VAUGHN: Ethics laws — enforcement = empty promises
All the ethics and disclosure laws on the books won’t make much difference if they are not aggressively and fairly enforced.
All the ethics and disclosure laws on the books won’t make much difference if they are not aggressively and fairly enforced.
If there’s any reason for real optimism in this picture, it’s for Americans.
The autonomy charter schools receive comes with the condition that they meet high standards or face closure.
One of Jud McMillin’s attributes, which bodes well for future leadership, is his ability to comprehend and communicate complex issues.
The public no longer accepts hollow proclamations with the same naïve grace.
Aprimo founder joins other notables as TechPoint Trailblazer.
Thoughts on “Art from the Heartland,” Mike Birbiglia and moonlighting by the “Avenue Q” puppets.
Dr. Malaz Boustani, the medical director of Wishard Health Services’ Healthy Aging Brain Center, thinks pop-up alerts for physicians that are part of many electronic medical record and e-prescribing systems are ineffective and need to be re-engineered.
For more than a year, Eli Lilly and Co. has been viewed by investors as a laggard stock with one, slim shot at producing a huge jackpot: its experimental Alzheimer’s drug. But now company leaders are trying to direct investor attention toward the drugmaker’s diabetes portfolio.
Marsh Supermarkets CEO Joe Kelley abruptly resigned Tuesday, and the locally based chain launched a search for its third chief executive in a little more than a year.
Marsh Supermarkets CEO Joe Kelley abruptly resigned Tuesday, and the Fishers-based chain launched a search for its third chief executive in a little more than a year. The company named Chief Operating Officer Bill Holsworth as its interim CEO.
But major Indianapolis-area hospitals still prefer personal referrals
With its shares trading up more than 60 percent from the doldrums of last fall, Calumet Specialty Products Partners rolled out plans to sell another 6 million shares of stock, raising more than $150 million.
Nearly two years after federal agents raided furniture maker University Loft Co.’s Hancock County plant, the once-fast-growing firm is seeing business bounce back.
Despite fierce opposition, some politicians are finally speaking out to say they are in favor of marriage and equal rights for gay citizens.
Officials consider expanding facility that got off to a slow start but began filling up last fall.
Like many states, Indiana faces a critical need to retrain and, in some cases, re-career adults over age 35.
Most technology firm startups are birthed by men in their 20s and 30s who have a background in computer science. To what degree women are underrepresented in the ranks of tech entrepreneurs is hard to quantify, but it’s a small universe.
The Mind Trust—an organization that proclaims to support entrepreneurial education initiatives, [and] unannounced and ignoring a well-established charter school evaluation process—feels compelled to play the roles of judge, jury and executioner.