Broad Ripple buildings slated for office conversion
Kyle Robinson and Drew Loftus are in the process of buying and rezoning a trio of vacant, connected buildings at 6334 Westfield Blvd., where the Monon Trail crosses the canal.
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Kyle Robinson and Drew Loftus are in the process of buying and rezoning a trio of vacant, connected buildings at 6334 Westfield Blvd., where the Monon Trail crosses the canal.
The Indiana Department of Environmental Management is tracking about 2,100 sites with leaking tanks, many of which contain gasoline and diesel fuel that can damage soil and contaminate groundwater.
A 9-year-old girl was injured after a truck drove through an Indianapolis home near West 38th Street and Georgetown Road early Sunday morning. Homeowner Jamie Cutler woke up about 3:15 a.m. when the truck crashed into her home in the 3600 block of Beasley Drive, pushing the couch her daughter was sleeping on through a bedroom wall. Her daughter escaped injury, but Cutler’s 9-year-old niece was found under a pile of debris. The girl was taken to Riley Hospital for Children in stable condition. The driver of the truck, Gonzalo Cruz-Cruz, 23, of Indianapolis fled the scene on foot. He was arrested a short time later on charges of drinking while driving and leaving the scene of a crash causing injury. Damage to the home was estimated at $30,000.
Bloomington police arrested 21-year-old James Finney Monday morning in connection with the fatal shooting of a pizza delivery man. Adam Sarnecki, 22, was shot just after midnight Nov. 4 outside the Pizza X store by a man he said was attempting to break into a car. Sarnecki was able to provide a description of the suspect before he was taken to the hospital, where he died after surgery. Finney was booked into the Monroe County Jail on preliminary charges of murder.
A jogger found a body in a ditch Sunday afternoon in Shelby County, police say. According to officers, a person was jogging about three miles from Indiana Live Casino on 700 North about 4:30 p.m. when the body was discovered. Detectives did not release information about the body, including gender or an estimated age.
The fate of mayoral and City-County Council candidates in Tuesday’s election is likely to come down to turnout in a few key districts, including Center Township and southern Marion County.
A building at 4701 Rockville Road, owned by local businessman Thomas Godby, is the target of a $2 million foreclosure suit filed by Old National Bank. The building’s tenants include Tony Stewart Racing Enterprises and Sara Fisher Racing LLC.
Farm-state lawmakers are moving to create a whole new subsidy that would protect farmers when their revenue drops — an unprecedented program that critics say could pay billions of dollars to farmers now enjoying record-high crop prices.
Roche Diagnostics will partner with a San Diego firm to incorporate its continuous glucose monitoring sensor with a wireless handheld device Roche is developing to help diabetics test their blood sugar and track their glucose levels throughout the day.
The plant is targeting far-off customers while it waits for the Midwestern economy to rebound.
The "unbranding" of the Indiana candidates is a clear political strategy as more voters tend to shed their party affiliation and identify themselves as independents.
The new head of the Indiana Economic Development Corp. says the agency is turning its focus to smaller companies and getting them to relocate to the state so they can build their roots.
Hotel operators in Kokomo and Muncie are among those who’ve seen signs the game in Indianapolis will improve their business.
Dozens marched from the Statehouse to Monument Circle encouraging people to shift their money to credit unions.
New eligibility requirements are designed to stem costs that have outstripped state’s ability to pay.
It’s the first verdict in a Zyprexa case since litigation over the antipsychotic drug, the drugmaker’s top seller, began more than eight years ago.
Dr. James M. Williams has been appointed vice president of medical affairs at Westview Medical Campus, an affiliate of Indianapolis-based Community Health Network. Williams, a family practice physician, did his medical training at the Chicago College of Osteopathic Medicine.
Indianapolis-based health care law firm Hall Render Killian Heath & Lyman P.C. added Mary Kate McNamara to its Indianapolis office. McNamara, who earned her law degree at Vanderbilt University, focuses her practice in labor and employment law.
Witham Health Services is constructing a clinic in Lebanon to house a satellite branch of the Indiana University Eugene and Marilyn Glick Eye Institute. The 4,000-square-foot facility, to open in January, will offer a range of vision care, including eye exams, fittings for new glasses and contacts, as well as cataract surgeries. The clinic primarily will be staffed by Dr. Daniel Spitzberg and Dr. Melanie Pickett, both professors at the IU School of Medicine’s department of ophthalmology. They initially will see patients several days a week, but hope to gradually increase to offer daily service. “We believe that receiving treatment close to home has a significant impact on the overall health of a patient—and this will help bolster that,” said Ray Ingham, CEO of Witham Health Services.
The British Supreme Court ruled in favor of Maryland-based Human Genome Sciences Inc. in its dispute with Indianapolis-based Eli Lilly and Co. over the validity of a patent for a gene sequence that could be used to treat people with autoimmune diseases. Lilly has made autoimmune diseases one of its key areas of research. Lilly had persuaded a U.K. judge in a previous hearing to revoke the patent on the basis that Human Genome’s list of potential uses for the gene was too vague. The court decision affects patent rights in the United Kingdom, but necessarily throughout Europe. Lilly maintains the patent is invalid and is “exploring available avenues to make its case,” the company told Bloomberg News in a Nov. 2 e-mailed statement. “Human Genome Sciences seek to foreclose a whole area of research in a way that is not only harmful to the industry, but would ultimately and unjustifiably hinder the future development of new medicines,” it said.
The Indiana Alzheimer Disease Center at the Indiana University School of Medicine will get $9.1 million over the next five years from the National Institutes of Health. The funds mark the fifth consecutive five-year grant the Alzheimer Disease Center has received from NIH to support research to understand the causes and potential treatments for Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia. It is the center's largest grant to date. The IU center is one of 29 similar centers around the country funded by the NIH. Alzheimer’s and other dementias afflicted 36 million people worldwide in 2010. That number could triple in the next four decades as the size of the world’s elderly population surges, according to a report from Alzheimer’s Disease International. Scientists are unsure what causes Alzheimer’s and there is no effective treatment.
The nation’s shortage of certain drugs is threatening to affect research trials being conducted by Eli Lilly and Co. and Endocyte Inc.