Carmel attorney elected to Indiana University’s board
IU says MaryEllen Bishop of Carmel has been elected to an alumni seat on the Indiana University Board of Trustees.
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IU says MaryEllen Bishop of Carmel has been elected to an alumni seat on the Indiana University Board of Trustees.
U.S. Senator Charles Grassley asked 16 drugmakers, including Eli Lilly & Co., Pfizer Inc. and AstraZeneca Plc, to reveal
how they treat whistleblowers who file complaints under the False Claims Act.
State officials expect more backyard fireworks shows this year because budget problems have forced many municipalities to
cancel large professional fireworks displays.
An agreement with Durham's attorney paved the way for FBI agents to pick up 18 cars from Durham's residences in Indianapolis
and Los Angeles.
Indianapolis-based WellPoint Inc. said Wednesday that its California subsidiary will dial down rate hikes that drew national outrage earlier this year and helped spark a final push for health care reform.
Indiana Black Expo kicks off its 40th annual Summer Celebration July 12 with a full schedule of events.
Caregivers anticipates coping with declining Medicare reimbursements while having to offer insurance to its employees.
CNO Financial Group Inc. has finalized plans to set up a $10 million fund to settle a multistate investigation into increases
in policy costs.
City leaders have introduced a Passenger Bill of Rights that must be displayed in all licensed taxicabs in Indianapolis. Among
the rights: the ability to pay with a credit card, to take the shortest route to a destination and ride in a safe, clean,
well-maintained taxi. It also says drivers must be well-groomed and appropriately dressed, and they’re required to speak
English and obey traffic laws.
Three armed men were caught on camera robbing a Walgreens store on East 86th Street in Nora. The suspects got away with $3,200
in cash and nearly $6,000 worth of prescription drugs. The men brandished guns and ordered two employees to open the safe
containing the store's cash, then forced the store pharmacist to hand over oxycodone and other powerful painkillers. No
one was hurt and no arrests have been made.
Police said Robert Stokes, 22, was shot near West 20th Street and Tibbs Avenue on the west side of Indianapolis shortly before
1 a.m. Stokes may have been hit as many as six times in the chest and seven times in the arms, investigators said, but he
is expected to survive. His mother drove him to Methodist Hospital, where he was listed in serious condition. Police said
Stokes knew his assailant, but no arrests have been made. Fox59 will have more at 4 p.m.
The state Supreme Court rammed an appeals court decision on Indiana’s voter ID bill down its throat. Was the appellate
decision “judicial arrogance?”
State Rep. Pat Bauer says employment figures provided by the Indiana Economic Development Corp. are a good start but insists
the
agency is not revealing everything it can.
San Francisco-based Canconier performs music from the time of Vlad the Impaler.
There’s more time for Illinois-based JD Norman Industries to hammer out a deal to buy a General Motors stamping plant
in Indianapolis, potentially saving hundreds of local jobs.
There are few things harder in entertainment than the creation of new musical theater.
Poet LLC plans to reopen the former Altra Biofuels plant in nine months, creating as many as 45 jobs.
Critics have argued that the law, which requires voters to show a photo ID to cast a ballot, violates the state constitution
because it isn’t applied equally to all voters. Those who vote by mail don't have to prove their identity.
United Auto Workers official Maurice "Mo" Davison is making one last attempt
to put a deal together for a Chicago-area firm to buy the General Motors stamping plant southwest of downtown Indianapolis,
which is slated to close in 2011.
A state official says General Motors could scuttle plans to sell an Indianapolis stamping plant marked for closing unless
a local union agrees to consider pay cuts.