2017 Forty Under 40: Cole Varga
Under Cole Varga’s watch, Exodus moved to new offices, saw the greatest number of refugee arrivals in its 35-year history (947 individuals), and waged a high-profile battle with former Gov. Mike Pence.
Under Cole Varga’s watch, Exodus moved to new offices, saw the greatest number of refugee arrivals in its 35-year history (947 individuals), and waged a high-profile battle with former Gov. Mike Pence.
With a varied background in sports and politics, Nickolas Williams is in the midst of a $2.5 billion campaign to make a difference at IU.
Leading teams in the Middle East, Europe, South America and East Asia, Jeffrey Wilson has risen through the ranks at Eli Lilly and Co. while also serving as board president for a vital United Way agency.
Even though Max Schumacher’s role with the team has diminished, he still has strong opinions about how the team should be run. Don’t expect a corporate name on Victory Field anytime soon.
The two owners operated six eateries in central Indiana, including one in Indianapolis, and have agreed to pay nearly $143,000 in restitution to the state Department of Revenue.
Bill Garrett endured racial prejudice on the way to the 1947 state basketball championship.
Robert Riesbeck, appointed to the top job last year, says growth opportunities in appliances and furniture are sufficient to offset declines in the company's battered consumer electronics product line.
For 30 of the commission’s 50 years of existence, David Baker has been a powerful but low-profile force in saving some of the city’s oldest structures from demolition.
The fast-growing tech firm is joining several companies that have signed up for space in a short-term-leasing operation not far from Lucas Oil Stadium.
Anthem filed a notice of appeal on Thursday after a federal judge blocked its $48 billion deal to buy Cigna Corp.
Indianapolis-based Anthem responded almost immediately Tuesday by saying Cigna does not have the right to cancel the deal.
Revenue in the fourth quarter dropped 11 percent from the same period of 2015, marking the biggest year-over-year decline in the company’s 22-year history.
Fans of the Indianapolis Indians this year will notice a massive new scoreboard, improved sound system and spiffier concession stands. Changes to seating are being considered for 2018 or 2019.
Indianapolis-based HHGregg Inc. is turning to investment banks “to pursue a range of potential strategic and financial transactions” as the struggling appliances and electronics retailer battles sinking sales.
Baldwin & Lyon’s said gross premiums written during the fourth quarter totaled a record $104.9 million, 7.2 percent higher than the fourth quarter of 2015.
Changes in trade policy would reverberate across Indiana, given its status in a new Brookings Institution study as the most export-dependent state in the country.
Several projects are in the works—a push led mainly by local developer Onyx+East, which plans to begin construction this year on nearly 150 units, 90 of which are in or near downtown.
Local hoteliers and hospitality officials are bracing for a soft 2018. And some in the industry are pointing to the fallout from a controversial 2015 law as the culprit responsible for an expected one-year downturn.
Father-and-son duo Jim and Sean Hallett launched a minor-league hockey team—the Indy Fuel—in 2013, but the enterprise has expanded far beyond just an ECHL franchise.
Since 2012, Indianapolis not-for-profits have been participating in their own version of the annual NCAA college basketball tournament and have raised more than $1.5 million.