Q&A with Heather Givans, Crimson Tate owner
Givans is busy selling her spirited, printed fabrics—some of which she has designed—to customers who are making masks for themselves and others.
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Givans is busy selling her spirited, printed fabrics—some of which she has designed—to customers who are making masks for themselves and others.
When the city was threatened with losing the Indianapolis Indians, the public rallied in ways big and small to keep the team here.
When a complex issue seems so overwhelming that a person becomes paralyzed with inaction, it becomes important to delineate and solve your challenges independently.
Investing locally is rewarding as part of a balanced portfolio. It is also exciting and gratifying to be part of allowing a local startup to launch or grow.
This photo taken on Dec. 10, 1942, shows the inside of a liquor store at the Claypool Hotel, although the description does not name the store. It could be the Estates Liquor store, which was located in the building for decades.
Within a week of Indiana’s first confirmed case of COVID-19, the Indianapolis-based endowment granted $15 million to underwrite a new community fund dedicated to helping social service agencies respond to the pandemic.
The Indianapolis-based hunger relief organization has seen demand for its services soar because of the coronavirus pandemic. The health crisis has forced the group to convert its biggest annual fundraiser into an online event.
The deal paves the way for cuts that experts estimate could reach 15 million barrels a day. Such a move would be unprecedented both in its size and the number of participating countries, many of whom have long been bitter rivals in the energy industry.
Consumer prices saw their largest monthly decline in five years, revealing the downward pressure that the coronavirus pandemic is exerting on the cost of gasoline, airfares, hotel rooms and other goods and services.
The 55 deaths were the most reported to date in the Indiana State Department of Health’s daily updates, up from 42 on Thursday.
New research from economists at three Federal Reserve banks shows coronavirus-related bankruptcies could rise by 200,000, reaching almost 1 million, unless government stimulus programs offset the increase.
Our initial defenses were so broad and blunt … because we knew so little.
Protocols for whom and how often to test those re-entering the workforce will be important.
We value life over commerce, we readily invest wealth and will suffer sharp economic harm … to save lives.
We are facing an enemy that could take four or five times as many U.S. lives as World War II—but only if it is not carefully managed.
If we do not heed warnings based on science and math, many more among us will fall ill, and some will die.
Scarcity does actually exist. Resources are not limitless and must be prioritized.
Coronavirus is like alcohol, money and power. It shows who among us are the flowers who could use a dousing of Roundup.
I must admit I have a love/hate relationship with this president. I love his conservative policies, but I hate his foul language, name-calling and deficit spending.
According to the 2019 Indiana Civic Health Index, Indiana is stuck in the bottom 10 of states for voter turnout. That’s embarrassing.