ExactTarget lands on Wall Street Journal list
The company, one of the city’s largest technology firms, is on the newspaper’s list of top 50 venture-funded firms.
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The company, one of the city’s largest technology firms, is on the newspaper’s list of top 50 venture-funded firms.
Announcements United Way of Central Indiana added its name to the list of those supporting the Indiana Compact, a statement of principles for immigration policy reform. The Indiana Compact advocates five principles should guide policy solutions around immigration reform: • federal solutions – urge Indiana’s Congressional delegation to address this federal policy issue. • law enforcement – respect the […]
Purdue University officials and others connected with the life sciences in Indiana say the planned $164 million Life and Health Sciences Quadrangle at the West Lafayette campus will mean high-paying jobs, retention of highly skilled scientists, and researchers who might well have left the state for either coast.
Formstack, the Indianapolis-based drag-and-drop form builder software firm, isn’t flashy like its California social-media-site sister Formspring, but it’s intensely practical for organizations needing contact forms, order forms and other online business tools.
Fortville manufacturer plans $3.3 million expansion
Speculative development is almost unheard of these days, but the Fort Harrison Reuse Authority is taking the plunge.
Eli Lilly and Co., Lilly Corporate Center, Indianapolis, 46285 (www.lilly.com) discovers, develops, manufactures and sells pharmaceutical products for humans and animals.
Republican Brian Bosma says the House will consider a formal censure motion Monday for absent Democrats who have boycotted the chamber for four weeks.
A North Central High School girls cross country coach is accused of having sexual relations with a 17-year-old student. Jacob Nay faces two counts of child seduction. The 34-year-old, who has been a counselor and coach at the school for seven years, resigned last week.
An early-morning fire destroyed a barn in rural Boone County, causing an estimated $500,000 to $1 million in damage. The blaze occurred just before 4 a.m. on a farm off State Road 75 just north of Advance. The fire set off several small explosions from propane tanks on two combines housed in the barn. No one was injured. The cause is unknown.
Indianapolis police are investigating a serious crash involving two vehicles at 52nd Street and Allisonville Road on the city's northeast side. Police say the driver of a red Cadillac SUV was traveling north on Allisonville when it crossed the center line and hit a white Ford SUV. Jamal Moore, 31, the driver of the Cadillac, told investigators he had been drinking earlier in the morning. His passenger, Joseph Reese, 34, of Indianapolis, was taken to Wishard Hospital in critical condition. Moore and the 27-year-old driver of the white SUV suffered non-life-threatening injuries.
The SBA wants to broaden the definition of a small business in 36 industries. Suddenly, 9,000 more businesses would be considered small.
Paul Estridge Jr. says potential investors have inquired about helping his homebuilding company. Without millions in capital and a line of credit, the business could close within a week.
Authorities say Fair Finance, led by indicted businessman Tim Durham, owes 5,200 investors $230 million. But they’re likely to recoup just a “teeny-tiny” fraction.
Eli Lilly and Co.’s patent-infringement claim over Hospira Inc.’s generic version of the cancer treatment Gemzar will be investigated by a U.S. trade agency with the power to block imports of the copycat drug.
The privately held firm, which has been raking in private investment since 2005, landed the biggest round of funding in its history from “two of the world’s largest public money managers.”
The number of applications to Butler University is up 41 percent—to a total of 9,357—compared with applications received by the same time last year, according to school officials. Requests for information and campus visits by prospective students are both up 35 percent for the year.
State officials have awarded Bloomington-based Crider and Crider Inc. a $25 million contract to build a 4-mile section of the Interstate 69 extension that will run from Indianapolis to Evansville.