LOU’S VIEWS: Alas, poor patrons
If intent were all that mattered, I would be writing in praise of Hoosier Bard’s “Young Hamlet.”
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If intent were all that mattered, I would be writing in praise of Hoosier Bard’s “Young Hamlet.”
These personal shoppers posses not only a knack for dressing people, but a background to each qualify as an expert in looking good.
For starters, the Pacers have to believe in themselves.
The bachelor’s in energy engineering and technology is believed to be one of only a handful of such programs offered around the country.
The giant hotel chain is now the official hotel of the Indianapolis-based sports governing body.
Sadly, a legislative body supposedly focused on job creation continues to willfully disregard the advice of the very business community that is expected to create those jobs.
The budding commercial district, dubbed 10 East Main Street, landed Metta Yoga at 2807 E. 10th St.
Building Tomorrow, which builds schools in Africa, usually finds its support on college campuses.
The local motorsports marketing firm employs about 90 in its Zionsville office.
A program to help Indiana University Health patients get discounted hotel rooms has ballooned in recent years to the size of a midsize convention.
West Lafayette-based Bioanalytical Systems Inc. is a provider of contract-research services to the pharmaceutical industry.
The Indianapolis city flag turns 50 next year, but considering that urban design experts note the flag isn’t exactly plastered all over town, it’s probably a safe bet this is one golden birthday that won’t be much of a party.
Much of the credit for the team’s recent upswing—on the court and with fans—is going to the team’s new head coach, Frank Vogel. But he is only the interim head coach, and his future with the team is uncertain.
Social media seems to be the talk (or, um, tweet) of the town these days. While hundreds of millions of people are using these tech media to interact with one another, the question investors are trying to answer is, what are these businesses worth?
It is an old story, but a nevertheless disheartening one. It is also a tale rich in its implications for young workers.
What IBJ fails to disclose are the 14,580 permanent jobs lost in Indiana in our defense industry over the past 30 years.
We at City Securities Corp. disagree with those predicting Armageddon. It is our belief that the vast majority of municipal issuers nationally are in sound financial condition.
Indiana’s current fiscal position points a way forward, illuminating what the next decade of good government, and good partnership between municipalities and businesses, should look like—not only at a regional level, but for the nation as a whole as well.