Pence objects to proposed gambling expansion
Indiana Gov. Mike Pence is asking lawmakers not to approve an expansion of gambling despite pressure from new casinos in bordering states.
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Indiana Gov. Mike Pence is asking lawmakers not to approve an expansion of gambling despite pressure from new casinos in bordering states.
Fishers-based Nexxt Spine LLC, a manufacturer of spinal implants, is consolidating operations and moving its headquarters and manufacturing facility to Noblesville.
Professor Larry Leverenz, director of the athletic training program at Purdue University, has been selected by National Football League Commissioner Roger Goodell to be part of a $60 million effort to prevent head injuries and concussions. The Head Health Challenge, sponsored by the NFL, GE Corp. and Under Armour, plans a $40 million research program to develop new brain-imaging techniques, and a $20 million innovation challenge that hopes to find new diagnosis and prevention technology. Leverenz has helped Purdue gain national attention for its concussion research.
About 1,000 students at Riverside Intermediate School in Fishers were evacuated Tuesday morning after smoke filled the building. Fire officials determined a malfunctioning air handler caused the problem. Students spent a short time outside before returning to the building about 9:45 a.m.
A Shelbyville police officer was arrested Sunday, accused of driving while under the influence. Aaron Calvert, an officer with the department since March 2011, was taken into custody following a car accident. He was placed on suspension without pay pending the outcome of the case.
More than two dozen of the world's largest pharmaceutical companies, including Indianapolis-based Eli Lilly and Co., have agreed to provide funding and other support to Interpol's battle against counterfeit prescription drugs.
Workers at southern Indiana's Crane Naval Surface Warfare Center are planning a protest of furloughs and pay freezes stemming from the automatic federal budget cuts.
Pitney Bowes said 137 employees will lose their jobs when it ceases operations at a distribution center in Hendricks County in May.
It’s the second time in three years the airport has been honored as the best in North America based on customer satisfaction.
Tinderbox said it is boosting its work force as part of a $540,000 expansion of its cloud-based IT business.
ITT Educational Services Inc. has been sued by investors who accuse the for-profit college of making misstatements about its private student-loan program, which was the subject of a subpoena from U.S. regulators.
A bill making its way through Indiana's General Assembly would change the laws governing need-based state financial aid to add more requirements for students.
Bitterness doesn’t get much better than Nicky Silver’s comedy.
Eric Bretzman, an engineer for Chip Ganassi Racing, closed March 1 on the purchase of 40 S. Main and negotiated a new long-term lease with il Villagio, an Italian restaurant that has operated in the 4,000-square-foot building for 10 years.
Bloomington-based Big Red Liquors is expanding into Indianapolis by acquiring the assets of United Package Liquors Inc. and taking over operations of the chain’s 24 local stores.
The Indiana House voted 92-4 on Monday in favor of the bill adding youth sports officials to the list of jobs for which children younger than 14 can be hired.
Mike Sherman, the chief financial officer at West Lafayette-based Endocyte Inc., talked about how the drug firm’s funding partnership with New Jersey-based Merck & Co. Inc. has helped accelerate development of the company’s pipeline, which is branching out into drugs to treat cancers of the lung, prostate and breast.
Dr. Stewart Brown, a family physician, has joined the Community Physician Network, which is part of the Community Health Network hospital system, in Noblesville. Brown formerly was the director of the family medicine program at Ball Memorial Hospital in Muncie, which is now part of the Indiana University Health hospital network. He earned his medical degree at the Indiana University School of Medicine.
Dr. Kathleen Swec, a pediatrician, has joined Community Physician Network in Noblesville. She earned her medical degree at Georgetown University and then served four years as an active-duty pediatrician in the Navy. Prior coming to Community, Swec practiced at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center in California.
Dr. Laryn Peterson, an ear, nose and throat specialist, has joined Community Physician Network in Indianapolis. She completed her medical degree at the IU medical school.
Dr. Charles Zeller, an ear, nose and throat specialist, has joined Community Physician Network in Indianapolis. He earned his medical degree at Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine. He also holds a master of science degree in human anatomy from Wright State University.
A jury Friday awarded $8.3 million to a former prison guard who accused Warsaw-based DePuy Orthopaedics of knowingly marketing a faulty hip implant that was later recalled, according to the Associated Press. Jurors found that the ASR XL implant was defectively designed and caused metal poisoning and other health problems suffered by Loren Kransky after he underwent surgery in 2007. The fraud and negligence suit is the first of nearly 11,000 similar cases involving an all-metal ball-and-socket hip joint that was pulled from the market two years ago to reach trial in the United States. Others like Kransky claim the implants have left them with crippling injuries or in need of other replacement surgeries. DePuy, a subsidiary of New Jersey-based Johnson & Johnson, has set aside about $1 billion to cover costs of the recall and lawsuits.
Eli Lilly and Co. has built up a stockpile of $21 billion in overseas profits as the nation’s largest drugmakers continue to use accounting mechanisms to avoid paying U.S. taxes. According to an analysis by Bloomberg News, the nation's six biggest drugmakers avoided paying $7.05 billion in U.S. taxes last year by shifting their profits overseas—nearly double the savings they achieved a decade ago. Now those legal practices are getting increased scrutiny from members of Congress. “The right kind of tax reform could do a lot to bring corporate profits back to the United States for investment and job creation,” said Charles Grassley, a U.S. senator from Iowa, in an e-mail to Bloomberg. “The current system provides an incentive for companies to keep money overseas indefinitely.” By moving patents and trademarks overseas, drugmakers can legally record sales of their products in foreign countries, avoiding any U.S. taxes until those profits are brought back into the United States. The maneuvers helped Lilly boost its earnings per share by 16 percent last year, according to Bloomberg. Other companies increased their earnings even more. Lilly declined to comment on the story.
IUPUI students can now pursue an academic minor in neuroscience, in addition to the neuroscience major that began in the fall. The School of Science at IUPUI launched its new neuroscience program to “take advantage of a booming neuroscience industry in Indiana and across the country,” according to a statement issued March 4. The school noted that the Indiana University Health hospital system recently opened a $120 million neuroscience center next to Methodist Hospital. And the IU School of Medicine is building a neuroscience research center next door to the IU Health facility. Neuroscience is one of several fast-growing segments of the life sciences industry in Indiana. A forecast by the Indiana Department of Workforce Development predicts that life scientist positions will increase by more than 22 percent in the next five years.
Capitol Construction has completed a 38,000-square-foot office build-out for NextGear Capital at 11799 N. College Ave., Carmel.