July 28, 2020 — Zionsville

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Tuesday, July 28, 2020

BIKE TO BE HEARD

Community gathers to oppose racism / P9

Holcomb issues statewide mask mandate / P3

BCHD recommends alternating in-person, remote learning / P5

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July 28, 2020

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On the cover

Central Indiana residents prepare to ride at Bike to be Heard. (Photo by Jarred Meeks)

Founded March 20 2012, at Zionsville, IN Vol. IX, No. 17 Copyright 2020. 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.

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Holcomb issues statewide mask mandate By Jarred Meeks jarred@youarecurrent.com

not be getting mixed messages throughout the day. “When they leave school grounds, they Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb signed an need to see that everyone is doing what executive order mandating all Hoosiers 8 they’re doing, that best practices are best years and older for all.” PANDEMIC wear masks when Indiana’s seven-day average posiin indoor public tivity rate increased to 7 percent, spaces, commercial entities and as of July 14. The state’s positivity transportation services, or when rate was 6.3 percent July 4 and 4.3 they can’t social distance, even percent June 18, indicating COVID-19 when outside. The order was to go is spreading. The state’s positivinto effect July 27. ity rate on May 3 was 14.5 percent. Holcomb State officials strongly recomIndiana State Health Commissioner mend masks be worn by children 2 to 7 Dr. Kristina Box has said she monitors the years old. A mask or other face covering statistic closely because it can be a better may be factory-made, sewn by hand, or predictor of community spread than the improvised from household items such as state’s number of positive cases, which are scarfs, bandanas and T-shirts. Mouths and expected to increase as the state’s testing noses should be covered. capabilities increase. Mask use will be required in all schools The number of Hoosiers hospitalized for grades 3 and up. Masks will be required with COVID-19 also has increased in recent of faculty, staff and anyone else in schools. weeks. As of July 20, 804 residents were They also are required for co-curricular hospitalized, up from 595 as of June 26. and all extra-curricular activities except for Previously, 1,579 Indiana residents were those involving strenuous physical activity. hospitalized on May 4. Health officials assure that masks do not Surrounding states have seen their posiincrease exposure to carbon dioxide or imtivity rates increase in recent weeks and pede breathing. also have issued mask mandates. Minnesota Holcomb said necessary exceptions will issued a mandate on July 22. More than half be made for medical purposes, strenuous of all states, including Michigan, Illinois and physical activity and for eating and drinkKentucky, have issued similar mandates. The ing. Holcomb did not say how long the exmoves come after Florida, Texas and Califorecutive order would last. Violators could be nia have reported their largest surges since charged with a Class B misdemeanor. the start of the pandemic in mid-March. “The mask police won’t be patrolling IndiSchool guidance ana streets,” Holcomb said. State officials have offered additional In addition to rising COVID-19 rates in the guidance to school systems for reopening. state, Holcomb said getting children back Holcomb said he would leave the decision to school and keeping Indiana businesses whether to open schools to local officials. open were determining factors in his deci“There is no more important task before sion to implement the mask mandate. us than returning students safely to school “We want businesses to stay open,” Holfor instruction,” Holcomb said. comb said during a July 22 press briefing. To mitigate the spread, state officials “We want more Hoosiers to continue this recommend schools space desks as far as trend of going back safely to work. We don’t apart as possible, facing the same direction. want to dial it back or put it in reverse or, They said it would be ideal to sequester stuas some are, shutting down again. Face coverings can and will help us blunt this increase. We’re asking our kids and their teachers to mask up, and our kids should

dents into groups to minimize the potential spread. Part of doing so would involve planning schedules so that a minimum number of students are in close contact. State officials also gave guidance for how to respond to COIVD-19 cases in schools. In a classroom, anyone who spends more than 15 minutes within 6 feet of a person within the 48 hours prior to that person displaying symptoms or having tested positive should be considered close a contact and should quarantine at home for a minimum of 14 days. The person should be monitored by their local health department and the state’s centralized contact tracing center. If sequestering students into groups is not possible, state officials said it might be necessary for entire classrooms to quarantine. “If a school has multiple positive cases, officials should work with the state and local health department on what next steps to take,” Indiana State Health Dept. Chief Medical Officer Dr. Linda Weaver said Coronavirus study results published The results of a statewide study to measure the spread of COVID-19 indicates a general population prevalence of about 2.8 percent in Indiana. The study was conducted by the Indiana University Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health at IUPUI in collaboration with the Indiana State Dept. of Health. The findings were published July 21 in “Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report,” the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s scientific publication. In June, researchers determined 1.7 percent of participants tested positive for COVID-19 and an additional 1.1 percent tested positive for antibodies, resulting in an estimated overall population prevalence of 2.8 percent. An estimated 187,802 Hoosiers were infected with COVID-19 at the time of the study, approximately 10 times higher than the confirmed cases in the state.

“The mask police won’t be patrolling Indiana streets.” — Gov. Eric Holcomb


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BCHD pushes new school schedule By Jarred Meeks jarred@youarecurrent.com The Boone County Health Dept. released a statement July 21 recommending school systems in the county PANDEMIC implement an alternating hybrid schedule for middle school and high school students. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, school systems have been tasked with balancing efforts to reopen schools for in-person learning while also attempting to ensure the health and safety of students and staff through stringent mitigation efforts. In an alternating hybrid schedule, students would attend in-person classes certain days of the week and participate in remote learning the other days of the week, meaning students would only attend inperson classes two or three days a week. “We have been working so closely with the schools in order to kind of figure out a game plan,” BCHD Public Health Educator Claire Haughton said. “What has been really great have been the superintendents. They have all wanted to have a unified front and to keep everything consistent so everything is not confusing for everybody.”

In a press release, the BCHD stated that research suggests the spread of COVID-19 is “minimal” in children ages 0-10. The department, however, stated there is research suggesting youth ages 11-19 are experiencing higher levels of spread. In April, scientists at the Institut Pasteur in France conducted an epidemiological survey on 1,340 people linked to primary schools in Crépy-en-Valois, a city north of Paris. Based on the survey’s findings, the institute suggested children do not spread the virus as readily as adults or older youths, and infected parents were likely the cause of the children’s infections, as opposed to children infecting parents. But a study released out of South Korea found that even though children younger than 11 spread the virus less than older children, there is still a risk of transmission. As of press time, the BCHD reported 611 COVID-19 cases in the county. Of the eight new cases reported July 22, three were residents younger than 19. Also, all county schools observing IHSAA reentry rules will pause in Phase 1, the first of a three-stage plan to start school athletics, until at least July 31, the department announced.

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July 28, 2020

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Commissioners reissue state of emergency By Jarred Meeks jarred@youarecurrent.com The Boone County Commissioners unanimously approved a resolution declaring a state of emergency July 20 PANDEMIC in response to an uptick in county COVID-19 cases. The resolution allows Donnie Lawson, the president of the Boone County Board of Commissioners and the county’s chief executive officer, the ability to organize a county response to the pandemic more quickly than without the declaration, Boone County Commissioner Jeff Wolfe said. The commissioners had allowed a previous resolution declaring a state of emergency to expire June 22. “My recommendation is that we get back into a unified command so that we have a unified front, at least for communication, because we are going to be making hard decisions, and everyone needs to be on the same page,” Boone County Health Dept. Emergency Services Director Tom Ryan said. Reissuing the Boone County State of Emergency Declaration will allow the Boone County Commissioners to again designate the Witham Pavilion at the Boone County 4-H Fairgrounds as a COVID-19 treatment facility, if needed. It also would allow for the streamlining of communications and operations between Boone County Incident Command partners. The declaration went into effect July 20 and may expire or be renewed every seven days. In the past four weeks, Boone County has seen an increase in COVID-19 cases, county officials said. As of July 20, Boone County had approximately 589 confirmed cases of COVID-19 and 50 COVID-19 deaths. “This is especially concerning due to Boone County schools beginning the new academic year in a matter of weeks,” the BCHD stated in a press release, noting it expects the number of known and unknown COVID-19 cases will continue to increase. Ryan said county hospitalizations and positive cases among those younger than 19 also are increasing. The Boone County commissioners and other county officials meet every Monday to determine if a continued declaration is warranted, according to the BCHD.


July 28, 2020

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Officials cancel county 4-H fair By Jarred Meeks jarred@youarecurrent.com Boone County officials have canceled the Boone County 4-H Fair because of the COVID-19 pandemic. PANDEMIC Boone County commissioners, county health officials and 4-H organizers made the decision during a July 16 meeting. The fair was scheduled to begin July 18. “When the meeting was done, they had decided it was in the best interest all people, adults and children, to not have the fair because of the danger of the virus being spread,” Boone County Commissioners Board President Donnie Lawson said. Initially, 11 events, such as the robotics

demo, achievement program and the 4-H fashion revue for sewing and wearable arts, were still scheduled with social-distancing strategies. But those events, along with all the others, are now canceled. As of press time, Boone County has reported 50 COVID-19 deaths. All but five occurred in long-term care facilities. Lawson said the decision to cancel the fair was made, in part, because of a rise in cases. In the early months of the pandemic, most positive cases in the county were confined to long-term care facilities. Now, data from the Boone County Health Dept. shows an uptick in cases among residents who do not live in such facilities. Lawson said officials canceled the fair out of concern for public safety.

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Zionsville cancels Creek Week — Zionsville officials have canceled Creek Week, a weeklong community service project that aimed to clean Eagle Creek. The Town of Zionsville stated Indiana’s increased number of COVID-19 positive cases and the upcoming school year caused town officials to decide this year’s Creek Week should be canceled. The event was originally scheduled for the week of Aug. 8 through Aug. 16. This year, Zionsville Creek Week was to take the place of the annual Creekfest event, which typically included a stream cleanup and festival with booths and activities.

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Project: New roundabout ZIONSVILLE Location: 116th Street and Project: Sycamore Street Guilford Road. East and bridge reconstruction westbound traffic flow will Location: Sycamore Street CONSTRUCTION be maintained,but north Bridge in Zionsville will be and southbound connectivclosed as the road bridge ity will be limited. deck and bridge railing systems are Start date: On or after July 15 reconstructed and new decorative lighting Expected completion: Mid-November is installed. Project: New roundabout Expected completion: Aug. 28 Location: 116th Street and College Avenue. Detour: Utilize U.S. 421/Michigan Road, East and westbound traffic flow will be 106th Street and Main Street. maintained,but north and southbound CARMEL connectivity will be limited. Project: Widening of 146th Start date: On or after July 15 Location: Near Boone County border Expected completion: Mid-November Expected completion: By end of 2020

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July 28, 2020

COVER STORY

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Community gathers to oppose racism By Jarred Meeks jarred@youarecurrent.com Dozens of central Indiana families arrived at an empty parking lot late on a Saturday evening wearing helmets and riding bicycles — families of all races, ages and backgrounds. They gathered to ride and, they hoped, to be heard. Countless protests have been held internationally in response to the death of George Floyd, a Black man who was killed in police custody May 25 in Minneapolis. In numerous locations in the United States, protesters were met with tear gas and other nonlethal responses by police. Protestors also damaged property in several cities. Aaron Williams, a Black Zionsville resident, said the events created potentially unsafe environments, so he and other organizers created a free, safe event for central Indiana residents called Bike to be Heard. Bike to be Heard was held July 18 in Zionsville to advocate for the end of systemic racism. The idea came about when Williams rode his bike with a neighbor and discussed ways to safely unite the community. During their ride, they decided a socially distanced bicycle ride was an ideal and safe activity to plan an event around. Local businesses and law enforcement, including the Zionsville Police Dept., the

Aaron Williams speaks to a crowd at Bike to be Heard. (Photo by Jarred Meeks)

Zionsville Fire Dept., the Boone County Sheriff’s Office, the Whitestown Municipal Police Dept., the Carmel Police Dept., Carmel Fire Dept. and the Indianapolis Municipal Police Dept. chief of police, supported the idea. Municipal officials from Zionsville and Carmel attended. “Better is yet to come,” Williams told attendees during the event. “It is up to us to make that happen and to bring about that change.” Among those in the crowd were some of Williams’ family, including his father, Olgen Williams, five of his six brothers and many

of their children. Olgen was amazed by the turnout and declared it an example for other communities in Indiana to follow. Olgen said he raised Aaron and his brothers to respect law enforcement. He said Aaron was “taught to love his brother” and that “no person is perfect.” He added that the principles he instilled in Aaron led him to view law enforcement from a nuanced perspective. “Given the work that police officers do in our community and how they put their lives on the line — men and women — every day, I tell people when police leave my neighborhood I’m going to be in the same caravan with them because I value their work that much,” Olgen said. “None of us are perfect. No person on the workforce is perfect, so we’ve got to work out the imperfectness and then keep on moving. We can’t throw it out the door because of a few incidents.” Williams echoed his father’s perspective, saying he trusts local law enforcement agencies. “We’ve seen a lot of back and forth with our law enforcement community, and one thing that I’ve been able to do is meet with members of our law enforcement community and our elected officials to bring about change,” Williams said. “And I’ll tell you this — I learned this from my mentor, my hero, my dad — I’m not for, whatsoever, defunding the police (or) abolishing the police, because if they leave, give me a five-minute warning because I’m going with them.” At the end of his speech, Williams called for the crowd to commit to a pledge he said

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will ensure the next generation of children are not subjected to the same inequalities and experiences. The pledge read: “I am committed to a better tomorrow. I pledge to make this world a better place for the next generation than the one that was given to me. I will seek out and celebrate diversity. I promise to listen, learn and then act as an agent of change. I will look for ways to teach my children, my neighbors and my friends to bring an end to systemic racism in our lifetimes. I believe that a brighter future is possible, and it will start with me!”

TEACHING THE NEXT GENERATION Indianapolis residents Genna and Jarrod Borror brought their 11-year-old son Quinn to participate in Bike to be Heard. The Borrors said they wanted to give Quinn the opportunity to show support for racial inclusion and be involved in activism at a young age. For them, Bike to be Heard was a perfect opportunity in a safe environment. “You don’t know what could happen,” Genna said about other protests. With the rise of internet connectivity and social media platforms, she said the world has responded in greater numbers to recent events compared to the L.A. riots in the ‘90s and more recent events in Ferguson, Mo., and she was proud her entire family could show their support.


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July 28, 2020

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ESSAY

LETTER

Parent traps

Trump, Biden aren’t your only choices

Commentary by Terry Anker Every parenting expert, including a few who became experts just by being good parents, will tell you that the best way to raise successful and well-adjusted children is through generous use of shame, manipulation and fear to get them to fall in line. Always make sure to include countless inconsistent and evolving directions and, if they resist or question absolute authority, label them stupid, or worse, and tell them that they deserve for bad things to happen to them. Plus, make it clear that adults are infallible and entirely devoid of self-interest. Not so much. Today, beating our kids into cooperation is more likely to get one arrested than awarded the gold star for child rearing. Happily, since Attila the Hun’s parents launched him into the world, most of us have figured out that a lighter hand produces a superior result. Belittling and demeaning supervision may work in the short-term but rarely produces more than resentment and hostility in the long-term. Still, it frustrates to answer their constant questions. “Just do it because I said so, or else!” is the endgame of one unwilling or unable to back up their edicts. Some is good. Most parents work to keep the kids safe and on course. Some is not so good. Others just want the kids to believe like they do. Dissent is not tolerated, and any method to enforce the orthodoxy is acceptable and warranted. Yet, how do we expect parents to behave? Do we Americans continue to value civil discourse as the primary mechanism to move political agreement, or has our general ethos leaned into shame, threat and finger-wagging as the go-to way to “force those idiots” to agree with us? If America becomes a bad parent to our youth, how will these generations emerge — fearful and submissive or resentful and angry?

Terry Anker is an associate editor of Current Publishing, LLC. You may email him at terry@ youarecurrent.com.

One tough juggling act Commentary by Danielle Wilson

under a couch, soon to be forgotten like a dead battery or a half-eaten breadstick. Like most of you, I play many roles. I’m a I am still managing to keep the sister ball daughter and a sister, a wife and a mother. in the air, quite spectacularly, I might add. Usually, I’m able to juggle all They know how hard it is to be a caretaker HUMOR the balls with relative ease, to Dad and a shoulder for Mom. Having eseven when a few become sentially volunteered as tribute, I have been extraordinarily heavy. But thanks to this rewarded with Most Favorite Sibling status. crackpot year we call 2020, my competent Thank you! I humbly accept. clowning days seem But let’s not forBut thanks to this crackpot year numbered. get the highly unwe call 2020, my competent Currently, the predictable teacher daughter ball is ball, whose size and clowning days seem numbered. taking most of my shape change daily. concentration and might. Dad is battling Sometimes small and round, sometimes a terminal cancer, and as the only one of his lethal flaming torch. How am I to juggle that five girls with the ability to help right now, hot mess? I’ve been spending most of my days in KenSo, I’m temporarily suspending my circus tucky, which means my parenting ball has act. been completely discarded. What are my Bozo out. own kids up to? I have no idea. I think they are working. I hope they are showering, but honestly, they might be hosting a VR mosh Danielle Wilson is a contributing colpit in the certainly filthy kitchen. I’ve also umnist. You may email her at completely neglected my husband, Doo. I info@youarecurrent.com. think I’ve seen him maybe three days out of the last 14, so both family balls have rolled

Editor, I know Indiana is a majority conservative state, but I also know there are many conservatives who don’t like Trump. If you’re one of those people, I don’t envy you. You must feel so conflicted. I’m here to tell you about the other Jo who might be your solution. Dr. Jo Jorgensen is the Libertarian nominee. She wants to protect some of the freedoms that conservatives are often passionate about, such as the second amendment and religious freedom. I hope to see her in the presidential debates because I think that will help maintain a healthy democracy. To be in the debates, a third party candidate must reach at least 15 percent in five major polls. The last Libertarian almost reached this goal in 2016. However, some polls don’t include third options. For this reason, I’ve been emailing news outlets such as CNN, Fox, and The New York Times asking them to include Dr. Jorgensen. I hope if everyone does this, they’ll include her in the polls. If you’re passionate about this subject, there is a nationwide protest you can attend called, “Let Her Speak.” On Aug. 8, there will be simultaneous protests across the country to get Dr. Jorgensen in the debates, including one in Indianapolis. For more information, you can go to facebook.com/groups/letherspeak. Isabel Riordan, Carmel

POLICIES Letters to the editor: Current Publishing will consider verifiable letters of up to 150 words. Letters must be thoroughly vetted prior to submission. Current retains the right to reject or return any letter it deems to carry unsubstantiated content. Current also retains the right to edit letters, but not their intent. Send letters to info@youarecurrent.com. Writers must include a hometown and a daytime phone number for verification. Guest columns: The policy for guest columns is the same as the aforementioned, but the allowable length is 240 words. Guest columns should address the whole of Current’s readership, not simply special-interest groups, and may not in any way contain a commercial message.


Issue 3 | SUMMER 2020

AND BETTER

PLAY

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55 AND BETTER Summer 2020

he coronavirus pandemic didn’t given master points.” make Wagner Van Vlack kick his Van Vlack said there is data that five-day-a-week bridge habit. shows bridge keeps your brain sharp The Carmel resident plays five days and helps fight off dementia. a week on bridgebase.com instead Van Vlack began playing when he of in-person. Van Vlack was was 10 years old and continplaying at Indianapolis Bridge ued through high school. He Center, but it has been closed then got too busy and took since the pandemic and will up the game when he retired likely not reopen until there is as a high school principal in a COVID-19 vaccine because Tucson, Ariz. Van Vlack and of the age of the participants. his wife moved to Carmel 8 “It’s saving the game be1/2 years ago. Van Vlack cause the fees you pay for “I managed a bridge club that, a portion goes back to your local in Tucson after I retired, which was a club,” Van Vlack said. “You can pay for terrific job,” he said. “I got paid to $6 online and the clubs get a portion play bridge. We have one daughter, (slightly more than $3) of that. Without and she and her husband lived in that income, the clubs all over the Chicago and she got pregnant, so our country would have to shut down. It’s a retirement thoughts of being in sunny wonderful game. It’s a terrific pastime. Arizona were put aside to be grandThey said it’s the world’s most popular parents, and we moved to Chicago. card game, and I’m absolutely addictThen my daughter, Jenny Van Hamped, as are many others.” ton, who is an attorney, got a job in Van Vlack plays with people from Indianapolis, so we just tagged along. the Indianapolis area club during a “We have a 10-year granddaughtwo-hour afternoon time slot. ter, who we’ve helped take care of “I know the people I’m playing with since she was born. Her husband died and against from my live experience three years ago of glioblastoma (brain at the club,” said Van Vlack, who also cancer).” plays online with a close friend from Fishers resident Maureen Clerkin, Arizona. 71, has been a member of the club Van Vlack, who prefers to be called for six years since retiring. Van, said the strategy doesn’t change. “I have about six or seven different “It’s the same game,” he said. “It’s partners,” Clerkin said. “I play with just the social aspect is limited. You the same person every Wednesday. can chat a little bit but it’s not the I’m guessing 50 percent of the Indiasame as being with people.” napolis club members are playing onVan Vlack’s wife, Julie, doesn’t play. line. Some aren’t because they don’t “We’ve salvaged our marriage as a like the online game as well. Since I’m result,” he said jokingly. “Sometimes playing with a lot of the same players, you get frustrated with your partner, I feel like I am connecting with them.” and sometimes it’s easier to get frusClerkin played bridge when she trated with your spouse than a friend. was younger and then stopped for 40 When you go to the club to play, years until retiring. most people are playing with friends “Both my brothers play, and we but they’re not playing with their husgrew up playing,” she said. “I’ve band or wife. At the club, I had five or played a variety of card games, six partners.” hearts, euchre, pinochle, poker. I like Van Vlack said all players get the bridge the best. It’s the most chalsame hand who are sitting across from lenging and the most fun. It takes a each other. lot of work. “It’s unlike life. It’s totally fair,” he “When I started back, I took a lot of said. “So, it minimizes the amount of classes. It’s mentally stimulating.” luck in the game. If you score more For more, visit indianapolisbridge. than your opponent, you win. You are com.


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55 AND BETTER Summer 2020

The Barrington of Carmel residents Jo Ann Myers, left, and Jan Haslar weave baskets for patients who require skilled nursing care. (Submitted photo)

Longtime friends share craft-making skills By Rick Morwick rick@youarecurrent.com

F

or nearly 10 years, Jo Ann Myers and Jan Haslar were next-door neighbors in Massillon, Ohio. They grew up together, graduated from high school together — and then a strange thing happened. Life got in the way, and they wouldn’t see each other again for more than three decades — until they discovered they both happened to live in Hamilton County. Now, they are reunited as friends and neighbors, only this time as residents of The Barrington of Carmel, where they share a passion — and talent — for basket weaving. “After graduating high school, we went our separate ways and had no contact for over 30 years,” said Myers, 79, who reconnected with Haslar several years ago after moving to Carmel and discovering that her childhood friend lived in Westfield. “I called her to renew our friendship.” Myers and Haslar, 81, moved into The Barrington a few months apart in 2018. The following year, they learned the art of basket weaving from a fellow resident, Sandy Godich, and have

since made dozens of baskets that are given to patients who require skilled nursing care. “Basket weaving is easy and something I can do and get lost in thought,” Myers said. “I lose track of time when I am weaving. It also is enjoyable to spend time with others while weaving and feel that I am doing something for others.” Haslar enjoys the craft for most of the same reasons. “For me, it’s very relaxing, and when I’m concentrating on what I’m doing, I can forget the world is out there,” she said. “It was really a blessing when we were in lockdown during COVID-19.” Myers and Haslar each had craft-making hobbies prior to weaving baskets. Myers has worked in ceramics, crochet and cross stitch and has made hook rugs, Indian jewelry and hand-rolled silk flowers. She also has sewn clothes. Haslar, meanwhile, has done sewing and needlework — such as cross Continued on Page 5


Continued from Page 4 stitch and tapestry — and has created paintings and pen and ink drawings. She also is a former flute player. But prior craft experience notwithstanding, basket weaving required learning a new set of skills — something both women warmly embraced. “I don’t feel there is anything difficult about basket weaving,” Myers said. “Basic weaving reminds me of making potholders when I was a kid. There are many ways to change the basic pattern by using different colors of reed and sizes of reed. Starting out as a beginner, we used patterns. After making a few baskets, I had the desire to make my own designs. “It’s always a work in progress.” Haslar agrees. “When I first started, the hardest parts to master were understanding all the different reeds, (such as) flat, flat oval, round, and what and when to use them, especially when following a specific pattern,” she said. “The time it takes to make a basket depends on the size, of course, (and) then it depends on what type of weave you’re doing. “The smaller baskets that we’ve made take about four to six hours.” When the baskets are finished, they are filled with toiletries and personal items such as pencils and puzzle books for patients in skilled nursing care. “A comment my husband made when I was doing hook rugs was that my next project would be making baskets,” Myers said. “Little did I know that 50 years later that would come true. When I started basket weaving, I had no idea it would be my favorite hobby.”

“I don’t feel there is anything difficult about basket weaving. Basic weaving reminds me of making potholders when I was a kid. There are many ways to change the basic pattern by using different colors of reed and sizes of reed.”

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— Jo Ann Myers 55 AND BETTER Summer 2020

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Hoosier Village: Meet Ginger Merkel By Mark Ambrogi mark@youarecurrent.com

G

inger Merkel was quite familiar with Hoosier Village when she moved into the senior living community near Zionsville in 2017. Her mother, Alice Peak, lived at Hoosier Village from 1994 until she died in 2008. Merkel and her late husband, Roger, had lived in Indianapolis before his death in 2016. Merkel, 73, works full time at Wells Fargo as a financial planner. Merkel, Merkel who has been with Wells Fargo for 43 years, earned her degree from IUPUI. Prior to financial planning, she was a buyer for Block’s, a defunct Indianapolis department store. “I knew a lot about Hoosier Village, and I recommended it to clients over the years, so I have a lot of clients who live out here,” she said. “There was good reason for me to come out here.” What keeps you working full time? “My dad (Philip Peak) worked until he was 87. My mentor, Alex Carroll, worked until he was 94. I’m trying to beat his record. My father was dean of education at Indiana University.”

How did shooting clay pigeons get to be your favorite pastime? “My husband was a U.S. Marshal and he taught me

Before we discovered M4L,

to use a gun early on. We used to travel and one of the events we went to for the firm was at Greenbrier (W. Va.) Sporting Club and they had a sporting clays course there. Both of us decided that looked like fun. We enjoyed it and met another couple we traveled around. She’s a colleague of mine and the firm and does what I do in the Washington, D.C., area.” Do you compete in tournaments? “No, we just shoot for fun. I’ve been doing it about 10 years or so. I do shoot with my business partner’s two boys that are going back to Purdue. We used to shoot almost every weekend. I don’t like skeet or trap, it’s too boring. Sporting clays involves several different shooting stations on a course, which offers a variety of trajectories, angles, speeds, distances and target sizes.” Any other hobbies? “I do a lot of work for the America Red Cross and I do a lot of traveling on their behalf. I do a lot of personal travel.”

Do you have a favorite travel spot? “I do a lot of travel to Europe, but I suspect that is going to decline some. I travel for the Red Cross. I am on a couple of national boards, so I spend a lot of time in D.C. Some of the board meetings are in other parts of the country. I spend a lot of time on airplanes or did until recently. I’ve been active in Red Cross for almost 30 years. I’m a life board member. They are stuck with me forever. I serve on the national philanthropic board for the national headquarters and also Tiffany Circle National Council. I was a chair for awhile and I have an emeritus position there. Tiffany Circle is the high-end women’s giving organization for the American Red Cross.” Did you have a favorite travel spot with your husband? “My husband was a German student and an exchange student in high school. He liked anything where he could use his German, so we spent a fair amount of time in Germany. Probably like Austria the best and Switzerland.”

“I do a lot of travel to Europe, but I suspect that is going to decline some. I travel for the Red Cross. I am on a couple of national boards, so I spend a lot of time in D.C. ”

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Senior move provides challenges Commentary by Kristen Howard

W

hen our phone rings and we hear an anxious voice on the other end, we know that it’s probably time to step in and help. Most of our clients call us after they realize how much work is going to be involved in their own move or a parent’s/grandparent’s move. They initially approach it like a typical move, but soon learn that it is going to require more effort and planning. They recognize there are more components (we refer to them as the spinning plates) that are involved. In a typical move, you might have a Realtor, mover, inspection, lender and possibly a relocation company. That process alone is stressful enough. Take all of those factors and add in potential years of memories that need to be sorted through, deciding what to keep/ take, an estate sale, navigating through Medicaid and VA benefits, legal consultations, updates that need to be made before selling and the decades of emotional baggage from parent/child roles. Now, think about all the phone calls and appointments that would need to be managed throughout the process. You can imagine why some seniors choose to stay put instead of making a move that could possibly be beneficial to their health. Our company began solely as a real estate team that focused on helping seniors downsize. We quickly learned that seniors didn’t just need help with the sale of their home but with the management of the entire process. That is why we added the transition management side to the business. When our clients work with our team, they have one point of contact, a Halo Angel. We oversee and coordinate all the moving parts, making it a less stressful process for the client and their family. We have a passion for working with seniors, and our goal is to make the transition a positive and pain-free experience. Kristen Howard is the director of marketing for Halo Senior Solutions. She can be reached at khoward@haloseniorsolutions. com. For more, visit haloseniorsolutions.com or call 1-833-284HALO (4256).

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PLAY

ON Retirees stay active with weekly golf leagues

By Mark Ambrogi mark@youarecurrent.com

D

uring the coronavirus pandemic, one way for older adults to stay active has been golf. Carmel’s Plum Creek Golf Club’s senior league got off to a little slower start before Carmel allowed carts to

be used. “When it started and you couldn’t use carts, a lot of the older people couldn’t play because they couldn’t walk the course,” Dave Van Vliet said. “We delayed the league start for a month because of that. We usually start in the second or third Van Vliet week in April, and we started in May. Seventy-five percent use carts now and the rest walk. I started walking because of the social distancing.” Carmel resident Steve Valentine, 64, said golf has been a positive way to stay active. “You get some exercise and a chance to socialize a little bit,” he said. “So many people who don’t play golf or don’t play that much are going stir crazy because you are cooped up in your house. We’re able to get fresh air, enjoy fellowship, and It’s been good for your mental well-being,’ Van Vliet, 68, serves as treasurer for the Plum Creek league. “It’s basically seniors, but we’ll let anyone play if they want to play,” Van Vliet said. “There are some in their 50s that retired early. There is a core 30 to 40 who play golf every day.” The league is held Tuesday and Thursday mornings. Van Vliet, who has lived in Carmel for 30 years, said all the members are retirees. Van Vliet said the league size has been steady with 59. League play ends in mid-October. “We got a lot of new blood this year and we lost some golfers,” he said.

Jim Sheffield of Carmel prepares to tee off at the first hole at Plum Creek Golf Club. (Photo by Ann Marie Shambaugh)

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55 AND BETTER Summer 2020

Continued on Page 9


From left, CE Quandt, Jim Jackson and Jim Winter prepare to tee off at the first hole at Plum Creek Golf Club. (Photo by Ann Marie Shambaugh)

Continued from Page 8 Van Vliet, who has golfed seriously for the past 25 years, said the teams are balanced by handicaps. “We usually have a high handicap, two mid-handicaps and one low handicap in the same group,” he said. “The low handicap is about a 2 for the tees we are playing and the high is 25. It’s a good mix. Most are about 12- to 18-handicap.” Van Vliet has been a Plum Creek member since 2002 and is in his third year with the league. “The first time I played this course I fell in love with it,” Van Vliet said. “It’s a good course for people who don’t hit the ball far. There are very few times that there are traps in front of the greens. It’s a very forgiving course. It’s a tough course because it’s a Pete Dye course and it’s all angles, and you have to play the right angles.” Valentine is in his second year as a Plum Creek member. “It’s a fun league, but there are some guys that are really competitive,” he said. “I have a 7-handicap for this year. I guess I’m considered an ‘A’ player. They have them categorized A, B, C, D. You get a chance to exercise and socialize.” Noblesville resident Chuck Witt, 66, moved to the area from Valparaiso three years ago to be close to his daughter and two grandchildren. He joined the league when he moved. “Not knowing anyone in the community, it’s been great to have friends around the golf course,” Witt

said. “It’s a big part of my social life.” Over the Hill Gang at Fox Prairie Noblesville’s Fox Prairie Golf Course’s senior golf league is known as the Over the Hill Gang. Pete Campassi, a 72-year-old Fishers resident, has been a member for 18 years. “To be a bunch of retired people that play golf, you couldn’t ask for anything more,” Campassi said. “It’s perfect. You don’t call anybody. You don’t need to call for a tee time. The golf course has been nice enough to give us a block of times. Today, Campassi we had 25 golfers. Yesterday, we had seven. But typically, it’s anywhere from 12 to 28 golfers on a given day. Some play three days a week, some play every day.” Campassi said everyone has a USGA-sanctioned handicap and then are divided into teams. The league typically starts at 8 a.m. weekdays. “We throw five bucks in a pot, play a little game,” he said. “You play with a different guy every day, which makes it neat.” Campassi said he played 150-plus rounds in 2019. He has been playing five days a week this summer. “Even before I retired, I was in a position where I could come out here, play and then go to my job,” Campassi said. “I think everyone is retired now. Some may do something else on the side.” Prior to the pandemic, Campassi said everyone would sit inside and socialize after a round of golf.

Some do gather at outside tables, but it’s not quite the same, he said. At 89, Richard Farrell is the oldest golfer playing this year. “I drive the golf carts out of the barn in the morning and park ‘em Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday,” said Farrell, who joined the league in 2005. “If I’m healthy enough, I try to play golf Monday, Wednesday and Friday. I’ve got a bad back, bad shoulder, bad elbow, bad hamstring, but I try to play.” Farrell Farrell said he enjoys the flexibility of the league and friendships. “I’ve been active all my life,” he said. “I ran a bowling alley for 50 years in Massachusetts. I started playing golf when I was younger and then gave it up for a while. I started again when I was 27 and played about every day for 50 years. We moved here in 2004, my two daughters and grandchildren are here.” Noblesville resident Jim Astrike, 80, lives only a half-mile from the course. “I love to play golf, and this is really handy,” he said. “It’s a great course. It’s one of the better municipal courses in Indiana.” Fisher resident Jim Seymour, 72, who plays five days a week, likes the flexibility of the league. “If I decided not to play tomorrow, I don’t have to show up,” said Seymour, who has been a member since 2006. 55 AND BETTER Summer 2020

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ADVERTORIAL

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r. Larry Stevens is a general surgeon who performs laparoscopic abdominal surgery. The Indianapolis resident serves as the chief medical officer at IU Health Saxony Hospital in Fishers. He practices at IU Health Methodist Hospital, IU Health North Hospital, IU Health Tipton Hospital and Saxony. Stevens answered the following questions about seeking health care or surgery during the coronavirus pandemic. What offices are open? “All IU Health facilities are open and operational. The emergency rooms, hospitals and doctors’ offices are open. Procedural areas such as cardiac cath labs, radiology and imaging services are available, so IU Health is able to offer the full depth and breadth of services that anyone in the community might need.”

Our highly skilled hip and knee replacement surgeons are ready to hel

At IU Health, nothing is more important to us than your health and safety, today and each day moving forward. We want to assure you that we are taking thoughtful steps to make sure our spaces remain safe for all Hoosi How we’re keeping you safe at each IU Health care facility: ■

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55 AND BETTER Summer 2020

Universal Mask Mandate: All team members will wear masks at every IU Health care facility. Patients will be required to wear masks also, provided at no cost to you. Social Distancing Priority: We support social distance guidelines by visibly displaying six-foot distances and re-configuring spaces in each of our care facilities wherever possible.

Continually Disinfecting: We are enhancing our disinfecting procedure so that everything remains thoroughly clean throughout the day.

Numerous treatment options, along with the patient-focused model of care IU Health, bring shorter hospital stays, fewer complications and help you get back to your quality of life. The team at the IU Health Hip and Knee Center a Saxony Hospital will do everything possible to protect and care for you and y family to the very highest of standards.


ADVERTORIAL What things are you doing to keep patients and team members safe? “There obviously is a series of steps to keep everyone safe. It begins with anyone who enters as a patient or family member will be screened at the door to assure they do not have COVID symptoms such as fever, cough or shortness of breath. Everyone visiting, having care in or working in an IU Health facility is required to wear a mask. As we’ve learned, wearing a mask is one of the most important things you can do to protect others and yourself from getting infected. It’s important to note that recent evidence out of New York has demonstrated that health care workers actually have a lower rate of COVID infection than the general population because we’ve been wearing masks from Day 1. So, screening at the entrances, wearing masks, frequent hand hygiene, particularly after touching high-touch surfaces such as door knobs, and if there are any symptoms of COVID, stay away from others and health care facilities until you are properly screened. IU Health has a virtual hub where you can have a virtual telehealth visit if you have symptoms. Unless one is critically ill with COVID, it is better to stay quarantined at home until screening and testing has confirmed that it is safe for you to be around others.” How is social distancing handled? “There is social distancing throughout the facility. When entering the facility, you are asked to socially distance when checking in. As much as possible, patients are taken directly to the exam room to minimize the time in the waiting room and potential exposure to others.” Are many elective surgeries being done? “We returned to elective surgery once the governor (Eric Holcomb) lifted the ban and once IU Health was able to acquire adequate protective gear for all staff, patients and families. We’ve seen many patients return and have their elective surgery, and it’s been done in a safe fashion. No patients that I’m aware of have contacted COVID because they have come in for an elective procedure.”

If you have significant knee pain, is it a good time to see a specialist or schedule a knee replacement? “Now is a good time for any care that is needed, whether it is with my colleagues in the IU Health Hip & Knee Center here at Saxony, or any other IU Health care team. As long as we take the appropriate precautions, wearing masks, hand hygiene and social distancing, it’s safe to visit health care facilities. In fact, health care facilities are probably safer than being out in the general public at this time. Any care you need you are safer in a hospital or doctor’s office than you are in the general public. It’s important to get the care in a timely fashion so your problems don’t worsen or they become more complicated or require a more extensive procedure or become a longer, higher-risk recovery.”

lp.

iers.

es

Leonard Buller, MD

R. Michael Meneghini, MD

“Any care you need you are safer in a hospital or doctor’s office than you are in the general public. It’s important to get the care in a timely fashion so your problems don’t worsen or they become more complicated or require a more extensive procedure or become a longer, higher-risk recovery.”

Lucian Warth, MD

Call 317.944.9400 to schedule an in-person or virtual visit. Sign up for one of our online or in-person seminars at iuhealth.org/joints. IU Health Saxony Hospital 13100 E. 136th Street in Fishers

at t at your

©2020 IUHealth

Has COVID-19 fear caused other issues? “Unfortunately, fear of coronavirus has led to many more adverse events. Nationwide, hospitals have seen 20 to 25 percent fewer heart attack and stroke patients compared to prior to the pandemic. The rate of heart attacks and strokes hasn’t gone down. Unfortunately, patients are suffering and even dying from home because of fear of the coronavirus. Know that hospitals are safe as long as you take the appropriate precautions. It’s far better than risking a tragic outcome by delaying care. One thing we’ve learned is, timeliness is absolutely crucial to recovery. The earlier one has intervention for a heart attack or stroke or infection, the better the outcome is going to be. The longer one delays the care, the worse the outcomes and the higher the risk of major complications and even death.” 55 AND BETTER Summer 2020

11


A portion of the Fall Creek Trail at Fort Benjamin Harrison State Park passes along the Fall Creek waterway. (Photo by Rick Morwick)

Fort Ben offers easy to moderate hiking By Rick Morwick rick@youarecurrent.com

I

f you ever get told to “take a hike,” it might not be a slight. It might actually be sound health advice, especially for older people who want to stay active in ways that don’t involve running, strength training or other activities that are aerobically taxing or stressful on joints. Locally, Fort Benjamin Harrison State Park in Lawrence has a variety of easy and moderate trails that combine pleasant scenery with walkable terrain — natural and paved — that can be completed in as little as 30 minutes or as long as several hours, depending on the physical challenge you’re looking for. In total, the park has six trails. Two are classified as easy and two are moderate. Of the four, the Fall Creek Trail, the Camp Creek Trail and the Harrison Trace Trail afford the best views of surrounding woods and waterways, lakes and ponds, and are among the most popular with hikers. As the name implies, the Fall Creek Trail follows a swath of Fall Creek. It also passes through woods with opportunities for birding and tree iden-

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55 AND BETTER Summer 2020

tification. It is 1.1-mile in length and classified as moderate. It ultimately connects to Camp Creek Trail. A bit more challenging than the Fall Creek Trail, Camp Creek is a 2-mile trial that passes along the banks of Delaware Lake, a prominent feature of the park, and Duck Pond. It also has views of several vistas from bluffs that overlook Camp Creek Valley. “You can turn (Fall Creek and Camp Creek trails) into one big loop, and it makes it about 3 to 4 miles,” said Denise Kivett, who works in the park’s visitors center and is the leader of a hiking club. “You’re going to have really great views of actual Fall Creek. Camp Creek is a little bit more on the rugged side but we still consider it one of our more moderate trails.” Unlike most other trails in the park, Fall Creek and Camp Creek are for hikers only. Bicycles are not permitted. The park’s lone paved trail, Harrison Trace, is 3.2 miles and is classified as easy. It is popular with walkers, joggers and bicyclists. For more, visit in-gov.


Reflection on time with grandparents Commentary by Tom Weesner

T

he sweet smell of freshly cut grass and spring flowers bring fond memories of spending time with my grandparents. One, in particular, stands out in my mind. As a baseball player, I would ask my grandpas to play catch. One would and the other wouldn’t, stating he was too old. For two men who were the same age, why did one feel so differently than the other? My grandfather who wouldn’t play catch walked all the time, including to and from work every day, up and down big hills (if you’ve been to Wabash, you know what I am talking about). He walked for heart health, but strength and flexibility were limited, so he didn’t feel comfortable playing catch. My other grandfather was more active and had a job that built strength and required balance and flexibility. My grandmothers, on the other hand, were the opposite of their spouses. One was active and strong, the other not so much. I remember vividly spending hours in my strong grandma’s backyard gardening, picking berries and picking up apples at the end of the summer. My grandma never ran out of energy and was able to pick up and carry the bushel basket of fallen apples swarming with bees. So, what do I take away from these memories? Spending time with your grandchildren requires not only stamina, but strength, flexibility and balance. Your grandkids are quite aware of your ability to play with them, and like me, they are likely to retell stories 40 years

later. I’m sure you are excited to be back on the walking paths, listening to the birds sing while your dog explores the fresh scents, and good for you! But, the ability to remain active requires more than just walking. Dave Stewart, director of personal training at Motion 4 Life Fitness, hears many stories of how comprehensive exercise programs have impacted grandparents’ lives. “I have one member who said he is doing more gardening than ever, another who doesn’t get tired after an evening with the grandkids, and a couple who traveled to Mackinac Island and were both joyfully able to bike around the entire island,” Stewart said. “Our members are able to be more active outside because they are spending time inside the gym during the spring and summer working on cardio, flexibility, strength and balance. All four of these areas are critically important for active aging.” Even the American College of Sports Medicine recommends strength training and exercises for agility and balance at least two to three times per week in addition to walking outdoors. So, in addition to your walking, find a local fitness facility that focuses on age-appropriate exercise and get started today! Your grandchildren will remember these good times with you.

Tom Weesner is the president of Motion 4 Life Fitness.

“I have one member who said he is doing more gardening than ever, another who doesn’t get tired after an evening with the grandkids, and a couple who traveled to Mackinac Island and were both joyfully able to bike around the entire island.” — Dave Stewart

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Rose Senior Living: Meet Pat Clark inducted in the Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame in New Castle several years ago. Scott and his family live in Westfield. Cory Haffner played basketball at Noblesville. He was listed as one of the top entrepreneurs in a ‘Forty under 40’ list (by the Indianapolis Business Journal in 2010). He owned a couple of Sky Zones and got rid of those before the COVID came along, thank goodness. He owns a couple of medical technology companies, and he and his wife and three children live in Zionsville.”

By Mark Ambrogi mark@youarecurrent.com

P

at Clark recently moved into Rose Senior Living in Carmel. Clark, 79, previously lived in Lawrence, just below the Fishers

line. Clark made the decision to move after her husband, Jim Clark, died in April at age 83. He owned Clark Tire in Fishers. “We were married for more than 20 years and had known each other for more than 50 years,” she said.

Clark

Describe your children’s interesting backgrounds? “My daughter, Kelly Louks, was a teacher and she was Mrs. Indiana back in the 1980s. She lives in Southlake, Texas, which is a suburb of Dallas. My son, Scott Haffner, played basketball for Noblesville High School and was the first Indiana All-Star that it had. He played one season at the University of Illinois and then transferred to the University of Evansville. His senior year he scored 65 points against the University of Dayton, so that was a big night. I didn’t miss any of his (college) games. He was drafted by the Miami Heat and played in the NBA for several years. I went down to Miami a couple of times to see him play with the Heat. He also played with Steph Curry’s dad (Dell) at Charlotte. He was

How many grandchildren do you have? “I have 14 (in a blended family as her late husband had two sons). My grandson, Corbin Louks, was (a receiver) with the Seattle Seahawks, Kansas City Chiefs and Denver Broncos. Scott’s son, Cameron, played varsity basketball at Westfield High School as a sophomore last season. Scott’s boys all play basketball and Cory’s girls all play basketball, so that’s where we spend our time going to games.” Where did you graduate? “I graduated from Butler University, so I’m a big Bulldogs fan.”

What did you do for a living? “I taught kindergarten and retired in 2002. I taught in the Hamilton Southeastern school district at different schools. I was down in Evansville for quite a while and taught school down there. I also was a surgical assistant for a periodontist for 13 years in Indianapolis.” Any other hobbies you have? “I love music. I sang with the Indianapolis Symphonic Choir for about 12 years. We did a concert at Carnegie Hall and at the Kennedy Center. That was a great experience in my life. Growing up I took voice lessons at the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music. I took some music classes at Butler, but that wasn’t my major. I’m very active in White River Christian Church and help with things. I also like cooking. I love gardening and flowers and things like that.” What do you like about living at Rose Senior Living so far? “I’ve met some nice people even though we can’t enjoy all the amenities, and they have so many. We sit outside where we can talk.”

“I love music. I sang with the Indianapolis Symphonic Choir for about 12 years. We did a concert at Carnegie Hall and at the Kennedy Center. That was a great experience in my life. ”

— Pat Clark

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Group protecting senior citizens celebrates 1-year anniversary Submitted by Better Business Bureau/Central Indiana

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etter Business Bureau Serving Central Indiana, along with other organizations and state agencies that work to protect senior citizens, recently celebrated the 1-year anniversary of the creation of the Indiana Council Against Senior Exploitation, or IN-CASE. IN-CASE members celebrated the anniversary with a series of virtual events aimed at educating and empowering seniors. According to a 2011 study, older Americans lose a minimum of $2.9 billion annually due to elder financial abuse and exploitation. Knowing the impact of abuse on the elderly, the Indiana Association of Area Agencies on Aging’s Senior Medicare Patrol director began hosting a networking group more than four years ago consisting of government agencies and organizations that serve older adults and/or have a mission to educate them and their caregivers on how to prevent all types of fraud. The networking group later developed into IN-CASE. The mission of IN-CASE is to empower Indiana communities to prevent and end senior exploitation and abuse through education, encouragement and empowerment. Forms of elder abuse include physical abuse; sexual abuse; emotional and psychological abuse; financial exploitation; neglect; trending financial exploitation scams targeting seniors; fake offers to buy consumers’ timeshare; online purchases where the product is never delivered or is offered as a free trial but consumers are charged; and offers of free or Medicare-covered COVID-19 testing kits. Consumers can visit BBB.org for information and articles on scam prevention. Specifically, BBB has articles titled “Timeshare Exit Trap” and “Subscription Traps and Deceptive Free Trials Scam Millions with Misleading Ads and Fake Celebrity Endorsements” and a BBB tip: Smart Shopping Online. Consumers are encouraged to report scams to Scamtracker.org.

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lizabeth Gerrard has had some different personas through the years, such as Mrs. Birdwhistle, the Storekeeper’s Wife and the Weaver’s Wife. That’s because Gerrard has portrayed several different characters during her years as a performer at the Conner Prairie living history museum. “I was the only character who did Mrs. Birdwhistle,” she said. “One time I did a program away from Conner Prairie and it was a paid program and they wrote the check to Betsy Birdwhistle, but my bank cashed it.” Gerrard, who turns 99 Aug. 6, has lived in Sanders Glen Assisted Living in Westfield for nearly six years. She previously lived in Noblesville in the same house for 68 years. Her husband, Jimmy Gerrard, died in 2004 at age 82. Gerrard How long were you at Conner Prairie? “I was there 42 years. I just loved it. I’d still be there if I could. When I first went, it was about all volunteer. Then they started paying and it was $3. If you would give two tours, it was $3. Then they started paying by the hour later. I almost left because I hadn’t been in the workplace for 20 years, but I stayed. I think I was 86 when I left. I’m grateful I had the chance to work there. I didn’t make much money, but that didn’t matter. I had a husband who did make a good living for us. He never minded I worked there, and he volunteered a few times. He worked at Allison Transmission. Are there activities you like to do? * “They have lots of activities, or they did before the pandemic. I like the learning programs where you are learning something all the time. I like bingo and I like ADJUSTABLE to play euchre. I knew a few people before I came here.”

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What did you do prior to Conner Prairie? “When I graduated from high school, I went to work at L.S. Ayres in downtown Indianapolis. I enjoyed that job. Then I decided I wasn’t doing enough for the war and went to work for a war plant (during World War II). We made the Norden bombsight for planes.” How many children do you have? “Two. My son, Erick Gerrard, lives in Chicago and my daughter, Melody Robertson, and husband, Garry, live in Noblesville and have two children. I have two grandchildren, and both are married, so I consider I have four grandchildren now. They both live in Terre Haute. They both went to Indiana State, got jobs, met their mates and stayed there.”

“I was there 42 years. I just loved it. I’d still be there if I could. When I first went, it was about all volunteer. Then they started paying and it was $3. If you would give two tours, it was $3. … I think I was 86 when I left. I’m grateful I had the chance to work there.” — Elizabeth Gerrard on Conner Prairie


Scams increase during pandemic Submitted by Better Business Bureau/Central Indiana

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ith an increase of time people spend on social media during the COVID-19 pandemic, scammers are jumping on their opportunity to scam the public through social media. Graduations, weddings and other celebrations are upon us, so it is not surprising to see more coupons for extreme deals at major retailers. However, scammers are offering fake retail coupons to steal your identity and/or download malware. Better Business Bureau wants to make sure everyone knows the difference between a real deal and one that could be a counterfeit coupon with bad consequences.   How the Scam Works Often found circulating on Facebook, counterfeit coupons could have several goals for the scammer. Sometimes, coupons are just a way for a site to generate extra hits online, but their goal is usually more malicious. They are often trying to steal personal information. Among the most frequently distributed fake coupons recently are Bath & Body Works, Costco, Aldi, Starbucks and Trader Joe’s. The coupons often offer cards or coupons for $100 plus free merchandise, especially if you share the link on social media. These coupons have been widely circulated on Facebook and many people clicked and re-shared the posts. The coupon link often takes them to a third-party website that, in order to get the coupon or voucher, asks for the person’s information, which results in downloading viruses or malware. The individual never receives the coupon/voucher and doesn’t know who received their information. BBB offers the following tips for identifying coupon scams: • Be skeptical. The better the deal looks, the more likely it’s fake. It is easy for scammers to steal logos and images of established businesses to create counterfeit coupons. • Check directly with the source. To verify the legitimacy of an offer, visit the company’s website to look for the coupon or directly contact the company.

Breaking Ground on fun and fitness!

This month, we’re breaking ground on the crown jewel of our community. The RETREAT clubhouse will bring plenty fun and fitness to Osborne Trails!

Westfield’s First 55 and Better Community Low-Maintenance Ranch Homes from the Mid $200s • • •

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Located at 193rd and Springmill One-of-a-kind floorplans featuring Lennar’s “Next Gen® Suite” Stunning clubhouse with soaring 2-story fireplace, proposed lounge area and outdoor pool (Coming Spring 2021) 180 acres with 3 miles of walking/biking trails

317-659-3230 | osbornetrails.com | 19373 Sumrall Place, Westfield, IN 46074

Pursuant to the Fair Housing Act, this housing is intended for occupancy by at least one person 55 years of age or older per home, although the occupants of a limited number of the homes may be younger. Within this limited number, one member of the household must be 45 years or older with no one in permanent residence under 19 years of age. Existing and proposed amenities for the community are subject to changes, substitutions and/or deletions without notice. Lennar makes no representation or guarantee that the community or any amenities will be built out as currently planned. Please see your New Home Consultant and home purchase agreement for actual features designated as an Everything’s Included feature, additional information, disclosures, and disclaimers relating to your home and its features. Elevations of a home may vary and we reserve the right to substitute and /or modify design and materials, in our sole opinion and without notice. Please see your actual home purchase agreement for additional information, disclosures and disclaimers related to the home and its features. Stated dimensions and square footage are approximate and should not be used as representation of the home’s precise or actual size. Any statement, verbal or written, regarding “under air” or “finished area” or any other description or modifier of the square footage size of any home is a shorthand description of the manner in which the square footage was estimated and should not be construed to indicate certainty. Garage sizes may vary from home to home and may not accommodate all vehicles. Features, amenities, floor plans, elevations, square footage and designs vary per plan and community and are subject to changes or substitution without notice. Lennar makes no guarantee as to the availability of homes within the price ranges set forth above. Price subject to change without notice. Visit Lennar.com or see a Lennar New Home Consultant for further details and important legal disclaimers. This is not an offer in states where prior registration is required. Void where prohibited by law. This advertisement provided by Lennar Indianapolis located at 9025 River Road, Suite 100, Indianapolis, IN 46240. Copyright © 2020 Lennar Corporation Lennar, the Lennar logo and the Everything’s Included logo are U.S. registered service marks or service marks of Lennar Corporation and/or its subsidiaries. Date: 07/2020 LNIND747

Continued on Page 17 55 AND BETTER Summer 2020

17


Leaving a positive legacy Commentary by Lisa Dillman

Our Our

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We hire We provide We hire We provide exceptionally services to help exceptionally services to help trained caregivers seniors remain safe trained caregivers seniors remain safe through our and comfortable, We hire We provide We hire We provide through our and comfortable, very own CNA wherever exceptionally servicesto tothey help exceptionally services help very own CNA wherever they Training School. call home. trained caregivers seniors remain trained caregivers Training School. seniors callremain home. safe through our safe, comfortable, through our and comfortable, very CNA and outthey of very own own CNA wherever Training School. nursing homes. Training School. call home. ELKHART INDIANAPOLIS ELKHART INDIANAPOLIS 574-343-2959 317-652-6175 574-343-2959 317-652-6175

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eaving a positive legacy is something my clients increasingly tell me they want. They hope to ensure that as they age, and when they pass on, they don’t leave their loved ones with unneeded stress. More and more of us are thinking about end-of-life issues because of the coronavirus pandemic. As an elder law attorney, I encourage Hoosiers to take positive steps that ensure their care wishes are spelled out and protect their resources for the future. Life Care Planning Life Care Planning is one way to get the help you need to manage your finances, legal issues and health care needs. Life Care Planning involves a team of attorneys, health care providers and financial managers. They look at the type of care you need and want, walk you through the maze of choices to help pay for it and examine the best ways to protect your assets and get top-quality care. You generally pay a fee to have the team at your disposal day or night. Estate Planning Clients often think that they have to

be rich to consider estate planning. Not true! Without your own plan, the state of Indiana will control how any assets you do have are distributed after you pass away. Another reason to have an estate plan of your own is to ensure that you can control who can make medical and financial decisions on your behalf in the event of incapacity. Without a properly designed and implemented estate plan, someone could petition the court to gain control over your medical care and assets. This could be a person you would never have chosen on your own! Don’t let fear stop you from taking action. The power to leave a positive legacy that you are proud of is in your hands. Lisa Dillman is an attorney at Applegate & Dillman Elder Law. The firm specializes in elder law and Life Care Planning. The firm has offices in Indianapolis, Carmel and Zionsville. Find out more at applegate-dillman.com

Another reason to have an estate plan of your own is to ensure that you can control who can make medical and financial decisions on your behalf in the event of incapacity. Without a properly designed and implemented estate plan, someone could petition the court to gain control over your medical care and assets. Continued from Page 17

Memory loss doesn’t have to mean all is lost. Call (317)

342-2232 for more information.

Brookdale Carmel Alzheimer’s & Dementia Care 301 Executive Drive | Carmel, IN 46032 © 2020 Brookdale Senior Living Inc. All rights reserved. BROOKDALE SENIOR LIVING and BRINGING NEW LIFE TO SENIOR LIVING are registered trademarks of Brookdale Senior Living Inc.

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• Look at the expiration date. Most coupons have one. The lack of one is an indication that the coupon may be phony. • Verify the source. If a coupon comes to you in an email, hover your mouse over the link (without clicking) and the URL destination address should appear. If that address looks like a random assortment of number and letters, do not click on it. • Check to see if the website is secure. There should be an “s” after “http” in the URL to indicate it’s a secure site. No “s” may mean it’s a

phishing attempt to get your information or to install malware on your computer. • Do a web search. Searching by the offer, business name and the word “scam” can often bring up information showing which offers are fake. • Don’t share your personal information. Legitimate businesses do not ask for private information such as credit card numbers or bank accounts for coupons or giveaways. Learn more about phishing scams and other scams targeting consumers. Report scams to BBB Scam Tracker.


Retired philosophy professor releases poetry book By Mark Ambrogi mark@youarecurrent.com

E

dmund F. Byrne always loved poetry, but he didn’t always have time to devote to it. “I began writing poems some 40 years ago,” said Byrne, IUPUI philosophy professor emeritus. “Early on, comparatively few of them were of publishable quality, in part because my time was then focused on professional academic writing as a philosopher. I became more focused on my poetry after retiring in 1998 after 29 years at IUPUI and even more so after the death Byrne of my partner Anne Donchin in 2014. “From New York where we had been living, I then returned to the Indianapolis area, where I bought a house in Carmel.” Donchin, also a former IUPUI philosophy professor, started the university’s women’s studies program. In 2017, Byrne, now 87, became one of the founding members of the Carmel Poetry Group, which for two years had live meetings but now meets virtually. Austin Macauley Publishers recently released Byrne’s “Human Kindness Shortfalls.” “My recent publication consists of 28 poems, most of which were written during my time with the poetry group, and each of these was critiqued by them, but it includes several quality poems from earlier times,” he said. “To quantify, I’d say some 85 percent of the poems in this book were written in the last two to three years.” The book’s description is, each of the poems addresses a problem that human kindness has failed to resolve sufficiently and thus hampered people’s ability to improve the world as we know it, Byrne said.

The poems are divided into five categories in the following order: Destructive activities known personally by the author; examples and illustrations of issues that compromise the ability of families to thrive; failures in the political realm that undermine social well-being; critiques of the human propensity for war; and some of the author’s experiences reflective of ecological woes in the world — greater openness to others in our attitudes could improve the world in which we live. “I arrived at this description almost automatically after having arranged the poems in similar groupings and then identifying the topic each group was about,” he said. This is Byrne’s second book of poetry. In 2018, he published “Towards Humanizing Humans: Hopeful Poems.” He also included a section of poems in his memoir “Remembering My Self” in 201. He also had approximately a dozen poems published in various outlets for writers, such as “Writers and Readers Magazine.” You You already alreadyhave have so much so much goinggoing on in on in your Byrne, who received thelife, IUPUI Spirit your we life,want we want toofhelp toPhilanthropy helpyou youon on your your path to Award in 2019, joined IUPUI in to1969 andand helped estabwellness. path wellness. Pure Pure simple, and simple, thethe way way nature nature intended. lish the Dept. of Philosophy (the firstintended. department in the You already already have have so soE.much going on in on in your IU School of Liberal Arts). You Byrne created themuch F.going Byrne life, yourwe life,want weliberal want to help toarts helpyou youon on your your path to Peace Studies Award to encourage faculty wellness. pathdestructive to wellness. Pure and Pure simple, and of simple, thethe and students to examine the effects parway way and/or nature natureintended. intended. ticular technologies, business religious practices, You You already already have have so much so much goinggoing on in on in your life, yourwe life,want we want to help to helpyou youon on your your path to et al., especially when wellness. path to wellness. Pure and Pure simple, and simple, thethe directed toward war. You already haveway so nature way natureintended. intended. Byrne also created the much going on in your Donchin and Byrne life, we want to help you Women’s Studies Stuon your path to wellness. Leading the way in plant-based therapeutic solutions. Pure and simple, dent Fund in Anne’s the way nature memory. Premium CBD, THC-free

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July 28, 2020

VIEWS

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

Movie commentary from the heart (and Google) Commentary by Dick Wolfsie

watched ‘Titanic,’ you asked me why the captain permitted guests to swim alongside Mary Ellen has me on very short leash the ship.” due to the virus. I am not allowed to go She had a theory. into grocery stores, play pick“You know what I think? You looked up HUMOR leball or even sit indoors with the film online and then quoted some eggfriends to enjoy a beer. When I head from The New Yorker so you could look kiss her, I have to stand 6 feet away, which smart to all of us.” is wreaking havoc with my neck. I told her that was craziest thing I ever We remain socially engaged by FaceTiheard, which … is not exactly a denial. ming every Saturday with our friends Jane For our next film, we all decided to watch and John Murphy. an old Hitchcock I’m not very good at following movies classic, “Notorious.” We start off by and have trouble participating in asking each other I offered my opinwhat we all did the ion: “The inclusion some of the conversations. past week — which of real-life footage is usually nothing. Then we discuss which and YouTube clips was interesting, but the movie to stream for a discussion the folshooting style was awkward, and the movie lowing weekend. Any movie is OK as long as disgraced its subject, when it should have John doesn’t have to pay for it. celebrated this music star.” I’m not very good at following movies and “Dick, you Googled the wrong film. That’s have trouble participating in some of the the 2009 movie, also called ‘Notorious,’ conversations. John has a Ph.D. in statistics, about a rapper.” and he told me that 51.7 percent of the time, Mary Ellen was mad at me for continuing I have missed the entire point of the flick. to cheat, so I promised to stop Googling But I did much better than that a few Satur- films. While we were eating the meal she days back. prepared on Sunday, she asked how I was Jane: I liked the movie. The characters’ enjoying it. personalities were multi-faceted. “Your dinner tonight, Mary Ellen, was John: The plot was suspenseful. Lots of superb! The entrée was not upstaged by the surprises. appetizers, pasta and vegetables. The dryMary Ellen: Yes, I loved the cinematograaged sirloin was impressively tender.” phy, especially the director’s use of tight “See?” she asked, “don’t you feel better shots. when what you say comes from your heart?” Dick: I felt the movie was surprisingly thin on plot, angry at times and disjointed, often wobbling between high-minded outDick Wolfsie is an author, columrage and tabloid sensationalism. nist and speaker. Contact him at Mary Ellen got on my case. wolfsie@aol.com. “Where did that analysis come from? You’re never that insightful. When we

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July 28, 2020

Current in Zionsville

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Weitz’s love for mini-golf turns into TV time By Mark Ambrogi mark@youarecurrent.com This is definitely one for Jennifer Weitz’s scrapbooks. The Westfield resident TELEVISION appeared on “Holey Moley,” an ABC TV show featuring miniature golf lovers in a challenge against seven other contestants. Weitz was watching the show in the summer of 2019 during its first season and saw information about how to apply. “I’ve played mini-golf my whole life, and I had a picture from my 10th birthday party,” she said. “I have a son and daughter and growing up it was a nice activity you could do as a family. It didn’t matter age or gender, so when we would go on vacation, we would always play mini-golf, and we were quite competitive as a family. It’s something I’ve always enjoyed, so I thought it would be fun to try and be on the show.” So she submitted an application. “I just kept making it through from the next round to the next round,” she said. Weitz was selected and went to Los Angeles to film the episode, which was the second episode of season 2. It was broadcast in June and was rerun July 23. It is available on Hulu and YouTube. The winner from each show competes for a grand prize of $250,000. “I won the first round and got knocked out in the second round,” Weitz said. “I got the first hole-in-one in the show’s history (on the Putter Ducky hole), which was fantastic. The second hole the distraction was the Thunder From Down Under dancers (appearing shirtless).” Weitz lost to a trash collector from southern Indiana. She got the first hole-inone of the season on the first hole. “It was so fun,” she said. “They just wanted everyone to have fun and make a great show.” The episode was titled “That’s One for the Scrapbooks!” which was taken from Weitz saying scrapbooking was a hobby. Before moving to Westfield in 2017, Weitz, who was born in Boston, lived in Carmel for nine years. Her children, Molly O’Connor and Danny O’Connor, are Carmel High

“Beehive, The 60s Musical” Beef & Boards Dinner Theatre, Indianapolis. Through Aug. 9. For more, visit beefandboards.com or call 1-317-872-9664. “The Last Five Years” Carmel Community Players, The Cat, Carmel. Through Aug. 2. For more, visit carmelplayers.org. Toy Factory Summer Concert Series, Lawn at Clay Terrace, Carmel. 7 p.m. July 30. Free. For more, visit clayterrace.com. Dave & Rae Noblesville Summer Concert Series, Dillon Park. 7 p.m. July 30. Free. For more, noblesvilleparks.org. “Beauty and the Beast” Wisdom Builders Community Theater, The Auditorium at The Annex, Ivy Tech, Noblesville. Through Aug. 1. For more, visit wbtheater.com.

From left, Jeannie Mai, Jennifer Weitz, Molly O’Connor and Chloe Otto (Debbie Otto is behind Chloe Otto). (Submitted photos)

Jennifer Weitz on the Putter Ducky hole.

School graduates. Molly, a recent Ball State University graduate, is an event planner for the City of Carmel, and Danny is going to be an Indiana State junior in the fall. Weitz’s friends Sharon Martin and Benita Hutt, both Carmel residents, went to Los Angeles with her for the filming. “Sharon made us hot pink golf ball earrings and we had matching T-shirts that

said ‘Team Jen,’” Weitz said. The first episode was filmed on a Thursday. The second round was filmed on a Saturday night. Molly flew out to join her mother for the second round of filming. Weitz’s sister, Debbie Otto, who lives in San Diego, attended with her daughter, Chloe. “We had a good cheering section,” Weitz said. Weitz called it one of the best experiences of her life. “It was great to be around like-minded people who loved mini-golf and be on set and see how they did it behind the scenes,” she said. It was fun to be a part of something you don’t get to do every day, said Weitz, a product owner for American Speciality Health. To get her mini-golf fix, Weitz said she has been playing at Birdies in Westfield. Another favorite is Pirate’s Quest, formerly called Pirate’s Cove before a name change in 2019, in northeast Indianapolis.

Rain on Main set to debut Aug. 8 editorial@youarecurrent.com Rain on Main, a painted rain barrel contest presented by Carmel Utilities, Carmel Dept. of Stormwater Management and the Hamilton County Soil and Water Conservation District, is returning to the Carmel Arts & Design District and will debut Aug. 8 at the Meet Me on Main event. The barrels will remain on Main Street through the following week. On Aug. 15, the barrels will be relocated to the Carmel Farmers Market, where they will be auctioned off to the highest bidders via an online silent auction. The electronic silent auction opens at noon Aug. 7 and will conclude at 11 a.m. Aug. 15. Individuals can register for the auction by texting RAIN to 88793. Net proceeds from the auction will be used to fund water education signage in Carmel Clay Parks, some of which have been installed in Founders Park at 116th Street and Hazel Dell Parkway.


July 28, 2020

NIGHT & DAY

Current in Zionsville

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Beef & Boards changes shows editorial@youarecurrent.com Beef & Boards Dinner Theatre has announced its next production will be the bluegrass gospel comedy “Smoke on the Mountain,” starting PRODUCTIONS Aug. 13. Maintaining its commitment to a responsible reopening, Beef & Boards is postponing the originally scheduled production of “Disney’s Newsies” until the fall of 2021. With a smaller cast, “Smoke on the Mountain” will allow performers to follow safety protocols, including necessary distancing on and off stage. Tickets already purchased for “Newsies” are automatically valid for “Smoke on the Mountain” at the same date and time. Those who have reservations for “Newsies” who do not wish to attend “Smoke on the Mountain” will receive the amount they paid in a gift certificate for use for a future production of their choice. The gift certificate does not expire. Set in 1938, “Smoke on the Mountain,” which runs through Sept. 27, tells the story of the first Saturday Night Gospel Sing at a country church in North Carolina’s Smoky Mountains. The show features two dozen

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rousing bluegrass songs performed by the Sanders Family, a traveling group making its return to performing after a five-year hiatus. Pastor Oglethorpe, the enthusiastic minister of Mount Pleasant Baptist Church, has enlisted the Sanders Family in his efforts to bring his tiny congregation into the modern world. Tickets range from $47.50 to $72.50 and include a plated meal, unlimited coffee, tea and lemonade. For tickets, call the box office at 317-872-9664 or visit beefandboards. com.

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July 28, 2020

NIGHT & DAY

Current in Zionsville

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101 Beer Kitchen

Commentary by Anna Skinner

ONLINE & IN-SCHOOL SESSIONS School of Rock | Zionsville | zionsville.schoolofrock.com 675 S. Main St., Suite 400 | Zionsville, IN | (317) 344-0307

Address: 9708 North District Dr., Fishers What to get: House-made macaroni and cheese with lobster Price: Plain: $12.25. With lobster: $19.75. Anna’s take: 101 Beer Kitchen is one of the new restaurants in Fishers District, a culinary-heavy development southeast of 116th Street and I-69. It has a beautiful patio and a large variety of menu options. I ordered the house-made macaroni and cheese with lobster. It’s a blend of six-cheese, homemade Mornay sauce with rigatoni pasta topped with toasted breadcrumbs,

101 Beer Kitchen’s house-made macaroni and cheese blends six cheeses with rigatoni noodles, topped with breadcrumbs. (Photo by Anna Skinner)

which added a delicious crunch. Diners can add andouille sausage for $4 or go fancy and add lobster for $7.50, which is what I did. The dish was rich, and the cheese sauce was thick and creamy. I topped it all off with a slice of key lime pie ($6.95). Tart key lime custard was layered atop a graham cracker crust and topped with fresh whipped cream and a lime wheel. Suggested pairings: Dansk Mjød Viking Blod mead, $10 for a 5 oz. pour or $45 for the bottle.

Behind bars: Asian Bloody Mary Get it at A2Z Café, Indianapolis Ingredients: 2 oz. sake, tomato juice mix, lime wheel, skewer stick, fortune cookie Directions: Pour sake over ice and fill with tomato mix. Stir or shake to mix. Garnish with lime wheel, skewer stick and fortune cookie.

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A L K S C E I T H I T E E S S E C R O P H S N L Y S S A P E Z T A T E I C Y P E S O O S R G O E O N

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July 28, 2020

INSIDE & OUT

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

15

Blueprint for Improvement: Staircase update in West Carmel Before

THE CHALLENGE This 2008 home is in Carmel’s Shelbourne Estates neighborhood. The new owners were looking to make several updates before moving in, including a full kitchen remodel, plus updates to the staircase and fireplace, to make the home their own.

After

Before

After

THE SOLUTION

1. In order to create a more modern look, the ornamental balusters were switched out and the posts, rails and stair treads were stained a dark oak. 2. The fireplace surround was updated with Carrara marble — the same material used in the kitchen backsplash — to tie the spaces together. 3. The columns over the fireplace were

removed and in their place is a custombuilt tapered drywall chase that is now the stunning focal point of the room. Larry Greene is the owner of Case Design/Remodeling; email him at lgreene@caseindy.com. Visit caseindy.com for more remodeling inspiration and advice.

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July 28, 2020

LIFESTYLE

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

A brief history of Jesus in Havana Commentary by Don Knebel Havana, Cuba, features one of the world’s largest statues of Jesus. Its design reflects Cuba’s people TRAVEL and perhaps its culture. In 1953, the government of Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista sponsored a design competition for a statue of Jesus to be erected on a hilltop overlooking Havana. Batista wanted a symbol for Havana comparable to the “Christ the Redeemer” statue in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Cuban sculptor Jilma Madera won the competition and convinced Batista that a statue the size of “Christ the Redeemer” would be too large for its intended location. Madera then went to Italy, where she executed her design in 67 blocks of Carrara marble. Pope Pius XII blessed the blocks before they were sent to Cuba, where workers assembled them around a metal frame atop La Cabana Hill, across the bay from Old Havana. Batista inaugurated the 320-ton statue on Christmas Eve in 1958, just 15 days before his government fell to Fidel Castro. “Christ of Havana” (“Cristo de La Ha-

bana”) stands 60 feet tall and is visible throughout the city. The eye sockets are empty, making it appear that Jesus is looking in all directions. Unlike most monumental statues of Jesus, the hands of “Christ of Havana” are close to his chest. The first two fingers of the right hand are extended in a V, and the left hand is cupped. Locals claim that Madera intended to suggest that Jesus is smoking a Cuban cigar and cradling a mojito, which she never confirmed. She did confirm that the facial features suggest Cuba’s racial diversity, and the flip-flops on Jesus’ feet were modeled on the ones she wore while carving in Italy. “Christ of Havana” became a National Monument in 2017. It can be reached from Old Havana by ferry or tunnel and provides a wonderful panoramic view of the city.

“Christ of Havana” overlooking Havana, Cuba. (Photo by Don Knebel)

Tom Roush Mazda

Don Knebel is a local resident who works for Barnes & Thornburg LLP. For the full column visit donknebel.com. You may contact him at editorial@youarecurrent. com.

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July 28, 2020

LIFESTYLE

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

Across 1. Indianapolis Indians pitcher’s miscues 6. Hoosier Motor Club handouts 10. IND accident investigators 14. Get 100 on a Zionsville HS exam 15. Conner Prairie furrow maker 16. Nabisco cookie 17. Moby Dick, e.g. 19. Push-up targets 20. Renter 21. Discharge 23. IU color 26. TMI part 27. Westfield HS second-yr. students 30. Indiana casino that’s partly underwater? 35. “I’m ___ human” 36. Compassionate 37. Books & Brews offering 38. Ryder Cup team 39. Shed tears 40. Eskenazi Museum designer 41. “Sn” in a Noblesville HS science class

42. Candy with iconic dispensers 43. Lilly rival 45. Unpaid sum 46. Where to get a funnel cake burger 48. Caravan stop 49. Indy Fuel surface 50. Sacred song 52. Prepare for printing 56. Defraud 60. Cattle calls 61. Swank New York address 64. Therefore 65. Gumbo veggie 66. Occupied 67. Glowing sign 68. Fishers HS midterm, e.g. 69. Item of value

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NEED NEW GUTTERS? PROTECT YOUR LARGEST INVESTMENT AGAINST STRUCTURAL DAMAGE

HAVE JIM WEGHORST, WITH THE CALL #1 RATED CLOG FREE GUTTER PROTECTION SYSTEM, GIVE TODAY YOU A FREE ESTIMATE 317-450-1333

SERVICES

WILL DO BOBCAT WORK, MOW LAWNS & DO SPRING CLEAN UP

C&H TREE SERVICE

GUITAR LESSONS

Wth recording artist Duke Tumatoe Learn from professional and have fun On Line or In Carmel duke@duketumatoe.com or 317-201-5856

LAWN CARE & LANDSCAPING

Locally owned/operated over 40 YRS

• • • • • •

SPRING CLEAN UP MULCH MOWING FERTILIZING TEAR OUT/REPLACE FREE ESTIMATES CALL 317-491-3491

Friedenson Design

WE FOLLOW COVID-19 HEALTH GUIDELINES

Home Advisor Authenticated Testimonials: Bath

They did a very good job... good communications. - Jeff K.

2B&K

Highly recommend this company, honest trustworthy & reasonable... - Jenna C.

Bath

She designs and he installs. They did a great job... - Marcus G.

4 • Oriental & Area Rugs • Tile & GroutExpires Carpet • Air Ducts 8/4/20 Upholstery • Wood Flooring • Water & Mold Remediation Carpet • Oriental & Area Rugs • Tile & Grout • Air Ducts

Upholstery 483-1166 • Wood Flooring • Water & Mold Remediation (317) • COIT.COM UPHOLSTERY (317) 483-1166 • COIT.COM

B&K BSMT

Amazing job. Their workers are teriffic... - Gale A. I choose Larry Friedenson because of his years of experience. I’m so glad I did... - Tom B.

FREE Estimate & Design Service BBB A+ (bbb.com/friendensondesign)

friedensondesign.com

Remodeling with Detail and Care

Classifieds

VISA, MasterCard accepted. Reach 128,087 homes weekly

Trim Shrub, remove or trim some trees Clean out houses, garages, basements, attics, gutters, paint. Do odd jobs, demo small buildings. Provide personal services Fully Insured Text or call Jay 574-398-2135 shidelerjay@gmail.com www.jayspersonalservices.com

friedenson@sbcglobal.net

Kitchen

0% OFF

SERVICES

SERVICES

For pricing e-mail your ad to classifieds@youarecurrent.com

SERVICES

FIREWOOD SALE Topping – Removal Deadwooding – Landscaping Stump Grinding – Gutter Cleaning INSURED – FREE ESTIMATES Call Steve 317-341-4905 or 317-932-2115

Guitar Lessons With Baker Scott

Beginners thru Advanced All styles Electric-Acoustic-Bass Private Lessons Parent-Child Lessons I teach improvisation for all instruments. Gift Certificates Available Read my LinkedIn bio near Carey Road & 146th • Carmel 317-

19

Anderson Construction Services

10% OFF

317-397-9389

July 28, 2020

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

910-6990

• House Wash • Roof Wash • Concrete Cleaning & Sealing • Stamped Concrete Cleaning & Sealing • Deck Cleaning & Staining • Fence Cleaning and Staining • Paver Cleaning and Sealing • Dock Cleaning and Sealing

Give us a call at 317-490-2922 to schedule your Free Quote & Demonstration omaliashsr.com Serving, Hamilton, Marion, Boone Madison & Hancock counties

.com

SALE 1996 Red corvette - very good shape 62,500 miles Asking $ 10200. Call me at 317 844 6587 & please, leave message

YOUR CLASSIFIED AD HERE!

Call Dennis O’Malia 317-370-0749

NOW HIRING

NOW HIRING

IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR SKILLED CARPENTERS!

Senior WCS Consultant at Blue Sky Technology Partners, Inc. in Noblesville, IN (Telecommuting from any location in US permitted) Design, development, execution & operation of e-commerce solutions; senior developer and consultant; develop Java-based HCL Commerce applications using MVC architecture; use HCL Commerce, Java, JSTL, JSON, XML, Strut, DB2, Oracle, IBM AIX, IBM HTTP Server Requires a minimum of BS in Comp Sci, Engineering, Math, MIS or closely related field or for. equiv. Must be IBM Certified Application Developer – WebSphere Commerce V7.0 Submit CV and cover letter to Josh Woody, 350 Westfield Blvd, Suite 400, Noblesville, IN 46060

Looking for job security? Simpson Construction Services has so much work that it must hire five people for residential remodeling NOW. The skilled carpenters we select will have strong abilities in bathroom remodeling, but also with respect to kitchens, decks, basements, wood and tile flooring, doors and windows, interior and exterior painting, drywall, plumbing and electrical, siding and room additions. Again: Only skilled carpenters need apply. For immediate consideration, call Gary Simpson at 317.703.9575.

SEEKING EMPLOYMENT College graduate seeks a part or full time nanny position. Capable of helping elementary aged children with e-learning if schools are closed. Strong work ethic and multi-tasking skills. Light housekeeping, meal preparation, homework help, and shuttle children to extracurricular classes available. Salary is negotiable and references available upon request. Pleases contact Shirley Fitzwater at 317-919-9098.

COMPUTER TECHNICIAN NEEDED

Local Computer repair shop in need of PC and Mac techs with experience pref both PC and Macs, certification strongly desired, pleasant personality & some sales experience. Pay starting at $16/ hour and up for F/T. Send resume with cover letter to jobs@ctcarmel.com


20

July 28, 2020

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com


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