NCAA seeks clarification from court in O’Bannon ruling
The NCAA is going back to court in Oakland, California—to clarify two points in U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken's ruling.
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The NCAA is going back to court in Oakland, California—to clarify two points in U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken's ruling.
The Capital Improvement Board of Managers of Marion County voted Monday to give the Indiana Sports Corp. $500,000 a year for the next 10 years to create a reserve fund for maintenance on the IU Natatorium at IUPUI.
Environmental, health and neighborhood groups are calling on the Marion County Health Department to compel Indianapolis Power & Light to test groundwater at eight coal ash lagoons on the city's south side.
Purdue University has developed a three-year bachelor's program for communications students that it says will allow them to save more than $9,000.
In spite of the beaucoup bucks in the pharma sector, patients, along with their families and committed advocates, are turning out to be better sources of funding for early stage companies because they tolerate risk better than drug companies and investors.
The decline in patient visits slowed a bit for Indiana University Health in the second quarter, allowing the hospital system to use a price increase and cost cuts to significantly boost its operating profit.
Those changes are coming in the wake of Monday’s huge announcement that Chicago-based Tribune Broadcasting, parent to WTTV, has wrestled away the CBS-TV affiliation held by WISH-TV Channel 8 since 1956.
Major Hospital is seeking public input on its plans to build a $100 million hospital on the northern edge of Shelbyville, according to The Shelbyville News. The plans, which Major executives have been mulling since 2003, call for a 240,000-square-foot facility that would connect to Major’s Benesse Oncology Center in the Intelliplex business park. Major has also opened orthopedic, cardiology and OBGYN centers in the park. Major’s inpatient hospital in the center of Shelbyville has 72 beds, but the vast majority of the care Major provides is on an outpatient basis. Major has already begun to solicit bids from construction firms and bond rating agencies. CEO Jack Horner said the Major Hopsital board could make a decision on building a new hospital by October.
St. Vincent Heart Center wants to build a helipad about a half-mile from the specialty hospital. Currently, helicopter ambulances transporting cardiovascular patients must land at a borrowed facility a couple of miles north, on the opposite side of heavily traveled U.S. 31—adding as much as 20 minutes to the trip. Carmel’s Board of Zoning Appeals denied a similar request back in 2008, saying the proposed location was too close to nearby neighborhoods. But the newly proposed location at 10202 N. Meridian St. is less residential. The now-vacant land was once the home of Pilgrim Lutheran Church, which moved to 106th Street in 2012 to make way for the U.S. 31/I-465 interchange improvements now under construction. The zoning board is scheduled to consider the request at its Aug. 25 meeting.
Warsaw-based Symmetry Medical Inc. plans to sell off the orthopedics components subsidiary that generates nearly 80 percent of its revenue, according to Greater Fort Wayne Business Weekly. Massachusetts-based Tecomet, which is part of Genstar Capital, has agreed to pay $450 million for the OEM Solutions subsidiary. As part of the sale, Symmetry Medical will transfer ownership of its surgical instrument business, Symmetry Surgical, to the company’s shareholders and turn Symmetry Surgical into a newly traded public company. Shareholders would get one share of the new company for every four shares of Symmetry Medical stock. OEM Solutions generated nearly $81 million in revenue in the second quarter. Symmetry Surgical, meanwhile, saw $20.4 million in second-quarter revenue, down 8.7 percent from a year earlier.
WellPoint Inc.’s California subsidiary has partnered with the not-for-profit health plan Blue Shield of California to pay $80 million to launch a medical data sharing portal, according to the Associated Press. The California Integrated Data Exchange, known as Cal INDEX, is designed to share patients’ medical claims records electronically among doctors and hospitals, even for emergency room patients. Mark Morgan, president of WellPoint’s Anthem Blue Cross plan in California, said the health plans will mimic successful models such as the New York e-Health Collaborative and Indiana Health Information Exchange. The health plans’ information from patients' billing claims could supplement treatment records in the 30 health information exchanges health care providers have already created in California.
The speculative building totaling more than 930,000 square feet will be constructed at the developers’ AllPoints Midwest industrial park.
Katelyn Becht, a nurse practitioner, has joined St. Vincent Medical Group in Carmel. Becht received a bachelor’s degree from Purdue University and a master’s degree in nursing administration from Indiana Wesleyan University in Marion.
Dr. Andrew Miller has joined Eskenazi Health Midtown Community Mental Health as a child and adolescent psychiatrist. He earned his medical degree from the Indiana University School of Medicine. He received a bachelor's degree in biology from IU-Bloomington.
Dr. Peter Hogg, an orthopedic surgeon, has joined Franciscan Physician Network Orthopedic Specialists. He earned his medical degree from the Indiana University School of Medicine and a bachelor’s degree in biochemistry from DePauw University.
Andrea Pfeifle, a physical therapist, has been named the first assistant dean and director of the Indiana University Center for Interprofessional Health Education and Practice. The center was created to prepare future health care providers to deliver team-based care. Pfeifle comes to IU from the University of Kentucky, where she held a similar position. She earned a doctorate in education from the University of Kentucky.
WISH-TV Channel 8 is losing its affiliation with CBS-TV after nearly six decades, CBS Corp. announced Monday morning.
Buckingham’s plans for the property at U.S. 31 and 161st Street in Westfield show a mix of retail and residential uses.
It appears one man's bust is another's boom, because many of the reasons byproducts have become so popular are the same reasons you're paying historically high prices for beef.
Analysts say the Indianapolis-based NCAA could ask Congress for an antitrust exemption that, coupled with some reform, would help the organization maintain the basic model of college sports.
Indiana University is taking steps to better market itself to students and donors, using a strategy more common to consumer products.
NCAA President Mark Emmert said on a Sunday talk show that his organization found a lot in the decision that was "admirable" and some parts it disagreed with so strongly that they could not go unchallenged in court.
The Indiana Department of Transportation had sued the southern Indiana county after it imposed restrictions in response to residents' complaints about late-night construction noise around the I-69 site.
Steven Stolen, a former managing director of the Indiana Repertory Theatre, will work as an independent contractor for 25-30 hours per week until the target Oct. 1 completion of the evaluation.
National Collegiate Athletic Association rules barring student athletes from seeking a share of its $800 million in annual broadcast revenue are illegal, a federal judge in California ruled in a lawsuit that may dramatically change college sports.
IUPUI hopes to build a $45 million residence hall for 700 students on the campus in time for the 2016-17 academic year, the university announced Friday afternoon.