Dr. John Tomkowiak, Washington State University's inaugural dean for the Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine, is carrying on the legacy of the medical school's namesake by implementing a few innovative ideas of his own.
Tomkowiak, whose medical backgr
$1.8 billion acquisition still at least a year away
February 25, 2016
Continuous change in the health care industry served as the driving impetus for Group Health Cooperative as it started pursuing a partner a few years ago.
That pursuit culminated at the end of last year when Oakland-based health insurer Kaiser Permanente
Gonzaga University and the University of Washington announced this morning that they have signed an agreement through which Gonzaga will teach first- and second-year medical students on its campus starting next fall.
Gonzaga spokeswoman Mary Joan Hahn
As we reflect upon the last 30 years of the Journal of Business and the greater Spokane business climate, an old Tim McGraw song, 'My Next Thirty Years,†comes to mind. The song begins: 'I think I'll take a moment, celebrate my age. The ending o
Heading into the 1980s, Eastern Washington and North Idaho-renamed the Inland Northwest-were still heavily dependent on natural resources for our economic health. Then the national and regional economies went into a nosedive. A generation of leaders s
In 1986, the Spokane economy was in the doldrums. The last two high-rise office buildings to be built downtown had just come on line five years earlier. The opening of the Seafirst (now Bank of America) and Farm Credit Banks (now Wells Fargo) buildings ha
Congratulations to the Journal of Business for 30 years of service to the Spokane business community! It's both an honor and a privilege to be asked to contribute to this special anniversary edition of a publication that is anticipated and relied upon b
I have been a subscriber to the Journal of Business since my early days with Inland Imaging. In 1986, I was 30 years old and had just completed my first year as CEO at Inland Imaging. Our new imaging center on South Cowley Street was struggling to stay op
I came to Spokane in the early 1980s, so I have seen firsthand how education has evolved in this community over the last 30 years. When I arrived here, I was in my late 20s and had no intention of staying very long. The plan was to stay here with friends
I will have been at the Journal of Business for 27 years as of this spring, yet sometimes I still feel like a latecomer, having missed its first three years of existence.
Those were the truly formative years, when founders Norm Thorpe and Scott Crytzer,