Jennifer Christie
Jennifer Christie, a chemist, is a candidate in the Democratic primary in Indiana’s 5th Congressional District.
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Jennifer Christie, a chemist, is a candidate in the Democratic primary in Indiana’s 5th Congressional District.
From a young age, Dee Thornton watched her parents be civically and politically engaged in western Tennessee, but she didn’t run for public office until people approached her in 2018 about the 5th District seat.
Wall Street rallied again on Friday after a terrible, unprecedented report on the U.S. jobs market wasn’t quite as horrific as economists had forecast.
The Indiana State Department of Health said Friday that the cumulative death toll in the state rose to 1,328, up from 1,295 the previous day—an increase of 33.
Throughout Indianapolis, where the school system allows parents to choose where their children attend, enrollment for the next academic year is in upheaval as families and schools grapple with urgent crises.
Indiana University has joined a growing number of universities facing lawsuits filed by students who allege they haven’t been properly refunded for pandemic-related disruptions to the spring semester.
Woody Myers announced in a virtual press conference Friday morning that former state Rep. Linda Lawson will be his running mate.
The company, which makes board management and meeting software used primarily by not-for-profits, in mid-March offered organizations a free 90-day trial of its recently enhanced software.
Indiana native and Purdue graduate Robert Ulibarri, 37, has been named general manager for Saab’s aerospace facility in Discovery Park, where he will lead the advanced manufacturing and production for aerospace systems.
While family wealth grew for white, black and Latino families from 2013 to 2016, the gaps grew as well.
The moral to the story is not that TV is now flawed and substandard. It’s that content matters.
Traditionally, these organizations have been overlooked by American foundations.
Disasters tend to bring out the best in people.
Without these actions, we would remain beholden to hypothetical dire predictions and “experts” who are also amateurs.
As mitigation is relaxed, there will certainly be increases in cases and mortality again.
The pandemic taught us how many have this luxurious work-from-home option, but more painfully, how many don’t.
We should be wary of those who would use this crisis as an excuse to foist a much more expansive government upon us.
About 54% of respondents said the state is on the right track, while only 49% thought the country was going in the right direction.
Regardless of whether you do so in person or by mail, please make sure you actually cast a ballot.
Trump is arguably the only president in American history who lacks the capacity to feel empathy—or even the ability to fake it.