Bar Keepers Friend parent lands new headquarters
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.
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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.
Local NBA team nets 35 percent ratings increase in games on Fox Sports, with almost 70,000 households tuning in to Pacers-Bulls playoff game.
The operator of the building at 8424 Naab Road near St. Vincent Hospital is accused of owing an Illinois investment firm $4 million.
Sony officials plan to spend $72 million on new and upgraded equipment at its western Indiana factory, with most of that going toward Blu-ray disc manufacturing.
A team led by an Indiana University scientist has won a $2.4 million NASA grant for research that could help the space agency search for life elsewhere in the solar system.
Some health care system are finally allowing online scheduling.
The problem is, too many people make unhealthy choices and the consequences of these choices become everyone’s problem.
Industry cluster in northern Indiana has adapted to every other change in health care, and will absorb tissue regeneration, too.
Health reform could accelerate trend toward two tiers of care, with concierge services like Dr. Matt Priddy offers at the top and long waits and minimal attention at the bottom.
Toyota Motor Corp. says North American production will rise to 70 percent of normal in June as the company begins to recover from parts shortages caused by the earthquake in Japan.
The Center for the Performing Arts in Carmel has extended CEO Steven Libman’s contract through 2016, the board of directors announced Wednesday.
Local police investigators have arrested 24-year-old Geoffrey Collins in connection with a hit-and-run accident that killed one man and injured another late Sunday night. Collins was tracked down Tuesday after police received a tip. He admitted to driving the Ford Ranger truck that hit and killed David Smith and critically injured Jason Pedigo, who were pushing a shopping cart on West Morris Street about 11:45 p.m. on their way to get beer. Collins faces several felony charges.
April’s heavy rains and this week’s warmer temperatures are creating perfect breeding conditions for mosquitoes. Officials at the Marion County Health Department predict an early season for the blood-sucking pests. The department is using a new tool called the Vector Control Management System, which it believes will lead to a faster data-gathering process and more efficient mosquito control.
Indianapolis firefighters responded to another suspicious house fire near downtown Indianapolis on Wednesday morning, a day after the city was struck by 10 other fires, including seven confirmed as arson. Wednesday morning’s blaze heavily damaged a vacant home in the Fountain Square area about 6:35 a.m. Investigators suspect arson. Officials say they believe at least three of Tuesday’s fires were set by the same person. Police say they have identified at least two "persons of interest." A woman was killed and her son critically injured in one of the fires.
Want a pair of tickets for the upcoming concert at The Lawn?
The Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra plays “The Four Seasons,” May 12-14. Details here.
Hill Harper, from “CSI: NY” speaks at the Madame Walker Theatre on May 13. Details here.
The Academy Award-nominated documentary “Exit Through the Gift Shop” is screened at the Central Library on May 15. Art collector Brain Presnell will do the presenting. Details here.
May 14
The Jazz Kitchen
Forget the hit song “One Night in Bangkok,” Indy-rooted jazz vocalist Cherryl Hayes (yes, there are two Rs) has spent about 15 years there, using it as a base from which to play through Thailand as well as China, Hong Kong, Malaysia and more. She’ll be coming home for a one-night-only show at The Jazz Kitchen, supported by the Steve Allee Trio. For more on Hayes, click here.