Navistar cutting about 130 jobs in Fort Wayne
Navistar International Corp. is planning to lay off about 130 workers from its Fort Wayne operations by the end of the year as it continues consolidation to a new headquarters in suburban Chicago.
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Navistar International Corp. is planning to lay off about 130 workers from its Fort Wayne operations by the end of the year as it continues consolidation to a new headquarters in suburban Chicago.
The Fishers-based chain said it will reduce prices on thousands of items and keep them there for three months.
Union members packed an Indiana Statehouse hearing Thursday in their uphill fight against "right-to-work" legislation that sparked a five-week walkout by House Democrats earlier this year.
Indianapolis-based shopping mall giant Simon Property Group Inc. has received a new $4 billion unsecured revolving credit facility.
Columbus-based engine maker Cummins Inc. needs to add 7,000 engineers within five years, CEO Theodore Solso said Wednesday.
Indiana's budget picture continued improving last month as the state collected $31 million more in taxes than planned.
Lt. Gov. Becky Skillman and former U.S. Rep. Lee Hamilton will lead a group that's coordinating events to mark Indiana's upcoming bicentennial.
The U.S. Department of Transportation has approved $196.5 million for part of a high-speed Amtrak passenger rail link between Chicago and Detroit, U.S. Sens. Carl Levin and Debbie Stabenow from Michigan said Wednesday.
Steve Jobs, the Apple founder and former CEO who invented and masterfully marketed ever-sleeker gadgets that transformed everyday technology, from the personal computer to the iPod and iPhone, has died.
Education Management Corp., which operates two schools in Indianapolis, has asked a judge to throw out a Department of Justice lawsuit that claims it used improper sales tactics to lure unqualified students and the billions of dollars in financial aid they bring.
Indiana lottery officials say they overspent on their new headquarters and will sell some of their equipment after reports raised questions about the lavish facility.
Indiana residents, like other Americans, want stability, and compromise is not a dirty word.
The organization’s impact will be significant, if not determinative, at least in statewide races.
Regrettably, even in 2011 we are not as enlightened as we might imagine or as we certainly should be.
When I took office, I was shocked to find a backlog of over 200 equal-opportunity claims, some dating back to 2003.
Educators coming to the classroom from a non-traditional path might be an expert in their field, but they have no training in the art of educating students.
Simply put, the type of program, number of credit hours, or path to certification aren’t as important as teachers’ impact on their students.
Republican primary voters deserve a better class of right-wing populist, and the country does, as well.
It’s individuals in the marketplace who create real jobs—when they have the protection of life and property under the rule of law.
The focus of politicians is extremely limited in both space and time—and all the repercussions carry little, if any, weight in political decisions.