Office-supply cooperative Stationers lands big contract
A local company whose mission is to help mom-and-pop office-products dealers survive has a new weapon in the fight against big-box retailers.
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A local company whose mission is to help mom-and-pop office-products dealers survive has a new weapon in the fight against big-box retailers.
The Indianapolis Colts—and the team’s National Football League brethren—this month laid out plans for how teams would refund money to season-ticket buyers in the event owners lock out players and games are canceled next season.
Greenwood company buys sites on the cheap and turns them into profit centers.
Women’s golf tour, other sports properties turn to local firm for language, cultural skills
The Indianapolis company expects the pact will boost revenue from $1 million now to more than $10 million in 2013.
Gov. Mitch Daniels on Thursday appointed Mark Massa, who served as Daniels’ general counsel before leaving the post earlier this year to run for prosecutor, to run the state’s Alcohol and Tobacco Commission.
Twenty for-profit colleges—led by Carmel-based ITT Educational Services—reaped $521 million in U.S. taxpayer funds in 2010 by recruiting armed-services members and veterans through misleading marketing, according to a Congressional report released Thursday.
Thoughts on this year’s holidays shows from the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, Actors Theatre of Indiana, the Cabaret at the Columbia Club and more.
Second in a month-long series of fine-feathered restaurant reviews.
An open letter to Kevin Wilson, Indiana University’s football coach.
Like Donner, we find ourselves advocating lies and abetting coverups of our good soldiers’; true identities, rather than celebrating the unique talents of every American willing to serve
Today’s sorry state of affairs around immigration seems to have no resolution. Cries of “it’s not fair” to any proposed idea come from all sides.
Hard times make for hard work. The elves feel that Santa has not given them sufficient credit for the work they have done these past few years, when goodness and kindness were hard to find.
An Indianapolis man was shot and killed in his home on the city's east side at about 6:30 p.m. Wednesday. Police believe Jared Wathen, 27, was shot in his house in the 3200 block of Elmhurst Drive and tried to get help from neighbors before he died. Several gunshots were reported by neighbors and a dark-colored vehicle was spotted leaving the scene traveling south on Elmhurst Drive.
A 15-year-old girl was attacked at her bus stop at about 7 a.m. Thursday near the corner of Pleasant Run Parkway and Le Grand Avenue on the south side of Indianapolis. According to Indianapolis Public Schools, a male grabbed her around her stomach and tried to drag her off. During the struggle, the girl’s bus arrived and the driver began honking the horn, scaring the attacker off. The assailant grabbed the girl’s cell phone during the attack and kept it. The girl was shaken up, but not injured.
Firefighters extinguishing a car fire Thursday morning on the northeast side of Indianapolis discovered a body inside the vehicle. Investigators are trying to figure out whether the person died before or after the fire, which occurred at about 8 a.m. in an alley in the 3000 block of North Gale Street. Neighbors said they had never seen the car before and speculated someone was trying to dump the body in their neighborhood.
When the open-wheel series' title sponsor becomes directly affiliated with a team, questions could arise.
Colfin NW Funding LLC claims in a court filing that it is owed $6.4 million by the borrower that operates the Courtyard By Marriott Hotel Northwest under Indianapolis-based Schahet Hotels Inc.
The Indianapolis-based hospital system’s board of directors could vote to acquire the 25-bed hospital as early as next week, but might put off a decision till February.