BENNER: Super Bowl delegation’s focus is two years out
We can promise, at game time, a perfect environment: 70 degrees and dry.
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We can promise, at game time, a perfect environment: 70 degrees and dry.
The National Football League has trademarked “Super Bowl”—along
with “Super Sunday” and “NFL”—and is notorious for the lengths it will go to in order to protect
its brands.
Harrison Epperly has made a fortune in his business career, but he’s also sparked controversy.
Indianapolis Power and Light Co. is suing its engineering consultant over an industrial accident that spilled 30 million
gallons of polluted water into White River.
The name change reflects the completion of the company’s integration with Missouri-based Stark
Brothers Fulfillment, which Sigma Holdings acquired in 2007.
Many not-for-profits struggled to raise money in 2009, but a local agency that helps cancer patients said it actually saw
an increase in donations.
The uncertainty of health care reform and a bad economy curtailed venture capital flow in 2009.
Key measures cleared their chambers of origin by the Feb. 3 deadline.
Mississippi will receive $18.5 million from Indianapolis-based drugmaker Eli Lilly and Co. as part of a settlement over claims
the company promoted the anti-psychotic Zyprexa for ailments it was not federally approved to treat.
Jason Konesco, 38, came to what was then called Indiana Business College in 1999 after working for Brightpoint
Inc.
The Indianapolis trucking firm is not among the weaklings and, if anything, will benefit from additional fleet
failures to the
extent it diminishes industry capacity.
The seven-person production house led by Bruce White counts IUPUI and Rolls-Royce North America among its clients.
Indianapolis car dealer Tom Wood died Thursday morning after battling lung cancer. Wood grew his business from a single dealership
he purchased in 1967.
Hillenbrand Inc. manufactures and supplies burial caskets, cremation products and related services to licensed funeral homes.
Rating Ballard on his promises to master basics including snow removal and fixing potholes.
New revenue figures show Indiana tax collections fell $75 million short of expectations in January.
Colts owner Jim Irsay’s promise to Peyton Manning this week puts team president Bill Polian in a difficult, some may say impossible,
position.
Wally Trevino has been dismissed from the Henry County Sheriff’s Department after admitting to driving drunk and crashing
his truck into an empty house in September. Trevino was off-duty at the time. He was later arrested on charges of drunken
driving and criminal recklessness. Documents show two other off-duty officers were out drinking with Trevino that night.
IPS students won’t be getting a two-hour Super Bowl reprieve after all. District officials wanted to start the school day
two hours later on Monday to cope with the likelihood bus drivers won’t report to work after staying up late to watch the
game, but State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Bennett said such delays are allowed only in the event of an emergency.
The last time the Colts were in the Super Bowl, so many bus drivers called in sick on the next day, school got delayed. IPS
now plans to open one hour late and extend the school day by thirty minutes.
A City-County Councilman and metro police officer has been suspended. Lincoln Plowman is a Republican councilman from Franklin
Township. He’s also a high-ranking police officer and the focus of an internal investigation. Plowman commands IMPD’s support
service branch, which oversees reserve officers. Public Safety Director Frank Straub wouldn’t say why Plowman is under investigation.
He has turned in his gun, badge and squad car. A spokesman for the FBI says he can neither confirm nor deny a federal probe
is taking place. Fox59 will have more on the story at 4 p.m.