Source: WISH-TV lays off news, production workers
WISH-TV Channel 8 laid off employees late last week as local TV market is battered by swooning economy.
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WISH-TV Channel 8 laid off employees late last week as local TV market is battered by swooning economy.
The Indiana Supreme Court will decide whether the state’s voter identification law violates the state’s constitution.
The League of Women Voters argues that the law, which requires voters to show a photo ID to cast a ballot, violates the state
constitution because it isn’t applied equally to all voters. Those who vote by mail don’t have to prove their identity.
Arguments on the appeal are set to begin in March.
Investigators are trying to figure out why a man was walking along Interstate 65 when he was hit by a snow plow near State
Road 26 in Tippecanoe County. He died Monday night en route to the hospital. Investigators say the man was walking on the
shoulder of the road. His name was being withheld pending notification of his family. Fox59 will have more at 4 p.m.
Hoosiers enrolling at fast-growing Ivy Tech Community College might find it increasingly difficult to get the classes they
want at the times they prefer. Blame burgeoning enrollment and $10 million in funding cuts.
Indianapolis will spend $22.9 million in federal stimulus money to make street and bridge repairs starting in the spring.
Company plans to close operations in Miamisburg, costing the southwest Ohio city 75 jobs.
Lots of folks in Indianapolis law and sports circles think the Notre Dame athletic director is the right man to replace the
late Myles Brand. But what does Swarbrick think?
Edy’s Grand Ice Cream says the new jobs are part of a company consolidation after an expansion of the Fort Wayne plant. The
hiring will increase the facilty’s workforce to about 600 people.
An independent book shop specializing in mystery and suspense novels is closing after a seven-year run in Carmel.
Ivy Tech Community College’s new dean of the School of Business for its East Central Region will oversee all business programs
at its Anderson, Marion and Muncie campuses.
City father and Indiana Pacers chief Jim Morris says Indianapolis will rise or fall depending on how well the city nurtures
children and connects with the world. So, how are we doing?
Shares of Lilly and partner Amylin rose on hopes that their new version of Byetta will be approved following U.S. regulators’
clearance of a similar drug.
The North by Northwest Business Park near 86th Street and Georgetown Road has been sold to firms in Minneapolis
and Baltimore for $29.6 million.
The Justice Department imposed major conditions upon Live Nation and Ticketmaster in approving the companies’ merger, moves
that
Assistant Attorney General Christine Varney said would have the effect of lowering ticket prices.
An Indiana Senate committee plans to vote Tuesday on a bill that would allow casinos on Lake Michigan and the Ohio River to
move inland.
The bill, would ban smoking in public places statewide except casinos and pari-mutuel horse racing venues.
The Indianapolis Colts’ win over the New York Jets on CBS drew 46.9 million viewers, the most for an American Football Conference
title game since Patriots-Dolphins in 1986.
Hoosiers will have more access to the Internet and to public library materials across the state under a new set of standards
adopted by the Indiana State Library and Historical Board.
Indianapolis trucking firm Celadon Group Inc. saw revenue rise to $127.2 million in its fiscal second quarter, although profit
fell to $1 million.
On a seasonally adjusted basis, the pace of mortgage loan activity increased 9.1 percent for the week ended Jan. 15, according
to the Mortgage Bankers Association. Rates for 30-year loans fell to 5 percent, down from 5.13 percent the previous week.
Fifteen-year mortgages fell to 4.33 percent from 4.45 percent the previous week.