Logistics study revisits old concerns
The two-year study by the Conexus Indiana Logistics Council Executive Committee involved 36 logistics executives statewide.
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The two-year study by the Conexus Indiana Logistics Council Executive Committee involved 36 logistics executives statewide.
Austin, Texas-based Temple-Inland Inc. has notified state officials that will stop producing boxes at its Evansville facility
on May 28.
A northern Indiana recreational vehicle manufacturer is expanding its Elkhart operations and plans to hire up to 265 new workers
by 2013.
If the council gives its blessing, construction could begin this spring on Butler Automotive Group’s five-dealership development
along State Road 37. About 230 jobs could be created.
The biggest chance Brad Stevens ever took, the best game plan he ever drew up, had nothing to do with a prized recruit or
some brilliant set of Xs and Os scrawled out on a greaseboard. It came on the day he decided to quit his job at Eli Lilly
and
Co. and to pursue his first love, basketball.
The Murat Temple Association is a Shriners affiiate that owns the Murat Centre, which on March 16 was renamed the “Old National
Centre” in a three-year deal between the bank and Live Nation.
State attorney general says the federal health care law raises serious constitutional questions, including whether Congress
has the authority to enact a mandate that most Americans purchase health insurance.
Marion, Hamilton and Hendricks counties grew faster than any other Indiana counties last year, but among the three, only Marion
County had a higher growth rate than in previous years.
The site of the worst mass murder in Indianapolis history could soon be torn down. The city is working to secure a demolition
order on the Hamilton Avenue house where seven people were murdered in June 2006. Two men have since been convicted for the
deaths. Once the lot is cleared, the land could become a park or possibly a memorial to the victims.
An autopsy is planned Monday for a Bartholomew County mother who died mysteriously. Detectives say they've interviewed
several people who may have answers about what killed 28-year-old April Stephens, who was found dead Sunday in her home south
of Columbus. Stephens leaves behind an infant child who was not home at the time her body was discovered.
The Marion County Sheriff's Department is investigating whether Washington Township school police broke the law by maintaining
their own unofficial property room to collect evidence. Investigators say Washington Township police officers seized drugs
and drug-related evidence from students, then stored it in an unregulated property room on the North Central High School campus.
Marion County Sheriff Frank Anderson could decide to discipline the special deputies or even revoke their powers, which would
leave Washington Township schools patrolled by security guards without police authority. Fox59 will have more at 4 p.m.
Want to start a fight? Don’t say “health care reform.” Try “raw milk."
Duke Realty’s former chief operating officer took home $3.1 million last year. The office, industrial and retail property
owner and manager
also awarded raises to its CEO and the rest of his management team.
Engledow Group, one of the Indianapolis area's largest landscape companies, has acquired Litchfield Landscape Co. to bolster
its estates division.
This spring’s Parade of Home is being held about two weeks earlier than normal to help builders lure homebuyers who want to
take advantage of federal incentives intended to give the residential real estate market a boost. Builders also are taking
chances on more spec homes.
Surely you did something fun and or interesting this weekend.
Butler's triumph has likely eliminated some of the direct visitor spending the city would have seen if Syracuse or Kansas
State would have made it to Indy for this year's Final Four. But corporate excitement could wipe away that loss.
General Growth is weighing options to exit Chapter 11 protection, with competing bids from Indianapolis-based Simon Property
Group Inc. and Brookfield Asset Management Inc.
A local lawyer who created the game “Chronology” alleges breach of contract, trademark infringement, use of a counterfeit
mark, unfair competition, copyright infringement, trademark dilution and forgery.