MORRIS: D.C. crowd making economic matters worse
I’m struggling with moving on from recent events, after losing about 15 percent of value in my equity investments in 11 business days. I’m angry. I’m really angry.
To refine your search through our archives use our Advanced Search
I’m struggling with moving on from recent events, after losing about 15 percent of value in my equity investments in 11 business days. I’m angry. I’m really angry.
Twenty years ago, a hillbilly long shot from Arkansas pulled off one of the greatest upsets in golf history at Crooked Stick Golf Club.
When the stock market plummeted on Aug. 8 and did so again two days later, many of us found ourselves having flashbacks to 2008, when every bleak day in the market seemed to be followed by another and then another.
To a long-term, value-oriented investor, volatility should be viewed as opportunity. The crazy prices that are occasionally offered up by a roller-coaster market in periods of uncertainty allow for the purchase of undervalued securities.
There are many reasons to believe the second half of the year will bring a faster-growing economy.
While we at the Indianapolis Rowing Center applaud Bill Benner’s [July 23 column] call for attention to the crumbling infrastructure of our city’s amateur sports facilities, we’d like to add one bright spot—the rowing center.
Licensed practical nurse Nic Davis invented a device to kill and prevent the introduction of microorganisms that collect at catheter ports.
Pence Haven’t we heard this song before? Congressman Mike Pence, who is running for governor, has proposed that the way to job growth is to reduce Indiana’s already anemic receipts from corporate taxes. Pence has an almost abiding, religious faith and hope in the willingness of Wall Street to create jobs and opportunity. To paraphrase […]
What the country needs is job creation and not continuous discussion about the national debt.
The owner of the hotel and water park said a sale should be complete on Sept. 12. If the acquisition falls through, however, it will close the property on Oct. 9, putting 206 employees out of work.
Experts say Indiana farmers won't produce as much corn and soybeans as they had hoped for a second straight year.
In his [July 30] commentary, Michael Hicks suggests that the $1.6 trillion of U.S. Treasury Securities held by the Federal Reserve be wiped out (since they are debts the U.S. owes itself) and thus eliminate 11 percent of our total national debt.
In his [Aug. 8 op-ed], U.S. Rep. Todd Young spins his recent irresponsible actions in delaying the increase in the debt limit as “a meaningful and responsible first step on the path back to economic health.”
The latest prolonged recession intensified the push for U.S. productivity gains.
What did I learn on my summer vacation? One thing that immediately struck me was how homogenized citizens from Western industrialized countries have become—how much we all look and dress alike.
Indianapolis-based Allison Transmission in March said it planned to raise $750 million through a public stock sale, but the economic outlook has darkened since then.
Indianapolis will shed 200 positions next year to help cut $20 million from non-public safety agencies.
A motorcyclist died Wednesday after becoming trapped beneath a vehicle near 38th Street and Lafayette Road in Indianapolis. Investigators say the cycle was traveling east on 38th Street when it struck a Pontiac Montana van that was trying to turn west onto 38th Street from the New Wineskin Ministries parking lot. The unidentified 26-year-old motorcyclist was pronounced dead at the scene. The 51-year-old van's driver and a 7-year-old girl passenger were not injured.
An Indianapolis teenager was charged Wednesday with murder in the shooting of a 16-year-old boy. Police say 17-year-old Tavon Berry admitted to the crime. Shawn Terry was killed July 29 at an apartment on North Shortridge Road. The suspect told detectives that he shot Terry after an argument and then shot himself in the leg to make it look like he had been robbed.