Partying like it’s 2013
Even after the Great Recession and throughout the stubborn economic recovery, it’s getting harder to recall when Indiana’s fiscal house was a shambles.
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Even after the Great Recession and throughout the stubborn economic recovery, it’s getting harder to recall when Indiana’s fiscal house was a shambles.
It’s no secret that higher education is in a state of turmoil—one might even use the word “crisis.”
The surprising growth corresponds with the recent expansion of the Indiana Convention Center, and an explosion in the popularity of The Food Network and chef-centric programming. But don’t expect to make a mint.
When was the last time you sold your home? Was it a smooth and pleasant experience?
Robin Miller pronounced the idea of a season-ending race on the Speedway’s road course as the dumbest of all the dumb things that have happened over the years. I respectfully disagree.
Indianapolis is a master of not making waves. Chalk it up to being the capital of a notoriously risk-averse state.
The Conversation Project sparks discussion of end-of-life issues.
State Senator from Speedway plays outsized role in shaping policy for Indianapolis.
National conference gives local elected officials a chance to see the technology they continue to reject.
First in a month-long series of Indianapolis Cultural Trail restaurant reviews.
Twelve lucky entrepreneurs chosen from hundreds of applicants will spend two months this summer in a luxury facility working on bringing new business ideas to market.
Construction paperwork indicates the store will be almost 200,000 square feet and employ 100 people.
Indianapolis government bill among those the governor must decide to accept or reject.
The General Assembly’s work left some groups happy, some disappointed.
Consumer rating service gets stock-price boost from better-than-expected revenue in first quarter.
The works in the main ticketing hall and concourse B are on display through Aug. 4.
Economic and political spheres are abuzz with the recent discovery of a mathematical error made by Harvard professors Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff in their seminal analysis of debt-laden economies.
Brain drain is a genuine problem in Indiana. But instead of slowing this trend, our higher education financing policies accelerate this problem by pushing more students into majors that are in demand elsewhere.
The Indiana Department of Transportation will press ahead with a request for proposals on Interstate 69 from Bloomington to Martinsville, in hopes that a public-private partnership will stretch limited state funds.