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About Indiana
Indiana
Admitted to the Union
- As 19th State on December 11, 1816
Nickname
- The Hoosier State
Capital
- Indianapolis (Corydon was state capital until 1825)
Population
- 6,195,643 (2003 estimate)
Geographic Area
- 36,291 square miles (38th in size among United States)
Altitude
- average 700 feet, ranging from 320 feet (in Posey County) to
1257 feet (in Wayne County)
Climate
- four distinct seasons
- average annual rainfall: 40 inches
- average summer temperature: 70 to 80 degrees fahrenheit
- average winter temperature: 25 to 35 degrees fahrenheit
Government
Indiana's form of government is closely modeled on the federal
government with three branches: executive, legislative and judicial.
The Governor, elected for a four-year term, heads the executive
branch. The General Assembly, the legislative branch, consists
of the Senate and the House of Representatives. Indiana's fifty
State Senators are elected for four-year terms and one hundred
State Representatives for two-year terms. In odd-numbered years,
the General Assembly meets in a sixty-one day session. In even-numbered
years, the Assembly meets for thirty session days. The judicial
branch consists of the Indiana Supreme Court, Court of Appeals
and local circuit courts. On the national level, Indiana is represented
in Congress by two Senators and nine Representatives.
Education
In Indiana, public schools for K-12 are set up as consolidated
school districts with local school boards, along with the state,
responsible for meeting the educational needs of the local community.
Indiana also has several nationally known private schools such
as Howe and Culver military academies.
Public institutions of higher learning include Ball State University
at Muncie, Indiana State University at Terre Haute, and Vincennes
University at Vincennes. The two largest public universities are
Purdue University at West Lafayette and Indiana University at
Bloomington. Both have established regional campuses around the
state. Purdue leads the nation in undergraduate engineering enrollment
and IU graduates more medical doctors than any other school. The
University of Notre Dame at South Bend is one of the most prestigious
Catholic universities in the world. Butler University, Indianapolis;
DePauw University, Greencastle; Wabash College, Crawfordsville;
and Earlham College, Richmond are other notable private institutions.
Go to Indiana Department of Education Go to Commission on Higher
Education
Recreation and Sports
Over 1.1 million acres of land are available for outdoor recreation
in Indiana. The Department of Natural Resources operates parks,
forests, nature preserves, fish and wildlife areas, museums and
memorials across the state. Brown County State Park and the Indiana
State Museum at Indianapolis are two of the more popular facilities.
Indianapolis has become a major center for sporting events. Besides
being home of the Indiana Pacers professional basketball team
and the Indianapolis Colts in pro football, Indianapolis is also
host to the "Indy 500" in May and the "Brickyard
400" in August, run at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, and
the RCA Championship tennis matches each summer.