Enough Vonnegut?
Yet another collection of unpublished material is being released. When is enough enough?
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Yet another collection of unpublished material is being released. When is enough enough?
The Marion County Prosecutor's Office is holding blood drives this week to show support for police officer David Moore. Moore was shot several times during a traffic stop Sunday morning and remains in critical condition. The first blood drive will be held Tuesday from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. on the second floor of City Market’s east wing. Another will be held Wednesday from noon to 5 p.m. at Wishard Hospital’s Myers Auditorium.
A man who led police on a high-speed chase through the northwest side of Indianapolis Tuesday morning was apprehended after he crashed. Police attempted to pull over a male driver near 34th Street and Lafayette Road about 3 a.m. Tuesday. The driver refused to stop for police and led them on a chase on Lafayette Road with speeds reaching 100 mph. The chase finally ended when he rear-ended another car at 56th Street and Lafayette Road. The suspect attempted to run from police, but he was quickly caught. Police later discovered the car he had been driving was stolen.
Vice President Joe Biden is heading to the Hoosier State this week. Wednesday, he plans to make a stop at Greenfield’s EnerDel Inc., which makes advanced lithium-ion battery systems. The business was awarded $118 million in Recovery Act funds to expand its production line. The event is scheduled to get underway just before noon.
An Indiana House committee split along party lines to approve a bill that would cut jobless benefits for some people starting next year as the state tries to fix its insolvent unemployment insurance system.
Charging not-for-profits for government services, eliminating certain paper records and trimming how much counties pay to mental-health institutions are among the ways local officials say the cost of government could be reduced.
Courteous Colts fans go a long way to selling city to visitors.
The decline marks the third straight month that Indiana’s unemployment rate has fallen, but private-sector jobs actually dropped in December.
Workers are tearing down what’s left of an historic downtown apartment building after a two-alarm fire this morning.
Americans turned optimistic almost overnight, a new, expansive survey shows.
Ambrose Property Group, a commercial leasing and development company headed by former Duke Realty Corp. broker Aasif Bade, took over for Brenwick, which is primarily a residential developer, at the beginning of the year.
The mementos were owned by Fishers collector Dane Nash, who operated the American Super Heroes Museum downtown.