EDITORIAL: East 10th Street project can be repeated
When people see what’s happening on and near East 10th Street—and they will, thanks to the Super Bowl connection—they’ll see what’s possible and, we hope, join similar efforts.
To refine your search through our archives use our Advanced Search
When people see what’s happening on and near East 10th Street—and they will, thanks to the Super Bowl connection—they’ll see what’s possible and, we hope, join similar efforts.
Leave it to a couple of recent college grads to make money off of driving home the liquored-up.
BGBC Partners LLP and Katz Sapper & Miller LLP were recognized in the latest annual ranking compiled by Inside Public Accounting.
From what I have seen and read, this documentary is destined to change radically our perception of schools, and those who stand in the way of fixing them.
Plaintiffs are challenging the city’s 2007 decision to waive a hefty fee that otherwise would have been required to redevelop the crumbling site.
The 15-year-old company now has raised nearly $100 million in debt and equity financing and backing from individuals.
Celadon Group Inc. is a trucking company that provides long-haul, full-truckload freight service through Canada, the United States and Mexico.
In just a few days, thousands of Lilly employees will descend upon Interstate 70. The purpose: a massive makeover we’re calling “A Greener Welcome.” It will naturalize 10 acres of vacant interchanges.
Make no mistake about it, we are calling you out, in your own publication. Indiana Sports Corp. has about 30 staffers; we both run the event and run in the event. We want to go head-to-head with Team IBJ next year!
Kudos to Mary Dieter and IBJ for the investigative journalism that led to the [Sept. 27] publication of the disturbing disclosure that the Daniels administration failed to pursue up to $103 million in federal stimulus money that would benefit Hoosier small businesses and workers.
A [Sept. 27] IBJ article reported on a settlement Duke Energy and several customer groups have reached on costs associated with construction of the company’s clean-coal technology power plant in Edwardsport.
It’s exciting to think that, in 16 months, thousands of people will arrive in Indianapolis from around the globe to be part of Super Bowl XLVI. And millions more will watch from their homes. Indianapolis truly will be in the spotlight in February 2012.
he U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis,” I began, “has just released quarterly personal-income data through the second quarter of 2010. They show Indiana in third place among the 50 states—third from the bottom—for income growth during April, May and June.
A wrong-way crash shut down Interstate 65 in the downtown Indianapolis area for several hours Thursday morning. Indiana State Police say the driver of an SUV entered the interstate at the Meridian Street exit, heading the wrong way. He eventually crashed head-on with a UPS semi truck. The driver was thrown from the SUV and died at the scene.
Nearly 1,000 Indianapolis Power & Light customers lost power for a couple of hours Thursday morning after a reckless-driving suspect ran from police and crashed into a utility pole on the south side of the city. Police say an officer tried to pull the driver over about a half-mile north of the crash scene, but he hit the gas. The driver lost control of the car and slammed into a utility pole near the entrance of a Sodrel Trucking hub near Morris and West streets. Power was restored at about 4 a.m.
Greenfield police officer William Phillips was killed in a hit-and-run crash at about 12:15 a.m. Thursday along U.S. 40 in Hancock County. Phillips was on an off-duty night-time bicycle training ride with two other officers when he was struck by a vehicle described as a dark four-door passenger car or an older-model van. Police say Phillips was wearing a helmet, reflective clothes and had lights on the bike. Phillips leaves behind a wife and two young sons. Fox59 will have more at 4 p.m.
The Indiana Court of Appeals has sided with former Columbus, Ind., banker Will Miller in an estate battle launched by his older brother, Hugh. In an opinion issued Thursday, the court said Will Miller was correct to spend more than $20 million over 3-1/2 years on the upkeep of properties owned by the wealthy Columbus family.
Unlike state and federal law, city ordinance prohibits discrimination based on sexual orientation. That may be enough for the city to take action against Just Cookies, which operates in City Market, for declining a request based on the customer’s sexual orientation.
Officials for Crowne Plaza Hotel downtown said a $400,000 enclosed connector linking the hotel to the convention center will be done in February.