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MORRIS: Let’s vote our way out of this mess
Politics only gets worse when people stop participating in the process.
Set pricing helps boost diagnostic network’s growth
When the same MRI at one facility costs $600 and at another costs $2,200, Dr. Robert Gregori would call that a business opportunity.
EDITORIAL: Region’s fate tied to urban core
A conversation is starting about the health of this city’s urban core that everyone in the region should join.
RACE: 10 East Main brings together ingredients for revitalization
Branded as the 10 East Main Street Business District, the still somewhat spotty and edgy 10th Street is coming back to life serving new bohemians and longtime residents.
IU losing journalism dean to Northwestern
Brad Hamm is stepping down as dean of the Indiana University School of Journalism to take the same position at Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism.
Arrests made in $80M Lilly prescription drug heist
Authorities have arrested two Cuban brothers in the 2010 theft of about $80 million in Eli Lilly and Co. prescription drugs from a Connecticut warehouse, a robbery described as one of the biggest pharmaceutical heists in history, the U.S. attorney’s office said Thursday.
Lilly letting U.S. researchers test failed compounds for new uses
More than 20 compounds that Eli Lilly and Co., Pfizer Inc. and AstraZeneca Plc failed to turn into drugs will be tested by U.S.-sponsored scientists in a $20 million program to see if they’ll work against ailments they weren’t aimed at previously.
BENNER: Let’s hope Indiana-Kentucky rivalry won’t be gone long
I root for two teams: Indiana, and whoever’s playing Kentucky.
ALTOM: FAA should bring electronic-device policies up to speed
The public no longer accepts hollow proclamations with the same naïve grace.
After years of ‘pushing water uphill,’ Emmis now nimble
The Indianapolis media company is on track to have less than $75 million in debt by this summer—down from $1.6 billion before it launched the divestiture of its TV stations seven years ago.
NFP of NOTE: Partners In Housing
Partners In Housing assists the homeless and people with special needs by eliminating barriers to safe, affordable housing through the creation of beneficial partnerships.
Broad Ripple floods close restaurant
Most businesses in Broad Ripple quickly recovered from floodwaters that hit the area Tuesday, but restaurant Petite Chou remains closed. Petite Chou owner Martha Hoover said the eatery could be closed for six months. "I think we're looking at this as a 100-percent gut job," Hoover said. “The water came in at such a fast pace, and there was so much water.” The Indianapolis Department of Public Works said two flood gates were wrongly closed in the 6500 block of Westfield Boulevard, which led to flooding after heavy rains.
Teenager gets 20 years for shooting
A teenage boy who shot a man walking on the Monon Trail in June was sentenced Wednesday to 20 years in prison. Devon Moore, who was 16 when the crime happened, was tried as an adult for shooting 58-year-old Gary Bravard. Moore shot Bravard multiple times in the legs after he refused to give Moore and two other teens his money. The victim recovered.
Coroner arrested on alcohol charge
The Hancock County coroner was arrested early Thursday morning, police said, after she drove to a death investigation with a blood alcohol level at twice the legal limit. Tamara VanGundy was charged with operating a vehicle while intoxicated. Police said VanGundy was called to New Palestine late Wednesday night to investigate a possible suicide. When she showed up an hour later, she staggered from her vehicle and was noticeably impaired, officers said. VanGundy was booked into the Hancock County Jail, where she will likely remain until a Friday court appearance.
Seymour packaging plant with 111 workers to close
Exopack LLC plans to close its Seymour facility and terminate 111 employees by July 1, the company said Wednesday in a notice to the state.
Review: IRT’s ‘The Miracle Worker’
The Keller/Sullivan battles have an edge-of-the-seat excitement that would put a WWF fan on seat’s edge.
Baldwin & Lyons posts record first-quarter profit
The auto and trucking fleet insurer reported profit of $11.5 million in the first quarter compared with a loss of $15.2 million in the prior-year period, when company earnings took a beating from earthquakes in Japan and New Zealand.
U.S. applications for unemployment aid drop
The number of people seeking unemployment benefits fell last week by the most in nearly a year. But the four-week average, a less volatile measure, ticked up.
Attorney perplexed by state’s right-to-work filing
An attorney for a union challenging Indiana's new right-to-work law said Wednesday that he's perplexed by the state's court filing opposing his amended complaint in which he argued the law is unconstitutional.