Shelbyville manufacturer takes on big name in tumblers
A Shelbyville manufacturer is seeking to cancel a trademark held by Tervis Tumbler Co., which built a $75 million business around making double-walled plastic cups.
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A Shelbyville manufacturer is seeking to cancel a trademark held by Tervis Tumbler Co., which built a $75 million business around making double-walled plastic cups.
Jennie DeVoe is in the spotlight for “Devoted to Wildlife,” a benefit concert for the Indiana Wildlife Federation, July 9 at Carmel’s West Park. Details here.
After a first act of rock ’n’ roll favorites from the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, Christopher Cross and his band join in at this July 8-9 concert at Conner Prairie Amphitheatre. Details here.
Sade joins John Legend July 8 at Conseco Fieldhouse. Details here.
Josh Groban brings his “Straight to You” tour to Conseco Fieldhouse, July 12. Details here.
Emmylou Harris performs at the Palladium, July 13. Details here.
Singer Darrian Ford from the Broadway casts of “Smokey Joe’s Café” and The Who’s “Tommy” opens “The Cooke Book,” a musical tribute to Sam Cooke July 8-9 at the Cabaret at the Columbia Club. Details here.
July 8-24
Studio Theatre, Center for the Performing Arts
The premise is a gleefully silly one: Three unfit-for-service guys during WWII don drag to cover for a canceled appearance by the Andrews Sisters. The tunes are familiar (“Don’t Sit Under the Apple Tree,” “Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy”) to anyone with a cursory knowledge of American music. And the result is, well, I’m eager to see what the harmonically accomplished Actors Theatre of Indiana can do with it. Especially under the guidance of director David Engel, from the original off-Broadway cast of “Forever Plaid.” Sounds like it will beat taking a slow boat to China. Details here.
July 8-24
Studio Theatre, Center for the Performing Arts
The premise is a gleefully silly one: Three unfit-for-service guys during WWII don drag to cover for a canceled appearance by the Andrews Sisters. The tunes are familiar (“Don’t Sit Under the Apple Tree,” “Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy”) to anyone with a cursory knowledge of American music. And the result is, well, I’m eager to see what the harmonically accomplished Actors Theatre of Indiana can do with it. Especially under the guidance of director David Engel, from the original off-Broadway cast of “Forever Plaid.” Sounds like it will beat taking a slow boat to China. Details here.
July 8-Jan. 16
Indianapolis Museum of Art
With work dating from the ninth to the 15th century, this traveling show has been designed to reveal the depth of artistic achievement in the city-state that once existed in what is now southwestern Nigeria. More than 100 objects supplied by the Nigerian National Commission for Museums and Monuments offer representations of people and animals in a variety of media, including terra cotta, stone and metal. The opening party on July 7 includes live music. Details here.
Carrier Corp. has spent $32 million to upgrade equipment in Indianapolis and plans to invest another $36.5 million to start a second production line, creating 276 jobs at the plant. The company is seeking a tax abatement to help offset the costs.
Locally based J.C. Hart Co. has broken ground on a $19 million apartment community at the northeast corner of 116th Street and College Avenue in the Carmel Performing Arts District.
July 7-17
Indiana Convention Center and other locations
There’s a lot to choose from on the A&E front at this year’s Summer Celebration. Angela Bassett, Cicely Tyson and Danny Glover are among the big names appearing at the Pacers Sports and Entertainment Corporate Luncheon. James Fortune headlines the Gospel Explosion, Stephanie Mills is joined by Heads of State and S.O.S band for the free Music Heritage Festival concert, a film fest includes “The Wayman Tisdale Story,” and there are artists and entertainers throughout the Cultural Arts Pavilion. Details here.
The company, which had planned to close its Brookville Road plant, now is set to create 250 new jobs by investing $19 million in new equipment. It previously received $18 million in tax breaks and repaid $5 million to the city.
The Hoosier Lottery sold a total of $740 million in tickets and awarded $456 million in prizes during the 2010 budget year.
In Senate race, Lugar has outraised challenger Richard Mourdock 3-to-1.
The High Court in London on Tuesday denied Lilly’s request for a judgment without trial against Neopharma Ltd., the closely held company that has European marketing rights for the generic version of the drug known chemically as olanzapine.
Amazon.com plans to open a second warehouse in Plainfield this year, the company announced Wednesday. The online retailer’s fourth location in central Indiana is expected to create hundreds of jobs.
Health insurer WellPoint Inc. will pay $100,000 and take other steps after admitting it waited months to notify 32,000 Indiana customers that their Social Security numbers, health records and other personal information might have been exposed online.
The Marion County Coroner's office said Tuesday that a woman's body found floating in Fall Creek Sunday night is not Indiana University student Lauren Spierer, 20, or Noblesville grandmother Dorothy Heard, 74. Both have been missing for weeks. The body was badly decomposed and investigators on the scene were not able to determine the woman’s identity, age or race. Police say there are other missing-person cases that could hinge on the autopsy findings.
Construction crews will begin work Tuesday night to replace the 126th Street bridge over Interstate 69, resulting in several lane closures on the busy freeway. The right-side lanes on both southbound and northbound I-69 will be closed from 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. Wednesday. The closure will give contractors time to install a concrete barrier. Then, on or after July 12, the bridge will close while crews work to replace it. The project is slated to take four months.
A fire and explosion destroyed a Mexican grocery store in Anderson early Tuesday. Firefighters needed more than three hours to put out the blaze that wiped out the Esmeralda grocery near the city's downtown. No injuries were reported. Investigators didn't immediately know the cause.
Some NFL and NBA players' agents are now telling their clients to stay away from player-organized group workouts. Some think the workouts make players look too eager, even desperate, to settle the labor dispute.
M&I Bank filed the suit against J. Greg Allen, charging he defaulted on two loans he took out to buy 73 acres of land on the northeast corner of Emerson Avenue and County Line Road on Indianapolis’ south side.