Bayh’s war chest could play role in Senate race
Bayh, who announced last week that he would not seek a third term in the Senate, has wide legal flexibility in directing the
$12.2 million left in his campaign account.
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Bayh, who announced last week that he would not seek a third term in the Senate, has wide legal flexibility in directing the
$12.2 million left in his campaign account.
Both measures could be heavily amended before they are voted on as a whole.
Indianapolis’ largest ad agency has achieved a rare coup in the advertising world, winning back one of its biggest former
clients: flooring and upholstery cleaning firm Stanley Steemer.
Nearly four dozen host committee members and Indianapolis officials attended the game. The entourage will apply what they
learned to the 2012 event.
Directors at Chicago-based General Growth Properties Inc. are being sued by a shareholder claiming they shouldn’t have
rejected a $10 billion buyout offer from competitor Simon Property Group Inc.
President Obama will release a proposal to restart the health-care debate before a bipartisan White House meeting on Feb.
25, one day after WellPoint officials testify before Congress about steep rate increases.
A federal trustee will take control of the company’s assets while securities-fraud probes continue.
A local developer's plans to renovate a long-vacant and graffiti-covered 1915 building along Meridian Street have hit
a snag over a lack of parking.
The Indianapolis Airport Authority's plan for the next "30 to 50 years" starts with a team tapped Friday morning.
Five firms will study ways to use airport property, including the former passenger terminal.
The Marion County Prosecutor's Office has filed criminal-confinement charges against 47-year-old Darrell Johnson, the
former assistant director of Head Start. Investigators say that in November, Johnson used duct tape to restrain a 4-year-old
for misbehaving in the Head Start office in IPS School 75. Head Start, a national school-readiness program, has since fired
Johnson.
Two semi-trucks crashed in the southbound lanes of Interstate 65 near Lebanon early Friday morning. One of the truck drivers
swerved to miss a deer in the roadway, lost control and flipped over, crossing the interstate. The other driver crashed into
the other truck. Injuries were minor, but I-65 southbound was closed at Route 39, complicating morning rush hour.
A Lawrence police officer was seriously injured in a crash on Pendleton Pike while responding to a call about 3:30 Friday
morning. David Carter, 37, was heading west on Pendleton when a compact car abruptly stopped in front of him, forcing the
officer to swerve and hit a sign. Carter is in serious condition at Methodist Hospital. Pendleton Pike was closed west of
Interstate 465 as police investigated the crash scene. Fox59 will have more at 4 p.m.
The world's most famous golfer made his first public appearance today in three months. But it's difficult to say if
sports fans and sponsors will accept him back with open arms.
The state's eight public television and radio stations, including WFYI in Indianapolis, will not receive their final two
installments of public funding for fiscal 2010 because of Indiana's budget crisis.
Accuride Corp. says its Gunite Corp. factory in Elkhart will be closed by May 1. Its production will be moved to factories
in Rockford, Ill., and Brillon, Wis.
A meteorologist says we can expect a string of cold, snowy winters, thanks to more moisture in the atmosphere.
J.C. Hart Co. is designing plans for a $17 million upscale apartment community as part of the master-planned Lawrence Village
at the Fort.
Evista generated $1.03 billion in sales last year, of which $348.1 million came outside the United States.