Tool-maker Hurco makes headway after tough stretch
The company, which develops computer-controlled equipment for cutting and forming metal, made progress in fiscal 2012 toward restoring profitability to pre-recession levels.
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The company, which develops computer-controlled equipment for cutting and forming metal, made progress in fiscal 2012 toward restoring profitability to pre-recession levels.
Volunteers of America of Indiana is a faith-based organization that provides life-changing services to enhance the physical, emotional, spiritual and intellectual needs of individuals.
In mid-2011, the staff of local Web marketing firm SmallBox began a period of self-reflection that allowed the team to identify its “North Star,” the purpose, mission and vision that keeps a company headed in the right direction. It’s now spreading the word.
The U.S. Postal Service says it's hiring 400 new employees across Indiana, including in Indianapolis, but job-seekers have to apply online by Sunday night.
An 11-page utility bill in the Indiana Senate that a consumer group likens to “a money grab” would hasten and expand a utility’s ability to recover additional costs from customers.
For a guy whose company’s stock price has lost 75 percent of its value, Kevin Modany, the CEO of ITT Educational Services Inc., sounds pretty upbeat. And it seemed to rub off on investors Thursday.
Indiana lawmakers looking to plug a hole in state transportation spending are considering diverting the state's sales tax on gasoline to transportation.
Former Sen. Richard Lugar will join former U.S. Rep. Lee Hamilton as a professor in Indiana University's new School of Global and International Studies.
With 2012 now in the books, it is a great time to undertake an analysis of your financial results.
The United States has always had something like a middle class, but for most of our history it has been a distinction not necessarily dependent on income or wealth.
Amazon.com and other online-only retailers would have to start collecting Indiana's 7-percent sales tax this summer under a bill endorsed by a state House committee.
A top Indiana senator is calling for a review of Indiana's plans to subsidize a proposed coal-gasification plant.
Savvy Indiana business owners rightly wonder about the merger-and-acquisition and capital market outlook for 2013. Unfortunately, it is likely mixed, with a sluggish outlook for the first half of the year. However, many hope that, by midyear, there will be a pickup to end the year strong.
Lack of a disclosed price kept these deals off of Indianapolis Business Journal's list of deals.
The woman charged in the Richmond Hill subdivision explosion that killed two people wants her trial moved outside Marion County. James Voyles, defense attorney for Monserrate Shirley, filed a motion Thursday morning for a change of venue. Shirley, boyfriend Mark Leonard and his brother Bob Leonard were charged in December with murder and arson in connection with the Nov. 10 explosion that destroyed more than 30 homes. Dion and Jennifer Longworth died in the blast.
Indianapolis firefighters faced an extra hazard late Wednesday night while battling a Franklin Township house fire when ammunition in the garage began exploding. Homeowner Nina Gregory and her three children escaped the fire without injury and warned emergency workers about the ammo. The home, in the 7800 block of Ithaca Way, suffered more than $200,000 in damage.
The governor's office says Indiana first lady Karen Pence is having emergency gall bladder surgery Thursday. Gov. Mike Pence canceled a planned trip to southern Indiana to stay with his wife. A spokeswoman didn't have details about the surgery, but said she would provide updates later Thursday.
Casket company turns heads with aggressive foray into equipment manufacturing.