BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) -- Safety Jerimy Finch got a waiver from the NCAA Thursday to play for Indiana this season after transferring from Florida.
The Supreme Court ruled Thursday that a state has the right to prevent a possibly schizophrenic defendant from serving as his own lawyer in a criminal court.
Storms dumped as much as 10 inches of rain on soggy central Indiana on Saturday, threatening dams
Photos: Kingdom of the Crystal Skull and its predecessors owe a lot to the movie serials Steven Spielberg watched as a boy
Sen. Hillary Clinton, who made a strong pitch to blue-collar workers, was pulling a majority of the votes in rural and suburban Indiana during Tuesday's Democratic primary.
If you're running for president in Fort Wayne, Indiana, a little factory experience never hurts.
The Supreme Court on Monday backed Indiana's law requiring voters to show photo identification, despite concerns thousands of elderly, poor and minority voters could be locked out of their right to cast ballots.
The Supreme Court ruled Monday that states can require voters to produce photo identification without violating their constitutional rights, validating Republican-inspired voter ID laws
Obama retains the edge in grassroots support in the next crucial primary state. But Clinton has the endorsements
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) -- Safety Jerimy Finch got a waiver from the NCAA Thursday to play for Indiana this season after transferring from Florida.
The Supreme Court ruled Thursday that a state has the right to prevent a possibly schizophrenic defendant from serving as his own lawyer in a criminal court.
Storms dumped as much as 10 inches of rain on soggy central Indiana on Saturday, threatening dams
Photos: Kingdom of the Crystal Skull and its predecessors owe a lot to the movie serials Steven Spielberg watched as a boy
Sen. Hillary Clinton, who made a strong pitch to blue-collar workers, was pulling a majority of the votes in rural and suburban Indiana during Tuesday's Democratic primary.
If you're running for president in Fort Wayne, Indiana, a little factory experience never hurts.
The Supreme Court on Monday backed Indiana's law requiring voters to show photo identification, despite concerns thousands of elderly, poor and minority voters could be locked out of their right to cast ballots.
The Supreme Court ruled Monday that states can require voters to produce photo identification without violating their constitutional rights, validating Republican-inspired voter ID laws
Obama retains the edge in grassroots support in the next crucial primary state. But Clinton has the endorsements
Dear FSB: I'd like to turn my coaching business, a sole proprietorship, into an LLC. How do I do it? Lawyers are costly. Is there another way?
Before I forget, I'm trying to make a list of all the teams around the country (high school, college, women's, etc.) that are using all or part of the trendy offense (known as Dribble-Drive Motion or AASAA) devised by Vance Walberg and used by Memphis these days. If you're a coach who's running it, please send me the name of your school and the town/city where you're located. Thanks!
Dear FSB: Our family is looking to transfer our education business and sell the property. We hired a commercial agent but have only received one possible suitor, which did not work out. The business is set up as a not-for-profit and is tax-exempt, so we can take advantage of tax breaks. We would sell the property and transfer the board seats to any suitor who bought the property. While the business took a year or two to get off the ground, it is now doing much better. What can we do to move the sale along more quickly?
Brace yourself. You may soon get a memo from your employer with a pretty bold threat: Shape up or pay up. As part of an ongoing effort to curb the runaway cost of providing health benefits, a small but growing number of companies are charging workers for habits like smoking, overeating and failing to exercise.
A conservative majority of the Supreme Court appeared ready Wednesday to support an Indiana law requiring voters to show photo identification, despite concerns that it could deprive thousands of people of their right to vote.
Mary-Jo Criswell wants to vote in the November elections but is not sure if she will be able to, because of one barrier: She does not have government-issued photo identification.
Rankings to devour if you're not busy confronting Bob Knight -- with a bad video camera in hand -- for firing shotgun pellets into your swimming pool...
Plans to process a heavy grade of crude oil from oil sands in the Canadian province of Alberta have sparked a nasty battle in the Midwest, where some politicians are angry that the move will increase pollution in the Great Lakes, according to a report Wednesday.
Three construction workers replacing an air shaft at a southwestern Indiana coal mine were killed in an accident Friday, authorities said.
A quick Mailbag before the Big Show. Check back on Friday for our Wimbledon seed reports.
By the time the games at Fordham University's Rumble in the Bronx AAU basketball tournament had commenced on Saturday morning, the recruiting was already on the wall.
For all those angry Indiana Pacers fans who consider their team's 37-win pace to be an outright embarrassment this season, understand this: It really isn't much of a drop-off from what you should have expected. If you had higher expectations going into the season, then you were misguided.
SACRAMENTO -- A great deal has changed for both Indiana and Gonzaga since the 'Zags 90-80 victory over Indiana in the second round of last year's tournament, but here's one of the biggest differences: this time, the Hoosiers had their best big man available and Gonzaga did not. That helped lead to Thursday's reversal of fortune, a 70-57 victory for Indiana that propelled the Hoosiers into the second round against UCLA on Saturday.
In this weeks installment, we have Florida's NCAA tournament-preparation checklist, Acie Law's knuckleball shot and a heavy dose of Craig Ehlo.
It nearly goes without saying that there is usually quite a fair amount of pressure weighing on the shoulders of your typical NBA coach, with little personal payoff besides an enviable bank account and a good bit of internal satisfaction derived from a winning turn.
The employers on our list of the 100 Best Companies to Work For believe in piling on the perks - anything from flextime and telecommuting to in-house gyms and free gourmet food. Says Robert Levering, co-founder of the Great Places to Work Institute (which compiles the list), "Everything these companies do is designed to inspire loyalty in employees. That's what it's all about."
Antonie Davis didn't want his dad's new team to play any games. The 8-year-old remembered the end of his father tenure at Indiana all too well, when Mike Davis was under the intense scrutiny from fans that were still clinging to the memory of the icon he replaced. But back home in his native Alabama, as the first-year coach at UAB and away from the ominous shadow of Bob Knight, Davis has found his comfort zone -- and delivered a message to his son that is fitting after his tumultuous time in Bloomington.
The most cunning refinement yet in the administration's plot to scare the liver, lights and onions out of us with Tales of Terror Plots is the Department of Homeland Security's brilliant move to declare Indiana the national center of terrorism, with 8,591 potential targets. Many citizens have questioned the Indiana move -- some claiming it is a waste of money trying to stop attacks on the Wabash Cannonball. The Statue of Liberty and the Washington Monument might merit a little more attention. This is precisely why it is better to have Michael Chertoff and Karl Rove making this Homeland Security decisions, rather than Osama bin Laden.
Two inmates are suing Indiana because of a policy that bans graphic magazines, such as Playboy, Penthouse or Hustler.
At my age--at any age, probably--you hear a lot of sentences that begin, "The most important thing to do with your money right now is...." They can't all really be the most important, but certain m...
Senior Defense Department officials say Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has told them nobody should stay for just another year, but that he wants them for the rest of President Bush's second term. That is read as a signal that Rumsfeld intends to serve out the next three years.
An 18-year-old Pennsylvania man suspected of killing the parents of his 14-year-old girlfriend was captured with her Monday in Indiana after leading state troopers on a high-speed chase and crashing into a tree.
until she saw her latest property tax bill.
A storm that blew across the Midwest and East Coast was headed to Canada on Thursday, leaving more than 2 feet of snow in some areas and snarling holiday travel for many.
New governors will take the helm in six states, with voting reflecting a party shift in four of them -- two for Democrats and two for Republicans.
Republican challenger Mitch Daniels will unseat Democrat Joe Kernan to become Indiana's governor, according to a CNN projection.
Severe storms and tornadoes swept through several states Sunday, killing one person, smashing homes and downing trees and power lines, authorities said.
I own a small-cap stock fund that recently closed to new investors. Is this a good time for me to buy more?
Editor's note: As part of our coverage of the 2004 election season, CNN.com is sending correspondents to the colleges where they studied to report on issues affecting today's young voters. In this edition, Thom Patterson returns to his alma mater, Indiana University.
NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - In December, the State of Indiana cancelled a $15 million contract to upgrade its computer system. Why? Because workers from India would have been working on the government job.
This 56-year-old Huntington, Ind. teacher could host an infomercial for the Miracles of Long-Term Investing. She bought 100 shares of Squibb in 1980 and still owns stock in the company (now Bristol...
$128 Average value of goods taken per shoplifting incident
Grab your muskets and home amputation kits! Once again, disunity boils among the states. Arizona, Hawaii, and most of Indiana don't follow daylight-saving time. Why the rogue factions?
If you're like most Americans, you buy insurance on some schedule other than a single annual payment--$90 every month for 12 months, say, rather than $1,000 once a year. But it's easy to lose sight...
Peer idly out the window of a moving train, and you might catch a glimpse of small warning signs posted along the track. Fiber-optic cables, owned perhaps by AT&T, MCI, Sprint, or Qwest, are buried...
You can't keep a good idea down forever.
You can't blame Corwin Harper, 32 (relaxing in his chair at right) for seeking help last September. Although the Fresno HMO administrator and his wife Terrye, a 32-year-old nurse, pulled in a combi...
Rare is the political idea that enjoys as much sustained bipartisan acclaim as the "enterprise zone"--especially in a partisan election season like this one. Republicans love the idea of creating l...
THIS MONTH: --How to dump your mortgage insurance --Reach out and touch your bank by phone
COSTLY BUT WORTH IT
Your kid may have no aptitude for Caltech, MONEY's best college value, but he or she does not need to be a rocket scientist to find a terrific deal. On the following pages, you'll learn of more tha...
This 18-page list provides basic information on 1,115 four-year colleges and universities. It excludes most schools that didn't qualify for the analysis that determined our best-buys ranking, as ex...
HOW OUR TOP 10 COMPARE
COSTLY BUT WORTH IT
HOW OUR TOP 10 COMPARE
West 1. California Institute of Technology 2. University of Washington 3. Pomona College (Calif.) 4. Claremont McKenna College (Calif.) 5. Harvey Mudd College (Calif.) 6. University of California-B...
CARA WOOD, the 17-year-old part-time waitress from suburban Cleveland (MONEY, September 1993) named the beneficiary of a $450,000 estate, has emerged a big winner in an out-of-court settlement. Fiv...
Among the K-12 set, Japanese language instruction is on the increase. The Japan Foundation Language Center reports that more than 1,700 public and private schools in the U.S. now offer Japanese, do...
Can't get that cabana in Lyford Cay? Somebody else booked the company lodge in Aspen? Do what Americans are doing in greater numbers than they have in 15 years: Buy a travel trailer or motor home, ...
Don't sell your Elmer Fudd tiara yet. Prices for collectibles are rising. Auctioneer Ted Hake, owner of Hake's Americana & Collectibles in York, Pennsylvania, says bidders paid record prices in Apr...
Suppose for a moment that you are the corporate officer in charge of the $300 million 401(k) plan for 16,000 employees of Indiana-based Cummins Engine. You've just decided, like an estimated half o...
In many places this year, it's been a time of coping and hoping. But there are surprising pockets of prosperity, most of them tucked in the nation's heartland, virtually untouched by recession's ic...
The Labor Department predicts that demand for restaurant cooks will increase twice as fast as jobs generally over the next 13 years. Overall, cooking school enrollments increased an estimated 10% i...
SUPER STORYTELLER Give the babysitter a break and introduce the children to Kid Works, a software program that makes your personal computer read their own stories aloud. Created by Davidson & Assoc...
A federal tax hike that took effect this year could raise your state taxes too. Under the new rule, you must reduce certain itemized deductions on your federal return by 3% of any portion of your a...
I was distressed by your June article regarding ethical investing. How can it be ethical to refuse to invest in the very defense industries that made possible the completion of the recent war in th...
We begin this item by quoting from a recent Washington Post article datelined South Bend, Indiana, and describing certain goings-on in JR's Kitty Kat Lounge there: ''A red light revolves overhead a...
If assessing academic quality is tough, trying to calculate a school's value -- its quality relative to price -- is an even more difficult task. But after extensive consultation with educational ex...
Here's a cheerful earful for tax-shy investors: Dull old municipal bonds, which state and local governments issue to finance anything from airports to zoos, have taken on new sparkle. The after-tax...
By reviewing the scores from 1 to 100 in nine aspects of what a region has to offer, you can see precisely how our leading metro areas compare. A star signifies the highest score in each category a...
SHOPPERS supplied most of the oomph in the service economy last year. By keeping cash registers ringing even after many economists thought they would be immobilized by the stock market crash, consu...
A fundamental change in the takeover game has been under way since the Supreme Court upheld Indiana's ''control share'' statute earlier this year. In a matter of months some 20-odd states have enac...
Lawmakers think Congress may soon make it easier to take your vested corporate pension benefits with you if you quit your job before retirement. Currently most companies hold on to your money until...
Has the Supreme Court ended the takeover game? Is its landmark decision upholding an Indiana anti-takeover law good for investors? Depending upon whether you ask a raider, a corporate executive, or...
EVEN AMONG Rust Belt cities devastated by the recession and the decline of heavy manufacturing, Fort Wayne, Indiana, seemed in l982 to be down on its luck. In March, a once-in-a-century flood swept...
Called out of retirement six months ago to help revive ailing Continental Bank of Chicago, John Swearingen, the former chairman of Standard Oil of Indiana, vowed to turn it around in three years (F...

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