RACE: From Cardiff to Indianapolis, livable cities are universal
The capital cities of Wales and Indiana have much in common and are designing for the future.
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The capital cities of Wales and Indiana have much in common and are designing for the future.
Investors soon will have the opportunity to own a piece of an American landmark. The Empire State Realty Trust, whose signature property is the Empire State building, will offer shares to the public.
The Congressional Budget Office’s most recent assessment of the cost of the Troubled Asset Relief Program, in late May, occasioned far less thoughtful discussion of the role of government than it should have.
In a complaint filed Thursday, the family of the deceased coach and five members of the school’s board of trustees said the Indianapolis-based NCAA improperly interfered and grossly mishandled a criminal matter outside the scope of its authority.
A Carmel City Council committee’s decision not to help Pedcor Cos. land a state tax credit sent a message to developers: Public money won’t be flowing quite as freely in the future.
The student lender wants to separate its education loan management and consumer bank businesses into two publicly traded entities. The firm is a major employer in Indiana, with more than 2,600 employees at offices in Indianapolis, Fishers and Muncie.
Indiana State Fair organizers are conducting a job fair Thursday from 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. in hopes of filling 500 openings for this year’s event. Jobs available include ticket seller, parking attendant and security. Anyone in line before 7 p.m. at the agriculture and horticulture building at the fairgrounds will be interviewed, officials said.
A Walmart Supercenter on Pendleton Pike in Lawrence was evacuated Thursday after a bomb threat was reported just before 8 a.m. Police searched the store for more than an hour before allowing it to reopen.
A man was critically injured by a fire in his Wayne Township home Thursday morning. The blaze broke out at about 9 a.m. in the 2500 block of South Holt Road. Officials said the fire was contained to one room and the attic.
Managing Director Steven Stolen will leave the repertory theater for a position with Rocketship Education. Other local performing arts executives stepping down are John Pickett of the Indianapolis Opera and Kirk Trevor of the Indianapolis Chamber Orchestra.
The Labor Department said the four-week average of Americans seeking unemployment aid inched up to 347,250, a third straight increase.
Indiana farmers who had worried that wet spring weather would prevent them from planting some of their corn fields are now ahead of schedule at getting the state’s top crop in the ground.
Under Keystone Group’s tentative plans, the developer would add a second story to the building at the high-profile corner of Washington and Pennsylvania streets in hopes of luring a national restaurant.
Lilly Endowment awarded $230 million in 2012, mostly to Indiana groups. Its fortunes still are largely tied to the value of Eli Lilly and Co. stock, despite an effort to diversify the private foundation’s holdings.
During his post-race interview, Indy 500 winner Tony Kanaan mentioned his dad, son, Alex Zanardi, and a woman who returned a good-luck medal he gave her nine years ago. All very nice, but those aren’t the people who pay the bills.
IBJ’s Women of Influence program recognizes central Indiana women who have become leaders in their fields. They help run major corporations and leading arts organizations. They’re bankers, philanthropists and trailblazers. They come from diverse backgrounds but share a passion for making a difference. Click on the photos below to learn more about the 2013 Women of Influence honorees. […]
Indiana's Department of Education is seeking an outside review of the ISTEP test results following a series of computer glitches that will likely delay test results until July.
The $360 million initiative will be formally launched on Thursday by Gov. Mike Pence, executives of five major life sciences companies and officials of the state’s research universities.
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act presents employers with new choices regarding their employee benefit plans. Indeed, while the act may be full of bad news for employers (fees, complicated provisions, uncertainty on specific requirements), there is good news, as well.
Three years ago, the physician practice American Health Network was concerned that the boom in employer on-site clinics would hurt its business. So it launched a program aimed at managing the health of employers’ workers. And it has come up with some impressive results. Carmel-based American Health’s Employer Health Management program sends nurses to all […]