Indiana high school group plans statewide TV network
The Indiana High School Athletic Association has signed a three-year contract with Indianapolis television station WTTV to
broadcast state championship events.
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The Indiana High School Athletic Association has signed a three-year contract with Indianapolis television station WTTV to
broadcast state championship events.
Greenspan resigned from IU in 2008 amid NCAA allegations that his department failed to monitor former basketball coach Kelvin
Sampson.
Deputy mayor, city Bond Bank director resign to take jobs in the private sector.
Steel Dynamics is highly competitive partly because employees are compensated on how much money they save. Should Purdue and
other universities take notice?
Emmis Communications Corp. is shuffling several prominent on-air personalities at its Indianapolis radio stations' beginning
Monday.The moves involve Big Joe Staysniak and Steve Simpson of WIBC, Ed Wenck of WLHK and
Dan Dakich of WFNI.
Congress may determine long-term fate of FedEx’s Indianapolis cargo hub, where about 4,500 work.
Retail sales posted a surprising 0.3-percent increase in February as consumers did not let major snowstorms stop them from
storming the malls.
Indiana University Police are investigating a sexual assault after a female student was found unconscious and partially clothed
early Thursday morning in front of the Foster McGee dormitory. She was taken to Bloomington Hospital, where she told police
she had been sexually assaulted. Police say the woman did not live at the dorm where she was found, but students who do live
there tell Fox59 News that officers questioned several male residents.
Indiana State Police are among authorities from several jurisdictions investigating the possible abduction of two children
in Indianapolis, after a note describing the crime was found taped to a rest-stop bathroom on Wednesday in Bullitt County,
Ky. According to the note, a brother and sister named Josh and Laura McKae were forced into a truck by a man at an Indianapolis
gas station. The truck then proceeded south on I-65. Noting some red flags, officials aren’t sure if the note is legitimate
and are searching for more details.
A top-ranked senior at Greenwood High School is asking a federal judge to stop a graduation prayer that the senior class voted
to approve in September. The lawsuit by 18-year-old Eric Workman says the prayer and the vote unconstitutionally subject religious
practice to majority rule and violate the First Amendment. The American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana filed suit Thursday
on behalf of Workman in federal court in Indianapolis. Fox59 will have more at 4 p.m.
The cuts, both in Bloomington and Indianapolis, come as part of an effort to trim $2.4 million from the fund-raising group’s
$26 million operational budget.
State officials say local governments saved more than $8 million this winter purchasing road salt through a state volume-buying
program.
A new plan by mall owner General Growth Properties Inc. to exit bankruptcy resolves some uncertainty rival bidder Simon Property
Group Inc. has criticized, Simon CEO David Simon says.
The union for mechanics at Frontier Airlines is going to court over Republic Airways Holdings Inc.’s plans to shift their
work to Milwaukee.
Records show Marion County Prosecutor Carl Brizzi directed lucrative work for the Prosecutor’s Office to his friend, business
partner and political contributor John Bales.
Carmel-based Williams Comfort Air, a heating and cooling contractor, is accepting nominations for its Extraordinairy Treasures annual scholarship program. Six one-time scholarships totaling $5,000 will be awarded to high school seniors based on community service, leadership activities and family commitment.
Indiana banks soon might have to pay the state as much as $300 million in new fees for deposit insurance at a time the industry
is experiencing its deepest woes in decades.
“Staying Alive and Productive during Economic Hard Times” is the theme of the Indianapolis Professional Association’s seventh
annual networking luncheon. It will include a roundtable discussion of the economic state of local minority businesses and
organizations.
A 10-year, $20 million deal for a civilian division of the U.S. Marine Corps to occupy four floors of the 28-story M&I
Plaza building downtown will push
the city’s sixth-largest office tower from a woeful 30-percent occupancy rate to about 50 percent.
OK, I admit that I’m still wincing about last week’s column about a peaceful, easy feeling in the General Assembly
as it approached the leadership-targeted early-adjournment date.