Officials urge Indiana Planned Parenthood to split up
Indiana officials contend the state's Planned Parenthood chapter could end a fierce legal dispute over abortion funding by simply separating its abortion business from other services.
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Indiana officials contend the state's Planned Parenthood chapter could end a fierce legal dispute over abortion funding by simply separating its abortion business from other services.
Sen. Luke Kenley, R-Noblesville, plans to ask his Statehouse colleagues Thursday to help him lobby Congress for the right to tax online sales.
A 2010 ethics scandal involving the former chief legal counsel for the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission has come back to bite the state’s biggest electric utility.
Designation to east-side project would go beyond building certification.
The Holy Grail of energy efficiency has yet to arrive, but pieces are falling into place.
Holder’s Department sees no evil, hears no evil and speaks no evil—if the result is the election of black Democrats.
CBRE Inc. accuses the local hospital system of cheating it out of consulting fees that could top seven figures related to several building projects.
It’s harder than ever to see what, if anything, financiers are doing to earn that money.
All I could imagine was Steve Martin as Dr. Orin Scrivello, the sadistic (yet insanely funny) dentist in the movie “The Little House of Horrors.”
Anonymity on creates challenges, but it also creates opportunities for the marginalized, the rebellious and the tremulous to speak their minds.
Try competing with someone who is giving away a product that the law requires you to buy.
This will be the new policy battle extraordinaire: how to look objectively at the growing stack of research that marriage does, in face, matter.
“Have a blessed day” suggests that the caller had it within his power to cause a blessing to be bestowed upon himself.
For the members of this majority, property interests may rise to the level of “rights” but never absolutes.
I find myself (supporter of the two-party system that I am) a bit encouraged by the take-to-the streets mentality of these movements.
We find that Barack Obama and possibly Hillary Clinton did not actually qualify for the 2008 presidential primary.
They are dedicated. They are passionate. And most importantly, they are involved.
There is a brand of Republican Party philosophy that fits quite nicely with the demands of a big city.
Most mayoral candidates will expand on how their No. 1 priority is jobs. They mean jobs in their city. This is misguided.