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Indianapolis Woman Magazine was started as a monthly by C. E. Publishing in September 1984. [2] The founding publishers were Connie Rosenthal and Linda Eder. [2] It carried articles on shopping, cooking and decorating targeting women in Indianapolis. [2] The magazine was acquired by the Weiss Communications Inc. in 1994. [3]
The Woman's Improvement Club of Indianapolis, Indiana, was formed in 1903 by Lillian Thomas Fox, Beulah Wright Porter, and other prominent African American women as a small literary group to improve their education, but it was especially active and best known for its pioneering efforts to provide facilities to care for the city's African American tuberculosis patients from 1905 to the mid-1930s.
Pages in category "Non-profit organizations based in Indianapolis" The following 67 pages are in this category, out of 67 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
McKinsey's October 2022 Women in the Workplace report found that women leaders are switching jobs at the highest rates ever. As for why women are jumping ship, it's because they "are demanding more...
However, just 58% of women surveyed say their employer allows flexible work hours, 50% say their company offers health and wellness benefit programs, and only 41% report the same for mental health ...
As women are projected to control a third of total U.S. household financial assets — more than $10 trillion — over the next decade, significant sums of money are expected to change hands, ...
The two-and-one-half-story "T"-plan building was originally constructed in 1897 as a private dwelling for John and Sarah Minor; however, since 1927 it has served as the headquarters of the Indiana State Federation of Colored Women's Clubs, a nonprofit group of African American women. The Indiana federation was formally organized on April 27 ...
The group laid the cornerstone for the original Propylaeum building at 17 East North Street, between Meridian and Pennsylvania Streets, on May 8, 1890; it was dedicated on January 27, 1891. [8] The Indianapolis Propylaeum was among the first of its kind in the United States to be "financed entirely by women stockholders."