Indiana Landmarks names DePauw University alum as new CEO
The new leader succeeds Marsh Davis, who is retiring after 37 years at Indiana Landmarks, including 19 years as CEO.
The new leader succeeds Marsh Davis, who is retiring after 37 years at Indiana Landmarks, including 19 years as CEO.
While the exterior of the Intech Two building will remain largely the same, Indianapolis-based Ghoman Group plans to gut the interior to create a 140-unit hotel accompanied by a restaurant and conference center.
Critics of the Indiana Economic Development Corp., which receives hundreds of millions in tax dollars each year, have wondered whether the agency has been transparent and fiscally responsible enough.
And the first bills are hitting Gov. Braun’s desk for approval.
There’s a method to the madness that is the NCAA Division I men’s basketball tournament—and it relies wholly on the collective involvement of thousands of NCAA and university staffers, contractors, local organizers, venue workers and volunteers.
The National Association of Home Builders projected that current tariffs could raise the cost to build a single-family house in the United States $7,500 to $10,000.
Amid uncertainty around federal research funding, universities must explore private support, Purdue University President Mung Chiang told an tech industry group on Tuesday.
Data center construction has been met with some apprehension, including the low number of jobs produced for the large tax incentives and utility burden these developments require.
Researchers used an artificial intelligence tool to analyze sales calls and detect certain vocal markers.
A spokesperson for the company said the layoffs will impact workers at three Indiana facilities.
Several of the session’s most important pieces of legislation—including bills affecting the budget, property tax relief and health care transparency—will be heard, amended and passed out of committee next week.
President Donald Trump has spoken out against the CHIPS Act, meant to incentivize semiconductor-related development in the U.S., but industry insiders say they’re optimistic the initiative will survive.
Our policymakers should lock arms with the science-and-technology dreamers and doers across the country—from Silicon Valley to the Silicon Prairie.
Evansville-based Old National Bank is working on a first-of-its-kind effort: the launch of an Indiana-based bank whose target customers are minorities and those underserved by traditional banks.
I suspect that these questions and challenges are similar to those that some of you are facing at your own companies and organizations.
Without swift and decisive action, more Hoosiers struggling with mental illness and substance use disorders will not receive the treatment they desperately need and end up behind bars.
Economists have long pointed out that setting a price ceiling below the market clearing price will inevitably lead to product shortages.
Insurance works on the principle of the Law of Large Numbers.
IBJ reporters and editors watched the incident from IBJ Media’s third floor office in the AES building in the southeast quadrant of the Circle.
As director of strategic initiatives at the Applied Research Institute, Jeron Peoples connects innovators in national security technology with venture capitalists.