JW Marriott picks top chef
A former executive chef at an upscale Louisville hotel will lead culinary operations at the 1,005-room JW Marriott, which will feature two major restaurants and 100,000 square feet of catering space.
To refine your search through our archives use our Advanced Search
A former executive chef at an upscale Louisville hotel will lead culinary operations at the 1,005-room JW Marriott, which will feature two major restaurants and 100,000 square feet of catering space.
A popular restaurant on the east side of Indianapolis that burned in January is set to reopen Sunday. Texas Roadhouse, 16th Street and Shadeland Avenue, was rebuilt from the ground up. It took firefighters, battling cold weather and frozen hydrants, more than two hours to get the fire under control.
It's time for Indiana University Athletic Director Fred Glass to focus on leading the school's athletic department out of the desert it has been wandering for a decade, and stop chasing the ghost of Bob Knight.
An Indiana Marine killed in Afghanistan was on his third war-zone assignment. Cpl. John Bishop, 25, of Columbus died Wednesday during combat operations in Helmand province, according to military leaders. Bishop's wife also is a Marine and is pregnant with their first child. He also had a 4-year-old son from a previous marriage. Bishop planned to leave the Marines next June to pursue a career as a conservation officer.
Fall Creek Road was closed in both directions Friday morning between 65th Street and Hague Road on the north side of Indianapolis due to a break in a water main. As of 10 a.m., workers had replaced the broken pipe and were repairing the road. They hoped to have Fall Creek open in time for the Friday afternoon rush hour. Fox59 will have more at 4 p.m.
About 80 downtown business owners and employees have signed a petition urging Republican Mayor Greg Ballard’s administration to nix major plans to revamp metered parking in Indianapolis.
Indianapolis-based Drewry Simmons Vornehm LLP announced Friday it will move 39 employees from Keystone Crossing to a new Carmel headquarters as part of a growth plan that could include a downtown Indianapolis location.
The Lerner & Loewe warhorse is being given a solid, entertaining production at Beef & Boards.
A Hamilton County seed company has plans to expand its facilities, creating as many as 72 jobs over the next five years, state economic development officials said Friday morning.
The State Budget Committee has approved Indiana State University's plans to turn the former Terre Haute federal building into a business school.
Health clinics based in employers’ offices are showing signs of breaking out of their niche among blue collar and government employers—factories, warehouses and school corporations—and could pop up in Class A office buildings filled with white collar workers.
Indianapolis and surrounding counties have continued to show growth in the number of businesses during the recession.
What does Indiana have to show for the deluge of resources made available to would-be entrepreneurs in recent years—venture capital, angel investors, incubators and the like? Judging by the number of people taking the plunge into business ownership, not as much as might be expected.
Methodist Hospital is spending $27 million to renovate its neurosurgery suites as the centerpiece of a big expansion its owner, Clarian Health, hopes will create nearly 1,200 jobs over the next decade and vault Methodist into the top 10 neurosurgery sites in the nation.
A former Indianapolis developer accused of luring more than a dozen Hoosiers into a $900 million Ponzi scheme invoked the Fifth Amendment more than 850 times when questioned under oath in Florida.
I went back to ancient Greece and Rome and found long-running philosophical discussions about The Virtues.