FEIGENBAUM: Debate rages over the right to bear arms
House Bill 1065 would bar business owners
from prohibiting an employee from keeping a legally owned firearm in his or her locked vehicle at work.
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House Bill 1065 would bar business owners
from prohibiting an employee from keeping a legally owned firearm in his or her locked vehicle at work.
The Indianapolis Convention & Visitors Association said Thursday that it has received a $5.4 million gift to help market the
city’s tourism and convention industries. The grant comes from a foundation headed by the developer of the Marriott Place
hotel complex under construction downtown.
A defense attorney and prosecutors have agreed to delay the trial on securities fraud charges of a former Indiana money manager
who tried to fake his death by jumping from a small plane before it crashed in Florida.
A proposed high-speed commuter rail line that would run through northern Indiana was left out of federal stimulus
grants announced this week.
Unable to raise the $1.5 million to $3 million needed to operate an Indy Racing League team this year, Tony George folded
Vision Racing this morning.
Indy Racing League’s latest revelation raises more questions.
Mark Massa, attorney for Gov. Mitch Daniels, is “considering” running for Marion County prosecutor as the Republican candidate.
The leader of the party in the county said he would be “ecstatic” if he would.
Struggling West Lafayette life science contract research firm will search nationally for a new permanent leader.
Analysts worry about dive in already paltry sales of new blood thinner Effient
The Indianapolis Colts’ second trip to the Super Bowl in Miami is scoring business for the locally based Ambassadair
travel club.
Indy Racing League goes outside racing circles to look for new CEO. Professional Bull Riders Association boss offered job
to replace Tony George.
Malora Hardin–Jan from “The Office”–just booked for The Cabaret.
The Indianapolis Public School Board approved pay raises for several administrators on Tuesday, despite looming budget cuts.
Superintendent Eugene White will receive a 3-percent pay raise despite opposition from critics who say it sends the wrong
message. IPS, the state’s largest school district, faces $25 million in cuts next year.
A group of 21 Indiana doctors will spend 10 days in Haiti providing medical care for survivors of the devastating Jan. 12
earthquake. The team took a charter flight Wednesday night out of Greenwood Airport and stopped in Miami before boarding another
flight to Haiti. Dr. John Walker, one of the mission members, said the group will go wherever they are needed. “At this point,
a lot of what we’re going to see is dehydration, malnutrition, and infections as a result of those injuries,” Walker said.
Indianapolis police are looking for a suspect they said made off with a bag of messy cash on Wednesday afternoon after robbing
an Old National Bank branch at 6100 N. Keystone Ave. According to detectives, he never showed a weapon, but handed the teller
a note and implied that he had one. Witnesses said the dye pack inside the bag of cash exploded as he was escaping. The suspect
reportedly fled in a green Pontiac Grand Am. Fox59 will have more at 4 p.m.
Main articles Related-party loans pile up at Durham-owned finance firm FBI serves search warrants on Durham-owned companies Brizzi dropped plan to serve on board of Durham company Feds seek seizure of Durham’s assets Disclosures key to feds’ probe of Durham’s Fair Finance SEC probing Durham deal with Texas firm Durham enlisted directors with personal, financial […]
But excluding special charges, Warsaw-based orthopedic implant maker grows profits 5 percent, easily beating expectations
of Wall
Street.
The Indianapolis-based drugmaker says a weaker dollar depressed earnings in the fourth quarter compared with a year ago.
A partnership between Indiana University School of Medicine and a medical school and hospital in Kenya has received an additional
$5 million grant from the U.S. Agency for International Development to expand health care services in the African nation.
Like most companies that make thousands of parts in automobiles, Elkhart-based CTS Corp. was virtually unknown to the average
car buyer. That was until its gas pedal was blamed for big problems with some very popular cars.