Claire Fiddian-Green: Despite tumultuous times, there’s plenty of good news
One thing I can control is how I balance my consumption of positive and negative information and choose to approach life as a result.
One thing I can control is how I balance my consumption of positive and negative information and choose to approach life as a result.
Indiana’s strengths, if harnessed, could be a key to taking on these challenges and enabling the U.S. nuclear industry to leapfrog.
A study by Resultant last year looking into the 624 alumni showed that Orr is a win for all stakeholders.
The university presidents agreed that retaining students in Indiana requires a collaborative effort by universities and employers to channel students into enticing and promising jobs.
Arizona’s Scottsdale is leaning in to the very thing that might deter summer vacationers, while adapting events to high temperatures.
The Carmel City Council on Monday night voted 8-0 to remove rules instituted two years ago that required The GOAT to have earlier closing times, no outdoor speakers and a neighborhood hotline.
The funding is in addition to the $700 million the company will receive through an incentive agreement with the Indiana Economic Development Corp.—one of the the largest economic development deals in Indiana history.
MBX is focused on the discovery and development of novel precision peptide therapies for the treatment of endocrine and metabolic disorders, such as hypoparathyroidism, post-bariatric hypoglycemia and obesity.
Meanwhile, health care systems continue to send thousands of Hoosiers to court over unpaid sums as small as $250.
The five-year implementation grants range from $12.1 million to $32 million each, with DePauw University in Greencastle landing the largest grant.
According to The Wall Street Journal, the latter category was almost nonexistent four years ago (before the SEC’s new rules) but has exploded in popularity, taking in $31 billion of new investor money over the past 12 months and bringing total assets to $120 billion.
Indiana’s economic development conversations are becoming increasingly centered on a high-tech manufacturing industry in which few current Hoosier workers have experience: semiconductors.
Information is the key to a confident and successful negotiation for both sides, experts say.
A Cox Automotive report finds that car repossessions nationwide are up 23% over last year and 14% compared with the first half of 2019.
With the tightening of spending by companies and increased private-equity scrutiny around how budgets are spent, I believe a gap is widening between business development professionals who understand this information and those who don’t.
The spotlight is turning to Indianapolis-based Eli Lilly and Co. as the next possible member of the so-called “Trillion-Dollar Club,” based on the drugmaker’s climbing stock price and swelling demand for its treatments for diabetes, obesity and other diseases.
We look forward to learning more about Mike Braun, Jennifer McCormick and Donald Rainwater in the coming weeks—particularly about where they stand on issues important to Hoosiers.
A key part of our student-success pillar is our commitment to ensuring graduates are ready for the 21st century, signaled by our new requirement for annual experiential learning opportunities like a common first-year seminar, a final-year capstone, internships, undergraduate research or study abroad.
An intensive, eight-week training program is devoted to the understanding of semiconductors, the crystalline solids that conduct electricity and power computer microchips.
President Joe Biden delivered a somber, reflective speech from the Oval Office on Wednesday evening in his first remarks to the nation since his monumental decision to end both his reelection campaign and political career.