October 8, 2019 — Zionsville

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K-12 OPEN HOUSE Octob er 24th 6:00 -8:00pm

Tuesday, October 8, 2019

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Panel discusses housing scarcity / P3

Study shows Zionsville has highest household income / P7

K-12 OPEN HOUSE October 24th 6:00-8:00pm MYTRADERSPOINT.ORG

Scouting breakfast raises more than $40,000 / P9

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October 8, 2019

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October 8, 2019

COMMUNITY Contact the Editor

Have a news tip? Want to submit a calendar event? Have a photograph to share? Contact Managing Editor Anna Skinner at anna@youarecurrent.com or call 317.489.4444 ext. 803. You may also submit information on our website, currentzionsville.com. Remember our news deadline is typically eight days prior to publication.

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On the cover

Traders Point Christian Academy students Hayla Barton, left, and Alex Langford work in the biomedical sciences lab. (Submitted photo) Founded March 20 2012, at Zionsville, IN Vol. VIII, No. 28 Copyright 2018. 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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From left, Kathryn Ransburg, Susan Hyatt, Andy Beck and Tracy Beer participated in a panel discussing housing scarcity at a Sept. 17 event in Zionsville. (Submitted photo)

Panel discusses housing scarcity, homelessness at Zionsville event By Anna Skinner anna@youarecurrent.com Local experts addressed housing scarcity, homelessness and poverty during a panel discussion Sept. 17 at BOONE COUNTY SullivanMunce Cultural Center in Zionsville. Panel members were Susan Hyatt, chair of the Dept. of Anthropology at IUPUI; Kathryn Ransburg, an Indianapolis-area attorney specializing in tenant/landlord law and real estate; Andy Beck, marketing and public relations committee chair at Homes for All Indy; and Tracy Beer, McKinney Vento liaison for Lawrence Township schools. The event was presented by Boone County Voices for Change. Beer said one of the topics she is most passionate about is how homelessness affects a family, long term. “That’s one of the biggest things I was able to elaborate on just because I see that the most, especially with kids in school,” Beer said. Beer said it’s also a tough topic to explain because many homeless families are under-identified. “Whether it’s stigma or they just don’t know about it, but there are services out there through school with McKinney Vento,” Beer said. “McKinney Vento is a federally funded program every school district in the nation has to have. Somebody within the school district has to identify families and also make sure that the federal laws are followed.” Beer said Mckinney Vento removes barriers for homeless students, such as sports and transportation.

“Transportation is probably the biggest thing,” Beers said. “Typically in school districts, you get busing if you’re in the district, and this law requires us to bus even if (homeless students are) out of district.” Beer said another issue McKinney Vento struggles with is identifying families, which is usually a matter of families being unaware of resources. “We have all these great resources in Indiana with the shelters and different housing programs and stuff like that, but if families don’t know about them or they don’t meet the criteria, then they’re not being identified or brought to those resources,” Beer said. “Nobody is choosing this lifestyle, but it’s really hard to get yourself out of it when there’s a lot of barriers to the resources within the city.” During the panel discussion, Beers said she tried to explain the many challenges children encounter when housing is a problem. “I tried to touch on daily life of what kids go through,” she said. “If kids don’t get a good night’s sleep because of sleeping with three other family members in one room, or they’re scared to go to sleep because where they live isn’t appropriate or the neighborhood isn’t good, so they’re up all night on guard, that leads to behaviors in the classroom. That just leads to a lot of behavior issues at school as well as falling behind at school.” The panel discussion was the culmination of the Boone County Voices for Change’s One Book project. Organization members read “Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City” by Matthew Desmond.

Candidate town hall — The Zionsville mayoral and council candidates will answer questions from the community regarding economic development, plans if elected and issues affecting the business community from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Oct. 22 at Zionsville Town Hall, 1100 W. Oak St. The town council candidates will take questions from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. and the mayoral candidates will take questions from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. For more, visit zionsvillechamber.org. Parks department purchases utility vehicle — The Zionsville Parks and Recreation Dept. recently purchased a Kubota utility vehicle and equipped it with racks to assist staff with daily maintenance of trails. The Kubota will perform a number of tasks, such as monitoring the conditions of the parks, mobilizing staff for fallen trees in remote locations and general trail maintenance. The vehicle can travel the Big-4 Rail Trail while trail users simultaneously walk or bike the path. The department also recently received a donation of a Polaris from the Zionsville Police Dept. to be used for lighter duties along trails and parks. Salem UMC chicken and noodle dinner — The Salem United Methodist Church will conduct its annual chicken noodle dinner from 4 to 7 p.m. Oct. 19 at the church, 6701 South 775 East. The meal features homemade noodles with mashed potatoes, green beans or corn, salad, dessert and beverage all for $9 for adults and $3 for youth. For more, visit friendlycountrychurch.org or call 317-873-4015. Salem UMW conducts bake sale — The Salem United Methodist Women of Zionsville Annual Bake Sale will be held from 4 to 7 p.m. Oct. 19 at the church, 6701 South 775 East. There will be homemade noodles, Schermer pecans and a variety of snacks and baked items. All proceeds go to Salem UMW missions. For more, visit friendlycountrychurch. org or call 317-873-4015.


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October 8, 2019

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DISPATCHES ZWIN to meet — The ladies of ZWIN, Zionsville Women in Network, meet on the second Thursday of each month. The next meeting is 11:45 a.m. to 1 p.m. Oct. 10 at Zionsville United Methodist Church, 9644 Whitestown Rd. Business professionals working or living in Zionsville who are interested in meeting other business women are welcome to attend. For more, email Kathy Wood at kwood@c21scheetz.com or Deb Kuller at debbi.kuller@oldnational.com. Community Foundation of Boone County now hiring — The Community Foundation of Boone County is currently looking to hire a president and CEO. For more, visit communityfoundationbc.org/ now-hiring-president-ceo/. Zionsville Fire Dept. now accepting applications — The Zionsville Fire Dept. is now accepting applications for the positions of firefighter/EMT or firefighter/paramedic. Applications will be used to conduct a hiring process with the purpose of creating an eligibility list for future hiring. To obtain additional information or submit an online application, visit zionsville-in.gov/jobs. Paper applications may be obtained from the Zionsville Fire Dept. Administrative Offices, 1100 W. Oak St., between the hours of 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. ZCD board of directors’ positions open — The Zionsville Cultural District has open positions on its board of directors. The board meets regularly on the last calendar Wednesday of the month January through May with a summer hiatus June and July. It resumes the monthly meeting for the remainder of the calendar year. A typical meeting lasts from 6 to 7 p.m. If interested, send name and email address to info@zvillecd.org. ZFD improves ISO rating — The Zionsville Fire Dept. recently improved its Public Protection Classification rating from the Insurance Service Office. ZFD’s rating raised to a Class 2/2Y from a previous rating of 4/4X. The ISO classification system ranks departments on a scale of Class 1 to Class 10, with 1 representing the best in property fire protection. The new rating places ZFD in the top 2 percent of fire departments in the state and the top 5 percent nationwide. Send us your stories — Please email story suggestions on new businesses, interesting residents, upcoming events and more to Current in Zionsville Managing Editor Nancy Price at nancy@youarecurrent.com.


October 8, 2019

Current in Zionsville

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Local home featured on tour By Maria Cook news@currentzionsville.com

A Zionsville home known as the FortenseSimmons House, 9170 Fanchon Dr., was featured on the Sept. ARCHITECTURE 28-29 Architect’s Home Tour. The selfguided tour featured five homes. The Fortense-Simmons House was built in 1955 and designed renowned Indianapolis architect Edward Pierre in mid-century modern style. Indianapolis architecture and design studio atelierRISTING added a glass pavilion to the home in 2018. Th homeowners, Helmut Fortense and Katie Simmons, have several art pieces, including Aalto vases, in the home. It also includes furnishings from form+function, a modern design store in Indianapolis, owned by Fortense. Architect’s Home Tour committee member Laura Musall said the home was chosen for the tour because of its unique history and integration of its relatively new pavilion. “It’s a really interesting house for a couple of reasons,” Musall said. “One is that it’s an original mid-century modern and built in 1955. Of course, it was designed by

The Fortense-Simmons House, 9170 Fanchon Dr., was featured on the Architect’s Home Tour. (Photo by atelierRISTING and Steve Risting)

Edward Pierre, who was really a renowned Indiana architect who did many well-known homes around the Indianapolis area, so that made it interesting from that standpoint. Then this glass pavilion was designed as an addition to the house, and it’s just really interesting how it fits on the lot and how it looks like it just flows seamlessly with the house. “It’s an interesting look at how you can take a house that was designed in 1955 and add an addition to it, yet it still retains that original mid-century modern look.” The Architect’s Home Tour is sponsored by the American Institute of Architects. For more about the houses featured on the 2019 tour, visit aiaindyhometour.org/homes.


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COMMUNITY

Study reveals Zionsville has highest household income news@currentzionsville.com

UnitedStatesZipCodes.org recently released a list of Indiana ZIP Codes with the Highest Household Income, RESEARCH a study based on Census Bureau data. The study showed Zionsville has the highest household income in the state. For the full study, visit unitedstateszipcodes.org/rankings/ zips-in-in/median_household_income/. Ten ZIP codes with the highest household income: • Zionsville 46077 ($128,642) • Carmel 46033 ($124,712) • Fishers 46037 ($111,873) • Indianapolis 46278 ($110,750) • Fort Wayne 46814 ($108,638)

• Indianapolis 46259 ($103,550) • McCordsville 46055 ($102,571) • Carmel 46032 ($97,184) • Granger 46530 ($97,098) The study also released the 10 ZIP codes with the lowest household income. They include: • South Bend 46601 ($18,054) • Terre Haute 47807 ($20,389) • Fort Wayne 46803 ($20,837) • Gary 46407 ($21,209) • Indianapolis 46218 ($23,771) • Evansville 47713 ($24,947) • Anderson 46016 ($26,607) • Fort Wayne 46806 ($27,449) • Indianapolis 46201 ($28,783) • Bloomington 47408 ($29,981)

DISPATCH Indiana 1st among states with lowest credit card debt – WalletHub recently released a study that showed Indiana ranked first as the state with the lowest credit card debt. Some of the statistics the study found about Indiana include a median credit card balance of $2,313, a median income of $42,438, a cost of interest until payoff of $167 and an expected payoff timeframe as nine months and 29 days.

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ZCHS CROSS COUNTRY TEAM DONATES RUNNING SHOES

SEASON SPONSOR SPONSOR SEASON

LYLE LOVETT

MARY CHAPIN CARPENTER & SHAWN COLVIN:

FRI OCT 11 AT 8PM | THE PALLADIUM

SUN OCT 20 AT 7PM | THE PALLADIUM

& HIS ACOUSTIC GROUP

TOGETHER ON STAGE

The Zionsville Community High School girls cross country team recently collected running shoes to donate to Changing Footprints, an organization that distributes shoes to homeless, disasterstricken and underprivileged people at home and abroad. From left, Isabella Brady, Paige Zvokel, Halle Brown, Hannah Wleklinski, Julianna Aregentine, Ava Ward and Meredith Koons. Back. from left, Tori Kellum, Taylor Browne, Holly Bostian, Reagan McCooey, Lydia Moore, Keerti Mallur, Kylie Heagy, Lauren Wasson and Katelyn Wasson. (Submitted photo)

TRISHA YEARWOOD:

THE FOUR ITALIAN TENORS:

THU OCT 24 AT 7:30PM | THE PALLADIUM

FRI OCT 25 AT 8PM | THE PALLADIUM

THE RIGHTEOUS BROTHERS

SIR JAMES AND LADY GALWAY

EVERY GIRL ON TOUR

SUN OCT 27 AT 7PM | THE PALLADIUM

VIVA ITALIA

TUE OCT 29 AT 7:30PM | THE PALLADIUM

THECENTERPRESENTS.ORG | 317.843.3800 These activities made possible in part with support from the Indiana Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.


October 8, 2019

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Breakfast raises more than $40,000 for Scouting By Maria Cook news@currentzionsville.com

Zionsville Mayor Tim Haak, along with the Crossroads of America Council serving Boone County and other FUNDRAISER community members, recently presented the 2019’s Mayor’s Breakfast for Scouting at Lions Park in Zionsville. The annual event raises money for Zionsville Scouting activities. Haak said the event raised more than $40,000. Approximately 175 people attended. “Our event is a little unique in that we don’t use a banquet facility or conference center,” Haak said. “We host ours outside, under a tent in Lions Park as the sun’s coming up, so you get a little bit of a feel of being outside as you’re doing it. It’s unique and kind of makes it popular for attendees. “It was very successful and we’ve been very fortunate to have a generous community that supports Scouting.” The Good Scout Award was presented to Dr. James Haines of Zionsville Eyecare dur-

Mayor Tim Haak speaks at the annual Mayor’s Breakfast for Scouting in Lions Park. (Submitted photo)

ing the event. Haak said the award recognizes a community member who embodies the spirit of Scouting, regardless of whether that person has been involved in Scouting. “It’s designated to a community member that kind of embraces Scouting and the qualities that the Scouts have,” Haak said. “It’s about how that person relates to that community. They don’t have to be in Scouting or have been a Scout.” Crossroads of America councils across the state have conducted similar Mayor’s Breakfasts in other communities, such as Carmel, Fishers and Noblesville. .

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October 8, 2019

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zionsvilleoptimist.org

Proceeds benefit Zionsville Youth

8:05 AM at Zionsville high school

PRE-REGISTER:

OCTOBER 5

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GRAPE STOMP RETURNS TO HOPWOOD CELLARS

ManY ThAnkS to our SPOnSORS! sPecial thanKs

Community Volunteers • Friends of Youth • Starbucks Town of Zionsville • Walgreens • ZCHS • ZPD & ZFD PlatinuM sPonsor

the scoop

From left, Nichole Knoll, Nicole Dix, Jana McCaskill and Ruth Short stomp wine grapes with their bare feet at the Grape Stomp Sept. 21. The free event, which takes place anually on Cedar Street between Main and Elm streets in Zionsville, features live music, Hopwood Cellars wine for purchase, a bounce house and grape stomping. (Photos by Ben Stout)

Gold sPonsor

PNC Bank • Ed Martin Buick GMC Witham Health Services • Athletic Annex silver sPonsors

Dale Kennedy • Ortho Indy • Pearson Ford IU Health Physicians • Times Sentinel • Current

bronZe sPonsors Ashcraft & Frazier Orthodontics • Bingham Greenebaum Doll LLP Cobblestone • Donaldson’s Finer Chocolates • Control Tech El Toro • Indiana Institute for Prosthetics • Kern brothers shoes Meijer • Nyhart • Old National Bank • PFM Car and Truck Center Riley/Zionsville Pediatrics • RL Turner Corporation Robert Goodman Jewelers • romas family dentistry Schulte State Farm Insurance • simplicity funeral care State Bank of Lizton • Stevens Farms, LLC Stonegate Orthodontics, LLC • Tom Wood Lexus Zionsville Animal Hospital • Zionsville eyecare Zionsville Dentistry • Zionsville Physical Therapy Zionsville Self Storage FIND US ON FACEBOOK: @

From left, Cassie Miller, Kayla Thomas and Julie Kimmons enjoy the warm weather with a glass of Hopwood Cellars chardonnay.

zionsvilleoptimist

EMAIL: zoptimistclub@gmail.com

Kendall Purdy performs live music.

From left, siblings Emily Thomas and Josh Thomas with their friend, Ben Kimmons, inside the mouth of a tiger-shaped bounce house.


COMMUNITY turns onto 96th Street from Keystone Parkway, but left turns Project: Road widening and are not available. path construction Project: Extension of Location: Zionsville Road CONSTRUCTION Lowes Way closed between TechnolLocation: From Keystone ogy Center Drive and 106th Parkway to Range Line Road Street Expected completion: July 2020 Expected completion: December Project: Multi-use path installation along WESTFIELD 136th Street Location: Between Range Line Road and Project: Shelborne Road reconstruction Stadium Drive and widening Expected completion: October Location: Shelborne Road closed between Project: Path installation along the north 146th and 151st streets and between 146th side of 126th Street and 141st streets. Location: From Keystone Parkway to HaExpected completion: On or before Oct. 21 zel Dell Parkway Project: Ind. 32 full-depth road patching Expected completion: October Location: Ind. 32 between East Street and Project: New roundabout Ind. 38 Location: 96th Street and Delegates Row Expected reopening: Oct. 12 Expected completion: December Project: Monon Trail bridge Project: New roundabout Location: Monon Trail closed near Ind. 32. Location: A partial closure at 96th Street Expected completion: Early December and Gray Road Project: Ind. 32 turn lanes Expected completion: October Location: Lane restrictions on Ind. 32 near Project: Expansion of Cherry Creek Ditch Road Boulevard Expected completion: End of October Location: New connection between Hazel NOBLESVILLE & NORTH Dell Parkway and River Road Project: Logan Street Pedestrian Bridge Expected completion: Now open Location: Northbound lane of Ind. 19 closed between Ind. 32 and Logan Street. FISHERS Westbound lane of Logan Street closed Project: Ind. 37 Improvement Project between Ind. 19 and Eighth Street. RiverLocation: Construction began at 126th walk path closed. Street in August will be followed by 146th, Expected completion: May 2020 131st and 141st streets, ending with 135th Detour: Ind. 32, Ind. 38 and Eighth, ConStreet. ner, Nixon and Logan streets Expected completion: 2022 Project: Roundabout construction Detour: Ind. 37 will remain open during all Location: 276th Street closed between phases of construction, with two northDevaney and Gwinn roads bound and two southbound lanes open Expected completion: On or before Nov. 1 during each phase. There will be closures Detour: Gwinn Road, 266th Street, Devon side roads with alternate routes alaney Road ways accessible, which will be announced Project: 276th Street Extension Project at the time of the closure. Location: 281st Street closed between Project: Structure and embankment Gwinn and Whetston roads repairs Expected completion: Nov. 22 Location: Hoosier Road between 116th and Detour: 286th Street to Ind. 19 121st streets will be closed to all through Project: Ditch bridge replacement traffic between 8 a.m. and 3 p.m. Location: Joyce Avenue closed between Expected closure and reopening: The Strawtown Avenue and 241st Street road is expected to close Oct. 15 and last Expected completion: Nov. 29 no longer than three days. CARMEL Detour: 121st Street, Cumberland Road, Project: New roundabout interchange 116th Street Location: 96th Street and Keystone Project: Utility relocation for future 96th Parkway Street expansion Expected completion: 96th Street is exLocation: 96th Street between Lantern pected to reopen in November, with the and Cumberland roads full project done by the end of the year Expected completion: 96th Street expanDetour: Lanes on Keystone Parkway are sion to begin next year, utility work exrestricted but will remain open throughpected for the next several months out the project. Drivers can make right ZIONSVILLE & WHITESTOWN

October 8, 2019

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October 8, 2019

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Recalling painting the town on Halloween Commentary by Ward Degler

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My favorite holiday this year just might be Halloween. Not because of trick-or-treaters – we don’t get them PLAIN TALK out here – but because I can finally stop stewing about summer. No more failing flower beds. No more enraged weeds. No more lawn mowing. Summer didn’t have a whole lot going for it this year. To start with, the planting season was a full-scale reenactment of the Great Flood. Noah’s Ark made several appearances in my backyard during April and May, and by mid-June, Noah himself was sending out SOS pleas. Halloween has changed a lot since I was a kid. For starters, it’s more civilized. Today, parents herd their costumed children safely door-to-door to beg for candy that they aren’t allowed to have any other time of the year. There are apples, of course, and other healthy stuff like fruit bars, but candy corn and mini Snickers bars still dominate the spooky scene. The Halloween of my youth was more of a community affair. More chamber of commerce than neighborhood association. It

was, in fact, a well-rehearsed plan to eliminate ghostly mischief. It was customary in those days for kids (not me, of course) to prowl the downtown

Window painting is a thing of the past in my hometown. So is soaping windows. Now, it’s all about pint-sized goblins, witches and ghosts ringing doorbells and yelling, “Trick or treat.” streets with bars of soap, liberally applying streaks and globs of it on store windows. In case you didn’t know, soap on a window can’t be washed off. It has to be scraped off with a razor blade. It was such a problem that some store owners parked themselves in front of their shops all night to keep their windows clear.

Then, the school board and the chamber of commerce got an idea. After lunch on Halloween, kids were let out of school armed with jars of poster paint and paint brushes. For the next few hours, they worked in organized teams painting spooky scenes on the same store windows they used to soap. At the end of the day, the mayor, the head of the chamber of commerce and the principal of the school would tour the downtown streets, pick the best-painted windows and award cash prizes. The next morning, the kids returned with scrub brushes and buckets and washed the paint off the windows. Window painting is a thing of the past in my hometown. So is soaping windows. Now, it’s all about pint-sized goblins, witches and ghosts ringing doorbells and yelling, “Trick or treat.” And seeing who can collect the most Snickers bars, of course.

Ward Degler lives in Zionsville with his wife. He is author of “The Dark Ages of My Youth ... and Times More Recent.” Contact him at ward.degler@ gmail.com.

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CHICK-FIL-A OPENS IN ANSON, CAMPERS LINE UP

On Sept. 18, 110 campers spent the night in the Anson Chick-fil-A parking lot at 6240 East Whitestown Pkwy. When they awoke at 5 a.m. Sept. 19, they lined up to receive a year’s supply of Chickfil-A at Anson. (Submitted photos)

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SCOUTS BUILD TERRACED GARDEN

Scouts lay the brick wall for the project in the backyard of Union Elementary School. (Photos by Brad Thompson)

Commentary by Brad Thompson

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During some of the hottest days this summer, for his Eagle project, Peter Shrote of Troop 804, sponsored by the Boys & Girls Club of Boone County, and other Scouts toiled under the midday sun to build a terraced garden at Union Elementary School. While the sun blazed down, they had to be dressed in long-sleeve shirts and other protective gear given the hazards of working with sharp materials and dusty concrete. The project required quite a bit of engineering to make it functional and aesthetically pleasing. As anyone who has laid bricks knows, straight lines are essential. And though they are only high school students, the Scouts skillfully used various tools to ensure the bricks were exactly straight and level. The purpose of the garden is to help elementary students study biology. When the new terraced garden is complete, the students and teachers will take responsibility for planting and maintaining a variety of flowers. The plan is to use composting as a way to recycle kitchen waste. Funding for the project was provided by the Boone REMC, the Zionsville Optimist Club and the Union Elementary School PTO.

Laying brick begins with digging a trench, then using a concrete mix to form a foundation. Taylor Kiefer pours the concrete while Peter Shrote looks on.

Shrote checks if the wall is level, while Tyler Sepanski looks on.

The lower wall begins to take shape. Shrote hammers as Kiefer looks on.


October 8, 2019

COMMUNITY

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

Anker aims to help fill gap between open jobs

DISPATCHES

By Mark Ambrogi mark@youarecurrent.com

“The truth is, if you can’t find access to education, it’s a pretty bleak future, so Ivy Tech has always been important around the state, and I think it’s become more imporTerry Anker views Ivy Tech Community tant the last couple of years. It certainly is College’s role in contributing to Indiana’s to kids that grew up like me.” workforce as EDUCATION crucial. Anker has a bachelor’s degree in speech communication from Indiana Anker, a Carmel University and a law degree from resident, was recently named chair the School of Law in Bloomington. of Ivy Tech Community College’s The fact that students can attend 15-member State Board of Trustees. Ivy Tech for $4,000 a year makes it “There are thousands of credenaffordable for most Hoosiers, Anker tialed jobs that are not getting Anker said. filled, and that gap is not getting “You can walk away with a credential or any smaller,” Anker said. “If there is anything degree that is marketable,” he said. I hope to accomplish, (it) is to help fill gaps Anker said many Ivy Tech students go on between Hoosiers who are under- or unemployed and those employers who are desper- to attend a four-year college. “Last year, I went to a reception for a ately looking for credentialed employees to student who went two years at Ivy Tech and fill those jobs.” then went on to Harvard,” Anker said. “He Anker said Ivy Tech is uniquely positioned made the choice to go to Ivy Tech because to fill the gaps, for students and employers. of value. It was a lot less expensive for him The chair is a one-year term and it’s posto start at Ivy Tech.” sible the board could renew it for another Anker’s leadership role on the Ivy Tech year. Anker was first appointed to the board State Board of Trustees continues his relaby then-Gov. Mike Pence and then got retionship with Ivy Tech, as he has served on appointed by Gov. Eric Holcomb. the Ivy Tech Foundation Board in the past, “The primary function of the board is as a including as its board chair. fiduciary to make sure we are managing the Anker, an associate editor and founding state’s money and donors’ money as proppartner of Current Publishing, LLC, is chairerly as we possibly can,” Anker said. man of The Anker Consulting Group, Inc., Anker’s first meeting as chair was Oct. 3 Carmel, where he serves as a trusted adviat Ivy Tech’s Evansville campus. sor and owner for several small business “I grew up in a rural area between Montistartups in the retail, wholesale distribution, cello and Delphi. Most of the kids I went to media, technology and service industries. high school with didn’t go on to college,” he Anker’s other business interests include said. “The ones that did, a lot of them went CleanSlate, a leader in computer software to Ivy Tech, and it had a profound, positive and services, SWAN Software Solutions, a impact on their lives. I think now in rural Midwestern-based online help desk (CrossIndiana, it’s become more difficult in some Confirm), TAP Properties and The Anker Reways to go to college than when I went to ceivership Group, LLC. IU 35 years ago. It’s more expensive.

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October 8, 2019

COMMUNITY

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

SCHOOLS WITHIN A SCHOOL Scholar Project provides specialty options for students at Traders Point Christian Schools

By Anna Skinner anna@youarecurrent.com Traders Point Christian Academy is a private Christian school that serves Zionsville, Whitestown and COVER STORY surrounding areas. Recently, it launched the Scholar Project, which includes new K through 12 curriculum, a facilities expansion and new “Schools within a School” model for Traders Point Christian High School. “We are a small school, and we are located in an area where there are so many bigger schools that have the availability to offer a variety of different experiences and course offerings, and looking at our offerings, we said we really haven’t been able to offer as many courses and experiences as we would like because of the limited number of students and space,” Chief Advancement Officer Ryan Gallagher said. “So, the Scholar Project allows us to expand how many courses we can offer in a day.” The recent expansion Gallagher doubled the high school’s space. “We can get really specific about the types of classes we are offering, like medical technology or things looking at leadership and business principles,” Gallagher said. “Our class sizes have shrunk as a result of opening new classrooms.” The Scholar Project includes new Project Lead the Way curriculum for grades K through 12. The second floor of the high school, which was unfinished when it was built three years ago, is now complete. “We finished off that entire space to allow for, not just more students, but a lot of kids have been saying it feels like another school,” Gallagher said. The $1.1 million project took 10 months to complete. A ribbon-cutting ceremony recently celebrated the opening of the upper level. The entire upstairs of the school is dedicated to the Scholar Project. The “Schools within a School” concept allows students to graduate with a specialty, such as from the School of Biomedical Science.

TPCA Head of School Paul Williams, center, cuts the ribbon introducing the new Scholar Project. (Photos by Ben Stout)

“These things all are experiences we think our students want. We also believe if they have these experiences before they go on to college, or whatever the next step is, it allows them to be more efficient with their time on that next level and next step,” Gallagher said. “If they leave us feeling like they have been exposed to more things, they may leave and say, ‘I know I don’t like that now,’ or vice versa.” Sophomore Hayla Barton is one of 12 students enrolled in the biomedical science program. She will take the course through her senior year. “Personally, I’m interested in the medical field, so the School of Biomedical Science does a lot of very hands-on labs and stuff where we do blood typing,” Barton said. “When they introduced it, I was really excited for it just because it’s something I’m interested in. Basically, the class lets us use our own processes and lets us figure things out for ourselves. I feel like we can learn more from it.” For more, visit tpcs.org.

THE REED ATHLETIC CENTER Besides conducting a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the Traders Point Christian Academy’s Scholar Project, TPCA also cut the ribbon introducing the new Reed Athletic Center. “The Reed Athletic Center was gifted to us in full, so that project was a real blessing to our school,” Chief Advancement Officer Ryan Gallagher said. “It’s on the west side of Witten Field. That’s a stateof-the-art field that opened about three years ago.” The Reed Athletic Center is 4,000 square feet and was made possible through a partnership between TPCA and Witham Health Services. “That provides us with an athletic trainer, a chief medical officer and resources they’re providing us (that) we can put to use in this space,” Gallagher said. “There are weights and training equipment. Our faculty and staff are excited they get to

TPCA Head of School Paul Williams, center, cuts the ribbon `to the new Reed Athletic Center.

use that space now, too. With the community growing at the rate that it is, we have 650 homes being built to our west and expected to break ground this winter, and then the Whitestown Little League project to our south, and then Anson is exploding with new restaurants and shops every day. “Our job is just to keep up with all the growth in a sustainable way.”


October 8, 2019

VIEWS

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

ESSAY

LETTER Vote yes on ZCS

Company of one Commentary by Terry Anker In the 1932 movie “Grand Hotel,” smoldering film star Greta Garbo exclaims repeatedly, “I want to be alone.” As the plot progresses, reallife reclusive actress begins a romantic relationship with a stranger to whom she had earlier proclaimed the need for solitude, thus guaranteeing that she would assuredly no longer be alone. The fictional character finds happiness only when she admits a secret desire to be anything but lonesome. We good people often live the paradox. Certainly, those of us who are not blessed (or cursed) by a genetic predisposition to extroversion understand. While time engaged in the company of others is good, even necessary, the time we spend alone is restorative and, likewise, required for good health. The needed allotment is not consistent across all persons. Something in us drives a longing for our own fortress of solitude, just as the same internal voice demands that we seek shared space. In marriages, offices and crowded buses, we find ourselves pursuing intimacy while quietly hoping for independent identity. We alternate between striking up conversations and withdrawing, earbuds in place, into our own thoughts. How do we find the right balance? How do we give, and get, fully while still holding something back just for us? Is there a way to simultaneously be entirely engaged and fully autonomous? With differing personality needs, who decides the standard? It is another actress, Belgium-born Audrey Hepburn, who summed it up thusly: “I don’t want to be alone, I want to be left alone.” Terry Anker is an associate editor of Current Publishing, LLC. You may email him at terry@youarecurrent.com.

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Who said ‘one’ is easy? Commentary by Danielle Wilson Stupid sick kids. They ruin everything! Or at least give me high blood pressure. When does parenting get easy? I thought with three away HUMOR at college, I’d be mostly home free. My 15-year-old is fairly self-reliant and usually so busy with school and dance that I don’t see much of her. But she caught a nasty bug this past week and sent everything into turmoil. For starters, the nurse practitioner declared her ickiness to be viral, which meant no quick antibiotic fix. I was pulling for strep when I dragged her to the Minute Clinic on the third day of 103-degree-plus temperatures, but no such luck. We left with instructions to treat symptoms and to prepare for potentially 10 more days of lethargy, body aches, fever and sore throat. Obviously, school was out, but I didn’t want to take off work to watch her. So, after maybe seven seconds of contemplation, I decided she’d

be fine on her own. What’s the worst that could happen? I mean, if its bubonic plague, there’s nothing I can do anyway. Good luck, little lady! Don’t you go dying on me! Yeah, Mom of the Year right here. And I was actually more stressed about the amount of classes she was missing. Five-days’ worth could seriously derail her quest to beat her siblings for highest GPA, not to mention send her into a whirlwind of anxiety about catching up — a true nightmare for me as a mother. It’s hard when your baby is sick and you can’t do a darn thing to make her better. I guess I just assumed once I was down to one, parenting would be easy. Friends, I was wrong. Peace out.

Danielle Wilson is a contributing columnist. You may email her at info@youarecurrent.com.

QUOTE OF THE WEEK “Life is what happens when you’re busy making other plans.” — John Lennon

Editor, On Nov. 5, voters in the Zionsville Community Schools district in Zionsville and Whitestown will have the opportunity to cast two “yes” votes to support our excellent local public schools. For the first time, voters will be asked to vote “yes” on a construction referendum. This will allow ZCS to build the district’s sixth elementary school, increase classroom space at the high school and make needed modifications to other schools. State law now requires a referendum vote in order to build new schools. With more than 200 new students joining ZCS each year and several schools already at or near capacity, the additional classroom space is absolutely needed. The other referendum continues the operating referendum first approved in 2012 at exactly the same rate for an additional eight years. ZCS continues to be the lowestfunded school district in the state and referendum funds support one-third of teacher salaries. Without the approval of local voters and the investment from local taxpayers, our schools would be in dire straits with much larger class sizes, slashed programs and teacher cuts. Voting “yes” is not only good for our kids, but it is good for our property values and our town. Mary Reid, chairperson of Zionsville Yes!

POLICIES Letters to the editor: Current Publishing will consider verifiable letters of up to 200 words. Anything longer will be returned to the writer for editing. Anything presented as factual matter 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 for style, grammar, punctuation and spelling. 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 300 words. Guest columns should address the whole of Current’s readership, not simply specialinterest groups, and may not in any way contain a commercial message.


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October 8, 2019

VIEWS

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

As the stomach churns Commentary by Dick Wolfsie I created quite a stir during services last Sunday morning. Mary Ellen was embarrassed when she first heard it. HUMOR She thought I should excuse myself from the sanctuary. Was that my stomach growling? No one has this identification problem with other bodily eruptions. Everyone clearly knows who the originator is - although with one sound in particular (and its result), there is usually blame-shifting that unfairly maligns the family dog. But with things like sneezing, hiccupping and coughing, it’s seldom an issue. I’ll admit that I have loud internal plumbing. Each week, I record an audio tease for my television segments on WISH-TV. My producer said recently: “Let’s do that last line over again, Dick. I just heard the building’s sewer back up.” The technical name for a grumbling stomach comes from the Greek word borborygmos. The dictionary says this is an example of onomatopoeia, a word that imitates the sound associated with something. Now, before you start Googling (which also is medical jargon for what my stomach is do-

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ing), I already looked up this symptom and am aware that stomach rumbling is one indication of about 35 different illnesses, including uremia, acute mesenteric ischemia, aerophagia and functional dyspepsia - none of which I had ever heard of. That meant I needed to Google those particular disorders, as well, but more Googling would have turned my stomach - which was the last thing I needed. When your insides churn noisily, your brain is sending a message to your gut to prepare for a meal. As one medical site notes, your belly is saying: “Hungry. No food here; must eat soon.” Why do stomachs sound like Tonto talking to the Lone Ranger? I’ve been at my computer all afternoon and my wife just sent me an email saying she had a tough day and wants to go out for a quiet dinner. I hated to tell her, but that wasn’t going to happen. Not when I’m this hungry.

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


October 8, 2019

HEALTH

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

Baseball-style arbitration of fees can end surprise medical bills Commentary by Dr. Alex Choi I have been a physician for 18 years and have been president of the largest anesthesia practice in Indiana LEGISLATION for eight years. In that time, I’ve seen firsthand the heavy toll that surprise medical bills can take on patients. The good news is that Congress is acting to relieve patients of surprise bills and Sen. Mike Braun (R-Ind.) sits on the committee that will be hearing proposed legislation. Surprise billing occurs when patients receive large bills from their insurers after receiving unplanned medical care from providers outside their network. The result is that, instead of focusing on their recovery, Hoosiers must worry about how to pay bills that are far beyond their means. I applaud Congress for considering legislation to take the burden of these bills off of patients. However, a legislative solution could still hurt patients. To protect vulnerable Hoosiers from harm, legislation must include an independent dispute resolution process. IDR is a better way of setting provider payment rates than benchmarking, which would let the government decide what physicians would be paid. Benchmarking would allow the government to manipulate the open market and significantly under-

value physicians’ roles, which could hasten provider consolidation and reduce access to care. IDR works because it encourages medical providers and insurance companies to work together to reach a fair solution. In New York, the state has implemented an IDR process called “baseball-style” arbitration. In this process, a third party chooses one appropriate payment from two suggestions offered by the insurer and the physician. Unlike other forms of arbitration, this is very quick, efficient and cost-effective. The IDR process ensures that providers are adequately compensated so that they can afford to continue to care for patients in their communities. I call on Braun to make sure that the only legislation that passes Congress includes an IDR solution. It is in the best interest of Indiana patients that Braun protect us from government overreach and protect our physicians from the inevitable cutbacks that benchmarking fees would bring. Alexander Choi, M.D., MPH, is an anesthesiologist and president of Anesthesia Consultants of Indianapolis, the largest physician practice in Indiana with more than 100 anesthesiologists. He also is the immediate past president of the Indiana Society of Anesthesiologists and is active as the Vice Speaker of the House for the Indiana State Medical Association. He is a candidate for Zionsville Town Council At-Large.

DISPATCHES Riverview looking for volunteers ­— Riverview Health is looking for volunteers. Some of the volunteer service areas include patient transport, guest services and the gift shop. Shifts are available in the morning or afternoon, at least one day per week, Monday through Friday. If someone is interested in volunteering at Riverview Health in Noblesville or Westfield, please contact the manager of Volunteer Services, Melinda Nash, at 317-776-7236 or mnash@riverview. org. Walk to End Alzheimer’s — The Alzheimer’s Association is inviting Indianapolis-area residents to join the fight to end Alzheimer’s disease by participating in the Walk to End Alzheimer’s Oct. 12 at Victory Field. Funds raised will support critically needed research as well as local education and support programs. On-site registration begins at 8 a.m. Along the walk route, participants

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will learn about Alzheimer’s disease and dementia, volunteer opportunities, public policy initiatives and local programs and services provided by the Alzheimer’s Association Greater Indiana Chapter. Alzheimer’s disease is the sixth-leading cause of death in the United States and the only one in the top 10 that cannot be prevented, slowed or cured. More than 5 million Americans are living with the disease, including 110,000 in Indiana alone. That’s higher than the population of Carmel, Indiana. For every one of them, there are more than three Hoosiers serving as unpaid caregivers – about 340,000. Participants are encouraged to pre-register online for free at act.alz.org/ indianapolis. For Walk updates, participants may visit the Greater Indiana Chapter on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram at @ alzindiana and join the Indianapolis Walk to End Alzheimer’s Facebook group at facebook.com/groups/IndianapolisWalk.

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Presenters: Praveen Perni, MD and John Ward, MD When: Wednesday, Oct. 23, 6-7 p.m. Location: Riverview Health, 395 Westfield Road, Noblesville, IN 46060, Krieg DeVault conference room (entrance 3) Registration: The program is free, but registration is required. A light dinner will be served. To register, visit riverview.org/classes or call 317.776.7999.

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October 8, 2019

BUSINESS LOCAL

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

Zionsville printing business expands, celebrates 25 years By Maria Cook news@currentzionsville.com

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Did you know? — Silence may be golden, but too much of it will drive you mad. In Minnesota’s Orfield Laboratories, there’s an anechoic chamber that is so quiet, the background noise is measured in negative decibels (-9.4 dBA, to be exact). The room’s founder, Steven Orfield, explained that not only can you “hear your heart beating and sometimes hear your lungs,” but those who have entered the space have trouble standSize/Specs:

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Indiana’s unemployment rate still falling — Two positive takeaways from Indiana’s August employment report: The state’s unemployment rate last month fell to its lowest level in 18 months, and the number of unemployment insurance claims dropped to their lowest level this year. Indiana’s jobless rate dipped in August to a preliminary 3.3 percent from 3.4 percent in July, according to the Indiana Department of Workforce Development. The rate in Indiana hasn’t been that low since February 2018, when it stood at 3.3 percent for three consecutive months starting in December 2017. In addition, the number of Hoosiers filing for unemployment benefits in August dropped to 14,048, the lowest amount in a single month so far this year. Source: Indiana Dept. of Workforce Development Client/Filename:

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Good Impressions Printing & Graphic Design, 170 West Hawthorne St. in Zionsville, is celebrating its 25th anniverGROWTH sary with an expansion that will double the business’s space. The 1,600-square-foot expansion will house Good Impression’s new digital printing center and other imaging equipment. The long-time Zionsville business is family and veteran-owned. Owners Dennis Dishman and Charles Herzog are cousins who served in the military. Dishman served in the Marines and Herzog served in the Army. Dishman credits his military experience with teaching him how to succeed in business. “It really helps you learn to adapt and work with all sorts of different people from all sorts of different places,” Dishman said. Good Impressions offers printed products

ranging from banners and yard signs to posters, invitations and marketing materials. Dishman said Good Impressions has flourished by consistently adapting to the times. “First and foremost, our customer service is outstanding, and we’ve never tried to grow too large too fast,” he said. “We’ve always kind of kept a handle on our growth and we’re consistently putting money back into the company to invest in new equipment that allows us to do quite a few different things that you can’t do at home.” Dishman also credited Good Impression’s variety of products as another secret to the business’s success. “It’s a very wide variety. That’s actually another thing that’s allowed us to stay competitive and relevant,” he said. “We’ve expanded into yard signs, banners, largeformat printing as well. We push ourselves so that, if it’s printed, we can pretty much acquire it for you.”

ing up due to the fact that humans use sounds to orient themselves. That means anyone who spends a little time in the room needs to be seated. But they won’t be there for long. According to Orfield, the longest anybody has been able to tolerate the extreme silence is 45 minutes. Source: msn.com Stock up on TV stocks — The most likely winner of the 2020 presidential election? The stocks of local TV broadcasters. Their revenues should benefit from a record $3.3 billion in spending on political ads that will be broadcast in 2019 and 2020, nearly double the $1.7 billion spent in 2016, according to Advertising Analytics. That’s thanks in part to a crowded Democratic presidential field and to President Donald Trump, who is ­expected to attract more donations as an incumbent and spend much more on his re-election campaign than he did on the first campaign. Beyond the boost from presidential campaigns, local TV broadcasters are also good investments beyond 2020. They continue to grow through acquisitions, scooping up weaker players in the wake of the FCC’s 2017 rollback of rules designed to limit single-company control of many local broadcast properties. Source: BottomLineInc.com


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Candlelight Theatre holds spooky show editorial@youarecurrent.com

Local coffee shops serve up fall favorites

Candlelight Theatre has a spooky special for Halloween by presenting “Ghost Tales of the Civil War” by resident playwright James Trofatter at the Benjamin Harrison Presidential Site on select dates in October. The full-length play is replete with, historical artifacts and the rich ambience of President Benjamin Harrison’s original furnishings, making it a one-of-a-kind theater experience. Candlelight Theatre founder and creative director Donna Wing, a Geist resident, will appear in the performances. Hamilton County performers include Emily Jackson, Carmel; Ann Richards, Fishers; and John West, Noblesville. Dates are Oct. 11, 12, 18, 19, 26 and 27. The performances at the site, 1230 North Delaware St., Indianapolis, begin every half-hour, with six shows each day, 6 p.m. until 8:30 p.m. and 2 p.m. until 4:30 p.m. Sundays. Cost is $14.95 to $17.95. Tickets are available at eventbrite.com/e/ghost-tales-of-thecivil-war-tickets-61949682167.

Commentary by Anna Skinner anna@youarecurrent.com As temperatures cool and leaves begin to fall, there’s nothing better than cupping your hands around a BEVERAGES mug of warm coffee on a chilly morning, or at midday for a pick-me-up. Hamilton County brews up plenty of options, new and old, for those who love coffee. ROSE & LOIS Opening soon at 7249 E. 146th St., Suite 110, Carmel You can order coffee to-go, but have you ever heard of a coffee truck permanently on the go? Rose & Lois is a new business with plans to open its first brickand-mortar shop by 2020. Owner Rachel Priddy didn’t want to wait around until the shop was ready, so she and her family converted a trailer into a mobile coffee shop. Priddy sets up in the parking lot on 146th Street and Community Drive, where her new store will be built. Hours from 7 a.m. to noon on weekdays. She is serving lattes, nitro cold brew and hot coffee to folks on their way to work in what is called the “coffee desert” of Hamilton County by local coffee drinkers. I ordered the pistachio latte and sampled the Costa Rican drip coffee, both of which warmed me right up on an autumn morning. NOBLE COFFEE AND TEA 933 Logan St., Noblesville My favorite place to settle in and knock out my to-do list. The shop is big and has spacious seating with soft wood tones, the ultimate cozy atmosphere. You can sit by the window and watch people in downtown Noblesville hustle about, or cozy up in the corner to read a good book. I suggest an iced Americano or the Highlander Grogg blend, which has butterscotch, rum and caramel flavors.

(Above) Rachel Priddy displays her Rose & Lois mobile coffee shop. (Photo by Heather Sherrill Photography) (Right) The Black Hat at The Well Coffeehouse in Fishers is a smooth blend of cinnamon, cayenne and charcoal mocha. (Photo by Anna Skinner)

THE WELL COFFEEHOUSE 8890 E. 116th St. Suite 120, Fishers This is another of my favorite places to work from. The Well recently expanded its menu and now offers lots of light, healthy options, which also happen to be delicious (curry chicken salad bowl, turkey pesto sandwich, etc.). The Well just rolled out its seasonal menu, with offerings like Somethin’ Pumpkin’ (pumpkin, cinnamon, cardamom, nutmeg, ginger latte), Secret Garden (juniper, bergamot, lavender cold brew) and Black Cat (cinnamon, cayenne, charcoal mocha). If you want a taste of something you’ve never tried before, sample the Black Cat. It’s smooth, creamy

with spicy undertones. OUTSIDE OF HAMILTON COUNTY: For those who want to try the best coffee in the Indianapolis area, visit: • Quills Coffee, 335 W. Ninth St., Indianapolis • Bee Coffee Roasters, 201 S. Capitol Ave. Suite 110, Indianapolis • Porter Books and Bread, 5719 Lawton Loop E. Dr., Lawrence

Westfield — Uncorked with Molter Brothers is set for 7 to 10 p.m. Oct. 10 at Urban Vines, 330 E. 161st St. Noblesville — Performances of the thriller “Wait Until Dark” are set for 8 p.m. Oct. 11-12 and 2 p.m. Oct. 13 at The Belfry Theatre. For more, visit TheBelfryTheatre.com. Indianapolis — The Heartland International Film Festival is set for Oct. 10 to 20 at various theaters. The opening night features “A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood” at 7 p.m. Oct. 10 at Newfields. For more, visit heartlandfilm.org. Carmel — Meet Me on Main, a gallery walk set for the second Saturday of each month, will be from 5 to 9 p.m. Oct. 12 in the Carmel Arts & Design District. Carmel — Craig Thurston will perform at 4 p.m. Oct. 13 at Sugar Creek Vineyard and Winery, 1111 W. Main St., Suite 165.


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October 8, 2019

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McCruiston to voice Audrey II By Mark Ambrogi mark@youarecurrent.com

gospel on Sunday mornings. Alan Menken has been the composer of my childhood from ‘Hercules’ to ‘God Bless You Mr. Rosewater,’ my second-favorite Kurt Vonnegut Josiah McCruiston is making his debut book, so I am more than familiar. I am a fan. on the Beef & Boards Dinner Theatre stage. “Menken and (Howard) Ashman Well, sort of. The InMUSICAL dianapolis resident is are two brilliant writers, and I make it a goal of mine to sing their entire the voice of the mansongbook collection one day. This eating plant Audrey II in the musical will be my third time playing Audrey “Little Shop of Horrors.” II, and I’m just as excited as the “Audrey II is a fun character to first time.” explore the range of one’s voice McCruiston started acting in with proper tech and healthy habMcCruiston middle school with the Asante Chilits. The only challenge I can predict dren’s Theatre and had been a part of Ben is having to stop on Nov. 17,” said McCruisDavis High School’s show choir. In college, ton, who previously voiced the character at he worked at Six Flags during his summers Marian University and with Claude McNeal and also worked with Claude McNeal ProProductions. ductions. He then started performing with a “Little Shop of Horrors” opens Oct. 10 and variety of theaters. runs through Nov. 17 at Beef & Boards, 9301 “After college, I started working as an Michigan Rd., Indianapolis. actor and singer at the Indiana Historical The 1986 movie featured the baritone Society in the Cole Porter Room,” he said. voice of Four Tops singer Levi Stubbs as “Later, I had become an actor/interpreter at Audrey II. “My performance is based on the movie, if the The Children’s Museum (of Indianapolis) and also Santa Claus during Jolly Days (WinLevi were a jazz/gospel singer,” McCruiston ter Wonderland).” said. “My twist comes from my background For more, visit beefandboards.com. in jazz and blues on Saturday nights and MUSIC AND LYRICS BY

BENNY ANDERSSON BJÖRN ULVAEUS AND SOME SONGS WITH STIG ANDERSON (BOOK BY

CATHERINE JOHNSON)

10/4 - 10/19

TICKETS ON SALE NOW MAMMA MIA! is presented through special arrangement with Musical Theatre International (MTI). All authorized performance materials are also supplied by MTI. www.MTIShows.com

BE BOLD. BE BRAVE. BE YOU. civictheatre.org / 317.843.3800


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Attic presents Christie classic By Mark Ambrogi mark@youarecurrent.com

show fresh for those who have previously seen the play. Watson plays Philip Lombard, one of the lead characters. “And Then There Were None” is the play “It’s a very difficult role, probably the that Navar Watson has longed to do. hardest one I’ve ever “It’s my MYSTERY favorite done,” Watson said. “All the characters in this show story of have secrets and dark all time,” said Watson, a pasts. They’re professional Noblesville High School liars, and so it’s hard to graduate. “I am a massive figure out who they really Agatha Christie fan, and I are inside.” was the first one to really Hauer Hobson Westfield resident Jenna push the Attic Theatre into Hobson plays Ethel Rogers, the considering ‘And Then There Were maid on Soldier Island. Noblesville None.’ The story is just brilliant. It’s resident Blair Henson plays her husmenacing. I can’t wait for people to band, Thomas Rogers. see it.” “Ethel is quite a nervous-looking The Attic Theatre’s production creature, so developing her backruns Oct. 17 to 26 at the Ivy Tech story has been a bit of a challenge, Auditorium in Noblesville. Watson trying to layer on different elements “It’s the best-selling crime mysand events from her life prior to arriving on tery novel of all time and one of the more the island, giving the character depth and successful stage versions of Agatha Chrisdimension from the moment the curtains tie as well,” said Noblesville resident Ian Hauer, who is directing. “There are 11 roles in open,” Hobson said. Jerrod Burns, Westfield, and Steve Stone, the cast, and the play takes place over the Noblesville, also are in the cast. course of three days.” For more, visit theattictheatre.com. Hauer said the challenge is to make the

ATI selects three plays for series By Mark Ambrogi mark@youarecurrent.com

wife, Devan Mathias, has. However, Farrell said Mathias’ play was selected on its own merit. “We weren’t thinking about who the Actors Theatre of Indiana’s LAB Series has playwright was, we were thinking about taken the next step in its inaugural season. the play,” said Farrell, who selected ATI announced READINGS the three plays that the plays along with fellow ATI cofounders Judy Fitzgerald and Cynwill be presented thia Collins. with readings, featuring trained Mathias’ dramatic play, “Proveactors. The program, sponsored by nance,” will be the final of the three United Fidelity Bank and designed May 5, 2020 readings. All readings to nurture plays and playwrights, are set for the Studio Theater at the was announced earlier this year. Farrell Center for the Performing Arts in Don Farrell, one of three coCarmel. founders of Carmel-based ATI, said more Plays that received previous readings in than 20 submissions were received from the Indianapolis area were not considered. across the U.S. “We were looking for new voices and new “I was really impressed with the quality. stories,” Farrell said. There were a lot of really great plays,” FarEach play will have a reading and a talkrell said. “Some were more fleshed-out, and back session with audiences, staff, cast some were in the final draft version, which and playwright. is really helpful for us.” Farrell said he wants the audience to enAmong the playwrights whose scripts gage in a dialogue of constructive criticism. were accepted is Fishers resident Ethan He said the goal for the plays to take the Mathias, a Hamilton Southeastern High next step into a workshop or main stage School theater teacher. Mathias, who is production at ATI or elsewhere. acting in Civic Theatre’s “Mamma Mia!” this For ticket prices, visit atistage.org. month, hasn’t acted with ATI before, but his

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As an Indiana native, Mike always enjoys a meal at a local restaurant and showing people what the Indy area has to offer. You may find him drinking at local coffee shops, eating brunch in Fishers, shopping and having dinner in Carmel or at the latest concerts. For more, visit @wheresmikeg on Instagram.

CLAY TERRACE Passione Pane

Commentary by Mike Gillis

OCTOBER 26 | 2 PM–6 PM PRESENTED BY

Food, family and Halloween fun for all ages! Join us for a beer garden, live music, trick-or-treating, silly safari animal shows, balloon artists and much more!

Address: 11640 Brooks School Rd, Fishers What to get: Wood oven pizza Price: $17 Wood Oven Pizza Passione. (Photo by Anthony Carranza) Mike G’s take: Passione of bresaola (air-dried beef from Valtellina, Pane uses fresh ingredients to make dea valley in the Alps of northern Italy) or lightful Italian meals that you can only get prosciutto (air-dried ham that originated there. When you walk into the pizzeria, you in northern Italy). The other was the Monfeel like you are in a different part of Hamtanara, a combination of mozzarella and ilton County, a small, intimate feel that has creamy ricotta cheeses, homemade sausage the aesthetic of a boutique and the food and mushroom. 

 to match it. A fun fact is that some of the What to try: ingredients are sourced from Italy. • Bruschetta – The best I’ve had, with What I tried: With more than a dozen sigPane Rustico bread with fresh Roma nature pizza options, I had to order two tomatoes, extra virgin olive oil, basil, salt on my first visit. Both were distinctive in and pepper. their combination of ingredients and tasted • Gelato – Rotating flavors are sourced loexcellent. My favorite was the Meat Lovcally. Rich and creamy and worth a try. ers’, made with mozzarella, delicious spicy homemade sausage, pepperoni and a choice

Behind bars: The Dude Abides Get it at Porter Books and Bread, Lawrence Ingredients: 2 oz. vodka, 112 grams Aahaa Chai’s Masala Chai Concentrate, spiced milk, pink and black peppercorns. Directions: Steep milk for three days in the refrigerator with cardamom and pink and black peppercorns that have been smashed with a mortar/ pestle, then place in a tea bag to steep in the milk. Build the drink over ice in a glass, stir and garnish with pink and black peppercorns.

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“From Paris to Russia with Love,” Carmel Symphony Orchestra, the Palladium, Center for the Performing Arts, Carmel

Cost: $5 (students) to $65 
 More: carmelsymphony.org

8 p.m. Oct. 10-12; 1:30 and 7 p.m. Oct. 13

“The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance,” Main Street Productions, Westfield Playhouse

The musical focuses on Seymour, a hapless florist shop worker, who raises a plant that feeds on humans.

Cost: $28 (students) to $51 More: civictheatre.org

Luke Bryan, Sunset Repeat Tour, Ruoff Home Mortgage Music Center, Noblesville

7 p.m. Oct. 11

Country star Luke Bryan will be joined by Cole Swindell and Jon Langston on the tour. The event was previously scheduled for Aug. 18 but was postponed by thunderstorms. 
Cost: $38.25 to $127

Cost: $12 to $14

7 p.m. Oct. 10-12; 2 p.m. Oct. 13

The musical follows the tale of a young woman’s search for her birth father through the timeless songs of ABBA.

More: livenation.com

7:30 p.m. Oct. 11 and 12; 2:30 p.m. Oct. 13

A classic Western with themes of good versus evil, the play is adapted from Dorothy M. Johnson’s original 1953 short story, not the 1962 John Ford movie starring John Wayne and James Stewart.

Cost: $45 to $70 (includes buffet More: beefandboards.com, dinner), a $6 ticket discount 317-872-9664 is available for ages 3-15.

“Mamma Mia!,” Civic Theatre, The Tarkington, Center for the Performing Arts, Carmel

7:30 p.m. Oct. 12

The program features pieces by French composers Hector Berlioz and Maurice Ravel and culminates with Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovky’s “Symphony No. 2 in C Minor, Op. 17.”

Compiled by Mark Ambrogi

“Little Shop of Horrors,” Beef & Boards Dinner Theatre, Indianapolis

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More: westfieldplayhouse.org

DISPATCH Lyle Lovett and his Acoustic Group will perform at the Palladium at 8 p.m. Oct. 11. (Submitted photo)

Lyle Lovett and his Acoustic Group, the Palladium, Center for the Performing Arts, Carmel

8 p.m. Oct. 11

Singer-songwriter Lyle Lovett’s music features influences from country music, Western swing, folk, gospel, blues, rock and jazz. Cost: $45 to $125

More: thecenterpresents.org

Lecture set on Indiana’s top African American poets and musicians — An IUPUI professor will discuss the lives and work of some of Indiana’s greatest African American poets and musicians in a free lecture at 7 p.m. Oct. 17 at the Studio Theater at the Center for the Performing Arts in Carmel. Poets Mari Evans and Etheridge Knight and jazz musicians Freddie Hubbard and Wes Montgomery are highlighted in “Arts Midwest: Poetry, People and Place,” a multimedia presentation by Lasana Kazembe, Ph.D. To reserve tickets, visit TheCenterPresents.org/DrKazembe.


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October 8, 2019

INSIDE & OUT

Current in Zionsville

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Blueprint for Improvement: Basement has something for everyone Commentary by Larry Greene

After

Before

Background: Built in 2010, this home is in the Longridge Estates neighborhood on the west side of Carmel.

THE CHALLENGE The homeowners wanted to create a space that would be enjoyed by the whole family, including two kids who love to play video games and parents who enjoy entertaining and exercising at home. They also wanted to update the aesthetic of the basement to reflect the style of the rest of their home.

THE SOLUTION 1. The space was divided into a large entertainment area and a home gym. 2. The kids have their own space for playing multiplayer video games. It’s complete with two TV screens and cabinets for storage of consoles and games. 3. The barn doors that separate the living area from the exercise room feature innovative stops for soft-opening and soft-closing functionality. 4. Built-in shelves and cabinets display the homeowners’ collection of sports memorabilia; the glass barn doors below the TV are a fun tie-in to the fullsize doors in the room. 5. Custom wood planks behind the television were hand distressed on-site. To get started on your own remodeling project, visit us at caseindy.com or stop by one of our three locations. Larry Greene is the owner of Case Design/Remodeling. You may email him at lgreene@ caseindy.com. To see more photos of this and other Case projects, visit caseindy.com.

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Hit me with your pet shark Commentary by Curtis Honeycutt

Convent in the Desert of the Lions in Mexico City. (Photo by Don Knebel)

History of the Desert of the Lions Commentary by Don Knebel Much of Mexico City, a city of almost 9 million people, is crowded and noisy. But an hour’s drive from the center of TRAVEL the city is a still-peaceful area that was once the home of unusual monks seeking to be closer to God. In 1521, Spanish forces led by Hernán Cortés captured the area that is now Mexico City from the Aztecs. To help convert the indigenous people to Christianity, Catholic monks soon began arriving from Spain, including the so-called ”barefoot Carmelites,” who claimed a spiritual linkage to Jewish hermits once living on Israel’s Mount Carmel. They got their name from the requirement that they walk barefoot and took vows of poverty, chastity and absolute silence. In 1606, after having established convents among the villages in the valley, the Carmelites built a convent in an uninhabited wooded area in the mountains west of the villages, about 5,000 feet above the valley floor, where they could meditate without distractions. In 1722, the monks demolished their deteriorating convent and replaced it

with a still-standing domed structure that included a chapel and rooms for visiting monks. They named their 4,600-acre site “Desierto de los Leones” (“Desert of the Lions”) after its isolated (deserted) location and the pumas prowling the forests. By the middle of the 19th century, the Carmelites had abandoned the Desert of the Lions, which became Mexico’s first protected forest in 1876. After use as a military headquarters, the area became Mexico’s first national park in 1917. Today, the Desert of the Lions and its immaculately maintained grounds are within the boundaries of Mexico City. Some rooms within the convent building are now museums, illustrating the life of the monks who once lived there. The still-active chapel and gardens are popular for weddings and quinceañeras, parties recognizing a 15-year-old girl’s coming of age. Don Knebel is a local resident who works for Barnes & Thornburg LLP. For the full column visit donknebel.com. You may contact him at news@currentzionsville. com.

DISPATCHES No-rattle ceiling fan — If the screws that hold the light globe to your ceiling fan tend to work loose and then hum or rattle, slip a wide rubber band around the neck of the globe where the screws grip it. The rubber band prevents the screws from loosening, dampens any noise and protects the globe from overzealous screw tighteners. Source: FamilyHandyman.com

Shampoo to the rescue — Shampoo can multi-task if you are having a detergent emergency. If you have run out of dish soap or laundry detergent, you can substitute shampoo in a pinch. Make sure it’s the nonconditioning kind so you don’t end up with oily residue. A few drops for dirty dishes will do the trick. For a load of laundry, about onethird of a cup will be enough. Source: BottomLineInc.com

I’d love to be in a real band someday, if for no other reason but to come up with cool potential band GRAMMAR GUY names. Are you ready? Ladies and gentlemen, give it up for Mondegreen! After a quick Google search, it appears as though both Mondegreen and The Mondegreens are already band names. All the good ones are taken. Because I don’t want to get in a legal battle with either band, I’ll just tell you about the term “mondegreen” instead. A mondegreen is a term for a misheard music lyric that you sing or hear instead of the correct lyrics. Writer Sylvia Wright coined the term in 1954 in an article for Harper’s Bazaar, in which she recounted a misunderstood song lyric from “The Bonny of Earl Murray.” Instead of the actual lyrics “...and layd him on the green,” Wright heard “and Lady Mondegreen.” I love mondegreens. Some notable mondegreens include lyrics from Jimi Hendrix’s song “Purple Haze.” “Excuse me while I kiss this guy” instead of “excuse

me while I kiss the sky” often is heard. Pretty much every line from Elton John’s “Tiny Dancer” is easy to mishear. “Hold me close now Tiny Dancer” really does sound like “folding clothes with Tony Danza.” I’ve also heard people think this line said, “Happy birthday, private waxer” and “Hold me close, I’m tired of dancing.” Our brains hear these musical words and interpret them as whatever sounds make the most sense. That’s why, when we’re listening to a Pat Benetar hit, we’re prone to hearing “Hit me with your pet shark” instead of “Hit me with your best shot.” I think I like the “pet shark” line better. I could go on and on with examples of familiar mondegreens, but I want to take a moment to dub the already-knighted Elton John as the King of the Mondegreens. So, if you ever hear me going on about some guy named “Monty Green,” you may want to look up the lyrics to find out what I’m actually singing. Curtis Honeycutt is a national award-winning, syndicated humor writer. Connect with him on Twitter (@curtishoneycutt) or at curtishoneycutt.com.


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Across 1. Some UIndy degs. 5. Part of WHS 9. Sniper’s aid 14. Touched down 15. Ratio words 16. Push forward 17. WTHR morning program, with “The”

19. ___ Mary-of-the-Woods 20. Cardio workout option 21. Movie SFX 23. Numero ___ 24. UFO crew 25. Use as support 29. Some feds 30. “Just like I said” 32. Foot fraction

35. Luna Music genre 36. Election night red-andblue diagram 40. Figure out 42. Light science 43. West 86th record store 44. Ooze 47. Contrarian 48. Coal worker’s pneumo-

Indy’s HALLO-TWEEN Party!

Oct. 19, 6:30–9 p.m. PRESENTED BY PRESENTED BY

childrensmuseum.org/sports-spooktacular childrensmuseum.org/track-and-treat

#HauntedTCM

coniosis, familiarly 51. A Farewell to ___ 54. A bit formal 55. Hornets, on a Bankers Life Fieldhouse scoreboard 58. Zodiac cat 59. Indianapolis Indians minor-league level 60. Silk substitute 62. Hamilton County Court filing 64. Carmel HS grad who became Chair of the National Republican Senatorial Committee 68. Noblesville HS cushy class 69. Bungee, e.g. 70. Gets hitched 71. “Come in!” 72. Zionsville Fire Department need 73. Future DA’s exam Down 1. Photo finish 2. Puff up 3. Indiana House staffers 4. Pierce 5. Not hers 6. “Sorta” suffix 7. Classic Pontiac 8. “Awesome!” 9. Spanish ayes 10. Nashville-based org. 11. Poppy narcotic 12. Puccini’s pasta tubes 13. “Rocket Man” John 18. “Seize the day” acronym 22. New homonym 26. “Do it, or ___!” 27. Commotion

28. Violets of the NCAA 29. Attend alone 30. All ___ (clumsy) 31. Dine late 32. Texter’s “Beats me” 33. Teachers’ grp. 34. USN rank 37. 60 secs. 38. Perform at Belfry Theatre 39. PU frat letter 41. “Silent” prez 42. ISO piece 44. CD flaw 45. Squeeze (out) 46. Golf’s “Big Easy” 49. Inits. on a toothpaste tube

50. UN address? 51. “The Zoo Story” playwright 52. Showed again on WRTV 53. Damp 55. Hints 56. Penske brand 57. Dread 59. Way off 61. Pained cry 63. Ossip Optometry interest 65. Indy Fuel shutout, in a boxscore 66. IU Health workers 67. HST follower Answers on Page 31


BEFORE

AFTER

Current in Zionsville What is your goal? www.currentzionsville.com

29

October 8, 2019

FIT, HEALTHY, AND STRONG! NUTRITION

YOUR RESULTS HAPPEN HERE! STRENGTH-TRAINING I LOVE your success! Go to: fbfitness.com

CARDIO • FLEXIBILITY in Weight Loss! Call Expert Today (317) 250-4848 AFTER AFTER

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Get your card in front of 128,087 households! Call Dennis O’Malia @ 317.370.0749 for details

From tax return From accounting preparation to business to U.S. Tax Court transactions CPA-Attorney Since 1971

Full-Body Fitness, LLC

From protecting assets to estate planning

317-844-1303 • CPAttorney.com

1 on 1 Personal Training • Weight Loss Expert

3C Plumbing Inc. Cy Clayton Cadwalader

BEFORE

- water heaters - sump pumps - garbage disposals - bath & kitchen faucets - water softeners -

REPAIRS.

REASONABLY PRICED. RESIDENTIAL PLUMBING

cy@3CPlumbing.com

317.850.5114

AFTER

BATHROOM REMODELING CHIP TRAIN REMODELING BATHROOMS•KITCHENS•BASEMENTS

Bathroom Remodeling

Carmel and Zionsville since 1992 16 years experience Free home inspection Guaranteed work/referrals

Licensed • Bonded • Insured Text or Call Chip Train 317-258-2650

chiptrain@msn.com

Lic. # PC1Q701074

I LOVE your success!

Karen Tanner Real Estate Group

Clean of Hearts Cleaning Service AFTER AFTER

Annie Greenberg Schweiger

Collecting dust since 2005

REALTOR/Broker

• Residential Cleaning • Move Ins/Move Outs • Quality Service • Free Quote Cindy SamsGuaranteed • Satisfaction Full-Body Fitness, LLC

317.222.1304 Office 317.361.6333 Annie Cell Annie@BuyWithKTG.com 230 N Rangeline Road Carmel, IN 46032 www.BuyWithKTG.com

1 on 1 Personal Training • Weight Loss Expert

WALLA PAINTING Small Local Business - Servicing Hamilton County 2018 Angie’s List Service Award Winner Fully Insured and Bonded - FREE ESTIMATES Discounts on High Quality Paints

317-430-7684 • cleanofheartscleaningservice.com Insured & Bonded

• Interior / Exterior • Full Prep / Clean Service • Walls, Trim, Cabinets • Ext Trim, Siding, Brick

10% OFF

ROOFING • SIDING • WINDOWS

wallapainting.com/current 317.360.0969 *Discount for interior painting only

Denture Repairs

Prosthodontics of Central Indiana 11405 N. Pennsylvania St. #110

(Mon-Fri)

www.prosthodonticsIN.com

317-574-0866

We can help you upgrade to implant over dentures or fixed implant restorations

*Min. of $250 must be met to qualify, call for details. Expires 10/31/19

OUTDOOR CUSHIONS

FREE

COME TO THE SPECIALISTS! Free oral examination and denture assessment with any repair.

WINTER STORAGE

*Free winter storage with cleaning

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

10% off Gutter, Window Cleaning & Pressure Washing

317-334-1900

(Offer expires 10-31-19)

4349 W 96th St.

Since 1993

*

Labor over $1500

Same Day

CARPET & UPHOLSTERY

Insurance Specialist ROSE ROOFING Storm Damage

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

LICENSED BONDED INSURED

317-848-7634

www.centennialremodelers.com

Member Central Indiana

“JEFF” OF ALL TRADES • PLUMBING • ELECTRICAL • TILING, CARPENTRY & MORE! TURN YOUR ‘TO DO’ LIST INTO A ‘TO DONE’ LIST

HANDYMAN SERVICES, LLC.

FREE ESTIMATES

317-797-8181

www.jeffofalltrades.net - Insured & Bonded

$35 OFF

Any job of $250 or more “JEFF” OF ALL TRADES 317-797-8181 Coupon must be presented at time of estimate. Not valid with other offers or prior purchases. Offer expires 10/31/19.

ANOTHER WAY TO STAY COVERED™ Commercial | Benefits | Personal | Financial

317.846.5554 shepherdins.com


• Trunks • Custom Consoles • We also do boat interiors

30

October 8, 2019

FINE BATHROOMS

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

Complete Bathroom Remodeling -Ceramic and Porcelain Tile Installations -Custom Showers -Leak and Mold Solutions -Low Maintenance Choices

Anderson Construction Services Learn more at:

NOW OPEN!

We do custom auto upholstery • Carpet • Headliners • Seats • Trunks • Custom Consoles • We also do boat interiors

(765) 233-7100

threadheadzautomarine@gmail.com Like us on Facebook @ Thread Headz Auto & Marine Upholstery

www.iwantanewbathroom.com

Jorge Escalante

WEAVER CONTRACTING INC.

317-397-9389

• Excavation • Retaining Walls • Drainage • Septic Systems • Grading • Big Dirty Projects!

10% OFF

paintthetownred2007@gmail.com

Stop Procrastination Today

IF YOU MENTION THIS AD

Jorge Escalante

317-989-1002

317-397-9389 pain�hetownred2007@gmail.com

Jorge Escalante • Interior/Exterior

317-397-9389

Kitchen Cabinets • Interior/Exterior • pain�hetownred2007@gmail.com • Kitchen Cabinets

10% OFF

10% OFF

IF YOU MENTION THIS AD

IF YOU MENTION THIS AD

COIT CLEANS AIR DUCTS

40% O FF

• CARPET • HARDWOOD • VINYL PLANK • LAMINATE • TILE • PET FRIENDLY FLOORS 11230 ALLISONVILLE RD., FISHERS, IN 46038

Expires 10/15/19

VOGTCARPETONE.COM

Carpet • Oriental & Area Rugs • Tile & Grout • Air Ducts Upholstery • Wood Flooring • Water & Mold Remediation

(317) 483-1166 • COIT.COM Licensed, insured & bonded • Kitchen/Bath Remodeling • Custom Decks • Finished Basements • Ceramic Tile

- Installs Over New or Existing Gutters - Lifetime Transferable Warranty - Made in the USA - Free In Home Evaluation - Evening and Weekend Appointments - Family Owned for Over 30 years AbSOLUTELy NO HIGH prESSUrE SALES

Removal/Trimming • Plant Healthcare • Tree Planting • Consulting

John Xanders Vice President jon.x@xanderbuilt.net

317-848-8885 Xanderbuilt.net

• Wood Floors • Doors & Windows • Interior & Exterior Painting • Drywall • Plumbing & Electrical

Gary D. Simpson Office: 317-660-5494 Cell: 317-703-9575 Free Estimates & Satisfaction Guaranteed

• Roofing and Siding • Room Additions • Power Washing • Decorative & Regular Concrete • Handyman Services

simpsonconstructionservices.com

317-485-7330 • www.gutterhelmet.com

Kandice Richey • 317-432-7151


October 8, 2019

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

Classifieds

VISA, MasterCard accepted. Reach 128,087 homes weekly

SERVICES INTERIOR PAINTING

40 years of references in Carmel Meticulous - conscientious Chuck Horn - 317-531-7743 House cleaning Experienced- reliable References provided FREE estimates Call or text Elizabeth $20 OFF YOUR FIRST CLEANING (317)- 691- 0627

WILL DO FALL CLEAN UP

Trim shrubs, 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

SERVICES

SERVICES

NOW HIRING

GARAGE SALE

GUITAR LESSONS

C&H TREE SERVICE

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

LAWN CARE & LANDSCAPE Locally owned/operated over 41 YRS *FALL CLEAN UP *LEAF REMOVAL *IRRIGATION WINTERIZATION SNOW & ICE REMOVAL *FREE ESTIMATES CALL 317-491- 3491

NOW HIRING

MULTI-HOME GARAGE SALES

Colonial Village Day Care in Zionsville has part-time or full-time positions open! Call 317-873-4223 or send resumes to: colonialvillagedc@gmail.com

AUCTION

AUCTION

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 near Carey Road & 146th • Carmel 317-

910-6990

.com

NOW HIRING

NOW HIRING International Business College ADMISSIONS ASSISTANT POSITION

NOW HIRING • 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

W I T H

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

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

T O G E T H E R

31

HAMILTON COUNTY HARVEST FOOD BANK

Y O U

F E E D I N G H A M I L T O N COUNTY

2020 Focus on the Future

This ad sponsored by:

Front of House Team Members Now hiring hosts, to-go, servers, and bartenders. Part-time and full-time positions available. Flexible hours, great work environment, and fun atmosphere. Ask for an application today! Stop in Monday thru Friday for an interview: 13445 Tegler Drive, Noblesville In 46060

Since 2010, we've helped 40 Hamilton County pantries and programs provide over half a million meals. Will you help us plan for the year 2020?

org ank. B d Foo HCH

**OUTBOUND CALLING ** **THIS IS A PART-TIME POSITION** Admissions Assistants are responsible for: contacting high school students who have requested information, giving degree information, determining program interests, and scheduling appointments to tour the campus. An Admissions Assistant’s job functions are to provide the requested information to prospective students via phone, encourage investigation, and to schedule campus visits. *SCHEDULE REQUIREMENTS – Monday through Friday schedule.. Saturdays will also be worked on occasion.* Monday-Thursday 2:30 pm to 8:30 pm Friday 2:30 pm to 6:30 pm (ATTENDANCE IS VITAL!!!!) NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE! Email your resume to: cwinter@ibcindianapolis.edu

PUZZLE ANSWERS

M A T T E

B L O A T

A I D E S

I N C D E D K A R A L B E E

R E R A N

M O I S T

S T A Y B O L T O H U C M A B L S A E F Y A E R

H I G H I S T O S H O W C E A N O L D Y O S O U L E S E E A C K L D R E S A A T O D C O R H O S

HELP IS JUST AROUND THE CORNER.

FREE IN-SHOP DIAGNOSIS SCAN FOR SPECIAL OFFER!

S C O P E I M P E L S A I N T G I U N O N G M E N U S O U S M A P O P T I C S P A N T I U N G S Y C H A N Y L O N D Y O U N G D W E D S E L S A T

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WE ARE YOUR APPLE SUPPORT EXPERTS!

950 N. Rangeline Rd., Ste. E, Carmel, IN 46032 • (317) 867-0900 • www.ctcarmel.com • M-Th 9:00-6:00, Fri 9:00-5:00 and weekends by Appt.


Columbus;kcatrenich;Control Tech Heating & Air Conditioning;A36952-467095;9.7 x 10-4c (19Fa-Early)

32

October 8, 2019

Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

SOON IT WILL BE

TOO COLD FOR YOUR FURNACE

TO GO OUT

RECEIVE UP TO

$1,600

when you purchase the Lennox® Ultimate Comfort System*

OR

Enjoy no payments for the first 3 months when you finance a new Lennox® system for as little as

$116 A MONTH.**

24 hr. Service - Sales - Installation www.ControlTech.biz 1200 Parkway Dr., Zionsville, IN 46077 317-868-2211 “Where we care about you and your air”

Offer expires 11/22/2019. *Rebate requires purchase of qualifying items between September 2, 2019 to November 22, 2019. Qualifying items must be installed by November 29, 2019. Rebate claims (with proof of purchase) must be submitted (with proof of purchase) to www.lennoxconsumerrebates.com no later than December 14, 2019. Rebate is paid in the form of a Lennox Visa® prepaid debit card. Card is subject to terms and conditions found or referenced on card and expires 12 months after issuance. Conditions apply. See www.lennox.com/terms-and-conditions for complete terms and conditions. **Offer available September 2, 2019 to November 22, 2019. Offer based on a retail price of $10,000. Requires purchase of qualifying system. Financing available to well-qualified buyers on approved credit. No down payment required. No monthly payment required and no interest is accrued during the 3 month deferral period. After deferral period, the loan is rolled into 6.99% APR for 120 Months with equal monthly payments of $116 a month. Normal late charges apply. Cannot be combined with any other promotional offer. Minimum loan amount $3,000. Maximum loan amount $100,000. You may prepay your account at any time without penalty. Financing is subject to credit requirements and satisfactory completion of finance documents. Any finance terms advertised are estimates only. See Truth in Lending disclosures available from lender for more information. © 2019 Lennox Industries Inc. Lennox Dealers are independently owned and operated businesses.

Service-19Fa-Early-4c.indd 26

7/22/19 2:10 PM


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