wako news
There is a movement by some lawmakers in Springfield to pass legislation that could require state high schools to adopt new mascots. A bill which calls for public K-12 schools with names, logos or mascots containing Native American tribes or aspects of Native American culture to change them. It is sponsored by state representative Maurice West of Rockford. He says research shows that mascot names such as Warriors, Indians and Braves adversely affects Native American youth and their learning ability. He added that school mascots are supposed to foster school pride and create a strong school community, but they do not. If the legislation passes and becomes law, schools would not have to change their mascots immediately. They would have a period until September 1st of 2027 to make the changes. The bill would only impact public K-12 schools in the state. It would not cover the University of Illinois nickname--the Fighting Illini.
I-70 stopped Sunday in Hancock County
Pleasant View Road bridge over I-74 to close for bridge replacement in Shelby County
Experienced Parke Heritage next up for Triton Central
Shelbyville's Harry Larrabee inducted into Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame
February real estate market provides positive outlook for spring season
SCS hosting educational workshop on online predators
Safe Zones enforcement to begin on I-74
VA announces $112M grant opportunity to strengthen community-based suicide prevention efforts
