BENNER: Will Pacers be reborn or say a long goodbye?
Winning will not, as some have suggested, cure all, because the NBA business model is so horribly awry.
Winning will not, as some have suggested, cure all, because the NBA business model is so horribly awry.
Cable giant Comcast has fanned a typical smoldering Internet grumble-fest into a major screaming match, complete with a lawsuit
and cries for federal intervention. The outcome may affect how much it costs you and me to do business across the ’Net.
At some point, fuel cells may answer the hype they’ve lived under the last 15 years.
The stimulus and array of bailouts have thus far done little to boost the economy. Neither is there good evidence they kept
things from getting worse.
Conseco Fieldhouse does not belong to the Pacers, but to the city. And we need the Indiana Pacers.
There is still a lot of ground to cover before the sun sets on the year.
But the time will go by quickly.
I just came across [Bill Benner’s] touching June 14 article, and am excited to point out to you John Wooden’s
article, “The Great Scorer,” in the July/August issue of Poetry magazine.
I want to thank you for your crisis tips in [Bruce Hetrick’s June 28 column]. You not only provided thoughtful commentary,
you helped me win an argument with the hubby.
Good [column by Mickey Maurer in the July 12 issue]. I agree with you that the right people make all the difference
in the world.
I decided
to read [Bill Benner’s June 28 column]—see, whenever there is soccer involved, my blood runs faster, my pulse gallops and my
mind expands beyond reality.
I thought your [July 5] article on Amos Brown was very well-done.
I just wanted to say “well done” regarding your [July 5] article [on bond swaps]. The subject of your report
has been a topic near and dear to my heart for about two years.
Consider these alarming statistics: More than 6,700 Marion County students drop out of school every single year. Dropouts
earn $9,200 less per year than high school graduates, and earn $1 million less over a lifetime than college graduates.
Baseball doc and drama from Finland among strongest offerings.
Never in a single business class was I informed of the most important factor in making a sound business investment decision
— people.
The new edition of The Red Eye is only a short designated-driver ride from most Broad Ripple night spots.
Throughout our 234 years, each wave of immigrants feared the one arriving before it.
The drive to make central Indiana a leader in the use of electric vehicles is smart—regardless of where the money comes
from.
Soccer is pure sport, in the best and most meaningful sense of the word.
Our state needs to learn how to effectively engage with the emerging economies of the 21st century in order to be successful.