Hillenbrand CEO Camp to step down in September
Kenneth Camp helped transform Batesville-based Hillenbrand Inc. from a $650 million casket company serving North America to a $1.6 billion global diversified industrial company.
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Kenneth Camp helped transform Batesville-based Hillenbrand Inc. from a $650 million casket company serving North America to a $1.6 billion global diversified industrial company.
“Is there something unique about Indianapolis theater?” ask early arrivers for the American Theatre Critics Association conference.
The Children’s Museum of Indianapolis has landed retired astronaut David Wolf as its first “Extraordinary Scientist-in-Residence,” calling on the native Hoosier to help develop programs sparking kids’ interest in science, technology, engineering and math.
The private operator of the Hoosier Lottery faces a $20 million penalty in Illinois because it fell nearly $66 million short of the profits it promised that state.
Hospital officials praised Indiana's medical savings accounts but some consumer advocates panned them Wednesday during a public hearing as Gov. Mike Pence seeks federal approval to use the Healthy Indiana Plan to expand Medicaid in this state.
Any expansion of Indiana's already ambitious school voucher program may have to wait after senators pushed for more information Wednesday to determine the effects of the fledgling program.
The Mind Trust education reform group has agreed to give $1 million each to two California-based charter school networks that plan to open 12 new schools here in the next seven years.
Indianapolis-area statistics on home sales, demographic trends and more.
Architect Chris Lake’s Zionsville home is a work in progress, and probably always will be.
A confluence of circumstances has led to a spurt of sales that sometimes occur within days.
This year, the American Pianists Association classical fellowship competition will have a visual art component. Take a look here.
Violinist Nicola Benedetti joins the ISO and Krzysztof Urbanski and you could be there.
A Mini Fringe, a great lady of the American theater, and a performance in a downed balloon highlight this week in arts and entertainment.
An Indiana House committee has rewritten a gambling bill to keep table games out of Indiana's racetracks and restore money for counties that host casinos.
A Senate committee unanimously passed legislation that’s meant to bolster the state’s economy with a new council charged with aligning work-force training efforts. House Bill 1002 – which already passed the House – now moves to the full Senate for consideration.
Indiana State Police detectives believe they can finally close a 30-year-old cold case involving a murder at the Indiana State Prison in Michigan City. Scottsburg resident Paul Stucker, 52, was arrested Tuesday in Gretna, La., in connection with the slaying of Johnny Hodge, 34, inside a cell at the prison in 1983. A tip led police to Gretna and to Stucker. U.S. Marshals and the Great Lakes Regional Fugitive Task Force assisted with the investigation. Stucker is awaiting extradition from Louisiana to Indiana.
Indianapolis police nabbed a man wanted on a federal warrant on Wednesday morning after a short chase on the city’s northwest side. The chase began around 2:30 a.m. in the 4600 block of Kessler Boulevard North Drive, as police attempted to pull over a speeding driver. The driver attempted to escape, leading police on a short chase through the neighborhood until the maroon vehicle stopped in the 3500 block of West 52nd Street. Police apprehended the 36-year-old man after he tried to flee on foot, and discovered that he was wanted on a federal warrant.
President Obama has filled out his brackets for the NCAA men’s basketball tournament, and Indiana University is his pick to go all the way. ESPN revealed Wednesday that Obama’s Final Four also includes Louisville, Ohio State and Florida. The president has only picked the winner once in his previous years in office, with North Carolina taking the title in 2009. His bracket generally favors Big 10 teams for the upcoming tournament, but, he said, “I think this is Indiana’s year.”
Students returned to classes Wednesday at IUPUI following a four-hour lockdown on Tuesday afternoon after a student reported seeing a man with a gun in a campus parking lot at about 12:30 p.m. School officials released a text alert around 12:55 p.m. urging students, faculty and staff to seek shelter as police searched for the suspect, who was reportedly wearing a long brown coat. IUPUI Police Capt. Bill Abston said authorities received word of two subsequent sightings but did not find anyone matching the description during their search. Some students said there was some confusion about what the lockdown entailed and whether they could leave buildings. Others credited the university and police with handling the situation quickly.
The move to the newly formed Big East athletic conference will cost Butler a lot more than its $2 million exit fee from the Atlantic 10.