A trip back in time to L.S Ayres, a pi party, and more on this week’s A&E priority list
Plus Indy Film Festival’s Film to Fork series continues with “The Search for General Tso.”
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Plus Indy Film Festival’s Film to Fork series continues with “The Search for General Tso.”
Job openings rose 2.5 percent, to nearly 5 million, the most since January 2001, the Labor Department said Tuesday. The number of people quitting their jobs increased 3 percent, to 2.8 million, the most in more than six years.
A Senate committee is scheduled to hear testimony Tuesday afternoon from school officials on the House-backed funding plan that would shift tens of millions of dollars to growing suburban districts.
The response to Monday’s unveiling of Honda’s aero kit in California was markedly different than Chevrolet's Feb. 17 debut.
A new subdivision with 315 homes could displace a golf course in Westfield, but so far city officials and residents aren’t sold on the plan.
The First Financial Bank branch at the northeast corner of Pennsylvania and Washington streets will close in May, while a restaurant from an Irvington couple opens on East 16th Street.
Former Indy Land Bank director Reggie Walton wasn't the initial target of an undercover FBI agent who came to town in 2012. But Walton, 33, managed to talk himself into a federal indictment that could put him in prison for 20 years.
Three vacant structures at an intersection just north of East 16th Street have been purchased by two developers planning a mix of office and retail for the struggling area.
The defense and aerospace contractor plans to add another 249 workers to its existing work force of 912 in Indianapolis by the end of 2020. It also plans to invest about $26 million on the local expansion.
The Indiana State Medical Association says two of its computer hard drives that have been stolen contain insurance information on 39,000 people.
A plan that's in its early stages would bring a children's museum to a former Sears store at Mounds Mall in Anderson.
Simon’s acquisition offer is only 6.6 percent higher than Macerich’s average price in the previous 20 days. One reason the premium looks miniscule is because Macerich’s stock had already jumped 24 percent since November on takeover speculation fanned by Simon.
Through partnerships with county-owned hospitals, Indiana’s nursing homes pulled in about $260 million last year in extra federal funds. That means participating nursing homes enjoyed a 10 percent bonus check.
Former Indianapolis attorney William Conour, whom the government says defrauded former clients of nearly $7 million, is currently serving a 10-year sentence in prison.
A state-funded feasibility study for creating a reservoir on the White River north of Indianapolis severely underestimates the cost of the project, according to a group of Ball State University professors who conducted a peer review of the study.
The U.S. Supreme Court has sided with the Obama administration in upholding a rule making mortgage brokers eligible for overtime pay under federal labor law.
The three largest credit-reporting agencies say they will change how they handle records, including making the dispute process easier for consumers and providing a waiting period before medical debts are reported.
Simon’s hostile bid represents a 30-percent premium to Macerich’s closing price on Nov. 18, the day before Simon disclosed it acquired a 3.6-percent stake in the Santa Monica, California-based mall landlord.
The U.S. Census Bureau found that 2.7 percent of registered nurses in 1970 were men. That percentage is now closer to 10 percent.
The state highway department said a contractor plans to begin work March 16 on a $36 million project for rebuilding and widening I-65 between Southport Road in Indianapolis and the Main Street interchange in Greenwood.