You-review-it Monday: ‘Becky’s New Car,’ burlesque and more
Surely you did something fun and or interesting this weekend.
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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.
Indiana is trying to shift hundreds of foster children with medical, emotional or behavioral problems into cheaper care for
children without special needs, a move that cuts payments to families who care for the state's most challenged children.
Alternative energy developers are looking at potential wind farm sites in Tippecanoe County and portions of neighboring Fountain
and Montgomery counties.
The tiny town of Reynolds had big plans when Gov. Mitch Daniels touted it in 2005 as the location of BioTown USA, the state's
first project to make a community produce enough energy to become self-sufficient.
About eight hours after Butler beat second-seeded Kansas State 63-56 to reach the first Final Four in school history, the
Bulldogs returned home to a large crowd and loud cheers.
Edy's Grand Ice Cream expects to fill 120 full-time production positions — paying about $13 an hour — at its
Fort Wayne plant in the next three months because of demand for its popular Nestle Drumsticks.
Lilly’s lobbying spending represents a 36-percent drop from the final quarter of 2008, even though the Congressional debate
over health care reform peaked during the last quarter of 2009.
Indiana will receive more than $61 million in federal stimulus money to help the state's lowest-achieving schools improve
their performance.
Deal with unit of Massachusetts-based Thermo Fisher Scientific would keep many of the employees working in same
location.
A police standoff that lasted more than 12 hours ended Thursday morning when a Grant County man shot his estranged wife before
turning the gun on himself. Amy Nose and her husband, Paul, were going through a divorce, but friends say the couple talked
of reconciling. Still, Amy filed an intimidation report with police 24 hours before she was killed. Amy, who worked at nearby
Taylor University, had two daughters.
A 74-year-old New Castle woman faces drug charges after police found a stash of prescription pills in the woman's truck
during a traffic stop. Phyllis Williams told officers she didn't know how the medication, worth about $34,000, ended up
in her truck. She's now charged with several felonies including possession of a controlled substance. Williams has a history
of drug-related arrests.
Investigators suspect an electric heater caused a fire early Friday that killed a man on Indianapolis near-east side. Firefighters
found the body of William Ralston in the front room of his house on Villa Avenue, just south of Prospect Street. He was the
only person living in the two-story home. Ralston was using the living room as a bedroom, according to family. Fox59 will
have more at 4 p.m.
Ethical conundrums rarely present themselves in black-and-white. But Google gets high marks from a couple of Hoosier academics
who say the company made the right choice to leave China.
A mix of business and personal woes have pushed Steven Carter Ross, the longtime owner and manager of the Vogue nightclub, into personal bankruptcy. Steven Carter Ross has owned the Vogue, 6259 N. College Ave., since 1981. (IBJ Photo/ Perry Reichanadter) Now a judge must decide whether Ross can keep the popular Broad Ripple […]
Corporate hospitality at sports events has been stagnant in recent years, but organizers expect a big bounce for this year’s
NCAA Final Four in Indianapolis.
Besides an immediate bump in apparel sales, the university is expecting a jump in student applications, alumni contributions
and season-ticket sales, as well.
The state’s jobless rate has been either 9.8 percent or 9.7 percent the past four months.