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Articles
BENNER: Ticket sales are key to keeping Big Ten games
What’s happen off court at the Big Ten Men’s and Women’s Basketball Tournaments could be as interesting as what happens on.
Indianapolis International Airport’s art collection grows
The new work was delayed by 16 months because the artist’s New Orleans home and studio were destroyed by Hurricane Katrina.
Officials: Weak smoking ban hurts Indianapolis’ hospitality efforts
The ongoing smoking-ban debate is getting a new spark from convention leaders trying to light a fire under
lawmakers, who have been reluctant to approve the kind of comprehensive smoking ban that
health—and now tourism—officials say is needed here.Study: Hospital clout spurs higher Calif. health costs
While insurers get the blame for rising health-care costs for consumers, surging fees from hospitals and the growing dominance
of such providers may be just as responsible for driving up expenses, according to a new study examining California's
market.WellPoint records subpoened in California probe
The California attorney general has demanded documents from several health insurers, including Indianapolis' WellPoint,
believing that their rate-setting and claims practices might be illegal.Convention center tours part of larger tourism strategy
Executives of Gen Con, one of the city's largest conventions, visited Indianapolis last week to get their first glance
of the construction of the Indiana Convention Center expansion. Local tourism officials are using such tours to market the
larger space.General Growth seeks to block lawsuit over Simon bid
General Growth Properties Inc. asked a judge to block a shareholder lawsuit accusing its board of improperly rejecting an
acquisition bid from Simon Property Group Inc.You-review-it Monday: Bill T. Jones, Harold Lloyd, etc.
So fill me in. What did you see, hear or do this weekend?
Colts ticket price hike has far-reaching effects
The Indianapolis Colts' decision to increase ticket prices in 2010 pulls another $4 million or so of discretionary dollars
out of this small market. It could also inch the team higher above NFL league ticket price average.Consumer group sues Anthem over policy changes
A consumer watchdog group filed a lawsuit Monday against WellPoint’s California subsidiary on behalf of policyholders, claiming
they were pushed to take coverage with fewer benefits and higher deductibles.Dann Pecar nabbed by Ohio law firm in merger
Cleveland-based Benesch Friedlander Coplan & Aronoff LLP gains Indianapolis presence by absorbing 99-year-old local law firm
with 29 lawyers.Colts’ Bill Polian finds himself in middle of NFL overtime debate
While top prospects were on display at yesterday's NFL Combine in Indianapolis, members of the league's competition
committee were hotly debating a rule that could change the game next year.Simon daughter questions using father’s estate to pay donations
Pledges to St. Vincent, Indianapolis Museum of Art should be paid by trusts, foundations affiliated with Bren Simon, court
papers allege.Company news
Call it California screamin.’ Indianapolis-based WellPoint Inc. continues to get a steady flow of
bad news coming from the Golden State, which is feeding problems for the health insurer in Washington, D.C. WellPoint CEO
Angela Braly gave an unapologetic defense last week before a congressional committee about her company’s 25-percent
premium hike on individual customers in California. But the next day, California Attorney General Jerry Brown subpoaned documents
from WellPoint and its insurance peers in an investigation into whether their premium increases and claims denials were illegal.
According to Bloomberg News, the investigation was undertaken in response to reports that California insurance providers deny
almost 40 percent of claims. Then on Monday, a consumer watchdog group sued WellPoint for pushing consumers to take coverage
with fewer benefits and higher deductibles, which the lawsuit says violates California law, according to the Associated Press.
On Thursday, President Obama’s top health official, Kathleen Sebelius, wants to see WellPoint and its rivals in her
office to explain their premium hikes. Heavy media attention on premium hikes in states across the country has revived Obama’s
health reform efforts, which WellPoint has opposed since last fall. The only good news for WellPoint came on Wall Street,
where investors are pleased the company is raising its prices faster than medical costs are escalating. WellPoint’s
stock price surged 6 percent last week alone.The Indiana University Melvin and Bren Simon Cancer Center has named a replacement for former director Stephen
Williams, who died of cancer in February 2009. The center chose Dr. Patrick J. Loehrer Sr., who joined the IU faculty in 1990,
and also will serve as associate dean for cancer research and hold the title HH Gregg Professor of Oncology at the IU School
of Medicine. Loehrer is an internationally recognized researcher and specialist in testicular cancer, gastrointestinal cancer,
and thymoma. His appointment must be approved by university trustes.Indianapolis-based PDS Biotechnology Corp. won a $1.28 million grant from the National Cancer Institute
to help it complete preclinical testing of an experimental drug aimed at curing infections and cancers caused by human papillomavirus.
The most common cancers caused by the virus are cervical, anal and head and neck cancers. PDS said 400 million people have
the virus, and no existing vaccines offer a cure.The University of Notre Dame licensed technology developed by one of its professors to Pennsylvania-based
Molecular Targeting Technologies Inc. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed. The technology, developed by chemistry
prof Bradley Smith, can target dead or dying cells in humans or in bacteria clusters. Such selective sensing could help researchers
see more clearly the effects of treatments on cancers or bacterial infections.IU cancer center names new director
Dr. Patrick J. Loehrer Sr. replaces Dr. Stephen D. Williams, the center’s founding director, who died of cancer in February
2009.IPL retirees, union continue fight over plan funding
Retirees re-energize legal battle against IPL, seek rehearing in Court of Appeals over post-retirement funding case that could
cost utility $100 million.Cornelius to retire as Bristol-Myers Squibb CEO
The former Guidant Corp. CEO and long-time Eli Lilly exec said he and his family will be returning to Indianapolis.
Indians ready to score with Comcast, Brighthouse TV deal
A full season of televised games will give franchise a platform to promote attendance at Victory Field.
