Seymour officials question trooper post closing
Officials in Seymour are protesting the announced closing of an Indiana State Police post in their city.
Officials in Seymour are protesting the announced closing of an Indiana State Police post in their city.
Eli Lilly and Co. CEO John Lechleiter’s total compensation increased $4.1 million in 2009.
January’s report offers hope that employers may start adding jobs soon. Excluding the beleaguered construction industry, the private sector as a whole added 63,000 positions.
Harrison Epperly has made a fortune in his business career, but he’s also sparked controversy.
Plews Shadley Racher & Braun has finished a careful restoration of the Eden-Talbott House, continuing a strategy of shunning
glass and steel.
Current and past recipients of IBJ‘s annual Forty Under 40 recognition.
Cooper Manning, brother of Super Bowl winners Peyton and Eli, is a big success in his own right as a broker of energy stocks.
But you’ll rarely hear him mention the sibling connection to his clients, or that he’s buddies with Drew Brees.
From their career paths to their paychecks, Indianapolis Colts quarterback Peyton Manning and New Orleans Saints signal
caller Drew Brees are miles
apart in many ways. But there also are some intriguing parallels between the men who led their teams to Super Bowl XLIV.
Jan. 28-April 18
Indianapolis Art Center
The first of what will become a biennial exhibition
features 70 works by 50 artists from Indiana, its neighbor states and, just for good measure, Wisconsin. Local artists include
Amy Brier (creator of the rolling limestone ball pieces at White River Gardens) and Deborah Klein, who works in delicately
cut paper (see samples here). The show was juried by arts advocate Paul Klein, author of the popular Chicago blog ArtLetter.
Details here.
The east-side Indianapolis kitchen and bathroom remodeling shop is attempting to succeed as a solo operation following longtime
employee Allen Weisenburger’s decision to buy the operation rather than let it close.
Your decision to discontinue the printing of stock prices and economic activity charts, as announced in your Jan. 17 issue,
was extremely disappointing to us as well as, surely, to other paid subscribers.
The Supreme Court threw out a 63-year-old law designed to restrain the influence of big business and unions on elections,
ruling that corporations may spend as freely as they like to support or oppose candidates.
These deals had no price tag, but still were significant.
WellPoint’s sale of its NextRx unit was the largest deal in the Indianapolis area in 2009.
Brenda Myers, executive director of the Hamilton County Convention and Visitors Bureau, rounds out the appointments to a restructured
Indianapolis Capital Improvement Board.
Last weekend’s A&E events included trips back to the 1970s at the IMA and the 1940s at the Phoenix Theatre.
Tony Cotman, 42, has vacated his post as Indy Racing League vice president of competition.
Indiana’s future as a hub for making electric and hybrid vehicles hinges on a single government loan program.
It’s hard to imagine an invention more commonly used than the light bulb. It’s a shame that by 2014 we probably
won’t be able to buy them anymore, at least not as readily as we do now.