Marsh renews effort to sublease headquarters
Most of the 148,000-square-foot building just north and east of the 96th Street/Interstate 69 interchange is empty.
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Most of the 148,000-square-foot building just north and east of the 96th Street/Interstate 69 interchange is empty.
Mayor Greg Ballard's office has an announcement scheduled for 10 a.m. Tuesday to reveal a "major sport's national governing body" that is moving to the city. IBJ reported in February that USA Football was seriously considering moving here.
The proposal to remove an 80-percent approval threshold for takeover bids against the wishes of Lilly’s board received
approval from shareholders holding 74 percent of Lilly’s shares.
Eli Lilly and Co. will repurchase rights to develop and market antidepressant Cymbalta outside the U.S. and Japan from European
partner Boehringer Ingelheim for an initial payment of $400 million.
Marion County prosecutor Carl Brizzi has not hosted “Crime Watch” on WIBC in three weeks, due to a scheduled break. But station
officials want him
to address accusations on air if he is to continue the show.
Officials hope to reschedule flight to Italy for Tuesday to salvage the remainder of planned job attraction and creation trip.
Toyota Motor Corp. agreed Monday to pay a record $16.4 million fine for failing to properly notify federal authorities about
a dangerous accelerator pedal defect. The automaker still denies the government's
allegation that it violated the law.
Lilly shareholders are set to gather Monday in Indianapolis to hear an update on the company’s performance, including
how it will keep paying its generous dividend during the lean years after Zyprexa’s patent expiration.
Investigators are looking for a man who tried to rob an adult bookstore in Muncie late Sunday night. The would-be robber entered
After Dark armed with a steak knife, but police believe he got nervous after seeing store surveillance cameras. He ran out
the door without any money or merchandise. The man is described as white or Hispanic, wearing a camouflage jacket with a T-shirt
over his face.
Residents of a northwest Indianapolis neighborhood say they're the target of a pair of serial burglars. The first burglary
happened last month in the Fieldstone subdivision near 62nd Street and Georgetown Road. Witnesses say two men come to
the door of a home, and if no one answers they break a window to get in. Police say the burglaries have been occurring in
broad daylight, between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m.
Indianapolis police are looking for information about a shooting that injured a man sitting in a car outside Mallard Cove
Apartments on North Shadeland Avenue just before 10 p.m. Sunday. The unidentified victim is expected to survive, according
to reports, but police don't have anyone in custody. Investigators have not released information on a motive. Fox59 will
have more at 4 p.m.
Californians seem to be more ready to embrace a unified open-wheel races series than the place that gave IndyCar racing its
name.
Powerful new lobbies are fighting over the future of the controversial industry. Who are they appealing to? You.
For years, ethanol fuel derived from corn was almost politically untouchable, thanks to powerful advocates on Capitol Hill.
The ethanol industry has consequently exploded over the last decade, thanks to government subsidies and incentives. But skepticism
about ethanol is rising, prompted by fluctuating food prices and an organized campaign by anti-ethanol advocates to discredit
the industry.
The Indiana Arts Commission revamped the way it allocates money out of concern about future state budget cuts, which would
further reduce grants available to arts organizations.
Alro Steel Corp., which has plants in Indianapolis and Fort Wayne, paid a $120,000 fine over hazardous chemical reporting
violations.
A total of 242 homes in the nine-county area sold for at least $250,000 last month, an increase of 23.5 percent from the same
time last year.
Republican Rep. Dan Burton, who's seeking his 15th term in central Indiana's heavily Republican 5th District, raised
$754,000 through March 31 in that heavily contested race.
The Indianapolis-based drugmaker also lowered its forecast for full-year profits because the new health care law grants bigger
rebates on prescription drugs to federal health insurance programs.