Riverview scoops up doctors from American Health Network
Nine family-practice doctors are set to leave their large physician group and join Noblesville’s Riverview Hospital, more than tripling their revenue-generating potential.
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Nine family-practice doctors are set to leave their large physician group and join Noblesville’s Riverview Hospital, more than tripling their revenue-generating potential.
Carrier Corp.’s plan to invest $36.5 million in its Indianapolis plant hinges in part on how well consumers take to a new platform of high-efficiency furnaces.
Great [Morton] Marcus column in the July 4 issue of the IBJ. What’s happening in this state is extremely unfortunate and shortsighted.
Bill Benner’s [July 4] column “A love lost … ” was great—absolutely the way I remember it, plus the scoring of a double-header on the radio, knowing every batting average, home runs and RBI’s of the all-time greats.
The greatest challenge in landing a new gig is making a tremendous shift in perspective.
Over the next 10 years, baby boomers will begin to retire en masse. By 2030, we can expect about 18 percent of Indiana’s population to be age 65 or older, up from 12 percent today.
I know it’s still early, but I’ve got presidential politics on my mind. Why? Because the economy continues to be stuck in the mud and it takes strong leadership at the top to get things moving again.
I actually find it astonishing that there are still Americans who devote themselves to opposing free trade on the grounds that it hurts the economy. There is no more easily disproven fiction.
Enterprising investors willing to conduct the necessary due diligence may seek to discover high-growth opportunities in emerging-country investments.
The lawsuit filed this month to block the state’s new school voucher law should be turned back on a lobby that has fought education reform at every turn and rarely offered solutions to underperforming schools other than demanding more money and time.
Storytelling Arts of Indiana promotes the art and use of storytelling in everyday life.
Cooler Conversations thinks it can penetrate the novelty items market with beverage sleeves that can play school fight songs or corporate messages when a drink is inserted.
Despite the NFL lockout, the city of Anderson still anticipates the arrival of the Indianapolis Colts later this month for the start of training camp. City officials say they are optimistic the NFL will reach a contract with players in time to hold the camp, which took place in Anderson last year for the first time in more than a decade. The 18-day camp generated more than $6 million in visitor spending a year ago, Anderson Mayor Kris Ockomon said, and the city expects that number to rise this year. Camp is scheduled for July 31.
Indianapolis fire investigators are looking into two suspicious fires that broke out early Thursday on the city's east side. One fire, which happened at about 1:20 a.m. in the 5400 block of Julian Avenue in Irvington, destroyed a garage and two vehicles. At about the same time, another fire three blocks away on Hawthorn Lane destroyed a garage and a vehicle. Arson investigators say both fires may have been set by the same person.
About 385 families have requested state tuition assistance at private schools since July 11, when the Indiana Department of Education started accepting applications for its new voucher program.
Wabash College is getting a $6.2 million grant to boost a center's efforts to support professors who teach religious studies or theology.
Knowledge Services, an Indianapolis-based information technology firm, plans to lease additional office space on the city’s north-east side to make way for 200 more workers by 2015.