Former mayor cleared in alleged domestic dispute
Former Indianapolis Mayor Steve Goldsmith has been cleared of wrongdoing in the case involving his arrest following a domestic dispute call to Washington, D.C., police last summer.
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Former Indianapolis Mayor Steve Goldsmith has been cleared of wrongdoing in the case involving his arrest following a domestic dispute call to Washington, D.C., police last summer.
In a filing earlier this month, the Midwest Independent Transmission System Operator Inc. told federal regulators that a mechanical failure in September contaminated the data center.
For-profit college operators such as Carmel-based ITT Educational Services Inc.would lose a financial incentive to enroll soldiers and veterans under U.S. Senate and House bills aimed at curbing what sponsors call aggressive marketing of subpar programs.
A bill that would require Indiana's school boards to disclose all financial details of proposed superintendent contracts before voting on them drew only positive comments during a public hearing before a legislative panel.
Banks took back more U.S. homes in January than in the previous month, the latest sign that foreclosures are accelerating after slowing sharply last year. Foreclosures were up 69 percent in Indiana compared to January 2011.
Indiana is battling its second measles outbreak in two years, even though its vaccination rate exceeds the national average. Health officials say the cases, traced to a Super Bowl event, illustrate just how vulnerable the public is to exposure from sources at home and abroad.
A legislative committee has endorsed a bill that would prohibit Indiana's public school districts from charging fees for school bus service.
The star of “Song and Dance,” “A Little Night Music” and more didn’t need her Broadway best to shine.
Over objections from Mayor Greg Ballard, the Indianapolis Airport Authority and Indy Park Ride & Fly, the city’s Metropolitan Development Commission gave the green light to a 31-acre, 3,700-spot parking lot in the Ameriplex development on the city’s west side.
As we work to rebuild our broken district, we must aim not for perfection, but for progress.
Frustration should not drive change for its own sake when a competing bedrock principle is in jeopardy.
The 45-year-old Callista has created an entirely new model for a spouse.
The problems they created so discredited Progressives that they started calling themselves “liberals.”
Something has clearly gone very wrong with modern U.S. conservatism.
The right to pursue happiness has been perverted into a government-backed entitlement to happiness.
Facts are facts and the laws of physics cannot be repealed.
If socialism wasn’t good, we argued lamely, then wealth at least was bad—or not as fair or as kind as government could make it.
The only way to enforce the law if a public official ignores a public access counselor’s opinion in your favor is to sue.
Those 76 million baby boomers born between 1946 and 1964 are flooding onto the rolls at a rate of 10,000 each day.
Could there be new collusion in the appraisal network?