WILSON: RATS CAN TEACH YOU / P5
HELPING HOMELESS YOUTH / P6
QUICK AND EASY NEW YEARS TIPS / P12
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Growing downtown
Downtown Westfield Neighborhood Association has a new director with an eye for economic development, projects / P9
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Resolutions for 2011 Founded Jan. 29, 2008, at Westfield, IN Vol. III, No. 44 Copyright 2008. Current Publishing, LLC All Rights Reserved. 1 South Range Line Road, Suite 220 Carmel, IN 46032
317.489.4444
Publisher – Brian Kelly brian@currentincarmel.com / 414.7879 General Manager – Steve Greenberg steve@currentincarmel.com / 847.5022 Managing Editor – Margaret Sutherlin margaret@currentincarmel.com Associate Editor – Terry Anker terry@currentincarmel.com Art Director – Zachary Ross zross@ss-times.com / 787.3291 Associate Artist – Haley Henderson haley@currentincarmel.com / 787.3291 Senior Reporter – Brandie Bohney bbthegrammarguru@gmail.com /260.750.4266
OUR VIEWS
It is our position that New Year’s resolutions make sense. Isn't a crucial part of life about growing and improving ourselves? And, isn't the New Year is a great time to establish a starting point to work on an aspect of our lives? While some imagine the tradition quaint, we believe the counter reset can be compelling. Many great historical figures were in a constant process of self-improvement. For instance one of our favorite Americans, Benjamin Franklin kept a journal and worked to follow 13 virtues (he identified them at age 20 and worked to implement and perfect them until the end of his life). While we certainly do not expect that most of us are able to set and pursue a single goal for the rest of our lives, we do believe that the at least annual act of contemplating and selecting a worthwhile personal objective is a valuable process. Even if we have never gone to the trouble of making a New Years’ resolution, why not make Jan. 1, 2011 the kickoff year. Weight loss, enhanced learning, expanded vocabulary, and skill development – there has to be an area that is worthy of improvement and remember effort counts too.
Tough process
It is our position that while school redistricting is a necessary and even good at times to balance school enrollments and prevent overcrowding; it is the responsibility of the School Boards to make sure students receive the same high-quality education in every school. Rightly, school redistricting can sometimes be an explosive topic. In some stilted effort to achieve school choice, families routinely relocate to certain areas so that their children can attend a particularly well-rated school. And with length of bus rides a significant area of concern, proximity to those buildings matters. When school boards change building boundaries, parents feel unjustly harmed as they are often paying a housing premium to be in a specific district. Most school administrators would argue that in a perfect world, redistricting would never be necessary. But reality dictates otherwise – some schools are bursting at the seams while others schools see increasingly empty desks. However, long bus rides across town to move kids from top-rated schools to lower performing ones is a tough pill to swallow. What is required to ensure that all schools perform at the top level? School boards must be held directly accountable for the performance (or nonperformance) of individual schools.
The views in these editorials are of reader participants. They do not represent those of Current Publishing ownership and management.
Advertising Sales Executive – Dennis O’Malia dennis@currentincarmel.com / 370.0749 Indianapolis Sales Consultant – Kevin Messmer kevin@currentincarmel.com / 513.4359
Business Office Bookkeeper - Deb Vlasich deb@currentincarmel.com / 489.4444 The views of the columnists in Current In Westfield are their own and do not necessarily reflect the positions of this newspaper.
strange laws
CONSTITUTION CLOSEUP
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Our nation has all sorts of arcane, nonsensical laws on the books. Each week, we’ll share one with you. In Florida, it is against the law to "break wind" in a public place after 6 p.m. on Thursdays. Source: Weird Laws (iPhone application)
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Every week, we will print a portion of the U.S. Constitution, followed by a portion of the Indiana Constitution. We encourage you to benchmark government policies against these bedrock documents. Today: the Indiana Constitution. ARTICLE 4. Legislative. Section 22. continuer Providing for opening and conducting elections of State, county, or township officers, and designating the places of voting; Providing for the sale of real estate belonging to minors or other persons laboring under legal disabilities, by executors, administrators, guardians, or trustees. (History: As Amended March 14, 1881; November 6, 1984). Section 23. In all the cases enumerated in the preceding section, and
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in all other cases where a general law can be made applicable, all laws shall be general, and of uniform operation throughout
the State. Section 24. Provision may be made, by general law, for bringing suit against the State; but no special law authorizing such suit to be brought, or making compensation to any person claiming damages against the State, shall ever be passed. (History: As Amended November 6, 1984). Section 25. A majority of all the members elected to each House, shall be necessary to pass every bill or joint resolution; and all bills and joint resolutions so passed, shall be signed by the Presiding Officers of the respective Houses.
December 28, 2010 | 3
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From the backshop
READER's VIEW
Get ready for 146th Street bridge work
Stand for freedom of, from religion
Be patient, this is going to take a while – and we really don’t know exactly how long. We’re talking about the widening of the 146th Street bridge over U.S. 31 … for starters. The effort, part of the $1.2-billion Major Moves project to turn U.S. 31 into a limitedaccess highway, is to get under way sometime in February. Yes, it’s going to be something of a mess. When road projects of this scope are undertaken, it mostly cannot be helped. INDOT, we believe, will do the heavy lifting involved to keep traffic flowing at a reasonable pace, but it said there will be some lane closures at times for the work that, in our city, will go from the bridge to Ind. 38. Plans call for the construction of access roads running north-south between the bridge and 151st Street. As we’ve reported, businesses that front on the west side of 31, or those up against the southbound lanes, will be razed to make room for the new infrastructure. Given the city’s progress – and speed – on other road and street projects, coupled with Carmel’s work on Keystone Parkway, we’d seriously like to see mayors Andy Cook and Jim Brainard work a deal to take over the project from the state. Can it happen? Yes. Will it?
Brian Kelly & Steve Greenberg We can only hope. ••• Here’s a case of another lost soul trying to find her way, but don’t feel sorry for her. We’re talking about Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, (D-Texas), who incorrectly argues an inheritance is a gift to those receiving it and therefore should be taxed. What she means is it’s perfectly fine to steal out money, and it makes us wonder this: Are her generous health care benefits taxed? Would they not be a gift from Stupid Pill-ingesting voters? And how is this not double taxation?
If I was a rich man
COMMENTARY By Terry Anker It is a conflict time immemorial. Tevye pined about what life might be like if he “were a rich man;” and in an interestingly close name coincidence, modern music artist Travie (McCoy) found chart-topping success with his ode to immense wealth, “Billionaire.” In itthis young performer dreams of how his life and the lives of those close to him could change were he bathed in billions. It acknowledges the particularly philanthropic and the entirely rapacious. Wealth, it seems like so many things, serves to amplify the existing conflicts within us. It allows us to indulge our desires – good and bad. Tevye couples the fact that money would provide him with time to study religion to become more devout even as it would pay for servants which would allow him to avoid work. Perhaps is the subtle message of the tune, but isn’t it in fact more pious to labor for oneself? Some, especially during the holidays, test their financial limits in seeking to be generous. They
rack up irresponsible debt and push themselves to the brink. Is it possible to envy the generosity of another? Are Tevye and Travie really seeking to be generous, or simply longing for the power of cash? Envy of the wealth of others is an undoubtedly powerful motivator. Art and politics have followed it throughout the generations. Political leaders use class warfare to advance their own personal agenda (often including the tremendous accumulation of wealth). Countless wars and revolutions have been fought from our burning desire to count other people’s money. Yet scores of surveys have shown that most people would be satisfied with 20 percent more than their peer group, ensuring that rich is always out of reach. It seems our perception of wealth is defined by our perception of self. Terry Anker is an associate editor of Current Publishing, LLC. You may e-mail him at terry@ currentincarmell.com.
tution (as part of the Bill of Rights) protects the free exercise of religion. It does not protect just the free exercise of Christianity. The authors used the term “religion,” meaning that all religions have exactly the same status before the law and the government. The American Constitution does not endorse one religion, and was created with the intention of building a secular government on the basis of democratic principles. While many of the Founding Fathers were Deists, I understand that many were also Christians. What’s interesting is that because they had witnessed the evils of a theocracy, they recognized religious exclusion and put their OWN religious beliefs aside long enough to ensure the impartiality of the government in matters of religion. Donna has the right to say what she pleases and practice her faith openly. However, to imply that the country is founded on any one religion and Christianity in particular? Simply put: unfounded. Erin Epstein
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The following refers to a letter to the editor on Dec. 14. Editor, While Donna Thomas seemed earnest in her appeal to Carmel citizens to rid the city of the word “holidays” in December, to be replaced solely by the word “Christmas”, she is clearly uneducated on the history of “the formation of our country” and its lack of religious premise. Let’s start with the Founding Fathers. One of Thomas Jefferson’s monumental accomplishments was the Statute for Religious Freedom drafted by Jefferson in 1779 (drafted after the Declaration of Independence) and enacted into law by the Virginia General Assembly in 1786. This bill guaranteed religious liberty and stated in part “the impious presumption of legislators and rulers, civil as well as ecclesiastical, who, being themselves but fallible and uninspired men have assumed dominion over the faith of others, setting up their own opinions and modes of thinking as the only true and infallible” to describe how religion should not have an impact on how our society is governed. Further, the first amendment to the Consti-
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DISPATCHES » HEPL collecting phones – Hamilton East Public Library is partnering with Prevail to collect unused or retired cell phones to assist victims of domestic violence. Donated cell phones will be refurbished and reprogrammed for emergency calls, or sold to help raise funding for agencies that fight domestic violence. All cell phones must be deactivated prior to donation. Donations will be accepted through March at both the Fishers Library and the Noblesville Library. For more information, call 773-1384. » Prevent sexual abuse in children – The next Stewards of Children program will be Tuesday, Jan. 18 at the Monon Community Center in Banquet Room A at 6:00 p.m. During the hour and a half program, adults interacting with children and adolescents on a regular basis can learn how to prevent and recognize the signs of child sexual abuse and react responsibly in an abuse situation. The cost is $15.00 and registration is available online at www.chauciesplace.org or by calling (317) 582-8251. » New Year’s at The Mansion – Ring in 2011 with a celebration at The Mansion at Oak Hill, at the intersection of 116th Street and Hazel Dell Parkway in Carmel. After a culinary feast, dance the evening away to the entertaining sounds of local band Five Easy Pieces, performing music from the ‘40s to today. The event is open to all ages, and reservations are $75 per person. For more information, call 843-9850.
Apparently you can learn a lot from rats COMMENTARY By Danielle Wilson Every year at my children’s school, fourth graders participate in a nutrition unit in which they study the effects of food on lab rats. Each classroom hosts two female albino rats – one to act as the control, the other as the variable – for about a month. Students take turns babysitting over the weekends, and since our oldest had done so two years ago, our twins begged to do the same. But Santa brought a cat last year, you see, and as we all know, cats eat rats. I explained to our kids that if they didn’t want to have to tell their classmates how Ginger slaughtered poor little Zoey, they would need to be diligent not just in caring for their “pets,” but in closing their bedroom doors. They promised, and we agreed. Holy Mary, pray for us. As luck would have it, they both were assigned a rat on the same weekend, which also happened to be a hunting trip for Doo. Yay! Just me, the kids and the afortmentioned rodents for 60 hours. The cat notwithstanding, how hard could it be? And actually, the first two days went well. The twins played with the rats, cleaned their cages and covered them at night. They fed them fresh hot dogs, carrots, lettuce and bread,
and provided them plenty of clean water. They even made little rat obstacle courses out of cardboard boxes! So cute. On the second morning of their stay, however, something awoke me around 6 a.m. Call it a motherly instinct, but I knew immediately that the cat was attempting a full-frontal assault. I leapt from my bed, ran down the hall, and burst into my son’s room just as Ginger was scaling the side of the cage. Gotcha! I proudly walked into school Monday morning with two 9-yearolds and two live rats. Yes, I am amazing. Ahh, but the story doesn’t end here. Several weeks prior to our rat-sitting experience, one of twins had begged me to let her enter the drawing to become a lucky new rat owner once the project was over. With 22 students and two rats, her odds at winning were one in 11. This meant I could say “yes” and appear to be the best mother ever without any real threat of actually getting the creature. A brilliant plan, if I do say so myself. She failed to tell me that only two students put their names in the hat. Two. So the very day I returned two rats, I got to bring one back home. Awesome! For several weeks, Zoey managed to avoid being eaten. Though I would often see Ginger 10181 INFINITI Carmel Current_F_12_28
Danielle Wilson is a Carmel resident and contributing columnist. You may e-mail her at danielle@ currentincarmel.com.
12/20/10
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DREYER & REINBOLD INFINITI This year, make the holidays especially moving.
» Conner Prairie wins national award – Conner Prairies Interactive History Park was awarded the highest honor for museums, the 2010 National Medal for Museum and Library Service. The award recognized Conner Prairie as one of the top five museums in the nation for its outstanding educational programs and economic contributions to the area. The award was presented by First Lady Michelle Obama. » City hall holiday hours – Westfield City offices will be closed Dec. 31-Jan. 3 in observance of New Years.
pacing in front of Corinne’s room, we were all diligent in keeping the door shut and the cat out. It was incredibly stressful, though, to wonder how many nights the rat had left. Surely Ginger would figure out a way to “go native.” Luckily, she never got the chance. On the very day I was set to go to Petsmart and finally purchase appropriate cage bedding, Corinne came home from school to find Zoey asleep. Permanently. She calmly announced, “It’s OK, Mom. I didn’t expect her to live long anyway.” No tears, no hysterics, just flat-out maturity. Personally, I was just relieved. (Interestingly, the saddest person was the mother of the other rat owner, who emailed when she heard the news: “I’m so sorry! Sorry we didn’t get Zoey!”) But now that Zoey’s gone, I’m realizing how much she actually taught my kids. Nutrition, responsibility and the circle of life … not bad for a rat. Peace out.
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Outreach Inc seeks solutions for homeless youth
Outreach Inc hosted a Christmas party for clients, volunteers and staff. Santa, plenty of food and gifts were on hand, and Indianapolis Colts' Daniel Muir was there to offer support for the homeless teens.
The nonprofit relies on street teams to go out and engage the homeless community, and identify youth by actually being on the street. Being active in the homeless community allows Outreach to better find youth in need, and by simply allowing them the opportunity to know help is available and allowing them to seek it on their own terms. This structure has helped word about their organization to spread quickly among those who need Outreach the most, according to Howard. Moreover, the team is always active in IPS and other area schools to reach out to youth. These combined strategies allowed the organization to identify 500 homeless youth this year, and help over 400 of those to enter the Outreach program. While the Drop In center is an important way for Howard and his group to touch base with the kids and allow them the chance to warm up and get a nutritious meal, any teen entering the Outreach program will enter the full faceted Outreach program. Through XC
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Outreach, teens will receive careful case management, helping them with legal hurdles and getting proper documentation to be successful. The G.O.A.L. program allows a case manager to help the teen make it through school or achieve their GED. One of the bigger challenges for Outreach’s director Eric Howard is not necessarily just reaching out to homeless kids, but educating Indianapolis’s entire community about the changing face of homelessness. “Homelessness here doesn’t look like big city homelessness,” he said. “Some kids have clothes and go to school but don’t have anywhere to go at the end of the day. The causes are so widespread that no stories are the same. Some kids might be getting out of jail and their parents have moved on leaving no forwarding address. Others homelessness might be a result of poverty, or they’ve outgrown the foster system. Some kids just know it’s easier on them and their family’s situation for them to move out and on.” Another educational focus of the organization is helping Indianapolis realize how widespread the problem actually is. “We’re trying to underwrite full time case manager positions at Pike High School and North Central High School,” said Howard. “Our homeless population goes that far north, and a lot of people don’t realize how very much in their backyard this is.” It’s a tireless job and one where a little success of any kind for a client is big news. For new staff member, Katie Johnson of Indianapolis, the challenges in the community as a whole are much bigger than the ones she faces as a member of the street team. “There is this misconception that they are different from us,” said Johnson. “But really these are amazing kids, with a story and who want to build relationships with others. They aren’t so different from you or me.” To learn more about Outreach Inc visit outreachindiana.org.
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By Margaret Sutherlin Current in Westfield At an early Monday morning staff meeting on the eastside of Indianapolis, members of Outreach Inc are sitting in a circle in the large conference room of Englewood Christian Church sharing updates from the past week. Things are progressing slowly until one member announces the good news that sends everyone into enthusiastic cheers: one of their clients has found a job. The mood picks up around the circle, and people are pleased, excited, hungry for similar stories. Another update or two later, and the mood shifts from the fleeting success to groans of frustration: one client has gotten his girlfriend pregnant. The morning proceeds in the same way, a few ups with more downs. When trying to help a growing homeless youth population, Outreach Inc.’s members are used to as much bad news before any good. Getting a job is no small victory in today’s economy, but a big one, especially for a homeless teen. For Outreach employees though even small successes are big ones, especially amid the setbacks and challenges that can be a lot more serious than an unplanned pregnancy. “I had a really radical change in my perspective of success,” said executive director Eric Howard. “Outreach came about through my own spiritual journey with Jesus Christ. I started it in 1996 and have been busy since.” Outreach’s mission is simple: to help get homeless teens and children into homes, and get those that can work jobs. Providing stability and safety is the focus, though community education also plays an important role. It’s a difficult task which sends their small team of 12 out to Indianapolis’s tough neighborhoods, seeking out ways to engage the homeless community.
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By Margaret Sutherlin Current in Westfield Commuters throughout Hamilton County have options once again to make it downtown. Indianapolis Commuter Express bus routes have found additional funding, which will allow them to continue operating after federal grant money runs out. Miller Trailways, the City of Carmel, and Kite Realty have combined efforts to continue the services. Miller Trailways will continue operate the bus lines through advertising and riders. Carmel has pitched in $25,000 of funding for the park and ride side and Kite Realty is providing parking at the new Fishers ICE location. “We’re delighted to see so many different entities demonstrate their belief in the importance of this commuter service,” said Ehren T. Bingaman, executive director of the Central Indiana Regional Transportation Authority in a statement. “We’re indebted to Miller Trailways, the City of Carmel, the Town of Fishers and Kite Realty Group. As we work to improve transit options, it’s important to continue a service that’s been so successful.” Changes will be coming with the shifts in funding however. The number of routes will be
6 | December 28, 2010
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reduced to three per city, and the Fisher’s parkand-ride location will relocate to Fishers Station at Allisonville Road and 116th Street. Moreover, fares will have to increase to compensate for the lost funding. Users can expect to pay $5 each way, with the potential for increased prices again later on. Online tickets and discounted passes will be made available soon. For more information visit: www.indygo.net. The service runs Monday through Friday. The new departure times are listed below. Departing Carmel park-and-ride location: 6:30 a.m., 7:10 a.m., and 7:45 a.m. Departing downtown for Carmel: 4 p.m., 5:05 p.m., 6 p.m. The Carmel park-and-ride location is at Meijer at the corner of Pennsylvania Street and West Carmel Drive. The buses will each stop at 10 downtown locations. Departing Fishers park-and-ride location: 6:30 a.m., 7:10 a.m., 7:45 a.m. Departing downtown for Fishers: 4:05 p.m., 5:10 p.m., 6:05 p.m. The Fishers park-and-ride location will move to Fishers Station on the northeast corner of Allisonville Road and 116th Street. The buses will each stop at 8 downtown locations.
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Salvation Army's red bucket lessons COMMENTARY By Ken Kingshill I have to admit, it was never really on my “bucket list” of things to do before I die. Nevertheless, there I was a couple of Saturdays ago with my boys’ Cub Scout den ringing a bell outside of Wal-Mart for the Salvation Army. And it was fun! Of course, we only had a half hour shift. I can’t imagine being out there in the cold for hours at a time ringing that bell like most of the volunteers seem to do. Although we didn’t see any anonymous donors slipping Krugerands into the kettle, our Cub Scout pack apparently did pretty well for the day. It’s amazing how five or six overly exuberant ten-year olds in red aprons bring out the best in people. Even with a handful of parents lurking in the background feeling a little bit goofy. I guess it’s hard to resist dropping your change into the bucket amidst a veritable cacophony of ringing bells and carol singing. After it was all said and done, the Salvation
Army representative expressed enormous gratitude for our Cub Scouts’ efforts on that Saturday. The hundreds of dollars that they helped raise will undoubtedly do much to help the less fortunate during the holiday season. In the end, though, I feel as if the boys were the ones that received the greatest benefit from their experience. They will not likely walk by another bell ringer without feeling the urge to empty the change from their pockets. Well, more like my pockets. And they are developing a deeper understanding of why it is that they set aside some of their weekly allowance for giving to others. As my father always said when he gave us kids gifts on his birthday, “It’s better to give than to receive.” City Councilor Ken Kingshill is a Westfield resident and Realtor. You may e-mail him at kkingshill@ westfield.in.gov.
Fundraiser for local family huge success Current in Westfield The Hancock family will have a wonderful Christmas this year, despite losing their home to a fire, because of Westfield resident generosity. The Mill Tavern’s fundraiser to support the family after their house burned down on Dec. 1 has collected double what was expected, and donations continue to roll in. Chris and Kristen Weiler, owners of the Westfield bar and restaurant, said this year’s stocking fundraiser saw some of the most holiday spirit and thoughtful-
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ness yet. Kristen Weiler said even one resident brought in a year’s worth of spare change to donate. “It’s such a wonderful, warm feeling to see people giving this time of year,” said Kristen Weiler. “We’ve more than doubled our goal already, and will keep collecting until our stockings run out. We bought out the entire Michaels stock for this one!” The Mill Tavern is located at 161st and Spring Mill Road.
Current in Westfield
December 28, 2010 | 7
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Downtown Westfield Neighborhood Association has a new director with an eye for economic development, projects By Brandie Bohney Current in Westfield There are big changes in store for the Downtown Westfield Neighborhood Association, and new director Anne Poynter couldn’t be happier or busier. In the next few years, downtown Westfield will undergo significant changes and a big facelift. And while the most obvious of those changes are cosmetic in nature, there are changes going Poynter on below the surface, which are even more important. Many of those changes are happening in the Downtown Westfield Neighborhood Association. Anne Poynter has been the full-time director of the DWNA for six months now, and she’s hoping to give the organization a change in focus. So much time, she notes, has been consumed by events: “I came into this job as Westfield Rocks the 4th was finishing being planned, Farmer’s Market was going on, [Westfield] Derby and Numa were in the process. I had to hit the ground running.” While the events are crucial in bringing people into downtown Westfield, Poynter explains that they can’t be the only draw to the area. Her position as director has four facets: promotion, beautification, organization, and economic development. “It’s probably going to take another year or two, but I’m trying to get to a point where that balance is a little more equitable,” Poynter said of the job description. Since starting in July, she’s had major events on her plate and was settling into the position. Beautification of downtown Westfield already has an excellent partner, Poynter notes: Westfield in Bloom. “They’ve got such a great organization, and the people really care about beautifying our downtown,” she says of the group. Still, she’d like to see more beautification, and especially so of the businesses themselves. “I’d like to work with our merchants to work on improving the look of our downtown,” she explains. “We’re in transition, and it’s really, really hard because nobody wants to [make significant changes] until they know what’s going to happen.” Poynter also hopes to get some volunteers to help her both catalogue a volunteer database and coordinate the accounting aspects of the organization. Those aspects will help with the organization aspect of her position, for which she has a greater goal in the future: “I’d like to make [DWNA] a viable, solid, eventually stand-on-its-own organization.” Doing so would require finding funding from outside the city and through grants, but those aspects aren’t a possibility until the organizational framework is solid. She notes that the city has given DWNA a great start, though, both in funding her position and in the donation of the DWNA office at 211 S. Union Street. The other aspect of her job – economic development – is one she sees as the most vital. “This is a big role: filling empty spaces, getting to know the existing businesses, sort of being the liaison between all the merchants and the city or county or whomever. I’m that person who, if there’s a problem, I need to know about it right away.” Poynter notes that in her first six months, she has already dealt with some issues of this stripe, and moving forward, retaining current businesses while bringing in new merchants will
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be one of her greatest responsibilities. “First and foremost, my commitment is to the businesses in the downtown area and getting people to them. That is my number one charge.” One change she’d like to see in the organization in the immediate future is a tweak in the name. “It’s been a volunteer organization, so it’s been run much like a neighborhood association, but it’s metamorphosed with the city and the community into something much bigger,” Poynter explains. “I’m championing for getting rid of ‘neighborhood’ because it sends the wrong impression to the community of what we are. Really we’re a merchant village association.” With all the changes and responsibility on her shoulders, Poynter couldn’t be happier about the position she’s in. “[Westfield] is like a newborn baby in so many ways: it’s so fresh and innocent and it has so much potential in front of it,” she explains. And while the potential is exciting, she admits that she isn’t alone, and the people around her really deserve most of the credit for the good things happening in Westfield: “Here, you’ve got this incredible sense of optimism. There are no egos, no ‘that’s-below-me.’” She explains that since coming on as director of DWNA, she hasn’t met anyone in any city department who hasn’t been overtly helpful or who wasn’t completely on board in the downtown improvement process. “It’s a public-private partnership,” she said. “We’ve always had [the city’s] muscle to help us get things done. It’s a great community to be working for.”
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get involved Volunteers Needed! Poynter needs volunteers of all stripes. If you would like to help with the Downtown Westfield Association, email her at info@dwna.org. She needs not only volunteers for events, but people with accounting and organizational skills to get the databases and budgets put together. “With all these events,” Poynter says, “I want to find all the people who want to be involved. When they contact me, I will find ways for them to get involved. We have every kind of volunteerism available on a regular basis.” Organizations and Businesses Wanted, Too! Poynter wants to fill the front room of the DWNA office with brochures and information about local businesses and organizations. In addition, when the new DWNA website launches next month, any business that would like to have its website linked to the DWNA website may contact Poynter to do so. “Part of what I’m trying to do is connect people, connect organizations, and promote all the organizations in this community and things that are going on,” she explains. “Any kind of contact information that people can send me, so that I can put them into our database and stay in contact, would be great.”
December 28, 2010 | 9
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DISPATCHES » Paws and Read – A very special program, Paws and Read, is Saturday, Jan. 8, at 10:30 a.m., when kids can read a story to a book-loving dog. This activity increases a child’s confidence, generates excitement about reading, and makes learning fun. Dogs provide rapt attention and children can read aloud without fear of criticism or interruption. Stop by the Children’s Desk to schedule 15 minutes of special time with a trained listening dog. This is a free program but registration is required. » Mystery Lover’s Book Discussion – The Westfield Washington Public Library’s Mystery Book Discussion Group will be talking about “Mark of the Lion” by Suzanne Arruda, when they meet on Wednesday, January 5, at 1 p.m. » Conner Prairie wins national award – Conner Prairies Interactive History Park was awarded the highest honor for museums, the 2010 National Medal for Museum and Library Service. The award recognized Conner Prairie as one of the top five museums in the nation for its outstanding educational programs and economic contributions to the area. The award was presented by First Lady Michelle Obama. » Mental health needs up – Colleges and universities across America are ill equipped to deal with increasing mental health needs of students according to a new report by American College Counseling Association. About half of all college students seeking counseling have a serious mental illness. The study showed students seeking counseling 44 percent had severe psychological disorders, up from 16 percent ten years ago, and 24 percent are on psychiatric medication, up from 17 percent in 2000. -www.nyt.com » Arizona evaluates teachers in new way – Starting in 2012, all Arizona public school teachers will be evaluated in a new way - including measurements of how well students have progressed academically under a teacher. Currently, the evaluations include Arizona's Instrument to Measure Standards test scores, but they only compare scores from year to year, using different groups of students. The new system will analyze individual student growth over the year. -www.educationnews.org
10 | December 28, 2010
Simple New Year’s resolutions we can all share
PARENTING By Becky Kapsalis Legendary coach and motivational speaker Lou Holtz said, “God put eyes in the front of our head – not in back to see where we’ve been ... but in front to see where we’re going.” This appears to be an appropriate message for the coming New Year. Where we’ve been (2010) is soon to be history, and where we’re going (2011) can be a year for wide-eyed optimism. The older I get, the quicker the holidays seem to come, and my resolutions from the year before creep up on me so quickly that I find there isn’t enough time in a year to see my resolutions to fruition. So this year I’m going to take a much closer look at my resolutions and keep them simple enough to accomplish. I’ve separated my resolutions into three categories. Categories that were instilled in me as a child and resolutions that can be applied on a daily basis – not cumulative – rather collectively. The three categories are God, country and family. GOD: I will give my thanks and gratitude to God, every day, for providing me with all that is possible through Him. I will show my respect to Him by being aware that everything I say needs to be good and helpful so that my words are encouraging to all who hear them. COUNTRY: I will honor my country by reciting, daily … I pledge allegiance to the flag Of the United States of America, and to the Republic for which it stands: One Nation under God, indivisible, With Liberty and Justice for all. I will give thanks to our military for keeping us safe and I will educate myself and exercise my right to vote for the candidate who best defines my American values. FAMILY: I will not take my family for granted. I will be a beacon of trust, loyalty, humility, sacrifice, perseverance and sterling character, with exemplary morals, values and ethics. I will see to it that my children and grandchildren understand their own responsibilities to God, country and family. Children are our greatest accomplishment. Nothing we accomplish can be greater than the accomplishment of raising kind and decent children. Simple yet succinct resolutions. Resolutions I believe we can all share in. Happy 2011 everyone. Hugs!
I love semicolons; you should too
GRAMMAR LESSON By Brandie Bohney Of all the punctuation marks, I think the semicolon is among the least understood and therefore the least used. It makes me a little sad, because I really love semicolons; I use them frequently. In order to alleviate some of the stress some of you may be feeling about the using semicolons, I’ll put it in easy terms: The semicolon is basically a weak period. By weak, I don’t mean it’s a wimpy punctuation mark. It’s not getting beaten up by the other punctuation marks on the playground. Oh, no. This bad boy holds his ground. What I mean is that rather than completely dividing sentences the way a period does, the semicolon leaves the sentence intact. It just shows a break between clauses. It’s a way of saying, “These two sentence parts could stand alone as their own sentences, but I don’t want them to because they’re better as a single sentence.” Mark and Joseph work well together. Their projects are always impressive. Mark and Joseph work well together; their projects are always impressive. I can almost hear the semicolon singing: “Anything you can do, I can do better. I can do anything better than you.”
You don’t use a semicolon, though, if you are also using a coordinating conjunction (and, but, if, or, for, nor, so). In that case, you use a comma: Mark and Joseph work well together, and their projects are always impressive. Semicolons are a good way to add variety to the types of sentences you use in your writing. If you frequently use commas and coordinating conjunctions or short, choppy sentences, having a sentence broken up by a semicolon once in a while is good for your writing. Variety is the spice of life, you know. Another use of the semicolon is something I’ve heard termed a super-comma. I think the term is a little silly, but the basic premise of the super-comma is that it’s the divider in a list of items that already contain commas: The runners are from Anchorage, Alaska; Dallas, Texas; and Columbus, Ohio. So while it still may not be a punctuation mark you use every day, the semicolon is not to be ignored. Brandie Bohney is a grammar enthusiast and former English teacher. If you have a grammarrelated question, please email her at bbthegrammarguru@gmail. com.
You can contact Becky Kapsalis at becky@indyparenthelp.com or 317-508-1667 for Parenting Classes.
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DISPATCHES » Civic to hold auditions – The Booth Tarkington Civic Theatre will hold auditions for its upcoming production of “Cabaret” and “Miss Saigon” Jan. 3 and 4, 7 to 10 p.m., at Marian University, 3200 Cold Springs Road, Indianapolis. Anyone can show up and audition for various roles. Visit www.civictheatre.org or call 924-6770 for more information. » Leap into White – Garvey Simon Art Access, 27 East Main St, Carmel, will present an exhibition of new oil pastel drawings by Daisy Craddock from Jan. 13 to Feb. 26. Craddock has been exhibiting her work nationally since the mid-1970s. Known for her gestural paintings and drawings that explore nature, Craddock’s new body of plein air drawings are the subject of this exhibition. For more information, visit www.gsartaccess.com. » Registration filling up for mini-marathon – The 500 Festival announced last week that approximately 1,000 spots remain for the 35th running of the OneAmerica 500 Festival Mini-Marathon. The Mini-Marathon and the Finish Line 500 Festival 5K are scheduled to take place on Saturday, May 7, 2011. Registration remains open for the Finish Line 500 Festival 5K at www.500festival.com for $35. » Flight attendants fool drunks – If you're noticeably drunk or getting unruly, it's the flight attendant's responsibility to control the situation. "Sometimes if we think you've had too much to drink, we'll serve you, but not serve the whole mini-bottle of booze," confesses one flight attendant. "We may just dip the rim of the glass in enough vodka or gin and fill the rest with mixer." -www.glo.msn.com » December gardening tips – 1. As houseplants are growing more slowly in December light, cut down on watering by half until active growth resumes. Hold off on fertilizing as well. 2. Group houseplants near each other to form a support group to cope with the low humidity of most winter homes. -www.almanac.com » Airlines rake in bag revenue – According to just-released figures from the Department of Transportation, the nation’s top 20 airlines took in $2.56 billion in baggage fees during the first nine months of the year. Since then, they’ve almost certainly topped the $2.7 billion that they earned during all of 2009. -www.msnbc.com
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Lots of laughs and music at Beef and Boards in 2011 Current in Westfield Beef and Boards is starting their 2011 season with a smart comedy about growing up as a whiz kid, and with adults that never quite made it out of their childhood. “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee” is a Tony-Award winning musical that is filled with wonderful music and funny moments for adults and older kids. Centered on each of the various spellers, the musical introduces each child’s unique story and situation through musical and some audience participation. The musical starts Dec. 29 and runs until Jan. 30, and also includes a very special New Years Eve show, where dinner and dancing will be especially important to bring in the new year. “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee” stars Sarah Hund, Jayson Elliott, Tiana Checchia, Dominic Sheahan-Stahl, and Licia Watson, DaRon Lamar Williams, Kiyo Takami, Seth Tucker and Paul Hansen. In addition to the January show, the 2011 features Hairspray, Annie Get Your Gun, Cinderella, Church Basement Ladies and Singin’ in the Rain, along with Beef and Board’s traditional holiday favorites returning next December. Hairspray, which starts in February, is a movie, turned Broadway musical, turned movie, set in the 1960s Baltimore, were Tracy Turnblad makes her television debut on a local show. Her big hair, hips, and loads of enthusiasm help her use her new star power to help others. The musical focuses on music and dance, but also race and the dynamics of being a teenager. Showtimes vary, in addition to ticket prices which can vary from $36-59, so to learn more call the box office at (317) 872-9664 or visit www.beefandboards.com.
Chip Tolentino (Dominic Sheahan-Stahl) prepares to spell a word as Olive Ostrovsky (Tiana Checchia), left, and Marcy Park (Kiyo Takami) watch in The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, on stage at Beef & Boards Dinner Theatre Dec. 29 through Jan. 30.
Pick of the week
new year's at the jazz kitchen
Indianapolis’s well-known jazz club is hosting a New Years party this year, complete with classic jazz and funk. Two shows featuring local artists such as Brenda Williams, will be on hand to ring in 2011. For more information visit www.thejazzkitchen. com. Where: The Jazz Kitchen 5377 N. College Ave When: Dec. 31, 2010, 8:30 p.m. or 10:30 p.m. Tickets: $25 per show, or $30 for both shows
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New Year's party hosting tips This New Year’s Eve, you can have a champagne party on a beer budget through creative planning. Caviar not required – An assortment of raw vegetables are a classy substitute for caviar at a fraction of the price, but presenting them on a platter with dip is boring. Instead, take those same ingredients and place them in individual glass votive candle holders that people can pick up and carry while mingling and then you’ve got something special. Little details like this make your party look trendy and appealing. No filet, no problem – No need to break out the filet mignon if you want to serve more substantial food; cheaper cuts of meat can be presented with flair. For example, you can braise beef in a casserole and serve it in sourdough bread bowls. Stick to classics – For a cocktail party, offer a holiday punch or signature drink to control the costs of buying different types of liquor. Browse the Web for interesting holiday drink ideas -- such as candy cane martinis. Opt for cocktails – Opt for a champagne cocktail instead of regular champagne. Put a few fresh pomegranate seeds in a champagne flute followed by pomegranate juice. Then, fill with champagne. The red-tinted drinks look festive and will stretch out the number of servings you get from each bottle of champagne. Don’t even consider paper – Party hosts often ditch real plates for the convenience of paper plates and plastic utensils. These cheapen the event while adding to costs. Always use real plates and flatware, even if they don’t match. You can even try using vintage handkerchiefs instead of paper napkins. Go natural – Don’t buy expensive holiday decorations for a party when there are plenty of free raw materials in your yard. For example, evergreen shrubs or trees – such as boxwood or holly – can be snipped to make garland and wreaths. Also try Styrofoam cones to artistically display evergreen clippings and make a centerpiece tree. This could cost about $40 at a florist. -www.foxbusiness.com
Hot spinach red pepper dip Ingredients • 1 cup water • 1 cup diced red bell pepper • 1/2 cup thawed frozen chopped spinach • 1 (8 ounce) package cream cheese • 2 tablespoons milk • 1/2 cup grated Parmesan cheese • 1/2 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes • 1/4 teaspoon salt • 1 pinch freshly ground black pepper • 1 tablespoon finely diced red bell pepper Directions 1. Bring the cup of water to a boil in a small saucepan over high heat and add the 1 cup of diced red pepper and the chopped spinach. Bring the water back to a boil, turn the heat down to
Hot broccoli cheese dip Ingredients • 1 (8 ounce) package cream cheese, softened • 1 cup Knudsen Sour Cream • 1 envelope Good Seasons Italian Dressing Mix • 1 (10 ounce) package frozen chopped broccoli, thawed, well drained • 1 (8 ounce) package Kraft Shredded Cheddar Cheese, divided Directions 1. Heat oven to 350 degrees. Beat cream cheese, sour cream and dressing mix with1 mixer until DocterFlyer_2.ai 10/18/10 blended. Add broccoli and 1-1/2 cups Cheddar
Great american Song book
MEN’S HEA LTH
‘Twas the Night Before Christmas By Ken Darby In 1942, lyricist, musician and composer Ken Darby set Clement C. Moore’s famous poem to music and created a holiday favorite. Darby himself was well known throughout the music community initially for his involvement with The King’s Singers, which sang backup for Bing Crosby in “White Christmas”, and also were involved in recordings for “The Wizard of Oz”. Darby
12 | December 28, 2010
medium and simmer until the pepper is very soft, about 10 minutes. Drain the spinach and red pepper in a colander, pressing out as much liquid as possible. 2. Combine the cream cheese and milk in the saucepan and cook over medium heat until hot and softened. Stir in the cooked spinach and red peppers, Parmesan cheese, crushed red pepper flakes, salt, and ground black pepper. Continue to stir until well combined and heated through. 3. Spoon hot dip into a serving dish and serve with the tablespoon of finely diced red bell pepper sprinkled on top for garnish. 4. Carefully hollow out a round, one pound loaf of bread and spoon this creamy cheese dip inside. Serve with toasted bread slices or crisp crackers.
WOMEN’S HEA LTH
won three Academy Awards for best score (“The King and I” and “Porgy and Bess”) and best musical adaptation (“Camelot”). He was well known also as the composer of Elvis Presley’s great hit “Love Me Tender”. Darby worked frequently in movies, arranging and composing pieces for stars such as Marilyn Monroe, and worked extensively with Walt Disney.
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cheese; mix well. Spread into 9-inch pie plate. 2. Bake 20 minutes. Sprinkle with remaining Cheddar cheese; bake 5 minutes or until melted. PM -www.allrecipes.com
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Scallops with potato pancakes and caviar sauce
Annex Theater Champagne
Ingredients Pancakes • 1 pound baking potatoes, peeled • 1 large egg, lightly beaten • 1/4 cup matzo meal • 1/4 cup grated onion • Salt • Vegetable oil, for frying Scallops and caviar sauce • 1 1/2 cups Champagne • 9 black peppercorns • 3 thyme sprigs • 1 bay leaf • 1 large shallot, thinly sliced • 1 teaspoon fresh lemon juice • 1 1/2 tablespoons crème fraîche • 1 1/2 sticks (6 ounces) cold unsalted butter, cut into tablespoons • 1 ounce caviar • Salt • Vegetable oil, for frying • 20 medium sea scallops (1 pound) • 2 tablespoons minced chives Directions 1. Pancakes: Coarsely shred the potatoes and squeeze out any excess liquid. Transfer to a large bowl and stir in the egg, matzo meal, onion and a large pinch of salt. Shape the mixture into 20 scallop-size cakes, about 1/2 inch thick; press the cakes to compress them. 2. In a large skillet, heat 1/4 inch of vegetable
Ingredients • 1 sugar cube • 1 dash bitters (such as Angostura) • 5 fluid ounces Champagne Directions • Place the sugar cube into a Champagne flute, and drop the bitters onto the sugar. Fill the flute with Champagne, and serve. Do not stir.
oil until shimmering. Working in batches, fry the pancakes over moderately high heat until browned and crisp, about 3 minutes per side. Lower the heat if the pancakes brown too quickly and add more oil if necessary. Transfer the pancakes to a baking sheet and sprinkle with salt. 3. Scallops and caviar sauce: Preheat the oven to 325 degrees. In a small saucepan, combine the Champagne with the peppercorns, thyme sprigs, bay leaf, shallot and lemon juice and boil over high heat until reduced to 1 tablespoon, about 15 minutes. Strain the sauce into another small saucepan. Stir in the crème fraîche and bring to a simmer over moderate heat. Remove from the heat and stir in the softened butter, 1 tablespoon at a time. Stir in the caviar and season lightly with salt. Cover the sauce and keep it warm. 4. Wipe out the skillet and heat 1/4 inch of oil in it until shimmering. Season the scallops with salt and add half of them to the skillet. Cook over high heat until richly browned, about 1 1/2 minutes per side. Transfer to a plate and keep warm while you cook the remaining scallops. 5. Rewarm the potato pancakes in the oven. Arrange the pancakes on a platter and set a scallop on each one. Add the chives to the caviar butter sauce and spoon over the scallops. Serve right away. Note: The pancakes and caviar sauce can stand at room temperature for up to 2 hours. Rewarm the caviar sauce over low heat, stirring constantly. -www.foodandwine.com
Where I Dine
RESTaurant
vito ruggieri
Donatello’s Italian Restaurant
Where do you like to eat? “I like to eat at Maneki Neko Sushi & Hibachi.” What do you like to order there? “All the seafood and sushi is very good there.” What about this restaurant do you like? “They’re honest people, if you order something and they don’t have it or it’s not fresh, they’ll tell you that and not serve you the food, which, as a restaurant owner, I respect.” 214 E Main Street Westfield, IN 46074 317.867.4810
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Swedish Glogg Ingredients • 2 cups water • 12 cardamom seeds • 2 cinnamon sticks • 12 whole cloves • 1/2 orange, zested • 1 cup white sugar • 1 cup raisins • 1 cup blanched almonds • 4 cups Muscatel wine, or orange Muscat • 4 cups port wine (or Burgundy) • 2 cups brandy Directions • Bring water to a boil with cardamom, cinnamon, cloves, and orange zest; stir in sugar until dissolved. Remove from heat, and allow to steep overnight. • Place the raisins and almonds into a large saucepan. Strain the sugar water into the raisins, then pour in Muscatel, port, and brandy. Place over medium-high heat, and cook until hot but not simmering. Serve warm in a mug with some fruit and almonds in each cup.
Donatello’s Italian Restaurant is the newest of restaurants in the Carmel Arts District and is nearing their opening day. The owners of Donatello’s are not new to the restaurant industry, having owned Arturo’s in Indianapolis for a number of years. Adam Aasen co-owns the restaurant along with his parents. Aasen and his father take pride in their dedication to the restaurant. Striving for a small, intimate setting, they want their guests to feel personal, genuine service while dining in their restaurant. “We are classic and upscale, without being pretentious. We want to bring back the intimacy of dining.” Aasen said. Seating a maximum of forty people, a nice, small restaurant is exactly what the family was shooting for. Evenings of busy waiters trying to turn tables, impersonal service, and processed food will not be crossed at Donatello’s. “At Donatello’s, we try to make all of our food from scratch, within reason.” Aasen said. Donatello’s serves fine Italian dishes, like Ravioli Gorgonzola, Wild Mushroom Risotto, and Tortellini Michelangelo. Learn more at donatellositalian.com, and call 317-564-4790 for reservations. To stay up to date with the specials, follow them on Twitter at @eatatdonatellos, where deals and specials will be posted daily.
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THEATRE ‘Joseph’ at Civic
“Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat,” Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice's musical adaptation of the well-known Biblical tale, returns for the holidays. The trials and triumphs of Jacob's favorite son is told entirely in song at Civic Theatre, 3200 Cold Springs Road, Indianapolis. Tickets are $34 and the production runs through Jan. 1. For tickets and show times, visit www.civictheatre.org.
Norway
Ten years have passed since Brent and Andy shared their deepest secrets. Beethoven scholar Brent drifts from city to city performing and lecturing until he discovers Andy is following him. The production runs at the Phoenix Theatre from Jan. 6 through Jan. 30. Tickets range from $15 to $25 depending on performance dates. For more information, visit www.phoenixtheatre.org.
ART Blue Chip Print Show
Featuring artists such as Chuck Close, Tara Donovan, and Sol LeWitt, the Blue Chip Print Show at Garvey Simon Art Access in Carmel highlights post-war contemporary artists up close and in detail. The show runs through Jan. 7, and the gallery is open Wed. – Sat. noon to 5 p.m. For more information, visit www.gsartaccess.com.
COMEDY Morty’s Comedy Joint
The following acts will be performing at Morty’s Comedy Joint, 3625 East 96th St., Indianapolis. For show times or other details, visit www.mortyscomedy.com or call 848-5500. Thursday through Sunday – Headliner Costaki Economopolis. Tickets: $12 on Thursday, $25 (7 p.m.) or $40 (9:15 p.m.) on Friday, $15 on Saturday, $5 on Sunday.
LIVE MUSIC Mickey's Irish Pub
The following performances and events will take place this week at Mickey's Irish Pub, 13644 N. Meridian Street. For more information call 573-9746. Friday, Dec. 31 – Soul Street Saturday, Jan. 1 – Ribs & Bone
Mo’s Irish Pub
The following musical acts will be performing live at Mo’s Irish Pub, 13193 Levinson Lane in the Hamilton Town Center, Noblesville. For more information, call 770-9020. Friday, Dec. 31 – Something Rather Naughty Saturday, Jan. 1 – Jai Baker
Moon Dog Tavern
The following musical acts will be performing live at Moon Dog Tavern, 825 E 96th St., Indianapolis, 46240. Call 575-6364 for more information. Thursday – Ribs & Bone, 8 to 11 p.m. Friday – Loo Abby, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Saturday – Cari Ray, 9 p.m. to midnight
Slippery Noodle Inn
The following musical acts will be performing live at the Slippery Noodle Inn, 372 South Meridian Street, Indianapolis. For more information, visit www.slipperynoodle.com. Thursday – Benito & The Black Voodoo Band Friday – W.T. Feaster Band and The Why Store
SYMPHONY A Night in Vienna
Join the ISO to celebrate the start of 2011, as the symphony partners with Dance Kaleidoscope to bring a wonderful night of music and dance. After the performance join in the after party for a champagne toast and ringing in the New Year! Friday, December 31, 9:00 p.m. at the Hilbert Circle Theater. Tickets $35-60. For more information visit www.indianapolissymphony.org
Dr. David Sullivan
14 | December 28, 2010
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DISPATCHES » Perfect 10 – A nude nail is always a classic. And for dress-up purposes, you needn't forsake it for something garnet or vampy. Just a hint of shimmer takes it from neutral to festive. Try OPI Nail Lacquer in At First Sight ($8.50, Ulta). Or layer any clear, glittery polish over your usual sheer shade. "This is one of the easiest ways to get in the spirit without going over the top — plus, it's gorgeous," says OPI founder Suzi Weiss-Fischmann. -www.goodhousekeeping.com » Fringe benefits – Call them bargainbasement Botox: Bangs really can take years off your face. "Ask your stylist to snip a few but leave them long enough so that you can sweep them to the side, in case you don't love how you look in bangs," says Stacey Whitmire, a stylist at New York City's Arrojo Salon. Side-swept bangs still partially conceal forehead lines, and the look is almost universally flattering. -www.goodhousekeeping.com » Hit the sack, look hotter – Turns out, there’s a reason they call it beauty sleep. That’s the bottom line of a Swedish study that finds that people are perceived as less attractive -- as well as less healthy and more tired -- when they’re sleepdeprived than when they’re well-rested. After staying up for 31 straight hours, test subjects were perceived as 4 percent less attractive, 6 percent less healthy and 19 percent more tired by 65 ordinary people. -www.msnbc.com » Create a spa-like guest bath – Give your guest bath the look of a serene retreat with a color palette reminiscent of the best spas. Pale or dusty blues, soft greens, pale grays, and beige are tranquil options for a relaxing room, especially one that comes with a large soaking tub, as seen here. If your guest bath doesn't get much use between visitors, make sure tub, shower, and sink are thoroughly scrubbed and the room is dust-free before your next guests arrive. -www.bhg.com
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How to make the perfect guest room COMMENTARY By Sue Pelley Modern living is mobile and fast paced, so it’s not surprising that homeowners can expect to receive houseguests several times a year – especially at holiday time! Whether you’re a growing family or a tiny apartment dweller, your options for guest accommodations are often challenging. The time-honored sleeper sofa has long been a standard, and then along came futons, for those wanting a firmer seat and a solid “mattress.” And today, day beds, complete with trundle inserts, are quite popular. If you must provide guest space in living areas, try to furnish a small chest with empty drawers, which can double as the sofa side table. And don’t forget hanging space in an armoire or nearby closet. Decorative screens are especially popular as room dividers. You might consider investing in one to close off your guest/living area when privacy is needed. If your home has an extra bedroom, decorat-
ing for guests can be a most enjoyable project. Why not try some interesting color and accessory combinations to make your guest room even more inviting. And by coordinating your bedspread, pillow shams, dust ruffle and window treatment, your room is guaranteed to be a restful haven for any jet-lagged traveler. And speaking of window treatments, don’t forget to consider a room-darkening treatment on your windows. There’s nothing worse than having
your guest arrive very late and tired, and then having them wake up at the crack of dawn to sunlight streaming into their room! Keep in mind that comfort demands several essential pieces of furniture. The bed, no matter what size, should be as comfortable as your own, and there should be an ample supply of pillows and blankets available. A bedside table and lamp are necessary. If space allows, a small desk and chair are wonderful additions to any guest space, especially if you’ve included pens, stationery, stamps and books about local points of interest. A comfortable armchair will give the room a finished look, as well as provide an even greater sense of welcome for your guests. Noblesville residents and business partners Sue Pelley and JoAnne North operate Decorating Den Interiors. Design segments featuring Pelly have aired on HGTV. Pelley can be contacted at: suepel@ sbcglobal.net.
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W W W. G R I L L E 3 9 R E S TA U R A N T. C O M
December 28, 2010 | 15
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DISPATCHES » Wearable robots could help paralyzed - Brain-machine interfaces — devices that let users control electronics with their minds — have long enabled paralyzed individuals to perform everyday tasks such as sending e-mails and playing video games. But they tend to lack the feeling of movement that typically goes along with these activities. In a new study, researchers used robots to add this missing sensory input, and they’ve found it allows monkeys move a cursor across a screen more quickly and accurately. -www.msnbc.com » Passwords not enough? – A hacking attack on the publisher of such blogs as Gawker, Gizmodo and Jezebel exposed account information on as many as 1.4 million people, and several unrelated companies (including banks, Google, and Yahoo!) had to freeze their accounts and force users to reset passwords. The attack showed that, despite warnings, many use the same passwords for various sites, putting themselves at greater risk for identity theft. Security experts say it’s time to move beyond passwords. -Associated Press
16 | December 28, 2010
Should Mac owners install security suites? COMMENTARY By Gary Hubbard This is one of the most heated debates on the Interwebs: Should folks who have a Mac install any type of security software? In the past, the discussion was specifically about whether one should install “anti-virus” software on their Mac, but today’s attack vector is much more sophisticated than simple “virus” code, so the real discussion should be about general security. The term “virus” is used by most non-technical folks when they mean any kind of malicious software (malware). But today we are being attacked by so many different malicious programs that actual virus code is pretty low on the threat list. Let’s start by discussing some of the common claims you’ll hear on the Internet: Macs don’t get viruses One of the first viruses every written (1982), was written for the Apple II, and subsequent versions of Apple’s Mac OS (especially 7) have had well-chronicled bouts with lots of viruses. With the release of OS X, Apple made a dramatic shift in security that made most of the past exploits useless. In technical terms, the statement is false, because viruses written specifically to attack OS X as well as various “proof of concept” viruses have been written over the years. If you expand the term “virus” to mean malware, then many Tro-
jans and browser exploits exist. (Here’s the top 20 from Sophos: http://bit.ly/hTz1Y3.) Macs are safer than Windows computers This statement is unequivocally indisputable! The relative dangers for Internet-connected computers running Windows are exponentially higher than for those running Mac OS X. The primary data that most folks point to for the reason is the market share: Worldwide: Windows 90.81 percent vs. Mac 5.03 percent (Netmarketshare.com) US: Windows 83.37 percent vs. Mac 11.46 percent (Netmarketshare.com) Apple’s decisions to leave old exploitable OS code out of OS X essentially required malicious software authors that were targeting Macs to start from scratch. This combined with the inherent security built into OS X made it much harder to write code that could exploit and propagate malicious code amongst this smaller number of computers. It’s no longer about the OS! But the folks writing malware want you to keep focusing on the Windows vs. Mac discussion, because they have already moved on to attacking everyone, no matter what operating system they use. Today’s exploits rely on exploiting the weakest part of any computer system: the user! Social engineering tactics combined with exploits of unpatched browsers are leading the
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charge for today’s sophisticated Internet-based attacks and making the OS that you’re running irrelevant. “Drive-by downloads” (slipping malicious code into your computer when you visit a malicious Web site) can be performed on virtually any browser (Internet Explorer, Firefox, Safari, Chrome, Opera, etc.) regardless of operating system if they are left unpatched. So to get to answering the question: Installing an anti-virus program that constantly runs on Macs might not be necessary, as it will have an impact on the performance (just like on Windows systems), but having a tool (like the free ClamXav – http://clamxav.com) that you can manually run on occasion is a pretty good idea. The real threats are your browser, Internet utilities and your behaviors on the Internet. If you or any member of your family engage in risky behavior (file sharing, cracked software, game cheats, adult sites, etc.) don’t count on a “security suite” to save you. Make sure to keep your browser, Adobe Flash/Reader, Quicktime and Mac OS updated with the latest security patches. Gary Hubbard is the owner of Data Doctors Computer Services - www.datadoctors.com. Have a technology question? Send it to CurrentInCarmel@datadoctors. com
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DISPATCHES » St.V names Heart Center president – St.Vincent Health officials announced recently that Blake A. Dye, FACHE has been named the president of the St.Vincent Heart Center of Indiana. Dye will officially start on Jan. 17, and will assume the role formerly held by John Stewart, who serves as president of the newly-formed St.Vincent Medical Group. Dye comes to St.Vincent following an 11-year tenure as president and chief executive officer of Henry County Hospital in New Castle, Ind. » Mood may affect cancer survival – Researchers found that women with advanced breast cancer whose mood lightened during the course of a one-year study lived more than two years longer than those whose mood worsened. But they caution that the potential mindbody connection is still uncertain, and that it's far from clear that depression is at the root of the shorter survival. Depression can burden the body in a number of ways that are linked with cancer progression -- from decreasing immune function to increasing inflammation. -www.msnbc.com
Fish-oil supplements: Essential omega 3 source, but avoid the pitfalls COMMENTARY By Laura Marenco The benefits of omega 3s are numerous. They serve to nourish our brains and cardiovascular systems, benefit our immune system and inflammation responses, and even fight depression. The best sources of Omega 3s are found in a fish-oil supplement, which should ensure low toxicity and provide easy daily doses. The market is flooded with products, but one can weed out the bad and avoid the pitfalls. Unfortunately, much of our fish is tainted with toxins such as mercury and PCBs. While about all fish oils are purified, many have mediocre quality-control standards. This was recently evident when California sued several big companies such as GNC and CVS for not disclosing high levels of PCBs in their fish-oil supplements. California may be tougher than most, but there are products that exceed requirements, so why settle? Look for a fish-oil brand that regularly tests its product and takes quality seriously. There can be confusion on levels of DHA and EPA contained in fish oils. DHA has benefits for things such as your brain and nervous system and EPA reduces inflammation and improves cardiovascular health. What is important is to get a healthy dose of each. DHA can be the
most crucial, as the body can actually convert DHA to EPA as needed. The recommended daily dose is 500 mg of DHA and EPA combined, and more can be taken for greater benefit. The bio-availability of fish oil is not equal. Due to purification, most omega 3s are formulated as ethyl esters, a different form from the original triglyceride. Few manufacturers take the extra step to reconstitute the fatty acids back into the triglyceride form. A recent clinical study, published in the Danish Journal “Prostaglandins, Leukotrienes and Essential Fatty Acids,” determined the bio-availability of omega 3s in triglyceride form was 70 percent greater than in ethyl ester form. If it is not bio-available, it misses the first requirement for real benefit. Make sure you are getting omega 3s that are the more natural triglyceride form. So keep in mind purity, healthy levels of DHA and EPA, and bio-availability. You’ll get the healthy benefits of omega 3s without the pitfalls.
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» Pain med too risky for elderly? – A type of pain medicine long believed to be relatively safe for older adults appears to come with more risks than other, supposedly riskier, painkillers, new study findings report.The authors found that people on opioids, a class of pain drugs that includes morphine and codeine, had a higher risk of fractures, cardiovascular problems such as heart attack or stroke, hospitalizations, and death relative to other types of pain medication, including over-thecounter drugs. -Reuters » What’s in your water? – According to a recent “New Scientist” report, a comprehensive survey of U.S. drinking water reveals that drinking water may contain a host of hormonally active chemicals. Some of the most frequently found substances included: MTBE (Methyltert-butyl Ether) – a chemical added to fuel to raise octane number; a potential human carcinogen at high doses – and Atrazine – a U.S. herbicide banned in the European Union. A known endocrine disruptor, it feminizes wildlife and lab animals, is linked to reproductive problems in lab animals, impairs immune function, and is linked to both breast and prostate cancers in humans. -www.mercola.com
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Making sound decisions for your children COMMENTARY By Carol Rossetti Do you know what was the first gift of Christmas? A child! As a Christian one would think of the child as the Christ Child. I am also thinking of it as all children are gifts from God. Somehow over the past 30 years, we have decided to think of children as small adults rather than the joyful, curious, learners we are given. No time to lay down and count the clouds. Instead we rush them off to some organized activity. We forget to use kindness and compassion when they stumble remembering that we had to stumble also to grow. Children have no voice except the voice their parents and teachers give them. They have few choices in their day-to-day lives. They have to eat the food their parents buy, and they have to live where their parents decide to live. Don’t get me wrong. I am a big believer in parental rights and I want every parent to be thinking about some of these things. Are you using good judgment with the food you purchase for your children to eat? Are you giving your children time to be children, to stop and smell the flowers, to jump in the autumn
leaves, to count clouds in a summer sky? As a teacher, are you using compassion with the little ones you have been given to guide? Are you remembering they are children not mini adults. Do you strive to keep in mind they are brand new and in the learning process and it is your job to hold their hearts in reverence gently guiding them. As you approach this Christmas season and beyond, remember the first gift of Christmas was a child. They are our future and will become the kind of adults we teach them to be. We used to be in the business of raising adults. Now we are in the business of raising children. Let’s go back to raising responsible, principled, and moral adults. That can only happen if their teachers, parents, grandparents, etc. are responsible, principled, and moral adults. Another Christmas has passed, a new year is upon us and we have been given the gift of children. How will you treat your gift? Carol Rossetti, N.D. is a Naturopathic Doctor and resides with her husband in Noblesville. She can be reached at Health Connections,. 585-9111 or at dr.rossetti@comcast.net
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DISPATCHES » County home prices increase - According to a report from the Metropolitan Indianapolis Board of REALTORS, the average sale price of homes in Hamilton County increased 5.1 percent to $248,109 during September to November 2010, when compared to the same threemonth period in 2009, resulting in the highest average sale price in MIBOR’s service area. November 2010 average sale price increased 6.4 percent to $240,240 when compared to November 2009. » More consider walking on mortgage – Nearly half, 48 percent, of homeowners with a mortgage said they would consider walking away from their home if they owed more on it than it was worth, according to a Harris Interactive survey released this month. The survey was conducted in November. The real estate industry calls this "strategic default," referring to people who choose to walk away even when they can technically afford to continue paying their mortgage. Just six months ago, a similar survey indicated that only 41 percent of consumers would consider doing this. -www.msnbc.com » ‘Austerity’ tops Webster’s search – "Austerity," which Merriam-Webster’s defines as "enforced or extreme economy," spiked to the top of the company's top searches at its website, www. merriam-webster.com. Coupled with No. 2 "pragmatic," the list reflects a year when searchers were still worried about a rocky world economy, said Peter Sokolowski, the dictionary's editor at large. -Reuters » Blockbuster to close 182 stores – Bankrupt video rental chain Blockbuster plans to close 182 stores by the end of the first quarter of next year as it tries to find a way back on its feet. Blockbuster filed for bankruptcy in September, weighed down by its debts and stung by video-ondemand and competitors such as mailorder pioneer Netflix and Redbox, which rents movies through kiosks. Blockbuster has closed about 1,000 stores in recent years as it tries to cut costs, but still had about 2,900 in the United States when it filed for bankruptcy. -Reuters
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Get the most out of your organization's values COMMENTARY By David Cain It’s an interesting idea. You’ve got a mission statement and some related values of your organization that hang on a wall in the lobby or the bulletin board of the break room. There they are, sequestered away like tiny deliberating jurors, just a pipe dream of those who took the time to scribble them onto paper. Almost every business has a vision, a mission statement and organizational values. And so do most other groups. It might not be written down and posted in the living room of your home, but generally everywhere there is a group of people congregating, there is an idea of where you are headed and why you are together, and a collective set of values or rules by which the members abide. At the end of 2009, I wondered how a business could get the most out of its organizational values. I pondered how you really could get people to understand the importance of their actions as it relates to how they represent a company. I met a man who had an idea. He asked people in performance evaluations to cite things they did to promote the values of the organization. But why wait until reviews? Why not begin every meeting with, “Let’s go around the table and quickly say one thing you’ve done in the last 24 hours to live the values of this company.” What people never understand is that organizational values are more than big overarching statements about what you want to become. They are statements about what you should be. One of our values is, “Always increase the customer’s confidence in you and the company.” If I ask what have you done to support our values in the last 24 hours, the answers range from, “I gave great recommendations to customer X about their project Y” to “I made a commitment on a timeline and kept it.” When people begin to understand that values aren’t simply decorations that hang in the lobby but instead an overlay to behaviors, you see better results. As this year ends, I’m reminded of this lesson. I’ve also starting thinking in terms of how this applies to my kids. Maybe next year I’ll start going around the dinner table and asking, “What have you done in the last 24 hours to support the values of this family?” It might sound like overkill, but it makes people think and act differently. And sometimes awareness is all it takes to create better results.
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David Cain works at MediaSauce, a digital media and online marketing company in Carmel. David welcomes your questions or comments at David.Cain@MediaSauce.com.
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MONEY MATTERS What’s the worst financial advice you’ve ever heard given? “Just last week I was asked to buy into a bridge loan. They wanted me to purchase it for $250,000. The collateral was commercial property. They said it would yield a 300% return in 3 months.” Amy Stacey, 42 Westfield
“Don’t get a pre-nuptial agreement. That’s the worst advice.” Rob Lannerd, 49 Westfield
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Type: Traditional, two-story Age: Built in 2006 Location: Near 169th Street and Gray Road Neighborhood: Slater Ridge Square Footage: 6,448 square feet (includes finished basement) Rooms: Fabulous custom four-bedroom, three full, two half bath home. Main floor with soaring great room, private master suite with deck access, gourmet kitchen with huge center island, granite counters and custom tile floors. Hearth room. Upstairs bonus room. Walkout lower level has a theatre room, billiards room, custom wet bar and exercise room. Two-tier deck that overlooks lake. Strengths: Spacious kitchen with upscale amenities and hearth room. Floor plan features popular main-floor master suite. High-end quality finished basement with wet bar, theatre and exercise room. Stunning lake view. Challenges: Lack of private backyard. Located in prestigious neighborhood still under development.
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Wittmann 20/20 Family Eye Center isn’t focused on just good eye health, but also being a part of the Carmel community. At Wittmann 20/20, Dr. Tammy Wittmann is anxious to help her patients make the best choices for their eyes, and learn how to protect their viDr. Wittmann sion. A graduate of Indiana University School of Optometry, Dr. Wittmann recently opened her location on 146th Street after practicing in Carmel and Westfield since 2003. Regular eye exams and check ups are part of the plan at Wittmann 20/20, but Dr. Wittmann also offers more involved treatment for serious eye problems. Lasik, vision therapy, non-surgical vision correction, and also treats eye diseases and eye emergencies are also important aspects of the center. Such a wide variety of services allows Dr. Wittmann to find an individualized treatment plan for all her patients’ needs. Dr. Wittmann doesn’t care only about eye health however, but also is very focused on becoming a part of the Carmel community. She sees herself and her business as a part of the community, and since her opening, Tammy has been actively involved with local arts groups from the Carmel High School choirs, to philanthropies promoting breast cancer awareness, and supporting student functions.
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Childlike faith, Grown-up love SPIRITUALITY By Bob Walters It’s easy to think the Bible has it backwards telling us to become like a child (Matthew 18:3-4) when we are working so hard at being grownups. But maybe we get the “grownup” thing wrong. If I have one prayer going into the New Year it’s that I never “mature in my faith.” The wonder of Christ is so much fun, so exciting, so big, so interesting, so deep, so comforting, so assuring, so challenging and so complete that the last thing I want to do is have my faith get old. Consider that “being a grownup” in the societal context is generally about earthly works – responsibilities, problem solving, more responsibilities. Ever notice that? Satan sure does. He’d much rather have a responsible adult worried sick about earthly travail than have a responsible adult with a childlike faith in God. The latter doesn’t give Satan much to work with. Having the ability to lay anything at the feet of Christ is the kind of grownup I want to be. I’m fine with responsibilities; it’s a joy when we can trust each other. Most of us have been on both sides of that one, though. We’ve sometimes trusted the wrong people, and maybe on occasion we have been entrusted with the wrong things. The point here is that childlike faith knows God can be trusted all the time, every time. It
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knows God is the good, the right, the eternal; that God can do anything but actually does everything according to His own plan. God gives us the freedom – love’s foundation – to make up our own minds about our faith. Childlike faith? I think that means, “no doubts.” It definitely doesn’t mean “unquestioning.” Have you ever known a child who didn’t have a million questions? God loves that! “Ask and ye shall receive” (John 16:24) isn’t about Christmas presents. It’s about God’s grace and mercy. Ask for that, and believe. I know plenty of people who define the completeness of their adulthood by “knowing what they want and getting it.” Satan’s plan is to get us to focus on the things we want so that we either second-guess or completely ignore the things God wants. Certainly that sounds childlike (childish?), but have you ever known a parent who wasn’t second-guessed or ignored despite their child’s neediness? Christ on the Cross proves our Father loves us anyway … even the grownups. Bob Walters (www.believerbob. blogspot.com, email rlwcom@aol. com) hopes you’ll enjoy childlike faith in the New Year. When you can feel God smile, you’ve succeeded.
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Full basement remodel in Carmel
COMMENTARY By Larry Greene ORIGINAL ROOM: This home in the Huntington Chase subdivision on the west side of Carmel was built in the 1990s and included the original unfinished basement of approximately 1,200 square feet. As the family’s children grew older, it became important to create a new finished space where they could hang out with their friends. ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN: The project architect worked on three different preliminary designs to give the owners different ideas. The final design incorporated the following areas: bathroom 5’x 8’, media room 17’x16’, wet bar 14’x12’, billiards area 17’x21’, office 12’x12’, stairway 3’x10’ and an unfinished mechanical/ storage room 28’x12’. BATHROOM FINISH: New finishes included a Kohler Cimarron toilet and new 30” vanity in a cherry cordovan stain with a cultured marble top with ogee edge. Plumbing fixtures included Moen faucets and a Sterling tub/shower surround made of a tough fiberglass composite material. Finally, new Alcarra 13” floor tile was installed in a straight pattern.
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Before WET BAR FINISH: The new wet bar included new cherry cordovan stained cabinets with space for a sink and microwave. New tan brown granite countertops were installed with a standard beveled edge profile, Kohler sink and Moen faucet. The floor area was covered with Alcarra tile in a 12” x 24” running bond. HOME THEATRE: An audio/video firm was brought in to design and install the components and wiring in the media room including in-wall and in-ceiling speakers, ceiling-mounted projector and specialized theatre seating. Storage niches were framed in, and stained adjustable shelving was installed flanking the new flat-screen TV. NEW DAYLIGHT WINDOWS WELLS: The lack of natural light and the fact that one of the windows was leaking resulted in an upgrade of the existing windows. The first step was to excavate the soil surrounding both window wells and con-
After struct two new enlarged window wells composed of 6 x 6 treated lumber. Although this was a fairly involved and costly process, the additional natural light added greatly to the atmosphere of the finished space.
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Larry Greene is owner of Case Design/Remodeling. You may e-mail him at lgreene@ caseremodeling.com or call 8462600. Visit www.caseremodeling. com for more information.
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When I'm 64 ...
The finishing touch to the Christmas tree HUMOR By Mike Redmond Naked. There’s no other word for it. My Christmas tree looks naked. Why? Because I can’t find the tinsel. I get this from my father. He was the protinsel protagonist in our house, where every Christmas he and Mom would engage in the struggle that became known in family lore as The Great Tinsel War. It happened the same way every year. “No tinsel this year,” Mom would declare while Dad was under the tree with a spirit level trying get the trunk straight. Dad would come out from under the tree, covered with pine needles, his face flushed with both exertion and agitation. “To (un-Christmaslike word) with that,” he would say. Mom would pretend to relent. “All right,” she would say, “but be tasteful about it. One strand at a time.” She said this so it would be easier for her to go back over the tree and remove all but a few strands of tinsel while we were asleep. After which Dad would sneak out of bed to reapply it. Whereupon Mom would double back and take it off again. Which, of course, led to Dad doubling the amount when he came back just to
touch things up. And so it would go, night after night until Dec. 25 arrived and brought with it Peace On Earth, including our house. For most of the day, anyway. Whether the tree had tinsel or not on Christmas morning was all a matter of who had gotten to it last. OK, you can see I come by this tinsel weirdness honestly. I am my Dad’s boy on this one. And you can also see why my tree just doesn’t look right to me. What’s aggravating is that I HAVE tinsel. Imported stuff, heavy, not like that shredded Mylar you get at the drug store. I thought it was in the attic, but no. If I didn’t know better I’d say Mom has been up there. Oh, well. I know where I can get some more. If need be, I’ll have it overnighted. It’ll cost a bunch but a proper Christmas tree is worth it … although truth be told, all Christmas trees are proper trees, tinsel or no, for the beauty and warmth and joy they bring to our homes, and our hearts. Mike Redmond is an author, journalist, humorist and speaker. Write him at mike@ mikeredmondonline.com or P.O. Box 44385, Indianapolis, IN 46244.
COMMENTARY By Dick Wolfsie I’m at the very bottom. Lower than ... well, you know the expression. I guess someone has to be last on my club’s racquetball ladder, a members-only online display of the win-loss record of players and their scores. I’m not ashamed of my feeble ranking. If it were that big a deal, WikiLeaks would be all over it. I once thought this was a relatively easy game, because how bad do you have to be to miss an entire wall? And you have three walls you can aim at. Plus a ceiling. Some courts have a back wall made of glass so the healthclub members pumping up their enviable biceps often chuckle as they watch me play. The men laugh at me, too. I’m always looking for a game, but not with just anyone. I send out emails looking for some action. “D player looking for another D. An A-C relationship is out of my league. But I am comfortable with a D-C pairing.” Racquetball players are real swingers. The other day while trying to bend over and tie my shoes, I noticed some men on the next court. One guy had all the moves. Oh, he was definitely a player, even though he was a little overweight. But that’s my type. I feel I have a better chance because the competition
isn’t as great with the other singles. I decided to call him and see if he was interested in a match. We played for a few weeks, but it never got serious. (I always end up a loser in these relationships.) I’ve had some memorable low points in my racquetball career, both on live television. In l995, Sudsy Monchik, the No. 1 player in the country, crushed me 15-6. A respectable outcome, I thought, except that he was using a four-pound cast iron frying pan instead of a racquet. I also lost to my good friend Gary Baker who had just returned from Barcelona, where he finished No. 2 in the world competition ... for disabled athletes in wheelchairs. Both of those are true stories. I do love the game. I’m going to be 64 in a couple of months, and will continue playing despite what my knees are trying to tell me. Every time I lose to younger guys, they say I’m not considering how old I am. The older guys say I have potential. I can use that kind of encouragement, which is why I won’t play anyone my own age.
Dick Wolfsie is an author, columnist, and speaker. Contact him at wolfsie@aol.com.
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DISPATCHES » Kroger recalls pet food – The Kroger Co is recalling select packages of dog and cat foods at some of its retail stores because the products may contain a fungusproduced carcinogen found in some corn. The recall involves certain bags of Pet Pride Cat Food, Pet Pride Tasty Blend Poultry & Seafood Cat Food, Pet Pride Kitten Formula Food, Old Yeller Chunk Dog Food, Kroger Value Cat Food, Kroger Value Chunk Dog Food. Indiana was one of the states included in the recall. -www.msnbc.com » Dogs are not colorblind – Dogs do see in color. However, they see differently than most people do and are less able to distinguish between colors. Veterinary ophthalmologists have determined that dogs see like people who have red/green color blindness. Dogs’ eyes have receptors for blue and green shades, but not for red shades. As a result, it appears that dogs cannot easily distinguish between yellow, green and red, but they can identify different shades of blue, purple and gray. -www.petwave.com
24 | December 28, 2010
Buckle up your pup: Simple safety practices may save your dog’s life and your own COMMENTARY By John Mikesell The dangers of driving with your dog unrestrained are numerous and hardly hypothetical. In the United States alone, thousands of deaths of dogs, drivers and passengers are attributed to unrestrained dogs each year, in addition to what must be an unimaginable number of injury accidents and fender benders Even a low-speed crash may turn an unrestrained dog into a missile, possibly ejecting the animal out through the windshield or side window, or perhaps injuring passenger or driver, resulting in further loss of control of the vehicle. The Automobile Association of America estimates that a 10-pound dog will exert approximately 500 pounds of pressure in a 50-mileper-hour crash, and an 80-pound dog will exert 2,400 pounds in a crash at 30 miles per hour. If a dog survives the impact, he will likely be injured and frightened, and may flee the scene and risk being struck by another vehicle or becoming lost. A small dog on the lap of the driver
in a crash is at risk of being crushed between the air bag and the driver. According to AAA, more than 30,000 accidents per year are caused by dogs riding in the front seat of a vehicle. As surprising as this number is, this only includes dog owners insured by AAA. Here’s what you can do: • Buy a well-fitted harness/car safety belt product and use it every time your dog is in the car. • Put your dog in a well-secured crate in the car. • Don’t keep small dogs on your lap while you drive. NO EXCEPTIONS! • Make sure your dog always has ID tags with your current contact information on them. It’s best if there is more than one contact person/number on the tag John Mikesell, owner of Izzy’s Place, A dog Bakery in Carmel, can be reached at john.mikesell@att.net.
Even a low-speed crash may turn an unrestrained dog into a missile. F U N D
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I M A M C O N E M E L O N E A D D A R E S D A C L E F S T O V E T S E E R B E R S I A P L A N E I R E S N E A P G A R Y
Answers to BUILD THE WORDS: AULD LANG SYNE, MATT PAINTER, SNOWMAN, ELI LILLY, LAW AND ORDER SVU Answers to HOOSIER HODGEPODGE: Topics: DECIMALS, EXPONENTS, FRACTIONS, INTEGERS, PERCENTS, SQUARE ROOTS; Mammals: DOLPHIN, OTTER, SEAL, WALRUS, WHALE; Tokens: DOG, IRON, SHOE, TOP HAT; Cities: TELL CITY, TERRE HAUTE, TIPTON; Actresses: LOMBARD, LONG; Coach: WILSON Answers to INDIANA WORDSMITH CHALLENGE: HARMONY, DYNAMO, RANDOM, ADORN, HANDY, HARDY, HOARD, HORNY, HYDRO, MANOR, MAYOR, MORAY, MYNAH, NOMAD, RADON, RANDY, RAYON, AHOY, ARMY, DARN, DORM, DRAM, DRAY, HAND, HARD, HARM, HORN, HYMN, MANY, MAYO, MOAN, MORN, MYNA, NARY, NORM, ROAD, ROAM, ROAN, YARD, YARN
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Pets of the week
Isaac is a three-year-old male fawn and white Boxer mix. Isaac is a friendly boy who really looks forward to his daily walks and enjoys the one on one attention he receives from staff and volunteers. He is kind of a quiet guy and would love to find a family who will take him to obedience school so he can learn new commands (he already knows ‘sit’). Isaac is playful and loves toys and sometimes he gets a bit too excited and jumpy, so until he gets the training he needs and learns proper doggie manners, he would be best suited in a home with teenage children. Dooney is a two-year-old female orange and white tabby DSH. Dooney is a very affectionate girl who enjoys snuggling with other cats and has made some really good kitty friends at the shelter. She would be happy to find a home where she can be a loving family pet and leave shelter life behind because she has been here for several months. Dooney would do well in any home and she is part of this month’s promotion Homeward Bound for the Holidays that includes a special adoption package and reduced fee. For more information on these and other animals at the Humane Society, call 317-773-4974 or go to www.hamiltonhumane.com
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Crossword 1
2
3
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14
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Find the items in the puzzle going up, down, sideways or diagonally and list them. Each letter is used no more than once. Answers below.
53
38
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45 48
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Across 1. Strange Law #1: Within ___ hours of eating garlic, a person may not enter a movie house, theater or ride a public streetcar at 78-Across 5. Orange soda maker 10. Nur Allah Islamic Center leader 14. Bear seen at Holcomb Observatory 15. Claude’s restaurant partner in Indy 16. Alexander’s Ice Cream treat 17. Requirement 18. Strange Law #2: It is forbidden to eat ___ in the park at 68-Across 20. Great American Songbook Foundation Executive Director, ___ Anne Sadler 22. S-shaped molding in a Shoopman home 23. Do arithmetic at Durbin Elementary School 24. Item repaired at Kimmel’s 27. Indianapolis International Airport posting: Abbr. 28. Hi-___ monitor 29. Northern Indiana city where 54-Across is the law 32. Scotch’s partner at Lake House Tavern 34. Bob & Tom news director, Kristi ___
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Indiana Wordsmith Challenge
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Hoosier Hodgepodge 9
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35. “Darn it!” 37. ISO staff symbol 41. Hoosier Park tresses 43. Victory Field single or double 45. Dooley O’Tooles kitchen appliance 46. Denison Parking place 47. Bunched hair 49. “Get the picture?” 50. Taylor’s Bakery specialty 54. Strange Law #3: It is illegal for ___ to threaten to cut off kids’ ears at 29-Across 56. Some UIndy degrees 59. Hr. division 60. Indianapolis Opera solo 61. Circle segment in Westfield HS math class 62. Add to the pot at Indiana Downs! Casino 64. 747, e.g. 68. Marion County city where 18-Across is the law (2 wds.) 72. Angers 73. Sicilian volcano 74. Stalin’s predecessor 75. Kind of tide 76. Appear to be 77. Affirmatives 78. Northwest Indiana city where 1-Across is the law Down 1. Part of UNCF
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A U U Y M T P E A E N P E
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6 Math Topics
4 Monopoly Game Tokens
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5 Marine Mammals
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Using the letters in the name "Andy Mohr," create as many common words of 4+ letters as you can in 20 minutes. No proper nouns or foreign words. Answers below.
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__________________ __________________ __________________ __________________ __________________ __________________ __________________ __________________ __________________ __________________ __________________
30+: Word wizard 20-29: Brainiac 10-19: Not too shabby <10: Try again next week
Build the word 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 parenthesis. The dashes indicate the number of letters in each Indiana Wordsmith Challenge answer. Each segment is used only once. Answers below. ANDO AUL DLA ELIL ILLY LAW MAT NGS NTER RDE RSVU SNO TPAI WMAN YNE
3 Indiana "T" Cities
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1) New Year's Eve Song (4) ___ ___ ___ ___
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2) Purdue Coach (3) 2 Ft. Wayne Actresses
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1 New IU Football Coach
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4) Indy Pharmaceutical Company (2) ___ ___ ___
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5) Long-Running Wednesday Night Drama on NBC (4)
2. Black-and-white cookie at Marsh 3. Computer operator 4. Ted’s Montana Grill salad bar veggie 5. Indiana cornfield sound 6. Genetic initials 7. Golden rule preposition 8. Military blockades 9. Regarding this point 10. Indianapolis hockey team 11. Carmel Dental Group tooth 12. Battery terminal 13. Patches up 19. Honey drink
21. Persian potentates 25. Neighbor of Wash. 26. Carve in stone 29. North Meridian Street shade trees 30. Indy Dance Academy jump 31. French Lick Casino bingo relative 33. Be in the cast of a CRT show 36. Big Boy Hobbies buy 38. Misplace 39. “...happily ___ after” 40. Katz & Korin Attorneys charges 42. Catchall abbr. 44. Carmel Symphony Orchestra
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___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___ ___
horn 45. Perform at PT’s Showclub 48. Way off, like Evansville build the words 51. Asian nurse 52. Befitting an emperor 53. Main dish at Eddie Merlot’s 55. Rolling up hay 56. “___ in Toyland” 57. Narrow mountain ridge 58. Part of an act for the Mud Creek Players 63. A long, long time
___ ___ ___
65. Miller’s Country Carpet calculation 66. In the vicinity 67. Catch sight of 69. Former IU football coach, ___ Cameron 70. Compete 71. Crane Naval Base rank: Abbr.
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“Homeless Youth in Indiana.” The Indiana Youth Institute. Issue Brief: Dec. 2009.
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28 | December 28, 2010
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