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Also this week:
At Conner Prairie Amphitheatre, the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra is joined July 9-10 by singer Jim Curry for “The
John Denver Songbook.” Details here.
O.A.R. is joined by Citizen Cope for a July 8 concert at the Lawn at White River State Park. Details here.
Tom Petty performs July 10 at Verizon Wireless Music Center. Details here.
Indiana Black Expo gets an early start with the IBE Black Film Festival, July 10-11 at the Tobias Theatre
at the Indianapolis Museum of Art. Details here.
The American Pianists Association present 2006 APA Classical Fellowship Awards Finalist Mei-Ting Sun at
the Rathskeller July 11. Details here.
The husband/wife team Christian and Katalina present "Mind Tripping Show" at the Hilton
Indianapolis Hotel and Suites, beginning July 9. Details here.
Famous Monsters Convention
July 9-11
Wyndham Indianapolis-West
The movie fan magazine Famous Monsters of Filmland, which inspired the likes of directors Stephen Spielberg and John Landis,
recently emerged from bankruptcy and has been relaunched.
What does this have to do with Indianapolis? Well, the new crew has decided to add a convention to its publication offerings
and they’ve chosen Indianapolis as the location. Guests include actors Thomas Jane (“The Mist”), William
Forsythe (“The Devil’s Rejects”), Ernie Hudson (“Ghostbusters”), local TV legend Sammy Terry,
and reunions of cast members from George Romero’s Living Dead movies. Details here.
Tom Chapin
July 10
White River State Park
This year’s Family Arts Series at White River State Park continues with family-music favorite Tom Chapin, whom some
might remember as host of the TV show “Make a Wish.”
Chapin will sing songs from his kid-friendly albums, but he’s also expected to mix in more grown-up material, including
songs penned and popularized by his late brother, Harry Chapin. Local group The Grimes Girls open the show. The concert is
free and picnicking is encouraged. Detail here.
Darius De Haas
July 9-10
Cabaret at the Columbia Club
One of the pleasures of a lifetime of theater-going is seeing a relatively unknown performer, being wowed, making a mental
note of his or her name, then seeing how the talent evolves.
I was first knocked out by Darius de Haas when he played dual roles in the Paper Mill Playhouse production of Stephen Schwartz’s
“Children of Eden.” While I expected a long list of theater credits to follow, de Haas instead turned his career
primarily to concert stages and cabarets, with a specialty in the jazz music of Billy Strayhorn. When he comes to Indy this
weekend, De Haas will spend one set returning to his Broadway roots (his credits include “Rent” and “Carousel”)
and another focusing on the music of Stevie Wonder. Details here.
Harlan Bakeries planning $9.7M expansion
Harlan Bakeries plans to expand its Georgetown Road production facility by 65,000 square feet to make a new line of products—creating
43 jobs in the process.
“Reasons to be Pretty”
July 8 to Aug. 1
Phoenix Theatre
After earning a name for himself as a film writer/director (“In the Company of Men,” “Nurse Betty”)
and as a playwright off-Broadway (“Fat Pig,” “The Mercy Seat”), former IPFW teacher Neil LaBute made
his Broadway debut with his play “Reasons to be Pretty,” about a warehouse worker who discovers the danger of
saying what he means—particularly when it comes to his girlfriend’s appearance.
Its local premiere stars Ryan Artzberger, a familiar face to Indy theater-goers, who recently led a Washington, D.C., production
of the play to a twice-extended run. Having seen the piece in New York, I’m even more stoked to see it in a more intimate
production at the Phoenix. Details here.
CSO Architects plans new HQ in former Bally Total Fitness
Locally based CSO Architects Inc. is working on plans to remodel a former Bally Total Fitness location at Keystone at the
Crossing into its new headquarters.
Is alternative energy sustainable in Indiana?
An economic development observer questions what will happen after the feds turn off the tap.
Grocery distributor to reopen Bloomington warehouse
A wholesale grocery distributor is planning to move into a vacant warehouse in southern Indiana and potentially hire 60 workers.
Taco trio takes unusual road to entrepreneurship
Former soldier, disc jockey and nurse get off to a fast start selling hand-held food from a mobile unit.
Farmers Bank opening two branches in Hamilton County
Frankfort-based bank plans to open locations in Fishers and Noblesville as part of its plan to expand its presence in Hamilton
County.
Lilly grant helps teachers learn new science curriculum
A $1.5 million grant the the Eli Lilly and Co. Foundation will train Indiana science teachers in a new curriculum that helps
students learn through exploration and problem solving.
Report: Indiana could save $450M on school insurance
A new report says health insurance for Indiana's public schools and universities could cost at least $450 million less annually if they joined the state's plan for public employees.
People
Community Health Network announced a series of promotions within its operations:
Josh Arthur, a financial analyst, is now rehabilitation services manager for Community’s rehabilitation
sports medicine program. He has worked for Community for seven years as a financial analyst.
Stacey Faryna, a registered dietician, was named program director for Community Hospital East’s Center
for Wound Healing.
Lori Feldmeyer, a physical therapist, was named Community Health Network’s north market manager for
the rehabilitation and sports medicine centers.
Nichole Goddard is now named medical imaging manager of Community Hospital South’s medical imaging
center.
Karla Kirby was named clinical director for behavioral health on the Community Hospital North campus.
Janie Klank has been named manager of psychiatric case management at Community Hospital North.
Cindy Matlock, a registered nurse, has been named Community Hospital East’s evening shift clinical
manager.
Terry Nelson, a registered nurse, has been named Community Hospital South’s emergency department clinical
manager.
Kimberly Snyder was named Community Health Network’s sleep lab director.
Company news
Roche Diagnostics, which runs its U.S. operations out of Indianapolis, has partnered with IBM to develop a DNA sequencer much faster and cheaper than current technology. Roche and IBM ultimately want to provide a test that performs whole genome sequencing for $100 to $1,000 per test. Such wide access could make genetic sequencing as standard as biopsies, for example, and then allow medical professionals to “personalize” medical treatment based on a person’s genes. As part of the agreement, Roche will fund continued development of the technology at IBM and provide additional resources and expertise through collaboration with Roche’s sequencing subsidiary, Maryland-based 454 Life Sciences. Roche will develop and market all products based on the technology.
Indianapolis-based insurer WellPoint Inc. said its California subsidiary will dial down rate hikes that drew national outrage earlier this year and helped spark a final push for health care reform, according to the Associated Press. WellPoint now plans to raise rates by 14 percent for California individual policyholders. It will cap rate hikes at 20 percent, even though the company said it would lose $100 million on the plans this year. In April WellPoint withdrew increases that averaged 25 percent—and topped out at 39 percent—after consumers and President Barack Obama expressed outrage. WellPoint defended the hikes by saying rising medical costs and healthy people dropping coverage during the recession were forcing it to raise rates. But an outside actuary also found math errors, which prompted last week’s reduction.
About $72 million in construction bids have been awarded so far for the new Wishard Hospital. The contracts total about 14 percent of the entire construction package for the $754 million project, said Matt Gutwein, president and CEO of Health & Hospital Corp. of Marion County, which owns the hospital. He said the new hospital is on schedule and slightly below budget. The 1.2-million-square-foot hospital will be built on 37 acres at the west end of the IUPUI campus. Bids that have been awarded include demolition work, as well as work on a parking garage, the hospital’s foundation and utilities. Wishard hopes to award all contracts by January.
Lilly’s Lechleiter: No change in plans
The global financial press keeps asking John Lechleiter for his end-game strategy to survive Eli Lilly and Co.'s nightmarish
patent challenges. And, like a broken record, the Lilly CEO keeps giving the same answer: pipeline, pipeline, pipeline—no
mega-merger.
Health reform rule could cost WellPoint
WellPoint Inc. has about $800 million riding on one arcane rule: how to calculate a medical loss ratio. The ratio quantifies
the percentage of customers’ premiums were spent on medical care, rather than overhead or profits.
Indiana officials excited about solar company’s plan
Tipton County officials had been working for months to attract Abound Solar to the 800,000-square-foot factory along U.S.
31, where it might employ as many as 850 workers.
