Jennifer Wagner: This fall’s election is all about anger
The president keeps tweeting, and people keep getting more pissed off.
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The president keeps tweeting, and people keep getting more pissed off.
Support for an ideology with such an abysmal track record to date is astounding.
The Ball State trustees’ decision keep John Schnatter’s name on the Center for Entrepreneurship
is counter to the basic, Hoosier values of the university and state that we love.
It was a Jim Acosta moment, but I didn’t feel threatened. Times are different now.
It is all but certain that Mueller’s team has information that the public does not, whether complicating or mitigating for the president.
Raising taxes on credit unions would effectively be increasing taxes on the more than 2 million consumers in Indiana who belong to them.
Now is the perfect time to turn our gaze toward the future and invest in one of the nation’s most undervalued resources, children who are born and grow up at or below poverty guidelines. For the state of Indiana, that is $25,100 for a family of four.
The political children are at play here. But we need an adult in charge because the stakes are too high for our country.
The city must take action to fix a problem that threatens the appeal of our downtown.
Despite the prayers, tears and pleading by the left and the media on cable news, the special counsel and his team of mostly Democratic lawyers and investigators haven’t released any evidence of collusion because, as President Trump has repeatedly said, there was no collusion.
The foundation, which controls more than $800 million in charitable assets, is serious enough about confronting racism that it recently altered its mission statement to drive the point home.
On Aug. 17, 1907, a fire at the Prest-O-Lite factory at 229 E. South St. downtown led tanks of acetylene gas to explode, sending pieces of steel flying through the air.
Unfortunately, relying on handbook policies and management training is insufficient, particularly in today’s #MeToo environment.
Fiesta Indianapolis, an annual cultural event that has celebrated the city’s Latino heritage since 1980, has been called off this year. La Plaza, the group that organizes Fiesta Indianapolis, announced that it “decided to support the events by the Mexican Consulate, Indiana Latino Expo and Indiana Latino Institute during National Hispanic Heritage Month” instead. The […]
Funding a college education is an investment and, as with any investment, there should be a positive return.
With rise of biometrics and other technology, some think it’s time to change security protocol.
Pretty much every school of note, including Indiana University, Purdue University, the University of Notre Dame, Ball State University and Ivy Tech Community College (which offers a well-regarded two-year associate’s degree certified by the National Security Agency) offers advanced education for students interested in cybersecurity.
A privacy assessment generally entails a privacy professional’s assessing an organization’s data, including the risks and vulnerabilities related to the company’s collection, storage, handling and disposal of data.
Peppy Grill, 1004 Virginia Ave., has been closed by the Marion County Health Department after an inspector found food was not being stored at proper temperatures.
The Richard M. Fairbanks Foundation announced Tuesday that it would give $7.5 million in grants to 24 Marion County schools and districts to help fund substance-use prevention.