BICENTENNIAL: Four who made a difference: Travel
Christel DeHaan, Anton J. “Tony” Hulman Jr., Melvin Simon and Thomas Taggart made significant contributions to the Indianapolis travel industry.
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Christel DeHaan, Anton J. “Tony” Hulman Jr., Melvin Simon and Thomas Taggart made significant contributions to the Indianapolis travel industry.
The city became center for food and huge gatherings.
Robert C. Hunt, Hugh J. McGowan, Adolph Scherrer, Bernard Vonnegut made significant contributions to construction, design and engineering in Indianapolis.
The built environment has been shaped by iconic people, structures.
William H. Block, Michael G. Browning, Phillip R. Duke and Otto N. Frenzel made significant contributions in Indianapolis commercial real estate.
Transportation, business growth propelled new buildings and renewal.
A strong dollar and weaker global growth caused exports to slump to the lowest level in three years, one reason why American manufacturers are struggling.
Frontier Airlines Inc.—a no-frills carrier that was sold off by Indianapolis-based Republic Airways Holdings Inc. two years ago is considering starting a formal IPO process as early as next year.
The U.S. economy generated another month of solid hiring in November, making it even more likely that the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates from record lows this month.
Eli Lilly said Friday that it decided to stop developing the insulin peglispro after learning that it would take more time and cost more than expected to understand a significant side effect.
This summer, Hamilton was the first Indiana county to begin electronic filing of court cases. All counties are preparing for the transition, which will cost the state $5 million annually.
The annual gaming convention, considered the largest of its kind, attracted 61,423 individuals for 197,695 visits in August, marking its sixth straight year of growth.
Prosecutors are asking a judge to sentence the former director of an Indianapolis-based foundation created by longtime Subway spokesman Jared Fogle to 35 years in prison followed by a lifetime of supervised release.
Gov. Mike Pence’s expanded version of the Healthy Indiana Plan looked secure after winning approval from the Obama administration in January. But now it faces threats from both liberals and conservatives.
Lots of investors are betting health insurance giants Anthem Inc. and Cigna Corp. won’t ever make it to the altar—an outlook driven by concerns antitrust regulators or other obstacles will prevent consummating the $45 billion deal.
Out-of-town technology companies are putting down roots here and growing fast. They’re looking to tap into relatively fresh talent pools and to capitalize on what cities like Indianapolis don’t have—a high cost of doing business and intense employee poaching.
The Performance Racing Industry Show has grown into one of the biggest international draws of any trade show or convention held in Indianapolis.
The 48-story Chase Tower, the state’s tallest office building, has more vacant space than it has had in decades. But increasing speculation in the local office market that Salesforce.com will take a big chunk of space there could mean it is poised for a turnaround.
Dozens of companies across central Indiana are using programs aimed at middle- and high-school students to develop a pool of talented kids who are interested in science, technology, engineering and math to fill the growing number of jobs for which such skills are necessary.