DINING: Delicious deli ideal for pre- or post-show nosh
In 2002, the 86th Street staple relocated to Carmel. Now, that move could pay off as Shapiro’s becomes the unofficial cafeteria for the new Center for the Performing Arts.
In 2002, the 86th Street staple relocated to Carmel. Now, that move could pay off as Shapiro’s becomes the unofficial cafeteria for the new Center for the Performing Arts.
As the Green Bay Packers prepare to play the Pittsburgh Steelers, I have a serious case of Super Bowl envy.
Special charge would help offset lost gas-tax revenue.
Eli Lilly and Co. spin-off has landed new private investment and may double its work force this year.
Indiana’s new policy is, “If it is broken, throw it out.” We applied that policy to township assessors and now we are applying it to township government. Soon we may do the same to urban school districts.
Some utility consumer groups and large customers are fighting a proposed Indiana law that would allow power, gas and water companies to have their rates set annually by a formula rather than by state regulators.
Aero Engine Controls plans to invest as much as $8.5 million to expand its operations near Indianapolis International Airport, adding up to 159 jobs over the next two years.
Charging not-for-profits for government services, eliminating certain paper records and trimming how much counties pay to mental-health institutions are among the ways local officials say the cost of government could be reduced.
As a new owner revamps the Ritter’s business plan, at least four of the frozen custard stands in the area have either opened or are set to reopen in the same locations where they previously operated.
Tourism honchos outline aggressive goals for 2011, including increasing hotel room nights for conventions from 650,000 to 725,000, and targeting leisure travelers from Chicago and the United Kingdom.
Trash talk seems so silly. Pointless. Childish.
Indiana could be on the front line in the United Auto Workers’ campaign to unionize foreign-owned plants.
As someone addicted to the arts, I’ve seen a lot of talent on stage. Every once in a while, though, I see star power.
Open-wheel series leads resurgence in sponsorship dollars flowing to racing circuits, venues and teams.
I applaud Bruce Hetrick’s column (Jan. 10, “Why this public-school baby fears school reform”) for its keen observations about the value of education in the arts and humanities.
Vice President Joe Biden was in Greenfield, about 25 miles east of Indianapolis, on Wednesday morning to visit an EnerDel plant that received a $118.5 million Recovery Act grant in 2009 to expand its lithium-ion battery production.
Large conventions typically get the most attention, but it’s the smaller meetings that will be critical to ensuring the expanded Indiana Convention Center is adequately occupied.
Dr. Eric A. Yancy is now serving as chief medical officer of Indianapolis-based Managed Health Services, a health maintenance organization that has contracts with the state of Indiana to administer parts of the Medicaid Hoosier Healthwise and the Healthy Indiana Plan health benefits programs. Yancy will maintain his private medical practice.
Dr. Quinn Bensi, a pediatrician, has joined St. Vincent Physician Network in Zionsville. Bensi earned her bachelor’s degree in biology from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and received her medical degree from Southern Illinois University School of Medicine in Carbondale, Ill. She served as chief resident at the Indiana University Medical Center before working as a pediatric hospitalist for the IU Hospital and the Riley Hospital for Children.
Is it hyperbolic to relate anti-colonialism in the African Corn Belt to the machinations of the Capital Improvement Board, the Metropolitan Development Commission or the Indianapolis mayor’s office?