Where are stories about Bobby Fong?
The individual who seemed to get lost in all the hype leading up to the NCAA men’s national championship basketball game is Bobby Fong, president of Butler University.
The individual who seemed to get lost in all the hype leading up to the NCAA men’s national championship basketball game is Bobby Fong, president of Butler University.
Key utility executives and state legislators argue that Indiana’s power should come predominantly from coal and nuclear power.
Discovering value emerged as a TV staple long before the recent economic tsunami.
I like to picture my cast-off clothes in a nice shop like The Toggery.
Third in a month-long series of reviews of restaurants that sound wet—just like spring in Indiana. This week: Slippery Noodle Inn.
As ambitious an arts project as you are likely to find so far this century in central Indiana, IU Opera’s world premiere production of “Vincent” overflowed with stunning design and strong music.
I’ll be darned if Butler didn’t reach the championship game again.
My laptop has been my willing companion when putting numbers through the centrifuge or springboarding me out into cyberspace.
I recently had the opportunity to walk through the exhibit space at the Fire Department Instructor’s Conference at the newly expanded Indiana Convention Center. It gave me a great firsthand look at why we invested $275 million expanding the convention center.
Budget cuts became more painful in the past several years as the national recession drew the fiscal noose tighter on Indiana government income.
We think city officials have made a compelling case for stepping up big to secure the future of one of Indianapolis’ largest employers.
Today, a political leader who proposes a higher appropriation to clean streets would be criticized. If he proposed going to the moon, he would be impeached.
Nothing stirs the imagination like a near-death experience.
The dictionary defines “neighborhood” as “a district where people live.” That certainly defines Indianapolis …
A walk through the streets there showed a pattern of crumbling infrastructure, missing chunks of sidewalks, and boarded-up homes. When I asked a city official for the number of abandoned houses in this neighborhood, he answered, “between 300 and 450."
Teachers simply cannot be made the scapegoats in the education reform debate. This merely distracts from the real issues at hand.
What is especially troubling about this tactic is that it denies us a chance to debate these critical issues. The policies being proposed in Indiana to evaluate and reward teachers would benefit from a robust debate.
This inequality, in which an enormous segment of the population struggles while the fortunate few ride the gravy train, is a world-class recipe for social unrest.
Roads to democracy are always bumpy—and, frankly, I feel pretty good about Egypt.
Hysteria over the government taking away our right to buy inefficient light bulbs has been sweeping through certain segments of the Republican Party.