SHELLA: Pence next up to answer residency questions
That means they sleep, eat, work and attend school in Arlington. Their hearts are in Indiana.
That means they sleep, eat, work and attend school in Arlington. Their hearts are in Indiana.
Work is starting on an 8-mile-long tunnel under the south side of Indianapolis that is the first major part of a $1.6 billion project aimed at reducing the release of raw sewage into the city's rivers.
Thoughts on ‘One Man, Two Guvnors,’ ‘Other Desert Cities,’ ‘Peter and the Starcatcher’ and more.
Have you ever wanted to operate heavy construction equipment? At Mickey’s Camp you’ll be able to operate a skid steer loader, excavator and a motor grader simulator.
Since Tuesday, fans, coaches and prominent journalists have fired off more than 150 messages on Twitter or on blog posts either blasting the Indianapolis-based NCAA or praising Greg Shaheen, who had overseen all 89 of the NCAA’s championships since August 2010.
April 14
Athenaeum Theatre
Jim Lehrer provides the keynote address, two high school students pick up writing awards, and Joe Raiola, senior editor of Mad Magazine, offers a comedy performance called “The Joy of Censorship” at this dinner celebration of Indy’s favorite literary son. Jim Shella of WISH-TV emcees. Details here.
The 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.
Long knows that, in order to keep his leadership post, he has to give in to a number of conservative demands.
Student-reporting programs at Franklin College, Butler University aid cash-strapped newspapers statewide.
Spurred by fundraising campaigns by local television stations, more than $1 million has been raised to help victims of last week’s devastating tornadoes in southern Indiana. In addition to doing a good thing, the stations are getting a marketing boost from their efforts.
There has been a lot of disinformation and misinformation in Indiana politics of late with regard to the residency issue.
This week, meet James Burnes, who launched virtual patent-marking service PatentStatus LLC in January and spent the first weekend of February hobnobbing with corporate bigwigs in town for Super Bowl XLVI.
A former employee of Ambassadair travel club is trying to raise $5.3 million to finance the first six months of a business created in its image.
All of this union-backed expression is in response to the right-to-work bill.
An after-hours nightclub and a sports apparel shop operated by Indianapolis-based Lids Sports Group will occupy much of the space, dubbed “The Huddle,” during the festivities starting on Jan. 27.
Indiana excise police say officers will be watching partiers to make sure public drinking doesn't get out of hand during the Super Bowl in Indianapolis.
Indiana's Republican House leader said Tuesday that lawmakers will almost immediately take up right-to-work legislation that's likely to dominate much of the state's 2012 session.
In a wide-ranging interview, Gov. Mitch Daniels discusses his goals for the General Assembly, which convenes Wednesday. Among them: Implement a statewide smoking ban, make Indiana a right-to-work state, and end what he calls “credit creep” for college students.