Taft announces merger, boosting presence in Atlanta, Washington, D.C., markets
The merger adds more than 100 lawyers to the Taft team, which will soon have more than 1,200 attorneys in 25 offices nationwide.
The merger adds more than 100 lawyers to the Taft team, which will soon have more than 1,200 attorneys in 25 offices nationwide.
The London-based golf tour that is financed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund will bring 54 of the world’s top men’s golfers for the three-day LIV Golf Indianapolis Aug. 15-17.
The department has contracted with two companies to provide technology that will help it monitor intersections.
While robots are not taking over warehouses, experts say, they are making processes faster, safer and easier on the workers.
He’s just 25 years old, and the Colts are being patient with their homegrown defensive back.
Where else in the nation would Trump bring his climate-denier corncob caucus but Indiana?
The younger Simon will work closely with his father, CEO David Simon.
The Indianapolis-based pharmaceutical giant released its second-quarter earnings Thursday along with data from the latest studies of its weight-loss pill, orforglipron.
A new state partnership to expand immigrant detention is being promoted with a “Speedway Slammer” nickname. The moniker drew a backlash from the IndyCar Series on Wednesday and also a response from Pato O’Ward, the only Mexican driver in the series.
An Indiana House Democrat called defeating mid-cycle redistricting “a knife fight for democracy.”
LCFS provides the programs in collaboration with a host of community partners, including Community Hospital East, Indianapolis Public Schools and Gleaners Food Bank of Indiana, and with funding from the United Way, Lilly Endowment Inc. and Central Indiana Community Foundation.
The NCAA said expansion to 72 or 76 teams could still be considered prior to the 2027 tournaments.
The sports broadcasting veteran speaks candidly on her new book about Clark, the WNBA’s flawed handling of Clark’s debut and its continuing struggle with balancing promotion, parity and politics
Bob Hammel might qualify as the biggest homer of all sportswriters in Indiana, if not beyond, during his 30 years as sports editor of the Bloomington Herald-Times (which was named the Daily Herald-Telephone the year his tenure started).
The University of Indianapolis is launching a program this month to prepare nurse practitioners, long a fixture in primary care exam rooms, to care for complex and critically ill patients in hospitals.
The organization’s once-icy relationship with the sports betting industry is beginning to thaw, but the Indianapolis-based nonprofit is still holding legalized gambling at arm’s length as it evaluates the impact on college sports.
Critics say closing the camp won’t be helpful to the Streets to Home program—an ambitious new cross-agency effort to house more than 300 people living on the city’s streets.
Parkview said the hospital would be roughly 200,000 square feet, accommodate up to 40 inpatient beds and offer a 24/7 emergency department.
Gen Con is once again a sold-out event with more than 70,000 attendees expected for a four-day run that begins Thursday and ends Sunday. And all vendor spots are occupied.
Texts accusing “Liberal Liz” Brown of betraying her conservative values have been flying in northeast Indiana—funded by a “social welfare” nonprofit that no one knows about or isn’t willing to divulge.