Todd Rokita is playing politics again from the helm of the Indiana attorney general’s office, and his latest maneuver could be particularly harmful to Indiana communities.
Those two people he had to meet were the Rev. Nelson and Joyce Johnson, who are connected to anti-poverty efforts, worker rights and the infamous 1979 Klan-Nazi shootings in Greensboro.
Arguments about past presidents shape the nation's present understanding of itself, and hence its unfolding future. In recent ...
Dr. Alicia Geddis "was always planning to return to in-person work," in her role as superintendent of Danville District 118, she told the Monday. At a school board meeting Wednesday, Nov. 20, ...
Donald Trump’s second term could empower the organized far right much more than the first. Its current mobilizing strength ...
"The Order," starring Nicholas Hoult and Jude Law, is based on a real-life Pacific Northwest story that ended in a fiery FBI ...
In some ways, the university’s Sesquicentennial Celebration leaves indigenous history, context and perspective behind ...
Law enforcement agencies in Carmel, Fishers, and Westfield received reports earlier last week from residents who found ...
President-elect Donald Trump has vowed to use the U.S. military to help deport millions of undocumented migrants, a plan that ...
Rev. Clay Lee, who died at 4 on Nov. 11, stood his tallest at the zenith of Mississippi’s racial troubles of the 1960s.
Todd Rokita is playing politics again from the helm of the Indiana attorney general's office, and his latest maneuver could ...
BLOOMINGTON — Hoosiers have had many great leaders emerge from their midst or seen them move here to instill success. Abraham ...