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Indiana

  • State pulls fertilizer site backing
    Indiana officials withdrew state backing Friday for a fertilizer plant over concerns about whether its Pakistan-based owners are doing enough at its overseas operations to keep the potentially explosive material from being used against U.S.
  • Central Indiana town scorched
    Fire badly damaged several buildings Friday near the courthouse square in Greencastle, with flames shooting through the roofs as firefighters from several communities were called in to the central Indiana city to help.
  • Indiana withdraws support for fertilizer plant
    Indiana Gov. Mike Pence on Friday pulled his support of a plan by a Pakistani company to build a fertilizer plant after the Pentagon raised concerns that its products were being used to make bombs.
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Indiana latest to see proposed ban on UN ‘Agenda 21’

INDIANAPOLIS – Tea party activists have found a new target in a decades-old United Nations document that calls for better care of the environment, and Indiana is the latest state to enter the growing debate.

Republican Rep. Tim Neese of Elkhart has proposed a ban on implementing any environmental proposals stemming from the U.N.’s “Agenda 21.” That measure and a similar one in the Senate likely won’t get much traction in the General Assembly.

It’s an issue that’s been slowly moving from the fringes of the tea party into statehouses nationwide. Tennessee and Alabama passed bans last year and five states are considering it this year.

Former Fox News host Glenn Beck is fueling the fire with a novel that foresees the U.N. taking over the U.S. to generate clean electricity.

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