Tuesday, April 20, 2021
THE MITT FIX How one man brings baseball’s past back to life / P15
Prevail aims to prevent sexual assault / P3
Exploring a forgotten town’s name / P11
Classic Cleaners relocates, offers 24/7 service / P21
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Victims’ advocacy nonprofit focuses on prevention during Sexual Assault Awareness Month By Anna Skinner anna@youarecurrent.com At its core, Prevail is working to put itself out of business. The Noblesville-based adADVOCACY vocate for victims of crime and abuse works to promote its mission to the community in April, which is Sexual Assault Awareness Month, but its overarching objective is to prevent sexual assault and abuse altogether. “What we are actually trying to do is call it more Sexual Assault Prevention Month,” Prevail Marketing and Events Coordinator Natasha Robinson said. “Just bringing awareness is one thing, but really focusing on preventing the crime is a totally different thing.” Prevail has several opportunities throughout April to promote awareness and prevention, including Denim Day on April 28, when Prevail staff members wear jeans or denim. “Why we wear denim is because in Italy in 1992, there was an 18-year-old girl who was raped, and why they decided the perpetrator couldn’t be guilty is because her jeans were too tight for him to pull off and rape her, so the next day all the women in parliament wore jeans as a protest to the Supreme Court,” Robinson said. “Those are just examples of victim blaming, (such as), ‘Her skirt was so short, she was totally asking for it,’ ‘Men can’t be sexually assaulted, they’re too masculine and too big so that can’t happen to them,’ so those are a lot of things we deal with around Sexual Assault
To our valued readers: While Current remains exposed to the financial repercussions of the pandemic, we’re pleased to bring some good news on that front. Beginning with this edition, Current in Fishers will be distributed to 50 percent of the audience every other
From left, Prevail Executive Director Susan Ferguson, Hare Truck Center Commercial Sales Manager Todd Thurston and Prevail Marketing and Events Coordinator Natasha Robinson display some of the Clothesline Project shirts at Hare Truck Center in Noblesville. (Photo by Anna Skinner)
Awareness Month.” This year, National Crime Victims’ Rights Week is from April 18 to 24, and Prevail is promoting it through several public displays of the Clothesline Project, a collection of T-shirts designed by Prevail clients. The color of the shirt corresponds to the type of crime the victim faced. “We started the Clothesline Project to give the victims a chance to have a voice,” Robinson said. T-shirts from the Clothesline Project will be on display across Hamilton County throughout the month, including at Riverview Health, the Hamilton County
week. We appreciate your patience as we continue our recovery and we’re still proud to state that we still have retained all fulltime staff at the levels of compensation to which they are accustomed. As we indicated before, exactly when we can return to 100-percent delivery is anyone’s guess, but is something we still
Sheriff’s Office, Hare Chevrolet, HAND, Trinity Free Clinic, the Westfield Washington Township Trustee’s office and elsewhere. Prevail Executive Director Susan Ferguson said the Clothesline Project helps remove the victim stigma from a crime, especially one of a sexual nature. “I think it’s important because sexual assault is one of the most underreported crimes, and this is a way to create an environment that allows people to feel less stigmatized about reporting it and asking for help,” she said. For more, visit prevailinc.com.
badly want to restore. Thank you for your understanding as we continue to work to get back to business as usual. Brian Kelly Steve Greenberg President/ Executive Vice Publisher President/GM
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Geist resident Benner selected for USBWA Hall of Fame
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oversight.” Benner, who was the USBWA president from 1998 to 1999, left the Indianapolis Star Bill Benner didn’t know what to make in 2001 after 33 years as a sports writer and of a text message from columnist. He served as sports columnist at BASKETBALL CBS analyst Seth the Indianapolis Business Journal Davis. from 2001 to 2013. “I said, ‘If it’s the real Seth Davis, “It’s a capstone on my career,” I’ll call you back,’” Benner said. said Benner, who was inducted Davis, the U.S. Basketball Writers into the Indiana Sportswriters and Association president, delivered Sportscasters Association Hall of good news, telling the longtime Fame in 2017. Geist resident that he had been Benner said it’s special to have Benner named to the 2021 U.S. Basketball peers look back at his body of Writers Association Hall of Fame class. Malwork and highly regard it. As he looks on colm Moran, the USBWA executive director the names in the USBWA Hall of Fame, he is and Zionsville resident who has known humbled. Benner for several years, joined Davis on “There are some sports writing giants the call. in that Basketball Writers Hall of Fame,” he “I was emotional,” Benner said. “I was said. thrilled. I thanked Malcolm, especially, for The tentative plan is for the USBWA to having a long memory to remember when I conduct a virtual induction during the NCAA was actually a daily basketball writer. MalMen’s Final Four in Indianapolis this year colm very kindly said he couldn’t believe I hadn’t been inducted already and it was an Continued on Page 6
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Continued from Page 5
COMEBACK PATIENT OF THE MONTH This is one in a series of case studies of triumph over injury. For previous installments, visit www.methodistsports.com.
BACKGROUND: Michael, 8th grader at Noblesville West Middle school, plays football and baseball both at school and through travel leagues. Since his first injury in 5th grade, Michael has dealt with reoccurring sports related knee injuries. When Michael was first injured, his father, Brandon, knew Michael Bennett is an 8th he wanted to get his son over to Methodist Sports grader at Noblesville West Medicine for an evaluation. Brandon had surgery Middle School performed on his knee at MSM years ago when he was injured in high school sports. Knowing the level of care that he received then, and how smoothly the recovery process was, Brandon got Michael set up at MSM. WHY MSM: “Every experience throughout this process has been fantastic,” said Brandon, Michael’s father. “From the care that he received the moment we walked in, to the treatment by Dr. Ritter and his associates, the surgery at Beltway, to the physical therapy at Finch Creek with Nate and Melissa, it has all been phenomenal!” THE JOURNEY: During his appointment with Dr. Mark Ritter, specialist in orthopedic sports medicine & trauma, Michael was informed that he had a hereditary condition which offset his kneecaps, causing ongoing patella instability. With the need to hold off on surgery until his growth plates were closed, Michael received physical therapy at MSM until the time was right. At a checkup appointment in the fall of 2020, Michael was informed that his growth plates were officially closed, and that it was time to make a tough decision to either keep playing through the pain, or go through with the surgery. Ultimately, Michael decided to have the surgery so that he would be back on the field for summer ball and freshman football. “I thought I would not be able to try out for the Middle School baseball team,” said Michael. “My recovery was so far ahead of schedule I was able to try out for the team and make it.” A surgery that typically takes six to nine months for recovery took Michael only four and a half. “Michael poured dedication and energy into his rehabilitation,” said Dr. Ritter. “He’s returning to the baseball diamond just a few months after his reconstructive surgery. His quick return is a product of his hard work with MSM’s physical therapy staff.” Michael continues to receive physical therapy at MSM’s Finch Creek Noblesville location as he gets back in the swing of things. He has been able to return to doing the things that he loves most - fishing, catching baseballs behind the plate, and being active with friends and family.
Dr. Mark Ritter
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can get you back in your game, no matter what it is. 317.817.1200 | 201 Pennsylvania Pkwy, Suite 100, Carmel 46280 | www.methodistsports.com
and then hopefully honor the 2020, 2021 and 2022 inductees in person at the 2022 Final Four in New Orleans. Benner, 72, retired in June 2020 as senior vice president for corporate, community and public relations for Pacers Sports & Entertainment and executive director of the Pacers Foundation. Not completely retired, Benner hosts the “Inside Indiana Sports” segment on the statewide “Inside Indiana Business with Gerry Dick” television program. Benner covered more than 20 NCAA Final Fours. “I covered the (Olympic) Dream Team in Barcelona in 1992,” he said. “I’m proud of what I got to cover in terms of international basketball. I covered Brazil upsetting the U.S. in the Pan Am Games (in Indianapolis in 1987).” Four years later, he went to Cuba as Purdue’s Gene Keady coached the U.S. Pan Am team. He covered three Olympics Games. “I covered Damon (Bailey) when he won the high school championship in front of 41,000 (at the Hoosier Dome in 1990),” Benner said. Covering the Indiana/Purdue rivalry when IU coach Bob Knight and Keady were at the controls was unparalleled. “You can talk about Duke/North Carolina and Louisville/Kentucky, but when Knight and Keady were there, there was nothing like walking into Assembly Hall or Mackey Arena,” he said. Benner chronicled when unbeaten Indiana won the NCAA title in 1976 and Keith Smart hit the shot to lift Indiana University to the 1987 NCAA championship. Another highlight was when Reggie Miller scored eight points in 8.9 seconds as the Indiana Pacers rallied to beat the host New York Knicks in a 1995 playoff game. He covered the Pacers’ first game in Market Square Arena and was there for Indiana’s first and only trip to the NBA Finals in 2000. Benner and his wife, Sherry, moved to Geist in 1988. Their daughters, Allison and Ashley, both graduated from Hamilton Southeastern High School.
“I was emotional, I was thrilled ... It’s a capstone on my career.”
April 20, 2021
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Project: Admirals Pointe Project: 146th Street at Ind. Drive 37 Location: All left-turn CONSTRUCTION Location: Indianapolis DPW currently has closed Admilanes are currently rerals Pointe Drive to replace stricted on Ind. 37 and on the timber bridge over Geist and the 146th Street with traffic moved to the north fork of Dry Branch. The detour will interior lanes. Through traffic and right consist of Old Stone Dr. east to Carroll Rd. turns on Ind. 37 and 146th Street will / 700 W., then south to E. 79th St. and then remain open. Drivers are encouraged to west to Oaklandon Rd. seek alternate routes for all left turn acExpected completion: Midsummer 2021 cess. For more about the State Road 37 Improvement Project and to receive text updates, visit 37Thrives.com. Expected completion: This phase of the State Road 37 Improvement Project will continue into 2021. The overall State Road 37 Improvement Project will be complete in 2022. Project: Hague Road Lift Station improvements Location: There are lane restrictions in place for east and west bound traffic on 106th Street at Hague Road. Through lanes will be restricted and traffic will use the left turn lanes as through lanes. Left turn access onto Hague Road will remain open. Advanced warning signs will be in place. These restrictions are for bypass pumping for improvements to the Hague Road Lift Station. Expected completion: Mid-May
NOBLESVILLE AND NORTH
Project: Olio Road and 146th Street Intersection Location: The Olio Road and 146th Street Improvement project is widening Olio Road from 141st Street to 146th Street to four lanes and 146th Street from Bergen Boulevard to Olio Road to three lanes as well as constructing a two-lane roundabout at the intersection of those two streets. In addition, significant drainage improvements in the area. Expected completion: The intersection closed March 15 for 108 days. Detour: Motorists should use Prairie Baptist Road, 156th Street, Boden Road and Campus Parkway to avoid the closure.
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Bike team open to county By Mark Ambrogi mark@youarecurrent.com Fishers High School junior Zachary Strueder can’t wait for his second season with the Northside Indy team CYCLING in the Indiana Interscholastic Cycling League. “Everyone had a good time,” Strueder said of the mountain bike races. “It’s still competitive but we were all friends after it. It’s that adrenaline rush that I think most of my friends are addicted to trying to hit the biggest jump, have the biggest trick and just to be faster than one another. It’s a great, healthy, competitive sport. It’s awesome.” Guerin Catholic senior Dominic Stein was the one who encouraged Strueder to join. Strueder rode in the varsity category last season. “The varsity did four laps. A lap was about 3 to 5 miles around,” said Strueder, walo also wrestles at FHS. Northside Indy coach Tim Banks, a Level 3 coach with the National Interscholastic Cycling Association, is seeking more members for the team. The mountain bike league is for grades 6-12.
Guerin Catholic cyclists Sarah Banks and Allison Wozniak celebrate their 2020 state championships. (Submitted photos)
“We’re a composite team, which means we take kids from any school,” said Banks, a Westfield resident. Banks’ daughter, Sarah, a Guerin Catholic sophomore, was the sophomore state champion. Allison Wozniak, a Guerin junior, was the state champion in the junior varsity category. Wozniak is a Fishers resident. The 2020 season ran from July to the end of October. Northside Indy has a Facebook page, under NICA Northside Indy Mountain Bike Club, and information can be found on the website, indianamtb.org.
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Treating back pain Column by Dr. Michael McCarthy Back pain is the most common reason for a job-related disability and is one of the main contributors to employHEALTH ees taking sick-day leave. Determining the exact cause of back pain can be difficult and at times frustrating for those suffering from severe, chronic back pain. However, the majority of back pain symptoms typically result from sprain/ strain of the muscles that surround the spine, degeneration or arthritis of the spine, herniated discs, lumbar stenosis and/or fractures. For some, back pain can result from multiple areas and isolating the main source of pain is the first step in finding relief. Although most adults will experience back pain during some point of their life, the majority will not seek medical treatment. Self-directed treatments largely revolve around the use of oral pain medication (including nonsteroidal anti-inflammatories, such as ibuprofen), ice/heat and avoidance of pain-producing activities. Getting back to normal activity should begin with light walking, limited lifting, avoidance of bending/twisting and continued use of nonste-
roidal anti-inflammatory medication. Pain should serve as a guiding factor as patients begin to slowly reintroduce their daily routines. Are there ways to prevent back pain? Recent research has highlighted a significant link between abdominal muscle dysfunction and low back injuries. There has been a significant shift of clinical focus on the importance of core muscle strengthening, specifically the abdominal muscles, and the relationship with recurring back pain. Altered abdominal musculature, whether from deconditioning or obesity, clearly has a role in how we think about the prevention of back pain. Core strengthening exercises should be tailored for individual patients and providers should quickly recognize those patients with underlying diagnoses that preclude them from this therapy. Dr. Michael McCarthy sees patients in Lebanon, Whitestown, Carmel and Crawfordsville. He volunteers as an assistant professor of clinical orthopedic surgery at Indiana University, educating residents and fellows on spine pathology and spine surgery.
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What’s in a name? The forgotten town of Olio Commentary by Robert Bowling When Hamilton County was first settled, Fall Creek Township BACK IN THE DAY was nothing more than virgin wilderness. It was in stark contrast to Delaware Township. Living in this area of Hamilton County was not for the faint of heart. It required courage and endurance. Early settlers had to not only contend with the wilderness, but wild animals, brutal winters and learning to coexist with the Native Americans. Unlike Delaware Township, Fall Creek boasted just one town, Olio. It was so small that it was commonly referred to as a hamlet or village. It did have a store, blacksmith shop, school, church and a post office, all of which are signs of a thriving community. But what is the history behind the name? Olio was not the first choice for the town’s name. If the residents had been successful, the town would have been called Lickskillet. The post office was first established in 1851 and Solomon Cropper, one of the first settlers, petitioned for the name Lickskillet. The request was denied, possibly because there were more than 35 communities in Indiana that already had that nickname. Many theories abound as to the origin of the name Lickskillet, but the most popular one had to do with dish cleaning. Pioneer families would leave a used skillet on the back porch and let deer, who were attracted to the salt grease, lick it clean. Today, Lickskillet is a generic
term for any rural town. The second choice for the town’s name, which was accepted by the U.S .Postal Service. was Olio, but why it was chosen is a mystery. A possible explanation is that the area was rich in natural resources. The name itself implies “oil,” and at one time, it was the only place in the state where every family used natural gas. The area became popular among oil and gas companies that exploited it for its resources, but the town never received the benefits. Fishers could have looked vastly different had Olio been successful in taking advantage of its newfound wealth. Instead, it slowly disappeared like all of the other towns. While Mudsock was a nickname for Fishers Station, Lickskillet continued to be used as a nickname for Olio. Some residents refused to abandon the name. On more than one occasion, Lickskillet was commonly referred to as the capital of Fall Creek Township. Fall Creek Township’s only town, Olio, now lives on as a major street that bears its name. The road is lined with schools and businesses, and it has come a long way since it was just a small hamlet. Robert Bowling is a retired Fishers Police Dept. officer who is a high school criminal justice teacher. As an officer, he was the department’s first historian. Since retirement, he has served as a board member for the Ambassador House and the newly formed Fishers Historical Society, where he also serves as historian.
Hamilton Co. fills out Girl Scouts Board — The Girl Scouts of Central Indiana added 11 atlarge members to the board of directors, two from Hamilton County. Mary Azar Callahan, Fishers and Dr. Stacy Atkinson, Noblesville, will complete the group. Callahan is the director of partnerships for the Indy Chamber of Commerce. Atkinson is the chancellor for Ivy Tech Hamilton County.
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April 20, 2021
COMMUNITY
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Asian Americans unite against hate crimes want to give them the benefit of the doubt, but I’m aware that in other parts of the country people have been targeting Asian Doug Hsu loves to relax by going for Americans, so I’m very much put on edge,” walks through his Carmel neighborhood, he said. “It’s very unfortunate, because but lately the excuras an American born and brought PROTEST sions haven’t been as up here, I don’t feel it’s right that calming as they used a group of people should have to to be. think twice about, ‘Do I go for a He’s spent the last year hearing walk in my neighborhood or not?’” government officials and others According to the U.S. Census Burefer to COVID-19 as the “China vireau, Asian Americans make up the rus” or “kung flu” after it was first largest minority group in Hamilton Hsu discovered in Wuhan, while conCounty at 6.5 percent, and they currently seeing reports that hate represent an even higher percentcrimes against Asian Americans age of Carmel’s population at 10.3 have increased nationwide since percent. Rupal Thanawala, president the pandemic began. of the Carmel-based Asian American Hsu said he hasn’t knowingly Alliance, said many Asian Americans been a direct target of racism in have flocked to the county for its the past year, but for the first time quality schools and safe neighborHui ever, he feels defensive when he’s hoods, but some believe it’s time to out in public, wondering if those he encoun- break their silence on racial issues and let ters associate him with the pandemic, and their neighbors know what they’re experiif so, whether they harbor hateful or violent encing to prevent problems reported elsethoughts or intentions. where in the nation from happening here. “I don’t know what people are thinking. I
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April 20, 2021
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Twins’ design makes its mark on Carmel By Mark Ambrogi mark@youarecurrent.com Casey and Corey Wilkinson share common passions and talents. The 44-year-old identical twins ART founded Wilkinson Brothers, a graphic design and illustration studio, in 2003. The studio, 31 S. Range Line Rd., has been in the Carmel Arts & Design District for 10 years. “We each have our own families and our personalities are pretty different, but when it comes to work, we’re on the same page,” Casey said. “We share the workload as much as possible and often collaborate in each phase of the design process. It’s a one-two punch that draws upon a communication level established since birth.” At the studio, each day is different, so Corey said they don’t keep traditional office hours. “Owning and operating a design agency means we never truly clock out, but our schedules are often adjusted to attend field trips, soccer games or be present during family milestones too important to miss,” Corey said. “We love our jobs but spending
From left, twins Corey and Casey Wilkinson operate Wilkinson Brothers design studio that was formerly a carriage house. (Submitted photo)
as much time as possible with our wives and kids has always been our goal.” For the past two decades, Casey, the art director, has lived in Carmel, and Corey, the creative director, has lived in Fishers. The brothers grew up mowing lawns, pouring concrete and working on farms in Evansville. “In middle school and high school, we designed yearbook covers, illustrated for the school newspaper and hand-lettered signs,” Corey said. “This combo of hard work and creativity led us to pursue com-
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FAMILY DENTISTRY FOR ALL AGES
mercial art and visual communications in college.” Personalized Care FOR ALL AGES FAMILY DENTISTRY Corey majored in graphic design at Ball With A Gentle Personalized CareTouch With A Gentle Touch State University while Casey majored in visual communications at Ivy Tech Evansville. Wilkinson has clients across the United States, but most of the clients, including FAMILY DENTISTRY FOR ALL AGES from the sectors of motorsports, municiCare With A Gentle Touch palities and manufacturing, are inPersonalized central Indiana. “The City of Carmel is a client of ours, a partnership we’ve enjoyed since 2006,” Email: kwarddds@fishersdentalcare.com Casey said. “We’ve helped promote the Carwww.fishersdentalcare.com mel Arts & Design District since its early 11959 Lakeside Drive | Fishers, Indiana 46038 days and continue to design ads, signage, 317.577.1911 | Fax 317.576.8070 maps and branding for many of the city’s events and venues.” kwarddds@fishersdentalcare.com Recent Carmel projects the brothers www.fishersdentalcare.com have designed are the logos and branding Email: kwarddds@fishersdentalcare.com for the Carmel Clay Public Library, Brookwww.fishersdentalcare.com shire Golf Course and Hotel Carmichael. 11959 Lakeside Drive Lakeside Drive | Fishers, Indiana 46038 Visitors to Midtown Plaza 11959 also can see the company’s design-work on the ping317.577.1911 | Fax 317.576.8070 Fishers, Indiana 46038 pong tables, bike hub, water tower and 317.577.1911 the large postcard mural along Elm Street, which is designed to be a photo op or selFax: 317.576.8070 fie station.
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2077_210127 Fishers– The Current Tuesday.indd 1
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April 20, 2021
Current in Fishers
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April 20, 2021
COVER STORY
Current in Fishers
www.currentnoblesville.com
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How one man brings baseball’s past back to life By Jonathan Matthes jonathan@youarecurrent.com It was Nick Carraway who reminds the title character in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s masterpiece “The Great Gatsby” that he could not repeat the past. Maybe so, but Kevin Howell of Fishers would counter that if you cannot repeat the past, you can refurbish it — one baseball glove at a time. Senior recruiter at Community Health by day, craftsman by night, Howell retreats to his basement and into baseball nostalgia after work. Baseball cards of some of the game’s greats are on one wall. Tickets of memories past line another, along with framed newspapers of the Chicago Cubs 2016 World Series triumph on a third wall. On the back wall is a row of antique mitts restored to new. “A large percentage of my work has been taking dad or grandpa’s old glove out of the garage, basement, barn and send it to me, then I refurb them pretty enough to at least display,” said the self-taught Howell, 44. The modern baseball mitt is about as far cry from the mitts of the 1920s as Alexander Rossi’s IndyCar of today is from Ray Harroun’s Marmon Wasp that won the first Indianapolis 500 in 1911. Modern mitts are specialized. For example, a middle infielder’s glove is significantly different from a first baseman’s glove, which is dramatically different from a catcher’s mitt. The webbing of an outfield mitt has gaps, so players can see through the glove to catch the ball. A pitcher’s mitt’s webbing is solid, so the batter can’t see the pitcher’s finger placement on the ball. The gloves of yesteryear, in contrast, were all-purpose and looked more like ballooned hands than mitts. There was little webbing a century ago, and every position, except catcher, used the same style. The gloves also were designed to be durable and mistreated. “A (vintage glove) was made to put into your back pocket,” Howell said. “At the end of the inning, they’d just leave it on the field, so it’d get stepped on and all jacked up.” One time, Howell found a Draper and Maynard mitt from the early 20th century that was so aged its leather was more like cardboard and just as flat. “I could have hit it on the table, and it would have split. That’s how dry it was,” Howell said. Howell put in at least 10 hours of carefully massaging, then pounding with a mallet and cleaning with his own se-
cret solution to restore the mitt to near-playing condition. At first, the hobby was just something Howell did to relax. He would restring a glove while watching a movie or sitting outside and sell a few on his Etsy page. It helped him stay connected to the game he loved and played in high school. But then came a unique opportunity. The year 2020 was the centennial anniversary of the Negro Leagues, and to pay tribute to the occasion, the Negro League Museum in Kansas City, Mo., wanted to have an art exhibition to honor the league’s unique and overlooked history. Artisans included painters, sketch artists, screen printers and sculptors but no one who refurbished tattered old baseball gloves. No one, that is, except Howell, who contributed to the exhibit. “Kevin does awesome work, and his work is unique from other artists and makers. He has his own niche out there,” said Tad Richardson, a Seattle-area artist who founded the art exhibition on behalf of the Negro League Museum. “There are lots of baseball glove re-lacers out there, but no one is restoring those 100-year-old gloves to game-ready condition.” Richardson found Howell as he was combing social media for small businesses that specialized in baseball art and craft. He reached out to hundreds of such small businesses, and Howell was one who offered to join the new community. Howell sold 12 mitts at the event and restored an additional eight. Howell has seen a boost in sales for his services since the exhibition ended last year. “Maybe the most amazing thing we really did was ignite a
A before-and-after look at a Yogi Berra model Spalding catcher’s mitt. Kevin Howell primarily focuses on the leather work and the laces to restore old gloves. (Submitted photo)
INDIANAPOLIS AND THE NEGRO LEAGUES The first Black man to play in Major League baseball was not Jackie Robinson, but Moses Fleetwood Walker. Walker debuted in 1884 but his stay, along with other African American ballplayers, would be brief. By the 1890s, Major League Baseball was all white and would be until 1947 when Robinson came along. Without access to the Majors, African Americans formed their own professional leagues, the most successful being the Negro Leagues in 1920. Indianapolis had a significant role in the Negro Leagues with two major teams: the Indianapolis ABCs and the Indianapolis Clowns. The ABCs featured a local player, Oscar Charleston, who was posthumously enshrined in the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1976. The Clowns, meanwhile, gave the first professional opportunity to a promising 18-year-old from Alabama, Henry “Hank” Aaron, who would one day make 25 All-Star Game appearances and hit more home runs than any man before him, including Babe Ruth. community,” Richardson said. “What Kevin shared with you about it being a catalyst for him it seems to be a recurring theme. A week before this (program) was launched (the artists) might have seen themselves as competitors, and today they are collaborating. It brings goosebumps to my arm.” You can see more of Howell’s work at the Hoosier Vintage Gloves Instagram page at instagram.com/hoosiervintagegloves. His Etsy page is at etsy.com/shop/ HoosierVintageGloves. ON THE COVER: ???? (Photo by Jonathan Matthes)
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home and your roof. home However, are times hail is of notwhat as bad it seems you don’t need to worry about and there roof. Below are that examples youas can look forand before worrying about Preparing for hail damage is difficult. If the fallen hail is severe enough, it can cause damage to your about your home and roof. Below arebeing examples of what you roof. can look for before worrying about there damage on your home and roof. However, there are there times being that hail is not on as bad it seems and you don’t need to worry damage youras roof. April 20, 2021 about your home and roof. Below are examples of what you can look for before worrying about Current in Fishers www.currentnoblesville.com there being damage on your roof. Preparing for hail damage is difficult. If the fallen hail is severe enough, it can cause damage to your Preparing for SIZE hail damage is difficult. Ifthat the fallen severe it canand cause damage to yourto worry home and roof. However, there are times hail ishail notis as bad enough, as it seems you don’t need WHAT IS THE OF THE HAIL? homeyour and roof. However, there are times that hail ishail notwhat bad as can it seems you don’tworrying need to worry WHAT IS THE HAIL? about home and OF roof. Below are examples of you lookand before about Preparing forTHE hail SIZE damage is difficult. If the fallen isassevere enough, itfor can cause damage to your about your home and roof. Below are examples of what you can look for before worrying about If the hail around your home is in damage youras roof. home and roof. However, there are there times thatfallen hail ishail notison as bad it seems andcause you don’t needto toyour worry Preparing for hailsize damage isTHE difficult. If being the enough, it can damage If the hail around your home is in there being damage onsevere your roof. between the of a pea or a quarter, WHAT IS THE SIZE OF HAIL? about your home and there roof. Below are that examples youas can look forand before worrying about home andworry roof. However, are times hail is of notwhat as bad it seems you don’t need to worry between the sizeroof of a is pea orBut, a quarter, don’t your fine. if the there being damage on your roof. about your home roof. Below are of what you can look for before worrying about If the hail islarger, in don’t your roof ishome fine. if examples the hail isworry the around size ofand ayour golf ball orBut, between a pea aby quarter, hail thethe sizesize of be aofgolf ballororthere larger, yourisroof should checked a being damage on your roof. don’t worry your roof isOF fine. But, your WHAT roof should be checked byHAIL? aif the WHAT IS THE SIZE OF THE HAIL? IS THE SIZE THE hail is the size of a golf ball or larger, Ifhail the should hail around your home is in If theroof around your home is ina your be checked by WHAT IS THE SIZE OF THE HAIL? between the size of a pea or a quarter, between the size of a pea or a quarter, worry your roof is fine. But,ififthe the WHAT IS THE SIZE OF THE HAIL? don’t worry your roof ishome fine. But, If thedon’t hail around your is in hail is the size of a golf ball or larger, hail isyour thethe sizesize of ayour ballororis between ofgolf a pea alarger, quarter, If the hail around in roof should be home checked by a your roof should be aif the don’t worry your fine. between the sizeroof of checked a is pea orBut, abyquarter, hail the size of roof a golf larger, don’tisworry your is ball fine.orBut, if the your roof should be checked by a hail is the size of a golf ball or larger,
INSPECTING YOUR HAIL DAMAGE INSPECTINGYOUR YOUR HAIL INSPECTING HAILDAMAGE DAMAGE INSPECTING YOUR HAIL DAMAGE
your roof should be checked by a If your plants and trees in your Many times if the hail damage is Check the sidings of your home Ifyard yourare plants and trees in your Many times if the hail damage is Check theIf sidings your home shredded to pieces significant enough, your gutters for holes. there isof new damage yard arecaused shredded to pieces significant enough, guttersin fortoholes. If therethat is new and was by hail falling, will be heavily dentedyour or ripped your siding, is adamage good If your plants and trees in your Many times if the hail damage is Check the sidings of your home and was caused by hail falling, will be heavily dented or ripped in to your siding, that is a good there is a good chance there places. If this is the case, you indicator that your roof may also yard are shredded to pieces significant enough, your gutters for holes. If there is new damage there is a good chance there places. If this is the case, you indicator that your roof may also is damage to your roof. have a good reason to be conbe damaged. andiswas caused by hail falling, If your plants and trees in your will be dented orroof. ripped to the your siding, a good Many times ifreason the hail damage is in Check sidings of that your is home damage to your roof. have aheavily goodabout to be conbe damaged. cerned your yard are shredded to pieces significant enough, your gutters for holes. If there is new damage there is a good chance there places. If this is the case, indicator that your roof may also cerned about your roof.you and was caused by hail falling, will be heavily dented or ripped in to your siding, that is aofgood If your plants and trees in your Many times if the hail damage is Check thebesidings your home is damage to your roof. have a good reason to be condamaged. there is a good chance there places. Ifenough, this is the case, you indicator that Ifyour roofismay yard are shredded to pieces significant your gutters for holes. there newalso damage cerned about your roof. is damage to your roof. have a good reason to be conbe damaged. and was caused hail in falling, If your plants andby trees your will be times heavilyif dented rippedisin Check to your that a good Many the hail or damage thesiding, sidings of is your home cernedall about your roof. If you are experiencing of these hail warning signs, there is a good chance there shredded to pieces places. If this is the case, youis for indicator that yourisof roof may also significant enough, your gutters holes. If sidings there new damage Ifyard yourare plants and are trees in your Many times if the hail damage Check the your home If you experiencing all of these hail warning signs, iswas damage to by your and hail falling, have aheavily good reason to be conbe damaged. will benext dentedyour oryou ripped in fortoholes. your siding, that is adamage good yard arecaused shredded to roof. pieces here are the steps should take: significant enough, gutters If there is new there is acaused good chance there cerned about your roof. places. If this is the case, you that your roof also here are the next steps should take: and was by hail experiencing falling, will be heavily dented oryou ripped in indicator to your siding, that is amay good If you are all of these hail warning signs, is damage your roof. have a good reason to be conbe damaged. there is a good chance there 1. Call insurance agent places. Ifyou this isof thethese case, you indicator that your roof may also Iftoyou are experiencing all hail warning signs, here are the next steps you should take: cerned about your roof. 1. Call you insurance agent is damage to roof. 2.your Work with your insurance agent to have an inspection completed have anext good steps reason to be conbe damaged. here you should take: 2. Work with are your the insurance agent to have an inspection completed 3. Call Hays + Sons cerned about your roof. 1. Call you insurance agent 3. Call Hays + Sons If you are experiencing all of these 1. Call you insurance agent hail warning signs, 2. Work with your insurance agent to have an inspection completed 2. Work with your insurance agent to have an inspection completed here are the next steps you should take: signs, 3.3. Call Hays +Sons Sons Call Hays If you are experiencing all of +these hail warning
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800 East Thompson Rd (317) 788-2050 – Fax Indianapolis, IN 46227 2. –Work with your insurance agent to have an inspection completed Hays + Sons – Corporate Office (317) 672-1950 Office Indianapolis, IN 46227 1. Call you insurance agent Hays + Sons – Corporate Office (317) 672-1950 – Office 800 East Thompson Rd (317) 788-2050 – Fax 3. Call Hays + Sons 800 East Thompson Rd (317) 788-2050 –2.Fax Work with your insurance agent to have an inspection completed Indianapolis, IN 46227 Indianapolis, IN 46227 3. Call Hays + Sons
April 20, 2021
VIEWS
Current in Fishers
www.currentnoblesville.com
17
ESSAY
HUMOR
Taking flight
Hope springs renewal
Commentary by Terry Anker As the friendly skies have become a little more friendly and a little less frightening, many of us have found ourselves again standing in line awaiting TSA approval for our next destination. Like it or not, travel is beginning again. The experience is familiar yet different — like a dream state where our surroundings are as we remembered but with significant incongruencies. Still, to this we will adjust. The burning desire to take the kids to visit the mouse will overwhelm any concerns about unfamiliarity. The notion of a 20-hour car trip seems far more horrifying than whatever awaits in the modern time-of-pandemic airport. Indeed, most citizen travelers go on their merry way much as they did in the past. Stopping randomly, immediately in front of us in the middle of the hall, as if to say, “I need the attention of you running into me.” The newsstands are open, selling snacks and expensive trinkets for the forgetful or loath-to-shop wanderer who just remembered the missed birthday during their absence. Notably, the experience all seems a bit more polite. Folks don’t push as much in the lines. Why, we assume, that our pressure will somehow move the queue of 20 in front of us is an eternal mystery. Generally, it only annoys the one person in front of us and moves no one. Airline staff are grateful that we have come back — and that their chosen career might survive this contagion. Airports are not so overrun. But alas, many shops and restaurants did not survive the smaller crowds. Even as every surface is sprayed and cleansed, we’ve come to understand that sanitized does not necessarily mean clean and free from dirt! And, the free pretzels are on hold, at least for now. Still, we didn’t have to drive to Florida!
Terry Anker is an associate editor of Current Publishing, LLC. You may email him at terry@ youarecurrent.com.
Commentary by Danielle Wilson
QUOTE OF THE WEEK
“If life were predictable it would cease to be life, and it would be without flavor.”
-ELEANOR ROOSEVELT
POLICIES Letters to the editor: Current Publishing will consider verifiable letters of up to 150 words. Letters must be thoroughly vetted prior to submission. Current retains the right to reject or return any letter it deems to carry unsubstantiated content. Current also retains the right to edit letters, but not their intent. Send letters to info@youarecurrent.com. Writers must include a hometown and a daytime phone number for verification. Guest columns: The policy for guest columns is the same as the aforementioned, but the allowable length is 240 words. Guest columns should address the whole of Current’s readership, not simply special-interest groups, and may not in any way contain a commercial message.
Behold, fair reader, a new me. Well, maybe not a new me, but certainly a refreshed and revitalized Danielle. My husband Doo and I are just back from a spring break vacation in Florida, and though I drove 35 of the god-awful 38 hours and suffered a fever blister and migraine on our first day, I have returned rested and, dare I say, happy? I’ve always known the health benefits of sunshine and being near water, particularly the ocean, but in a year like no other after the cold and gray of winter, I hadn’t really appreciated how much I needed a sandy beach and near80-degree temperatures. And obviously, enjoying a few rum punches and fried grouper sandwiches on said beach didn’t hurt, either. But mainly, to have downtime in a tropical warm place was enough to reset my mental state from one of “Dangerous: Stress Levels Too High” to “Excellent: No Worries.” To park our car at the beginning of the week and not get in it again until we were leaving; to not open my laptop once; to go to sleep at 8 p.m., wake up at 7 a.m. and then perhaps take an afternoon nap; to finish three YA novels that should definitely not be considered young adult (Sarah J. Maas, well done!); to simply hang with Doo and talk about our kids, our future, his crazy plan to buy a 44-foot trawler; to ride bikes and eat coconut ice cream and cattily judge people in their swim attire … this trip was exactly what I needed it to be. Here’s hoping that you, too, have experienced some spring renewal. Peace out.
Danielle Wilson is a contributing columnist. You may email her at info@youarecurrent.com.
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April 20, 2021
VIEWS
Current in Fishers
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Warm memories of the unforgettable Jack Hanna Commentary by Dick Wolfsie “Who the heck is Jack Hanna?” I asked the staff during a TV production meeting in the fall of 1979. HUMOR “He asked who the heck you were, too,” laughed my producer, who had booked the director of the Columbus Zoo as a guest on “Columbus Alive,” a television talk show I had been hosting from Ohio’s capital city for about a month. While I have never attained Jack’s international acclaim, the man in the tan khakis and iconic outdoorsman hat was in some ways responsible for whatever success I have had. I’d like to think we gave each other a kickstart. Jack, according to his family, has been diagnosed with dementia, a tragic circumstance for a man who should have been able to look back on his life with vivid recollections of the wondrous experiences he’s had with both man and beast. During that first show we did together, we were both new to being live on TV. I asked him half-jokingly if the snake he had draped around my neck was venomous. Distracted by the cameras, he took several seconds to answer, appearing as though he had to think about it. It drew audible laughter from the crew. After the show, Jack apologized for his nervousness, but I told him that this naivete was charming, and I thought the show went splendidly. If you have ever watched Jack on talk shows, especially Letterman, you know he retained that air of innocence — even befuddlement — for his entire career.
On another show, Jack brought an opossum that had just had joeys, about seven of them. It was close to Christmas and Jack wanted to decorate me like a tree. He hung the babies on my suit jacket, each clinging with its tiny claws as I mugged to the camera. Six months later, I was awarded an Emmy for Best Talk Show Host, based on a short highlight reel the station had submitted. The first clip was Jack playing ‘possum … with me. In 2013, I attended the celebration of Jack’s 30-year an– DICK WOLFSIE niversary at the Columbus Zoo, an affair highlighted by penguins walking among the guests while they dined. While there, I asked Jack if he would write a blurb for my new book, “Mornings with Barney,” about my 13 years on WISH-TV with my beagle companion. Jack’s words are highlighted on the book’s back cover: “Bats, bears, baboons, badgers and bobcats. None compare with Barney the Beagle.” And few can compare to you, Jack. Through humor and a touch of self-deprecation, you introduced us to the exotic world of animals. I hope you will always retain some memories of how loved you have been by the public you entertained and educated for more than 40 years. You are someone few of us could ever forget.
I’d like to think we gave each other a kickstart.
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Dick Wolfsie is an author, columnist and speaker. Contact him at wolfsie@aol.com.
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April 20, 2021
HEALTH
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Docs: Wait 4 wks for mammogram By Mark Ambrogi mark@youarecurrent.com
tory,” Crook said. “As health care workers first started getting the vaccine and those women came in for mammograms, we found Shortly after the COVID-19 vaccines bemore and more women with enlarged lymph came available nationally, a trend began nodes.” to emerge from However, Crook said it doesn’t PANDEMIC mammogram happen with all patients who get screenings. the vaccine. “When patients have a COVID-19 Crook said the Society of Breast vaccination, one of the side effects Imaging created some guidelines IU is it can cause lymph nodes in your Health is following. IU Health is recunderarm region to become swolommending patients schedule their len or enlarged, which is a natural mammogram screening prior to Crook reaction to your immune system having their vaccine or four weeks responding to the vaccine,” said Dr. Susan after their second dose of the vaccine. Crook, a radiologist who specializes in “The lymph nodes go back to normal a breast imaging at IU Health North in Carmel. few days or several weeks after the vac“Sometimes we can see those lymph nodes cine,” she said. “So that’s why waiting four on the mammogram, and in the absence of weeks is usually adequate time to let those a vaccine history, swollen lymph nodes on lymph nodes go back to normal. If a patient a mammogram can be a symptom of someis having a problem in their breast, like feelthing that is wrong.” ing a lump or bloody nipple discharge, they That normal swelling from the vaccine should seek medical attention right away can provide an abnormal reading of the for that. They shouldn’t put it off because of mammogram. Typically, that swelling would the vaccine.” require additional imagining. Crook encourages patients not to delay “We were seeing it a lot more in othergetting a COVID-19 vaccine because of a wise healthy patients with a vaccine hisplanned mammogram.
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By Mark Ambrogi mark@youarecurrent.com Courtney Boyer was seeking assistance for her son, Grey, who was born with a neurological condition called THERAPY apraxia. “He was non-verbal at 4 1/2 in 2017,” Boyer said. “Doctors had no idea if he would ever talk, and if he did would likely have a large impediment.” So, it was good fortune in 2017 that her web and digital marketing agency, Charley Grey, was referred to Brian Forest Centers in Fishers, a neurofeedback clinic. She learned how it worked. “Being medically trained as a registered nurse and with a master’s level classes in neuroscience psychology, I had never heard of it,” said Boyer, who founded her own neurofeedback center earlier this year. Although the Fishers center had not helped anyone with apraxia, Boyer learned there were articles that showed neurofeedback to be effective. Neurofeedback, also known as electroencephalogram feedback, is a therapeutic intervention that provides immediate feedback from a computer-based
Courtney Boyer looks at the computer while technician Erica Dixon undergoes a neurofeedback session. (Photo by Mark Ambrogi)
program that assesses a client’s brain activity. The program uses sounds or visual signals to retrain or reorganize brain signals. “Fast forward, we trained my son at 4 1/2 years old, and he started speaking,” Boyer said. “Then he started to read and write, which is something we didn’t think he would be able to do. Now 8 years old, Boyer said people cannot tell Grey apart from other children. The success led the Carmel resident to start Grey Matters, which opened at 13250 Hazel Dell Pkwy. in Carmel in February. For more, visit greymattersofcarmel.com.
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Classic Cleaners installs future By Jonathan Matthes jonathan@youarecurrent.com Classic Cleaners, 11501 Geist Pavilion Dr., Fishers, did not have to move far to its new location, just a couple INNOVATION doors down from where it previously operated. But the new location has a new item that offers a glimpse into what the future of dry-cleaning looks like: A nearly 7-foot tall, red rectangle that looks like the door housing a home’s circuit breakers. But the structure is actually an automated garment-retrieval kiosk, made by Italy’s Metalprogetti. It operates like a vending machine for dry-cleaned clothing. The 24/7 kiosk allows customers to come in whether Classic Cleaners is open or not. During off-hours, the front door stays unlocked. To access the kiosk, customers enter their phone number and a pre-selected PIN into the digital screen. Then, a track rotates and delivers the garment from behind an interior door to be retrieved by the customer. “It takes some time because the conveyor (belt) is so large, but it is an amazing thing to see it in action,” said Classic Cleaners
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Steve Arnold, 61, stands with the new automated kiosk that will provide 24/7 service to customers . (Submitted photo)
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April 20, 2021
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Putting the ‘craft’ in craft cocktails: Pinheads bartender adds creative flare to bar’s line-up By Anna Skinner anna@youarecurrent.com Most of Fishers resident’s Alex Verdoorn craft cocktail experience comes from home bartending, and now he has creative freedom to implement what he’s learned in the CONCERT workforce. Verdoorn, who’s worked at Pinheads & Alley’s Alehouse at 13825 Britton Park Rd., Fishers, for four years, is revamping the restaurant’s cocktail menu and introducing offerings such as barrel-aged cocktails and draft cocktails. “I’m really lucky they’ve given me complete freedom to do whatever I want here,” Verdoorn said. One of Verdoorn’s most popular additions are barrel-aged cocktails, whereby he ages cocktails in 5- or 3-liter barrels from various liquor companies. The barrels have different char levels, in which the wood is charred to flavor the whiskey. The levels influence how a spirit tastes after an aging period of several months. “It’s the same process as making whiskey,” Verdoorn said. The most popular barrel-aged cocktail is Not for Karens, made by infusing whiskey with elderflower, orange, allspice and almond and then it is barrel-aged for six months. Most of Verdoorn’s inspiration comes from books and YouTube videos. Every six months, he updates Pinheads’ cocktail menu with seasonal flavors. He is working on summer-themed cocktails for the restaurant’s outdoor tiki bar. Pinheads began allowing Verdoorn to take creative control after customers began requesting drinks he had made them in the past but other bartenders were unable to replicate. “We go through a lot of volume here because we are a large facility,” Verdoorn said. “I’ve learned the only way to get a quality cocktail out quick enough is to batch them all.” So, Verdoorn makes some of his popular cocktails in bulk, such as an espresso liqueur or a mango habanero whiskey cocktail so other bartenders can serve the same drinks. “The hardest trick, honestly, is to figure out ways to batch a cocktail that still tastes good that isn’t going to go bad,” Verdoorn said. “Like when you’re putting lime or lemon juice or citrus in a cocktail, or bottling fresh juice, it’s essentially the pulp going bad. So, if you clarify it where it’s clear, it’s good for a long time, and the more alcohol in it, the better it can stay longer.” Verdoorn enjoys discovering ways to make someone enjoy a spirit they claim to dislike and also taking a single ingredient and creating a cocktail featuring that ingredient. “I really like challenging people and showing them, ‘No, you do like gin, you have just had terrible gin and terrible tonic (in the past),’” Verdoorn said. For more, visit bowlatpinheads.com.
Reciprocal Productions “Variety Hour Batten Down The Hatches” will have performances at 7:30 p.m. April 23-24 at the The Cat, 254 Veterans Way, Carmel. There is a separate virtual viewing option with a different program available April 30May 9. Live tickets are $15, with virtual tickets $12. For more, visit reciprocalproducti. wixsite.com/my-site-1/season. Peanut Butter & Jam Series Peanut Butter & Jam Series presents a performance by Rainforest Rhythm Jam at 10:30 a.m. April 24 at the Studio Theater at the Center for the Performing Arts. For more, visit thecenterpresents.org. Indianapolis Chamber Orchestra The Indianapolis Chamber Orchestra will present “Classic American” at 7:30 p.m. April 25 at the Palladium at the Center for the Performing Arts in Carmel. For more, visit icomusic.org.
Virtual cooking experience benefits Carmel Clay Public Library editorial@youarecurrent.com
Fishers resident Alex Verdoorn has been a bartender at Pinheads in Fishers for four years. (Photo by Anna Skinner)
MEET ALEX VERDOORN • Favorite drink to enjoy: Straight whiskey or a Negroni. • Favorite drink to make: “All of them,” he said, laughing. • How he runs his cocktail parties at home: Asks the attendee what their favorite spirit is, if they prefer sweet or sour and if they like spirit-forward cocktails, and then makes a drink based off the feedback. • Staple tool every bartender should have at home: A good shaker and strainer. “That’s huge in my opinion. I feel like a lot of people don’t have that at home.” • Staple ingredient: Fresh-squeezed juice
Amy Von Eiff from A Cut Above Catering will present “A Night in Tuscany,” a virtual cooking experience, to benefit the Carmel Clay Public Library from 6 to 7 p.m. April 22. Von Eiff will lead viewers in an online course to prepare a three-course meal for two in your own kitchen consisting of Caesar salad with homemade dressing; brown butter sage gnocchi, chicken piccata, Sicilian broccolini for the entrée and mini-cannolis for dessert. A meal kit with all ingredients and service for two will be available to pick up at A Cut Above Catering in Carmel. Details for kit pickup and for accessing the live online event will be provided after tickets have been purchased. Cost for the dinner-for-two experience is $150. For more, visit carmelclaylibrary.org/ tickets.
April 20, 2021
NIGHT & DAY
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CSO forges ahead with final Masterworks concert By Mark Ambrogi mark@youarecurrent.com Carmel Symphony Orchestra Artistic Director Janna Hymes is encouraged by the way her orchestra has naviDRINKS gated the COVID-19 pandemic. “We’re one of the few orchestras in the country that has played throughout COVID,” Hymes said. “We’re kind of a success story and I’m proud of that. We’ve worked hard to do that. I have a lot of friends in the industry who have just burned out because they are just exhausted. They are finding other jobs. They are going into real estate. One is selling wine. I think entertainment has been hit the hardest. We were one of the first things to shut down and we are one of the last things to come back. “You can’t fight it. You have to go with it.” Carmel Symphony Orchestra will hold its final Masterworks concert of the 2020-21 season at 7:30 p.m. April 24 at the Palladium at the Center for the Performing Arts in Carmel. Seating will be limited because of social distancing. A livestream option is available for $20. “The reason I’m excited is, it is all some of my favorite music,” Hymes said. “It’s all beautiful and it’s all really different.” The program includes “Marriage of Figaro Overture” (Wolfgang Mozart); “Pavane” (Gabriel Faure); “Mother Goose Suite” (Maurice Ravel); and “Symphony No. 1 in C” (Georges Bizet). “The ‘Marriage of Figaro’ is very exuberant and upbeat,” Hymes said. “It’s a short, fun opening. The Pavane is a slow, beautiful, dreamy piece which features our principal flute player. It’s gorgeous. People will recognize that piece and they will recognize a lot of the music, which is one of the reasons I like this concert. The ‘Mother Goose Suite’ is delightful.” The concert closes with Bizet’s “Symphony No. 1 in C” that Bizet wrote when he was 17. “The piece just shows his youth and excitement,” Hymes said. “It’s a really optimistic program and it’s got a lot of positive energy.” Hymes said 44 musicians will be on stage, which is not a full orchestra because of COVID-19 spacing restrictions. “It’s more of a chamber orchestra but definitely delightful with winds and brass,”
Janna Hymes will conduct the final Masterworks concert of the 2020-21 season April 24 at the Palladium. (Submitted photo)
she said. The crowd will be limited to approximately 350 to 400, the same as the March concert. “When we use the livestream, the cameras take up a lot of space,” Hymes said. Hymes said it’s been a year of figuring things out. She said it is still up in the air whether there will a May 8 concert, which wasn’t set to be part of the Masterworks series. Disney music is planned that can’t be livestreamed because of copyrights. “The best thing to do is be really flexible and to be open-minded,” Hymes said. “We do feel positive with people getting the vaccine and warmer weather coming (that) there is more opportunity to play outside.” Hymes is optimistic about CSO’s future but said smaller arts organizations around the world will make a decision if they can keep going. “We’re very fortunate that we have a city that supports the arts,” she said. “The mayor (Carmel’s Jim Brainard) is so generous, especially to the resident companies.” Hymes is confident that a fuller orchestra can perform in the 2021-22 season. “I have planned the season as if it will be a non-COVID year,” she said. Tickets for the in-person April 24 concert as well as livestreaming are available at CarmelSymphony.org. Prices begin at $18. Audience members are required to wear masks.
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Clockwise, from the top, Chef’s Sweet and Savory Twist, Mamisake Wings, Rainbow Unicorn drink, Avo Toast, the Drunken Pig and a mimosa. (Photo by Anna Skinner)
Another favorite brunch menu item is Avo Toast ($10). It’s avocado toast with a smear of guacamole on white or wheat toast topped with tomato, poached eggs, cilantro and microgreens. Pinheads also has incredible options on its regular menu. Try the Drunken Pig ($13), a beautifully messy burger layered with white American cheddar cheese, lettuce, tomato, mayo and house-made spicy bourbon bacon jam. Also give the Mamisake Wings a try. They are tossed in an umami glaze and grilled. A large order of 12 wings is $17 and a small order of eight wings is $13.
Behind bars: The Sweet and Spicy Get it at Pinheads, Fishers Ingredients: 1.5 oz. mango habanero whiskey, .75 oz. blackberry moonshine, 2 oz. pineapple juice, .5 oz. lime juice, dash of salt, habanero bitters, dehydrated pineapple slice Directions: Shake ingredients with ice and strain over fresh ice. Garnish with a dehydrated pineapple slice.
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Prices are plus tax, title and $199 documentation fee. Prices subject to change without notice. We buy your car offers subject to in person appraisal and inspection. See dealer for complete warranty and vehicle details.
WE WANT TO BUY YOUR CAR! Call us today to schedule an appointment with one of our appraisers.
525 David Brown Drive Westfield, IN 46074 317-399-7481 www.tomroushmazda.com
Matinee added for Feinstein-Manchester show — A 3 p.m. matinee has been added May 15 for Michael Feinstein and longtime friend Melissa Manchester’s team up for an evening of pop hits and gems from the Great American Songbook. There will be an 8 p.m. performance which, because of limited capacity, is nearly sold out. The concert will be Feinstein’s first live public performance – and the first “Center Presents” event with an on-site audience – in more than a year. The two entertainers will perform individually and together, backed by a piano trio. Feinstein, whose work as a singer, pianist, preservationist and ambassador of timeless popular music has earned him five Grammy Award nominations, is the artistic director for the Center and founder of the Great American Songbook Foundation. Manchester is perhaps best known for her Billboard Top 10 singles “Midnight Blue,” the Grammy-nominated “Don’t Cry Out Loud” and “You Should Hear How She Talks About You,” which won a Grammy Award for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance. For more, visit thecenterpresents. org or by phone at 317-843-3800.
April 20, 2021
NIGHT & DAY
Current in Fishers
www.currentnoblesville.com
Sorvig picks Oscar winners By Mark Ambrogi mark@youarecurrent.com In a theatrical world disrupted by the pandemic in 2020, Heartland International Film Festival FILM Artistic Director Greg Sorvig saw some positives emerge. “This year, 15 films featured at Indy Shorts and Heartland IFF were shortlisted for Academy Awards Sorvig and seven were nominated, including a record six short films,” Sorvig said. Select categories have a shortlist of films for consideration. Ten selections are then narrowed to five nominees. Sorvig’s Oscar picks (HIFF or Indy Shorts winners in bold): • Best Picture: Nomadland • Director: Chloe Zhao, “Nomadland” • Actor in a Leading Role: Chadwick Boseman, “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom” • Actress in a Leading Role: Carey Mulligan, “Promising Young Woman” • Actor in a Supporting Role: Daniel
Kaluuya. • Actress in a Supporting Role: YuhJung Youn, “Minari.” • Original Screenplay: “The Trial of the Chicago 7” • Adapted Screenplay: “Nomadland” • International Feature: “Another Round” • Animated Feature: “Soul” • Sound: “Sound of Metal” • Visual Effects: “Tenet” • Film Editing: “The Trial of the Chicago 7” • Short Film, Animated: “If Anything Happens I Love You.” • Short Film, Live Action: “Feeling Through.” • Documentary Short Subject: “A Love Song for Latasha” • Original Score: “Mank” • Original Song: “Speak Now” from “One Night in Miami.” • Production Design: “Mank” • Cinematography: “Nomadland” • Costume Design: “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom” • Makeup: “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom” • Documentary Feature: “My Octopus Teacher”
Tom Roush Mazda Your Local Dealer Since 1972 Dealer Since 1972 Your Your Local Local Dealer Since 1972
Giacomo Puccini’s
Outdoors under the Bicentennial Pavilion
May 14, 15, and 16 at 7pm Let the lights, performers, chorus, and orchestra of Madame Butterfly come alive in a brand new way as you experience the first ever Indianapolis Opera concert event at the Indianapolis Zoo. Supported by Original artwork created by Lyndsay Moy
Tickets On Sale Now IndyOpera.org or call 317-283-3531
In compliance with all state and county health guidelines.
Indy’s #1 Mazda Dealer
FROM $257 A MONTH FROM $299 A MONTH 20202020 CX-30CX-30 2020 CX-5 2020 CX-5 2020 CX-92020 CX-9
FROM $199 A MONTH
2021 CX-5 2021 MAZDA CX-30Lease from 2021 MAZDA CX-9 Lease from $210 a month $248 aMAZDA month Lease from $298 a month Lease from $210 a month Lease from $248 a month Lease from $298 a month or 0% Financing Available with
or 0% Financing Available with
or 0% Financing Available with
the 2021 Mazda CX-5 forPayment Lease theDay 2021 Mazda CX-30 for $199 a month90with Lease theAvailable 2021 Mazda with CX-9 Sport for or Payment 0% Financing Available or Lease 0% Financing Available with or 0% Financing 90 Deferral. Day Payment Deferral. 90Sport Day Deferral. $257 a month 0.9% financing for 60 months or 0.9% financing andPayment $500 APR Cash $299 a month or Deferral. 0% financing for 60 months 90 Day Deferral. 90 Day or Payment Deferral. 90 Day Payment
Covid-19 Store Update
Our Sales Department is Open! Our hours are Mon - Sat 9am-6pm. We are closely following and adhering to all CDC recommended
10 practices year/100,000 Mile Powertrain Warranty in our facility to keep your family and ours safe.
Department is Open! Our hours are Mon - Sat 9am-6pm. | www.tomroushmazda.com | 317-399-7481 525 David Brown Dr Westfield Our IN Sales 46074 We are closely following and adhering to all CDC recommended
Covid-19 Store Update 2019 Outlander Sport 2020 Eclipse Cross
in our facility to keep your family ours safe. (Mazda CX-30, CX-5, CX-9) 36 month, 10,000 miles per year with $2999 down plus first payment, tax,practices title, and $199 Doc Fee. Monthly payment includes $650and Acquisition fee and available customer lease cash if applicable.
Up to
2019
Lease from
25
2020 Outlander Up to
26
April 20, 2021
INSIDE & OUT
Current in Fishers
www.currentnoblesville.com
Blueprint for Improvement: Fashion-forward Zionsville bath Commentary by Larry Greene This 2006 home is in Zionsville’s Stonegate neighborhood. The owners’ goal was to elevate the master bath with an improved layout and elegant finishes.
After
THE BLUEPRINT • From black quartz countertops and glossy black cabinetry to a stunning geometric shower tile, a fashionforward black and white palette makes a memorable statement. • The shower was relocated to create a walk-in design; the vanities were consolidated from two to one with a double sink. • The large deck-style tub was replaced with a freestanding version. • A lighted mirror and chandelier top off this dazzling bathroom makeover. Larry Greene is the owner of Case Design/Remodeling; email him at lgreene@caseindy.com. Visit caseindy.com for more remodeling inspiration and advice.
Before
See more photos at youarecurrent.com/blueprint
SPRING SPECTACULAR SAVINGS! SPECIALS FROM SUMMERS!
welcome spring!
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A/C TUNE-UP
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FREE
SERVICE CALL WITH PAID REPAIR
$200 OFF
ANY TANKLESS WATER HEATER
317-406-7929 www.SUMMERSPHC.com
LIC # C050800234
$50 OFF ANY SUMP PUMP
Please present coupons at time of service. Cannot be combined with any other offer. Excluding tankless water heaters. Valid Mon-Fri 8am-5pm. EXP 4/30/21
April 20, 2021
LIFESTYLE
Current in Fishers
www.currentnoblesville.com
It’s on the tip of my tongue Commentary by Curtis Honeycutt Do you ever have a hard time coming up with the right word? You get stuck and pause in the middle of a sentence, grasping to remember the GRAMMAR GUY name of that type of knife technique where you dice vegetables until they’re incredibly small. By the way, the term you’re looking for is “brunoise,” but you can’t quite retrieve it from the place in your brain where that word lives. We have a few different terms for not remembering the right word. If you can’t remember the right word or term, you are experiencing “lethologica.” This is when you can’t remember the word “brunoise,” but for some reason, you can recall “chiffonade” and “julienne.” This trips us up almost as much as the hurdler who had her shoelaces tied together, and it makes us feel like we’re not the sharpest knives in the drawer, so to speak. If, on the other hand, you have a hard time remembering names, you are experiencing “lethonomia.” I knew a guy who was horrible with names; he simply referred to someone whose name he couldn’t remember as “what’s his head.” For some reason, I wanted to remember the name of the guy who used to play first base for the Toronto Blue Jays. He wore a batting helmet out in the field. As a member of the Blue Jays, the guy whose name I couldn’t remember won World Series rings against the Braves and Phillies in 1992 and 1993, respectively. He was left-handed like me. I could remember all those details, but I couldn’t remember his name was “John Olerud.” That’s lethonomia. Lethologica and lethonomia come from
the River Lethe from Greek mythology. Also known as the River of Forgetfulness, the River Lethe was one of the five rivers of the underworld of Hades. As the legend goes, when a dead person drank from the Lethe, her earthly memories would be erased, and she would be reincarnated. There also was a goddess called Lethe, who was the divine representation of oblivion and forgetfulness. When you become obsessed with trying to remember a specific word, you are experiencing “loganamnosis.” I recommend carrying around a small notebook or keeping a running note on your smartphone with thoughts and ideas that come and go throughout the day so you don’t forget them later. However, if you can’t shake your loganamnosis because the word feels like it’s at the tip of your tongue, I recommend a hearty bowl of alphabet soup.
Curtis Honeycutt is a national award-winning, syndicated humor writer. Connect with him on Twitter (@curtishoneycutt) or at curtishoneycutt.com.
The Bradford Equities II (200 South Wacker Drive, Suite 726, Chicago, IL 60606) is submitting a notice of intent to the Indiana Department of Environmental Management of our intent to comply with the requirements of 327 IAC 15-5 to discharge stormwater from construction activities associated with ‘The Learning Experience’ Child Care Center located at 13650 Bent Grass Lane, Fishers, IN. Site runoff from the project site will discharge east to the existing Fishers Marketplace stormwater system, flowing north to the existing above-ground detention basin as designed by the overall development masterplan. Receiving waters of the Fishers Marketplace stormwater system is the White River-Shoemaker Ditch. Questions or comments regarding this project should be directed to the project engineering firm, Stonefield Engineering, LLC.
ONE OF THOSE DAYS? HELP IS JUST AROUND THE CORNER.
FREE IN-SHOP DIAGNOSIS UP TO $60 VALUE!
SCAN FOR SPECIAL OFFER!
317.867.0900
April is Distracted Driving Awareness Month.
DRIVE SAFE. 317.846.5554 | shepherdins.com
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WE ARE YOUR APPLE SUPPORT EXPERTS!
950 N. Rangeline Rd., Ste. E, Carmel, IN 46032 • (317) 867-0900 • www.ctcarmel.com • M-F 9:00-4:00 and Weekends/After Hours by Appt.
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Heartfelt Thanks Golf Tournament benefiting Riverview Health Foundation June 16, 2021, at Pebble Brook Golf Club in Noblesville 11 a.m. shotgun start Register at riverview.org/Golf2021. For sponsorship opportunities, contact Polly Craig at 317.776.7938.
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April 20, 2021
LIFESTYLE
Current in Fishers
www.currentnoblesville.com
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special 40. Mild expletive 41. Unworldly sort 44. CBS forensic series 47. Hague or Gray 48. Told fibs 50. Pond buildup 52. Solo of “Star Wars” 53. Nile snake 54. Beef ‘O’ Brady’s weekly food special 59. WRTV’s “American ___” 60. Lion’s sounds 61. Couturier Vera 64. ISO guest pianist: Peter ___ 65. NASCAR Hall of Fame designer 66. Former UIndy student nominated for two Academy Awards: ___ Driver 67. Got bigger 68. Stop 69. Thanksgiving sides
3 6 8 Down 1. UCLA part 2. Six-packs at Carmel Total Fitness 3. Aerial combat 4. Bigfoot’s kin 5. Hound or shawl 6. Skilled trade 7. Newfields docent’s offering 8. Rocker Osbourne 9. Coral creation 10. Some nerve 11. Kind of collision 12. Zimbabwe’s capital 13. “Ain’t happening” 21. Pirate’s home 22. Drove in the Indy 500 23. IU Health scan 24. Word with “nanny” or “web” 28. Laundry unit 29. Not static 30. Tune for two
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6 Hawaii Things ____________________ ____________________ ____________________ ____________________ ____________________ ____________________ 5 Small Indiana Counties ____________________ ____________________ ____________________ ____________________ ____________________
4 Sweet Treats ____________________ ____________________ ____________________ ____________________ 3 Food Delivery Services ____________________ ____________________ ____________________ 2 Area Drugstores ____________________ ____________________
1 Fairmount Indiana Icon ________________________________ 63. The Pacers’ Chad Buchanan and Colts’ Chris
Ballard, briefly Answers on Page 31
April 20, 2021
NUTRITION WEIGHT LOSS SPECIALIST STRENGTH-TRAINING
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1 on 1 Personal Training
Cindy Sams,
Cindy Sams Full-Body Fitness, Full-Body Fitness,LLC LLC
Current in Fishers Focused on www.currentnoblesville.com protecting your business so you can continue to grow it.
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317.846.5554 shepherdins.com
1 on 1 Personal Training • Weight Loss Expert
3C Plumbing Inc. Cy Clayton Cadwalader
REPAIRS.
REASONABLY PRICED. RESIDENTIAL PLUMBING
- water heaters - sump pumps - garbage disposals - bath & kitchen faucets - water softeners -
Don’t live in the world and dream… l ive in the world of your dreams LANDSCAPE
MANAGEMENT
cy@3CPlumbing.com
IRRIGATION CONSULTATION
16 years experience Free home inspection Guaranteed work/referrals
848-7634
www.centennialremodelers.com
Member Central Indiana
“JEFF” OF ALL TRADES HANDYMAN SERVICES, LLC.
FREE ESTIMATES
317-797-8181
www.jeffofalltrades.net - Insured & Bonded
WE CLEAN:
Insurance Specialist Storm Damage
Since 1993
TURN YOUR ‘TO DO’ LIST INTO A ‘TO DONE’ LIST
317.872.4800 sales@procarelandscapers.com
Lic. # PC1Q701074
ROOFING • SIDING • WINDOWS
• PLUMBING • ELECTRICAL • TILING, CARPENTRY & MORE!
ARCHITECTURE CONSTRUCTION
ROSE ROOFING LICENSED BONDED INSURED
FLORICULTURE
317.850.5114
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Any job of $250 or more “JEFF” OF ALL TRADES 317-797-8181 Coupon must be presented at time of estimate. Not valid with other offers or prior purchases. Offer expires 4/30/21.
Small Local Business - Servicing Hamilton County 2010-2020 Angie’s List Super Service Award Winner Fully Insured and Bonded - FREE ESTIMATES Discounts on High Quality Paints • Interior / Exterior • Full Prep / Clean Service • Walls, Trim, Cabinets • Ext Trim, Siding, Brick
wallapainting.com/current 317.360.0969
10% OFF
COVID-19 COIT CLEANS CARPETS COIT CLEANS CARPETS AIR DUCT
FF OCLEAN 0% 4WE 40% OFF
DUCTS
0% OFF
4 • Oriental & Area Rugs • Tile & GroutExpires Carpet • Air 4/27/21 Ducts Upholstery • Wood Flooring • Water & Mold Remediation Carpet • Oriental & Area Rugs • Tile & Grout • Air Ducts
*
Labor over $1500 *Discount for interior painting only
Upholstery 483-1166 • Wood Flooring • Water & Mold Remediation (317) • COIT.COM UPHOLSTERY (317) 483-1166 • COIT.COM
Jay’s
PERSONAL SERVICES Licensed, insured & bonded • Kitchen/Bath Remodeling • Custom Decks • Finished Basements • Ceramic Tile • Wood Floors • Doors & Windows • Interior & Exterior Painting • Drywall • Plumbing & Electrical
Gary D. Simpson Office: 317-660-5494 Cell: 317-703-9575 Free Estimates & Satisfaction Guaranteed
• Roofing and Siding • Room Additions • Power Washing • Decorative & Regular Concrete • Handyman Services
simpsonconstructionservices.com
FULLY INSURED SERVICES INCLUDE: • Residential & Commercial Mowing • Tree & Shrub Trimming/Removal • Mulching • Gutter Cleaning • Power Washing • Demolitions • Painting • Junk Removal • Moving Furniture • Build Decks/Remodeling
BOBCAT WORK
Call or text us at:
574-398-2135 shidelerjay@gmail.com
www.jayspersonalservices.com
topnotchmasonry@att.net
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FINE BATHROOMS
April 20, 2021
WE DO CONTACTLESS EXTERIOR ESTIMATES Current in Fishers
www.currentnoblesville.com
Jorge Escalante
Justin Rich Financial Advisor 11740 Brookschool Rd. Suite 400 Fishers, IN 46037 317-578-7857
Jorge Escalante
317-397-9389
• Kitchen Cabinets
10% OFF
IF YOU MENTION THIS AD
10% OFF
SERVICES
MEMBER SPIC
SERVICES
SERVICES
SERVICES
LAWN CARE & LANDSCAPING
• • • • •
SPRING CLEAN-UP MULCH MOWING FERTILIZING TEAR OUT / REPLACE FREE ESTIMATES CALL 317-491-3491 C&H TREE SERVICE
FIREWOOD SALE Topping – Removal Deadwooding – Landscaping Stump Grinding – Gutter Cleaning INSURED – FREE ESTIMATES Call Steve 317-341-4905 or 317-932-2115
GUITAR LESSONS
Wth recording artist Duke Tumatoe Learn from professional and have fun On Line or In Carmel duke@duketumatoe.com or 317-201-5856
Pet & House Sitting Service
www.pawpatrolindy.com
317-802-6565 317-432-1627 “The Safe and Reliable Alternative to Boarding” Insured/Bonded Serving Carmel & Westfield
Like us on Facebook @ Thread Headz Auto & Marine Upholstery
NEED NEW GUTTERS? PROTECT YOUR LARGEST INVESTMENT AGAINST STRUCTURAL DAMAGE
HAVE JIM WEGHORST, WITH THE CALL #1 RATED CLOG FREE GUTTER PROTECTION SYSTEM, GIVE TODAY YOU A FREE ESTIMATE 317-450-1333
Classifieds
VISA, MasterCard accepted. Reach 128,087 homes weekly
Locally owned/operated over 42 YRS
(765) 233-7100
threadheadzautomarine@gmail.com
Learn more at:
317-397-9389 pain hetownred2007@gmail.com
hetownred2007@gmail.com Kitchen Cabinets • Interior/Exterior • pain
• Carpet • Headliners • Seats • Trunks • Custom Consoles • We also do boat interiors
www.iwantanewbathroom.com
IF YOU MENTION THIS AD
Jorge Escalante • Interior/Exterior
We do custom auto upholstery
Anderson Construction Services
10% OFF
317-397-9389
NOW OPEN!
Complete Bathroom Remodeling -Ceramic and Porcelain Tile Installations -Custom Showers -Leak and Mold Solutions -Low Maintenance Choices
Guitar Lessons With Baker Scott
Beginners thru Advanced All styles Electric-Acoustic-Bass Private Lessons Parent-Child Lessons I teach improvisation for all instruments. Gift Certificates Available Read my LinkedIn bio/About near Carey Road & 146th • Carmel 317-
910-6990
.com
WILL DO BOBCAT WORK, REMODELING, BUILD DECKS & PROPERTY AND GUTTER CLEAN OUT Lawn Care and Landscaping, Mulching, Spring/Storm Clean-ups, Paint, Power-Washing. Trash & Furniture Hauling & Building Demos. FULLY INSURED & Sr Discount Text or call Jay 574-398-2135 shidelerjay@gmail.com www.jayspersonalservices .com
GROUNDHOG STUMP REMOVAL
Professional & Economical Remove tree stumps, ugly tree roots, stumps in and around chain link or wood fences. We also remove tree stumps that are protruding up onto sidewalks and around sidewalks. We grind them and/or remove. Please Call & Text at 816-778-4690 or 317-341-4905.
• House Wash • Roof Wash • Concrete Cleaning & Sealing House Wash • Concrete Cleaning & Sealing • Stamped Concrete Cleaning • Stamped Concrete Cleaning & Sealing • Deck Cleaning & & Sealing • Paver Cleaning and Sealing • Dock Cleaning Staining • Fence Cleaning and Staining • Paver Cleaning and and Sealing Sealing • Dock Cleaning and Sealing
Give us a before call at 317-490-2922 after to schedule your Free Quote & Demonstration omaliashsr.com Serving, Hamilton, Marion, Boone Madison & Hancock counties
driveway & Patio
Give us a call at 317-490-2922 to schedule your Free Quote & Demonstration
Serving, Hamilton, Marion & Boone counties • omalias.com CANTRELL’S TREE EXPERTS Topping -Removal -Deadwooding Bucket Truck Service , Landscaping Fully INSURED , FREE ESTIMATES Call Grover @ 317-253-3064 or Call Jim @ 317895-1509
LAWN CARE PLUS Mowing. Mulch Install. Hedge Trimming. Weed and Feed. Power Washing. Plus more... Over 20 Years of Experience. Serving Hamilton County 765.620.5000
VACATION RENTAL SPEND A WEEK IN
SUNNY SANIBEL AVAILABLE
May 8th THRU May 19th May 31st THRU June 6th June 25th THRU July 3rd July 9th thru July 31st *Beautiful 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath Condo *4th Floor with Gulf View *A Beautiful Inviting Pool *2 Lanais with Lounge Chairs *Plenty of Great restaurants to choose from *Perfect biking and walking paths *Up to 6 People A PARADISE AWAITS YOU Please email: rkojsc3@aol.com for rate info and details.
For pricing e-mail your ad to classifieds@youarecurrent.com
GARAGE SALE
NOW HIRING
SPRINGMILL CROSSING & SPRINGMILL PONDS GARAGE SALES
NOW HIRING: EXPERIENCED CAREGIVERS, CNAS AND HHAS;
Northeast of 136th & Springmill Blvd. & Southeast of 146th & Springmill Blvd. April 22-24, 8am-2pm
NOW HIRING OFFICE MANAGER
Clevernest is a growing company servicing homebuilders, architects, and residential clients throughout central Indiana, as an Andersen Window and Door Dealer, specializing in the installation of all that we sell. We are looking for more than an Office Manager, we are looking for someone who possesses a strong supportive mindset of “how can I help” and deeply appreciates finding joy on executing tasks and projects on a daily basis. This position is responsible for the activities related to office operations; therefore, one must have the ability to juggle multiple projects at once and be an advocate for our clients. Requirements: The ideal candidate is professional, entrepreneurial minded, and able to lead and assist with all aspects of an incoming project and day to day office functions. TO APPLY Clevernest Inc. 240 W. Carmel Drive Carmel IN 46032 tom@clevernest.com; 317-688-8100; www.clevernest.com COMPUTER TECHNICIAN NEEDED Local Computer repair shop in need of PC and Mac techs with experience pref both PC and Macs, certification strongly desired, pleasant personality & some sales experience. Pay starting at $16/ hour and up for F/T. Send resume with cover letter to jobs@ctcarmel.com
Senior Home Companions is hiring for the grand opening of its second memory care home, Story Cottage in Carmel. Flexible schedules and meaningful work. All shifts are available; full time, part time, week days, week nights, weekends and overnights. Paid training, referral bonuses andbenefits available. Competitive pay. Positions in Indy and surrounding areas available, too. Contact Lindsey Fiddler at (317) 251-0441 or recruitment@shcindiana. com for immediate consideration.
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR SKILLED CARPENTERS!
Looking for job security? Simpson Construction Services has so much work that it must hire five people for residential remodeling NOW. The skilled carpenters we select will have strong abilities in bathroom remodeling, but also with respect to kitchens, decks, basements, wood and tile flooring, doors and windows, interior and exterior painting, drywall, plumbing and electrical, siding and room additions. Again: Only skilled carpenters need apply. For immediate consideration, call Gary Simpson at 317.703.9575.
HELP WANTED:
Looking for an entry level employee to round out my help desk. It is a perfect job for college aged students or someone looking to return to the workforce. Primary duties would be inbound tech support calls, emails, and light office work. Mid-morning, approximately 15 hours per week. Please send resumes, work history, or questions to: mkress@theankerconsultinggroup.com
April 20, 2021
Current in Fishers
www.currentnoblesville.com
NOW HIRING
NOW HIRING
NOW HIRING
Now Hiring Drivers, Reservationist and Direct Support Professionals Full-time and Part-Time positions available Starting Pay: $12-13/hr. (based on experience) Fulltime includes great benefits! Make a difference in your community By providing safe, reliable and compassionate service. Janus Developmental Services, Inc. 1555 Westfield Road
Please apply online at www.janus-inc.org YOUR CLASSIFIED AD HERE!
NOW HIRING SECURITY OFFICERS
Call Dennis O’Malia 317-370-0749
FT/PT & Seasonal hours available Hiring for all shifts
PUZZLE ANSWERS
Apply online at www.jobs.aus.com Call 317-920-0402 to schedule your interview today! Open Interviews every Wednesday 10-3.
PUZZLE ANSWERS
Things: LEI, LUAU, PINEAPPLE, REEF, TOURISTS, VOLCANO; Counties: BENTON, MARTIN, OHIO, UNION, WARREN; Treats: 8777 Purdue, Suite 300, Indianapolis IN 46268 CAKE, COOKIES, DONUTS, ICE L A D Y A C T O R O H H I CREAM; Service: DOORDASH, GRUBHUB, F R O Z E P E A S UBER EATS; Drugstores: CVS, WALO B O E GREENS; Icon: JAMES DEAN S S G F M C I R A G I M H T
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Current in Fishers
www.currentnoblesville.com
Assisted Living Expansion Opening May 2021! VATIONS! R E S E R G EPTIN NOW ACC
Our Assisted Living apartments have been designed with you in mind. Let us help you navigate the best care for you or your loved one and show you what can happen when compassion meets care.
www.HamiltonTrace.us
Experience the heart of CarDon that you can only find at Hamilton Trace!
SCAN THE CODE FOR MORE INFORMATION AND TO SCHEDULE A TOUR. INDEPENDENT LIVING · ASSISTED LIVING · REHABILITATION LONG TERM CARE · MEMORY SUPPORT F A M I LY- F I R S T
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