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DINING: Festiva offers flavor fest
The latest restaurant from Peter George and Thomas Main offers a casual-but-creative take on Mexican food.
LOPRESTI: A month-by-month look at the 2017 sports calendar
No shortage of mysteries to solve as local favorite teams prepare to compete.
LOU’S VIEWS: Underground Railroad station gets $3.8 million upgrade
The newly renamed Levi and Catherine Coffin State Historic Site now offers more context.
Critics decry Pence team for letting stage rules die
The Pence administration has let expire an emergency rule put in place after the 2011 Indiana State Fair stage collapse that left seven people dead and dozens injured. And the regulators in charge of the rule are months or even years away from replacing it. The emergency rule, which established stricter design and construction requirements for outdoor event […]
Priority list includes Elvis, First Friday, more
Former Yuletide Celebration host Maureen McGovern pays a return visit to the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra.
KIM: Stop trying to keep up with the Joneses in 2017
The only thing worse than judging a book by its cover is making financial decisions based on what you assume the book might tell you.
BOHANON & STYRING: Advice for Trump: Drop trade-deficit obsession
Get the economy humming and all else will be forgiven. Don’t try putting a square peg in a round hole, thereby igniting a trade war.
FEIGENBAUM: The ‘mix for the fix’ and other legislative predictions
After (in)arguably the most tumultuous year in the 200-year history of the state of Indiana (and that Cubs championship), you can rest assured the 2017 legislative session promises none of that degree of drama.
HOOSIER BEACON: Calvin Fletcher, philanthropist and city’s first lawyer
Deeply religious, Fletcher was a staunch opponent of slavery and led an unostentatious life despite being one of the state’s richest men.
LETTER: Butler’s teacher school leads in ed reform
For 21 years, Butler’s College of Education has had a one-year student-teacher experience and were the first in the state to do so.
HUTSON: Imagining a Pence response
I think you will find it refreshing that the Trump administration plans to uphold all the laws of the country.
HUME: Indy 500 needs diversity in motors, chassis
Economic impact is generated by inviting more players to participate in the 500. Automotive industrial giants Ford Motor Co., Mercedes-Benz, Audi and Toyota have unmatched wealth waiting to be spent on race engine development for teams at the Speedway.
MARCUS: Governor: Don’t forget our smaller communities
Our state has good places the size of Evansville, South Bend and Muncie on down to Hartford City, Portland and Sullivan. These places could offer a quality of life deemed acceptable by our elite state economic developers if a program of incentives removed the blemishes caused by stagnation and decline.
MAURER: An ethical dilemma at the Daily Planet
A true tale reminds us that the customer should always be king.
$50M Penrose on Mass project to get underway following parcel sale
The project will include 236 apartments, 40,000 square feet of retail space and a 379-space parking structure.
State eco-devo agency inked fewer incentive deals in 2016
The Indiana Economic Development Corp. said the decline in deals is a good thing because it reflects a strong Hoosier economy.
Banks agree to pay $9 million to settle biased-lending claim
Indianapolis might stand to benefit from a U.S. Department of Justice settlement with two Cincinnati-based banks, which are accused of biased mortgage lending in four cities.
Long-discussed Penrose on Mass project clears major hurdle
The development partnership for the project has acquired a half-block site and will begin demolition of a former fire station and headquarters in early January.
Sears Holdings lines up $200M in financing to stay afloat
The move signals that hedge fund manager Eddie Lampert remains committed to bankrolling Sears, even as the once-mighty department-store chain suffers from dwindling sales and billions in red ink.