Q&A: ‘Mad Dog’ enjoying greener pastures with Indianapolis Colts
Jimmy Matis wasn’t sure what he would do when he lost his job after 24 years at Q95, but in this life, he says, “you just have to understand that you constantly have to learn.”
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Jimmy Matis wasn’t sure what he would do when he lost his job after 24 years at Q95, but in this life, he says, “you just have to understand that you constantly have to learn.”
The athletic footwear and clothing company said Thursday that its fiscal fourth-quarter earnings dropped 18 percent due to lackluster sales at stores open at least a year.
Republican pundit Mary Matalin is among several celebrities lobbying Indiana lawmakers to oppose a bill banning filming at farms and factories.
Governor, along with Lt. Gov. Ellspermann and ag director Gina Sheets, hopes to discuss potential for growth.
An Indiana lawmaker who opposes a 30-year contract with the developers of a proposed $2.8 billion coal-gasification plant told a House committee Wednesday that the surge in U.S. shale gas production has driven down natural gas prices, leaving synthetic gas projects unfeasible.
The Indiana Senate Education Committee is signing off on a limited expansion of school vouchers one day after the state's highest court deemed vouchers constitutional.
Economy, high cost of construction cited as factors.
In Kokomo, Chrysler plants rise with the resurgent automaker, while a GM plant across the highway hasn’t been so fortunate.
This week, win tickets to hear Stravinsky’s groundbreaking piece.
A wide range of offerings, from “American Idiot” to Easter at the Zoo, make the recommended list.
Toyota Motor Corp. is revamping the Highlander SUV, turning the car-based crossover into a more wagon-like model as the automaker seeks to keep its U.S. sales rising for a third consecutive year.
A water-main break is causing big problems at Ball State University in Muncie. Four major buildings, including the administration building, are expected to be without water for the rest of the day while repairs are being made. Offices will remain open and classes will continue as scheduled, but the bathrooms in the buildings will be closed.
An Indianapolis mother was arrested on a charge of neglect of a dependent Tuesday night after neighbors saw her 3-year-old son wandering alone along a street on the southwest side. Police were called to the 4600 block of West Troy Avenue after two women found the boy near their apartment building. The boy was “wet and trembling” and wore no shoes or coat, the report said. Roial Harris said she left her son asleep while she went to the Laundromat. The child was placed in the custody of Harris’ parents.
A man said he believes he passed out before crashing his pickup truck through the side of a home near 146th Street and Allisonville Road in Fishers. Jerry Mooneyhan, 57, was traveling eastbound on 146th Street at about 4 a.m. Wednesday when he became dizzy and failed to complete the turn before ramming into a bedroom in the house. The only person in the home at the time was sleeping in another bedroom. The resident and Mooneyhan were uninjured.
A Carmel-based developer plans to break ground soon on a $17 million senior-living community south of Keystone at the Crossing dubbed Traditions at Solana.
While under no obligation to write about their experiences at the American Theatre Critics Association conference in Indianapolis last week, scribes from around the country can’t help but offer opinions.
Of the 44 former men’s basketball coaches given so-called “show-cause” orders since 2000—such as IU’s Kelvin Sampson—at least 25 found other basketball jobs, usually after the orders expired.
It seems no matter how much Indianapolis postures itself as a major-league city, there are those who will never consider it anything more than a few high-rises amid a sea of cornfields tended to by a bunch of hayseeds.
James Atterholt was first named utility chief in 2010 to replace David Lott Hardy, who was fired by Gov. Mitch Daniels amid an ethics probe involving Duke Energy Corp.
Valuations continue to head north despite last summer’s drought, and farm managers and rural appraisers expect the trend to continue in the short term.