EDITORIAL: Interstate network isn’t enough
Our country’s transportation future is too uncertain for Hoosiers to be almost entirely dependent on cars.
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Our country’s transportation future is too uncertain for Hoosiers to be almost entirely dependent on cars.
We had been friends for less than a decade, but in a sense those were some of his best years—years of philanthropy, of passionate restoration.
The head of the continent’s largest producer of bottled water told Indiana recycling advocates his industry should take more responsibility in the reuse of plastic bottles.
As part of the celebration of the 100th anniversary of America’s greatest race—the Indianapolis 500—I am joining the Speedway’s invitation at thegreatest33.com to name the 33 greatest drivers ever to be on the starting grid.
Is it finally time to get some growth again out of a stock that since its debut on the public market 59 years ago has minted thousands of millionaires?
The French Seam is not a craft store or a quilting store. It’s where one shops for the trappings of an evening gown or a killer suit.
In light of our most recent General Assembly, I believe the top 1 percent of Indiana went to bat for the top 1 percent and then kicked the other 99 percent [who were] fooled into electing them in the teeth.
Congratulations are due Gov. Daniels and the Indiana Legislature for taking action to suspend public dollars to “family planning” organizations who perpetuate the continuing slaughter of the tiniest, most innocent human beings.
It turns out that, although we think of glass towers, cubicles and filing cabinets as the places where we go to accomplish something, the office is a terrible place to get anything done.
After a potentially disastrous fire, popular Greek eatery Santorini Greek Kitchen survives … and thrives.
From time to time, I am asked: “What is the best investment for Indiana’s economic development”? The answer: our high-school-age young men and women.
With the Miller House open, Columbus becomes even more of a design draw.
A Lawrence mom was arrested Wednesday, accused of neglect of a dependent and public intoxication. According to police, 24-year-old Vashney Bushrod fell asleep in her car with her two sons, ages 5 and 1, for about seven hours. Officers found empty vodka bottles in the vehicle. They also said Bushrod ran into a fence when she tried to park at the Pinnacle Square Apartments while under the influence of alcohol.
A man told police voices in his head made him commit a robbery Wednesday night. Aaron D. Williams, 31, was arrested for robbing the Village Pantry on North Meridian Street in Greenwood. He told police he has a mental disorder and is on medication for it. According to police, Williams used a large kitchen knife to hold up the store. Police pulled him over a short time later based on a description of his car and found a bag of money, cigarettes and the knife. Williams was taken to the Johnson County Jail and also was charged with two other robberies in the Greenwood area: a Red Roof Inn in January and another Village Pantry in April.
Beginning July 1, it will be illegal for drivers in Indiana to text while behind the wheel. Gov. Mitch Daniels on Wednesday signed legislation prohibiting the use of any hand-held telecommunications device to type, transmit, or read text messages or e-mail while operating a moving motor vehicle. Offenders could face fines up to $500. "Drivers who use hand-held devices are four times more likely to be involved in a collision serious enough to cause injury," said Ryan Klitzsch, Indiana Criminal Justice Institute Traffic Safety Division Director.
SerVaas Laboratories Inc. has moved its headquarters to a 65,000-square-foot building on the northwest side after nearly 40 years in its old location.
Three Indiana school districts, including Hamilton Southeastern and Franklin Township, are dropping a lawsuit against the state that claimed the method for distributing school funding treated growing districts unfairly.
Property along the White River is set to be rezoned to provide for a cross-country track, while a not-for-profit is eying a parcel farther north as one of three potential sites for a tennis center.
The owners of a new microbrewery in Fountain Square, slated to open by mid-August, plan to differentiate the business by focusing on the "convergence of art and science" in brewing.