MAURER: Local diva enlightens opera
Angela Brown has a voice that reaches extraordinary heights from roots that are set deep in Hoosier soil. She is a diva with a heart as big and as soft as her magnificent voice.
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Angela Brown has a voice that reaches extraordinary heights from roots that are set deep in Hoosier soil. She is a diva with a heart as big and as soft as her magnificent voice.
It would be a sad day in our civic history if the Indiana Pacers packed up and left for a place with
more financial firepower. But there’s a limit to how far the city should go to keep the team from leaving home.
The convention bureau has shelved its plan to attract a full-service hotel and instead will boost spending on tourism marketing.
Moving the Indiana Pacers from Conseco Fieldhouse to another city would impose serious financial hardship on the franchise,
according to one interpretation of the team’s 10-year-old deal with the city.
Not only are utilities grappling with how to pull carbon from their coal-fired emissions, but they also crave certainty about
where to put the carbon. With minimal information available about Indiana’s deep subsurface , much remains to be done to determine
where and at what scale the practice could be deployed here.
As shareholders gather April 19 for Eli Lilly and Co.’s annual meeting, more of them than ever will come with an unusual question:
Will Lilly be able to keep paying its dividend?
Historic Landmarks' endowment is down sharply, but executives believe they can afford to take on the cultural-events-center
project.
Duke Realty Corp. is a real estate investment trust that develops, manages and owns industrial, office and retail properties.
So-called carbon capture and sequestration, or CCS, is seen by some in the utility business as a potential salvation for coal.
But utilities may face a damned-if-you-do, damned-if-you don’t scenario.
Clarian Health is planning to build a bed tower at Methodist Hospital in a massive project that shows renewed
commitment
to the downtown campus. The tower would have 175 to 250 beds and allow Methodist to make all its rooms private.
Grace held her investment through many ups and downs in the stock market. But most important to her was that Abbott as a
business continued to thrive, despite the swings in its stock price.
Reorganizing school districts is difficult, but we Hoosiers have done so before.
Conseco expects its write-offs will be worth more than $800 million over the next 20 years.
The Indiana State Teachers Association might shoot itself in the foot in its standoff with the state’s school chief.
Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Bennett invites heads of teachers unions to meeting to publicly share reform ideas instead of “bureaucratic rhetoric and no
specifics.”
There's a simple reason why Butler sophomore Gordon Hayward won't be in a Bulldogs uniform next year. And it has as
much to do with the CBA as the NBA. And a few million dollars.
An Indiana climate specialist says the state's spring planting forecast is looking good, with rain and temperatures expected
to be close to normal. Associate state climatologist Ken Scheeringa said many Indiana farmers are eager to plant this month
after last year's slow, wet start to the planting season. He said the forecast for the rest of the spring looks much better
than a year ago, when the state's weather was dominated by the La Nina weather cycle's cool, wet conditions.
Greenwood police have made an arrest in the city’s first bank robbery since 2008. Police say 30-year-old Eric Brokamp
used a BB gun on Monday to rob the Bloomfield State Bank at East Main Street and Emerson Avenue. After police released a surveillance
photo, someone called in an anonymous tip. Police tracked down the suspect and arrested him at his home in a trailer park
on Timberline Drive.
Organizers of tax-day tea parties across the country expect thousands of demonstrators to participate in local rallies Thursday,
including one in Indianapolis. The second annual Tax Day Tea Party outside the Indiana Statehouse kicks off at 3 p.m. with
a meet-and-greet event with local, state and federal political candidates. The rally officially begins at 5 p.m. Nationwide,
organizers want to project an image of peaceful people upset by big spending, high taxes and a burdensome federal government.
Fox59 will have more at 4 p.m.