Kodak official: Company keeping R&D center in Ohio
Eastman Kodak Co. reportedly looked at relocating a 500-person research-and-development center to Indiana, but will instead stay put in Ohio, according to a company official.
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Eastman Kodak Co. reportedly looked at relocating a 500-person research-and-development center to Indiana, but will instead stay put in Ohio, according to a company official.
Former City-County Councilor Lincoln Plowman had asked a judge to overturn his attempted extortion and bribery convictions after a jury found him guilty of the charges Sept. 15.
Aecom, a global firm that also is one of the companies rebuilding the World Trade Center site in New York City, designed the Deep Rock Tunnel Connector, the linchpin of a tunnel system the city will build to handle sewage overflows during rain storms.
Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller’s office said the new notices boost to 45 the total number of tort claims received to date from victims of the deadly state fair stage collapse.
The Indianapolis-based soccer association’s decision to move to Westfield’s Grand Park Sports Campus follows a similar announcement earlier this year by the Lids Indiana Bulls, a youth baseball organization.
Battery maker Ener1 Inc., which has almost 400 employees in the Indianapolis area, has replaced its chief executive and appointed Ivy Tech President Thomas J. Snyder as non-executive chairman of the board.
Weekly unemployment applications dropped 37,000, to a seasonally adjusted 391,000, the Labor Department said Thursday. That's the lowest level since April 2 and the first time applications have fallen below 400,000 since Aug. 6.
Former Indianapolis developer Sydney “Jack” Williams admitted to failing to report $6.4 million in income from 2004 through 2007 that he earned from Miami Beach, Fla.-based Capitol Investments, run by CEO Nevin Shapiro.
The U.S. economy grew slightly faster in the spring than previously estimated but remained dangerously weak in the face of high unemployment and higher gas prices.
Indiana University and the Crane Naval Surface Warfare Center signed an agreement to collaborate in areas including cybersecurity, computing and economic development.
The National College Athletic Association has been sued by two former college football players who claim the organization failed to enforce safety measures to protect them from concussions.
Indiana's attorney general says he'll fight a federal judge's ruling limiting Indiana's ban on political robo-calls to in-state phone calls only.
The recession pushed some nurses out of retirement and others into full-time jobs. But the nurse shortage is expected to resume as the economy improves.
Reform-induced changes dominate health care panel of health care experts convened by Indianapolis Business Journal.
A Morgan County teacher and coach has been placed on paid leave while investigators look into accusations that he sexually assaulted a 16-year-old female student in his home. Authorities in the Monrovia district are withholding the man’s name because no charges have been filed. School officials were notified of the alleged assault by the girl’s parents on Monday. According to the girl, the incident occurred May 29 after she was asked to babysit for the teacher. A former student said the teacher was disciplined last year for inappropriate behavior involving female students.
Tyson Fresh Meats Inc. is recalling about 131,300 pounds of ground beef that might be contaminated with E. coli. Some of the beef was distributed in Indiana. The products being recalled include Kroger-brand ground beef, Butcher's Brand beef and generic label beef, which were all produced Aug. 23. The Kroger beef was distributed in Tennessee and Indiana. The Butcher's beef in North and South Carolina and the generic beef in Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, Illinois, Indiana, Missouri, New York, Ohio, Tennessee, Texas and Wisconsin. All the beef comes in 5-pound or 3-pound packages. E. coli can cause bloody diarrhea, dehydration and kidney failure.
Indiana State Police have arrested a person of interest in the murders of five people in rural Franklin County, about 60 miles southeast of Indianapolis. The man, arrested during a traffic stop, was wearing a disguise. He is being held in the Ripley County jail on an unrelated charge for the armed robbery of a pharmacy in Osgood. Investigators think the murders were the result of a drug deal. The victims were identified as Angela Napier, 47, and her son Jacob Napier, 18; daughter Melissa Napier, 23; and estranged husband Roy Napier, 50. All four were shot in the head and found in one home. Victim Henry Smith, 43, who suffered a gunshot wound to the chest, was found dead in a home across the street. Melissa Napier's 4-year-old daughter was found Sunday wandering down the road from the crime scene.
Chris Tucker, who recently returned to stand-up stages, plays the Murat, Sept. 30. Details here.
The Tarkington Theatre, the new stage at the Center for the Performing Arts, gets tested by the dancers of Pilobolus, Oct. 1. Details here.
Rare USO footage, appearances by Michael Feinstein and Bob Hope’s daughter Linda, and performers from Actors Theatre of Indiana are all part of “GI Jive: The Music & Entertainers of WWII,” kicking off a new exhibition at the Palladium’s Great American Songbook Gallery, Oct. 2. Details here.
Piano duo Anderson & Roe, with guests from Dance Kaleidoscope, perform in the latest American Pianists Association Grand Encounters concert, Oct. 2 at Talbott Street. Details here.
Jon Stewart performs two shows at IU Auditorium, Sept. 30. Details here.
The Avett Brothers extend the season at the Lawn at White River State Park with an Oct. 1 concert. Details here.
Anthony Rapp, original cast star of Broadway’s “Rent,” speaks on love and loss in “Without You,” at the University of Indianapolis’ Ransburg Auditorium on Sept. 29. Details here.
Sandi Patty fans get a double hit at the Palladium. On Oct. 4, she’ll perform in concert with Michael Feinstein. On the 5th, she goes Broadway with a release concert for her new CD. Details on both shows here.
Sept. 30-Oct. 29
Theatre on the Square
Dismissed in its original Broadway production as a “Chorus Line” wannabee, “Working”—adapted from Studs Terkel’s oral history of the working lives of everyday people—has proven itself in many regional theater productions. It’s rarely the same show twice, though. In this iteration, the music from the original (including songs by “Wicked” composer Stephen Schwartz, James Taylor and others) has been supplemented with two originals by Lin-Manuel Miranda, of “In the Heights” fame. And the show, once featuring a sprawling cast of 17, has been tightened for a company of six. Details here.