Indiana agency: No action planned over card game prizes
Gaming Commission Executive Director Sara Tait said her agency never had plans to take action against a senior center that offered prizes like cookies and toilet paper in euchre card games.
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Gaming Commission Executive Director Sara Tait said her agency never had plans to take action against a senior center that offered prizes like cookies and toilet paper in euchre card games.
Indianapolis-based marketing technology firm SmarterHQ has landed another $8 million in venture capital, spearheaded by an investment fund launched by local retail behemoth Simon Property Group Inc.
The Indianapolis-based drugmaker on Wednesday will release new data from patients taking its Alzheimer’s drug that could show whether the drug has slowed the progression of their disease. That will show investors whether the 45 percent rise in Lilly’s stock price over the past year is justified.
Kathleen Krusie has been named president of Community Health Network’s north region. She will begin on Aug. 17, replacing Jason Fahrlander, who was promoted to president of acute care services for Community’s entire eight-hospital network. Krusie has been CEO of St. Joseph Regional Health Center in Texas since 2010. Before that, she worked at Mercy […]
Cook Pharmica LLC plans to spend $28 million and hire 70 workers to add a new drug-filling line at its Bloomington facility, company and state officials announced Monday morning. Cook Pharmica, a subsidiary of medical-device maker Cook Group, currently employs 575 workers manufacturing and packaging drugs for use in clinical trials or for sale on […]
The overall survey results, compiled by the National Association for Business Economics, portray an economy muddling along at a steady, if tepid, pace.
Cook Pharmica, a subsidiary of Bloomington-based medical device maker Cook Group, currently employs 575 workers who manufacture and package drugs for use in clinical trials or for sale on the market.
The owner of the four-story hotel hopes to break ground in the fall and open a year later.
Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller is joining two Republican state senators in the race for the 9th District congressional seat.
iHeartMedia is getting into the country game in Indianapolis after agreeing earlier this year to buy WDRZ-FM 98.3, the market's Radio Disney station. The Walt Disney Co. is abandoning the format.
The National Collegiate Athletic Association has asked an appeals court to block a ruling that requires the organization to allow its member schools to pay student-athletes at least $5,000 a year starting Aug. 1.
Michael Feinstein and company teach teens and the sounds of “Star Wars” hit Conner Prairie as music, music, music fill this week’s top picks.
City leaders want to establish Anderson as a cultural hotspot, patterned after Seattle and Portland, Oregon, and other places where the millennial generation is flocking.
Developers could save when they scale back the required number of parking spaces and instead offer bike racks, electric-car charging stations or other “green” amenities.
The Indiana Court of Appeals has denied a request by former Secretary of State Charlie White that it review a state appeals court decision upholding his three felony convictions for vote fraud, theft and perjury.
IBJ ranks the fastest-growing firms in the Indianapolis area, hitting sectors from construction to cybersecurity. The common thread: impressive 3-year revenue growth.
Indiana Superintendent of Public Instruction Glenda Ritz is blaming a clerical error for about $8,000 in campaign contributions being collected during this year's legislative session in a potential violation of the state's campaign finance laws.
Donors gave $343.4 million in fiscal year 2015, breaking 2003’s record of $311 million. Researchers received $401 million in outside funding, the most since 2011.
The prospects for Indiana's flood-ravaged grain crops recovering are becoming increasingly slim with more rain forecast over the next two weeks, according to Purdue Extension experts.
Funeral homes aren't just for funerals anymore. Businesses that once focused almost entirely on honoring the dead are now open to an array of events as they seek to add revenue.