HALE: Indiana Humanities helps Hoosiers connect, engage
Here in Indianapolis, more people attend cultural events than they do sporting events, generating a stronger economic impact.
Here in Indianapolis, more people attend cultural events than they do sporting events, generating a stronger economic impact.
One of the more pernicious and insidious effects of the Donald Trump regime may well be the damage he does to language itself. Trumpian language is a thing unto itself: some manner of sophistry peppered with superlatives. It is a way of speech that defies the Reed-Kellogg sentence diagram. It is a jumble of incomplete […]
When George Shultz was secretary of state in the 1980s, he liked to carve out one hour each week for quiet reflection. He sat down in his office with a pad of paper and pen, closed the door and told his secretary to interrupt him only if one of two people called: “My wife or […]
BorgWarner Inc. is set to close two technical centers in central Indiana and consolidate them into a newly constructed facility in Noblesville that will house more than 300 high-wage employees, the Hamilton County city announced Wednesday afternoon.
The Federalist Papers regarded federalism and its cousin, the separation of powers, as surer bulwarks of liberty than anything written into the Bill of Rights.
Here is a sampling of panelists’ comments at the April 28 Life Sciences Power Breakfast.
By Anthony Schoettle [email protected] Most people are aware of the Kiwanis Club. Sort of. Precious few know what the 102-year-old organization actually does. That alarmingly low brand awareness is a problem for the global not-for-profit, which has suffered from dwindling membership in recent years. To arrest that, Indianapolis-based Kiwanis International in April launched its first […]
Around Indiana, life sciences companies are searching high and low for venture capital to fund promising but expensive new products, which can take a decade or longer to develop.
After years of sitting empty, the former Shapiro’s Delicatessen building in City Center will have a new tenant by next summer.
Venture studio High Alpha on Tuesday announced its fifth portfolio company, an employee-engagement company called Structural Inc.
KPWR-FM, which Emmis has owned for 32 years, has long been one of the most popular stations in the massive Los Angeles media market. Emmis shares soared after the announcement.
Daily nonstop service between the two cities begins Thursday. Optimism over demand and Indianapolis’ tech sector already have persuaded Alaska Airlines to add service to San Francisco.
Indiana’s byzantine liquor laws recently provided a clean textbook example—a natural experiment—of the Law of Demand.
The decision makes it virtually impossible for Anthem to salvage the merger and means the insurer could be on the hook for $1.85 billion in breakup fees and $13 billion in damages to Cigna.
An unprecedented cyberattack swept across the globe over the weekend, but so far the majority of victims haven’t paid hackers a ransom.
Many of the 200,000 victims in more than 150 countries are still struggling to recover from the attack of the so-called “WannaCry” virus.
President Mitch Daniels said he didn’t think the school could keep tuition costs down as long as it has and he’s disappointed other colleges haven’t followed suit.
If society is determined to help those with expensive medical problems, the way to do it is … well, by helping those with expensive medical problems.
A coalition of government, business and community groups is posing a big question: How can Indianapolis and surrounding counties best capitalize on the White River?
With conditions ripe for attracting an airline offering service to a destination such as London or Paris, officials with the Indianapolis International Airport have hired the Indy Chamber to help lay the groundwork.