IU eyeing Oregon State AD
Indiana University may have a shorter list than expected for its soon-to-be-open athletic director position. The Oregonian is reporting that Oregon State University athletic director Bob De Carolis could be offered the job…
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Indiana University may have a shorter list than expected for its soon-to-be-open athletic director position. The Oregonian is reporting that Oregon State University athletic director Bob De Carolis could be offered the job…
Dow AgroSciences has added 350 jobs around the world so far this year-200 of them at its Indianapolis headquarters-and the CEO of the agricultural-chemical company expects to continue expanding the work force into next year. “Global demand for food, feed, fiber and fuel reinforces the need for agricultural productivity, and Dow AgroSciences is well positioned […]
Spotlight on Monroe County Named for James Monroe, the fifth U.S. president (1817-1825) LARGEST CITIES/TOWNS Population Bloomington ………………………………69,247 Ellettsville …………………………………….5,589 Stinesville ……………………………………….189 5 LARGEST EMPLOYERS Employees Indiana University…………………………13,960 Bloomington Hospital ……………………..3,000 Cook Inc……………………………………….2,200 General Electric Co…………………………2,000 Ivy Tech Community College ……………1,000 COUNTY MSA* Population 128,643 1,695,037 Median age 29.2 35.6 Households 46,715 667,391 Average household […]
Chinese wins converts IU embraces difficult language as China’s economic influence spreads The rise of China’s economic and cultural stars has ignited the popularity of Chinese language instruction at Indiana University, which is gaining national distinction as a leader in the field. The number of students taking Chinese language classes has grown 110 percent over […]
TIPPECANOE COUNTY Plant gets grinding British food and industrial ingredients company Tate & Lyle has been assessed two civil penalties totaling $247,941 involving the company’s wet corn milling facility along North Sagamore Parkway in Lafayette. It was formerly known as the A.E. Staley Manufacturing Co. Sagamore plant. The penalties resulted from two settlements signed July […]
JOHNSON COUNTY Truce called in annexation fight Greenwood and Bargersville officials have called off the dogs in their fight over the right to annex parts of the Center Grove area in Johnson County. At least for now. After Bargersville officials forwarded a compromise Oct. 2, Greenwood officials halted their plans to quickly annex the land […]
Pipeline could fuel Shelbyville economy Shelbyville retailers, hoteliers and entertainment venues should get a boost for the next year from 400 construction workers who will move to town to help build the Rockies Express natural gas pipeline through Indiana. The workers started flowing in last month and will make Shelbyville their home until mid- to […]
BOONE COUNTY Town eyeing vacant lot The town of Zionsville is negotiating to purchase a vacant lot in the village’s historic downtown that formerly was occupied by a Shell service station. Town Council members earlier this month voted unanimously to hire two independent real estate appraisers to assess the empty lot at the corner of […]
MORGAN COUNTY Historic goldfish hatchery saved A Morgan County preservation group has agreed to buy a building that once served as headquarters for the world’s largest goldfish hatchery. The Morgan County Historic Preservation Society agreed to buy the Grassyfork Fisheries building in Martinsville from Ozark Fisheries, the Reporter-Times reported this month. Eugene Shireman founded the […]
MONROE COUNTY IU seeking applicants for student trustee Indiana University is inviting students at each of its eight campuses to apply for the post of student trustee. The current office holder, Arthur D. King, a senior in the IU Kelley School of Business, is the 17th student to hold the position. His twoyear term ends […]
HAMILTON COUNTY Carmel adopts budget of $89 million for services The city of Carmel has passed an $89 million budget for 2009. At its Oct. 6 meeting, the Carmel Common Council adopted the budget, which is based on a property tax rate that’s lower than the rate Carmel Mayor Jim Brainard, a Republican, inherited when […]
HANCOCK COUNTY RV dealer goes big league Things aren’t all bad for Indiana’s economic bellwether, known as the recreational vehicle industry. Found among the negative news, such as headlines in RV Business about Middlebury camper maker Pilgrim International’s going bankrupt and a big bank getting out of RV inventory financing, there was word that Mount […]
Indiana has become the lone state in the upper Midwest not requiring that utilities supply a certain percentage of their electricity from renewable resources, such as wind turbines and landfill gas. Last month, Michigan’s legislature mandated that at least 10 percent of electricity supplied in that state be generated from renewable sources by 2015. Indiana’s conspicuous lack of a standard, along with growing environmental concerns over coal, could improve prospects for passing a standard during the 2009 session of the…
Medicare’s new rule to refuse to pay hospitals for “preventable errors” hasn’t caused hospital administrators to lose sleep about lost revenue. But they do worry that the new rule, which went into effect Oct. 1, could increase the number of costly malpractice lawsuits filed against their hospitals. It’s not clear yet what the financial impact of Medicare’s new “no-pay” rule will be. But companies that make their money supplying hospitals with equipment and services have wasted no time using the…
After a tumultuous and historic couple of weeks, culminating Oct. 10-when stocks dropped 800 points as the market opened-investors stood on the edge of the abyss and stopped selling. Market participants arrived at the conclusion that, over that coming weekend, financial chiefs around the world would do whatever it took to rescue the financial system. And they did, by formulating measures to be undertaken by finance leaders across the globe that are unprecedented and wideranging, from supporting the commercial paper…
I was uncomfortably challenged when Faye of the Forest landed on my deck a few days ago wanting to know what all these economic goings-on meant. “I’m responsible for teaching the elves,” she said, “and I don’t know what to tell them.” “I don’t know what to tell you,” I said. “But here’s what seems to me has happened.” “Some people,” I said, “are unable to make the payments on their mortgages. These mortgages are not held by the banks…
A group of professionals wearing hard hats walks into the climate-controlled pedestrian bridge that links a parking garage to the new terminal at Indianapolis International Airport. Circular ceiling fixtures light up in a pattern of red and blue, and a chorus of electronic-sounding sighs greets them: “Ahhh.” The playful, interactive installation by Los Angeles-based Electroland is called “Connections,” and it’s expected to become a favorite of the traveling public. The Indianapolis Airport Authority dedicated $3.89 million of the $1.1 billion…
Democratic gubernatorial candidate Jill Long Thompson promises to buoy Indiana’s slumping rural counties with a three-tiered
incentive plan. Republican Gov. Mitch Daniels has a different vision for stoking the state economy. He wants to build on Indiana’s
strengths–such as world-class research at universities–to innovate and create jobs.
An acute physician shortage in Indiana is driving a request for an additional $5 million in annual funding to expand enrollment at the state’s only medical school. The Indiana University School of Medicine’s Physician Workforce Task Force conducted a study in 2006 that found the state already had 3,500 fewer physicians than it should. Indiana had 12,534 doctors in 2005-a number that remains relatively flat because the medical school churns out the same number of graduates each year. Over the…
Critics are chirping like cicadas and basically singing the same song. One, get rid of Lynch, the sooner the better. And two, spend money, lots of it, on a “big-name” coach. If only it were as simple as the knee-jerks would have you believe. Perhaps they have forgotten, but Indiana has a lame-duck athletic director, Rick Greenspan, who won’t clean out his Assembly Hall office until Dec. 31. A search committee is vetting applicants. I’m told there are exceptional candidates…