RATHKE: My saga of staying up to date on health care reform
Human resources used to be about payroll and benefits. Now it’s also about watching Congress.
Human resources used to be about payroll and benefits. Now it’s also about watching Congress.
Indiana University Health is the latest system to drill employees ranging from clerks to physicians in how to treat patients.
Tracy Lawrence is joined by Philip Steven & The Open Road at 8 Seconds Saloon March 18. Details here.
On March 19, Radmilla Cody discusses her experiences as the first biracial Miss Navajo Nation after a screening of the film “Hearing Radmilla” at the Eiteljorg Museum of American Indians and Western Art. Details here
Three Dog Night brings its hits to French Lick Resort March 18. Details here.
Composer Marvin Hamlisch (“A Chorus Line,” “The Way We Were”) performs at the Palladium March 20. Details here.
Vince Gill offers two shows at the Palladium March 22-23. Details here.
All shapes and sizes show their stuff when Angel Burlesque presents “Erin Go Bragh-less” in celebration of St. Patrick’s Day. Details here.
IndyChoruses’ “Moonlight on the Wabash” features songs by Hoosiers, March 19-20. Details here.
The Talking Heads tribute group This Must Be the Band performs at the Cabaret at the Athenaeum, March 19. Details at 997-7001.
Pianist Monika Herzig celebrates Women’s History Month—and the release of her latest disc, “Come With Me”—with a performance at the Jazz Kitchen March 18. Details here.
Percussionist Colin Currie and jazz group The Icarus Ensemble join the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra for its latest Happy Hour concert, March 17. Details here.
The Carmel-based homebuilder said Tuesday that it will shut down if outside investors or a line of credit aren’t obtained soon. The company previously received a cash infusion last June from a group of subcontractors.
Butler University Bulldog fans will have to do without their mascot when the men’s basketball team takes on Old Dominion in the first round of the NCAA tournament Thursday night in Washington. Blue II, a real bulldog, attended the Final Four at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis last year as Butler made its run to the championship game. But NCAA rules forbid live animals from early-round venues. Blue II’s Twitter site has been overwhelmed with fans opposing the ban.
The Indianapolis Colts and its stadium manager, the Capital Improvement Board of Marion County, are squabbling over who pays certain concession expenses. The dispute ultimately could reach arbitration, if an agreement is not reached.
In 1987, KFC became the first fast-food chain to enter mainland China, and it’s never looked back.
The Capital Improvement Board voted Monday to retain the services of three firms that currently provide security at Lucas Oil Stadium and the Indiana Convention Center, at an annual savings of $300,000.
Though Big Ten tournament attendance in Indianapolis is up this year, it would be exponentially higher if IU and Purdue were rival powerhouses.
China has made educating its population in English a big priority. And when this Communist government decides something is important, it goes all out.
NFL labor talks broke down just hours before the latest contract extension expired Friday, putting America’s most popular sport on a path to its first work stoppage since 1987, and raising questions about Indianapolis’ hosting of the 2012 Super Bowl.
Jim Schellinger, chairman and CEO of CSO Architects, has been appointed to handle weather preparedness for the Super Bowl to be hosted in Indianapolis in February.
Indiana University is drafting plans to offer thousands of university employees a voluntary retirement buyout.
Recreational product superstore Family Leisure changed its name from Watson’s two years ago, but it could take years before the company led by Kevin Prefontaine builds the kind of brand equity tied up in the old name.
A complicated legal case about trade secrets points up a down side to the success Indiana’s research universities have had turning their research into revenue: Large legal bills can eat much of the money.
Is theater dead? Three different productions from three different companies over the past few weeks point to some ways to counter—or at least hold off—the decline.
A year ago this week, the Butler men’s basketball team was preparing to play the University of Texas-El Paso in the opening round of the NCAA tournament. Who knew what was about to unfold?
Aida McCammon has spent 20 years helping Hispanics improve their lives and succeed in the United States.
Indiana House Democrats largely remain bunkered en masse in Urbana, Ill., save occasional individual appearances back at town hall events in their respective districts.