February 18, 2014

Page 1

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Awarded for Valor Fire department officers were recognized at the annual ZFD Ball / P9

More money for downtown façade grant / P3

School board update / P8

Residential Customer Local ECRWSS

Carmel, IN Permit No. 713 U.S. Postage Paid Presorted Standard

A Women’s HeArt HeAltH event

Dedicate one night to an important fight–heart disease. RSVP by calling 317.688.2828 or visit iuhealth.org/northheart ©2014 IU Health 02/14 HY02214_0809

Humane Society Fur Ball to help animals / P11


2

February 18, 2014

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com


February 18, 2014

COMMUNITY

On the Cover

ZPD Officer Adam Harper stands with Zionsville residents Peter & Sarah Schlifke. Harper was awarded a meritorious service citation for delivering the Schlifkes’ baby girl in September. (Photo Illustration by Zach Ross) Founded March 20 2012, at Zionsville, IN Vol. II, No. 45 Copyright 2013. Current Publishing, LLC All Rights Reserved. 30 South Range Line Road Carmel, IN 46032 317.489.4444 info@youarecurrent.com The views of the columnists in Current in Zionsville are their own and do not necessarily reflect the positions of this newspaper.

Cedar

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Area where the Façade Grants can be used.

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How to apply for a façade grant:

• Complete and submit application • This can be found at zionsvile-in.gov • Get quotes for grant-appropriate portions of the project • Get material samples where possible • Review application with a committee representative • Meet on the building site with an architect/committee member • Perhaps get more quotes and material samples • Present the project to the ZARC committee for approval

ON THE WEB

Girls’ Night Out — The Zionsville Education Foundation’s inaugural “Girls’ Night Out” fundraiser will be held from 7 to 10 p.m. Feb. 28 at The Palomino Ballroom in Zionsville. The event is a change of pace and locale from the previous daytime fashion show. Tickets are $75 each and include heavy hors d’oeuvres, a specialty beverage, a silent auction, entertainment and inspiration. All proceeds benefit the ZEF’s Fall Classroom Grant cycle. For more information or to purchase tickets, visit ZionsvilleEducationFoundation.org or call 733-4805. Planning commission — The Zionsville Planning Commission will meet at 7 p.m. Feb. 19 inside Town Hall. The group will be discussing the construction of Hat World in Creekside Corporate Park.

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Current in Zionsville reaches 100 percent of the households in 46077 by U.S. Postal Service every Tuesday. For more information about how to reach that audience, call Rob Schaefer at 677.5244 or e-mail him at rds@youarecurrent.com.

Popular St.

First St.

Want to advertise?

The town’s facade grant program will allow shop owners to update exterior building designs, such as windows and doors.

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www.facebook.com/currentinzionsville www.twitter.com/CI_Zionsville www.instagram.com/currentzionsville

At the February Zionsville Town Council meeting, the council approved an increased budget for the Zionsville Business Architectural Review Committee. The committee will see a $25,000 budget increase from 2013, from $50,000 to $75,000. This money is granted to small business owners in an effort to help beautify Zionsville’s downtown. These funds come from the town’s food and beverage account. Former recipients of these façade grants include Lowder Insurance, which received $11,108 in 2011, and Cobblestone Grill, which received $12,723 in 2013. This year, the committee has already approved a $25,550 grant for the Villagio restaurant. A pending grant of $34,308 is appropriated for the 305 S. Main St. building that will soon become Scoops Ice Cream and Gelato. “I thought [the committee] needed to get more,” said Councilwoman Candace Ulmer, following the council’s approval. Councilman Steve Mundy said this is a great program to help Zionsville’s businesses thrive. “It’s very worthwhile,” he said. “But you don’t want to spend all your budget on one project.” Mundy recommended the group move from its previous 50/50 matching program to a leaner budget of granting perhaps 30 or 40 percent to a project, to give money to more businesses instead of just one or two each year. The façade grant application currently states, “The façade grant program provides matching grants of up to 50% of the project cost for qualifying projects with no maximum cap.” It also states that these grants should be used to provide a pleasing aesthetic for business owners and consumers, but that these are not maintenance grants. To be approved, these grants must “encourage the enhancement of historic or distinct architectural features.”

3

DISPATCHES

By Sophie Pappas • sophie@youarecurrent.com

Second

Join our community

More money for façade grants

Third St.

Have a news tip? Want to submit a calendar event? Have a photograph to share? Call Sophie Pappas at 489.4444 ext. 208 or e-mail her at sophie@ youarecurret.com. You may also submit information on our website, currentzionsville.com. You can find the Contact Us form under About Us in the upper-left corner. Remember our news deadline is typically eight days prior to publication.

Fourth St.

Contact the Editor

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

Eagle Extravaganza — Eagle Elementary PTO is hosting its annual Eagle Extravaganza beginning at 11 a.m. March 7. The Eagle Auction and Pizza Dinner raises funds for the PTO. Price is $3 per person, with a maximum amount of $18 per family. To make a reservation online, visit EaglePTO.iVolunteer.com. Online reservations will close Feb. 28. The PTO is currently accepting more silent auction items for the Extravaganza. School clinics — Zionsville elementary schools are asking for any gently used clothes to be donated to the nurses’ offices. Items such as girls’ and boys’ pants are helpful for accidents, especially with the younger students. To make a donation, please visit any nurse’s clinic or the school office. Zionsville lacrosse — Spring Registration for Zionsville lacrosse teams is now open for boys and girls in grades 3 to 8. The registration deadline is Feb. 22. To register, visit www.ZLAX.org. Beef & Boards auditions — Beef & Boards Dinner Theatre will hold auditions for child performers on Feb. 22 and for adult performers on Feb. 24. Roles are available for all of the theatre’s spring and summer shows. For details on how to register for an audition visit www.beefandboards.com.

Brooks in Zionsville

Primary candidates

DVD Review - Game of Thrones

Congresswoman Susan W. Brooks (R-IN5) will hold her second 2014 “Connect with your Congresswoman One-on-One” event on from 4:30 to 6 p.m. Feb. 20 at the Hussey-Mayfield Memorial Public Library. For more details visit www.currentzionsville.com On the Web tab.

On Feb. 7, the final group of May 6 primary candidates filed at the Boone County Clerks Office. For a complete list of the Zionsville residents running on May 6, visit www.currentzionsville.com On the Web tab.

Say what you will about author George R.R. Martin and HBO’s adaptation of his epic fantasy series, but they’re willing to take big storytelling chances. That narrative brashness continues in season three, which sees the entire continent of Westeros split into different warring factions. It’s full of surprises and unexpected character development, with fan favorites brought low and the hissable Lannister clan seemingly triumphant. Read more at currentnightandday. com

Brooks

Letter to the editor Steve Gilliam, the Division Chief of EMS, with the Zionsville Fire Department teamed together with the American Heart Association in support of House Bill 1290. This bill would make it mandatory for all high school seniors to complete a basic CPR course before graduation. Gilliam wrote a letter to the public about why everyone should support this bill. To read his letter, visit www.currentzionsville.com On the Web tab.

District convention International Director Judy Hankom will be in Zionsville, for the annual Multiple District 25-C convention. The convention is at 9 a.m. Feb. 22, inside St. Alphonsus Catholic Church. The Zionsville Lions Club will Brooks host this convention. For more details visit www.currentzionsville.com On the Web tab.


4

February 18, 2014

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

TOMORROW NIGHT! FIRST U.S. TOUR! PRINTING PARTNERS CLASSICAL SERIES

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Visit our Great American Songbook Gallery, Basile Café and Basile Gift Shop. More events our website. FAMILY SHOWS DELIVERED BY THE INDIANAPOLIS STAR

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February 18, 2014

COMMUNITY

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

5

Abatement numbers revealed By Sophie Pappas • sophie@youarecurrent.com

Hat World, Inc. is proposed for the Creekside Corporate Park landsite. (File photo)

When people drive by your house and say “Wow!”

These are the proposed tax abatements for Hat World, Inc. Annual Tax

Abatement $194,438

Real Estate

$418,810

(note: land value is not eligible for 50% abatement)

Personal Property

$78,031

(note: only new personal property is eligible for 50% abatement)

$15,350

Total Tax Paid = $287,052 Abatement = $209,789

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abatement is estimated to be $194,438 per year. The personal property abatement is estimated to be $15,350 per year. A public hearing to discuss the tax abatements is scheduled for 6 p.m. March 3 at town hall during the town council’s meeting.

Shelborne Rd.

Since the Jan. 10 announcement that Hat World, Inc. will be moving to a site at Creekside Corporate Park, talks of tax Business abatements and incentives have been looming. Hat World is planning for a 150,000-squarefoot corporate office, which will create approximately 450 jobs. Annuals salaries for these jobs will average $52,000. The town’s publicist, Kate Snedecker, stated that the project will have a “tremendous local economic impact.” The Zionsville Town Council approved fee waivers for road impact fees, sewer connection fees, building ILP fee and sign permit fee at its Feb. 3 meeting. These waivers come to an approximate value of $264,000. Last week, the town officially released the estimated figures for just how much money Hat World will save with the assistance of tax What is a tax abatements. abatement? A tax Two forms of tax holiday is a temabatements are being porary reduction proposed: a real estate or elimination of a tax. Governments abatement and a perusually create tax sonal property abateholidays as incenment. Both of these tives for business are good for 10 years. investment. The real estate

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February 18, 2014

COMMUNITY

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

Wrapped in Love diaper drive By Kathi Reichert • news@currentzionsville.com

ANNUAL NJS TOES ON THE GO! FEBRUARY 18 - APRIL 30

Come in and enjoy one of our great pedicures during this time and you will be entered to for a chance to win a ultimate cabanas pedicure.

Spring at NjS!

New Aveda spring makeup, OPI & CND spring polishes & scarves have arrived!

Join us for our 20th Birthday Celebration! njsstudio.com |

facebook.com/pages/NJS-Studio-Inc

70 E Pine St. Zionsville, IN 46077 | 317.873.6785

Steve Schwartz, owner of Ballerinas and Bruisers, has made many connections with his customers through the years, but charity none compares to a recent chat with a customer. It was from this one conversation that the Wrapped in Love diaper drive was conceived. While speaking with Dr. Chuck Dietzen, founder of Timmy Global Heath, Schwartz learned of the dire conditions many families at the Benjamin Bloom Children’s Hospital in San Salvador, El Salvador are forced to endure. Dietzen had just returned from El Salvador on one of his many mission trips. He observed patients’ parents reusing disposable diapers because they are both unaffordable and often unavailable. Schwartz recalled the story he heard with sadness. “He was a little disturbed at what transpired there. It was moms wringing out their disposal diapers so they could reuse them. And there was a little boy sitting at the entrance of the hospital with a diaper that had to have been three days full,” Schwartz said. Currently, disposal diapers in El Salvador cost $1, when most of the families there earn, on average, $1 to $4 per day. Schwartz’s heart went out to these families, who inspired him to organize the Wrapped in Love diaper drive to benefit the People Helping

Wrapped in Love diaper drive Accepting donations of disposable diapers in ANY size and gift cards toward the purchase of new diapers from Target, Meijer or Costco Dates: Feb. 15 – March 1 Drop-off locations: • Ballerinas and Bruisers: 180 S. Main St., Zionsville • SoHo Café & Gallery: 620 S. Range Line Rd., Carmel Benefiting: People Helping People Network, www.phpnetwork.org, and the Benjamin Bloom Children’s Hospital in San Salvador, El Salvador

People Network and the families of the Bloom Children’s Hospital in El Salvador. “I was thrilled with his reaction,” said Dietzen. “It is great when you have people in your own community whom you can come home and tell what you experienced, and have them grab onto it and say, ‘We’ll [help].’” Both Ballerinas and Bruisers in Zionsville and SoHo Café and Gallery in Carmel will be collecting packages of disposal diapers from Feb. 15 through March 1. Patrons can also donate gift cards from Target, Meijer or Costco to purchase diapers. The People Helping People Network will send the diaper donations, along with a larger effort to bring urgent medical supplies to Bloom Children’s Hospital in El Salvador. The goal is to fill one large shipping container to be sent in mid-March.

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February 18, 2014

COMMUNITY

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

7

Weaver moves to Anson

By Sophie Pappas • sophie@youarecurrent.com

Anson will see a flood of new job opportunities for Zionsville and Whitestown residents this year with the opening of Meijer, Business and now with the proposed opening of Weaver Popcorn Co. Weaver Popcorn Co. is a Noblesville-based company that plans to move into a new research and development facility in the up-and-coming area of Anson. The company expects to spend $18 million to make improvements and buy equipment for an existing site that overlooks Interstate 65. Having operated for more than 80 years, the

company stated that it would move 50 corporate jobs from Noblesville to Anson, and add more than 40 full-time jobs. Most of these new positions will be in the manufacturing department and will pay an average of $22 an hour. Bryan Brackemyre, executive director of the Boone County Economic Development Corporation, has recommended that Whitestown offer Weaver a personal property tax abatement that would save the popcorn maker more than $1.2 million over 10 years. The site is expected to open by mid-May. For information on how to apply for jobs at Weaver, visit www.PopWeaver.com. The stable for the Gregory House was located at 420 W. Hawthorne St. The owner, Frank Gregory, created the blocks used to build the stable. Many more of these blocks can be seen on buildings in Zionsville. The stable was built in 1905 and remodeled in 1939. It was turned into a home in the 1970’s.

Back in the Day

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February 18, 2014

COMMUNITY

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

School Board of Trustees update news@currentzionsville.com

The Zionsville Community School Board of Trustees met on Feb. 10. Below are a few of the meeting’s highlights. Education Make-up snow days Superintendent Dr. Scott Robison said that he is currently meeting with teachers and staff to discover the best ways to make up snow days. Options include extending school hours or using electronic means. “The aim is to keep us out of June,” Robison said. He said he has received many comments from students and parents asking that school not be prolonged into June, due to planned international travel and summer camps. Robison said that he hopes to follow the “Ohio model” of delivering content to students on a Thursday, and then giving them an entire week to complete the assigned work electronically. This would give students a long lead time and allow teachers to be available for questions. Robison will present his final recommendation for make-up days at the board’s Feb. 24 meeting. He hopes that the make-up days will occur in March. Service projects The board recognized fifth-grader Tara Harmon from Mrs. Ostendorf’s class at Zionsville West Middle School. Harmon raised money to provide school uniforms to students in Indianapolis Public Schools. She received a $500 grant from

the Colts and a $750 grant from Walmart Corporation in order to purchase the uniforms. “Not everybody is able to go home and have dinner on the table or have clean clothes every day,” Harmon Harmon said. “[Service projects] can actually be really fun to do, and they really help other people, too.” DOE grant The board approved a decision to submit a technology grant application to the Indiana Department of Education. This grant money would be used to purchase additional laptop computers for middle school and high school students to rent. This is part of the “One to One” computer to student program. Sixty percent of students currently purchase their own laptops, with five percent of students receiving free rentals due to economic hardship. This leaves 35 percent of students who need to be able to rent a laptop for the duration of their school days. Currently, a laptop or netbook is required to complete schoolwork in the middle and high schools. Smartphones and tablets are not capable of being used for schoolwork.


February 18, 2014

COMMUNITY

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

9

Summer legs are made in the winter!

Retiree Richard Ford (holding award) stands with the present-day ZFD deputies. Ford was rewarded for his 40 years of service.

ZPD Officer Adam Harper visited baby Emily Schlifke at the hospital after he delivered her in her parents’ Colony Court home on Sept. 2, 2013.

Cindy Baldwin of SD Advertising stands with Deputy Chief Jeff Beam, Deputy Chief Brian Miller and ZFD Chief James VanGorder. SD Advertising was acknowledged as the ZFD Business Partner of the Year.

Now is the time to start planning for your summer vacation and all those days at the pool. If you’re tired of dealing with your varicose veins, call Indiana Vein Specialists for an evaluation. Summer will be here before you know it, call now.

317.661.4021 Justin Pataky (second from left) was presented with the Firefighter of the Year award. (Submitted photos)

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February 18, 2014

COMMUNITY

Current in Zionsville

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Lye soap from ashes and bacon Commentary by Ward Deglar

Last week when I told you that one of my jobs as a kid was to clean ashes out of the furnace, I failed to mention the ash pile Plain Talk in the backyard. Everybody in town had an ash pile. Some of those ashes went for garden fertilizer in the spring, and some of them got sprinkled on driveways after winter ice storms. Dad decided to use ours to make soap. Turns out Mom had been saving bacon grease all during the war. I think it was used to make ammunition or something. And even after the fighting was over she continued to save it, pouring it into empty coffee cans. It was while she was muttering about what to do with all that grease that Dad got the soap idea. Laundry soap, he called it. Good old-fashioned lye soap. According to a recipe he had found in the back of his grandmother’s Bible, bacon grease and ashes were two of the things you needed to make lye soap.

I don’t remember all the steps in this alchemy, but part of it was filtering water through the ashes and then mixing it with the grease and some other stuff in a pot and cooking it over an open fire. I am sure the open fire was necessary because at one point the whole mess smelled so bad it would have driven us out of the house. After it had bubbled and been stirred for hours, Dad poured the whole shebang into a wooden frame he had made and set it aside to cool. Later he cut the slab of soap into bars and presented them to Mom. I think she tried one once. I remember she complained about blisters on her hands. After that she went back to her Oxydol. Dad never mentioned the lye soap again. Ward Degler lives in Zionsville with his wife and dog. He is author of “The Dark Ages of My Youth ... and Times More Recent.”You may contact him at ward.degler@gmail.com.

School Board Discusses Land Swap – At their Feb. 10 meeting the Zionsville School Board of Trustees agreed to allow trustee Jim Longest to continue working alongside the Town of Zionsville in the Creekside Corporate Park land swap. In a tentative agreement, the town will deed Jennings Field property to ZCS in exchange for Creekside Corporate Park land. Jennings Field will remain as is, with no new buildings constructed on the field. ZCS initially purchased the land at Creekside Corporate Park to build a bus maintenance facility. “We are very close in these final negotiations,” Longest said.

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February 18, 2014

COMMUNITY

Current in Zionsville

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11

By Colin Henry news@currentzionsville.com This year the Humane Society for Boone County will celebrate Cover Story its seven-year anniversary and raise money for its animals during its first Fur Ball, which will take place at 5:30 p.m. on Feb. 22 inside the Golf Club of Indiana. Founded by a group of local resident volunteers, the Humane Society has become a resource caring for homeless, lost and displaced domestic animals. All of this has been possible despite having no building to work in. All of the proceeds from the Fur Ball, a Mardi Gras-themed event, will go toward Operation Shelter, a building fund to raise the more than $1.5 million needed to construct or buy a place to house the animals. So far, the group has raised $300,000. The facility for Operation Shelter is expected to cover seven acres at a still-undetermined location. It will include a dog park large enough to support local residents and their dogs. “We can’t say for sure now, but it would be our dream,” Humane Society President Susan Austin said. “We would love to have a place for the dogs to get plenty of socialization, exercise and interaction with other animals. It makes them much better pets in the home because a happy and tired dog is a good dog.”

HISTORY OF CARING

In 2007 the group began with contributions and volunteers. Until now, these volunteers have temporarily fostered the animals. They take care of their day-to-day

Forest is one of the many Humane Society animals in Boone County, waiting to find a loving home. He is an active dog, and will need some training but president of the group, Susan Austin, said he is a fun-loving animal and will make a great family dog.

Siggy, Bill and Dan are just a few of the felines looking for a new home. They currently live with a Humane Society volunteer. (Submitted photos)

needs until the animals can be found a suitable home. “Our volunteers foster, feed and house the pets, and run them to veterinary appointments for general health and to be spayed or neutered,” Austin said. The organization currently has more than 60 active volunteers, all whom register on the group’s Website. “The Website has helped immensely because it is a good link for people to help the animals,” Austin said. “As long as the pets find a good home, that is what it’s really about.” The Humane Society’s Website is also linked to PetFinder.com, a searchable database to help bring homeless pets to new

owners. The site has a directory of more than 14,000 animal shelters and adoption organizations in the U.S., Canada and Mexico. “We use Pet Finder, which I believe is one of the, if not the, biggest listing of all the in-shelter animals. We are a part of that and if people can’t find what they are looking for with us they can use the proximity search of the area [for another shelter] and find what they are looking for,” said Austin. Austin said she hopes the Fur Ball will raise enough funds for the group to build a place for the animals, and take some of the burden off the volunteers. “Then maybe we can find all of the animals a permanent home,” she said.

Location:

CAUSE:

COST:

The Cardinal Room at Golf Club of Indiana, 6905 S. 525 East, Lebanon

All proceeds will benefit “Operation Shelter.”

Tickets are $50 per person, $375 for an eight-person table and $425 for a 10-person table. For reservations call 765485-8888. Payment can be made with a check addressed to Humane Society, P.O. Box 708, Lebanon, IN 46052.

“We would love to have a place for the dogs to get plenty of socialization, exercise and interaction with other animals. It makes them much better pets in the home because a happy and tired dog is a good dog.”

To volunteer with the Humane Society for Boone County, visit www.HSFBC.org. Harvick is another happy pup waiting to find his “forever home.” For details on how to adopt an animal, visit petfinder.com.


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February 18, 2014

VIEWS

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

FROM THE B A C KS H O P

FROM THE EDITOR

Could this be good news?

I hate snow days

The Wall Street Journal, in tandem with NBC News, recently released results of national polling it did, and the results are at once staggering and encouraging. How can that be? Read on. Pollsters asked Americans if our nation is better, stagnant or worse off since President Barack Obama took office. An unthinkable (even to us) 68 percent of respondents said the president has steered the United States to a position that is worse than when he captured the Oval Office in the aftermath of George W. Bush’s bungled administration. Obama is in his sixth of eight years as our leader. It’s also amazing and heartening, the fact that 81 percent of respondents disapprove of the job Congress is doing and twice as many among those polled stated they hold negative views of the Republican Party. Good news, it seems, but for a voting community that needs a serious reset. Maybe it’s under way. Maybe the independents are finally good and fed up with the ineffectiveness of our president and the representatives and senators on both sides of the aisle. Is this the leading edge of a sea change? Are the independents coming to the fore in a meaningful way? We certainly would celebrate that. ••• In the Feb. 25 edition of Current, you’ll find a copy of our annual summer camps guide, which we hope will prove helpful, if not enlightening, to you. In addition to useful content from our writers and experts, there will be highlights of multiple opportunities for kids’ summertime enrichment. Attendant to that is something about which we’re extremely enthused: Current Kids’ Day at the Center for the Performing Arts on March 1. We’re sponsoring the event, in conjunction with the CFTPA, at which there’ll be family activities galore, including back-to-back performances of “The Cat in the Hat.” Join us, won’t you? More information may be found at www.thecenterpresents.org. Brian Kelly, publisher, and Steve Greenberg, general manager, are co-owners of Current Publishing, LLC. Write them at info@ youarecurrent.com.

Wanna write us a letter? You can do it a couple ways. E-mailing it to info@currentzionsville.com is the quickest and easiest. The old-fashioned way is to snail mail it to Current in Noblesville, 30 S. Range Line Road, Carmel, IN 46032. Keep letters to 200 words max (we may make exceptions), and be sure to include your home ZIP code and a daytime number for verification.

Kill him!

Commentary by Terry Anker

Even as we recover from our collective disappointment that the big game didn’t provide us with adequate thrills, one is brought to contemplate the modern ethos surrounding the grand combat that is contemporary football. As we sit and listen to commentators compare these young athletes’ prowess to all manner of ancient warriors, the hyperbole is both amusing and concerning. Just this week a purveyor of such things announced the looming exhibition boxing match of a pair of celebrities – or at least notorious humans. The promoter is bringing together George Zimmerman, the low-rent, armed neighborhood watch protagonist who shot an unarmed 15-year-old boy, and Earl Simmons, the multi-platinum-selling, bankrupt deadbeat dad of 12 (more paternity claims are being litigated), felon and movie star who presently calls himself DMX. Although there isn’t enough room in this column, perhaps in the entire newspaper, to fully come to grips with these men’s guilt or innocence against the various social expectations they have confronted, one can

certainly imagine the PT Barnum-like spectacle this display will generate. Mr. Simmons summarily expressed his bravado by proclaiming in an expletive-laced tirade that he would beat Mr. Zimmerman to near death and complete his humiliation by evacuating himself on the body. Mr. Zimmerman, in his own display of modern manhood, has been seeking a boxing match like this one for some time and has been shopping for an opponent most likely to generate attention, and thus cash for himself. Please forgive the use of rather coarse language in describing the interaction between these two humans; however, its expression printed here barely exposes the vitriol of what has actually been said. Is this an important expression of rage in our society, or simply unfettered and devolved pandering? Terry Anker is an associate editor of Current Publishing, LLC. You may e-mail him at terry@currentincarmel. com.

Q U O T E  O F   T H E  W EEK The only way to get smarter is by playing a smarter opponent, learn not to be deceived.

- JR Capablanca

I hate snow days. Between my already busy schedules, snow days mean I then have to add, “taking care of little brother” to my list of daily duties. When Yianni, age 11, is home from school because of frigid temperatures and that lovely mixture of ice and snow, I am left to deal with his preteen angst (and odor) while the parentals are away at work. In spite of my personal complex with snow days, I must say that I was more than pleased when I heard Zionsville Community School Superintendent Dr. Scott Robison’s words on how Zionsville schools hope to make up for lost time in the classroom. Robison said that he will likely recommend that the ZCS Board of Trustees petition the Indiana Department of Education in order to make up snow days via electronic learning. Electronic learning, or E-Days, implies that students would be assigned homework or readings to complete over the course of a week, from the comfort of home. They would use their laptops to complete their work, and also have school hours to contact their teachers with questions. If the schools begin implementing E-Days in March or April, this would allow students to be released for summer vacation before the first of June. Parents and students everywhere will leap for joy if they are told that family travel or summer camps will not be disturbed. And truly, not even this big sister who hates it when her little brother is home from school, would want to shorten summer break. After all, summer break is nearly as sacred as a snow day! Robison will finalize his recommendation for the board and present it at the Feb. 24 meeting. Sophie Pappas is the managing editor of Current in Zionsville. You may e-mail her at sophie@ youarecurrent.com

B EL I EVE  I T ! Our nation has all sorts of arcane, nonsensical laws on the books. Each week, we’ll share one with you. In New Jersey if you have been convicted of driving while intoxicated, you may never again apply for personalized license plates.

Source: dumblaws.com


February 18, 2014

VIEWS

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

Showing our Kentucky side

Commentary by Danielle Wilson

As I approach my seven-year anniversary with Current, I’ve been revisiting some of my most “famous” columns. Here’s the one that forever changed my husband’s identity. humor Pardon me, but my Kentucky is showing. One night, you see, as I lay in bed with my sound machine at half blast, I heard what sounded like a small critter shuffling behind me. Squirrel in the chimney, I thought, and cranked the noise to “Prop Plane.” Moments later, the scratching shifted, and I determined it was coming from directly above my head, from the attic. The weird clawing continued, so I went to get my husband (who I will hereinafter call “Doo” in reference to Loretta Lynn’s husband). Doo came upstairs and confirmed that something was definitely up there, but felt there was no need to fret. I eventually fell asleep, but at 4:30 a.m., I awoke to more creepy pawing. Dang nabbit! When I went outside to take a gander, I couldn’t see anything at first. Then a circular shape with two pointy ears came into focus, daring me to do something about his uninvited presence. Naturally, I hightailed it back to safety. At first light, Doo climbed up to attic with a broom and came face-to-face with our perp, a big mother of a raccoon. Doo ordered me outside; he would attempt to scare the varmint out onto the roof. No good. The ‘coon hunkered down

between the joists. “I’ll be back,” Doo shouted as he sped off in the truck, covered in insulation and sweat. Minutes later Doo returned, now armed with a pellet gun. He again entered the attic, ready to go all Deliverance on the critter. Out on the front yard, I heard Pop! Pop!, and then Doo hollerin’ “I got him!” Though he couldn’t find a body, we proudly claimed success. At 11:30 pm, however, our worst nightmare was confirmed. The Bourne Raccoon was alive! Scratch, scratch, shuffle, scratch. With the kids asleep, Doo grabbed his gun and headed into the fray once more, while I sprinted outside. Pop! Pop, pop, pop. Silence. Then Doo came bounding out the door in nothing but a pair of cut-off shorts, yellin’ that he’d nailed the sucker, while I stood barefoot in a bathrobe. How Butcher Holler was this scene? Me and Doo, half-naked at midnight, trying to kill a ‘coon with a shotgun? All that was missing was a baby on the hip! A big fat apology to neighbors who were lured to their windows by our backwoods shenanigans. We promise to keep our Kentucky better hidden next time. Peace out, y’all.

Danielle Wilson is a contributing columnist. You may e-mail her at danielle@currentincarmel.com.

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February 18, 2014

VIEWS

Current in Zionsville

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Snooze dog

Commentary by Dick Wolfsie

Something curious is happening to me. I hope it’s nothing to be too concerned about. I’m not napping as much as I used to. For humor most of my life, if I was on the couch watching a TV show, I’d nod off within five minutes. But a couple of weeks back, I made it through the entire Super Bowl wide awake. Not even Peyton Manning can say that. This past month I did not take a single nap. Even the dog wondered what happened to our siesta. He kept following me around the house as if to say, “Hey, I’m 80 in dog years. It’s almost 2 p.m. Let’s stretch out and do this.” Napping has never been a problem. When I was a high school teacher, I actually fell asleep in class while proctoring a statewide exam. The kids were very polite. “I hope we didn’t disturb you yesterday, Mr. Wolfsie,” said one of my students. “We tried to cheat as quietly as we could.” Until recently, I could take a quick snooze while having dinner with friends, sitting at red lights, waiting for my wife to put on makeup, letting the dog relieve himself, and waiting at fast food drive-up windows and in checkout lines. Anywhere. Mary Ellen has never quite understood the value of a nap. Personally, I think women are afraid they’re going to miss something. Like a sale, or a beautiful sunset, or the plot of a movie. Men don’t

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care about stuff like this. My inability to nap recently came up during my recent annual physical, but there was some confusion in the conversation. “How are you sleeping?” asked Dr. Ross “It’s been rough,” I told him. “Sometimes I’m awake for 8 or 10 hours in a row.” “TEN HOURS?” he gasped. “We need to do some testing. How long has this been going on?” “Several months.” “Do you just toss and turn in bed?” “Well, I’m not in bed. That’s the problem. I’m out driving the car, watching the news or cooking. Sometimes I’m in the garage operating heavy machinery.” “This is very troubling, Dick. So you don’t sleep all night? “No, I sleep great at night. It’s all day that I can’t sleep.” Dr. Ross was very helpful once I straightened out the misunderstanding. He said I had to accept that men experience changes in their bodily rhythms as they mature. “I want you to go home this afternoon and really think about that,” he said. I told him I’d have to sleep on it. Which meant, of course, it would have to wait until that night.

Dick Wolfsie is an author, columnist, and speaker. Contact him at wolfsie@aol.com.

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February 18, 2014

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Current in Zionsville

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15

February 18, 2014 • currentnightandday.com

Symphony from Israel to stop in Carmel during tour

T H I S  W EEK

By Jay Harvey • editorial@youarecurrent.com Being in the middle of a 38-concert tour might seem like a heavy load for an orchestra conductor to undertake, but BoguMusic slaw Dawidow is used to the rigors of touring and international travel for the sake of music. In fact, the Haifa Symphony Orchestra that the Polish native will conduct in a concert at the Palladium Feb. 19 is just one of five orchestras he’s involved with on four continents. In addition to being principal guest conductor of this orchestra from northern Israel, Dawidow (pronounced “DAH-vee-doff”) continues to direct the Chopin Chamber Orchestra he founded in Krakow, Poland, in the 1980s. He also holds the post of principal guest conductor with the Bogotá (Colómbia) Symphony Orchestra. All that, plus regular work with orchestras in Palermo, Italy, and South Korea, makes for what could well be an exhausting schedule for a 60-year-old. “I don’t feel it,” Dawidow said about his age, as he prepared to travel to Elmira, N.Y., last week. His wife is accompanying him on this tour, as she does on most of his travels. “If you love this, you don’t feel your age,” he said. “I was born to be on the stage and I feel born again whenever I go onstage.” The main difficulty is adjusting to time-zone changes, he admitted in a telephone interview. “But if music is your life, you do everything you have to do to get into the music,” he said. His formative musical studies focused on conducting in his native Poland, but his career focus blossomed significantly in the early 1980s when he worked with and observed Leonard Bernstein in Vienna over seven to eight months. In the twilight of his career, Bernstein was giving concerts and making recordings with the Vienna Philharmonic. “He just showed me that these big guys are normal guys,” Dawidow said. “You can talk with them. And you can see how they work. That was something that can be the best in a young conductor’s experience. “ As for Bernstein’s influence on him, Dawidow said, “He has proved to me the value of looking for the simplicity in music. In performing music, in dealing with all the people involved, you keep in mind that everything starts from the classics.” Dawidow has emphasized known masterworks he loves in the programs he’s leading on the current tour. The Carmel audience will hear the overture to “Euryanthe” by Carl Maria von Weber; Ludwig van Beethoven’s Symphony No. 7

Let your spirits soar – The Indiana Wind Symphony presents a new show called “By Air or by Sea.” Conductor Charles Conrad CARMEL invites listeners to venture onto the high seas and soar through the open skies with music of the symphony as their vessel. The inspiring performance begins at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 22 at the Palladium in Carmel. Tickets start at $20. For more information, call 843-3800 or visit www.thecenterfortheperformingarts.org. Fishers on Tap – Warm your insides during this third annual beer tasting event from 4 to 7 p.m. Feb. 22 at 11313 USA Parkway, FISHERS featuring more than 60 Indiana craft beers. General admission is $40; designated drivers pay $20. Sponsored by the Fishers Rotary Club, proceeds will benefit local service agencies. For more information, please go to www.fishersrotary.org. Stone Soup Suppers – When you throw just the right ingredients together and let them simmer, the results can be just NOBLESVILLE downright delectable. At Nickel Plate Arts’ Stone Soup Suppers, thoughtful, fun, fascinating people together are brought together to have “artful conversations” about creativity, community, humanity and more over a delicious dinner of soup, salad, sides and, of course, dessert. The Feb. 20 supper will feature up-and-coming local artists discussing “What art in Hamilton County could be” from 7 to 9 p.m. Feb. 20 at the Nickel Plate Arts Campus, 107 S. Eighth St. Cost is $50. For more information, call 452-3690.

Boguslaw Dawidow of Poland will conduct the Haifa Symphony Orchestra during its performance at the Palladium on Feb. 19. (submitted photo)

in A major; and with soloist Roman Rabinovich, Tchaikovsky’s Piano Concerto No. 1 in B-flat minor. Audiences respond well to music they are likely to be familiar with, Dawidow said, and bringing programs consisting largely of wellknown compositions allows them to assess the quality of an orchestra they are unlikely to know. Israeli pianist Rabinovich will be the soloist in 20 of the Haifa orchestra’s U.S. concerts. At other stops he will play concertos by Beethoven and Rachmaninoff. The ensemble has another soloist on hand for the remainder of the concerts: violist Avshalom Sarid, who will be fea-

tured in a contemporary concerto by a fellow Israeli. Formed in 1950, the Haifa Symphony Orchestra offers a varied musical palette to audiences at its home base in northern Israel. It has bigband and opera affiliates, a Jewish music series, extensive children’s concerts and an educational component, in addition to its classical season. This is its first American tour. Haifa Symphony Orchestra • 7:30 p.m. Feb. 19 • The Palladium in Carmel • Tickets start at $15. • For more information call 843-3800 or visit www.thecenterfortheperformingarts.org.

Winter Carnival – Escape the winter cold and join Carey Ridge Elementary School, 16231 Carey Rd., for its annual Winter WESTFIELD Carnival from 6 to 9 p.m. Feb. 21. The Winter Carnival is a fun evening for the whole family and is open the community. This exciting event will include a silent auction, bounce house, snacks, carnival games, obstacle course and rock wall, cake walk and much more. Tickets will be required to enjoy the snacks and carnival games and all proceeds benefit Carey Ridge Elementary. For more information, contact Erika Haahr at 402-2260 or erika_haahr@yahoo.com. ZCHS Winter Concert – The Orchestras of Zionsville Community High School will perform in their annual winter concert series zionsVILLE at 7 p.m. Feb. 19 at the Zionsville Performing Arts Center, 1000 Mulberry St. For tickets and more information, visit http://cms.zcs.k12.in.us/zhs/


16

February 18, 2014

NIGHT & DAY

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

The Center Presents: ‘Frank Ferrante in an Evening with Groucho’ at the the Studio Theatre • This fast-paced 90-minute show features awardwinning actor, director and playwright Frank Ferrante’s hilarious portrayal of comedian Groucho Marx.• 1 Center Green, Carmel • Tonight at 7 p.m.; Feb. 22 at 3 and 7 p.m. • Call for ticket prices. • 8433800 • www.thecenterfortheperformingarts.org Winter Farmers Market in Carmel • Visit the Indiana Design Center to browse one of the largest winter markets in the state. Thirty vendors will offer meats, vegetables, baked goods, teas and more. • 200 S. Rangeline Rd., Carmel • 9 a.m. to noon. • Free • For more information, call Ron Carter at 710-0162.

saturday

Beef & Boards Presents: ‘Cats’ • Andrew Lloyd Webber’s musical phenomenon returns to Beef & Boards and the popular musical is enjoying its 25th anniversary in 2014. • 9301 Michigan Rd., Indianapolis • Tonight at 8 p.m.; Feb. 19 at 1 and 8 p.m.; Feb. 20, 21 & 22 at 8 p.m.; Feb. 23 at 1:30 and 7 p.m. • Tickets start at $38.50 • 872-9664 • www.beefandboards. com

Today

The Center Presents: Haifa Symphony Orchestra of Israel at the Palladium • This renowned orchestra will make its first visit to the United States and the program includes Weber, Tchaikovsky and Beethoven. • 1 Center Green, Carmel • 7:30 p.m. • Tickets start at $15 • Call 843-3800 • www.thecenterfortheperformingarts.org

wednesday

Stone Soup Suppers • Nickel Plate Arts presents an evening of “artful conversation” as they offer a dinner of soup, salads, sides and dessert complete with an interesting topic and guest speakers. Tonight’s topic is “What Art in Hamilton County Could Be...” Check the website for schedule information and to make reservations. • 107 S. 8th St., Noblesville • 7 to 9 p.m.; every Thursday through March 27. • $50 • 452-3690 • www.nickelplatearts. org

thursday

DISCOVER AN INSPIRED WAY TO DINE. Discover an inspired way to dine. Hotel dining has been taken to entirely new heights at Grille 39 Restaurant at the Renaissance Indianapolis North Hotel. Chef Dallas Montgomery brings local cuisine to life as he presents contemporary American cuisine. Here, whether relaxing in comfort by the fireplace or socializing with friends at a table, Grille 39 provides an elegant, unique, sophisticated yet casual atmosphere that inspires you to linger.

Jabberwocky Fishers • The Fishers Public Library is the site for the Jabberwocky Storyteller Series. Four non-professional storytellers will share stories about a specific topic and then anyone from the audience is invited to step up and share a three- to four-minute story on the same topic. Tonight the storytellers are tackling “Dating Nightmares.” • 5 Municipal Dr., Fishers • 7 – 8:30 p.m. • Free • 595-3150 • www.hepl.lib.in.us Booth Tarkington Civic Theatre Presents: ‘Steel Magnolias’ • Laugh and cry with the six ladies and friends from the deep South who stick together through life’s ups and downs. • The Tarkington at the Center for the Performing Arts, 3 Center Green, Carmel • 7 p.m.; Feb. 21 at 7 p.m.; Feb. 22 at 5 p.m. • Tickets start at $31.50 •843.3800 • www.thecenterfortheperformingarts.org The Loft Restaurant – Jes Richmond, acoustic guitar and vocals • Looking for a farm-to-table restaurant and live music on a Friday night? Dine at the Loft Restaurant at Traders Point Creamery and enjoy freshly made meals with seasonal ingredients and a rotating schedule of performances from local musicians on Friday nights.• 9101 Moore Road, Zionsville • 6 to 9 p.m. • Restaurant open 5 to 9:30 p.m. • Call 733-1700 • www.www.tpforganics.com

friday

The Center Presents: Lee Greenwood at the Palladium • Acclaimed country songwriter and singer Lee Greenwood brings his energetic show to the Palladium. Fans will enjoy hits such as “Ring on her Finger, Time on her Hands,” “Somebody’s Gonna Love You,” and more. • 1 Center Green, Carmel • 8 p.m.• Tickets start at $28. • 843-3800 • www.thecenterfortheperformingarts.org

Bead and Tea Party at Nickel Plate Arts • Relax and get crafty by learning to make a turquoise and African bead bracelet while enjoying exotic teas from Kenya, South Africa and Japan. Participants take the finished bracelet projects home. • 107 S. 8th St., Noblesville • 1 to 3 p.m. • $20 and please register. • Call 452-3690 to register. • www.nickelplatearts.org Indiana Wind Symphony Present: ‘By Air or By Sea’ at the Palladium • Charles Conrad is the conductor as Indiana Wind Symphony takes the audience on a journey through the soaring skies and on the open seas. • 1 Center Green, Carmel • 7:30 p.m. • Tickets start at $15. • Call 843-3800 • www. thecenterfortheperformingarts.org Fishers On Tap at Forum Conference and Events Center • Sponsored by the Rotary Club, this premiere craft beer tasting event will feature eight of Indiana craft breweries. Proceeds benefit local service agencies. • 11313 USA Parkway, Fishers • 4 – 7 p.m. • General admission is $40; designated drivers pay $20. • www.fishersrotary.org Hearthside Suppers at Conner Prairie • Learn how 19th century dinners were prepared by participating in the Conner Prairie’s Hearthside Suppers. Guests will prepare, serve and eat an authentic 19th century meal inside the historic William Conner House. Party games and storytelling follow dinner; this program is recommended for ages 10 and up. Reservations are required. • 13400 Allisonville Rd., Fishers • Tonight from 6 to 9 p.m. and every Thursday through Sunday in February. • $60 per person; $55 for members • 776-6006 • www. connerprairie.org

sunday

6th Annual Zionsville American Legion Riders Chili Cook-Off and Daytona 500 Party • This event is open to the public; participants may enter the chili cook-off and/or enjoy all-you-can-eat chili while it lasts. If entering the cook-off, chili must be at the Legion by 11 a.m. Please register by Feb. 22 • 9950 S. 600 E., Zionsville • $5 per person, includes food. • Call 695-8885 to register and for copy of rules. • e-mail post79@att.net Laura Bush Live at Clowes Memorial Hall • The former First Lady of the United States delivers a free lecture as part of the Butler University Celebration of Diversity Distinguished Lecture Series. • 4602 Sunset Ave., Indianapolis • 7:30 p.m. • Free but ticket is required. • 940-6570 • www.butler.edu

Monday


February 18, 2014

NIGHT & DAY

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

Play tackles fading WASP culture By Terri Spilmam • editorial@youarecurrent.com Imagine if a dining room table handed down from generation to generation could tell stories about all the holidays, meals, theatre life-changing events and conversations that occurred while gathered around it. Carmel’s newest theater group, Carmel Theatre Company, will be presenting A.R. Gurney’s play “The Dining Room” which is written around that very idea. Director Ken Klingenmeier has cast three men and three women who play a total of 58 characters of all ages as “The Dining Room” travels its course through time. “The play is a study of Americans, primarily White Anglo Saxon Protestants who make up a large cross-section of our country,” Klingenmeier said. “It is about what that cross-section values both materialistically and emotionally.” The play was first presented in 1982, but its themes of clinging to tradition still resonate today. The cast shares the duties of the multiple characters in 18 short scenes that take place in the dining room of a typical well-to-do household. Each vignette portrays a different occasion and life circumstance among a family such as a father/son interaction on grammar and politics, the exposure of a mother’s infidelity, a senile grand-

A family helps their aging mother through Thanksgiving dinner in a scene from “The Dining Room.” From left, actors Barb Weaver, Ryan Shelton, Sonja Distefano, Mark Tumey, Tonya Fenimore and Daniel Shock. (submitted photo)

mother that doesn’t recognize her own sons and a daughter wanting to come home after a failed marriage, each ranging from the funny to the serious. Producer Kim Howard said, “We have a talented cast of experienced actors and are anticipating an enjoyable and quality production.” The cast includes: Mark Tumey, Ryan Shelton, Daniel Shock, Tonya Fenimore, Barb Weaver and Sonja Distefano. “The Dining Room” • Studio 15 • 15 First Ave. NE in Carmel • 7:30 p.m. Feb. 27, 28 and March 7, 8, 14 and 15; 2 p.m. March 1, 9, 16 • Tickets are $12 for seniors or children 12 and under;$15 for adults • For more information call 688-8876or visit www.carmeltheatrecompany.com.

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February 18, 2014

NIGHT & DAY

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

Moon Dog Tavern – 4825 E. 96th St., Indianapolis – www.moondogtavern. com Feb. 21 – Zanna Doo Feb. 22 – Dude! Feb. 23 – Can You Rock? Three D’s Pub & Café – 13644 N. Meridian St., Carmel – www.threedspubandcafe.com Feb. 21 – Pedal Joy Feb. 22 – Big Daddy Caddy Vogue Nightclub – 6259 N. College Ave., Indianapolis – www.thevogue.com Feb. 21 – Clayton Anderson Feb. 22 – Snoop Dogg 8 Seconds Saloon – 111 N. Lynhurst Dr., Indianapolis – www.8secondssaloon.com Feb. 21 – Keith Anderson Feb. 22 – Blue River Band Feb. 23 – Joe Diffie Hopwood Cellars Winery – 12 E. Cedar St., Zionsville – www.hopwoodcellars.com Feb. 21 – Bill Price Feb. 22 – Andy & Stephen Barley Island Brewing Co. – 639 Conner St., Noblesville – www.barleyisland.com Feb. 21 – Derick Howard Hoosier Park Racing & Casino – 4500 Dan Patch Circle, Anderson – www.hoosierpark.com Feb. 22 – Cheap Trick Do317 Lounge – 1043 Virginia Ave., Indianapolis – www.do317lounge.com Feb. 20 – Faux Paw, The Easthills and The Bonesetters Feb. 21 – The Apache Relay & The Lonely Wild with Promised Land Sound Feb. 22 – Beyond Normal Sea with St. Aubin, Bethesda

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1500 W. Oak Street Suite 200 Zionsville, IN 46077 317.733.2626 BY SPECIAL APPOINTMENT ONLY

AN OPTION

MacKenzie River Pizza, Grill & Pub THE SCOOP: Locally owned and operated by two Montana-born brothers, Mike and Jon Shuel, MacKenzie River Pizza, Grill & Pub offers delicious food in a rustic and casual atmosphere. The menu offers a wide selection of appetizers (such as an amazing goat cheese queso), salads (try the Thai Chicken Salad), pastas, entrees, burgers, sandwiches and, of course, really good pizza. Finish your meal with a piece of authentic mud pie. There is a wide range of kids’ menu items and gluten-free choices. TYPE OF FOOD: Casual American and pizza AVERAGE PRICE: $10 to $15 FOOD RECOMMENDATION: Athenian Pizza (Kalamata olives, spinach, onions, tomato and feta) DRINK RECOMMENDATION: Huckleberry Lemon Drop RESERVATIONS: Yes, for groups HOURS: 11 a.m. to 10 p.m., seven days a week PHONE: 564-4211 ADDRESS: 11596 Westfield Blvd., Carmel (second location at 4939 E. 82nd St. in Castleton) WEBSITE: www.mackenzieriverpizza.com Follow Karen Kennedy on Twitter: @karenkcurrent

WHERE I DINE Beth Aasen, owner, Donatello’s Italian Restaurant Where do you like to dine? Auntie Em’s Frozen Custard and Cupcakes What do you like to eat there? Everything, but I really love the raspberry smoothies! What do you like about Auntie Em’s? They are all really nice people, and always take care of you. Auntie Em’s Frozen Custards and Cupcakes is located at 111 W. Main St., Suite 130, Carmel. They can be contacted at 846-4100 or online at www. auntieemscustard.com.

BEHIND BARS island girl Bartender: Shannon Asher at Britton Tavern, 14005 Mundy Drive, Fishers Ingredients/directions: Mix 2 parts Blue Chair Bay Coconut Rum, 1 part cranberry juice and 1 part pineapple juice together in glass shaker. Pour into iced 8-ounce glass. Garnish with cherry and orange slice.

Evening with the Ambassadors Preview the Carmel High School Ambassadors upcoming performances for Disneyland Paris & London.

March 14th & 15th | 7pm Carmel High School Auditorium Your attendance directly supports this award winning show choir! TICKETS NOW ON SALE AT www.totalgatesolutions.com www.facebook.com/AmbassadorsCHS www.twitter/AmbassadorsCHS www.chsambassadorclub.org


S a l o n

01

The One Salon For Men and Women

February 18, 2014

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

®

HAIR • SKIN • NAILS • MASSAGE • SUNLESS TANNING • BLOWOUT • BOUTIQUE

START THE NEW YEAR OFF RIGHT WITH 20% OFF ANY WELLNESS SERVICE OR YOGA PACKAGE NOW THROUGH FEB. 28, 2014. CALL 317.580.0101 TO LEARN MORE ABOUT OUR WELLNESS & YOGA OFFERINGS. COLOR CODING: WHICH SHADE IS RIGHT FOR YOU? Are you considering switching up your shade for spring? Here are a few tips to keep hair color transition natural, beautiful, and worry-free. Enlist a Trained Professional Always get your color done by a professional. It can be hard to apply product evenly throughout hair and even harder to judge processing time when your experience in color is limited. Take the fuss and mess out of at-home dyeing by scheduling your appointment with one of our stylists at Salon 01. Our unique color bar and personal consultations will make you feel right at home- without the unwanted cleanup! If you’re thinking blonde… If you were blonde as a child or if you had a lighter hue that was blonde by summer’s end you may have the skin tone to pull off those light locks. Think about regular maintenance, though. Blonde hair must be taken care of and touched up more frequently, depending on the shade of your natural hair color. If you’re thinking red… Almost anyone can pull off red hair. The trick is in the specific hue of red. To find a red that fits perfectly with your skin tone, have a personalized consultation with one of our Salon 01 stylists! They will formulate a red individually for you. If you’re thinking brunette… Typically, if you are not naturally blonde, brown hair upkeep is fairly easy. This is a good choice for people that would rather not spend too much time fussing over colored hair. A tip from Marie Claire {To maximize the impact of your chocolaty color, go deeper and monotone if your hair is nearly all one length. If it's shorter or very layered, make the ends slightly lighter, and weave in high- and lowlights to emphasize the texture of the cut. }

EXTENSIONS: ARE THEY RIGHT FOR YOU? Thinking long hair could be right for you? Salon 01 has a Dream Team made up of specially trained stylists in HairDreams hair extensions. Hairdreams has been a worldwide leading provider of real, human hair extensions for many years. The Hairdreams philosophy includes a strict quality orientation. Only absolutely healthy, thoroughly tested hair passes the stringent Hairdreams quality control process and is subsequently gently refined. The result: excellent hair quality which, in the meantime, has become the Hairdreams “trademark”. Proof of this outstanding quality is the Hairdreams guarantee of faultless hair appearance during the entire wearing period. The prerequisite is simply maintenance and necessary care measures and the regular aftercare at your Hairdreams salon.. Hairdreams works with leading stylists around the world, including many top stylists in metropolises such as Milan, Paris, or New York, who regularly style celebrities, actresses, singers and models with hair from Hairdreams. Every Hairdreams stylist is intensively trained by an experienced educator and regularly takes continuing education to keep up with the latest application techniques. To learn more about the hair extension process or to book an appointment with a member of the Salon 01 Dream Team, call 317-580-0101.

HEAVY METAL It’s a great look, when it’s done right. Other times, a metallic eye shadow can look flaky, or even too outdated. Instead of passing on this trend all together, though, take our advice for applying the perfect metal shade for you. Step One - Sweep the shadow of your choice across your lids, being sure to stay below the brow bones. Step Two - Lightly line your eyes with a black eye pencil. Use more pressure at the outer corners to really make eyes pop. Step Three - Brighten up the inner corners by dabbing a lighter shadow. For more makeup tips and trends, visit one of Salon 01’s estheticians! Call 580-0101 to book your consultation today.

200 CITY CENTER DRIVE, CARMEL 3 1 7 . 5 8 0 . 0 1 0 1 • W W W. S A L O N 0 1 . C O M

FOR MORE TIPS & TRICKS, CHECK OUT OUR BLOG

FIND US ON FACEBOOK

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February 18, 2014

HEALTH

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

Don’t hide your legs this summer Commentary by Dr. Jeffery Schoonover

F E B R UA RY

22 Heart disease is the number one killer of women, but do you know why?

Are you unhappy with your legs’ appearance? Do you avoid wearing clothing that shows your legs? Are you experiencing swelling veins and discomfort in your legs? Do you have a network of spider veins crawling across your legs? Do you have bulging, twisted veins? This summer you can grab your shorts or bathing suit and enjoy the summer sun. When we have varicose vein disease, valves in our legs do not work properly and allow some of the venous blood to flow backward and pool in our legs, resulting in bulging veins and symptoms such as pain, swelling, tiredness or redness. If an individual has bulging veins or is suffering from discomfort, treatment may be required to relieve symptoms. Spider veins might not always cause discomfort, but can be a cosmetic concern. Diagnostic ultrasound vein mapping should be performed to determine the abnormal areas of blood flow in both legs. With that information, a comprehensive plan of treatment can be determined. Endovenous laser treatment is a minimally invasive treatment for varicose veins. Using ultrasound guidance, a small laser fiber is inserted

through the skin into the varicosed vein. Laser energy is delivered inside the vein, which causes the vein to collapse and seal shut. Once that vein is closed, the blood reroutes to other healthy veins. This procedure is done in-office under local anesthetic. It usually takes 30 to 45 minutes. Following the procedure, patients wear a compression stocking on the treated leg. Most patients return to work within a day or two; many return to work the same day. EVLT may also be accompanied by sclerotherapy, which is a straightforward strategy to treat any residual, problematic veins. This procedure involves using a very small needle to inject a solution into the veins, which cause them to collapse and disappear. Beyond the obvious health benefits of treatment is the legs’ improved appearance. If you are experiencing symptoms of varicose veins or are bothered by your legs’ cosmetic appearance, a consultation is important. Treatment is easy and will dramatically improve your quality of life. Jeffery P. Schoonover, M.D., FAAFP, RVT, RPVI, practices with the Indiana Vein Specialists, 11876 Olio Road, Suite 700, Fishers. He can be reached at 348-3023. For more information, visit www.indyveins.com

Opt for super-fatted soaps in winter – The same products that keep your face looking fresh in the spring and summer may cause skin problems during winter. Choose a gentle, super-fatted, fragrance-free soap for cleansing. Super-fatted means the soap is loaded with oils to keep skin moisturized. – www.webmd. com

You are invited to join Community Physician Network cardiologist Nanette Oscherwitz, MD, for a special seminar on women and heart health. Heart disease affects women differently than it does men, with signs and symptoms that go beyond typical chest pain. Don’t miss this chance to learn: • Risk factors for heart disease • Signs and symptoms of heart disease in women • How to manage stress for a healthier heart • How to exercise for a healthy heart • What heart screenings are available and are they right for you

Women and Heart disease doesn’t skip a HealtH generation. Saturday, February 22, 2014 9:30 to 10:00am Heart Healthy Cooking Demonstration, neitHer sHould Heart care. presented by Chef Yong Choi (Sample tasting and beverages provided)

ARN Mortuary & Cremation Services The respected and trusted professionals at ARN Mortuary & Cremation Services provide families with the highest quality of service, expertise and sensitivity in making final arrangements for your cremation or traditional funeral. Our beautiful new state of the art facility, with an on-site crematory and 24 hour staffing, offers peace of mind to you and your family. Stop by for a tour or for information today.

nd VascularHospital (CHV) isisthe cardiovascular advancements, coordinated care and by 10:00 10:45am Women and Heart Disease,care presented d Vascular thehome homeof ofto cardiovascular advancements, coordinated and Nanette Oscherwitz a voice voice in in your your care care at atall allof ofDr. our sites and will experience easy access to quick treatment. our sites and will experience easy access to quick treatment. 10:45 to 11:00am Heart healthy exercise fitness providing the the latest latest in in comprehensive comprehensive care with with groundbreaking hearttips andfrom vascular providing care groundbreaking heart and vascular expert Randy Dirksen advanced diagnostic diagnostic and and interventional interventional cardiology, cardiology, cardiovascular cardiovascular surgery surgeryand andcardiac cardiac advanced Enjoy a hospitals variety ofand educational booths and a fun filled event e of ne of the the nation’s nation’s first first all-digital all-digital hospitals and Indiana’s Indiana’s first first Cardiovascular Cardiovascular Genetic Genetic designed for a healthy you! , wechoice are the bestitchoice it comes to matters est when comeswhen to matters of the heart. of the heart.

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8075 Shadeland Avenue, 46250 do with your heart, it has everything to do with us. ToIndianapolis, learn more, callIN800.777.7775 o do with your heart, it has everything to do with us. To learn more, call 800.777.7775.

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A special thank you to Community Health Network Foundation and its donors eCommunity.com/heart for making this event possible.

11411 N. Michigan Road, Zionsville, IN | (317) 873-4776 | arnmortuary.com CHVB3505 WomenHDSem_CFNZW .indd 1

1/29/14 4:51 PM


February 18, 2014

LIFESTYLE

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

LEARN TO LOVE YOUR HOME AGAIN.

Stepped Pyramid of Djoser (photo by Don Knebel)

‘The Pyramids’ Stepping-stones’ Commentary by Don Knebel

Egypt’s larger-than-life pyramids continue to generate speculation about their origins, ranging from the extraterrestrial to the travel supernatural. Even the Egyptians once posited a divine explanation. The stepped pyramid at Saqqara shows that the real story is closer to Earth. Believing that souls live on after death, Egyptians initially buried their important dead and their possessions in underground tombs covered by “mastabas.” Mastabas, made first of mud bricks and then of stones, were solid, flat-topped structures up to 30 feet high with gradually sloping sides. A passage to a special chamber inside allowed priests and family members to bring offerings to the person buried below for use in the afterlife. In about 2650 B.C., Imhotep, the palace architect of Pharaoh Djoser, came up with a new idea for his boss’s tomb at Saqqara, the burial ground serving the capital at Memphis. He covered the underground tomb with six stacked mastabas of diminishing size, creating a stepped pyramid made entirely of stone. For designing what was then the largest stone structure ever built, Imhotep was later worshipped as a god. Seeing the stepped pyramid, Pharaoh Snefru

ordered that his pyramid eliminate the steps and support his tomb above the ground so it would be closer to the sun god. About two-thirds of the way to the apex, engineers had to reduce the angle of inclination from 55 to 43 degrees to eliminate stability problems created by the internal tomb chamber. The result was the socalled “bent pyramid.” On the next try, Snefru’s engineers started with a 43-degree angle and succeeded in creating the first “true pyramid,” with smooth sides and a constant angle. This so-called “red pyramid” may contain still-secret passages leading to the undiscovered mummy of Snefru. Using Snefru’s model, his son Khufu took the pyramid-building art to its pinnacle in the Great Pyramid of Giza, still the most massive structure ever built. No little green men, no magical powers, no unsolvable mysteries. Egypt’s pyramid builders drew on past successes, learned from earlier mistakes and achieved lasting greatness. That is the real secret of the pyramids. Don Knebel is a local resident who works for Barnes & Thornburg LLP. For the full column visit currentzionsville.com. You may contact him at news@currentzionsville.com

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LOVE YOUR HOME AGAIN.

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February 18, 2014

DOUGH

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

Too much money in a 401(k)? Commentary by Mark Wade

We understand the sadness associated with losing a beloved pet. When the need arises, we offer compassionate pick up of your pet from your home or veterinarian's clinic; private cremation or burial assistance. Our pet memorial center offers a dedicated Rememberance Room to say your last good bye and receive your pet's cremains in privacy. Our Sanctuary is available for life celebrations, visitation and funerals. Large selection of urns and containers, memorial jewelry, custom art and other items available too.

317-872-4500 9595 Valparaiso Court, Indianapolis, IN 46268 Just East of Michigan Rd. on 96th Street www.rosepetmemorialcenter.com We are located in College Park North Business Center in the north building on east side. Turn by the Red Roof Inn sign on the south side of 96th Street, just east of Michigan Rd. The complex will be on your left.

Please join Janus Developmental Services, Inc. for the

2014 Create, Connect and Commit Fundraising Breakfast! To be held at The Fountains in Carmel | March 14th, 2014

HONORARY CO-CHAIRS:

Mayor John Ditslear from the City of Noblesville Commissioner Steven C. Dillinger - Hamilton County Mayor Jim Brainard from the City of Carmel Mayor Andy Cook from the City of Westfield John Weingardt - President of the Fishers Town Council Pete Peterson – Vice President of the Fishers Town Council Scott Fadness – Fishers Town Manager Janus provides individuals with disabilities the opportunity to participate and contribute within the community. To reserve your place at the breakfast, please contact Joanne McDonough at 317-773-8781, ext. 112 or jmcdonough@janus-inc.org

Under current IRS rules, every person holding money in one or more retirement accounts must begin withdrawing some of that Finance money each year starting in the year he turns age 70½. This may seem like a long time from now based upon your current age, but the planning for this required distribution from these accounts should begin years before that date. If you have accumulated a large sum of money in your retirement accounts, you might even want to begin this process as early as age 50. That’s because it’s possible that you have too much money in your qualified accounts, which could cause a tax issue during retirement. Not taking the required minimum payout could cause a penalty of half the amount you should have removed, but did not remove, from your accounts. Part of this puzzle is that you may have tax liability during retirement if your income from dividends, other income or IRA withdrawals, exceeds $24,000 per year. The concern here is that tax rates in later years will be higher than they are today. Predicting future tax rates is impossible. Given the national debt today, this is a very real possibility. To reduce this tax liability in retirement, it may be wise to begin withdrawing funds from your qualified accounts long before you reach the required distribution. A person who has more than $300,000 in

qualified money at age 50 should see a financial advisor to calculate what the expected required distribution would be at age 70½. Remember that after 20 years of investing, your $300,000 could easily become $600,000 or even well over $1 million if you made wise investment decisions. If, for example, you have $600,000 sitting in your accounts at age 70, you would be required to withdraw $21,897 in the first year of distribution. This might not be a big deal unless your growth on that account exceeds the minimum distribution. Those of you who were brave enough to be in the stock market the past 24 months probably made a return that could be in the range of 5 to 35 percent. If your money was sitting in a savings account at the bank, your return was probably less than 1 percent. At age 76, if you still have $600,000 in qualified money, your minimum distribution would be $27,272. This would put you into a taxable situation under current rules. Your growth each year would require you to continue to withdraw increasing amounts of money, increasing your tax liability. For this reason, some individuals will need to begin withdrawing funds from their accounts at a much earlier age. You can make these withdrawals prior to age 59½ without penalty. As stated earlier, always discuss these issues with a financial advisor before taking any action. Mark R. Wade is vice president of Bankers’ Bank of Carmel, located at 716 Adams St., Suite B. He can be contacted at MWade@bankersbankusa.com.

DISPATCHES Essay contest for kids - The Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago and its partner organizations are sponsoring the Money Smart Kid Essay Contest, where students in grades 6 through 8 are encouraged to answer this year’s Money Smart essay question with a typed essay of 500 words or fewer. Three finalists, along with their families and teachers or adult sponsors, will be selected to attend the Money Smart Week Indiana Kickoff Breakfast in Indianapolis on April 4, 2014. The winners will receive a CollegeChoice 529 savings account through the generous sponsorship of CollegeChoice 529, Fifth Third Bank and PNC Bank. The winner will receive $750 and the runners-up will each receive $375. The deadline to apply is Feb. 28, and the essay question can be found at www.in.gov/sos. Questions about the contest can be addressed to indianamskid@gmail.com. Toyota to recall Prius cars for software defect - Toyota issued a recall covering the third-generation Prius cars due to a programming glitch in their hybrid system. Toyota said the problem is in the software used to control the boost converter in a module that is part of the hybrid system. “The setting of the software could cause higher thermal stress in certain transistors within the booster converter, and these transistors could deform or become damaged as a result,” Toyota said. “This will result in various warning lights being illuminated, and will probably cause the vehicle to enter a failsafe mode.” The cars could be driven but with reduced driving power, and in limited cases, the hybrid system could shut down, causing the vehicle to stop, possibly while it is being driven, Toyota said. SOURCE: Reuters

Long-term care now priced by gender Deciding to buy long-term-care insurance is a big financial commitment — even more so if you are a woman. Last year, Genworth Financial and other big insurance companies adopted gender-distinct rates for long-term care insurance — which means that if you are a woman, you will now pay more than a man for the same coverage. Long-term care insurance pays for help with daily activities such as bathing and dressing if you can no longer do them yourself. Long-term care insurers said they adopted gender-based premiums to reflect the reality that women tend to live longer than men and are more likely to use benefits. Women own about 58 percent of policies, Genworth said, but account for nearly 67 percent of all claims. The effect is that women will now pay several hundred dollars more a year in long-term care premiums than a man would for a comparable policy. SOURCE: New York Times


February 18, 2014

INSIDE & OUT

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

23

Creating a comfortable kitchen in a walk-out basement

Commentary by Larry Greene

before & after

Existing kitchen: This home located on a secluded lot overlooking Morse Reservoir was no longer suited to blueprint for the way the homeimprovement owner lived. “I began making the walk-out basement more of my living space. The kitchen there was closed and non-functional. I wanted to create a comfortable and cozy space, a place where you want to come in and sit down.” Hickory cabinets: The design reflected the natural surroundings. “The designer suggested natural hickory cabinets,” stated the owner. “I didn’t want a contemporary or modern look.” The cabinets gave the natural farmhouse feel the owner was looking for. The existing drywall bulkheads were removed, allowing for a more open feel. New exhaust fan ductwork was concealed in the ceiling for the new microwave. Island as contrast: To create a contrast for the natural cabinetry, the island is stained in an espresso finish. Black Pearl granite in a leather finish also provides contrast from the White Persia granite on the perimeter cabinetry. Seating for four makes the island the true center of the kitchen. Farmhouse look: The farmhouse look was continued in the details as well. “I have always wanted a farmhouse sink,” stated the home-

Final details: New appliances in black and matte stainless steel were installed, as well as a wine refrigerator and under-cabinet lighting. Updated storage solutions were also part of the final design, including a mixer lift, a built-in spice rack and double-layered utensil drawers. Finally, new 6-inch-wide hand-scraped maple engineered hardwood flooring was installed over the concrete slab.

owner. A plate rack was installed over the sink and glass doors in a few of the wall cabinets. An oil-rubbed bronze finish on the cabinet hardware and faucet provides a hint of copper that compliments the natural hickory. Copper pendant lights complete the feel.

Larry Greene is the owner of Case Design/Remodeling Indy, a fullservice design/build remodeling firm serving Boone, Hamilton, and Marion Counties. Contact him at 846-2600 or lgreene@caseindy.com. Visit caseindy.com for more info.

Same beans...

MORE JARS.

CURRENT KIDS DAY AT THE PALLADIUM CELEBRATING THE PERFORMING ARTS

SATURDAY, MARCH 1 | 10 AM – 4 PM | PALLADIUM LOBBIES

The industry experts at Somerset CPAs and have discovered that not all beans are taxed the same. Contact a tax professional at Somerset CPAs, or visit us online at www.SomersetCPAs.com to learn more.

Kevin O’Connell Tax Principal

Susan Bradford Tax Principal

We invite families to discover music and theater together. Visit the venue and select from ticketed events.

TPO “BLUE”

10 AM, 2 PM AND 7 PM | STUDIO THEATER

Come play in our sea as dancers, performers and audience members mix and mingle as they embark on an adventurous trip to the Mediterranean! Family Shows delivered by the Indianapolis Star. DUKE ENERGY

PEANUT BUTTER & JAM CONCERT

10:30 AM | ROBERT ADAM ROOM, PALLADIUM

Ennis Clare, a high-energy traditional Irish band, features Irish fiddle, guitar, banjo, and exultant accordion. BOOTH TARKINGTON CIVIC THEATER PRESENTS

“CAT IN THE HAT”

10 AM, 2 PM, 5 PM | TARKINGTON AGRICULTURE - CONSTRUCTION - DEALERSHIPS - DENTAL HEALTH CARE - MANUFACTURING - RETAIL - REAL ESTATE

This Dr. Seuss classical leaps onto the stage. The 5pm performance is designated a “Sensory Friendly Performance” for an audience of families and friends of children or adults with sensory issues. Visit CivicTheatre.org for additional information about their Disability Awareness Day also scheduled on March 1st.

FREE JAPANESE DRUMMING DEMONSTRATIONS 1 PM | ROBERT ADAM ROOM, PALLADIUM

Enjoy this preview of TAO: Phoenix Rising coming on March 19. VISIT OUR BASILE CAFÉ. MORE EVENTS ON OUR WEBSITE.

TICKETS ON SALE NOW!

3925 River Crossing Parkway, 3rd Floor | Indianapolis, IN 46240 | 317.472.2200 | info@somersetcpas.com

TheCenterPresents.org or call 317.843.3800


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Use all the letter segments below to fill in the answers to the clues. The number of segments you will use in each answer is shown in parentheses. The dashes indicate the number of letters in each answer. Each segment is used only once.

Find the items in the puzzle going up, down, sideways or diagonally and list them. Each letter is used no more than once.

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Using the letters in SPEEDWAY, create as many common words of 4+ letters as you can in 20 minutes. No proper nouns or build the words foreign words.

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10. Like certain Canadian provinces 11. Lady of Donatello’s 15. Get worse, as losses 18. Indy Dance Academy jump 20. Birch Bayh’s January birthstone 24. Simon Property Group’s financial goals 26. Wooden duck, say

40+: Word wizard 30-39 Brainiac 20-29: Not too shabby <20: Try again next week

27. Sacred beetles of ancient Egypt 30. Boone Co. Chamber of Commerce web address ending 33. Otherwise (2 wds.) 35. Put a match to 36. Slice veggies into thin strips at Peterson’s 37. Indiana Poet Laureate’s “before”

38. Bloodhound’s trails at Lilly 39. Finish putting at Crooked 50. Encourage (2 wds.) Stick (2 wds.) 52. “Coach” star: Jerry Van ___ 43. Proof goof at Indianapolis 54. More than suggest Monthly Indiana Wordsmith Challenge57. J.C. Sipe sparkler 45. Electrician on a film set 58. Coast Guard rank: Abbr. 46. Eiteljorg Museum tribe or 59. Day before a holiday Canadian capital 47. Conducted a clinical study Answers on Page 27

One of those days? Help is just around the corner. Computer Troubleshooters

iPad, iPhonire,s & iPod repa

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317-867-0900 www.CTCarmel.com

316 S Range Line Rd, Downtown Carmel Hours 9-6 M-F and 10-3 Sat. Call anytime.

Call on us at any time for services including: Hardware Troubleshooting Software Troubleshooting Internet/Email Setup and Assistance Networking Application Setup and Support Regular Computer Maintenance Website Design Virus Protection & Removal Internet Security Troubleshooting Remote Access & Diagnostics Service Plans Residential Service PC and Mac Service and Sales


February 18, 2014

SPRINGTIME SPECIALS, START NOW! Check out my website: www.fbfitness.com

Carmel City Center Current in Zionsville www.currentzionsville.com 732 S. Range Line Road Carmel, IN 46032 Cell 317.752.0228 Direct 317.819.4246 EFax 317.819.7450 smckee@century21ras.com www.century21ras.com

Cindy Sams, FULL-BODY FITNESS (317)250-4848 CALL

Indy's #1 Weight Loss TODAY! Specialist It's time to do this. It's your time.

Get your card in front of 108,133 households! Call Dennis O’Malia @ 370-0749 for details

25

Steve McKee Associate Broker/Realtor Each office is independently owned and operated.

HANDYMAN SERVICES CHIP TRAIN REMODELING KITCHENS • BATHROOMS • BASEMENTS

Remodeling Carmel and Zionsville since 1992 Licensed • Bonded • Insured Chip Train 317-258-2650 • chiptrain@msn.com

Servicing: Carmel, Fishers, Noblesville, Westfield and Zionsville.

Insured & bonded.

BANKRUPTCY

In most cases, you can protect your home & car! Get rid of most debts! FREE CONSULTATION Attorney F.A. Skimin | Indianapolis

317.454.8060 We are a Debt Relief Agency. We help people file for relief under the Bankruptcy Code.

“JEFF” OF ALL TRADES

• PLUMBING • ELECTRICAL • TILING, CARPENTRY & MORE! TURN YOUR ‘TO DO’ LIST INTO A ‘TO DONE’ LIST

HANDYMAN SERVICES, LLC.

$35 OFF

FREE ESTIMATES

317-797-8181

www.jeffofalltrades.net - Insured & Bonded

Any job of $250 or more “JEFF” OF ALL TRADES 317-797-8181

Coupon must be presented at time of estimate. Not valid with other offers or prior purchases. Offer expires 2/28/14.

WALLA INTERIOR PAINTING Family owned - Carmel/Westfield based 2010-2013 Angie’s List Service Award winner Fully insured - FREE ESTIMATES Discounts on high quality paints

• walls • ceilings • trim • drywall repair wallapainting.com 317.656.7045

$150 average per room 2 coats & patching on walls

MAID SERVICES THAT WOW!

Since 1993

848-7634

www.centennialremodelers.com

11650 Lantern Road, Ste.214, Fishers, IN 46038 | www.havel-law.com

Providing Personal Attention to your Personal Injury Claims

OFFER GOOD UNTIL 3/31/14

VISIT MYMAIDINDY.COM CALL 317.732.5071 TO BOOK NOW!

Learn to shoot a handgun! Beginner thru advanced pistol, CCW & instructor training courses. Firearm sales & transfers Yes, there’s a Gun Shop in Fishers! www.IndyGunSafety.com

13287 Britton Park Rd., Fishers, IN

(317)345-3263

Member Central Indiana

HAVEL LAW OFFICE, PC

$20 OFF NEW CUSTOMERS

Armed with knowledge!

(317)846-5554

ROOFING • SIDING • WINDOWS LICENSED BONDED INSURED

Indy Gun Safety shepherdins.com

ROSE Insurance Specialist ROOFING Storm Damage

Linda Havel

• Car, Truck and Motorcycle Accidents • Biking Accidents • Slip and Falls on Residential and Commercial Premises • Injuries from Explosions, Fires, Railing or Stair Collapse CALL 317-525-7754 OR 317-576-8620


26

February 18, 2014

Current in Zionsville

TUXEDO RENTAL

www.currentzionsville.com

• PROM • WEDDING • BLACK TIE AFFAIR

• Commercial/Residential • Gutter Cleaning • Fully Insured • Free Estimates

SAVE 25% OFF WINDOW CLEANING

317.847.4071

(Offer expires 2-28-14)

(317) 645-8373 • www.TopShineWindowCleaning.com

Toys, Glassware, China, Pottery, Coins, Trade Books, Trains and much more.

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www.chromaticsstudio.com 1233 W. Oak Street, Zionsville, IN 46077

Specializing in Antique & Vintage Items Onsite - Online/Proxibid - E-Bay Consignments

Laura Seidensticker / Manager / Certified Trainer

1400 S. Guilford Road., Suite 130B, Carmel, IN 46032 / Tel: 317.641.8600 carmel@getinshapeforwomen.com www.getinshapeforwomen.com

Guitar Lessons

Wth recording artist Duke Tumatoe Learn from professional and have fun All levels - in Carmel duke@duketumatoe.com or 317-201-5856

C.G.H. Lawn and Landscape Maintenance 317-400-8257 Quality services at affordable rates. Lawn Care Programs, Mowing, Edging, Mulching, Trimming, Aerations.

FLAT SCREEN TV REPAIR

Flat screen TV’s (carried in) repaired. Most for $100 to $125 @ Brauchla TV, 1800 W 8th. Anderson IN. (twenty min east of Noblesville. NO MINIMUM CHARGE WITH THIS AD!. Offer expires Feb 25th 765-642-4976 In Business 65 yrs.

Happy Pets In-Home Pet Care

Services

Services

Kingston’s BAND REHEARSAL SPACE

Book a session for your band! 3 hours/$50 1,000 SF studio, lounge with 60” plasma TV, full PA & backline provided, drums available 340 Ridgepoint Drive, Carmel rick@idealtalentinc.com 317-979-0137 Like us on Facebook! “Between the awesome physical facility, and the exceptional personal service, look no further than Kingston’s.” -Travis Jensen, An Innocent Band Woodsmen Tree Service William Wainscott 317-412-1306 *Fully Insured *Free Estimates *Tree Trimming *Tree Removal *Stump Grinding The Right Choice is as Clear as Black and White

House & Dog Sitter

A less stressful and economical alternative to boarding with loving care for your pets in the comfort of your home. Experience in Exotics. Insured/Bonded Member of Pet Sitters Associates LLC happypetsitter@gmail.com Hamilton County only 317-645-6043 • References available

donknapp34@gmail.com 317-835-6731

Years Experience 149Years

317-802-6565 317-432-1627

“The Safe and Reliable Alternative to Boarding” Insured/Bonded Serving Carmel & Westfield www.pawpatrolindy.com

Auction

Skip’s Auctions Gallery

Next auction date; Monday March 10 at 6pm Auction Zip #26565 We buy estates, households, gold, silver and coins 14000 St. Rd. 32E, Noblesville, IN 765.606.6001 Always accepting clean consignments.

LOST

Guitar Lessons Pet & House Sitting Service

Office: (317) 495-8482 Fax: (317) 203-5506 Website: www.aclassactauction.com E-mail: scamp45450@aol.com

Classifieds

VISA, MasterCard accepted Reach 108,133 homes weekly

Services

Sandy Flippin PO Box 725 Plainfield, IN 46168

With Baker Scott

Beginners thru Advanced All styles Electric-Acoustic-Bass Private Lessons Parent-Child Lessons near Carey Road & 146th Carmel 317-

910-6990

.com

Need Your Help

I need to find the gentleman that I helped out of the snow bank at Cool Creek Park on Sunday, 1/6/14 ( during the storm). I left my glasses in your van. Please call 317-796-7516 so I am able to get them back. Thank you.

Roommate WAnted Roommate wanted to share furnished 2BR condo in Carmel. Wash/dry, internet, cable and utilities included. $550/month Gender unimportant. Must not mind smoking. Call 317-402-5628.

Garage sale

HERE FOR YOU AND YOUR FAMILY Protect Your Assets For Your Children and Grandchildren • Estate Planning & Reviews • Power of Attorney • Health Care • Wills Directives • Trusts • Living Wills • Pet Trusts

Law Office of

Wesley N. Hoppenrath

3501 Westfield Rd, Suite 101 • Westfield IN (317) 913-2828 info@hoppenrathlaw.com • www.hoppenrathlaw.com

For pricing e-mail your ad to dennis@youarecurrent.com Childcare Fishers Home Childcare

Kids Helping Kids Indoor Garage Sale

Sat., Feb. 22, 10AM-1PM Forest Park Inn 701 Cicero Rd., Noblesville IN Come shop for great items sold by young vendors. All items for sale are fun! $1 admission goes to Noblesville Parks’ children’s program scholarships. 317-770-5750

141st Marilyn. M-F 6:45-5:30 2 Full-time providers. CPR/First aid certified Nutritious meals. Fenced backyard. Fun, safe and clean. References. Call Tiffany 317-332-9136

DISTRESS SALE

Bank Foreclosures Hamilton Co. Free list of Foreclosure Properties. Receive a FREE daily list by e-mail; www.hamiltoncoforeclosures.com

Lenox Trace Condo off Guilford 2 bed, 2 bth, lower level, garage $99,900 Neutral, great location. Call Carole Gulledge L.J. Real Estate 317-908-8001

Carmel-Lenox Trace Condo’s

New Listing 2brm, 2bth, den, upper level $112,500: Beautifully decor all newly carpet/some appls/ on pond Call Carole Gulledge at L.J. Real Estate 312-908-8001

Carmel-Lenox Trace Condo’s

Just listed: 2 brm, 2bth, upper level w/Garage $110,900: Immaculate w/great view of the pond Call Carole Gulledge at L.J. Real Estate 317-908-8001

Now Hiring NOW HIRING!

Compounding pharmacy in Carmel looking for responsible and motivated individuals to work Monday through Friday. Pharmacy technician experience preferred, but will train. Customer service position available. Immediate openings available. Send resume to jr@valuscript.net

Now Hiring

Real Estate

Carmel

Member of the Indiana and Indianapolis Bar Associations

New Store Opening Hiring For All Positions (Noblesville) New Wings Etc. location coming soon to Noblesville! Looking for motivated, energetic individuals to be a part of a rapidly growing Restaurant/Sports Bar concept. Hiring for Server's (Must be 19 or older), Bartender's, Kitchen Supervisor's, Cook's, Prep Cook's, Hostess/Hosts. Email Resume or Apply in person at 185 Sheridan Road, Noblesville, IN 46060 on Monday - Friday from 10am to 4pm and Saturday Noon - 4pm.

Bus Driver / Activity Assistant

Wanted for The Hearth at Windermere. Must have CDL. Apply in person. 317-576-1925 Jim or Tiffany

Now Hiring A Noblesville company is seeking a part-time truck driver to make statewide product deliveries. The driver must be capable of driving a 1 ton flatbed truck pulling a 24’ bumper hitch trailer. Each day will start and end in Noblesville. The ideal candidate will be detail oriented and personable. The applicant needs to have a clean driving record and be able to pass a DOT physical. A CDL is not required. If interested, please send a cover letter and/or resume to jworden@watermarkeps.com

Residential cleaning

company in Fishers seeking FULL time housecleaners. M-F 8am-5pm. Need reliable transportation and great attitude. To apply: Call 579-1988 or e-mail monika@ housekeepingmaideasy.com Local Carmel retail store is

NOW HIRING:

Looking for Full-time sales associates. Please call 317-843-2655

The Kolache Factory 116th & Guilford

NOW HIRING

Full/Part time Bakers, Kitchen workers, Cashiers Starting at $9/hour Contact EarlyFoods@KolFac.com or 317-213-2509

NOW HIRING Full/Part-time Waitstaff Full/Part-time Linecook Apply in person 160 East Carmel Drive • 843-9900


February 18, 2014

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

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NOw HIring

Community Association Services of Indiana, AAMC, an Associa company, the leader in community association management, is now hiring.

ASSISTANT MANAGER This full time position will manage the administrative duties of a Community Portfolio Manager. You will support resident relations and must demonstrate exceptional communication skills with clear and concise writing, empathetic and respectful interpersonal interactions and a sense of humor. This position will work out of our Carmel office. The right candidate will be able to multitask, meet multiple deadlines, and have strong organizational skills and professionalism including responsiveness, thoroughness, accuracy, confidentiality and attention to detail. Must also be able to complete work with minimal supervision, maintain professionalism while under pressure and possess effective problem solving and negotiation skills. Computer proficiency in Word and Excel is required. Prior HOA or other property management experience is preferred. Current designations from NBCCAM, CAI or NAA are also preferred. No weekends required! The hourly pay range for this position is $14.00 - $15.00. Email your resume to jscully@cas-indiana.com. All offers of employment are subject to successful completion of a comprehensive drug screen and a criminal background check. Full benefits packages are included as well as opportunities for career growth. We are an Equal Opportunity Employer. www.cas-indiana.com, www.associaonline.com

Help Wanted

The Carmel Dads’ Club is seeking full time and seasonal Facility maintenance positions. Candidates should contact Josh Blackmore, Facility Superintendent at 846-1663 X 315 to set up applications/interviews. Full time candidates must have clean driving record and no physical limitations. Seasonal candidates, must also have no physical limitations and both positions require manually work in all weather conditions. Sports Field Maintenance, landscaping and/or equipment maintenance experience a plus.

GreenCycle of Indiana is looking for a qualified candidate to fill the position of Office Assistant at the Noblesville, IN location.

GreenCycle of Indiana is looking for a qualified candidate to fill the position of Delivery Driver at the Noblesville, IN location.

The Office Assistant will handle customer transactions, schedule deliveries, answer customer questions, and provide excellent customer service. This position can progress with more duties and responsibilities as the new hire becomes familiar with the computer program.

The Delivery Driver will need to be customer service oriented. The Driver will need to have a clean driving record, pass a drug screen & CDL physical, & be able to drive a singleaxle truck. A chauffer’s license is preferred. The Driver will also be required to maintain appearance of the vehicle inside and out, as well as, help out in the mulch yard when not on deliveries.

We are seeking a self-motivated individual who is looking to be a team player and able to bring new ideas to the table. We are very focused on providing the best customer service to our customers. This position is a part time/seasonal position. Hours range from 36 – 55 hours, depending on the time of year. Saturdays are required March – September. GreenCycle of Indiana EOE $10/hr. Please visit www.greencycleindy.com to learn more about our company. Resumes may be brought to: Applications may be picked up at: 2695 Cicero Rd. Noblesville, IN 46060 No phone calls please.

Brickman Group

Immediate Openings

LAWN CARE

JOB FAIR Wednesday, February 19th, 2014 (9am-3pm) 10720 Andrade Dr., Zionsville 317-344-9351

Part-time Office Assistant Needed

Part-time Office Assistant for a small Engineering/Manufacturing Company located in downtown Carmel. Hours are 9:30 a.m. – 2:30 p.m. M-F, some flexibility possible. QuickBooks proficiency is a must! Email resume to tsmoot@ globalmanufacturingsystems.com

Puzzle Answers

C R E P E S

S C E N T S

H E A R S T

H O L E O U T

A H F O P R I G C A P A R R N O J E F U T I L T S I E D N Y G N K E E E M

E V A D E I F N O T E N S

M A U L I E A O P R G E R T E Y P U O R G E

F O A M I N L A G E O R T I D S T E C I C A I M O R G E Y A N B I G E S T A G E F F G E O V E N E R

S I G N O R A

D E E P E N

O T T A W A

T E S T E D

Answers to BUILD THE WORDS: BOWLING, SEYMOUR, WIKIPEDIA, CROSSROADS, BACON Answers to HOOSIER HODGEPODGE: Joints: ANKLE, ELBOW, HIP, KNEE, SHOULDER, WRIST; Suburbs: AVON, BROWNSBURG, FISHERS, GREENWOOD, PLAINFIELD; Brands: BRIDGESTONE, FIRESTONE, GOODYEAR, MICHELIN; Poetry: HAIKU, ODE, SONNET; Twins: FRATERNAL, IDENTICAL; Station: WFYI Answers to INDIANA WORDSMITH CHALLENGE: PAYEES, SPAYED, SPEEDY, SPEWED, SWAYED, EASED, PAWED, PAYEE, SEEDY, SPADE, SPEED, SWEEP, WADES, WEEDS, WEEDY, WEEPS, WEEPY, YAWED, APES, AWED, AWES, AYES, DAYS, DEEP, DEWY, DYES, EASE, EASY, EWES, EYED, EYES, PADS, PAWS, PAYS, PEAS, PEWS, SEED, SEEP, SPAY, SPED, SPEW, SWAP, SWAY, WADE, WADS, WASP, WAYS, WEED, WEEP, YAPS, YAWS, YEWS

We are seeking a self-motivated individual who is looking to be a team player and able to bring new ideas to the table. We are very focused on providing the best customer service to our customers. This position is a part time/seasonal position. Hours range from 36 – 55 hours, depending on the time of year. Saturdays are required March – September. GreenCycle of Indiana EOE $10/hr. Please visit www.greencycleindy.com to learn more about our company. Resumes may be brought to: Applications may be picked up at: 2695 Cicero Rd. Noblesville, IN 46060 No phone calls please.

Northside church seeks

“full charge bookkeeper” with experience in Accounts Receivable, Accounts Payable, Payroll, General Ledger and Bank Reconciliation. Please email to: careersnorthsidechurch@gmail.com

Lost and Found

Found: Handyman type tools Location: West Main st. & Old Meridian St on the round a bout Identify: 317-440-8956

Summer Camps 2014 A guide for parents and caregivers offering helpful tips, camp listings, summer programs and activities in and around Hamilton County

Coming February 25th Reach all 108,133 households in Carmel, Fishers, Noblesville, Westfield and Zionsville by U.S. Mail for one low price!


28

February 18, 2014

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

A Women’s HeArt HeAltH event

Dedicate one night to an important fight–heart disease. Put on something red and come celebrate heart healthy living and Go Red for Women month with Indiana University Health North Hospital. This special night includes:

A talk on heart health from an IU Health cardiologist n A presentation from a dietician on incorporating heart healthy food into your diet n Free dinner n Door prize giveaways n

Women’s HeArt HeAltH event Dr. Mark Fisch Cardiologist Thursday, February 27, 6-8 pm RSVP by calling 317.688.2828 IU HeAlTH NoRTH HoSPITAl 11700 N. Meridian St. Carmel, IN 46032 iuhealth.org/northheart

©2014 IU Health 02/14 HY02314_0809


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