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  • SACS hires new superintendent. Indiana legislative session reaches halfway point. Trump administration lists three federal properties in Indiana to either close or sell.
  • Hundreds protest Trump, Project 2025 at Statehouse. Legal expert discusses immigrant students' rights. Bill headed to House floor would enhance FSSA transparency.
  • A closer look at threats to public media funding. Funds are now available for counties affected by flooding. Columbia City kicks off Historic Preservation Month with tours.
  • Mayor Tucker plans to use state tax funds for neighborhood projects, pending council approval. Braun to meet with VP Vance amid national redistricting push. Indiana launches blackout license plates.
  • The Language Access Lab finishes its first interpreter training. We break down differences between public, charter, and private schools. Governor Braun is open to talks on Indiana’s death penalty.
  • Hoosier Starbucks union workers join nationwide push for fair labor contract. IEDC audit details undisclosed conflicts, 'potential for favoritism'. Mental health remains a challenge for girls in Indiana.
  • Five school tax measures pass, and one fails in Indiana special elections. New coalition aims to clean up, protect waterways in the Ohio River Basin. November SNAP benefits delayed at least one week.
  • The House votes to extend unemployment benefits for more than 2.5 million Americans, and President Bush quickly signs the measure into law. The action followed that of the Senate Tuesday. The overwhelming vote -- 416 to 4 -- belied the fierce debate over whether the measure went far enough. NPR's Andrea Seabrook reports.
  • The House approves President Bush's $87 billion request for new spending in Afghanistan and Iraq. The funds, aimed mostly at supporting U.S. troops in those countries, are likely to pass in the Senate Friday night. The lopsided vote in favor of the aid request belies weeks of debate over the spending measure and the U.S. presence in Iraq. NPR's David Welna reports.
  • Ann Powers picks her favorite chart-topping, radio-dominating songs of 2012.
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