Maker of singing coozie has deals with IU, Purdue, Iowa
Cooler Conversations thinks it can penetrate the novelty items market with beverage sleeves that can play school fight songs or corporate messages when a drink is inserted.
Cooler Conversations thinks it can penetrate the novelty items market with beverage sleeves that can play school fight songs or corporate messages when a drink is inserted.
Longtime Indianapolis developer launches spirited attempt to save baseball palace.
That didn’t take long. After finalizing its merger with Morgan Hospital & Medical Center on July 1, Indiana University Health announced a new medical office building in Mooresville. According to The Reporter-Times of Martinsville, the 15,200-square-foot building should be finished by December. The $3.6 million project will unite physicians who work out of two separate office buildings in the area. The southern suburbs of Indianapolis have become a battleground for Indianapolis’ major hospital systems. Franciscan St. Francis Health has long dominated the area. But Community Health Network recently expanded its hospital on County Line Road and also formed a close partnership with Franklin-based Johnson Memorial Hospital. IU Health’s acquisition of Morgan Hospital gives it a toehold in the region, and the system still has a chunk of land in Bargersville it could build on if its leaders see the opportunity for further growth.
As part of their partnership announced in November, OrthoIndy and St. Vincent Health have begun offering orthopedic care in Bedford, where St. Vincent is in crosstown competition with Indiana University Health. Orthopedics is a key specialty to bring lucrative surgeries into a hospital. In Bedford, OrthoIndy’s Dr. Benjamin Justice and Dr. Matthew Lavery, along with St. Vincent’s Dr. James Rickert, are accepting patients at St. Vincent Dunn Hospital.
Indianapolis-based Northwest Radiology Network P.C. has hired Dr. Marc Underhill, a graduate of Boston College and the Indiana University School of Medicine. He most recently was an interventional radiology fellow at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit.
Northwest Radiology also hired Dr. Vincent Flanders, a graduate of the University of South Florida and the Duke University School of Medicine. He recently completed a fellowship in interventional radiology and abdominal imaging at Harvard Medical School’s Massachusetts General Hospital.
Indianapolis-based Hall Render Killian Heath & Lyman P.C. hired associate attorney Jarrod A. Malone, whose practice focuses on professional liability defense for dentists, physicians, hospitals and lawyers. Malone is a graduate of the IU School of Law in Indianapolis.
Steve Lippia assists the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra with “Sinatra Songbook,” July 15-16 at Conner Prairie Amphitheatre. Details here.
Steely Dan (which, at one time, included Michael McDonald, above) comes to the Murat Theatre, July 15. Details here.
The new Indiana Festival Theatre, featuring IU theater students and professional actors, continues with Shakespeare’s “The Comedy of Errors,” July 13-30. Details here.
“Last Comic Standing” winner Alonzo Bodden performs at Morty’s Comedy Joint July 14-16. Details here.
Guitarist Jeff McLaughlin celebrates the release of his new Owl Studios disc with a show at the Jazz Kitchen, July 14. Details here.
Styx and Yes performs at Verizon Wireless Music Center, July 19. Details here.
Duets in the Round, July 15 at Locals Only, features pairings of local musicians, including Danny Flanigan and Jon Martin, Bill Price and Michael Clark, and Cara Jean Wahlers and Grover Parido. Details here.
When I first heard about the downtown Nordstrom store closing, of course I was disappointed.
The campaigns for these new developments were essentially commercials for all these nice and livable communities outside the city.
Janssen Pharmaceutica said Thursday it has completed the sale of its animal health business to Eli Lilly and Co. Inc.
Developer George P. Broadbent sold The Broadbent Co. to his wife for $50,000 in March 2010 as he faced a barrage of lawsuits threatening his control over the real estate company he co-founded in 1972. He has also transferred several properties to her.
Many popular and well-paid disc jockeys in the local radio market have been let go over the last several years, and their station’s ratings generally didn’t suffer when they left.
The city is bidding work to repair concrete and add a green roof to the Meridian Street Bridge adjacent to downtown Union Station.
Items ranging from T-shirts and sweat shirts to mugs and pennants are available exclusively through ColtsProShop.com, at the Colts ProShop in Lucas Oil Stadium and at Circle Centre mall.
Unlike the NFL, which is swimming in money, the NBA is drowning in red ink.
The fact is that hospitals are paid three to four times for physician ancillary services.
A wide range of Super Bowl items went on sale this month at Lucas Oil Stadium and the Colts Pro Shop in Circle Centre Mall. Indy gets a one month head start on retail sales.
The staff at the Palladium in Carmel will receive more training on how to accommodate people with disabilities after a would-be concertgoer said she was denied a pair of $20 tickets.
Jennie DeVoe is in the spotlight for “Devoted to Wildlife,” a benefit concert for the Indiana Wildlife Federation, July 9 at Carmel’s West Park. Details here.
After a first act of rock ’n’ roll favorites from the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, Christopher Cross and his band join in at this July 8-9 concert at Conner Prairie Amphitheatre. Details here.
Sade joins John Legend July 8 at Conseco Fieldhouse. Details here.
Josh Groban brings his “Straight to You” tour to Conseco Fieldhouse, July 12. Details here.
Emmylou Harris performs at the Palladium, July 13. Details here.
Singer Darrian Ford from the Broadway casts of “Smokey Joe’s Café” and The Who’s “Tommy” opens “The Cooke Book,” a musical tribute to Sam Cooke July 8-9 at the Cabaret at the Columbia Club. Details here.
Eli Lilly and Co., once the undisputed leader in the U.S. diabetes market, wants to regain its dominance by launching as many as four new diabetes drugs in the next five years, Lilly executives said during an investor meeting June 30. Lilly has lost large chunks of market share in the past decade to Denmark-based Novo Nordisk A/S and France-based Sanofi-Aventis SA. But this year, Lilly, through a partnership with Germany-based launched Boehringer Ingelheim GmbH, launched Tradjenta, a once-daily tablet that will compete with Merck & Co. Inc.’s successful Januvia but could involve fewer complications for patients with liver or kidney problems. As early as next year, Lilly could get the green light on Bydureon, a long-delayed once-weekly version of its Byetta treatment, developed with Amylin Pharmaceuticals Inc. Lilly could seek regulatory approval in 2013 for dulaglutide, a once-a-month drug similar to Bydureon. An oral drug called empagliflozin, also gained through the agreement with Boehringer Ingelheim, could launch in 2014. "Diabetes is one of the great opportunities for Lilly moving forward," Jan Lundberg, president of Lilly Research Laboratories, said in an interview with Reuters.
As part of its agreement to add Westview Hospital to its system, Community Health Network will assume $10 million in debt, spend $7.5 million on upgrades, and help open an outpatient center in Speedway, the two hospitals announced June 28. They will also look for more locations in western Indianapolis to add outpatient centers. Community and Westview first announced in November they were in talks to form a “strategic alliance.” On June 24, Westview’s board approved the merger. Westview needed to get bigger, CEO Jon Anderson said, because the 2010 health care reform law and other national trends are pushing hospitals to have some of their revenue hinge on whether they keep a specific population of patients healthy. Westview had annual revenue of $106 million in 2009, the most recent figure available. Community is more than 10 times as large, with annual revenue of $1.3 billion. From Community’s perspective, Westview helps it expand into the western portion of Indianapolis for the first time. In addition to Anderson, Community has hospitals in the southern, eastern and northeastern suburbs of Indianapolis. Community wants to make sure it has facilities accessible on all sides of the city in order to be attractive to employers who want to contract with a hospital system—either directly or through an insurer—that will take responsibility for keeping the employees healthy.
Indiana University Health is losing its chief financial officer, who has overseen the hospital system’s bulging balance sheet since 1999. Marvin Pember, 58, is taking a new job near Philadelphia as president of the acute care division of Universal Health Services Inc., a publicly traded company with 22 acute hospitals and numerous behavioral health centers spread from coast to coast. Pember’s last day at IU Health will be July 29. IU Health, an 18-hospital system based in Indianapolis, will begin a national search for his replacement immediately. Pember joined IU Health, then known as Clarian Health, when it had just three hospitals—Methodist, Indiana University Hospital and Riley Hospital for Children—all in downtown Indianapolis. Today, its hospitals stretch from LaPorte and Goshen in northern Indiana to Paoli and Bedford in the south. IU Health also has three more facilities set to join its fold by year’s end.