Indy Eleven soccer games to be locally televised this spring
WNDY-TV Channel 23 will broadcast the club’s inaugural campaign. One of its challenges will be to field a team of announcers who can provide authoritative play-by-play.
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WNDY-TV Channel 23 will broadcast the club’s inaugural campaign. One of its challenges will be to field a team of announcers who can provide authoritative play-by-play.
George Rubin, one of the principal architects of Unigov, will retire at the end of the year at age 81. As a legislator, he also created the Indiana Uniform Consumer Credit Code.
Jeremy J. Aguilar plans to take a similar position with another company, the Indianapolis-based retailer announced Thursday.
Gov. Mike Pence’s plan to eliminate the tax on business equipment would mean significantly higher taxes for other property owners if the state took no specific action to protect them, according to a new analysis.
The theater on the city’s near-east side was built in 1927 but has been vacant since 1992. The building’s supporters hope the new roof is the first step in revitalizing what was once the neighborhood’s crown jewel.
Under the proposal, taxpayers benefiting from the federal adoption credit would be able to claim an additional credit on their state return.
Mailing a letter is about to get a little more expensive—from 46 to 49 cents per stamp. And for businesses, rates for bulk mail, periodicals and package service will rise 6 percent.
Between Christmas and New Year’s Day is when many families raid the game closet. If all you’ve got are Monopoly and Scrabble, consider picking up one of these.
The complaint charges the company and executives with misrepresenting the strength of the Indy-based firm’s business model, financial performance and future prospects.
Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller has warned residents hit by rampaging floods to beware of scam artists. Zoeller said Monday that con artists often prey on home owners in heavily damaged areas, promising quick repairs to flooded structures. Zoeller recommended that home owners get written contracts before approving any work, and to never pay more than a third of project costs up front.
A central Indiana resident who tried to save his wife from a burning home on Thursday has died. Eugene Hollers, 58, suffered burns on 85 percent of his body in the fire that claimed his Spiceland home. Hollers had tried to save his wife, Rita, from the blaze before neighbors held him back. Rita perished in the fire. Eugene was taken to Eskenazi Hospital in Indianapolis, where he died on Monday.
Indianapolis police are investigating a fatal stabbing at a motel on the city’s near-northwest side on Monday night. At 10:30 p.m., officers were dispatched to the Gateway Motel at 1740 Lafayette Road, where they found a man who had been stabbed at least once. The man was transported to Eskenazi Hospital and subsequently pronounced dead.
Other performers may dip a (mistle)toe into outrageous waters around holiday time, but I’ve seen none offer as consistently outrageously entertaining an X-mas program as the Leisure Kings.
Pence says international trade is vital to Indiana’s economic growth and fiscal prosperity. In 2012, Indiana exported $34.4 billion to countries around the world.
Compared with last December, shoppers are more choosy this year and holding back on spending at brick-and-mortar locations. But even online sales are running below their expected growth rate.
The deadline to enroll in plans that begin Jan. 1 now is midnight Tuesday for most of the U.S. On Monday, healthcare.gov fielded nearly 50,000 simultaneous visitors, triggering a queuing system.
There are big things in the wings for Heartland Truly Moving Pictures, which this month elevated COO Stuart Lowry from supporting player to headliner. Coming attractions include new sponsor deals, expanded programming and, potentially, a bigger staff.
The National Weather Service has extended flood warnings for 30 counties across central and southern Indiana until 8 p.m. Monday. Those areas have been hit with 3 to 7 inches of rain since Friday. On Monday, continuously rising water levels prompted early morning voluntary evacuations in parts of Indianapolis, according to the head of the Indianapolis Department of Homeland Security. By 5 a.m., Fall Creek had risen to its third-highest level in recorded history, and swamped a section of Fall Creek Parkway south of the Indiana State Fairgrounds.