Stadium size, hotel space to be issue in Indy’s bid to host 2018 Super Bowl
League sources say a stadium with capacity below 75,000 will have difficulty landing a future Super Bowl. Even after expansion, Lucas Oil Stadium is 3,000 to 5,000 short.
League sources say a stadium with capacity below 75,000 will have difficulty landing a future Super Bowl. Even after expansion, Lucas Oil Stadium is 3,000 to 5,000 short.
Democratic gubernatorial candidate John Gregg said he wants the state to begin educating students before kindergarten.
Gov. Mitch Daniels says he plans to ask his potential successors whether the state should set up a health care exchange.
Indianapolis hotels could no longer ban contract workers from direct employment under an ordinance passed Monday night by the City-County Council.
The immediate reaction on Wall Street to last month’s U.S. Supreme Court ruling upholding President Obama’s health care law was to buy hospital stocks and dump health insurance stocks. But at least one analyst expects the long-term outcome to be the exact opposite.
Republican Mike Pence and Democrat John Gregg are heading into the key stretch of the Indiana governor's race with strong bankrolls.
The primary goal of the contract is to boost the lottery's net income, which dropped from $218 million in fiscal year 2006 to $188 million during fiscal year 2011 — a 14 percent decline.
The physicists who made the discovery, Obama noted, all had health insurance.
Which makes you wonder why they continue to do, say and write such dumb stuff.
The Supreme Court will have to revisit this issue again—and perhaps more decisively.
Political posturing only oversimplifies a complex situation.
After the Arizona ruling, the issue only gets more complicated for Republicans.
The state superintendent of public instruction’s race may be the most crucial contest this fall.
Indiana Democrats attacked Republican Senate candidate Richard Mourdock on Monday for opposing the 2009 Chrysler bankruptcy, a position they see as his biggest weakness.
Pence has not only hit the airwaves first, but he has hit them three times, with a series of touchy-feely pieces detailing his courtship with his wife, his history growing up in Indiana and a devastating storm which struck his hometown of Columbus.
Republican Mike Pence, Democrat John Gregg and Libertarian Rupert Boneham are vying to succeed Republican Gov. Mitch Daniels, who is term-limited from seeking re-election in November.
The Rs and the Ds could fight over ad space in voter registration.
I wonder what President Daniels can do off campus to benefit the nation and the world from the platform he has been presented.
It remains to be seen what will happen to BrightPoint’s 1,300 employees in the Indianapolis area.
City-County Councilor Vop Osili thinks the city could level the job-seeking playing field for ex-offenders by eliminating the question of past convictions on job applications.