Colts fans can help fight bad home field trend
Lucas Oil Stadium may be too soft to provide much of a home field advantage for Colts during playoffs. But rowdy fans can
give LOS a harder edge for visiting Ravens.
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Lucas Oil Stadium may be too soft to provide much of a home field advantage for Colts during playoffs. But rowdy fans can
give LOS a harder edge for visiting Ravens.
An Ohio congressman is upset the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Indianapolis isn’t seeking to freeze the assets of
Fair Finance Co. owners Tim Durham and Jim Cochran.
Indianapolis-based Kiwanis International on Friday named longtime staff member Stan Soderstrom its executive director. Soderstrom
has been the interim executive director since October, when Rob Parker left the organization of service clubs.
St. Francis and Westview hospitals are open to hosting the osteopathic-medicine school proposed by the Indianapolis Catholic
institution.
The city of Indianapolis is seeking to consolidate management of its parking operations into a single, long-term lease that
could net it tens of millions of dollars to make street and sidewalk repairs. City leaders are expected to release a request
for proposals “soon.”
The Indiana Osteopathic Association passed over a virtually certain $75 million in startup funding from Indiana Wesleyan University
to choose Marian University for its new osteopathic college.
Indianapolis Colts wide receiver Pierre Garcon says he finally has made contact with some family members in Haiti. Garcon
says his mother received word Thursday night that some of his relatives survived Tuesday’s earthquake. But many other
family members are still unaccounted for. Garcon is using his Facebook and Twitter pages to update fans on the situation and
to raise money for disaster relief.
Friends and family gathered Thursday night to mourn the loss of Travon Neely, 15, who was killed Thursday when several people
opened fire in front of his house near 22nd Street and Graham Road. Police said a bullet went through the walls of the home
and hit Neely in the head. Several others were home at the time but weren’t hurt. Neely was a sophomore at John Marshall High
School.
Indianapolis police say they are looking for two men who ambushed a woman on the near-northwest side Friday morning, killing
her husband in the process. Investigators say Sonny Stingley’s wife went out to warm up the car in the driveway of their
house on Hart Drive about 6:45 a.m. When she was returning, two masked men grabbed her and forced her inside at gunpoint.
A struggle ensued and her husband was shot. The men fled. Police are asking anyone with information to call Crime Stoppers,
262-TIPS. Fox59 will have more at 4 p.m.
Lilly Endowment Inc. is continuing to support the state’s advanced-manufacturing initiative, giving Conexus Indiana a grant to help connect potential workers with the necessary training.
A new English-style pub and restaurant is planned for Fountain Square, a new bakery is coming to Fishers and Firehouse Subs plans to open its second Indianapolis-area location near 86th Street and Michigan Road.
Colts fans threatening boycott after Howl at the Moon manager invites Ravens fans to come party in Indianapolis. Blue Crew
thinks invite was laced with insults to Indy.
Beleaguered Elkhart took another hit this week when Illinois-based Gunite Corp. announced plans to move 110 manufacturing
jobs to Rockford, Ill., and Brillion, Wis.
An Indiana liquor store trade group wants a court to freeze state alcohol permits until a judge can clarify quota laws on
the number of permits allowed.
Bird strikes remain a threat—statistically more so than a Nigerian terrorist with a bomb in his BVDs—at Indianapolis International Airport. There were 37 bird strikes reported at the airport in 2009, five involving damage or temporary grounding of an aircraft.
The tiny Catholic institution in Indianapolis has $30 million raised toward new college that could train nearly half as many
students as the Indiana University medical school.
Two walkways that will connect to the new Marriott Place hotel will extend downtown’s network of skywalk and underground pedestrian
paths to a total of 12 hotels with more than 4,700 rooms–the most of any downtown in the United States.
At issue is a dispute pitting NFL players against owners, and owners against one another over how league
revenue should be divided. If it isn’t resolved, the 2011 season could be shortened, delayed or canceled.
The local construction company is drawing up plans for a mixed-use project with offices, a parking garage and retail space
on several parcels it owns near Capitol Avenue and 16th Street.
The largest creditor for Lauth Group Inc. has asked a bankruptcy judge to appoint a trustee after evidence in a related case
suggested Lauth insiders may have backdated documents to thwart creditors.