You-review-it Monday
A busy weekend included a Dance Kaleidoscope revival, a Bob Dylan tribute, and confessional theater.
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A busy weekend included a Dance Kaleidoscope revival, a Bob Dylan tribute, and confessional theater.
Officials say closing a key Lake County bridge serving casinos, a steel mill and other businesses is costing the state tax
revenues amid other financial losses.
An Iraqi war veteran is drawing scrutiny from environmental advocates who question whether his work experience is appropriate
to his new job as a top state environmental adviser.
The General Assembly plans to consider changes to Indiana’s alcohol laws this session, including proposals that would allow
microbreweries to sell takeout beer on Sundays and permit alcohol sales during voting hours on Election Day.
Investigators are taking a "hard look" at safety at a northwestern Indiana steel mill that has had two recent explosions.
The museum counted 1.3 million visits last year, an increase of 270,000, or 26 percent,
over 2008.
Melvin Simon’s
daughter Deborah filed court papers Thursday afternoon charging her father was coerced into approving a
new estate plan in February 2009 that dramatically increased the amount of his fortune going to her stepmother, Bren.
The top level of the parking garage at Indianapolis International Airport is being closed in a money-saving effort. Officials
also will block off some little-used areas of surface parking lots, saying that the decline in air traffic during the recession
has reduced the need for parking spaces at the new passenger terminal that opened in late 2008
People for the Ethical Treatment for Animals made the $7,500 offer in a letter to Mayor Greg Ballard after the chain made
a deal to help pay for fire extinguishers and smoke detectors.
Robert E. Nelms received an eight-year sentence that will be served through a community corrections program after pleading
guilty to theft and securities fraud.
Indianapolis-based Emmis Communications Corp. reported lower revenue during its fiscal third quarter, but still managed a
small profit.
Indianapolis-based Emmis Communications Corp.’s revenue dropped, but the radio and publishing company still posted a profit
during its third fiscal quarter.
A central Indiana minister died in an accident Thursday near Lafayette when his car hit a school bus. Kasey Schnepp had
just dropped off his daughter at the Delphi School Corp., according to police. Minutes later, he lost control of his car in
the snowy conditions and slid in front of one of the district’s busses. Schnepp, minister at Burlington United Methodist
Church, was killed instantly. Eleven students and the bus driver were taken to hospitals with minor injuries.
Jane Laing, 32, died Thursday night after being struck by two cars while trying to cross East 82nd Street on the northeast
side of Indianapolis. Laing was crossing the busy street near Allisonville Road when she was struck by a Pontiac Grand Prix.
That driver stopped to help, but another car ran over the victim and fled the scene. Fox59 will have more at 4 p.m.
A change in rules for school administrators opens the door to people outside the traditional education establishment.
Does the over-dramatization of weather conditions keep audiences away?
The Labor Department said Friday that employers cut 85,000 jobs last month, worse than the 8,000 drop analysts expected. But
the nation’s unemployment rate held steady at 10 percent.
Commercial Office Environments gets larger with its purchase of Area 4 Office Furniture. Operations of the two companies will
be consolidated at Commercial Office Environments’ facility on Zionsville Road.
This year’s Indiana State Fair will celebrate the state’s $3 billion hog industry by putting hogs and pork products center
stage during the 17-day fair. Deep-fried bacon on a stick? We can hope.
One of the city’s most prolific commercial real estate brokers is leaving the local office of Colliers Turley Martin Tucker
to join Chicago-based Jones Lang LaSalle.