What’s New: Snappening.com
This week, meet Crystal Grave, who left a corporate marketing career to start event-planning resource Snappening.com.
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This week, meet Crystal Grave, who left a corporate marketing career to start event-planning resource Snappening.com.
Fair Finance Co.’s bankruptcy trustee finally has found some deep pockets to go after in his quest to recover money for the small-time Ohio investors who lost more than $200 million when the Tim Durham-led company failed two years ago.
The owners of Holiday World have taken another step toward re-opening an amusement park near Louisville known as Kentucky Kingdom that closed more than two years ago.
The State Labor Department says the company that built the stage ahead of last summer's deadly Indiana State Fair collapse showed "plain indifference" to safety standards.
The Greenwood Redevelopment Commission on Tuesday evening approved an incentives agreement with One Click Ventures LLC, which plans to hire 109 people over the next five years.
Indianapolis-based trucking firm U & D Service Inc. was ordered to cease operations by federal authorities after being declared an “imminent hazard” to public safety.
OHL Solutions Inc. will pay a $1 million fine for shirking its duty to screen for explosives cargo bound for passenger planes at Indianapolis International Airport, U.S. Attorney Joe Hogsett announced Wednesday morning.
The appliance and electronics retailer attributed the decline to lower-than-expected profit margins and higher spending on advertising.
A state report on the state fair stage collapse accuses a stagehands union of five violations in the deadly disaster, according to an attorney who said the union was being made a scapegoat.
The measure is a reaction to Franklin Township's decision last fall to begin charging at least $40 a month per child for bus service.
The leader of the Indiana House Education Committee said Tuesday a proposal specifically allowing public schools to teach creationism alongside evolution in science classes could be unworkable.
Indiana's state tax collections came in slightly below projections for January, the first monthly shortfall since the new state budget year began last July.
The chief executive at Indianapolis-based Republic Airways Holdings Inc. says he's trying to make the airline's money-losing Frontier Airlines unit more like lower-cost rivals Spirit Airlines and Allegiant Travel Co.
The first live stream of the Super Bowl was the most-watched single-game sports event online, according to NBC.
The Indiana Supreme Court on Tuesday decided to take over the legal battle in which Democrats are trying to have convicted Republican Secretary of State Charlie White replaced by their 2010 candidate for that office.
A former Playboy playmate, a well-known rapper and local businessmen are among the defendants in a barrage of lawsuits filed by a bankruptcy trustee trying to collect funds for investors of Fair Finance Co., the defunct Ohio firm led by Tim Durham.
Police are still looking for a suspect in a hit-and-run accident in Indianapolis that left a 22-year-old woman from Brown County in critical condition Saturday night. Tara Sanders was riding a scooter near the intersection of Troy Avenue and Keystone Avenue about 7:15 p.m. when she was struck by a vehicle that left the scene. She remains in Methodist Hospital in critical condition with numerous injuries, including brain damage.
An Indiana student is suing his school for the right to wear the popular "I (heart) boobies" bracelet at school. Sales of the rubber wristbands raise funds for breast cancer research, but a Monticello middle school told an eighth-grade boy that he must remove his bracelet, turn it inside out or face expulsion. The ACLU of Indiana said the bracelets are protected by the First Amendment and are designed specifically to get kids to talk about breast cancer. The ACLU filed the suit on the student’s behalf. A federal judge has already sided with the ACLU on a similar case in Pennsylvania.
Excise police announced Monday that they issued 218 citations in downtown Indianapolis during Super Bowl week. Police said they had relatively few problems with those attending events at the Super Bowl Village, Lucas Oil Stadium and the Indiana Convention Center, considering an estimated 1.1 million people visited the area during the week. Plainclothes officers focused their attention on underage drinking. More than half of the citations, 135, involved illegal possession or consumption of alcohol.
If Colts fans really have Manning's best interests at heart, they should be happy to see him play for another team.