Richardson to run for county, not state, position in next election
The highest-ranking Republican woman in the Indiana Legislature has decided to not seek a new term and instead run for a county clerk position next year.
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The highest-ranking Republican woman in the Indiana Legislature has decided to not seek a new term and instead run for a county clerk position next year.
Millennials have a reputation for loving products that are local, authentic and benefit the environment. So why are they buying so many plastic Christmas trees?
For Indianapolis to thrive, its businesses need to share their resources for civic-minded efforts, N. Clay Robbins told attendees Friday at the Engage Indiana event for corporate philanthropy.
Friday's jobs report made clear that the U.S. economy is on firm footing and is likely benefiting from more resilient global growth, with all major economies across the world expanding in tandem for the first time in a decade.
The project will close the two streets just north of Fall Creek Parkway, as part of Citizens Energy’s $2 billion project to improve waterways.
The museum is planned for the southern end of the South Bend campus, with construction expected to start in 2020.
Sue and Chris Estep, owners of RoundTripper Baseball Academy in Westfield, say they met with Mayor Andy Cook to discuss the possibility of relocating to Grand Park.
When downtown’s upscale Cerulean stops serving on Dec. 31, it will mark the end of a brutal year for the local restaurant industry marked by an unusually high number of closings.
Pressure is building on the insurer to drop its conservative, bread-and-butter approach after one of its biggest rivals, Aetna Inc., agreed to be bought by drugstore chain CVS Health for $69 billion.
The governor called the performance of one of the biggest online schools, Indiana Virtual, “unsatisfactory.” It has received more than $20 million in state funding while graduating about 61 students.
The university said the effort is a response to Gov. Eric Holcomb's call for teaching computer science to more primary school students.
Indianapolis-based software-as-a-service company Formstack announced this week that it plans to open an 8,300-square-foot office in downtown Colorado Springs that will hire 55 employees.
The city of Fishers is trying to prevent vacant (or soon-to-be-vacant) properties that housed grocery stores from being redeveloped without city oversight.
Michigan City-based Horizon Bancorp has $3.5 billion in assets and operates 68 offices in Michigan, Ohio and Indiana, including locations in Bargersville, Carmel, Franklin, Greenwood and Indianapolis.
IBJ is changing the issue date of the newspaper from Monday to Friday, effective with the last issue of 2017.
Defiance Comedy’s “The North Wing” gives us a look into the working lives of elves.
Following seven years of growth in new-vehicle sales, U.S. consumers appear to be tapping the brakes—but the auto industry says the slowdown is not causing them concern.
We try Carmel’s Rad’s and Irvington’s Batters for the alleged most important meal of the day.
Battle-tested coach has endured lousy year with grace, perspective