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Indiana fair lawsuits won’t go to trial until 2014
A group of lawsuits filed over last summer's deadly Indiana State Fair stage collapse likely won't go to trial for nearly two years.
Thieves hit dozens of storage units
Thieves broke into at least 65 units at Community Storage in the 2900 block of South Lynhurst Drive on the southeast side of Indianapolis between Friday and Monday morning, taking thousands of dollars of items. Police said a Community Storage employee showed up for work Tuesday and noticed that padlocks had been cut off the doors of units. Dozens of people had property stolen, including tools, electronic equipment, appliances and clothing. Police are studying security camera footage and the entry codes used over the weekend to find possible leads.
Boy, 13, arrested after fatal crash
Indianapolis police say a speeding sport-utility vehicle that flipped several times on a far east-side street Tuesday evening was driven by a 13-year-old boy. An adult cousin riding with him was killed. The SUV went out of control after going too fast into a curve. Juan Carrillo, 26, of Indianapolis, was ejected and died at a hospital. Police arrested the boy on several preliminary charges, including criminal recklessness.
Smoking-ban lawsuits face long odds, legal expert says
A constitutional law professor at the Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law in Indianapolis said he doubts 10 bar owners have a chance fighting the city’s smoking ban in court. The ban goes into effect Friday.
What’s New: Ready the Nest
NICU nurse Becky Drummy’s maternity concierge service helps new parents handle the arrival of their little life changers.
STOSSEL: Competition is the best regulator for business
As long as there is open competition, honesty pretty much takes care of itself.
COLLINS: Mixing summer vacation and the debt debate
Romney said he would extinguish the blaze with his spending and tax-cutting plan.
BLOW: ‘Metrosexual black Abe Lincoln’ label misleads
The proposal was racially charged, and its authors knew it.
DOUTHAT: ‘Julia’ is Obama’s subsidized everywoman
She seems to have no meaningful relationships apart from her bond with the Obama White House.
KRUGMAN: Coming fairly soon to Europe: apocalypse
Italy and, in particular, Spain must be offered hope.
BROOKS: Why citizens demand something for nothing
The principles that guide the budget introduced by U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan provide a good framework.
SOWELL: The lies that politicians tell are not so sweet
Inflation is a quiet lie, by which a government can keep its promises on paper.
WOUDENBERG: Rethinking gambling taxes as competition rises
We need to break that dependence so that our legislators are free to serve Hoosiers.
SHELLA: Some take aways from the primary elections
The race was [McIntosh’s] to lose and he found a way.
MEREDITH: Valuable teaching time drained by unnecessary testing
Used properly, better standardized testing can help tell us whether standards-based reforms are working.
HARRIS: Tests should be a priority, but not at expense of other skills
Standardized tests are a vital instrument for determining whether schools are carrying out their central mission.
EARLY: The mole hill that’s tripping many a politician
White didn’t understand that town council seats are more important than congressional seats.
Conexus: State growth will slow without more infrastructure investments
Nearly all of the $3.8 billion the state received from leasing its toll road is spent or committed, and Conexus Indiana says roads and bridges are crumbling again. How does the group, which focuses on manufacturing and logistics, recommend paying for infrastructure improvements? In effect, by raising taxes.