U.S. stocks suffer second straight day of heavy losses
The Standard & Poor's 500 index fell more than 2 percent for a second straight day and is now in its longest slide since 2016.
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The Standard & Poor's 500 index fell more than 2 percent for a second straight day and is now in its longest slide since 2016.
The state of New York is blaming 49 industrial sites in Indiana—and hundreds of other sites across the Midwest—for causing it to miss ozone air-pollution requirements.
The Athenaeum Foundation on Thursday said it has hired an Imax Theater executive to succeed Cassie Stockamp as president.
An Indianapolis-based company has signed a deal with national mail-order pharmacy GoGoMeds that officials project will help double its local workforce—to about 250—within five years.
A newspaper story says House Speaker Brian Bosma paid $40,000 to hire an attorney to investigate a former intern who alleges she had a sexual encounter with Bosma in 1992. The letter of support called the story an attempt “to discredit” Bosma “with uncorroborated allegations.”
President Donald Trump repeatedly criticized the Federal Reserve over the past 24 hours as markets plunged, saying the central bank was “going loco” with too many interest hikes.
Tens of millions of Social Security recipients and other retirees will get a boost in benefits next year. It's the biggest increase most retired baby boomers have gotten.
The physicians’ group claims the Connersville health system misled it on patient volumes and has refused to adjust a subsidy to make up the difference.
Emmis Communications spent nearly a decade and tens of millions of dollars trying to put together an industry-wide effort to make cell phones act like smart portable radios. In the end, CEO Jeff Smulyan said he couldn’t continue to “fund R&D for the entire industry.”
Consumer prices edged up a slight 0.1 percent in September as energy prices retreated after a big gain in August.
The average margin of victory this season is 63-3 at school that never kicks an extra point.
Mike Braun is worth tens of millions of dollars, but his supporters say he carries himself like a regular, down-to-earth guy.
Joe Donnelly, a Democrat seeking re-election to the U.S. Senate, distances himself from Washington, D.C., but not from President Donald Trump.
Joe Donnelly’s former family business, which he owned stock in until last year, has received repeated shipments of goods from China. That makes Donnelly susceptible to charges of hypocrisy while undercutting one of his main attacks against Mike Braun.
Although there is no guarantee the projected $350 million it generates will all end up covering health care expenditures, hopefully the Legislature will dedicate it to public health spending.
I predict that Indiana will experience a revolving door of appointed state superintendents.
Don’t stop recruiting until there are viable candidates of color in the applicant pool worthy of an interview.
The challenge is that social value is hard to achieve when making a profit or worrying about the bottom line.
What’s fascinating: The two men most recently elected to serve as presidents of the United States took a positive approach.
In modern America, we shouldn’t have a need to address the shortage of women in leadership roles.