April 13, 2013
Lou HarryThe new, 450-seat Howard L. Schrott Center for the Arts at Butler University fills a venue gap between the school's two theaters
that each seat about 100 and the 2,200-seat Clowes Memorial Hall.
More
April 8, 2013
The $5 million donation from the family of late Indianapolis businessman James F. DeVoe will help found a new school of business
on the university’s Marion campus.
More
March 2, 2013
Dan HumanAn Indiana-born entrepreneur gave $125 million. Just five others gave $1 million or more.
More
February 9, 2013
Dan HumanThe ISO hopes that occasionally featuring classically trained artists who stray from traditional symphony conventions will
tap new audiences and fill empty seats.
More
January 12, 2013
Dan HumanThe Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra has raised barely half the $5 million the organization says it needs by Feb. 3 to live
up to the terms of a contract it negotiated with musicians last fall.
More
December 12, 2012
Dan HumanThe Arts Council of Indianapolis on Wednesday unveiled a a new program to help central Indiana not-for-profit arts, cultural
and humanities organizations raise funds for individual projects.
More
December 3, 2012
Andrea Muirragui DavisThe Indiana Historical Society has raised $19.5 million to support the Indiana Experience, its series of interactive history
lessons intended to draw more visitors to the local not-for-profit’s downtown facility.
More
November 15, 2012
Dan HumanThe Nina Mason Pulliam Trust spread the grants across two dozen not-for-profits in human services, animal and nature protection,
and community enrichment.
More
November 14, 2012
IBJ StaffThe Glick Fund has doled out more than $2.5 million in grants to 37 Indianapolis-area organizations, the Central Indiana Community
Foundation, which manages the fund, announced Wednesday.
More
November 13, 2012
Dan HumanA $200,000 gift from the Dr. Laura Hare Charitable Trust will help the Central Indiana Land Trust acquire 109 forested acres
in southwest Johnson County.
More
September 29, 2012
Dan HumanThe ailing Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra intends to step up annual donations 40 percent. But many longtime donors feel conflicted
about future contributions as they await word on whether the ISO will scale back to part time.
More
September 15, 2012
Dan HumanThe Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra’s decision to cancel the first two weeks of its season and lock out musicians could
carry long-term risks in alienating subscribers and donors, observers say.
More
September 4, 2012
Cory SchoutenIndianapolis Zoo officials are hoping to finish strong on the organization's largest fundraising effort since the zoo
moved to White River State Park in 1988.
More
August 11, 2012
Dan HumanEllen Annala has less than a year to lead United Way of Central Indiana through a multimillion-dollar fundraising campaign
and launch a five-year strategy. At the same time, the not-for-profit’s board has its own challenge: finding someone
to take over when Annala retires April 1.
More
July 17, 2012
Lilly Endowment's $500,000 gift will help fund needed maintenance to the historic building on Indiana Avenue. Center directors
say the theater needs a new HVAC system, in addition to electrical wiring, lighting and sound equipment.
More
July 11, 2012
Associated PressPurdue University says donations to the school rose by 32 percent during the past year for its second-best fundraising year
on record.
More
June 19, 2012
Dan HumanCharitable giving grew 4 percent nationally in 2011, but the increase was less than 1 percent after adjusting for inflation,
according to a report released Tuesday by the Giving USA Foundation and The Center on Philanthropy at Indiana University.
More
April 27, 2012
Associated PressPurdue University will use a $10 million anonymous gift to help build a facility dedicated to encouraging student excellence
and leadership.
More
April 14, 2012
Kathleen McLaughlinThose left in the lurch by financial promises unfulfilled by Joe Bilby are mystfied by his motives, since he seems not to
have profited from any of it.
More
April 14, 2012
Kathleen McLaughlinThe Indiana Achievement Awards is going on what organizers called a “sabbatical,” though its return isn’t
guaranteed. The change is the result of a loss in grant funding for all not-for-profit programs at the IUPUI Solution Center,
which organized the awards.
More
April 7, 2012
Anthony SchoettleThe city’s public radio and television stations are more than holding their own, even as their commercial brethren continue
to suffer from a now-5-year-old economic swoon.
More
April 7, 2012
Brackets for Good pits one not-for-profit against another in an NCAA-tournament style fundraising competition.
More
April 5, 2012
Kathleen McLaughlinA 70-year-old Trafalgar man who made empty promises of multimillion-dollar gifts to local cultural institutions was sentenced
to six years of probation Thursday morning in an unrelated check-fraud case.
More
March 27, 2012
United Way of Central Indiana is projecting that its 2011 annual campaign will raise a record-breaking $40.6 million, topping
the previous high of $39 million in 2007.
More
March 23, 2012
IBJ StaffMarilyn K. Glick, who with her husband Gene B. Glick donated millions of dollars in recent years to civic projects such as
the Indianapolis Cultural Trail, died of cancer Friday at the age of 90.
More
So the Mayor adds another non value added layer to having a vehicle towed? Whereby the City Government RECIEVES AN ILLEGAL KICKBACK FROM A LGOISTICS COMPANY THAT SUBS THE WORK TO LOCAL TOW COMPANIES? What is the service the City performs for receiving the "tribute"? This is RICO!!!!! What a corrupt and unnecessary layer. What a dirtbag Mayor and his cronies.
Owner occupied housing. Clear enough?
So people think I am paranoid. It's from experience in dealing with puds requested by developers who make major donations themselves to representatives, have nice fund raisers for those running for office and hide through pac's. then there are the public relation firms. You will note some pr comments below. You there Clyde Lee? My opinion. Commercial along 421, great. Multifamily housing, terrible idea that will change the town. Senior condos or zero lot line homes west, great. I suggest keeping all entries to commercial areas at 421. All entries to owner occupied on sycamore. Will keep the traffic on sycamore down some. Two other things. You can't trust what will be there in 10 years. Steve builds quality stuff, but areas change over time. Look at the changes at the wall mart center at 86th and 421 over the last 10 years. Look at the apartments and neighborhoods behind St Vincent's. Raintree properties WILL decrease in value if commercial and multifamily goes in near. It has already been happening around the bridges area. The houses that have been sold recently are way below market. Several deals not closed due to the Illinois construction and the whole unsurety of the bridges. It's pretty simple, Zionsville will approve the whole thing because the city council has been groomed over a LONG period of time for this. I might even suggest some are in their position as a result of this.
Esta, do you have a dog in this fight? You seem to really want to knock anyone against this project. No, I didn't move to Indiana for the architecture. I moved here for that red barn in the field. The horses and fields of corn. A place that is NOT overdeveloped. There are plenty of nearby places in Indianapolis that could be REDEVELOPED instead.
RKW - OK, we get it, you're paranoid. The question is, are you paranoid enough? Greg - Yes, Pittman(s) is (are) at it again. They are developers, they build things. It's what they do. So when you go to work tomorrow, Greg, you're at it again too. Cliff - Really? You moved to Indiana for its progressive architecture? That's like moving to England for the cuisine. Zionsvillain - The house you moved to was once a field or woods. I'm willing to bet folks were upset when that ground was plowed under and a house was built. But I guess now that you are in, everything should stop? "My house was OK, but the next one is sprawl." SE Guy - Please don't paint us with such a wide brush. Most reasonable Zionsville residents welcome planned, measured development.