MORRIS: Being in the Super Bowl moment
Now that there’s time to take a breath, I want to share some personal experiences from Super Bowl-related activities the past few weeks.
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Now that there’s time to take a breath, I want to share some personal experiences from Super Bowl-related activities the past few weeks.
The close of a landmark event like the Super Bowl coupled with the pressing need to update Indiana Sports Corp.’s long-range plan offers the organization a prime opportunity to rethink the city’s sports strategy.
Indianapolis Mayor Greg Ballard plans to veto a proposed ordinance that would expand the city’s public smoking ban, his spokesman confirmed Thursday.
Democrat John Gregg and Republican Mike Pence submitted plenty of signatures to get their names on Indiana’s ballot for governor. Fishers businessman Jim Wallace, however, said he came up 111 signatures shy of the number needed to make the ballot.
The new law would prevent the I-Light data network from straying beyond its stated mission of serving the state’s colleges and universities.
The investment math of compounding at high rates of return over long periods can lead to astonishing results.
How is it, I wonder, that an employment contract between willing parties could get to the point where either side is viewed as an enemy?
The funds will be used to construct a three-story, independent-living facility consisting of 50 one-bedroom units for low-income senior citizens at the neighborhood center on Indianapolis’ northwest side.
Many issues that address daily commerce, business relationships, education policy, and the internal functions of state and local government remain to be addressed.
I really appreciated Kathleen McLaughlin’s [Feb. 6] article on the donor who made large financial commitments to multiple not-for-profits but is not expected to fulfill them.
Thanks to Mickey Maurer, again, for his voice of reason in the Indiana wilderness.
Today, we hear an endless drumbeat about job creation and use that as a metric to judge government incentives. What we really want is “wealth creation” through innovations that satisfy customers.
As one of my sons observed a few weeks back, when we were scratching our heads over an especially egregious bit of political buffoonery, very scared people desperately crave certainty in a world that has none.
Indiana conservation officers are investigating the shooting death of a bald eagle in Morgan County. The eagle was found Feb. 1 by a resident on private property near the town of Eminence. “It is a senseless shooting of our national bird and a federally threatened species,” said Conservation Officer Jon Fennig. The bald eagle is protected by the federal Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act and the Migratory Bird Treaty Act. Violations could carry a fine of up to $250,000 and up to two years in prison.
An Indianapolis man was taken to a hospital Thursday morning after he drove his pickup truck off Interstate 465 and into an office building on Shadeland Avenue. Marty Thomas, 37, said he lost consciousness before driving down an embankment just south of the I-69 exit ramp. The building, at 7222 N. Shadeland, was left with a gaping hole, but no one was injured. Thomas was being evaluated at Community Hospital.
A woman was killed early Thursday in an accident involving a pickup truck and a car on Kentucky Avenue near Interstate 465 on the southwest side of Indianapolis. The woman was a passenger in the car. The drivers were both seriously injured. A cause of the accident is being investigated.
A state panel has approved changes to Indiana's A-to-F grading standards for public schools despite complaints that the new rules are too complex for schools and parents to understand.
Rolls-Royce Holdings Plc, the world’s second-largest aircraft-engine maker, said profit rose in line with estimates, buoyed by a backlog of orders from Boeing Co. and Airbus SAS.