A&E priority list includes Zoobilation, Pride Fest, more
Also this week, the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra finishes its season…and drops in at the Palladium.
Also this week, the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra finishes its season…and drops in at the Palladium.
The Battery Energy Storage System, or BESS. will be built at the Harding Street Station. The utility received approval for a 10-year tax abatement from the county that will save it more than $3 million on the project.
Those who disregard science shouldn’t be trusted to lead us.
Raju Chinthala, a Carmel resident, is on a mission to get Asian-Americans registered to vote and eventually running for office. He formed the Asian-American Indiana PAC to support candidates from either party.
HHGregg Inc. has tried for four years to reverse sliding sales. That hasn’t worked, and now executives have turned their focus to slashing expenses in a quest to return to profitability next year.
While health insurers in states around the country have proposed large rate increases for the health plans they sell on the Obamacare exchanges, insurers in Indiana are asking for modest increases or even decreases. The bad news is that it appears the rest of the country is just catching up with Indiana’s already-high prices.
The northern Indianapolis suburbs are struggling to improve their doorsteps despite tight budgets, right-of-way acquisition obstacles and fickle public tastes.
The aging downtown home of the Indianapolis Indians continues to draw national attention and earn rave reviews, including a No. 6 ranking on a list of the nation’s best minor-league ballparks.
In one fell swoop, the law firm more than doubled the size of its intellectual property team with the additions it scored from Krieg DeVault. The move could bring as much as $10 million in annual revenue to Taft.
Janeane Garofalo, Kyle Kinane, Doug Benson and Michael Che among Limestone Comedy Festival talent. “Jesus Christ Superstar” and “American Idiot” blast into local theaters.
The deal would resolve a 2011 lawsuit accusing former Indianapolis businessman Tim Durham of using Fair Finance funds to prop up National Lampoon. He is a former CEO of both companies.
Optical Disc Solutions Inc. will close its doors at the end of June, idling nearly 40 workers.
Plus the debut novel for a UIndy student, what’s coming from the Indianapolis Chamber Orchestra, and a new downtown mural.
Dr. Keith March at the IU School of Medicine is almost like a medical superhero, churning out patents at warp speed.
Recent experiments show VR can be an effective “you are there” storytelling technique for journalism.
Central Indiana has been the birthplace of groundbreaking innovation felt nationwide–even worldwide.
It took $394,000 to rank in the top 1 percent of U.S. earners in 2013. And more than 100 of the Indiana contingent in that exclusive club were physicians employed by one of the four major hospital systems that operate in the Indianapolis area.
In the 1920s, Indianapolis was one of the most innovative cities in the nation. But after “the dark tragedy of the roaring twenties,” Indianapolis lost its edginess for decades and only recently has begun to regain it.
What do the Indiana entrepreneurship programs—two of which are nationally known—have to show for their efforts?