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Indiana Live to be renamed Indiana Grand Casino

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Shelbyville's Indiana Live Casino is getting a new name—Indiana Grand Casino—now that the venue has parted ways with a management company from which it licensed the name.

The move is the latest fallout from the racino's legal tangle with Maryland-based Cordish Cos., which managed the venue from its opening in 2008 until 2010. Cordish claims in a lawsuit that it was the subject of a smear campaign that cast the company as incompetent in its role at Indiana Live.

"Other than the new casino name, guests won’t notice any other changes as a result of the name change,” said Tom Dingman, Indiana Live's general manager.

The name change could be temporary because the racino is in bankruptcy, and is considering offers from suitors, including Centaur, owner of Hoosier Park in Anderson.

 

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  • ATM Machines and Cashiers
    Today I went to the casino and after playing slot machines I tried to withdraw cash from the ATM machine. The machines were down but I didn't know it until I tried several machines. I went to the cashier cage and a cashier looked at me and said if you are trying to use your card the machines are down and I can't help you. Then she just turnd and walked away. I felt she was rude and waited to see if I wanted any other information. I simply went home after waiting 30 minutes watching to see if they were going to come up. Personally I felt things could have been handled better but with new owners I guess it doesn't matter if they lose a guest.
  • E-Mail
    can't in to mail account,

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  1. Doug Henning!

  2. These guy were thugs — they grew up in freaking Haughville! Smh, sigh. If the mayor needs/wants "quality" Black Hoosiers who are NOT corrupt, give me a call — I know plenty. Land bank info here - http://www.kubepharm.com/indylandbank/IndyLandBank.html

  3. Magician and illusionist!

  4. The basic idea of nice apartments with parking and retail is a good one, but this design seems overwhelmingly big/tall for Broad Ripple. The size could be disguised a bit with lots of big trees/landscaping, but the complex is too massive to blend in easily. That section of canal between College and Westfield will also need to be upgraded on both sides. Nice apartments facing onto a nice promenade with shade trees/plantings could bring together the canal towpath/Monon recreation, the outdoor seating at existing restaurants, and this project into something that upgrades the whole area. A plan for the whole stretch makes more sense than facing nice new housing onto what looks like a ditch. Is there a plan? Does the public have input? Who pays? The apartment idea seems to be reasonable, but Whole Foods is not a good idea for appropriate retail. Besides the store being physically too big, there are already Fresh Market at 54xCollege and Whole Foods in Nora for fancy groceries. Good Earth and Kroger are within walking distance of the Shell site. There are at least 7 grocery stores within a safe bike ride. Whole Foods would add nothing but traffic congestion. This design is on the right track, but there needs to be more work done to ensure that it blends in with and enhances the existing community. A project that large will set a tone for that whole part of town. It could be a real asset, but only if done right.

  5. I did not move to Zionsville to live in Carmel. This and the subsequent developments to follow will ensure a vanilla uniformity of strip malls and apartment buildings as we seek to bring our town down to the least common denominator. We were warned before recent elections that pro-development council members would make sure their friends (landowners and developers) would be able to make their millions off of the exploitation of Zionsville. Why in God's name would we sell out the best preserved small town in the State of Indiana?

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