Indians pack Victory Field with $1 concession special
Indianapolis Indians turn traditionally slow night into big money-maker by cutting profit margin at concession stand.
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Indianapolis Indians turn traditionally slow night into big money-maker by cutting profit margin at concession stand.
Some observers think Bayh will run for governor again to springboard to the presidency. But to stand out to national, and
possibly even Hoosier, voters, he might be forced outside his cautious comfort zone.
January home sales in the nine-county Indianapolis area fell 16.5 percent from the same month last year, according to a report
from Re/Max of Indiana. But the housing news wasn’t all bad. The average price of a home in the area jumped 12.1 percent.
White River Capital’s profit rose in the fourth quarter, due largely to a strong performance by its main subsidiary, Coastal Credit LLC.
Rolls-Royce Corp.’s Indianapolis manufacturing facility has been awarded a multimillion-dollar contract by the U.S. Army to
develop a digital engine control for one of its helicopters.
President Barack Obama is making a fresh attempt to rescue his health care overhaul by proposing a measure that would allow
the government to deny or roll back egregious insurance premium increases that infuriate consumers.
Claims by Toyota in internal documents that it saved money by obtaining a limited recall from regulators in 2007 create an
even bigger challenge for the automaker's president when he testifies before U.S. lawmakers this week over quality and
safety lapses.
Indiana University's new basketball training complex will be named after billionaire entrepreneur Bill Cook and his wife.
IU athletic director Fred Glass says the Cooks gave $15 million—the single largest gift in IU athletics history—toward
the nearly $20 million basketball training center.
At the heart of the debate is the question of what should be a fair profit for health insurers. WellPoint CEO Angela Braly
will likely be grilled on the issue when she appears at a Congressional hearing Wednesday.
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.