FDA panel is first key test for Biden COVID-19 booster plan
Scientists inside and outside the government have been divided in recent days over the need for boosters and who should get them.
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Scientists inside and outside the government have been divided in recent days over the need for boosters and who should get them.
The Indiana State Department of Health has reported 222 new deaths from COVID-19 over the past four days, an average of 55.5 per day.
A forecaster whose production projections are cited by automakers, suppliers and research analysts the world over just took its biggest chop yet to estimates that have been falling all year due to the global chip shortage.
This year’s hackathon, to take place Oct. 22-24 at Butler University, will focus on sports-related applications for 5G wireless technology.
As part of the deal, the West Club at the stadium will be renamed the WynnBet Club—a 21-and-up sports bar on the club level.
Having been created in an act of architectural homicide, the CCB itself should hardly be protected from meeting the same fate.
From afar, the City-County Building’s mark on the skyline is significant. Dated architecture, perhaps, but noticeably part of the urban fabric.
During 40 years in the news business, I was never so far removed as I was from the terrorist attack in 2001, possibly the biggest story of our time.
The refusal to stay the law from taking effect by the Supreme Court has given hope to those who oppose choice.
It is time the states be allowed to pass laws that reflect the will of the citizenry.
We want to look like we never leave a piece of paper out on a desk, or we wash and put away every dish following every meal.
The Republican supermajority can and will do what it wants with little regard to the voices of all Hoosiers.
It is too often a mistake to turn something that makes a great musical into a movie. It doesn’t justify the risk.
The pandemic has offered companies and employees a new opportunity to refocus.
The philanthropic sector continues to have failed to be transformed by the impact of 9/11 on Muslim Americans.
Right now, participation in Hoosier Hall Pass is low, and there is often a shortage of poll workers on Election Day.
I felt like the questions were very much in touch with the issues local residents and workers are facing.
Forty percent of voters believe that Indianapolis is headed in the right direction, while an equal 40% think the city has gone off on the wrong track.
Let me suggest a simple start for Holcomb’s move toward real leadership: Require the hundreds of schools that are not reporting their COVID cases to do so.
It’s tragic that thousands of people are dying unnecessarily from our newest vaccine-preventable disease.