November 13, 2006
Anthony SchoettleEmmis Communications Corp. has a new mantra when it comes to emerging technology some say will kill the radio industry: If
you can't beat 'em, join 'em. Emmis entered a relationship with California-based Apple Computer Inc. nine months ago that
is paying big dividends. Since launching one of the radio industry's first iTunes storefronts on its stations' Internet sites,
Emmis officials said they have become the No. 2 iTunes affiliate based on sales. Only Internet behemoth Yahoo Music sells
more....
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November 13, 2006
Scott OlsonThe terms for emerging Internet technology are enough to make the less savvy long for the days when e-mail seemed cutting-edge.
The communication tool, especially among teens, has given way to instant messaging, of course. So it's no wonder colleges
and companies alike are starting to shun standard e- mail and Web-page marketing efforts in favor of video-on-demand clips,
known as vodcasts. "The computer was meant to be watched; it wasn't meant to be read," said Jon DiGregory, who founded...
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September 25, 2006
Greg AndrewsAnyone surprised that at age 62, Jim Cornelius would take on the bruising job of leading embattled drugmaker Bristol-Myers
Squibb shouldn't be. After all, the Zionsville businessman has surprised observers before. This is an executive who 12 years
ago gave up one of the top jobs in corporate America-chief financial officer of Eli Lilly and Co.-to become chairman of Guidant
Corp., then a much-maligned collection of medical-device firms that Lilly was spinning off into a stand-alone company. A risky
move,...
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September 4, 2006
Greg AndrewsBEHIND THE NEWS First Internet's acquisition is no run-of-the-mill bank Bank mergers happen all the time in Indiana, but this
one is about as unique as they come. The buyer, Indianapolis-based First Internet Bancorp, was one of the nation's first Web-only
banks when it opened its doors in 1999. Today, it's among the top five in that field, with assets topping $445 million. The
seller is Indianapolis-based Landmark Financial Corp., parent of Landmark Savings Bank. Landmark Financial, with assets of...
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August 14, 2006
Greg AndrewsA Marion County judge has ordered an Indianapolis credit union to pay its former CEO $3.4 million, saying it wrongly froze
the executive's accounts after accusing him of financial improprieties three years ago.
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July 31, 2006
Greg AndrewsUnion Federal Bank's Fort Wayne-based parent is locked in a dispute that could put in peril the Indianapolis financial institution's
$330 million sale to Bowling Green, Ohio-based Sky Financial Group Inc.
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July 24, 2006
Jeffrey A.Toothpaste. Laundry bleach. Cat food. Banking services. Despite the hopes of many bank executives, vast numbers of consumers
rarely elevate their banks beyond everyday commodity status. Through traditional advertising and marketing, many banks attempt
to differenti ate themselves as the bank of choice or the bank that makes a difference. Repeat the tag line often enough and
hopefully potential customers will start to believe it. One fact underscores this unfortunate commodity service status: According
to recent market research, the No....
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July 24, 2006
Scott OlsonHonda Motor Co.'s decision to build a massive auto manufacturing plant near Greensburg has the small Decatur County town abuzz
with excitement. But a company already entrenched there is making some noise of its own. MainSource Financial Group Inc. has
increased assets an impressive 50 percent during the past year largely due to four acquisitions made by the publicly traded
bank holding company. "We're a little opportunistic," admitted MainSource President and CEO James Saner. "We really want to
grow, give...
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July 24, 2006
Peter SchnitzlerCity Securities Corp., one of the largest investment firms based in Indiana, has purchased Columbus, Ohio-based ReCasa Financial
Group LLC, a specialty lender focused on rehabs of dilapidated houses.
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July 24, 2006
Scott OlsonAn East Coast investment-banking firm is opening an Indianapolis office and has recruited three high-profile professionals
who bring a wealth of experience to manage operations. Towson, Md.-based The Riderwood Group Inc. wants to help midsize companies
raise $5 million to $200 million in capital, a range largely ignored here by outside rivals, firm executives said. "There
really is not a national mid-market investment bank [in Indianapolis]," company President Mitchell Fillet said. "This is a
place where the big firms have...
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July 24, 2006
Matthew KishHow big is the portfolio? Very big. How does it stack up to its rivals? Nobody knows for sure. The Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp. requires banks to report the deposits they hold at branches, but it doesn't require banks to spell out how much commercial
business they're generating geographically. "It's one of the biggest frustrations of the bank information that we [compile],"
said Karen Dorway, president of Bauer Financial Inc., a Coral Gables, Fla.-based bank rating service that tracks market...
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July 10, 2006
Anthony SchoettleSince purchasing Escient Solutions in early 2003 and changing its name to Electronic Evolutions Inc., Mike Alley has increased
revenue 35 percent, to $6.5 million. That'll be small potatoes if Alley's dreams for the company pan out. Alley, former Fifth
Third Bank of Central Indiana president and CEO, wants to be a consolidator in the fragmented electronics and automation design
and installation industry. Toward that end, he partnered in late June with electronics industry veteran Daniel Knotts and
formed E2...
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July 10, 2006
On June 1, Gov. Mitch Daniels and officials from the Indiana Public Employees Retirement Fund announced the Indiana Investment
Fund, a $100 million investment vehicle. The fund will invest in early-stage startups and loans to mature firms. It will invest
in Indiana-What's wrong with local investment pros? based agriculture, manufacturing, information technology, transportation
and life sciences companies. Credit Suisse was selected to manage this new fund. As a global investment bank, Credit Suisse
certainly has skilled bankers who can evaluate...
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June 26, 2006
Anthony SchoettleAnd more are coming. Indianapolis is leading the charge toward high-definition radio, thanks to the strong presence of national
players such as Emmis Communications Corp. and Clear Channel Communications, which operate a total of seven stations here.
But the technological revolution reaches far beyond our airwaves. Industry experts call HD the most radical change in the
radio landscape in 50 years, despite the fact that few listeners have the special radio receiver necessary to tune in the
new channels. "We're...
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June 12, 2006
Scott OlsonBuzzing With ActivityUnique Broad Ripple biz ready to offer franchises For business partners Wendy Reed and Pam Weaver, life
these days is starting to look a lot like the frenzy their company name projects: Sugar Buzz. They're not really hopped up
on sweets, but the Indianapolis women are flying high nonetheless-buoyed by the glory of being featured in a national magazine
and the promise of franchising their unusual mix of children's parties and dropin day care. The longtime pals combined...
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June 12, 2006
Julie YoungCommunication-and simplicity-can be a challenge when it comes to tech talk. "It's like the old adage, if you ask a tech guy
what time it is, he'll tell you how to build a watch," said Joel Russell, president of Indianapolis-based software developer
eImagine Technology Group. But Russell works around potential "lingo" problems when he's meeting with customers. No matter
the industry, he looks for ways to automate inefficient processes using computer software. His goal is to save his clients
time...
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June 12, 2006
-Peter SchnitzlerNew York-based investment bank Credit Suisse is building quite a book of private-equity business in Indiana. Credit Suisse
has been chosen to manage the Indiana Public Employees' Retirement Fund's new $105 million Indiana Investment Fund. It also
directs the $73 million Indiana Future Fund, which was launched by BioCrossroads, a local organization dedicated to developing
the state's life sciences industry. Indiana's not the only place Credit Suisse is applying its expertise. Last fall, Ohio
formed the Ohio-Midwest Fund, a regionally...
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June 12, 2006
Della PachecoWhen Colleen Brown graduated from the Indiana University School of Medicine in May, she was part of a class making history.
For the first time, the medical school was graduating more women physicians than men-131 and 128, respectively. Since 1970,
there has been a 10-fold increase in the number of women physicians, according to a February 2006 study by the American Medical
Association. In 1970, only 25,404 women graduated in the United States in all medical specialties. By 2004, the...
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June 12, 2006
Peter SchnitzlerIndianapolis-based City Securities Corp. is leading a $390 million bond issue for the Indianapolis International Airport expansion.
To snag the deal, it overcame a host of far larger competitors on Wall Street. To paraphrase Mark Twain, reports of the death
of local investment banking are greatly exaggerated. It's the second-largest bond deal in City Securities' 82-year history,
surpassed only by the city's 2002 purchase of Indianapolis Water Co. for $580 million. City Securities also led the water
deal. "We've done...
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June 5, 2006
Chris O\'malleyNo habla inglesImmigrants who want to advance find many programs to help them learn English Osvaldo Escobedo was hungry to
learn English. It was bad enough when he couldn't advance at the Nissan Motor Co. plant in Aguascalientes, in central Mexico,
because he couldn't converse in the business language of English. Later, when he came to the United States, he couldn't eat
much more than what he could pronounce. "When I go to restaurant, I ask [for] 'coffee and doughnuts....
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May 29, 2006
Ken CarowCapital is the lifeblood of any business. But fresh infusions of money are particularly important for startup and small businesses,
since they often can't fund new equipment, employees or facilities out of their cash reserves or profits. The top three sources
of new capital for small business are owner's equity (33 percent) bank loans (20 percent) and trade credit (15 percent). Let's
focus on bank loans and simple ways that small-business owners can improve their chances of getting a loan...
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May 22, 2006
Jeffrey F.Customers got their first inkling 25 years ago when ATM machines were introduced. Another hint came along 10 years later when
voice mail arrived. The trickle of computerized customer-service inter actions became a flood as we started using devices
like parking-garage ticket machines, airline ticket kiosks, telephone voice trees and self-service checkouts for groceries
and library books. Internet transactions such as online shopping, banking and purchasing movie tickets also entered the scene.
Interacting with these "smart technologies," which seemed odd...
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May 22, 2006
Peter SchnitzlerTechPoint's Mira Awards, which were to be handed out May 19, celebrate excellence in Hoosier innovation. The annual awards
banquet also serves as a pretty good bellwether of who's poised for a big payday. For example, TechPoint honored Indianapolis-based
medical device-maker Suros Surgical Systems Inc. with a Mira award three years before Massachusettsbased Hologic Inc. acquired
Suros for $240 million in April. In 2003, TechPoint also recognized Carmel-based banking software-maker Baker-Hill. California-based
Experian bought Baker-Hill last August for an undisclosed...
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May 22, 2006
Chris O\'malleyOne Call Communications has been placed in receivership, a day after a lender for its 2002 management buyout filed a lawsuit
alleging the Carmel long-distance and operator-services company owes it more than $21 million. The May 11 lawsuit in U.S.
District Court in Indianapolis by Pittsburgh-based PNC Bank appears to be the knockout blow for a telecommunications firm
accused by several states of violating consumer protection laws in billing and collection practices. Also looming is a proposed
$1.1 million fine...
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May 15, 2006
Jo EllenComplexions Day Spa Downtown day spa has glowing business Irvington native focuses on organic products, attracts clients from
entertainment, sports scenes Trinia Cox's venture builds on a 10-year career in skin care and makeup artistry with stints
in Chicago and Los Angeles. And the location of Complexions Day Spa on Massachusetts Avenue was a good fit with her background
in the arts, including gigs as a singer with Dr. Bop and the Headliners and her own group, Trinia and the...
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First, the Athenaeum is going to have to get past the hurdle with the Lockerbie residents and the agreement that the parcel would be residential. Second, and in my opinion, this prime piece of property should include parking, PLUS, a black box theater(s), some market rate and affordable artist housing and a plan to renovate and reconfigure the second story theater. I would negotiate to add the DeHaan property surface parking lot into the development mix, place a one story surface parking garage on the DeHaan lot on the street level (for the Dehaan tenants use during the daytime) and add a second story to the garage that would become an addition to the current second story theater and then change the direction of the theater by moving the stage across the alley and on top of the DeHaan lot parking. You can add all the stage elements that are currently missing from the Athenaeum stage to make it more attractive for use by Ballet, Opera and traveling productions. Plus, the theater changes would probably help solve some of the soundproofing issues. Alas,it does not seem to be a part of the strategic plan to conduct a study to determine best use of the property. Seems like the current plan is a quick and easy move that ignores the property best use/potential and any strategic property planning for the effect on future generations.
I recall that MSA's pilings are still in the ground and hard to remove. It’s not likely any proposal will include significant underground construction/parking because of this. Start adding 2 floors of retail, 8 floors of parking and 5-10 floors of possible hotel, and/or 10-20 floors of residential, and you are at 30 floors already with possible expansion of all the uses. But then again I could be wrong.
Accoriding to their website there is no deadline to the Do Not Call list. What is this article referring to??
On what planet are they entitled to this largesse from the stockholders? These people make multi-million dollar salaries: Pay for your own personal travel.
It matters because they're already paid enormously fat salaries: Pay for your own personal travel. Being "taxed on it" isn't a valid excuse--so what? They're still being gifted a raft of luxury perks from somebody else's money on top of an enormous, lavish salary.