November 17, 2012
Bill Styring / Special to IBJThe Pilgrims were small “c” communists. Lands were farmed in common and everything went into a common storehouse
from which everyone drew sustenance.
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November 17, 2012
Bill Taft / Special to IBJThe recession affected some older Indianapolis neighborhoods differently than it did the larger metro area housing market,
with areas of Marion County taking particularly hard hits.
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November 17, 2012
Woodrow Myers / Special to IBJBreast cancer is not one disease; it is many diseases. And although it is not limited to women, women over the age of 50 are
at the highest risk.
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November 3, 2012
Ed Treacy / Special to IBJI’m going to surprise you. I’m not going to tell you Marion County is absolutely a Democratic county. It is more
complex than yes or no.
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November 3, 2012
Kyle Walker / Special to IBJAs with Mark Twain, the report of the death of the Marion County Republican Party was an exaggeration. Don’t believe
me? Check the 25th floor of the City-County Building.
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November 3, 2012
Ted Boehm / Special to IBJThe ballot this year will ask you whether two judges of the Indiana Supreme Court and four on the Court of Appeals will be
retained in office. Don’t forget to vote yes on all six retention questions.
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November 3, 2012
Julia Vaughn / Special to IBJWith Indiana ranked a dismal 48th for voter turnout, you would think Republicans and Democrats could agree that our state
needs to take aggressive steps to increase the number of active voters.
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November 3, 2012
Samuel L. Odle / Special to IBJAmericans seem to be full of contradictions. Perhaps that is why we are so admired, and yet so hated, by the rest of the world.
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November 3, 2012
Greg Garrison / Special to IBJAlmost every politics-attentive person around Indianapolis probably sees the Nov. 6 elections as of huge consequence.
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November 3, 2012
Cecil Bohanon / Special to IBJPolitics is about compromise. But compromise is always around an agenda and elections are about agendas.
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November 3, 2012
Rex Early / Special to IBJIt is only a few days until the election, and the Mourdock-Donnelly Senate race is still in limbo.
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November 3, 2012
Jim Shella / Special to IBJAll of a sudden, when I check out news stories on the Internet, a negative political ad pops up and I can’t make it
go away. That is, unless I want the news story to go away, too.
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November 3, 2012
Kathy Davis / Special to IBJIf you know me, I think you agree that I am not a firebrand partisan with automatic reactions based on my Democratic Party
affiliation.
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November 3, 2012
Mark Souder / Special to IBJDemocratic gubernatorial candidate John Gregg has hauled out the canard that Mike Pence is a “show horse,” not
a “work horse,” based upon two “polls” in 2006 and 2008. Neither was scientific: They were anonymous,
voting multiple times could be easily done, and rivals could rig the voting.
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November 3, 2012
Robin Winston / Special to IBJPolitics is an amazing, yet perplexing, profession. I have often wondered why President Obama trails Mitt Romney by a large
margin in rural areas.
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November 3, 2012
Teresa Meredith / Special to IBJI do not think parents need a trigger law to allow them to do what they should be doing already by advocating for their children.
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November 3, 2012
David Harris / Special to IBJFor too long, power over urban schools has rested too much with district central offices and not enough with parents.
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November 3, 2012
Hilary Leighty / Special to IBJApparently, the Republican Party has waged a war on women. I’ve heard this from the mainstream media, many Democratic
candidates and even a few Indiana University professors.
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October 13, 2012
Bill Styring / Special to IBJA $2.8 billion coal-to-natural-gas plant in Rockport has been in the works for several years, but the economics of the project
seem dodgier by the day.
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October 13, 2012
Ed DeLaney / Special to IBJThe state could direct $10 million to reducing childhood poverty and require that “family impact statements” be
devised as to proposed regulations. The result would be that poverty would be alleviated by the $10 million minus the cost
of the impact statements and the cost of the inevitable litigation about them.
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October 13, 2012
Luke Kenley / Special to IBJMike’s goal No. 6 is to develop a plan to improve the health, safety and well-being of Hoosier families, especially
children.
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October 13, 2012
Brian A. Howey / Special to IBJLast summer, when the conservative Americans for Prosperity dumped $700,000 into Indiana on a TV ad attacking Democratic U.S.
Senate candidate Joe Donnelly, I posted a story on the Howey Politics Indiana website talking about how the Super PAC was
running the ad “on behalf” of Republican Senate nominee Richard Mourdock.
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October 13, 2012
Lara Beck / Special to IBJIn the days leading up to the election, there are countless opportunities to learn about the candidates who are running for
elected office. With Election Day just weeks away, chances are you are getting bombarded by campaign paraphernalia in the
mailbox, on television and radio, the Internet and in your neighbor’s front yard.
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October 13, 2012
Anthony L. Fargo / Special to IBJIn Monroe County, the League of Women Voters has been having trouble with its candidate forums for local and state races.
Some of the candidates refuse to take part.
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October 13, 2012
Jennifer Wagner / Special to IBJI’ll bet you’re not an undecided voter. How do I know? Because you’re reading this opinion piece in this political publication
that resides within a larger publication that’s focused on a narrow set of issues. In other words, you’re engaged.
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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.