KENNEDY: Threshhold questions for higher education
Colleges and universities that are genuinely engaged in education must have standards.
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Colleges and universities that are genuinely engaged in education must have standards.
Police were at Franklin Central High School Thursday morning because of an alleged shooting threat. School board President Scott Veerkamp said the school is taking the threat seriously even though officials believe the threat to be a rumor that escalated over social media. School officials received concerned calls from parents, but assured them that they had investigated the reports and believe the students are safe.
A woman badly injured in the Indiana State Fair stage collapse is communicating with family and friends after waking up from a month-long coma. They say 30-year-old Andrea Vellinga of Pendleton began gradually waking up last week from the coma she had been in since suffering severe head injuries in the Aug. 13 collapse. Vellinga communicates with a dry-erase board because of a tracheotomy. She's been at an Indianapolis rehabilitation center for the past couple of weeks. The stage collapse killed seven people and injured dozens of others.
State police say a man who stopped to help others with car trouble was struck and killed late Wednesday by a semitrailer on the shoulder of Interstate 465 in Indianapolis. The crash happened after the car pulled over because of tire trouble near I-74 on the city's southeast side. Police say the man stopped his pickup truck behind the car and had gotten out with his passenger when the semitrailer drifted over, hitting the truck, the two men and a passenger from the car. The pickup truck driver was killed instantly, while the other two men hit were taken to hospitals with non-life threatening injuries.
Some 13,000 people have agreed to pitch in to help with visitors and events surrounding the game, slated for Feb. 5 in Indianapolis. More than 2,000 attended a training kickoff event on Wednesday.
Freedom and flexibility are long-term goals for many entrepreneurs, but getting there is anything but easy.
Stocks opened sharply lower Thursday, extending a rout around the world. Indicators across the financial markets suggested investors were frightened that the global economy is in for a long slump.
At three community health centers, all patients will be asked about their alcohol and drug usage confidentially, as part of an early-intervention approach designed to cut down addictions and reduce hospitalization.
The Center Township Board on Wednesday approved a plan to move the township’s small claims court from the City-County Building to the Julia M. Carson Government Center on Fall Creek Parkway despite a judge’s objections.
Indiana House records show that more than $100,000 has been collected from the 39 Democrats whose five-week boycott blocked legislative action.
Pace American Enterprises in Middlebury is eliminating the jobs as part of a company-wide layoff that so far has affected 250 employees in five locations.
Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller has reached a settlement with the Fair Finance bankruptcy trustee to give back $11,000 in contributions he received from indicted financier Tim Durham.
A classic creature, a classic movie musical and classic tunes take the stage.
Some members of Congress hope to revive work on the alternate engine for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, which Rolls-Royce in Indianapolis worked on for nine years before the project was halted in April.
The widow of Bill Cook joined Dean White, Herb Simon and Jim Irsay on the annual Forbes 400 list of wealthiest Americans.
KYB Manufacturing North America Inc. expects to invest $6.4 million to add warehouse and distribution facilities to its existing 51-acre campus in Johnson County.
Gleaners Food Bank, Indiana University Health, the city of Indianapolis and the Indianapolis Parks Foundation announced Wednesday they're teaming up on the project called Indy Urban Acres.
An Indiana trade delegation led by Lt. Gov. Becky Skillman is on its way to Japan after being delayed by a typhoon.
It’s not so much that these young Americans are living lives of sin and debauchery, at least no more than you’d expect from 18- to 23-year-olds. What’s disheartening is how bad they are at thinking and talking about moral issues.
At the cusp of the 2012 race, we have a classic cultural collision between a skinny Eastern egghead lawyer who’s inept in Washington gunfights and a pistol-totin’, lethal-injectin’, square-shouldered cowboy who has no patience for book learnin’.