Schools, state trying to boost college affordability
Has Indiana made any progress in tackling student debt since students started racking it up through the Great Recession? The answer is somewhat complicated, higher education finance experts say.
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Has Indiana made any progress in tackling student debt since students started racking it up through the Great Recession? The answer is somewhat complicated, higher education finance experts say.
Homeowners who live just south of the golf club’s southern border fret about the future of the White River bluffs if Highland proceeds with controversial plans to sell 20 acres for residential development.
The 2016 graduating class includes 66 students earning doctorate, masters and bachelors degrees as well as graduate certificates in philanthropic studies.
A new 9,800-square-foot medical office planned as part of the Spring Mill Station development near the southeast corner of 161st Street and Spring Mill Road is expected to include a new primary care office for IU Health Physicians.
Noble Roman’s Inc. sells and services franchises and licenses for non-traditional foodservice operations and stand-alone take-n-bake locations under the trade names “Noble Roman’s Pizza,” “Noble Roman’s Take-N-Bake” and “Tuscano’s Italian Style Subs.”
A former administrator at the Indiana University School of Medicine says he was pressured to resign after complaining about a female administrator he claims sexually harassed him.
Two technology-related companies will spend a total of $3.5 million to expand their Hamilton County operations and create about 125 jobs over the next four years, state officials said May 3. DuraMark Technologies Inc., a digital printer of safety labels and branding decals, plans to spend $3 million to construct a 17,500-square-foot headquarters at 6450 […]
Sports gods don’t fire coaches, and they can’t be rushed in bestowing greatness on players.
Indiana will get its first look this summer at a $3.9 million data system that aims to help the public and state agencies better plan and make decisions about education and jobs. The “Indiana Network of Knowledge”—called INK—aims to merge reams of data from different state agencies to give Hoosiers a better sense of the […]
I can understand a feeling of depression after doing so much work and seeing so little change.
The demand for the mayor to take over the Coke plant situation has raised questions about a long-standing political tradition in the city.
Ten percent of any group contains persons who are unattractive, useless or disruptive, perhaps criminal. Yet dolts, often described as dissenters, have potential value.
Without leaders to execute strategy, manage through dynamic change, and engage your employees, even the best businesses can be relegated to mediocre performance.
A post-mortem for the drop-outs, and some advice for the presumptive nominee.
Through the fund, managed by the Purdue Research Foundation, students pay back a set percentage of their salary over a term of nine years or less.
Yes, most health insurance plans protect against large insurable events. The kicker is that most health insurance plans also cover the equivalent of oil changes.
For the second straight year, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology has admitted a record number of female students.
Deep cuts in Medicare reimbursements and competition from a few huge national chains and walk-in labs are making it tougher for Indianapolis-based AIT and other toxicology labs to compete.
Indianapolis-based Hall Render, one of the nation’s largest law firms specializing in health care, has expanded into the Southeast with an office in Raleigh, North Carolina. The move puts the firm in the home of Research Triangle Park, one of the nation’s largest research and technology clusters, anchored by three universities. It also marks Hall […]