HAUKE: Growth of government takes toll on stock returns
The unprecedented size of government in America matters to anyone who is concerned about wealth creation in this country.
To refine your search through our archives use our Advanced Search
The unprecedented size of government in America matters to anyone who is concerned about wealth creation in this country.
Motorsports insiders think the Brickyard 400’s declining fortunes will hasten the Hulman-George family’s decision
on the future of the Indy Racing League, which the NASCAR race has helped subsidize.
Landing the best parking spot doesn’t always require getting a big promotion.
Wartime familiarity should make us more tolerant of our differences and care more for one another’s children.
The Lakeville-based company won a victory in the antitrust case brought by Pittsburgh-based Specialty Tires of America,
which objected to exclusive contracts for the supplying of racing tires.
Two years after Bright Automotive was founded, the prospect of thousands of Indiana factory workers cranking out Bright’s
100-mile-per-gallon “IDEA” delivery vans by 2012 seems dim.
The Indiana Veterinary Medical Association hired the local agency to develop a new branding and identity campaign.
The Carmel-based company backed off earlier predictions after a mid-year slow-down that could affect its sales.
Russell Kershaw is the new dean of its Clark H. Byrum School
of Business.
Venture dollars for Hoosier companies are still few, but the flow of deals is picking up.
In most productions of the raucous musical comedy “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum,” the lead
character, Pseudolus, is a just-this-side-of desperate middle-age guy with an overactive libido who could break out in a major
sweat at any moment.
I’m happy to report that the new, locally owned Shebella’s exceeds pizza buffet
expectations and, with some of the items we sampled, exceeds even those of traditional pizza joints and sub shops.
We need to provide some perspective. If Brickyard 400 attendance was, as estimated, somewhere between 130,000 and
150,000, that still makes it the second-largest single-day sporting event in the world and represents a healthy influx of
cash, much of it coming from elsewhere, spent in the area over the weekend.
Seems like almost every day a new social media platform is born. If you added them all up, you would easily be in the hundreds.
Obviously, all of them are too much for all of us to pay much attention to, but there are a few you should not only know about,
but participate in.
Years ago, when technology was just starting to classify and count all of us, we worried we’d become merely numbers.
Now we may not even be readable numbers, but just ink on a bar code. And that’s a good thing, as it turns out.
The gains amid economic malaise are impressive, but also unsustainable. Companies can’t continue to grow earnings forever based on cost-cutting.
Indy Reads works to improve the literacy skills
of adults in central Indiana who read or write at or below the sixth grade level.
The tabloid relies on the same open-records laws that give mainstream news outlets access to information about arrests, including
photos.
This problem [at Black Expo] is nothing new; it has a long history of violence and disrespect for the community we all live
in.