RUSTHOVEN: This is post-racial America?
The final days of June made me wonder if we’re ever going to get past race.
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The final days of June made me wonder if we’re ever going to get past race.
A growing expo for Indiana’s technology industry will give 60 startups a shot at pulling in capital on July 11. Each company will get 60 seconds to pitch their businesses to Halo Capital Group, Elevate Ventures and a handful of other seed- and early-stage investment firms.
Ball State University next month will launch what’s believed to be the nation’s first-ever digital sports production major.
The Vic, which opened in 1996, looks as nice as it did on opening night.
Irish industrial conglomerate Ingersoll-Rand Plc is poised to spin off its security operations late this year into Allegion—which will have its North American headquarters and most of its executive team in Carmel.
Indiana Gov. Mike Pence has picked state Auditor Tim Berry as the new Indiana Republican Party chairman.
Five people arrested last week after a bank robbery in Fishers now face federal charges, authorities announced Tuesday. Xavier Hardy and Duryea Rogers, both 26, are charged with armed bank robbery and using a firearm in a crime of violence. Deandre Armour, 37, Tahitia Burnett, 40, and Olivia Haiflich, 20, are charged with aiding and abetting the robbery, as well as using a firearm in a crime of violence. Prosecutors said federal authorities have been watching the suspects because an informant told them they were planning several bank robberies.
A driver left the scene of a two-vehicle crash Wednesday at 25th Street and German Church Road just before 4 a.m. Indianapolis police arrived at the scene to find a flipped-over Jeep and a gray Ford Taurus in a ditch. The Jeep’s driver sustained minor injuries. The driver of the Taurus fled the scene on foot.
Two Indianapolis women say they were robbed by an armed man Wednesday morning as they walked to their car in the 5900 block of East 14th Street at about 4:15. One of the victims told police she gave the man all the cash she had, $7, after he pointed a silver handgun at her head. She said the man apologized several times for the robbery and offered her marijuana and his Chicago Bulls hat in exchange for the cash before walking off.
An executive for the phone service company told regulators Wednesday that the firm's depth of experience—not fraudulent tactics—led to the creation of 30,000 federally subsidized accounts last year.
At some point, NFL and Colts fans may wonder whom they’re cheering for. They may wonder whose poster their child has on the wall. And they may not like the answer staring back at them.
A local restaurateur is renovating 7,300 square feet of space in the former Chateau Thomas Winery building at the south end of downtown and plans to open Tow Yard Brewing by late summer.
A Carmel company that markets a device which plugs into a car’s diagnostic port to monitor the vehicle's performance has filed a patent-infringement lawsuit against a better-known competitor.
A Canadian-based General Motors supplier plans to open a new facility near Fort Wayne and hire up to 160 workers in the next few years.
German oil-and-vinegar purveyor Vom Fass plans a late-summer opening for its first Indiana store at Hamilton Town Center. Two restaurants and a kids’ clothing store also are in the works.
In a major concession to business groups, the Obama administration Tuesday unexpectedly announced a one-year delay, until after the 2014 elections, in a central requirement of the new health care law.
A national group is questioning the fairness of a Ball State University panel reviewing allegations that an honors course is religion disguised as science.
I can see the business model of the physicians and hospitals at work as they recommend tests of questionable necessity. Yet when it’s my own wife and son, it’s easy to think of a terrible outcome to avert with just one more test.
A former Marion County deputy prosecutor formally pleaded guilty Tuesday to accepting a bribe. David Wyser has agreed to tell federal prosecutors everything he knows about public corruption in Indianapolis.