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BENNER: We need not have panicked after losing 2007 bid
Remembering the overblown reaction when the Super Bowl passed us by.
Senate passes comprehensive charity gambling bill
Not-for-profits with multiple affiliates in the state would need only one gambling license to run fundraisers.
Speedway oil re-refinery begins production
Illinois-based Heritage-Crystal Clean says its refinery here is the second largest in the U.S.
City Gallery named finalist for national ‘placemaking’ grant
The Harrison Center’s gallery for promoting urban neighborhoods was chosen from among 2,000 applicants.
Excess land at Fishers airport will be turned over to farming
The town’s leaders had envisioned the Indianapolis Airport Authority property being developed to add to the tax base.
MAURER: Religion does not make the candidate
Kennedy believed in an America where the separation of church and state was absolute.
EDITORIAL: State keeps locals on tight leash
It’s a predicament dripping with hypocrisy. This is a state, after all, where politicians routinely complain about the power of the federal government.
Mini Thin maker agrees to $1M bankruptcy settlement
Carmel resident Richard Deer, who built a business around Mini Thin dietary supplements, has agreed to pay $1 million in his company’s bankruptcy case.
Sale of storied bank reflects industry’s difficult times
John Keach Jr., the third generation of his family to lead Indiana Bank & Trust, looked into the future and wondered how—given the lackluster economy and increasing costs for everything from employee benefits to regulatory compliance—it would generate robust earnings growth.
KIM: Markets start strong in ’12, but be ready to ‘tie a knot’
Franklin D. Roosevelt famously said, “When you get to the end of your rope, tie a knot and hang on.” Investors who heeded that advice during the scary decline last August and September have been rewarded.
HICKS: Field research sheds light on Super Bowl impact
My two sons and I headed to Indianapolis’ Super Bowl Village recently for some field research.
Closing arguments under way in White trial
Indiana Secretary of State Charlie White's defense lawyer rested Thursday without presenting a case against voter fraud charges that could oust White from office. Clsoing arguments got under way Friday.
FEIGENBAUM: Right-to-work resolution opens floodgates for other bills
House Democrats and Republicans, who had been bickering like Patriots and Giants fans, suddenly seemed to drop all political pretenses, and returned to conducting the people’s business.
Risk for Manning
If the medical reports are correct as printed, and I assume they are, it would be hazardous [for Peyton Manning] to perform as quarterback.
Health care reform spawns complexities
John Stossel [Jan. 9 Forefront] did a nice job capturing much of the concern and uncertainty of Obamacare by employers.
McNAMAR: I love Indy, but not the public transit system
I would like to commute by bus—I can’t. I work in Carmel, but IndyGo does not go beyond 96th Street.
RUSTHOVEN: Yank the shepherd’s crook on Gingrich
Newt Gingrich is a horrid conservative standard-bearer.
Indiana union leader promises no Super Bowl skirmish
The president of Indiana AFL-CIO is promising union members will not disrupt the Super Bowl festivities in Indianapolis after efforts to block right-to-work legislation failed.