Roundup: Kroger opens downtown grocery; Broken English debuts
Downtown gets a new grocery and taco restaurant; a seafood restaurant makes a move in Zionsville; Keystone Crossing lands new pizza place; and a midtown diner closes after four months.
Downtown gets a new grocery and taco restaurant; a seafood restaurant makes a move in Zionsville; Keystone Crossing lands new pizza place; and a midtown diner closes after four months.
Health care providers’ frustration is running high, and even advocates say the movement has fallen short.
The Indianapolis-based health system said Nov. 3 that it recovered the bag of paperwork within hours and began an internal investigation.
The Colts have found a foolproof way of not being pounded by the New England Patriots in the playoffs.
Three-year-old Pigasus Pictures is making its mark, with one award-winning feature film to its credit and another with growing expectations set to wrap up production within a month.
Appropriately scaled to the Tarkington, it offers the intimacy that IO tried to find in past productions while also allowing for effective scenic design.
Plus, Broadway in Indianapolis brings “A Christmas Story” tour to town.
The nearly 22,000-square-foot grocery is part of the chain’s aggressive renovation and expansion campaign. Also in the roundup: three new eateries, two salons, two boutiques and two dentist offices.
Alex Bozich’s Inside the Hall, one of the most popular websites covering IU basketball, has a considerable following not only in central and south-central Indiana but throughout the Midwest.
Pharmaceutical companies have introduced medicines to treat dependence, reverse overdoses and deal with opioid side effects. But few effective and economically viable alternatives to addictive painkillers have emerged from the laboratory.
There were the state football championships, two marquee Pacers games, the Old Oaken Bucket showdown and a Colts home matchup that looked winnable.
The settlement ends a two-year quarrel over whether IU Health violated antitrust laws when its ambulances transported most of the county’s 911-response patients to its own hospital.
In less than two years, Fenwick has balanced two budgets, grown parks-and-recreation investment, helped expand coverage at a school health clinic, and created an employee handbook.
Walker has helped Hoosier Energy formalize a distinct long-term corporate strategy function.
Roark Capital is likely to focus first on improving Buffalo Wild Wings’ food and operations, which should be easy fixes for a firm that experienced in the restaurant industry, an analyst said.
Major League Soccer on Wednesday announced four finalists for the two expansion clubs it is scheduled to add by the end of the year. Indianapolis is not among the four, but MLS said the city could be considered for two other franchises it wants to add in the future.
Members of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee asked Alex Azar, a former executive for Indianapolis-based Eli Lilly and Co., if he would put the public first if he is confirmed as secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services.
George McGinnis finally gets a long overdue call from national Hall of Fame.
The projects, proposed separately by Litz & Eaton Development LLC and Block 20 Development LLC, would be built on two empty lots and on property where an existing building sits.
Here is a list of Indianapolis-area not-for-profit organizations and the things each needs most. This is an opportunity for businesses and individuals to make tax-deductible gifts in the spirit of the season. Anyone who wishes to make a contribution should contact the organization directly.