Tuesday, February 11, 2014
Program initiated by Fishers resident teaches high school students how to help save the ecosystem / P14
Local students wins NFL competition / P3
Fishers Rotary to host third annual Fishers on Tap / P5
Cox files paperwork for mayor run / P7
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February 11, 2014
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On the Cover
Fishers resident Dave Wing began a program called Project Coral Rescue to help save reefs in Florida Keys. (Photos by Tim Grollimund) Founded Jan. 25, 2011, at Fishers, IN Vol. IV, No. 4 Copyright 2013. Current Publishing, LLC All Rights Reserved. 30 South Range Line Road Carmel, IN 46032 317.489.4444 info@youarecurrent.com The views of the columnists in Current in Fishers are their own and do not necessarily reflect the positions of this newspaper.
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Local student wins NFL competition By Holly Kline • news@currentinfishers.com
The 2013 Punt, Pass & Kick National Championships were held in December in Denver. Sophia Saucerman, a seventh-grader achievement at Heritage Christian School, represented the Indianapolis Colts in the NFL-run competition and won the championship for her age group. The NFL sponsors the PP&K competition, and there is no charge to participate; boys and girls ages 6 to 15 are welcome to find a local PP&K event and compete. Boys’ and girls’ events are separate and everyone is divided by age groups. Saucerman was a finalist in 2012 and competed again in 2013, managing to come in first in a local PP&K event and first in sectional and state competitions. She earned a spot in the finals and went on to win the PP&K championship in the girls’ 12-13 age group. Saucerman was honored with other PP&K champions on the football field during the Jan. 12 San Diego-at-Denver playoff game. “I like that I got to go to the game and get announced,” Saucerman said. The competition is made up of one punt, one pass and one placekick. Each participant receives a cumulative score made up of points awarded in all three events. Saucerman’s score was an impressive 314.4 feet. “It was nerve-wracking,” Saucerman, said, when talking about competing at the national finals. “But my nerves went away when I did my first round of events,” she continued. “It was a lot better than when I did it last year and I felt confident.” “Sophia has shown a fantastic desire to better herself on the soccer field and it has shown in her desire to better herself in the Punt, Pass & Kick competition,” said Saucerman’s FC Pride Soccer Club coach Matt Blackbourne. “Her teammates love what
she has accomplished,” he continued. “The coaches, players and families at FC Pride are extremely proud of Sophia’s achievements in the Punt, Pass & Kick competition,” added FC Pride Director of Coaching Jamie Gilbert. Saucerman, is excited to continue competing in PP&K events and said she is very happy with her 2013 performance. “I want to do this until I’m 15,” she said.
Miller named to Wittenberg University’s dean’s list – Madelyn Miller of Fishers was named to the dean’s list at Wittenberg University, maintaining a 3.5 grade point average for the 2013 fall semester. Miller is scheduled to graduate in 2016. Affiliated with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, Wittenberg has been named by the Princeton Review for 11th in the nation for “Best Classroom Experience.” Learn more at www.wittenberg.edu.
Needleman named to dean’s list at Tennessee State University – Sarah Needleman, a resident of Fishers, was named to the fall 013 dean’s list at Tennessee State University. The honor list names those of all students who have achieved a grade point average of 3.0 or higher in 12 or more semester hours. Founded in 1912, Tennessee State University celebrated 100 years in Nashville during 2012. Visit the university online at tnstate.edu.
ON THE WEB
DVD Review In many ways, “All Is Lost” is 2013’s companion film to “Gravity,” though far fewer people saw it. Robert Redford stars as Our Man, an unnamed lone seafarer aboard a high-class sailboat. Like Sandra Bullock did in space, he faces an existential crisis when his vessel is fatally damaged, and he spends the rest of the movie trying valiantly – though without much hope – to survive. Read more at currentnightandday.com
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DISPATCHES Meyer in scholarship pageant – Fishers resident Claire Meyer will participate in the Miss Purdue Scholarship Pageant on Feb. 16 at Fowler Hall at Purdue University. She will compete in five phases of competition: evening gown, lifestyle, fitness in swimsuit, talent, and interview Q&A for the title of Miss Purdue University, which is a preliminary pageant to the Miss Indiana pageant. Miss Indiana continues on to the Miss America pageant. JCC partners with Chaucie’s Place – The Jewish Community Center joins Chaucie’s Place in the effort to prevent child sexual abuse. As an organization serving thousands of youth each year, the JCC’s commitment to abuse prevention has gained momentum to move well beyond the training of staff with direct contact with children. This month, every staff member, both full- and part-time, are mandated to attend the 2.5-hour “Stewards of Children” training session presented by Chaucie’s Place. Training sessions will occur from 5:30 to 8 p.m. Feb. 10 at the JCC, 6701 Hoover Rd., Indianapolis, and from 1:30 to 4 p.m. on Feb. 15 at Chaucie’s Place, 4607 East 106th St., Carmel.
Heritage Christian School seventh-grader Sophia Saucerman recently represented the Indianapolis Colts in the 2013 Punt, Pass & Kick National Championships in Denver. (Submitted photo)
Area residents make Butler University’s dean’s list – The following Fishers residents have made the dean’s list for the fall semester of the 2013-2014 academic year at Butler University in Indianapolis: Loor Alshawa, Kristin Burand, Courtney Cox, Grace Drascic, Kailey Eaton, Zachariah George, Kaitlyn Kiley, Amber Kline, Dania Saltagi, Samuel Smith, and Andrea Wirthwein. Bhatt named to Cornell University dean’s list – Nupur Bhatt of Fishers has been placed on the dean’s list of the College of Arts and Science for Excellence in Scholarship for the fall 2013 semester at Cornell University. The College of Arts and Sciences is Cornell University’s largest undergraduate college. Alimin named to Creighton University’s dean’s list – Marcela Alimin of Fishers, a fourth-year student in the School of Pharmacy and Health Professions, was named to the fall 2013 dean’s list at Creighton University. Fulltime students that rank in the top 10 percent of their class for the semester and earn a 3.5 grade-point average or better on a 4.0 scale are eligible for inclusion in the dean’s list.
Redmond
Tax reduction
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Mike Redmond says it is not too early, guys, to start thinking about Valentine’s Day. This is because he is a guy and knows how guys work, and that means he knows that 90 percent of guys tend not to think about Valentine’s Day until it is almost too late. To prevent an upset Valentine, Redmond offers a few suggestions. Read more at curentinfishers.com
Senate President Pro Tem David Long (R-Fort Wayne), State Sen. Brandt Hershman (R-Buck Creek) and State Sen. Luke Kenley (R-Noblesville) recently unveiled legislation to boost Hoosier job and economic growth by reducing the state’s corporate income tax and business personal property tax. The Indiana Senate Majority Caucus has designated this initiative Senate Bill 1. Read more at curentinfishers. com
Thinking about starting a home remodeling project? CASE Design/Remodeling Indy is holding two free 90-minute kitchen and bath seminars this month. Larry Greene, president and owner of Case Design/Remodeling Indy, will explore the latest design trends. Read more at currentinfishers.com.
Volunteer fair Conner Prairie Interactive History Park in Fishers is seeking adult volunteers ages 18 and older to attend a free volunteer fair; no experience or skills are necessary. All volunteers are trained. Read more at currentinfishers.com.
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Rotary Club to tap craft breweries news@currentinfishers.com The Rotary Club of Fishers and local Indiana craft brewers are teaming up this month for the third annual Fishers On Tap fundraiser winter fundraiser. The event takes place from 4 to 7 p.m. Feb. 22 at the FORUM Conference & Events Center, 11313 USA Parkway, Fishers. The Rotarians plan to have eight craft breweries available to sling samples including past participants Daredevil Brewing Co., Sun King Brewing Co., Upland Brewing Co., Bier Brewery, Flat12 Bierwerks and Barley Island Brewing Co., Union Brewing Co., and Peoples Brewery Co. General admission tickets cost $40, and tickets for designated drivers are $20, and can be purchased at www.fishersontap.com. Money raised at the event has been designated for youth and child services in local community. In some cases the Fishers Rotary club will be able to apply for matching grants from the Rotary Foundation to double the impact that the event proceeds will have on children and young adults. The club expects another sellout crowd of 450 guests to come out for an evening of great local craft beer, live entertainment, food samples from
local restaurants, 50/50 raffle, and plenty of giveaways from local businesses. “This annual event has become a key fundraiser for our club to help us make a difference in the lives of residents in our community who need help. We are looking forward to using these funds in support of this year’s focus, children and youth services,” Michele Whelchel, president elect. The first Fishers On Tap event in 2012 raised $2,500 for various charities with the second netting $8,200. This year, due to strong sponsorship support by local businesses (including Current in Fishers) and our title sponsor, Elfcu, to help cover the event’s costs, they expect to grow the net earnings significantly. Fishers On Tap – Summer will return June 14 at the outdoor amphitheater at the Town of Fishers municipal complex. For more information about Fishers On Tap, visit www.fishersontap.com.
Meador named to dean’s list at St. Bonaventure University – Alexandra Meador, a second-year student from Fishers, has been named to the fall 2013 dean’s list at St. Bonaventure University in St. Bonaventure, New York. Meador’s major is Sport studies. For more information, visit www.sbu.edu.
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Cox seeking mayor’s office sentative on the Parks Advisory Committee. Cox has also served as a past vice president of the Fishers Station Kiwanis Club and is curRenee Cox, Fishers Town Council member, has rently a membership chair of the Geist Kiwanis filed paperwork seeking the Republican nomiClub. She is a member of the Hamilton nation to be the first County Federated Republican Women Election mayor of Fishers. Club as well as the National Federation “I listen to Fishers of Republican Women. voters and try to make sure their voices Cox has spent the last 13 years in are heard,” she said. “My experience and sales, marketing and business developvision make me uniquely qualified to ment in the healthcare industry. transition Fishers from a town to a city. “I am a small business owner and I look forward to serving the residents Cox enjoy utilizing my passions of helping of Fishers (if elected) as their mayor.” others and educating them on how to save In Cox’s three years on the Fishers Town money on medications,” she said. “Some of my Council, she said she fought for lower taxes and professional accomplishments include helping limited government. to grow a small, independent company from “I was the only town councilor to fight the $250,000 annual revenues to over $25 million in Fishers Food and Beverage Tax,” she said. “By seven years and working as a regional marketing defeating the tax proposal, I kept taxes low for associate for Omnicare, a Fortune 300 pharmaFishers families and enabled Fishers to foster a ceutical services company.” positive environment for small businesses.” Cox and her husband David have lived in FishFrom January 2010 to December 2010, Cox was ers for eight years. They have a goddaughter, the president of the Fall Creek Township Board three nieces and two nephews. She serves as the vice president of the Hoosier Heritage Port Authority and is the council reprenews@currentinfishers.com
Local student serves as page – Nicholas Baehl, a student at Hamilton Southeastern School, recently served as an Indiana House Page during the 2014 session of the Indiana General Assembly. The Indiana House of Representatives offers an opportunity for students between the ages of 13 and 18 to visit the Statehouse and experience a full day of legislative activity. Pages are able to see how the state legislature works firsthand in a behind-the-scenes tour and work alongside legislatures, legislative assistants and interns.
February 11, 2014
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February 11, 2014
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February 11, 2014
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Stoller to run for Fishers City Council news@currentinfishers.com Selina Stoller has announced that she is running for Fishers City Council, Northwest District. “I want to serve the commuelection nity and to be engaged in the City of Fishers’ growth,” Stoller said. “I strive to facilitate public safety in Fishers. I am passionate about Fishers’ future, and as a result, I am announcing my candidacy to run for election to Fishers City Council.” Stoller said she believes the City of Fishers faces many challenges such as public safety, aging infrastructure and unplanned growth and trusts that solving these issues will contribute to the strength of Fishers. “I believe in teamwork to develop a city where we can all thrive,” she said. Stoller has lived in Fishers with her husband, daughter and son for over 13 years. Her family regularly participates in Special Olympics of Hamilton County. Her husband is a coach for multiple sports, and the family volunteers and assists SOHC. Stoller said her main concern as a mother is public safety to ensure that Fishers is a safe community to raise a family. “Burglaries, robber-
ies, and break-ins have increased and are a big concern to Fishers families,” she said. Though Stoller named public safety a top priority, she said she believes the issue of public safety goes beyond the latest crime report. “Safety is also on the roads. Development is moving forward in Fishers just as it should. If the development is not properly and strategically planned, traffic congestion and unsafe intersections can be easily created,” she said. Stoller added that many people flock to Fishers because of the school system, however, “the problem lies in that the schools do not receive money for new students until after they have completed one year of school in the community. With new developments being put in Fishers, the schools are overcrowded. Strategic planning is needed to properly implement the development to allow the schools to expand at a reasonable pace.” Stoller provides consultant services regarding distressed assets, and has planned and managed for private equity funds, specializing in asset allocation, incorporating non-traditional investments in a portfolio, targeting a minimal acceptable return.
Thompson named to University of Notre Dame’s dean’s list – Chase Thompson of Fishers has been named to the dean’s list of the University of Notre Dame’s first year of studies for outstanding scholarship during the fall 2013 semester. Students who achieve the dean’s honors at Notre Dame represent the top 30 percent of students in their college.
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February 11, 2014
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George files for city council election allow for hundreds of acres of land to be used for business development,” George said. George said he has also assisted Fishers through Fishers Town Council member David George many other projects over the years, including the has filed for Fishers City Council, Southwest Disdowntown redevelopment plan and the trict 5. He has served Nickel Plate District, which includes the election with Fishers Town amphitheater as well as Launch Fishers. Council since 2003. “Throughout my time on the town “I have had the privilege of serving council, I have shown a strong committhe Town of Fishers, and specifically ment to responsible, fiscally conservathe Southwest district for over 11 years,” tive government,” he said. George said George said. “Our community has grown he believes that the Fishers community considerably during my time as a memGeorge has always benefited from quality serber of the Fishers Town Council. I look vices that are readily available and are also proforward to continuing to help make Fishers a vided in an efficient manner. great place to live, work, and play while main“Fishers has kept its taxes low during my taining a commitment to responsible, conservatime as a member of the town council, which tive government.” has encouraged the tax base to grow and create George said he has worked to improve Fishmore services that were not previously availers’ infrastructure during his 11 years serving able,” he said. with Fishers Town Council. Some of the recent George moved to Fishers shortly after graduinfrastructure improvements have included a ating from Purdue University with a degree in roundabout at the intersection of Fall Creek & civil engineering. He also received his MBA from Brooks School roads, various path connection Butler University with a concentration in finance. projects, I-69 and the 116th Street interchange George is a senior project manager for Kite Reimprovements as well as approval for an interalty and is the president of David George & Aschange at I-69 and 106th Street. “This interchange will not only help to alleviate sociates, a real estate company. George has lived in the Southwest District in Fishers for 18 years. traffic from the 116th Street exit, but it will also news@currentinfishers.com
Bonek named to Drake University dean’s list – Mariah Bonek of Fishers was named to Drake University’s dean’s list for the fall 2013 semester. Students must achieve a grade-point average of 3.5 or higher to earn this honor.
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A WOMEN’S HEART HEALTH EVENT
Dedicate one night to an important fight–heart disease. Put on something red and come celebrate heart healthy living and Go Red for Women month with Indiana University Health Saxony Hospital. This special night includes: A talk on heart health from an IU Health cardiologist ■ A presentation from a dietician on incorporating heart healthy food into your diet ■ Free dinner ■ Door prize giveaways ■
WOMEN’S HEART HEALTH EVENT Dr. Edward Harlamert Cardiologist Thursday, February 20, 6-8 pm RSVP by calling 317.688.2829 IU HEALTH SAXONY HOSPITAL 13000 E. 136th St. Fishers, IN 46037 iuhealth.org/saxonyheart
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Brown to run for Fishers City Council news@currentinfishers.com Georgia Brown has announced that she is running for Fishers City Council North Central District (District Three). Brown has been a resident election of Fishers for 30 years and said she is running for City Council for three reasons: to ensure public safety, invest in the community’s future, and stand for neighborhood values. “I love my community and care deeply about our city,” she said. Brown said she believes in limited government and fiscal responsibility. “Government should live within its means, protect its citizens and work with the school system to provide excellent education,” she said. Brown has spent her career working as an investigator and for the Indianapolis Police Dept. and said she has a particular interest in public safety. “Fishers is growing, and crime is growing,” she said. “I have lived here a long time and I want to make sure resources are spent on public safety before buildings downtown that only add congestion.”
Brown said she believes that experience with the community must be an essential part of its leadership. “There are a lot of new fresh faces in Fishers, which is good,” she said. “But I also think it is important that leaders understand the history of this community, the schools, and its character.” Brown said she adamantly believes resources should be allocated to essential services and managed growth before pet projects. She explained that, if elected, she will be the keeper of the Fishers fire and police departments and schools. “Our schools are in fiscal crises,” she said. “Seeing the land giveaways and corporate welfare is disturbing. We have lost our way when we are having a new referendum ever year while continuing to bribe developers to do business in Fishers.” Brown said she is committed to making sure that the things that made Fishers so attractive to so many folks continues to be focal points as growth continues. Brown said her 35 years of experience working with law enforcement (including the Indianapolis Police Dept. and Marion County Prosecutor’s Office), is an invaluable asset as our Fishers community grows.
Staying healthy – The fifth Annual Hamilton County Resource & Health Fair 2014 runs from 1 to 7 p.m. March 13 at the Hamilton County 4-H Fairgrounds in Noblesville. The event is coordinated by The Hamilton County Health Task Force and Good Samaritan Network of Hamilton County. Last year nearly 100 registered sponsors and booth participants provided high-quality healthcare information, including eight different screening opportunities.
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Program initiated by Fishers resident teaches high school students how to help save the ecosystem By Nancy Edwards • nancy@youarecurrent.com Living the American dream for many people involves a lucrative career, followed by retirement to relax and take up a hobby. Not for Dave Wing. cover story The Fishers resident, 62, spent his remaining career years as chief accounting officer with United Airlines, yet he began to yearn for something else to do with his life. He retired in 2010. “I asked myself, ‘now what am I going to do?’” Wing said. “I’m not the person to sit down or play golf.”
Repurposing a life
In 2011, Wing read an article about a new program being offered at Harvard University. The Advanced Leadership Initiative was started by a group of Harvard professors with the purpose of recruiting retired, experienced leaders for a one-year fellowship designed to begin new careers with a greater impact on society than the retirees had experienced in their first careers. Those that attend the fellowship can choose from systematic problems ranging from poverty, global health, and environmental degradation to basic education. Those with advanced degrees attend seminars on advanced leadership and develop a plan for an area that they are interested in. The following year, Wing was accepted into the fellowship program. Education appealed to Wing, as well as the preservation of coral reefs, which affects not only animals in the sea, but the climate of the world as well. Wing needed to connect with someone who had experience in marine biology to develop an idea for a new career. He was introduced to David Makepeace, 64, a resident of the northern Florida Keys who retired from 33 years of teaching marine science to high school students. Wing and Makepeace founded Project Coral Rescue, a program for high school students taking honors marine science classes at Coral Shores High School and Island Christian School. The program, in its first year, is receiving funding through cash donations, cash matches and through reduced rates or free goods and services by both non-profit and for-profit organizations.
Saving the reefs
As part of the program, students are taken on dives in the Florida Keys to witness the loss of coral reefs. “We are teaching students why (the coral reefs are dying), biology and what is being done to preserve and protect what we have
Two high schools in the northern part of the Florida Keys have implemented Project Coral Rescue into their classroom curriculum.
left,” Wing said. Coral reefs make up 1 percent of the total area of the ocean and are often referred to as “the rainforest of the ocean,” according to
Wing, because “it is a vibrant ocean ecosystem with a high degree of biological diversity. Its importance to ocean health is undeniable; about 25 percent of the fish species which live in the ocean today spend some portions of their lives in coral reefs,” he said. Students are taught that activities such as boating, diving and fishing can cause direct damage to the corals, as well as polluting the water. Other dangers include carbon dioxide, the rapid growth of algae, which competes with coral space, global warming, which causes the water to become warmer as well and cause coral bleaching. “Bleaching is a process still not understood but it ultimately causes corals to lose access to nutrition and therefore causes them to starve and die,” Wing said. The good news is that, with the assistance of the Coral Restoration Foundation, the students are helping to rebuild coral reefs. The foundation began a method of coral restoration for two types of corals: staghorn and elkhorn. Coral fragments that are broken off from larger coral colonies are grown in an underwater nursery, also maintained by students. Fragments that have reached an appropriate size are transplanted to bare areas of coral reefs using a material similar to putty, which sticks the coral fragment to the reef and hardens quickly in the water. “The transplanted corals continue to grow wherever they are transplanted with a success rate of more than 90 percent,” Wing said. Students have also learned that lionfish, a predatory breed that originated in the Pacific and Indian oceans, have posed a significant danger to the ecosystem, eliminating up to 80 percent of other reef fishes. Lionfish, which are typically adopted and placed into aquariums, are found striking by people due to their red and white stripes and dorsal fins. However, lionfish will attack every other type of fish in the aquarium and have a voracious appetite. When the lionfish become too large, their owners do not want to kill them, and instead throw them into the ocean.
How the ecosystem affects Indiana
Coastal parts of the U.S. are not the only areas affected by the poor ecosystem. The rate of dying fish can drive up prices of fish significantly. As well, according to Makepeace, fisheries are impacted, and farmers must be careful about the use of fertilizer, which can impact the Mississippi River. “Anything that goes on in and around the Mississippi River, any fertilizer that can get in the river, does have a direct impact on the health of the coral reefs,” Makepeace said. “So many things sustain us from the ocean: food from the ocean, water, medicines discovered from marine sources, and the ocean provides jobs.”
“I asked myself, ‘now what am I going to do? I’m not the person to sit down or play golf.” - Dave Wing
February 11, 2014
VIEWS
Current in Fishers
www.currentinfishers.com
FR O M T H E BACKSHOP
FR O M T H E EDITOR Never too late for a dream career
FFF to benefit kids, their art
So, this is cool for a number of reasons. Hamilton Southeastern Schools kindergarteners through eighth-graders with artistic flair are being encouraged to share their ideas for the Fishers Freedom Festival’s annual T-Shirt Design Contest. The winner will have his or her design on the official 2014 T-shirt for the festival that runs June 28-29. Festival officials say the school with the highest percentage of entries will receive $500 towards its art program. In the event that there is a tie, the prize will be divided equally. For more details, please go to www.fishersfreedomfestival.org or call the festival office at 595.3195. Entry deadline is Feb. 14. The Fishers Arts Council and the Fishers Freedom Festival will provide prize money. A panel from the Arts Council and the Fishers Freedom Festival Committee will determine the winning artwork. Up to 100 T-shirt design finalists will have their artwork on display as a Fishers Art in Town Hall exhibition March 1-31. This is a multiple-win art endeavor. We’re looking forward to the coming designs. ••• It’s a small one, but here’s another reason why your tax dollars will be at peril with an investment in mass transit. The communications folks at IndyGo warned folks in a press release last week that, in the event of snow, we should allow for extra travel time to and from our destination; plan for delays due to icy streets, heavy snowfall and traffic congestion; watch our footing as snow and ice can make sidewalks, steps and bus floors slippery; hold onto the railing when boarding and alighting; and dress warmly for potentially longer wait times at bus stops. Wow. You can’t make up this stuff. ••• In observance of Presidents’ Day on Feb. 17, the United States Postal Service will be closed. That means delivery of your edition of Current will be delayed one day to Feb. 19. Brian Kelly, publisher, and Steve Greenberg, general manager, are co-owners of Current Publishing, LLC. Write them at info@ youarecurrent.com.
Wanna write us a letter? You can do it a couple ways. E-mailing it to info@ currentinfishers.com is the quickest and easiest. The old-fashioned way is to snail mail it to Current in Fishers, 30 S. Range Line Road, Carmel, IN 46032. Keep letters to 200 words max (we may make exceptions), and be sure to include your home ZIP code and a daytime number for verification.
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Failing infallibility
Commentary by Terry Anker
There are few things that frustrate us more than making mistakes, especially big mistakes. Not only do they point towards our own fallibility but they also remind us to slow down and pay attention to the details of what we do. To be sure, there is a distinction between culpability for one’s own actions and an unpreventable error resulting from circumstance. And, the space between the two is often difficult to measure. Yet, we know when we have failed through our own folly. Recently, I led the charge in insulting an important partner and embarrassing myself proving that I’m failing infallibility. Not as attentive as I should have been to the bulk of e-mail and other communications that shower us each day, I misinterpreted an important message and took action without confirming the veracity of my understanding. Ultimately, I ended up embarrassing the truly good person while at the same time making an ass of myself. Kudos for multitasking! By the time the error was discovered, harm
had been caused and the opportunity to fix the transgression had passed. Certainly, the victim of my actions was magnanimous and thoughtful (in a way that I’m not sure I would have been mature enough to be); but, the frustration over the error hangs with me. How many mistakes do we make that go unrecognized? How many opportunities do we miss to do the right thing? How many people are harmed in silence? Many of us glide through life with rare repercussion for our own error. We are insulated from failure either by previous success or by personal advantage. Yet so many, unsheltered by accumulated goodwill, live in peril of a single transgression. When we imagine ourselves to hardly stumble in a gaffe, is it more likely that we seldom are held to account for our actions? Terry Anker is an associate editor of Current Publishing, LLC. You may e-mail him at terry@currentincarmel. com.
Q U O T E O F T H E W E E K The most important single ingredient in the formula of success is knowing how to get along with people.
- Theodore Roosevelt
I first met local resident Dave Wing, 62, a few months ago at a play that he and his wife, Donna, produced at Oaklandon Civic Theatre about the friendship during the 1800s between Transcendendalists Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau. Dave and Donna are an example of a couple that have led the American dream: lucrative careers, intelligent kids, wonderful trips and a nice home. Yet something happened along the way that changed after they retired. The idea of playing golf and relaxing at home did not appeal to them. They wanted something more. They wanted to make a more significant impact in the world. A few years ago, Harvard University came knocking on their door. The couple were offered a one-year fellowship granted to educated, retired, experienced individuals that had a dream. For some people, these dreams involved offering low-cost HIV medicine to third-world countries or helping survivors of tsunamis rebuild their lives. David and Donna decided that, with their interest in education, scuba diving, and the erosion of coral reefs in the ocean, they would help educate future generations on lessons in saving the environment. The Wings traveled to the northern keys in Florida to meet with a retired marine biology teacher named David Makepeace. Together, they decided to incorporate their vision to high school students interested in marine biology. Together, they are taking an important step toward helping the environment. Retirees, what is your dream for a second career? Perhaps you were busy raising children or working a job just because of security in your younger years. Explore your options. For more information on Harvard’s Leadership program or the Wings’ idea of saving the reefs, visit http://advancedleadership.harvard.edu. Nancy Edwards is the managing editor of Current in Fishers. You may e-mail her at nancy@youarecurrent.com
BELIEVE IT! Our nation has all sorts of arcane, nonsensical laws on the books. Each week, we’ll share one with you. In an attempt to “foster kindness” in the citizens of New Jersey, the month of May is designated “Kindness Awareness Month”.
Source: dumblaws.com
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February 11, 2014
VIEWS
Current in Fishers
www.currentinfishers.com
Working mom’s job is hard enough Commentary by Danielle Wilson
F E B R UA RY
22 Heart disease is the number one killer of women, but do you know why? You are invited to join Community Physician Network cardiologist Nanette Oscherwitz, MD, for a special seminar on women and heart health. Heart disease affects women differently than it does men, with signs and symptoms that go beyond typical chest pain. Don’t miss this chance to learn: • Risk factors for heart disease • Signs and symptoms of heart disease in women • How to manage stress for a healthier heart • How to exercise for a healthy heart • What heart screenings are available and are they right for you
I was talking with some fellow working moms (WMs) the other night, and I heard a story that got me so fired up I’m writing a humor column about it. Read on and be appalled. WM was feeling guilty about not spending enough time with her children and decided to take a day off to simply play with her kids. They’d sleep in, go to Starbucks and “pretend” to work on laptops while they sipped coffee and hot chocolate, ate a fun lunch out, and then maybe saw a movie or went bowling. They’d talk, laugh, hug and create beautiful memories. More importantly, WM would assuage her guilt and all would be right in the world. But of course everyone was grumpy the morning of the much-anticipated Bonding Day, and no one really wanted to get dressed and go out. But, chillin’ at the coffee shop was on the schedule, so WM plowed ahead. An hour later, after her sugar-crazed rugrats had completely ignored multiple harshly whispered pleas to calm the frick down, she decided to cut her losses and pack up. Better luck at Stop No. 2. Here’s where it got interesting. Another patron, a woman mind you, had the nerve to criticize her parenting as she was leaving. To. Her. Face. I know! Instead of empathizing with a “Don’t worry about it, honey, we’ve all been there,” or even better, offering a “Can I help you?”
Ms. High-and-Mighty touted her Christian beliefs and suggested that maybe WM should have just stayed home. Can you believe that? I just want to punch her! WM ended her morning crying in the car and feeling even guiltier than before. Way to go, lady. We’ve all witnessed our kid meltdowns in a nice restaurant or the checkout aisle at Meijer, but who in her right mind actually says something when she sees the chaos unfolding? And I’m sure this woman thought she understood the situation perfectly, and that she was doing her good deed for the day, but all that hag managed was to ladle a huge helping of guilt on WM, who was already beyond frustrated and disappointed. Admittedly, I judge other moms all the time, but I would never express it out loud for two reasons: I’m the blackest pot on the stove and karma’s a (rhymes with itch). Listen, people: Being a mom is tough, and working moms constantly struggle to find a good balance between career and home. Please don’t add to the scales by dishing out unsolicited advice. Instead, try putting yourself in her position and remember how challenging parenting can be. A few kind words in solidarity can make all the difference, particularly to WMs. Peace out.
Danielle Wilson is a contributing columnist. You may e-mail her at danielle@currentincarmel.com. ADVERTORIAL
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February 11, 2014
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Current in Fishers
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February 11, 2014 • currentnightandday.com
THIS WEEK Midwinter Dance Festival - The Butler Ballet will present two different programs for its inaugural season in the new Howard L. CARMEL Schrott Center for the Arts on the campus of Butler University. George Balanchine’s Valse-Fantaisie, staged by Butler Dance faculty member Patrick Hinson, will open each of the programs and a new work by Spanish choreographer Gustavo Sansaro will close each evening. New works by Butler Ballet resident choreographers Marek Cholewa, Stephan Laurent, Susan McGuire, Cynthia Pratt and Derek Reid will round out the programs. The performances will be at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 12; 7:30 p.m. Feb. 13; 8 p.m. Feb. 14; 2 and 8 p.m. Feb. 15; and 2 p.m. Feb. 16 at the Howard L. Schrott Center for the Arts, 610 W. 46th St. in Indianapolis. Tickets are $19. For more information, call 9402787 or visit www.schrottcenter.org. Valentine’s dinner - Treat your special Valentine to an ultimate romantic dinner from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. Feb. 14 at River Glen Country FISHERS Club, 12010 Clubhouse Drive. This exceptional evening includes a buffet dinner, open bar, prizes, music and a silent auction. The cost is $75 per couple; proceeds go to the Special Olympics of Hamilton County. For more information or to register, please go to www.specialolympicshamiltoncounty.org.
The Bahia Orchestra Project from Brazil has committed to playing Latin-American compositions in its repertoire. (submitted photo)
Brazil’s best orchestra to team with French pianist By Jay Harvey • editorial@youarecurrent.com As an example of what music can do for poor kids, Venezuela’s El Sistema has inspired many other musical education programs Music around the world with social purposes behind them. Its Simon Bolivar Youth Orchestra brought to prominence conductor Gustavo Dudamel, now music director of the Los Angeles Philharmonic. One of the fruits of El Sistema’s success is NEOJIBA/the Bahia Orchestra Project, which sits atop a similar pyramid of musical training in the Brazilian state of Bahia. Conducted by its founder, pianist Ricardo Castro, the 100-member youth orchestra, established in 2007, will be near the end of a two-and-half-week North American tour when it appears at the Palladium. The Bahia Orchestra Project is already known in Europe, having played concerts in Berlin, Lucerne and London (where its featured guest artist was superstar pianist Lang Lang). For its Carmel appearance, it will welcome another well regarded, if not quite as famous, pianist as soloist - Jean-Yves Thibaudet. He’s a native of France now living and performing in the U.S.
French pianist Jean-Yves Thibaudet will be the guest soloist during the collaborative performance at the Palladium.
Thibaudet will be featured in Maurice Ravel’s Piano Concerto in G major. That’s one of two piano showcases on the program. By special request of Center for the Performing Arts management, the Bahia ensemble will also play George Gershwin’s “Rhapsody in Blue,” with Castro as soloist. Center spokesman John Hughey said the request was made to highlight the location of the Feinstein Initiative and its Great American Songbook vocal competition at the Palladium,
and because Gershwin is considered among the greatest American songwriters. Other works on the Palladium program are Peter Tchaikovsky’s Romeo and Juliet FantasyOverture, two movements from Heitor VillaLobos’ “Bachianas Brasileira” No. 2 and Arturo Marquez’s “Danzon 2.” The latter two works — by Brazilian and Mexican composers, respectively — represent the Bahia Orchestra Project’s commitment to LatinAmerican repertoire. Bahia is a historically significant part of eastern Brazil, with geographical diversity crowned by a famous 685-mile coastline. It’s one of 26 Brazilian states and its largest city, Salvador, was established in 1599 and became the country’s historical capital. Two important cultural traditions of Brazil — the carnival and the samba — originated there. Bahia Orchestra Project • Brazilian youth orchestra, conducted by Ricardo Castro; with piano soloist Jean-Yves Thibaudet • 7:30 p.m. Feb. 13 • The Palladium in Carmel • Tickets start at $40. • For more information call 843-3800 or visit www.thecenterfortheperformingarts.org.
Date night - Romance is in the air at Nickel Plate Arts, 107 S. Eighth St., as it opens a very special Valentine’s Day NOBLESVILLE exhibit from 6 to 9 p.m. Feb. 14. The opening night reception for Love, Lust & Poetry Part Duex will include wine tasting, desserts, live music, poetry readings, caricatures of couples, Noblesville Past & Present exhibit in Stephenson (children’s art from local elementary schools) and more. Bring your sweetheart to this one-of-a-kind date-night experience! My Little Valentine - Celebrate Valentine’s Day this year with your little valentine from 1 to 2:30 p.m. Feb. 14 at the Westfield WESTFIELD Programming Facility, 330 E. Main St. Participants will make Valentine crafts, play themed games, and enjoy a Valentine dessert and story. A parent or guardian must attend and participate, for ages 3 to 5. Cost is $10. For more information, call Brittany Goger at 804-3183. Local Antique road show - From 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Feb. 16, Hidden Treasures zionsVILLE Antiques will hold its version of an “antique road show.” Antiques experts will tell show goers what their items are worth.
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February 11, 2014
NIGHT & DAY
Current in Fishers
www.currentinfishers.com
Beef & Boards Presents ‘Cats’ • Andrew Lloyd Webber’s musical phenomenon returns to Beef & Boards. The popular musical is enjoying its 25th anniversary this year. • 8 p.m. tonight; 1 and 8 p.m. Feb. 12; 8 p.m. Feb. 13, 14 & 15; and 1:30 & 7 p.m. Feb. 16 • 9301 Michigan Rd., Indianapolis • Tickets start at $38.50 • 872-9664 • www.beefandboards.com
Today
Wine, Cheese and Chocowednesday late Tasting at Vine & Table • Sample delicious high-quality treats that make perfect Valentine’s gifts. Fourteen red, white and sweet wines will be displayed in three different areas throughout the store. Peachtree Mountain truffles will be available so customers can choose their favorite wine-andchocolate combinations. • 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. • 313 E. Carmel Dr., Carmel • Free • 817-9473 • www.eatdrinkevolve.com
Winter Farmers’ Market in Carmel • Visit the Indiana Design Center to browse one of the state’s largest winter markets. Thirty vendors will offer meats, vegetables, baked goods, teas and more. • 200 S. Range Line Rd., Carmel • Free • For more information, call Ron Carter at 710-0162.
saturday
Conner Prairie at Dawn • Take advantage of this unique opportunity to witness the beautiful winter morning scenery at Conner Prairie. Photographers, artists, bird-watchers, walkers, etc. are welcome; must be 18 or over. • 7 to 10 a.m. today and the third Saturday of every month through April 19 • 13400 Allisonville Rd., Fishers • $10 for dawn event only, $15 for all-day pass and $9 for members • 776-6006 • www.connerprairie.org
Stone Soup Suppers • Nickel Plate Arts presents an evening of “artful conversation” as it offers a dinner of soup, salads, sides and dessert complete with an interesting topic and guest speakers. Tonight’s topic is Noblesville’s musical heritage. Check the Website for schedule information and to make reservations. • 7 to 9 p.m. tonight and every Thursday through March 27 • 107 S. 8th St., Noblesville • $50 • 452-3690 • www.nickelplatearts.org
thursday
Booth Tarkington Civic Theatre Presents ‘Steel Magnolias’ • Laugh and cry with the six ladies and friends from the deep South who stick together through life’s ups and downs. • 7 p.m. tonight, Feb. 14 and Feb. 15; 2 p.m. Feb. 16 • The Tarkington at the Center for the Performing Arts, 3 Center Green, Carmel • Tickets start at $31.50. • 843-3800 • www. thecenterfortheperformingarts.org Valentine’s Day Dinner at the Loft • Enjoy a three-course Valentine dinner complete with wine pairings at the Loft. Three seatings will be available: 5, 6:30 & 8 p.m. Harpist Jan Aldridge Clark will be present on both Friday and Saturday nights. • 5, 6:30 and 8 p.m. • 9101 Moore Rd., Zionsville • $49/person, $64/ person with optional wine pairings • Call 733-1700 for reservations. • www.tpforganics.com
friday
FAMILY FUN AT THE CENTER... FAMILY SHOWS DELIVERED BY THE INDIANAPOLIS STAR
BLUE! THE MEDITERRANEAN SEA TEATRO DI PIAZZA D’OCCASIONE
FEBRUARY 28 – MARCH 2 | THE STUDIO THEATER FAMILY SHOWS DELIVERED BY THE INDIANAPOLIS STAR
FROGZ - IMAGO THEATRE
FRIDAY, MAR. 7 AT 7 PM & SATURDAY, MAR. 8 AT 3 PM & 7 PM THE TARKINGTON COCA-COLA WORLD STAGE SERIES
TAO: PHOENIX RISING
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19 AT 7:30 PM | THE PALLADIUM FAMILY 4-PACKS AVAILABLE!
FAMILY SHOWS DELIVERED BY THE INDIANAPOLIS STAR
CASHORE MARIONETTES
SATURDAY, MAR. 22 AT 7 PM & SUNDAY, MAR. 23 AT 3 PM THE TARKINGTON Visit our Great American Songbook Gallery, Basile Café and Basile Gift Shop. More events on our website.
TICKETS ON SALE NOW! TheCenterPresents.org or call 317.843.3800
The Belfry Theatre Presents ‘Bell, Book And Candle’ • In a nod to Valentine’s Day, this romantic show centers on a witch who unexpectedly falls in love with her neighbor when she casts a spell on him. Will he still love her if she cancels the spell? • 8 p.m. tonight and Feb. 15; 2 p.m. Feb. 16 • Adults $15; ages 12 and under $12 • 10690 Greenfield Ave., Noblesville • Call 773-1085 for reservations. • www. thebelfrytheatre.com Date Night at Nickel Plate Arts • Live cello music and a romantic atmosphere await at Nickel Plate Arts. Ticket price includes two drinks plus one dessert to share and three art activities: couple caricatures, poetry on demand and handmade Valentine cards. • 6 to 9 p.m. tonight • 107 S. 8th St., Noblesville • Tickets $25 • 452-3690 • www.nickelplatearts.org Live Music and Cupcake Plate at Hopwood Cellars in Zionsville • Celebrate Valentine’s Day at Hopwood Cellars with their Cupcake and Chocolate Plate, plus enjoy award-winning wines that are made from Midwestern grapes. Stay to listen to live acoustic and vocals from John England. • 7 to 9 p.m. tonight • 12 E. Cedar St., Zionsville • $17.95 for cupcake and chocolate plate plus two glasses of wine • 873-4099 • www.hopwoodcellars.com
Actors Theatre of Indiana Presents ‘Forever Plaid’ at the Studio Theater • This delightfully funny show features four singers from the 1950s who receive the chance to posthumously perform harmony-rich hits from the ‘50s. • The Center for the Performing Arts, 1 Center Green, Carmel • Adult Tickets $40; call for senior and student discounts • 843-3800 • www.www.actorstheatreofindiana.org/ Carmel Community Players Present ‘Valentine’s Cabaret’ • This musical salute to love features local musicians performing songs of romance and relationships. • tonight Feb. 1614299 Clay Terrace Blvd., Suite 140, Carmel • Tickets $10 • 815-9387 • www. carmelplayers.org Hearthside Suppers at Conner Prairie • Learn how 19th-century dinners were prepared by participating in Conner Prairie’s Hearthside Suppers. Guests will prepare, serve and eat an authentic 19th-century meal inside the historic William Conner House. Party games and storytelling follow dinner; this program is recommended for ages 10 and up. Reservations are required. • 6 to 9 p.m. tonight and every Thursday through Sunday in February • 13400 Allisonville Rd., Fishers • $60 per person; $55 for members • 776-6006 • www.connerprairie.org
sunday
The Center Presents Michael Feinstein’s ‘The Gershwins and Me’ at the Palladium • Enjoy an evening of entertainment and music while discovering the amazing story of the Gershwins. • 7 p.m. tonight • 1 Center Green, Carmel • Tickets start at $15. • Call 843-3800 for tickets. • www.thecenterfortheperformingarts.org President’s Day Musical Jam at Nickel Plate Arts • Visit the Logan Street Sanctuary for the chance to participate in a musical jam with local artists. • 1 to 5 p.m. today • 1274 Logan St., Noblesville • Free • 452-3690 • www.nickelplatearts.org
MOnday
February 11, 2014
NIGHT & DAY
Current in Fishers
www.currentinfishers.com
19
Three-ingredient recipes to make your sweetie smile By Sophie Pappas sophie@currentzionsville.com Take the stress out of Valentine’s Day, and mix up one of these simple, threeingredient recipes for your sweetheart. Oh-so-yummy Oreo truffles Ingredients: • 1 package of cream cheese • 1 bag of semi-sweet chocolate chips • 1 package of Oreo cookies Directions: 1. Crush Oreo cookies in a plastic Ziploc bag until they are the consistency of breadcrumbs. 2. Melt chocolate in a microwave-safe bowl until it is completely melted. 3. In a mixer, mix the cream cheese and Oreo crumbs together. Roll into oneinch balls. 4. Roll the Oreo balls in the melted chocolate. Lay on wax paper to dry.
Smooth as butter peanut butter cookies Ingredients: • 1 cup of peanut butter • 1 cup of sugar • 1 large egg Directions: 1. Mix the sugar and egg together until smooth. 2. Add the peanut butter to the mix. 3. Drop teaspoon-size balls of dough onto a cookie sheet. Bake for 10 minutes at 350 degrees.
Simple dip strawberries Ingredients: • 1 package of dark chocolate coating1 bar of milk chocolate • 24 strawberries, preferably with stems Directions: 1. Melt chocolate coating and milk chocolate in the microwave for 30-second intervals until fully melted. Stir between those intervals. 2. Holding the berries by the stem end, dip them into the melted chocolate, swirling to make sure all sides are coated. Lift them out of the chocolate and let drip a second or two. 3. Place berries on wax paper to dry. Then serve and enjoy!
• Rifle & handgun indoor range • Memberships Available • State of the Art ventilation and containment systems • Classes for beginning, women & advanced shooters • Expert firearms & accessories shop • Convenient Location From IN-32, N on Dartown Rd., E on Enterprise Dr. to:
17777 Commerce Dr., Westfield, IN 317-399-7918 timsshootingacademy.com
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February 11, 2014
NIGHT & DAY
Current in Fishers
www.currentinfishers.com
Moon Dog Tavern – 4825 E. 96th St., Indianapolis – www. moondogtavern.com Feb. 14 – Sonja Feb. 15 – My Yellow Rickshaw Feb. 16 – Can You Rock? Vogue Nightclub – 6259 N. College Ave., Indianapolis – www.thevogue.com Feb. 13 – Yonder Mountain String Band Feb. 14 – Sixteen Candles Feb. 16 – Mayer Hawthorne with Quadron 8 Seconds Saloon – 111 N. Lynhurst Dr., Indianapolis – www.8secondssaloon.com Feb. 15 – Bigg Country Hopwood Cellars Winery – 12 E. Cedar St., Zionsville – www.hopwoodcellars.com Feb. 14 – John England
lIvE MUSIC
Feb. 15 – Myra & Jon Old National Centre – 502 N. New Jersey St., Indianapolis – www.ticketmaster.com Feb. 13 – Infected Mushroom with Butch Clancy Feb. 14 – Avant with Chante Moore Feb. 15 – Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr. with Chad Valley (Deluxe at the Amber Room) Feb. 15 – Trey Anastasio Band (Egyptian Room) Bankers Life Fieldhouse – 125 S. Pennsylvania St., Indianapolis – www.bankerslifefieldhouse.com Feb. 15 – Brantley Gilbert with Florida Georgia Line, Thomas Rhett and Aaa Insurance Monumental Music Jam Do317 Lounge – 1043 Virginia Ave., Indianapolis – www.do317lounge.com Feb. 11 – The Defibulators with O’ Sister, Brother Feb. 14 – Dinner and a Suit with Weeknight Feb. 15 – The Rents with The Deadbeat Sailors *Performers are scheduled, but may change.
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PRESENTS
Romantic night remembers Gershwin By Karen Kennedy • karenk@youarecurrent.com This time of year, we all struggle to come up with a mushy and endearing sentiment to add to the Valentine’s prose on the card Music Hallmark has already written for us. Often, we end up adding something devastatingly clever, like, “Love, me.” Don’t you wish you could come up with something like this? I’ve got a crush on you, sweetie pie All the day and nighttime, hear me sigh … The world will pardon my mush ‘Cause I have got a crush, my baby, on you. Nobody expresses love quite like George Gershwin and nothing could be more romantic than sitting and listening to a glorious evening of his music sung by the inimitable Michael Feinstein. Feinstein’s “Gershwins and Me” will be presented at the Palladium on Feb. 16. It will be an evening of songs and stories presented the way only Feinstein can. When he was 20, Feinstein was hired by George Gershwin’s brother, Ira, as an archivist. He wrote a book about those years entitled, “The Gershwins and Me; a Personal History in Twelve Songs.” Feinstein will sing songs from the Gershwin songbook interspersed with tales from the book. He also will share the stage with the winner of 2013’s Great American Songbook Competition, Julia Goodwin, who recently performed with him
Michael Feinstein will perform the works of George Gershwin on Feb. 16 at the Palladium with the help of Julie Goodwin, the winner of 2013’s Great American Songbook Competition. (Submitted photo)
at the legendary New York jazz club Birdland. “I have read Michael’s book and cannot wait to hear these stories in person,” said John Hughey, director of external relations for the Center for the Performing Arts. “It’s going to be a beautiful tribute to the Gershwins. We all adore Michael for his musical talents, but he’s an amazing writer and storyteller, too. No one other than Michael could share these stories. He lives and breathes American music and makes us proud of our history as he brings these songs to life.” Forget the chocolates. Take your Valentine to an evening he or she will remember forever. Feinstein’s “The Gershwins and Me” • 7 p.m. Feb. 16 • The Palladium in Carmel • Tickets start at $15. • For more information call 843-3800 or visit www.thecenterfortheperformingarts.org.
Evening with the Ambassadors Featuring the songs....Catch a Falling Star • Heart and Soul • Chain Gang….and many more! Written and Originally Directed and Choreographed by Stuart Ross Musical Arrangements by James Raitt • Directed and Choreographed by Don Farrell
FINAL WEEK!
JANUARY 31 - FEBRUARY 16 www.actorstheatreofindiana.org or call 317.843.3800 Forever Plaid is presented through special arrangement with Music Theatre International (MTI). All authorized performance materials are also supplied by MTI. www.mtishows.com
Preview the Carmel High School Ambassadors upcoming performances for Disneyland Paris & London. March 14th & 15th | 7pm Carmel High School Auditorium Your attendance directly supports this award winning show choir! February 3rd - 6th Patron Tickets online Regular ticket sales begin February 10th. www.totalgatesolutions.com. www.facebook.com/AmbassadorsCHS www.twitter/AmbassadorsCHS www.chsambassadorclub.org
February 11, 2014
NIGHT & DAY
AN OPTION
Michaelangelo’s Italian Bistro THE SCOOP: Michaelangelo’s is a delightful, small, family owned spot offering generous portions of classic Italian dishes, calzones, flatbreads and pizza. Dinners are accompanied by endless salad or soup and freshly baked bread. Try a popular “pasta combo” that has three different pastas on one plate. For dessert, try the “cake of the vine,” made with wine, brown sugar and cinnamon. Michaelangelo’s specializes in carryout for large groups with a handy pickup window, and kids eat free on Wednesdays. TYPE OF FOOD: Italian AVERAGE PRICE: $8 for lunch, $14 for dinner FOOD RECOMMENDATION: Lasagna (vegetable, chicken or traditional meat) DRINK RECOMMENDATION: A glass of Grayson cabernet RESERVATIONS: Yes HOURS: Lunch and dinner, seven days a week PHONE: 773-6066 ADDRESS: 550 Westfield Rd., Noblesville WEBSITE: www.michaelangelosbistro.com Follow Karen Kennedy on Twitter: @karenkcurrent
Current in Fishers
www.currentinfishers.com
W HE RE I DINE Zack Darring, owner/operator, Zacky’s Where do you like to dine? Donatello’s Italian Restaurant What do you like to eat there? I really like their pizza. What do you like about Donatello’s? I love the atmosphere and the people. Its family owned and operated. Donatello’s Italian Restaurant is at 9 W. Main St., Carmel. They can be contacted at 564-4790 or www.donatellositalian.com.
B EHIND BARS Elderberry Martini
Bartender: Neil Ketcham at Houlihan’s, 14065 Town Center Blvd., Noblesville Ingredients/directions: Combine ¾ oz. Elderflower Liquor, 1 ¼ oz. strawberry rum, and a splash of lemonade. Shake all ingredients in iced shaker and pour into martini glass. Pour ½ oz. Ruffino Prosecco sparkling wine into glass on top of the rest of the ingredients, and top with 2/3 oz. Monin strawberry syrup; the syrup will sink to the bottom. Garnish with slices of strawberries in the drink.
COMING SOON TO THE CENTER... THIS THURSDAY! PRINTING PARTNERS CLASSICAL SERIES
BAHIA ORCHESTRA PROJECT WITH RICARDO CASTRO, CONDUCTOR & JEAN-YVES THIBAUDET, PIANO THURSDAY, FEB. 13 AT 7:30 PM | THE PALLADIUM
THIS SUNDAY! THE STRATFORD SONGBOOK SERIES
MICHAEL FEINSTEIN’S “THE GERSHWINS & ME” SUNDAY, FEB. 16 AT 7 PM | THE PALLADIUM PRINTING PARTNERS CLASSICAL SERIES
HAIFA SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA OF ISRAEL
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 19 AT 7:30 PM | THE PALLADIUM CNO FINANCIAL GROUP COUNTRY SERIES
LEE GREENWOOD
FRIDAY, FEB. 21 AT 8 PM | THE PALLADIUM FAMILY SHOWS DELIVERED BY THE INDIANAPOLIS STAR
FRANK FERRANTE IN AN EVENING WITH GROUCHO
FRI. FEB. 21 AT 7 PM & SAT., FEB. 22 AT 3 PM & 7 PM | THE STUDIO THEATER DREWRY SIMMONS VORNEHM POP & ROCK SHOWS
THE TEMPTATIONS & THE FOUR TOPS
THURSDAY, FEB. 27 AT 7:30 PM | THE PALLADIUM COCA-COLA WORLD STAGE SERIES
PADDY MOLONEY, THE CHIEFTAINS & SPECIAL GUESTS
THURSDAY, MARCH 6 AT 7:30 PM | THE PALLADIUM FAMILY SHOWS DELIVERED BY THE INDIANAPOLIS STAR
FROGZ - IMAGO THEATRE
FRI., MAR. 7 AT 7 PM & SAT., MAR. 8 AT 3 PM & 7 PM | THE TARKINGTON TAFT LAW JAZZ & BLUES SERIES
THE PAT METHENY UNITY GROUP
FRIDAY, MARCH 14 AT 8 PM | THE PALLADIUM THE BUCK GROUP AT MERRILL LYNCH DANCE SERIES
KORESH DANCE COMPANY
FRIDAY, MAR. 14 & SATURDAY, MAR. 15 AT 8 PM | THE TARKINGTON THE STRATFORD SONGBOOK SERIES
LINDA EDER
SATURDAY, MARCH 15 AT 8 PM | THE PALLADIUM COCA-COLA WORLD STAGE SERIES
TAO: PHOENIX RISING
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19 AT 7:30 PM | THE PALLADIUM
TRISHA YEARWOOD
THURSDAY, APRIL 3 AT 7:30 PM | THE PALLADIUM
Visit our Great American Songbook Gallery, Basile Café and Basile Gift Shop. More events on our website.
TICKETS ON SALE NOW! TheCenterPresents.org or call 317.843.3800
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February 11, 2014
HEALTH
Current in Fishers
www.currentinfishers.com
Tips to increase your metabolism
for 6 1.9% 0 mo nths
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Commentary by Karen Adkins
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2013 Ford Explorer Sport $39,942 CPO, Black on Black, Leather, Navigation, & 20” Wheels!
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ONE OR MORE OF THESE CARS MAY BE SOLD BY THIS DATE.
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Whether people are trying to lose weight or want to prevent weight gain, metabolism is usually part of the discusnutrition sion. The speed at which the body burns calories – called “metabolic rate” – is different for everyone and is based on a variety of factors, including age, gender and genetics. Patients often ask what they can do to boost their metabolic rate. Here are a few suggestions: Build muscle and stay active – The more muscle you have, the higher your metabolic rate – even at rest. In fact, every pound of muscle burns six calories each day, while fat burns just two. Exercise, especially high-intensity aerobic exercise, can increase metabolism in the hours following a workout. Eat more often – Having small meals or snacks every three to four hours keeps your metabolism up and running. Drink water – Your body needs water to use calories, so even mild dehydration can slow metabolism. Drinking a glass of water or an unsweetened beverage before meals helps. Increase protein – It takes more calories to digest protein than to digest fat or carbohy-
St. Louis de Montfort Catholic School
Junior Kindergarten & Kindergarten
OPEN HOUSE
For 3, 4 & 5 year olds Thursday, February 20th 8a.m. - 11a.m. 11421 Hague Road, Fishers, IN
Register for 2014-2015 school year. Personal tours will be given to you and your children. For more information: Contact Jennifer Podlogar 317.842.1125 or jpodlogar@sldmfishers.org www.sldmcatholicschool.org www.sldmfishers.org
10650 N. Michigan Rd., Zionsville, IN 46077 (888) 478-1917 Member Central Indiana
LICENSED BONDED INSURED
BEFORE
drates. Although eating a balanced diet is important, choosing more servings of healthy proteins, such as turkey, fish, eggs, beans, nuts, white chicken meat, lean beef and tofu, can increase metabolism. Choose green tea – The combined benefits of caffeine and catechins in green or oolong tea can boost metabolism for a couple of hours and may help your body burn more calories during moderate exercise. Add some spice – Believe it or not, spicy foods have benefits when it comes to increasing metabolism. Although their effect is temporary, if you eat spicy foods often, the benefit could add up. Consider adding chopped red or green peppers or red pepper flakes to foods. Diet sensibly – Very low-calorie diets can stall metabolism. You may lose weight, but much of this is likely muscle, which will slow your metabolism in the long run. Plus, very low-calorie diets often mean you aren’t getting the nutrition you need for optimal health. Talk to your doctor about a diet plan that’s right for you. Karen Adkins, MD, specializes in internal medicine and family medicine. She is a guest columnist located at IU Health Physicians Primary Care North, 11725 N. Illinois St., Ste. 595, in Carmel. Reach her by calling the office at 688.5522.
“Posting our job opening in Current was a tremendous success. Within hours of the issue being distributed, we had numerous inquiries from very qualified individuals. We signed up to have our ad run for two weeks, but was able to settle for one since we found the perfect person to fill our position so quickly. You can't beat Current when trying to reach out to the local public, and we will definitely use its services again." -Brian Carriger sales support manager Dimensions Furniture, Carmel
info@youarecurrent.com
317.489.4444
AFTER
See us on Angie’s List & BBB
848-7634 • www.centennialremodelers.com
February 11, 2014
DOUGH
Current in Fishers
www.currentinfishers.com
Ignore big data Commentary by CJ McClanahan
© 2014 All Rights Reserved Certa ProPainters, Ltd. Each CertaPro Painters business is independently owned and operated.
Have you heard the term “big data”? If you haven’t, there’s no doubt you’ve unwittingly move the needle been a part of it. Do you remember the time you Googled the term “hair replacement for men,” and now you see advertisements for Propecia on a banner ad on every new Website you visit? That’s big data. Companies learn as much as they can about you, then jam all of that information into a giant algorithm, which helps them determine what they think is the best way to influence your buying decisions in the future. You might not like it, but big data is here, and there’s no reversing the trend. As an entrepreneur, you should ask the question, “How should I take advantage of all this information?” You don’t. Unless you have a team of Harvard MBA’s, I recommend that you ignore big data. That’s right; resist the urge to jump onto the bandwagon. Here’s why. You’re already drowning in a bunch of information you ignore daily. Adding streams of new data will only make you
more frustrated. Instead, you need to review the smallest amount of data possible to make good business decisions. This will not be easy because every other day you’ll identify something new (e.g., Facebook “likes”) that you think is important. Trust me, it isn’t. Virtually every small business can boil its business down to three to five key performance indicators that really drive bottom line improvement. For example, if you own a small accounting firm, your growth is based on referrals and upselling current clients. A construction company should pay extremely close attention to individual project profitability. You just need to figure out what moves the needle in your business. Here’s my advice: brainstorm every single KPI you can imagine, and then pare this list down to no more than five. As with most things in life, the solution is simple. You just need to execute. CJ McClanahan is the founder and president of reachmore, a leadership training and consulting firm, and also the author of “Thrive.” To contact CJ, or to find out more about reachmore, go to www.goreachmore.com.
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DISPATCHES Bye-bye tax breaks - Two proposals in President Barack Obama’s 2015 budget could curb retirement tax breaks for the rich. The first would limit savers’ combined balance across tax-preferred accounts. Last year, the president introduced the idea of prohibiting contributions to tax-advantaged retirement accounts like IRAs, 401(k)s and pensions when a person’s combined balance exceeds a certain level. Last year, for instance, the limit would have been $3.4 million for someone who was 62, but just $1 million for someone who was 40, according to a Tax Policy Center report. Secondly, there’s a proposal to cap the value of deductions for retirement savings contributions. Every year he’s been in office, Obama has proposed limiting the tax benefit of itemized deductions, as well certain tax exclusions, to 28 percent of the amount claimed. The Tax Policy Center estimates the proposal would affect mostly individuals who make more than $200,000 and married couples above $250,000. SOURCE: CNN Money SCAN TO DOWNLOAD OR REDEEM COUPON
Young Americans scarred by financial crisis - Last month, UBS Wealth Management Americas released its quarterly Investor Watch report, which labeled millennials (which it defines as people ages 21 to 36) as the most fiscally conservative generation since the Great Depression. The majority of millennials surveyed said that the best advice they ever got was to save money, a switch from every other generation that cherished investment advice above all other financial tips. As a result, millennials aren’t buying into the purported merits of long-term investment and market chasing. Only 12 percent would invest some unexpected extra income in the market, and only 28 percent see long-term investment as key to success. As of last year, nearly 300,000 U.S. workers with college degrees were earning minimum wage. And the Center for College Affordability and Productivity reported that nearly half of the college graduates from the class of 2010 are working in jobs that don’t require a bachelor’s degree. A full 38 percent have taken gigs that don’t even require a high school education. SOURCE: MSN Money
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February 11, 2014
LIFESTYLE
Current in Fishers
www.currentinfishers.com
Same beans...
MORE JARS.
The industry experts at Somerset CPAs and have discovered that not all beans are taxed the same. Contact a tax professional at Somerset CPAs, or visit us online at www.SomersetCPAs.com to learn more.
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Stable at Meknes, Morocco (Photo by Don Knebel)
AGRICULTURE - CONSTRUCTION - DEALERSHIPS - DENTAL
A Moroccan Versailles Commentary by Don Knebel
HEALTH CARE - MANUFACTURING - RETAIL - REAL ESTATE
3925 River Crossing Parkway, 3rd Floor | Indianapolis, IN 46240 | 317.472.2200 | info@somersetcpas.com
Meknes is one of Morocco’s former royal cities, along with the better known Fes, Marrakech and Rabat. Meknes is famous for buildTravel ings erected by a 17th-century ruler who fancied himself the equal of French King Louis XIV and holds a world record for virility. Moulay Ismail ibn Sharif, claiming to be a descendant of Muhammad, became the Sultan of Morocco in 1672. Ismail moved his capital from Fes to Meknes and set about erecting palaces and other buildings to match his image of Versailles. He reportedly used 25,000 slaves in his projects, many of them Europeans captured by Barbary pirates operating from Moroccan ports. Some of the building materials may have been plundered from Volubilis, a nearby city with buildings dating to Roman times. Ismail’s famous stable housed 12,000 horses under a single roof supported by stone arches. Three long corridors intersected at the entrance, allowing one attendant to monitor all the horses simultaneously. An enormous granary adjoining the stable stored grain at controlled temperatures to enable both the horses and the residents to survive a long siege. A wheel inside the granary pulled water from an underground
stream. When construction at Meknes was complete, 15 miles of walls surrounded the city. Ismail, who led huge armies of soldiers from sub-Saharan Africa against his rivals, reportedly placed 10,000 skulls atop the walls to warn prospective attackers. Ismail maintained good diplomatic relations with Louis XIV, but was rebuffed in his efforts to marry the French king’s daughter. Not to worry; Ismail had enough wives and concubines to sire at least 867 children. Because of his military successes and his buildings at Meknes, Moulay Ismail is considered one of Morocco’s greatest rulers despite (or perhaps because of) his reputation for ruthlessness. A 1755 earthquake destroyed many of the buildings in Meknes, and Ismail’s successors moved the Moroccan capital to Marrakech. The stable and granary have been partially restored and they, along with Ismail’s mausoleum, are open to visitors. Ismail’s record for fathering the most children of any man in history remains untouched. Don Knebel is a local resident who works for Barnes & Thornburg LLP. For the full column visit currentzionsville.com. You may contact him at news@currentzionsville.com
Girl Scouts of Central Indiana presents the
Hamilton County Leadership Luncheon March 11 The Mansion at Oak Hill • 5801 E 116th St, Carmel Doors open at 11:30 a.m. • Program begins at noon
Keynote speaker: Dr. Dottie King
16th president of Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College Donations will be used to help build Girl Scouts of Central Indiana’s Leadership and Learning Center. To host a table of ten or reserve an individual seat, contact: Connie Saywell | cwsaywell@hotmail.com • Becky Swift | beckyswift@outlook.com
855.GSCIN.4U • girlscoutsindiana.org
February 11, 2014
LIFESTYLE
Current in Fishers
www.currentinfishers.com
25
In defense of ‘alright’ Commentary by Jordan Fischer In a previous column, I wrote about how “alright” isn’t “all right.” Today, I thought we could visit some counterargugrammar guy ments. This is going to be fun. First, we’ll look at the history of “alright.” Our friend Merriam-Webster says it’s been around for a while. Dating its first known use to 1887, Webster says, “The one-word spelling alright appeared some 75 years after all right itself had reappeared from a 400-year-long absence. Since the early 20th century some critics have insisted alright is wrong, but it has its defenders and its users.” Webster goes on to say that despite its detractors, “alright” is frequently used in journalistic and fictional writing. (Note here: AP style says never to use “alright.”) How about the Oxford English Dictionary? You might be surprised to find the esteemed publication is even more lenient toward “alright.” The dictionary notes, “Similar ‘merged’ words such as altogether and already have been accepted in Standard English for a very long time, so there is no logical reason to object to the one-word form alright.” That’s an interesting argument – though one might counter it by pointing out that “all ready”
and “already” have two distinct meanings. Can the same be said for “all right” and “alright?” “All ready” means exactly what you would expect: wholly equipped or prepared. “Already,” on the other hand, is an adverb which signifies an action occurred “by or before a stated or implied time.” Now, do “all right” and “alright” have distinct meanings? Based upon examples I’ve found, and my own sense of how I would use it colloquially, I would have to say no. “All right” seems to be used in a literal sense – everything is completely fine – and “alright” seems to have developed as the more figurative form – everything is OK, but not great. I’ll finish today by saying I’m partial to “alright” when used colloquially. I think American speakers intuitively understand the difference between something being “all right” and being just “alright.” That being said, I’m not sure “alright” passes muster to be used in formal writing … which is too bad, because it’s really an all right word.
CURRENT KIDS DAY AT THE PALLADIUM CELEBRATING THE PERFORMING ARTS
SATURDAY, MARCH 1 | 10 AM – 4 PM | PALLADIUM LOBBIES We invite families to discover music and theater together. Visit the venue and select from ticketed events.
TPO “BLUE”
10 AM, 2 PM AND 7 PM | STUDIO THEATER
Come play in our sea as dancers, performers and audience members mix and mingle as they embark on an adventurous trip to the Mediterranean! Family Shows delivered by the Indianapolis Star. DUKE ENERGY
PEANUT BUTTER & JAM CONCERT
10:30 AM | ROBERT ADAM ROOM, PALLADIUM
Ennis Clare, a high-energy traditional Irish band, features Irish fiddle, guitar, banjo, and exultant accordion. BOOTH TARKINGTON CIVIC THEATER PRESENTS
“CAT IN THE HAT”
10 AM, 2 PM, 5 PM | TARKINGTON
This Dr. Seuss classical leaps onto the stage. The 5pm performance is designated a “Sensory Friendly Performance” for an audience of families and friends of children or adults with sensory issues. Visit CivicTheatre.org for additional information about their Disability Awareness Day also scheduled on March 1st.
FREE JAPANESE DRUMMING DEMONSTRATIONS Jordan Fischer is a contributing columnist for Current Publishing. To ask Jordan a grammar question, write him at rjfische@gmail.com.
“All right” seems to be used in a literal sense – everything is completely fine – and “alright” seems to have developed as the more figurative form – everything is OK, but not great.
Please join Janus Developmental Services, Inc. for the
2014 Create, Connect and Commit Fundraising Breakfast! To be held at The Fountains in Carmel | March 14th, 2014
HONORARY CO-CHAIRS:
Mayor John Ditslear from the City of Noblesville Commissioner Steven C. Dillinger - Hamilton County Mayor Jim Brainard from the City of Carmel Mayor Andy Cook from the City of Westfield John Weingardt - President of the Fishers Town Council Pete Peterson – Vice President of the Fishers Town Council Scott Fadness – Fishers Town Manager Janus provides individuals with disabilities the opportunity to participate and contribute within the community.
1 PM | ROBERT ADAM ROOM, PALLADIUM
Enjoy this preview of TAO: Phoenix Rising coming on March 19. VISIT OUR BASILE CAFÉ. MORE EVENTS ON OUR WEBSITE.
TICKETS ON SALE NOW!
TheCenterPresents.org or call 317.843.3800
Special th anks to th ese top 12 Un ited Way company contributo rs who keep Hamilton County th riving.
To reserve your place at the breakfast, please contact Joanne McDonough at 317-773-8781, ext. 112 or jmcdonough@janus-inc.org
1. CNO Financial Group, Inc.
6. Stanley Security Solutions, Inc.
2. Sallie Mae, Inc.
7. Allegion
3. Duke Realty
8. Delta Faucet
4. Walker
9. KAR Auction Services
5. USA Funds
10. Katz, Sapper & Miller, LLP
11. GEICO 12. Marsh Supermarkets
uwci.org/hamilton
26
February 11, 2014
Current in Fishers
www.currentinfishers.com
S a l o n
01
The One Salon For Men and Women
®
HAIR • SKIN • NAILS • MASSAGE • SUNLESS TANNING • BLOWOUT • BOUTIQUE
START THE NEW YEAR OFF RIGHT WITH 20% OFF ANY WELLNESS SERVICE OR YOGA PACKAGE NOW THROUGH FEB. 28, 2014. CALL 317.580.0101 TO LEARN MORE ABOUT OUR WELLNESS & YOGA OFFERINGS. TOP 5 BENEFITS OF YOGA Over the last few years, yoga has taken over pop culture. Everyone is doing yoga, talking about doing yoga, or fully implementing yoga in their daily lives. We have included yoga as part of our services in conjunction with the series of nutrition and wellness menu items. Here are our top five reasons why we believe yoga is good for everyone’s everyday life: 1. Yoga is for everyone – It’s meant to relax, rejuvenate, recharge, release, and refresh your inner connection to your body and mind. Allow yourself to appreciate the time you are giving to yourself and relax. It doesn’t happen as often as we need it. 2. Yoga teaches you to understand your body – The practice of yoga serves as a link to the acceptance of our body. One can learn physical, mental and emotional strengths. Learn to accept your body for what it is and connect with your needs. Let your body tell you what it needs to be worked on instead of the other way around. 3. Yoga serves as a great way to recover after workouts – Your body needs to release toxins after every workout and drinking a lot of water isn’t always enough. Yoga gives the body the opportunity to stretch out while building core strengths. Every stretch releases toxins which allows for more recovery time and less soreness the following days. 4. Yoga incorporates meditation – Giving yourself time to meditate, or just spend some peaceful moments in thought, helps with finding ways to love your present. We all live busy lives, which can translate into worrying about the things we don’t get done. Meditation or reflection lets you refocus and rejuvenate yourself while releasing the stress. 5. Yoga is for you – You get out what you want to get out of yoga. It serves as your time for YOU. Our Yoga sessions are Wednesdays at 7:30am and 6pm, call us at 317-580-0101 for more information.
CHERRY ALMOND ENERGY BITES Looking for a delicious way to fuel your workout? Our Registered Dietician and Nutrition specialist, Kaitlyn, shares the recipe for one of her favorite treats for pre or post workout: 1/2 c. peanut or other nut butter 1/2 c. dried fruit – I used cherries 2 T. honey (use maple syrup to make it vegan) ½ c. oatmeal 1 c. slivered almonds 1 tsp. vanilla 1. Combine all ingredients in a food processor and pulse until well mixed and moistened. 2. Form into 16 or so balls and refrigerate until you are ready to eat them! For more recipes and information about the Wellness services offered by Kaitlyn at Salon 01, call 317-580-0101 to schedule an appointment. A GUIDE TO THE PERFECT LASHES Choose the right shade - The best way to get great lashes is to start with the right shade of mascara. Black can work on anyone, but for fair-skinned individuals, and those with red hair, try a brown-black for a softer look. Add Heat - Blast your eyelash curler with your hair dryer before very carefully curling the lashes. Squeeze the eyelash curler for a couple seconds once in the middle of the lashes, and once near the tips. Enhance - For a more dramatic look, apply single, false lashes that come in tiny clumps. Using tweezers, dip the lashes in lash glue and place at the outer corner of your eyelid. Add Volume - A translucent powder at the ends of lashes gives mascara volume and stay-power. Using an eye shadow brush, sweep powder on the ends and tops of your lashes prior to applying your mascara. Apply - Start with the wand at the root of your lashes and wiggle the brush to your ends. Apply multiple coats for a bolder look, being careful not to let it dry between applications, in order to avoid clumping.
200 CITY CENTER DRIVE, CARMEL 3 1 7 . 5 8 0 . 0 1 0 1 • W W W. S A L O N 0 1 . C O M
FOR MORE TIPS & TRICKS, CHECK OUT OUR BLOG
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February 11, 2014
INSIDE & OUT
Current in Fishers
www.currentinfishers.com
New kitchen and bathroom trends Commentary by David Decker 2014 has barely begun and already we’ve started to map out the newest trends for your kitchen and bathrooms. Take a look at indoors the following creative ideas that designers have come up with to make 2014 an exciting and innovative year. Kitchen • Floating shelves: Instead of storing their dishes away in cupboards and cabinetry, more homeowners are choosing to display them as part of the kitchen aesthetic. One way to do that is by using floating shelves, which are designed to be installed on a wall without showing any hardware or stabilizing brackets. • Black countertops: The sleek look of black granite or quartz countertops has wowed homeowners. Many are choosing to pair it with white or light-colored countertops, but the beauty of black is that it can complement virtually any design. • Brass, black and gold metals: In everything from faucets to cabinet fixtures, brass, black and brushed gold have become trendier than traditional silver. Bathroom • Standalone tubs: Because they take up less space than a traditional tiled-in-tub, many homeowners are choosing to install a freestanding tub. This also frees up space
Join us for worship this Sunday to receive God’s love in Christ From Divine Savior Lutheran Church Offering forgiveness, life, and salvation from God through his Word and Sacraments since 1969.
to create a luxurious modern shower. Speaking of which … • Luxury showers: When it comes to relaxing and unwinding after a tough day, showers are becoming more popular than bathtubs. Look for spacious showers that don’t include a traditional bench seat. For information on these trends and more, visit the Affordable Companies’ Website for news, updates and photos of cutting-edge designs. David Decker is president of the Affordable Companies, which include Affordable Kitchens and Bathrooms and now Affordable Custom Flooring. They are based in Carmel (575-9540, www.the-affordablecompanies.com). E-mail home improvement questions to david.decker@the-affordablecompanies.com.
Divine Service Sunday 10:30 a.m. 11351 Village Square Ln., Fishers, IN 46038 317.849.9692 | www.ds-indy.com
“Indy’s Oldest Heating & Cooling Co.” 131st Anniversary Sale
e Sav5 $4
1/2 price
Service call Must present at time of service. Cannot be combined with any other offer or discount W/ paid repair. Thiele 639-1111. Expires 3/11/14. M-F 8-4
131st Anniversary Sale e up
Sav
to
$
480
FREE
10 Year Warranty on the purchase of an air conditioner, heat pump or furnace
Must present at time of service. Cannot be combined with any other offer or discount. Mon-Fri 8am-5pm. Thiele 639-1111. Expires 3/11/14.
131st Anniversary Sale
131st Anniversary Sale
FREE
$59.95
2nd Opinion Will be honored upon presentation of Competitor Invoice at time of service. Cannot be combined with any other offer or discount. Mon-Fri 8am-5pm. Thiele 639-1111. Expires 3/11/14.
Furnace or Heat Pump Tune Up
Must present at time of service. Cannot be combined with any other offer or discount. Mon-Fri 8am-5pm. Thiele 639-1111. Expires 3/11/14.
No Hassle Financing Available! WAC Still Locally Owned & Operated
® 317-639-1111
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Relax. It’s Rheem.
callthiele.com
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February 11, 2014
LIFESTYLE
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Resources mine find 57. Coke competitor 61. Answer to riddle 64. Perform better than the Pacers 68. Rugs By Design calculation 69. Evens the score with the Millers 70. Liberates 71. Money drawer 72. Macy’s pantyhose color 73. Scratches on a gem at Shane Co. 74. Scream at a Fishers HS game 75. Surrealist Magritte Down 1. Bit of attire for a Yellow Rose Carriages ride, maybe 2. Private stash 3. Mr. T’s group 4. Lie atop (2 wds.) 5. Hamilton East Public Library book: “The Sun ___ Rises” 6. Learning by memorization 7. Like new dollar bills from PNC Bank 8. Noblesville police officers and firefighters, e.g. 9. Towel off a countertop 10. Porter Paints color shade 11. Woods of Britton address abbr. 12. Regret 13. Hoosier National Forest evergreen 21. Some IMPD forensic evidence 22. Teddy Bear Day Care snooze 25. Slave away
One of those days? Help is just around the corner. Computer Troubleshooters
iPad, iPhonire,s & iPod repa
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Across 1. Riverview Hospital surgical souvenir, often 5. St. Louis landmark 9. Eagle Creek Reservoir fishing spot 14. Detest 15. Indiana State Museum handeddown history 16. Downtown college, initially 17. U. of Evansville athletes 18. Sullivan’s kitchen directive 19. Butler grad and Indy bodybuilder Lupus who starred in TV’s “Mission: Impossible” 20. Start of a Valentine’s Day riddle (3 wds.) 23. MCL iced tea garnish 24. Zionsville Farmers Market veggie 25. “Gone With the Wind” plantation 29. Back of the neck 32. Frightened 34. Carmel-by-the-___ 37. Ate a Bub’s burger 39. Did King Electric work 40. Part 2 of riddle (4 wds.) 45. White River romper 46. ___-tac-toe 47. Beatty of “Deliverance” 48. Stage a historical event at Conner Prairie 51. Mellencamp’s gal pal 54. Makes a mistake 55. Indiana Department of Natural
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317-867-0900 www.CTCarmel.com
316 S Range Line Rd, Downtown Carmel Hours 9-6 M-F and 10-3 Sat. Call anytime.
E I C S U H Y
D O I Z X I R S X
C R J G E K E L N A L
Q C A C B A T U A L X L E
N A R C N L T N M W E E S F N
E A R N Y S A A H O E A J R W U S
R X R I A R B U C S N M Y I H O A S R
A I P D O D U F W S A I I T C M E
ATH ATR CAM CHIL DAVI DAY DREN DSON EUM GWO HAR ICKS JOE LEY NAM PIN RLD SMUS STP
T K E M T N A F S I T S O M T
A K E H H E R I E C O I T
1) Former New York Jets Quarterback (3)
Q M S X I Z F X K A U
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A L G E R I A M H
4 Hoosier Billionaires
__________________ __________________ __________________ __________________ 3 Indy Dry Cleaners
__________________ __________________ __________________ 2 Indiana Indian Tribes
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1 6-Letter Word Ending in "X"
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26. Ohio tire city 27. Christopher of “Superman” 28. Did sums at Pleasant View Elementary School 30. Butler fraternity letter 31. Indiana State Fair corn serving 33. Aaron’s: Rent To ___ 34. Make a three-pointer at Mackey Arena 35. Egg & I diner
Call on us at any time for services including: Hardware Troubleshooting Software Troubleshooting Internet/Email Setup and Assistance Networking Application Setup and Support Regular Computer Maintenance Website Design Virus Protection & Removal Internet Security Troubleshooting Remote Access & Diagnostics Service Plans Residential Service PC and Mac Service and Sales
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3) March Holiday (4) ___ ___
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4) Popular Indy Kids Attraction (4) ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___
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5) Motorcycle Brand (4) ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___
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Using the letters in HOLLIDAY (Park), create as many common words of 3+ letters as you can in 20 minutes. No proper nouns or build the words foreign words.
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2) Southside RV Dealer (4)
A Y B I L I S
6 OPEC Member Countries
5 Digital Camera Parts
Use all the letter segments below to fill in the answers to the clues. The number of segments you will use in each answer is shown in parentheses. The dashes indicate the number of letters in each answer. Each segment is used only once.
36. Modify a dress at Lucy’s Tailor 38. Pesticide banned in Indiana 41. Holcomb Observatory telescope part 42. PillowTalk lingerie purchase 43. Common Indiana National Guard address 44. Like an Indiana winter, maybe 49. Fair Oaks Farms female 50. Part of NATO
HOLLIDAY __________________ __________________ __________________ __________________ __________________ __________________ __________________ __________________ __________________ __________________ __________________
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35+: Word wizard 25-34 Brainiac 15-24: Not too shabby <15: Try again next week 52. Indianapolis Zoo beast Springs Elementary School 53. Less of a mess 63. Bloomington’s Assembly ___ 56. Like Crown Hill Cemetery at 64. Down, usually, on a light night switch 58. Havilah’s Boutique tag number 65. youarecurrent.com, for one 59. Back of a boat at Geist Challenge66. Lipton product Indiana Wordsmith 60. Indianapolis Monthly number 67. Morning moisture at Forest 61. Andrew Luck’s light throw Park 62. Show’s partner at Shamrock Answers on Page 35
29 MAID SERVICES THAT WOW! February 11, 2014
SPRINGTIME SPECIALS, START NOW! Check out my website: www.fbfitness.com
Current in Fishers
www.currentinfishers.com
Cindy Sams, FULL-BODY FITNESS (317)250-4848
$20 OFF NEW CUSTOMERS
CALL
OFFER GOOD UNTIL 3/31/14
Indy's #1 Weight Loss TODAY! Specialist It's time to do this. It's your time.
3C Plumbing Inc. Cy Clayton Cadwalader
- water heaters - sump pumps - garbage disposals - bath & kitchen faucets - water softeners -
REPAIRS.
REASONABLY PRICED. RESIDENTIAL PLUMBING
VISIT MYMAIDINDY.COM CALL 317.732.5071 TO BOOK NOW!
Get your card in front of 108,133 households! Call Dennis O’Malia @ 370-0749 for details
cy@3CPlumbing.com
HANDYMAN SERVICES CHIP TRAIN REMODELING KITCHENS • BATHROOMS • BASEMENTS
317.850.5114
16 years experience Free home inspection Guaranteed work/referrals Lic. # PC1Q701074
Remodeling Carmel and Zionsville since 1992 Licensed • Bonded • Insured Chip Train 317-258-2650 • chiptrain@msn.com
Servicing: Carmel, Fishers, Noblesville, Westfield and Zionsville.
Insured & bonded.
BANKRUPTCY
In most cases, you can protect your home & car! Get rid of most debts! FREE CONSULTATION Attorney F.A. Skimin | Indianapolis
317.454.8060 We are a Debt Relief Agency. We help people file for relief under the Bankruptcy Code.
“JEFF” OF ALL TRADES
• PLUMBING • ELECTRICAL • TILING, CARPENTRY & MORE! TURN YOUR ‘TO DO’ LIST INTO A ‘TO DONE’ LIST
HANDYMAN SERVICES, LLC.
$35 OFF
FREE ESTIMATES
317-797-8181
www.jeffofalltrades.net - Insured & Bonded
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 2/28/14.
WALLA INTERIOR PAINTING Family owned - Carmel/Westfield based 2010-2013 Angie’s List Service Award winner Fully insured - FREE ESTIMATES Discounts on high quality paints
• walls • ceilings • trim • drywall repair wallapainting.com 317.656.7045
$150 average per room 2 coats & patching on walls
Since 1993
Member Central Indiana
11650 Lantern Road, Ste.214, Fishers, IN 46038 | www.havel-law.com
Providing Personal Attention to your Personal Injury Claims
Steve McKee Associate Broker/Realtor
Linda Havel
Each office is independently owned and operated.
Learn to shoot a handgun! Beginner thru advanced pistol, CCW & instructor training courses. Firearm sales & transfers Yes, there’s a Gun Shop in Fishers! www.IndyGunSafety.com
13287 Britton Park Rd., Fishers, IN
848-7634
www.centennialremodelers.com
HAVEL LAW OFFICE, PC
Carmel City Center 732 S. Range Line Road Carmel, IN 46032 Cell 317.752.0228 Direct 317.819.4246 EFax 317.819.7450 smckee@century21ras.com www.century21ras.com
Armed with knowledge!
(317)846-5554
ROOFING • SIDING • WINDOWS LICENSED BONDED INSURED
Indy Gun Safety shepherdins.com
ROSE Insurance Specialist ROOFING Storm Damage
(317)345-3263
• Car, Truck and Motorcycle Accidents • Biking Accidents • Slip and Falls on Residential and Commercial Premises • Injuries from Explosions, Fires, Railing or Stair Collapse CALL 317-525-7754 OR 317-576-8620
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February 11, 2014
Current in Fishers
CHAUDION FULL TIME/FULL SERVICE AUCTIONS
TUXEDO RENTAL
www.currentinfishers.com
ESTATE-ANTIQUE AUCTIONEER SPECIALIST “SINCE 1964”
• PROM • WEDDING • BLACK TIE AFFAIR
$$ CASH BUYER $$ QUALITY BEDROOM FURNITURE & MORE CONSIGN TO AUCTION DAILY @ THE AUCTION EVENT X-CHANGE & MORE 22690 St. Rd. 19 – Cicero, IN 46034
Fast & Affordable Firearms Training
317.847.4071
www.chromaticsstudio.com 1233 W. Oak Street, Zionsville, IN 46077
www.indianajim.com•317-258-5545
Our Website @ www.cwchaudion.com Email us @ cwchaudion@eliteauction.com God Bless America • Veterans • Soldiers and their families
AUCTION PHONE (317) 409-6112
HERE FOR YOU AND YOUR FAMILY Protect Your Assets For Your Children and Grandchildren • Estate Planning & Reviews • Power of Attorney • Health Care • Wills Directives • Trusts • Living Wills • Pet Trusts
• Commercial/Residential • Gutter Cleaning • Fully Insured • Free Estimates
SAVE 25% OFF WINDOW CLEANING
Law Office of
(Offer expires 2-28-14)
(317) 645-8373 • www.TopShineWindowCleaning.com
Guitar Lessons
Wth recording artist Duke Tumatoe Learn from professional and have fun All levels - in Carmel duke@duketumatoe.com or 317-201-5856
INTERIOR PAINTING
Including dry wall repair and wallpaper removal 10 Years professional experience Call Keith Grimme (317) 410-6202 Free Estimates
FLAT SCREEN TV REPAIR
Flat screen TV’s (carried in) repaired. Most for $100 to $125 @ Brauchla TV, 1800 W 8th. Anderson IN. (twenty min east of Noblesville. NO MINIMUM CHARGE WITH THIS AD!. Offer expires Feb 11th 765-642-4976 In Business 65 yrs.
Happy Pets In-Home Pet Care
A less stressful and economical alternative to boarding with loving care for your pets in the comfort of your home. Experience in Exotics. Insured/Bonded Member of Pet Sitters Associates LLC happypetsitter@gmail.com Hamilton County only 317-645-6043 • References available
Pet & House Sitting Service Years Experience 149Years
317-802-6565 317-432-1627
“The Safe and Reliable Alternative to Boarding” Insured/Bonded Serving Carmel & Westfield www.pawpatrolindy.com
3501 Westfield Rd, Suite 101 • Westfield IN (317) 913-2828 info@hoppenrathlaw.com • www.hoppenrathlaw.com
Services
Services
Kingston’s BAND REHEARSAL SPACE
Book a session for your band! 3 hours/$50 1,000 SF studio, lounge with 60” plasma TV, full PA & backline provided, drums available 340 Ridgepoint Drive, Carmel rick@idealtalentinc.com 317-979-0137 Like us on Facebook! “Between the awesome physical facility, and the exceptional personal service, look no further than Kingston’s.” -Travis Jensen, An Innocent Band Woodsmen Tree Service William Wainscott 317-412-1306 *Fully Insured *Free Estimates *Tree Trimming *Tree Removal *Stump Grinding The Right Choice is as Clear as Black and White
Piano Lessons
(Cello and Trumpet too) Beginners – Advanced Contact Katy at cellogirlkaty@gmail.com or (317)695-0670 First lesson only 5 dollars
Guitar Lessons With Baker Scott
Beginners thru Advanced All styles Electric-Acoustic-Bass Private Lessons Parent-Child Lessons near Carey Road & 146th Carmel 317-
Member of the Indiana and Indianapolis Bar Associations
Classifieds
VISA, MasterCard accepted Reach 108,133 homes weekly
Services
Wesley N. Hoppenrath
910-6990
.com
Auction
Skip’s Auctions Gallery
Next auction date; Monday March 10 at 6pm Auction Zip #26565 We buy estates, households, gold, silver and coins 14000 St. Rd. 32E, Noblesville, IN 765.606.6001 Always accepting clean consignments.
LOST Need Your Help
I need to find the gentleman that I helped out of the snow bank at Cool Creek Park on Sunday, 1/6/14 ( during the storm). I left my glasses in your van. Please call 317-796-7516 so I am able to get them back. Thank you.
For pricing e-mail your ad to dennis@youarecurrent.com
For sale
Childcare
FOR SALE:
Fishers Home Childcare
Used Salon Equipment for sale. Manicure tables, all purpose chairs, retail shelves, electric facial bed, eight function beauty unit, barbacide jars and more. For info call 317-698-2382
Philanthropy
141st Marilyn. M-F 6:45-5:30 2 Full-time providers. CPR/First aid certified Nutritious meals. Fenced backyard. Fun, safe and clean. References. Call Tiffany 317-332-9136
Now Hiring NOW HIRING!
Compounding pharmacy in Carmel looking for responsible and motivated individuals to work Monday through Friday. Pharmacy technician experience preferred, but will train. Customer service position available. Immediate openings available. Send resume to shamndar@yahoo.com
Real Estate Carmel
317-796-9432 HAS PARTNERED WITH 5607 E. Washington St. 46219 Expanded store hours and inventory. Bridal donations tax deductible. Resale proceeds donated to charity.
Gowns for the Greatest Good For Rent House for Rent Zionsville Village Backs up to beautiful Zion Nature Preserve. 3 BR, 1 Bath, 1 Car Garage, Washer/Dryer, Range, Refrig, Large nice Deck, $1,400 per month 317-623-3264 http://MINDPOEM.COM/900
Room for Rent Zionsville Village Backs up to beautiful Zion Nature Preserve. Washer/Dryer, Range, Refrig, Large Nice Deck, $800 or $600 per month 317-623-3264
Lenox Trace Condo off Guilford 2 bed, 2 bth, lower level, garage $99,900 Neutral, great location. Call Carole Gulledge L.J. Real Estate 317-908-8001
NOW HIRING
Bank Foreclosures Hamilton Co. Free list of Foreclosure Properties. Receive a FREE daily list by e-mail; www.hamiltoncoforeclosures.com
Front Desk; 3pm - 11pm Restaurant Servers; 6am - 3pm Banquets Servers $15/hour+ Apply in Person! 11925 N. Meridian Street Carmel, 46032 (317) 816-0777
Carmel-Lenox Trace Condo’s
NOW HIRING INTERIOR WALL PAINTING
DISTRESS SALE
New Listing 2brm, 2bth, den, upper level $112,500: Beautifully decor all newly carpet/some appls/ on pond Call Carole Gulledge at L.J. Real Estate 312-908-8001
Carmel-Lenox Trace Condo’s
Just listed: 2 brm, 2bth, upper level w/Garage $110,900: Immaculate w/great view of the pond Call Carole Gulledge at L.J. Real Estate 317-908-8001
Roommate WAnted Roommate wanted to share furnished 2BR condo in Carmel. Wash/dry, internet, cable and utilities included. $550/month Gender unimportant. Must not mind smoking. Call 317-402-5628.
$10-12 starting pay. Pay based on experience and skill. All equipment and training will be provided. Must have reliable transportation. 35-40 hours of work per week, Mon-Fri, no work on weekends. Servicing Hamilton County. Call Jonathan 628-8789. Local Carmel retail store is
NOW HIRING:
Looking for Full-time sales associates. Please call 317-843-2655
The Kolache Factory 116th & Guilford
NOW HIRING
Full/Part time Bakers, Kitchen workers, Cashiers Starting at $9/hour Contact EarlyFoods@KolFac.com or 317-213-2509
February 11, 2014
Current in Fishers
www.currentinfishers.com
NOw HIring
NOw HIring
NOw HIring
Build a Career You Can Be Proud Of Xerox Services has immediate positions for Customer Service Representatives
Questions? Please contact Tessa at 765-778-6219 Apply in person: 2828 Enterprise Drive Anderson, IN 46013
puzzle answers
S H A W L S C O R E
Job Fair Wednesday, February 19th 9am - 7pm
Must pass background and drug screen.
www.xerox.com/Careers Click “Search for jobs related to business process and IT services” and search Job # 13042033
C A C H E E A T E R
A T E A M A L T E R
O U T F R E F L A
R A L E S S T D O O N N A P H L B I E R N A C S O T W D O E S W S
R O T E
C R I S P
E A D R D T T R E E E A R T I Y E
H W E I R P O N E E A S P O W S I N I C R Y A P T H E E A L L L L
H A R F U P U I E T E R T O I L N E A T E R
A K R O N
R E E V E
A D D E D
P R I C E
S T E R N
I S S U E
Answers to BUILD THE WORDS: JOE NAMATH, CAMPING WORLD, ST. PATRICK’S DAY, CHILDREN’S MUSEUM, HARLEY DAVIDSON Answers to HOOSIER HODGEPODGE: Countries: ALGERIA, IRAN, IRAQ, KUWAIT, LIBYA, QATAR; Parts: BATTERY, FLASH, LENS, MEMORY CARD, SHUTTER; Billionaires: COOK, IRSAY, SIMON, WHITE; Cleaners: CLASSIC, MORELLI’S, TUCHMAN; Tribes: MIAMI, SHAWNEE; Word: SUFFIX Answers to INDIANA WORDSMITH CHALLENGE: HOLIDAY, AHOLD, ALLOY, DAILY, DALLY, DILLY, DOILY, DOLLY, HILLY, HOLLY, IDYLL, LOYAL, AHOY, ALLY, DIAL, DILL, DOLL, HAIL, HALL, HALO, HILL, HOLD, HOLY, IDLY, IDOL, IDYL, LADY, LAID, LIDO, LILY, LOAD, OILY, OLLA, ADO, AID, AIL, ALL, DAY, HAD, HAY, HID, HOD, ILL, LAD, LAY, LID, OIL, OLD
EOE/AA
©2014 Xerox Corporation. All rights reserved. Xerox® and Xerox and Design® are trademarks of the Xerox Corporation in the United States and/or other countries. BR7307
Summer Camps 2014
Kleenco Maintenance and Construction Now Hiring for all Positions:
Paving:
Looking for an Asphalt Foreman, Concrete Foreman, Screed/Paver Operators, Asphalt Milling Operators, Laborers and CDL Drivers.
A guide for parents and caregivers offering helpful tips, camp listings, summer programs and activities in and around Hamilton County
Construction Needs:
Looking for someone that can build & repair fencing, such as chain link fence, wrought Iron fence, wood fence, vinyl fence & gate repairs New Store Opening Hiring For All Positions (Noblesville) New Wings Etc. location coming soon to Noblesville! Looking for motivated, energetic individuals to be a part of a rapidly growing Restaurant/Sports Bar concept. Hiring for Server's (Must be 19 or older), Bartender's, Kitchen Supervisor's, Cook's, Prep Cook's, Hostess/Hosts. Email Resume or Apply in person at 185 Sheridan Road, Noblesville, IN 46060 on Monday - Friday from 10am to 4pm and Saturday Noon - 4pm.
Bus Driver / Activity Assistant
Wanted for The Hearth at Windermere. Must have CDL. Apply in person. 317-576-1925 Jim or Tiffany
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Stormwater needs:
Landscapers, heavy equip operators, stormwater technicians, class a cdl drivers, grease trap pumpers, electrician and lift station techs There will be an open recruitment at the Fishers Banquet and Conference Center on February 19, 2014 from 2:30-8. The address is 9775 North by Northeast, Fishers, IN. If you have any questions please feel free to call or email HR at 765-724-3554, hr@kleencousa.com. You can also apply online at our website www.kleencousa.com
Part-time Office Assistant Needed
Part-time Office Assistant for a small Engineering/Manufacturing Company located in downtown Carmel. Hours are 9:30 a.m. – 2:30 p.m. M-F, some flexibility possible. $12 per hour. QuickBooks proficiency is a must! Email resume to tsmoot@ globalmanufacturingsystems.com
NOW HIRING Full/Part-time Waitstaff Full/Part-time Linecook Apply in person 160 East Carmel Drive • 843-9900
Coming February 25th Reach all 108,133 households in Carmel, Fishers, Noblesville, Westfield and Zionsville by U.S. Mail for one low price!
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February 11, 2014
Current in Fishers
www.currentinfishers.com
For UnitedHealthcare members, nationally recognized care continues to be in-network. We’re pleased to announce that an agreement has been reached with UnitedHealthcare. Indiana University Health is officially an in-network provider of your health insurance plan, effective January 1, 2014. We apologize for any inconvenience. Our commitment to provide you and your family continued access to affordable care from Indiana’s most highly skilled doctors remains as strong as ever.
©2014 IU Health 02/14 HY01414_0030
To learn more, visit iuhealth.org /unitedmembers 01414_0030_IUHSYS_10x11_4c_UHCAgreement_v5.indd 1
2/6/14 9:30 AM