Colts’ victory over Broncos reaps ratings bonanza in Indianapolis
At one point, about 80 percent of the households in Indy watching TV Sunday night were tuned to Peyton Manning’s spoiled homecoming.
To refine your search through our archives use our Advanced Search
At one point, about 80 percent of the households in Indy watching TV Sunday night were tuned to Peyton Manning’s spoiled homecoming.
Indiana life sciences companies trying to raise venture capital continue to do so with a national wind in their faces, according to the third-quarter venture capital data.
Dr. Jihan Huggins, a family physician, has joined Community Physician Network, a part of the Community Health Network hospital system, in Indianapolis. She earned her medical degree at Indiana University School of Medicine.
Dr. Valerie Moss, an OB/GYN, has joined Community Physician Network in Anderson. She holds a medical degree from the University of Louisville.
Dr. Richard Ofstein, a vascular surgeon, has joined Community Physician Network in Indianapolis. He earned his medical degree at the University of South Dakota School of Medicine.
Dr. Ashlie Stallion, a pediatrician, has joined Community Physician Network in Indianapolis. She completed her medical degree at the Indiana University School of Medicine and her pediatric residency at Riley Hospital for Children.
Gretchen Gutman has joined Bloomington-based Cook Group as vice president of public policy. She most recently served as associate vice president for governmental relations at Ball State University. She spent eight years as chief advisor to the Senate Finance Committee of the General Assembly and was a partner at the law firm Taft Stettinius & Hollister LLP in Indianapolis, where she worked with Cook on state-government policy. Gutman holds a bachelor’s in history and a master’s in public affairs from Indiana University-Bloomington. She earned her law degree from the IU School of Law in Indianapolis.
WellPoint Inc.’s third-quarter earnings report will get extra scrutiny after industry bellwether UnitedHealth Group disappointed investors last week and after the technical failures of the Obamacare exchanges. According to the Associated Press, Minnesota-based UnitedHealth’s third-quarter profit inched up just 1 percent compared with the same three-month period a year ago. UnitedHealth executives then narrowed the company’s full-year profit forecast, rather than raising it. That sent the stock prices of UnitedHealth, WellPoint and other health insurers tumbling. WellPoint shares had been trading near their all-time high of $90 apiece, buoyed by strong predictions about new revenue the company expects to glean from Obamacare. That has raised investors expectations for health insurers profit growth, said Citi analyst Carl McDonald. Enrollment started Oct. 1 in new public insurance exchanges that are part of President Obama’s health care overhaul. Indianapolis-based WellPoint won't have exchange enrollment data to share next week, but investors expect it to provide some insight into how enrollment has gone. Wall Street analysts expect WellPoint to post third-quarter profit of $1.81 per share, which would be a decline from the same quarter a year ago, and revenue of $17.7 billion.
Indiana could lose $63 million in payments next year from the 1998 tobacco settlement after an arbitration panel determined it had not worked hard enough to collect funds from cigarette companies that aren’t part of the deal. According to TheStatehouseFile, the ruling by a three-judge panel will reduce Indiana’s payment from $131 million to $68 million in 2014. And that’s just for claims from 2003; the years 2004 through 2012 remain in dispute. The state uses tobacco settlement payments to fund various public health programs. For the next two years, the state can make up the lost money out of its $2 billion surplus, said Senate Appropriations Chairman Luke Kenley, R-Noblesville. But Kenley has encouraged the Indiana Attorney General’s office to appeal the decision because an extended reduction in payments would have to be considered in future budgets. Forty-six states, including Indiana, signed what was called a master settlement agreement in 1998 with four of the largest cigarette manufacturers in the United States. Since then, roughly 40 other tobacco companies have joined the settlement, which requires the companies to make annual payments to states.
Nutrabiotix LLC, based in Purdue Research Park in West Lafayette, has received a $2.5 million federal grant to develop a fiber to help patients with irritable bowel syndrome. The fiber was created by Purdue food science professor Bruce Hamaker and Dr. Ali Keshavarzian, a gastroenterologist at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, where the fiber has undergone two human clinical trials. Nutrabiotix received its latest funding from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, which is part of the National Institutes of Health and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Nutrabiotix received another grant from NIH in 2010 for $250,000.
Indiana's former elections chief raised questions about his attorney's health during his 2012 voter fraud trial and said he thought it was "a joke" that his defense strategy was to call no witnesses.
The Indianapolis-based operator of radio stations expects free cash flow after capital expenditures to be about $14 million this year, said CEO Jeffrey Smulyan.
The new president of Indiana’s 181-year-old Wabash College expects the school to remain one of three all-male colleges left in the country.
Indiana finished 35th among states on the report's Opportunity Index, mostly because of a subpar score in education. The percentage of Hoosiers ages 16-24 not in school or not working mirrored the national average of nearly 15 percent.
So what did you get to see this weekend? Chime in with your opinion.
Cincinnati-based Sims-Lohman Inc. said it will invest $2 million to buy and equip a 57,000-square-foot facility in Zionsville. The firm already employs 22 full-time workers in the Boone County community.
The Kaiser Family Foundation found that 182,000 residents fall into a health insurance coverage GAP, and a jobs study found almost half of Indiana’s fast food workers are also receiving public assistance.
Republican House Speaker Brian Bosma and Senate President Pro Tem David Long approved the move Friday after the State Board of Education wrote a letter questioning why Superintendent Glenda Ritz has yet to release the A-F grades or teacher effectiveness ratings.
Carmel-based SteadyServ Technologies expects to roll out its keg-sensor system early next year and trigger an aggressive hiring phase.
The project's private developers are leasing the land from the airport and selling the electricity generated from the 44,000 panels to Indianapolis Power & Light Co.
Three members of the 124-year-old club’s board of directors allege that election rules were changed behind closed doors and in violation of procedure and state law.
General Electric, Morgan Stanley and Google all rose after reporting higher earnings than financial analysts were expecting. Google topped $1,000 a share for the first time.
Several hundred patients and workers were evacuated from parts of Roudebush Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Indianapolis until emergency crews determined a suspicious package posed no threat. The alert was lifted nearly three hours after the package was reported about 8 a.m. Friday. Details about the package weren't immediately released.
An airport shuttle driver somehow managed to survive with minor injuries Thursday after he ran under the back of a stalled box truck, causing an impact that sheared off his vehicle’s roof. The accident happened near the airport on southbound Interstate 465 about 9:30 p.m. Emergency workers took about 10 minutes to extricate the shuttle driver.
Police have arrested two men in connection with the death of Indianapolis man David McMiller, 28, who was killed March 6 in front of his three children inside Lynhurst Park Apartments on the southwest side. Elijah Moore, 22, and Jordan Heath-Gentry, 18, face charges of murder and robbery. Both are being held without bond.
A new report that 182,000 low-income residents could go without health insurance is refocusing attention on whether Indiana will win an exception to expand Medicaid using the Healthy Indiana Plan.