Local lawyer key figure in felling Armstrong
Bill Bock, lead counsel for the U.S Anti-Doping Agency’s case against cyclist Lance Armstrong, spent two years investigating the allegations.
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Bill Bock, lead counsel for the U.S Anti-Doping Agency’s case against cyclist Lance Armstrong, spent two years investigating the allegations.
-701 Ford Road LLC bought the KinderCare facility at 8485 Woodfield Crossing Blvd. The buyer was represented by Douglas Passon of Fortis Net Lease. The seller, BBDFC LLC, was represented by Kevin Broderick, Matt Gray, and Rick Trimpe of CBRE.
-Imperial Auto USA Corp. bought an 82,197-square-foot building at 3036 Madan Park Drive. The buyer was represented by Luke Wessel of Cassidy Turley. The seller, Terranova West LLC, was represented by John Hanley and Terry Busch of CBRE.
The money, long ago diverted by Gov. Daniels to the state’s general fund, would help reduce landfill waste and lower manufacturing costs.
A new reporting requirement on local governments gives taxpayers unprecedented access to debt information, but the data is also likely to raise many questions.
Recycling advocates and beverage container manufacturers want the next governor to fully reinstate Indiana’s Recycling Fund. Gov. Mitch Daniels suspended the recycling fund in 2009, redirecting the 50-cent-per-ton “tipping fee” to the state’s general coffers. The Indiana General Assembly established the recycling fund in 1990 to help pay for household recycling and hazardous waste programs. […]
Legacy Travel Club finds believer after months of fruitless fundraising locally.
As a professional speaker myself, I could appreciate his pacing and understated gestures.
George Seurat’s painting “A Sunday on La Grande Jatte—1884” provided the inspiration for the musical “Sunday in the Park with George.” For an Oct. 20 visit to both the painting and the musical, I was in the company of 35 participants in the first IBJ A&E Road Trip, an exercise in arts connectivity.
Last in a month-long series of reviews of possessive restaurant reviews.
Lin Dunn’s Indiana Fever is no longer just any team.
In just over a decade, the interactive marketer has rocketed from bootstrapped startup to New York Stock Exchange-listed company with a market value of $1.5 billion.
With election rhetoric reaching a fever pitch, investors are curious about what an Obama re-election or Romney win will mean for the stock market.
The facts by themselves offer no cause or understanding of the issue, much less an explanation of potential policy interventions.
The automobile industry did not need rescue. It did not need the government takeover. Only two badly run corporations were in trouble.
Three things have modulated the excesses of unfettered American capitalism since the rise of the Progressive Era in the early 20th century: labor unions, government regulations, and the progressive income tax system. It’s no coincidence that the rise of the American middle class followed.
I have avoided writing about any of left-wing author Sheila Kennedy’s opinion pieces because she’s such an easy target. However her [Oct. 22] “Elections have consequence” piece calling Republicans extremist demands a response.
Bruce Hetrick’s Oct. 22 column “Spouting off about the all-too-common art of spin” begins by offering the reader his view on how characters in the Broadway play “The Book of Mormon” are adept at spinning falsehoods in the guise of “helping people.” Hetrick provides spinning of his own, personally reviewing the highly irreverent play as hilarious, pant-wetting entertainment.
Peter Rusthoven’s columns are horrible. There is no business information in them, just conservative Republican dribble.
Please don’t blame the state’s emphasis on tests for the lack of life skills in mathematics [Meredith column, Oct. 1].