in foreclosure rates that began last year.
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Indiana broadcast and digitial spending starts from dark-money group linked with Sen. Jim Banks
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Police: Crypto ATM Fraud reports have doubled each year for the last four years, with a local total over $400,000 in losses; individual loss is an average of $11,000
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Regular mosque attendance rates is more than triple its capacity.
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James Petty and his truck were swept off the road near Shoals last week after heavy rainfall.
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Housing inventory and overall home affordability in Indiana were both up in February.
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The award is from the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics.
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Changes come as state, federal government put more pressure on food aid program.