Party of one: Restaurants catering to more solo diners
In the United States, solo dining reservations have risen 29% over the last two years, according to OpenTable, the restaurant reservation site.
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In the United States, solo dining reservations have risen 29% over the last two years, according to OpenTable, the restaurant reservation site.
The IEDC said officials will attend SEMICON Taiwan from Sep. 4-6, an event hosted by the international industry association SEMI. That group is bringing an event called SEMIEXPO in the Heartland to Indiana in 2025.
Yes, the Eras Tour is a huge deal. But IBJ’s Dave Lindquist is recommending 10 more music, literary, film, visual arts and theatrical events that also speak volumes about how Indy’s entertainment ecosystem has changed.
Believe Circle City is a college and career preparatory school on the north side of Indianapolis that enrolls about 200 students.
Pato O’Ward was not happy at all when NASCAR last week announced it would race in Mexico City at Autodromo Hermanos Rodríguez, the really popular Formula 1 venue and best circuit in his home country.
UNITE HERE said a total of 15,000 workers have voted to authorize strikes, which could soon spread to other cities.
Jim Barnes and John Stitz built the Carmel-based supply-chain technology consultancy from a two-man startup to a company with $113 million in revenue and hundreds of employees. Barnes has now filed a lawsuit against Stitz.
Casey and Abbie Samson own and operate the colonial outfitter that produces and sells more than 800 varieties of mostly late-18th-century-era clothing, accessories and living-history supplies.
More than two years after Gov. Eric Holcomb’s Indiana Economic Development Corp. quietly disclosed plans for the 9,000-acre campus in Boone County, the endeavor’s future now largely depends on the guidance of the next governor.
The fourth edition of Butter, billed as “America’s Equitable Fine Art Fair,” is scheduled Friday through Sunday at the Stutz complex at the intersection of 10th Street and Capitol Avenue.
Pete Ward started with the Indianapolis Colts in 1981 as an unpaid public relations intern, was hired as a full-time administrative assistant in 1982, and was intimately involved with the team’s move from Baltimore to Indianapolis in 1984. He was named director of operations shortly after the team arrived in Indianapolis and became chief operating […]
Faster feels thrilling, even when the outcome is mediocre.
The product: Pioneer seeds are a nearly century-old brand of seeds for corn, soybeans and wheat. Corteva Agriscience produces them in four locations in Indiana—Plymouth, Rushville, Worthington and Tipton—and in numerous other sites outside the state. History: The company was founded in 1926 as the Hi-Bred Corn Co. in Des Moines, Iowa, by Henry A. […]
This initiative is meant to reaffirm McDonald’s commitment to value, a foundational element of its brand identity.
Although unwitting buyers of low-value goods stolen by fly-by-night hustlers might not run much risk of prosecution, museums and private collectors of ancient artifacts are under increasing scrutiny to ensure items in their collections have been obtained legitimately.
We are pleased to see that the City-County Council plans to investigate the Hogsett administration’s actions in these cases
Classifying Indiana’s economic development efforts as “failed business attraction strategies” and the LEAP District (which will bring hundreds of new high-paying jobs to the state) as “deeply troubled” is wrong.
A good ally is an individual who is willing to prioritize change. Good allies turn the spotlight away from themselves and allow others to shine and experience new opportunities.
We should all be excited to support the company’s growth and success here while looking forward to even more commitments that will shape Indiana’s future.
This column is a tribute to those folks in neighborhoods everywhere who are making our planet a better place to live.