Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Rathskeller. The Athenæum Foundation nonprofit organization is dedicated to preserving the historical Athenæum and serving the Indianapolis community. The foundation sponsors events and programs throughout the year. Free tours of the Athenæum are offered twice a month between March and December. Group tours can also be scheduled.
The Indianapolis area offers plenty of options to ring in 2024. ... The Doo! at Rathskeller. 7 p.m. at The Rathskeller, 401 E. Michigan St. All ages. Tickets are $60 at bit.ly/3GkyTu9.
The Rathskeller closed in November 1997, and was torn down in October 2000 to make way for the Hotel Commonwealth, [12] a 148-room luxury hotel of which Boston University is a limited partner. The band Camper Van Beethoven, pejoratively referred to the club in their 1988 song "Never Go Back" ("Never going to go back to the Rat and play another ...
The Rathskeller in Olten, Switzerland. Ratskeller (German: "council's cellar", pl. Ratskeller, historically Rathskeller) is a name in German-speaking countries for a bar or restaurant located in the basement of a city hall (Rathaus) or nearby. Many taverns, nightclubs, bars and similar establishments throughout the world use the term.
Indianapolis never has a shortage of entertainment and things to do, but the city is going all-out for the total solar eclipse on April 8. ... The Rathskeller Biergarten, 401 E. Michigan St. $15 ...
Pork tenderloins aren't the only culinary gem to reach Indiana by way of Central Europe.
The Mass Ave Cultural Arts District, colloquially known as Mass Ave, is one of seven designated cultural districts in Indianapolis, Indiana, United States.The district centers on 0.86 miles (1.38 km) of its namesake Massachusetts Avenue, from its southern terminus at New York and Delaware streets to its northern terminus at Bellefontaine Street.
Marker at the site of John McCormick's cabin. Indianapolis was founded as the site for the new state capital in 1820 by an act of the Indiana General Assembly; however, the area where the city of Indianapolis now stands was once home to the Lenape (Delaware Nation), a native tribe who lived along the White River. [1]