Attendance up for Indiana classic-car auction
Organizers of a long-running classic car auction in northeastern Indiana point to improved attendance and sales as signs that they've put behind the financial troubles of its former owner.
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Organizers of a long-running classic car auction in northeastern Indiana point to improved attendance and sales as signs that they've put behind the financial troubles of its former owner.
An affiliate of the Steak n Shake restaurant chain has agreed to pay $3.8 million to acquire downtown's Ober Building from the Capital Improvement Board of Marion County. The restaurant chain likely will move its headquarters to the 1910 building.
An Indiana University study has found that what people studied in college had a direct effect on their chances of employment during the Great Recession.
The Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra’s management and musicians failed to reach a new contract before their current deal expired Sunday night, and the parties aren’t expected to meet again until mid-September.
Republican gubernatorial candidate Mike Pence says the iron fist of the federal government, with its freedom-crushing mandates, has no place in Indiana, except for when the government is ordering drivers to put Hoosier corn in their cars.
Two foreign companies—one based in Australia, the other in the United Kingdom—are among four firms competing for a chance to become the first private manager of Indiana’s lottery.
Indiana school principals will begin evaluating all teachers this year under a 2011 law that ties teacher performance to merit pay. But the new responsibilities are sparking worries that administrators will be stretched too thin.
A federal judge on Friday gave Emmis Communications Corp. the green light to proceed with a shareholder vote that could wipe out $34 million in unpaid preferred shareholder dividends.
A former concrete plant in Greenwood faces the wrecking ball to make room for a wider road. The city plans to raze the former Prairie Materials concrete plant so it can turn Worthsville Road into a major boulevard that can handle traffic from a planned Interstate 65 exit.
Union representatives for the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra’s musicians said Friday that management intends to call off the first two weeks of the season if the performers do not accept the current contract proposal by Sept. 7.
A search was underway Friday morning after a 3-foot python escaped its cage at Fishers Junior High School. The snake, named Rocky, was kept in a seventh-grade science classroom and is still believed to be in the room. Officials say the python does not have fangs, is not venomous, is very lethargic and was raised by a family with children. Animal control crews arrived to the school Friday morning to search for the missing snake.
Indianapolis detectives are investigating a shooting death on the city's west side Thursday night. A 26-year-old man suffering from a gunshot wound died at the scene in the La Esmeralda apartment complex in the 3600 block of Green Ash Court just after 10 p.m. Police are looking for witnesses and tips.
A homeowner says he shot and wounded a man who had broken into his family's home Friday morning near Decatur Central High School on the southwest side of Indianapolis. Wallace Turner said he, his wife and their 5-year-old daughter were sleeping when the intruder kicked open their home’s back door Friday about 1:45 a.m. Turner says he confronted the man and shot him in the leg. The intruder collapsed behind the house and was taken to the hospital in good condition. Police are investigating to see if the man was responsible for several other home break-ins in the neighborhood earlier in the night.
Upcoming event offers a chance to see and hear from some of Central Indiana’s top performing arts groups.
Indianapolis-based drugmaker Eli Lilly and Co. said Thursday its general counsel, Robert Armitage, will retire at the end of the year and be replaced by deputy general counsel Michael Harrington.
CMG Worldwide, an intellectual property licensing firm in Fishers, has lost a federal court appeal related to ownership of iconic images of Marilyn Monroe.
Janssen Pharmaceuticals Inc. and parent company Johnson & Johnson on Thursday announced a $181 million settlement with 36 states, including Indiana, and the District of Columbia over charges of marketing anti-psychotic drugs for non-approved uses.