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  • When the Pentagon revealed it secretly exposed enlisted men to mustard gas during WWII, VA officials promised disability benefits. But an NPR investigation finds that most were never contacted.
  • In a paper released in the journal Science, researchers explain that if the Red Planet is harboring life, the instruments on the rover have been unable to sniff it out.
  • Northwestern University plans to use special uniforms at its Nov. 16 game against Michigan. They're supposed to honor the U.S. military and wounded veterans. Critics, though, say the design makes it look as if blood has been splattered across an American flag. That's just wrong, they say.
  • Airports want Congress to raise passenger fees to pay for improvements, but airlines say the move would hit passengers in the pocketbook and might discourage people from flying.
  • The number of students enrolled in the state-funded voucher program that allows them to attend private schools is growing exponentially, according to an updated report released from the Department of Education last week.
  • Three people were hospitalized after a fire in the food truck that hadn't been licensed since 2013. The Marion County Health Department had sent notice to the truck to stop operating.
  • State Health Commissioner Jerome Adams has declared a public health emergency for Madison County, allowing the county health department to establish a syringe exchange program in an effort to reduce the spread of Hepatitis C.
  • One of the country's most comprehensive classical crossover groups stopped by the 90.1 WFYI studios last week. The Annie Moses Band was in town to plat The Palladium at the Center for the Performing Arts. But first, the sibling ensemble shared conversation and music with WFYI's Jill Ditmire.
  • The Supreme Court will rule within the next several days on a lawsuit claiming the Affordable Care Act doesn't allow enrollees in states that chose not to operate state-run health care exchanges to access subsidies that reduce the cost of insurance. About 160,000 people use the subsidies in Indiana.
  • State and local officials joined university leaders in a groundbreaking ceremony Tuesday for the Indiana Manufacturing Institute at the Purdue Research Park in West Lafayette.
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