Robert Pinsky
Nov. 28
Butler University Reilly Room
The founder of the Favorite Poem Project and a former poet laureate of the United States pays a visit as part of the Vivian S. Delbrook Visiting Writers Series. Details here.
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Nov. 28
Butler University Reilly Room
The founder of the Favorite Poem Project and a former poet laureate of the United States pays a visit as part of the Vivian S. Delbrook Visiting Writers Series. Details here.
Nov. 23-June 2
Indiana State Museum
The fact that James Dean made only three movies makes it even more remarkable that he has achieved American icon status alongside Marilyn Monroe and Elvis Presley. This show celebrates perhaps the most famous Hoosier in the world with a little help from CMG Worldwide, which licenses his image. Details here.
The rate of premature births in Indiana has fallen, reflecting a nationwide decline. The March of Dimes says Indiana lowered its preterm birth rate to 11.6 percent, down nearly two percentage points from the 13.2 rate reported in 2006. The organization gave the state a C on its annual report card.
A Lawrence mother was arrested after she admitted leaving her 1-year-old child in a cold car so that she could shop. Tamika Moore-Robinson, 27, faces neglect charges after the incident at Wal-Mart on Pendleton Pike on Monday. The child was left in the car for more than 30 minutes while the temperature outside was 34 degrees. Moore-Robinson told police she had planned to be in the store for only five minutes to buy diapers.
A funeral for the two people who died in the massive explosion in the Richmond Hill subdivision is set for Monday, Nov. 19, at 10 a.m. Services for Jennifer and Dion Longworth will take place at the St. Barnabus Catholic Church in Greenwood. A calling for friends and family will be Sunday from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the Wilson-St. Pierre Funeral home in Greenwood. The Longworths were killed and seven other residents were injured after their neighbors’ home exploded Saturday night.
Administrative costs on college campuses are soaring, crowding out instruction at a time of skyrocketing tuition and $1 trillion in outstanding student loans. At Purdue, bureaucratic growth is pitting professors against administrators.
The campaign, Indy Connect Now, will urge state legislators to allow voters to decide whether to fund an expanded mass-transit system in the area.
Home-sale agreements in the nine-county Indianapolis area rose 20.6 percent in October, the 18th straight month of year-over-year improvement in sales contracts.
As good a coach as Tom Crean is, he might be even better at alumni and public relations. He has the appeal of Bob Knight without all the baggage and it's only a matter of time before the affable coach is at the center of an effort to replace Assembly Hall.
The Glick Fund has doled out more than $2.5 million in grants to 37 Indianapolis-area organizations, the Central Indiana Community Foundation, which manages the fund, announced Wednesday.
Guest rooms will receive new furniture and bathrooms new floor tile and granite countertops. Improvements also will be made to public and meeting spaces, in addition to food and beverage areas.
Two local entrepreneurs are planning a restaurant, brewery, entertainment venue and aquaponic farming operation for a 1.4 acre parcel along the Monon Trail south of Broad Ripple.
Zionsville Community Schools and the town of Zionsville are teaming up to purchase and develop a prime piece of real estate owned by Dow Chemical Co.
Pence will travel to a meeting of the Republican Governors Association in Las Vegas and later to a training session for new governors being conducted in California.
As the smoke clears from the election season, Hoosiers have turned their attention back to the Statehouse. The newly elected members of the General Assembly have a long to-do list. Passing a balanced budget, examining education reforms and updating our criminal sentencing structure are just a few.
It makes sense that Mitt Romney and his advisers are still gobsmacked by the fact that they’re not commandeering the West Wing.
Breast cancer is not one disease; it is many diseases. And although it is not limited to women, women over the age of 50 are at the highest risk.