Tuesday, November 3, 2020
Road to recovery One Zionsville family’s experience with COVID-19 / P12
COVID-19 vaccine could be available this month / P3
Students paint traffic control box to promote social justice / P5
Boone County sees record COVID-19 cases / P16
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The Davis family pauses in front of their Zionsville home. (Submitted photo)
Founded March 20 2012, at Zionsville, IN Vol. IX, No. 29 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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State expects limited doses of vaccine this month By Jarred Meeks jarred@youarecurrent.com
washing your hands and practicing social distancing. They are the best tools we have.” Hospital capacity Indiana State Health Commissioner Dr. Hospitalizations in Indiana continue to Kristina Box said Indiana could receive iniincrease. On Oct. 27, the Indiana State Dept. tial shipments of a of Health reported 1,679 COVID-19 PANDEMIC two-dose COVID-19 hospitalizations, the highest total vaccine later this since mid-April. The state’s sevmonth, although vaccinations for en-day average positivity rate on the general public would likely not Oct. 28 was 7.1 percent, a figure that be available until sometime next has steadily risen since state health year. officials reported a seven-day av“We have been told by the federerage positivity rate of 3.9 percent Box al vaccine coordinators to expect Sept. 16. some doses of the first vaccine by late Positive COVID-19 tests continue to reach November, and, possibly, a shipment of the record highs each week. As of Oct. 27, the second vaccine in mid-December,” Box said state reported its most cases in a sevduring an Oct. 28 virtual press briefing. “We en-day period, with an average of 2,397 new don’t know how much Indiana will receive cases a day. yet, but we expect the supply to be limited ICU and ventilator capacity in the state in the beginning.” has slowly diminished, but state health ofPfizer, Inc., is the first company expected ficials said they aren’t concerned because, to have a vaccine ready for shipment to especially regarding ICU bed capacity, hospiIndiana, Box said. The second anticipated tals have shown they can increase capacity vaccine is being developed by Moderna. when needed. As of press time, 29 percent Both vaccines are awaiting emergenof ICU beds across the state were available, cy-use authorization from the U.S. Food and as were 77.8 percent of ventilators. Drug Administration. “Our hospitals are more nimble now The vaccination plan the state submitted than they were in April,” Box said. “They’ve to the Centers for Disease Control and Prealready demonstrated that they can get vention calls for the initial doses to go to creative and build ICU capacity. We simply health care providers and other vulnerable know more about how to handle this than populations, Box said. Allocation plans conwe did at the beginning. tinue to be finalized. “At this point, the hospitals still have “This is a rapidly developing situation, so the ability to adjust for a surge by working a lot is subject to change,” Box said. “What internally to get creative with staffing and I want to emphasize is that a widely availexternally to transfer patients as needed able vaccine to all people of all ages is still so that Hoosiers that are ill can still get the months away, so keep wearing your mask, care that they need.”
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Have a news tip? Want to submit a calendar event? Have a photograph to share? Contact Managing Editor Jarred Meeks at jarred@youarecurrent.com or call 317.489.4444 ext. 804. 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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Dr. Seuss collection — For more than 60 years, Dr. Seuss’s illustrations have brought a visual realization to his imaginary worlds. His artistic talent went far beyond the printed page and yet, to this day, his Secret Art Collection is virtually unknown to the general public. Throughout his lifetime, Theodor Seuss Geisel (Dr. Seuss) created paintings and sculpture. CV Art and Frame, Your Fine Art Gallery will share a selection of artworks from The Art of Dr. Seuss Collection at 110 S. Main St., Nov. 6–21. Visitors may explore and acquire works from Dr. Seuss’s best-known children’s books, as well as The Secret Art of Dr. Seuss, a collection based on decades of artwork.
Box said almost 70 percent of Hoosiers hospitalized with COVID-19 in October were 60 or older, representing the population’s largest percentage of hospitalizations since the pandemic began. The population also disproportionately accounts for most of the state’s COVID-19 deaths. As of press time, residents 60 and older account for 92.2 percent of Indiana’s COVID-19 deaths, according to the state’s online coronavirus dashboard, coronavirus.in.gov. Box said nearly 56 percent of COVID-19 deaths have been traced to longterm care facilities. On Oct. 21, state officials announced that the Indiana National Guard will be trained and sent to all long-term care facilities by the middle of this month to assist with surges. State officials also said clinical staff from the health care reserve workforce will be hired to supplement long-term care resources. Two million N95 masks and other pieces of personal protective equipment were scheduled to be shipped to the facilities. In September, Indiana began awarding more than $30 million to local health departments to open and operate their own testing sites for two years. To date, the departments have opened 69 testing sites and conducted more than 59,000 tests. “As we have seen more cases across the state, we are also seeing more testing,” Box said. “In the early days of the pandemic, our capacity for testing was measured in the hundreds each day, not in the tens of thousands we are seeing regularly today. “Our testing capacity is the highest that it has ever been.”
Zionsville home sales — Smaller sale price increases led to a fast-moving residential real estate market in Zionsville in September 2020. According to F.C. Tucker Company, the average sale price for a home in Zionsville was $498,869, an increase of 2.3 percent compared to September 2019. Zionsville homes left the market very quickly compared to this time last year, selling 33 days faster. The average price per square foot for a home in Zionsville also increased 1.5 percent, to $164.41.
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November 3, 2020
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Students paint traffic box By Jarred Meeks jarred@youarecurrent.com
A nother Done DeAl.
8993 Another Done Deal_4.7667x9.5
At the corner of Main and Sycamore streets, four Zionsville Community Schools students paintART ed the traffic control box with social justice themes to support national calls for diversity and inclusion. Eighth-grade Zionsville Middle School student Phoebe Sidebottom, From left, Phoebe Sidebottom, 13, Nina Tucker, 7, Audrey 13, initiated the “All in This Together Mast, 14, and Grace Lizama, 16, pause in front of a traffic for Social Justice” project. She was control box. (Photo by Jarred Meeks) inspired to raise funds for the project after seeing Black Lives Matter murals Eagle Elementary Nina Tucker, 7; Zionsville painted on city landscapes in the Pacific West Middle School student Audrey Mast, 14; and Zionsville Community High School stuNorthwest and downtown Indianapolis. dent Grace Lizama, 16. With assistance from “I thought it (art) would raise social justice in a beautiful way,” Sidebottom said. local artist Rebecca Cisneros of Palette Art Studio, the young artists worked through Sidebottom worked in collaboration with October to paint the box. the Zionsville Cultural District, the mayor’s office, Palette Art Studio and Robert GoodSidebottom said she hopes similar local man Jewelers to organize the project, which art projects are made in Indiana to show included choosing three additional students support social justice causes. “It needs to be heard, and the more peoto design one of the four sides of the traffic control box. ple talk about it, it will,” she said. The winners from each school level were
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Zionsville Town Council adopts 2021 budget By Jarred Meeks jarred@youarecurrent.com The Zionsville Town Council unanimously adopted a 2021 budget after several weeks of meetings and negotiTOWN NEWS ations to pass it without a deficit. Since Sept. 16, the council met seven times, including three budget workshops and a special meeting on Oct. 29. The council allowed an additional two weeks of deliberations to ensure it and other town departments were satisfied with the budget. Adopted revenue for the 2021 budget register is $31,982,623 and adopted expenses is $31,961,824, leaving a surplus of $20,799. In 2020, the town council adopted a budget with $31,173,282 in revenue and $32,883,090 in expenses, resulting in a deficit of $1,709,808. The total budget amount includes $5.7 million of transfers on the revenue and expense side. The $31.9 million figure is the budget amount without the transfers. The Council approved the $37.7 million budget when including the transfers. Tammy Havard, the town’s CFO, explained during the Oct. 29 special meeting why the 2020 budget was adopted with a deficit. “There are capital expenses that do occur from cash savings over the years,” she said. “That is a common practice. It’s known that capital expenses happen and are planned for.” Major capital outlays in 2021 include expenses related to a new roundabout, two fire tankers, Town Hall improvements and other town projects, which the council can fund through cash balance reserves saved in prior years, Havard said. The council cut other expenses to keep $500,000 in street repair funds in the budget, Havard said. The town stated in a social media post that states, “The technology improvements added to the budget will make it more efficient for citizens to interact with the town and allow for streamlined sharing of financial and nonfinancial information with citizens.” Police operating costs in the Police Operating Fund and Public Safety LIT Fund totaled $5,900,395 in 2020. The total in 2021 is $5,827,225.
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A special Armistice Day Commentary by Ward Degler Veterans Day used to be Armistice Day. In 1918, President Woodrow Wilson declared it a day of remembrance PLAIN TALK for those who had fallen during World War I. It was established on Nov. 11. It was declared a national holiday in 1938, and in 1954, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed a declaration changing the name to Veterans Day in honor of veterans — living and dead — from all wars. As a veteran of two conflicts, I have a special place in my heart for Veterans Day. I remember the men I served with, and several who never made it back home. I also remember one special Armistice Day. It was 1947, and the events of that day were so powerful that I wrote a short story about them a number of years later. Here is that story: The Day Jack Underwood Came Home Jack Underwood finally came on Armistice Day in 1947. The war had been over for two years, but he had remained on Saipan, a small island in the Pacific where one of the bloodiest battles of the war had raged.
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Jack had been highly decorated, and everyone agreed Armistice Day was a perfect time for him to come home. The homecoming went quite well, all in all. Almost everyone in town met the train when it came in from St. Louis. And, of course, everyone remembered the promises they had made when Jack went overseas. Mr. Underwood had pledged he would take the old Ford down off the blocks and wax it to a bright luster. Jack’s sister Louise kept her promise to iron all of Jack’s shirts and hang them in the closet. Even Mr. Murphy ordered “drinks on the house” all afternoon at the Birds Nest Bar. Mrs. Underwood’s promise – made mostly to herself – was that she wouldn’t cry. And she did OK until the very last, when the bugler blew taps, and the Marine captain presented her with the folded flag. Yes, everyone kept their promises that day, including Jack, who had promised he would come home. Ward Degler lives in Zionsville with his wife. He is the author of “The Dark Ages of My Youth ... and Times More Recent.” Contact him at ward.degler@ gmail.com.
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Clarification — Boone County Councilor Elise Nieshalla submitted her election guide information on time, but the entirety of it didn’t appear in Current in Zionsville’s guide. Below is her full bio: • Personal: Nieshalla is married to Chris and has four kids. She is a Nieshella member of the executive committee of Boone County Family Recovery Court, a board member of Sylvia’s Child Advocacy Center, a board member of Boone County Convention & Visitors Bureau, a board member of National Federation of Republican Women, the council liaison to the Boone Economic Development Corp., a judge for
Future Farmers of America, a volunteer for Habitat for Humanity, a State Republican Convention Delegate in 2014 and 2018 and a Vice Precinct Committeeman. • Background: Nieshalla is an incumbent for county council at-large. She is the vice president of the Boone County Council and also serves on the council’s budget committee. She is the vice president of the Indiana County Councils Association and received the 2018 County Councilor of the Year Award from the Association of Indiana Counties. She serves on the legislative committee for the Association of Indiana Counties. She is the owner and manager of real estate investments. She was a member of former Gov. Mitch Daniel’s Economic Development Transition
Policy Team, a former Head of Business Attraction for the Indiana Dept. of Commerce, a founding faculty member of the Hoosier Leadership Series and a former adjunct faculty at Indiana University. She has a master’s degree in public affairs from Indiana University. Some of her key accomplishments while serving on the Boone County Council include managing a fiscally responsible budget, funding school resource officers, reviving the Big 4 Trail connection project, winning the “Dark Box” court case, protecting taxpayers, and representing Boone County on a Japan Trade Mission with the Boone Economic Development Corp. • Website: EliseNieshalla.com.
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SPOTLIGHT M.A.S.H. takes on new sponsor M.A.S.H. Ministries, or Mobile Assistance for Service men and women at Home, has taken on a new sponsor. Gaylor Electric will be a Silver Sponsor of the first annual M.A.S.H. Gala and Silent Auction. M.A.S.H Ministries is an Indianapolis-based counseling group focused on assisting veterans, first responders, and others who are struggling with post-traumatic stress disorder and its effects. The goal of M.A.S.H Ministries is to raise awareness of veteran suicide and PTSD, while offering a variety of resources to provide hope for these veterans and their families. M.A.S.H offers both virtual and in-person counseling services, local retreats and rehabilitation camps across the Midwest. Versiti Blood Center issues emergency appeal for blood donations Versiti Blood Center of Indiana, a nonprofit organization that relies on Hoosier blood donations, recently issued an emergency appeal for blood donations. Versiti strives for a three-day supply of blood available to its partner hospitals. Schools and businesses are typically Versiti’s largest source of blood donations this time of year. Because of remote work and virtual schooling, many of those drives have been canceled. Compared to an average year, Versiti is down more than 50 percent in donations, or nearly 20,000 units of blood. O-negative and O-positive blood donors are most needed. Versiti Blood Center of Indiana has donor centers in Indianapolis,
Fishers, Carmel, Greenwood, Terre Haute and Lafayette. Heart and Soul Free Clinic to conduct second fundraising gala Westfield-based Heart and Soul Free Clinic will conduct a virtual fundraising gala at 7 p.m. Nov. 7. It will have a mask-a-rade theme. Heart and Soul Free Clinic provides free medical, dental and mental healthcare to uninsured and underinsured individuals in Central Indiana. Besides providing care at the clinic in Westfield, medical care also is provided on the mobile medical unit that travels to several different locations. Tickets for the virtual event are $100. Each attendee will receive a link to the event along with a Heart and Soul mask and a gift to celebrate with the clinic. To buy a ticket, visit heartandsoulclinic. org/virtual-mask-a-rade-gala. People also can purchase $75 raffle tickets. Raffle winners will be drawn at the virtual event. Winners do not need to be present to win. To purchase a raffle ticket, call the clinic at 317-804-5782 or email info@ heartandsoulclinic.org. Open Doors of Washington Township seeks Thanksgiving donations The Westfield-based Open Doors of Washington Township is seeking donations for its annual Thanksgiving project. The project provides food baskets for approximately 275 families in Westfield, and that number could increase this year due to the financial implications of the COVID-19 pandemic. The food pantry is seeking canned peaches, pineapples,
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866.459.5360 W W W. A X I A T P. C O M peas, cranberry sauce, turkey oven bags, cream of mushroom soup, cream of chicken soup and paper towels. Donations can be dropped off at Open Doors, 19360 Tomlinson Rd., in the donation box on the west side of the building. Donate by Nov. 10. Open Doors also is seeking volunteers to work on Monday evenings from 5 to 8 p.m. Duties are signing clients in and assisting them with their shopping. If interested, please contact Volunteer Coordinator Ann Godby at 317-867-8670 or 317-625-5752. MVEF receives grant The Mt. Vernon Education Foundation has received a $12,000 Central Indiana COVID-19 Community Economic Relief Fund grant which will benefit Mt. Vernon students. The grant is made possible by the Lilly Endowment, Inc. and awarded by the United Way of Central Indiana. The Lilly Endowment donated a total of $1,712,500 to help meet needs affected by the pandemic in Boone, Hamilton, Hancock, Hendricks and Morgan counties. The funds given to MVEF will be used to sustain operations and/or provide services that support individuals and families who are affected directly and indirectly by the economic impacts related to the COVID-19 crisis; meaning the money will be able to best help the community, including internet connectivity and meeting students’ social-emotional needs. Individuals and families at or below 185 percent of the Federal Poverty Level will be prioritized.
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Project: Hamilton Boone County Road and Little Eagle Creek reconstruction Location: Little Creek Avenue south of 146th Street will be closed for approximately 120 calendar days. The closure began Aug. 10. Expected completion: End of December CARMEL Project: New roundabout Location: 111th Street and Lexington Drive Expected completion: Mid-November Project: New roundabout Location: 116th Street and Guilford Road. East and westbound traffic flow will be maintained, but north and southbound connectivity will be limited. Expected completion: Mid-November Project: New roundabout Location: 116th Street and College Avenue. East and westbound traffic flow will be maintained, but north and southbound connectivity will be limited. Expected completion: Mid-November Project: New roundabout Location: Full closure of Illinois Street at Zotec Drive Expected completion: Late November Project: Utility relocation Location: Westfield Boulevard just south of 111th Street Start date: Week of Nov. 23 Expected completion: By Nov. 28 Project: Reconstruction of Range Line Road, including a new roundabout at Walnut Street and pedestrian and bicycle connectivity Location: Between Elm Street and City Center Drive Expected completion: January 2021 Project: Shelborne Road and 146th Street road shift Location: 146th Street will be under a traffic shift for each direction of travel for approximately 60 calendar days to allow crews to work on a roundabout. Once motorists reach Shelborne Road heading eastbound, they will stop at Shelborne Road and be directed south onto Shelborne Road via signage onto the roundabout that will connect back to the existing 146th Street. Once motorists reach Shelborne Road heading westbound, they will be directed north onto Shelborne Road via signage and must turn left onto the new frontage road.
Holiday
November 3, 2020
The Hendricks County ICON’s 2nd annual
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Hey, Kids! Get your FREE photo taken with Santa! Noon to 2 PM
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Craft Show presented by:
November 14, 2020 • 9AM-4PM 1900 E. Main Street, Danville, IN
Hendricks County 4-H Fairgrounds & Conference Complex
ADMISSION $3 COVID-19 RULES APPLY. MASKS ARE REQUIRED.
For more information, visit 4hcomplex.org (317) 451-4088 • craftshow@icontimes.com
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November 3, 2020
COVER STORY
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One Zionsville family’s experience with COVID-19 By Jarred Meeks jarred@youarecurrent.com Bella Davis, a “perfectly healthy girl” according to her parents, walked down her family’s third-story stairs Aug. 20 to celebrate her 16th birthday. It was the first time she had left the top floor of her family’s house in 40 days. In early July, after a cross-country practice at Cathedral High School, Bella, who is now a Zionsville Community High School student, complained to her mother, Holly, 44, that she had aches and pains throughout her body. Holly at first dismissed them as exhaustion from running several miles in the summer heat, but as the pain subsisted, she suspected Bella was suffering from something other than normal fatigue. Shortly after the July practice, Bella saw a doctor. Although she exhibited no symptoms of COVID-19, she was asked to take a test as a precaution. To the family’s surprise, she tested positive. And, though she tested negative for the disease for the first time on her 16th birthday, she still hasn’t fully recovered from the disease, and doctors don’t know why. “Something still isn’t right; she still suffers,” Holly said. “She’s been trying, but she doesn’t like to be around anyone. Our doctor said this from the beginning, ‘We don’t know that you can’t get it again.’ Obviously her immune system has been compromised as a result of it, so protecting her is incredibly important.” Immediately following her positive test, Bella’s father, Michael, 49, and her two sisters, Maggie, 18, and Vivie, 11, and Holly immediately isolated and sequestered Bella to the third floor of the family home. Bella’s breathing became labored, and she developed a slight cough. She spent most of her time in bed. The family could only interact with her through text messages or video chats. The closest they came to physical contact was leaving food by the door. The family quarantined for the required 14 days. As she worked from home, Holly – as she participated in Zoom calls – could hear her daughter struggling to breathe. So could the rest of the family. For Bella, the isolation was boring in the beginning, but she learned to cope. Her only reprieves were texting, Snapchat and other
Maggie, Michael, Holly, Bella and Vivie Davis pause before Bella’s illness. (Submitted photos)
Vivie works remotely on her school work
Maggie Davis does school work from home.
forms of social media. By the second or third week, she lost sense of time and sometimes track of days. She often paced her room but eventually became bored with that. In the weeks that followed, Holly started each day with a text from the Boone County Health Dept. asking whether anyone else in the family had become symptomatic. For the first two weeks, daily telehealth calls ensued as physicians tried to ascertain Bella’s condition remotely. During one of the first calls, a physician asked if Bella had a fever, and Holly began to instinctively reach for Bella’s forehead. But the physician stopped her. The Davis family believes Bella contracted COVID-19 during the July cross-country
practice. They rarely left the house, other than when Michael bought groceries. Holly has an increased risk of becoming severely ill from the disease. Word quickly spread in Bella’s peer group, and soon, most of them knew she had the disease. Students at other schools knew she had it. Somehow, without telling anyone but her close friends, word spread, and it became common knowledge Bella had COVID-19. “I told my friends I was literally dying of COVID-19,” Bella said. “And everyone was shocked that I could even get sick, let alone be really sick with it. At that point, kids weren’t getting sick with it. Or so everybody thought.”
As schools began to reopen for the fall semester and many announced plans to hold in-person classes, Bella’s parents knew she would be unable to attend in-person, but they also knew her sisters would be unable to do the same at their schools because of the risk of infection. Maggie missed her high school graduation ceremony. She was set to start college at Indiana University, but the family canceled her housing contract. Four of her five classes are online. She drives to Bloomington to attend the other. Bella and Vivie enrolled in Zionsville schools so Bella and Vivie could enroll in fully-virtual classes. The girls found themselves in a different school system, away from their friends, where they didn’t know any other students. As weeks passed and Bella regained some of her strength, Maggie and Vivie sat at the bottom of the family’s third-story stairs while Bella sat at the top. It was her first time Bella saw her family in person for weeks. “It was really weird coming out of that,” Bella said. “I hadn’t been around people in so long, so it was kind of overwhelming. And then the first few days after I finally tested negative, I still felt like somehow I was going to get my family sick. I was not sure if I should really hug them. It took a while to readjust.” The lingering effects of the disease lasted for Bella’s sisters, too. “We don’t really think about how it wears on our kids,” Holly said. “And then they’ll say something and it hits you like a ton of bricks.” When the school year started, Holly asked Maggie if she had made any new friends on campus, but Maggie said, “I don’t know where those kids have been; I can’t bring that home to you.” One night, Vivie cuddled with her mom and made a request. “If I die, I want my organs to be donated to people who own dogs,” she said. Bella is still plagued by fatigue and headaches, and the family has a second appointment with a cardiologist scheduled to run tests on Bella’s heart. Now, several months after testing negative for COVID-19, Bella, a 16-year-old who would regularly run several miles without rest, still struggles to walk up a flight of stairs.
November 3, 2020
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13
ESSAY
LETTER
Final tally
Herd immunity won’t work
Commentary by Terry Anker Watching the Hoosiers of Indiana University claim an overtime football victory against the Nittany Lions of Penn State not only provided much-needed fun in a world still reeling from lockdowns and countless existential crises, it also provided excitement safely bound by familiar rules and long-standing good sportsmanship. Fans waited for nearly a year to see their favorite teams take the gridiron and were not disappointed. Athletes gave it their all. Coaches ran the sidelines and hoped the hours of preparation and planning would lead to the desired outcome. Both sides were ready. Still, only one team would walk away as winner. There are no participation trophies in this game. Naturally, this writer, like the vast majority of this paper’s readers readers, rooted for the home team. Sure, some of us are alumni, but most followed our natural proclivity to back those closest by geography. One can assume that the people of Philadelphia might be more inclined to hope for a Penn State dominion. This game was played in Bloomington. IU had the home field advantage. Doubtless, fans who’d made the trip to watch and support the opposition would have been heckled some by the locals. It is all in good fun, right? But for this event, followers were barred. Folks could only chant their well wishes or express their frustrations in front of their living room televisions. No one could hear the names called to the referees or the jeering of the other team’s star player. Maybe that’s better, and maybe it is not. Today is another big game day. The elections will end, and someone will win. There is no participation trophy. Coaches and candidates gave it their all. Will the fans feel like it was a fair fight? Will the right team dominate? Will we go into overtime?
Terry Anker is an associate editor of Current Publishing, LLC. You may email him at terry@ youarecurrent.com.
Tears for (pranking) fears Commentary by Danielle Wilson Doo and I love a laugh at the expense of our four kids. We like to mess with them with statements like, “We don’t HUMOR do favorites, but you’re third.” Recently, my youngest sister played a doozy of a parenting prank, outlined below in all its glory. First, some context. Emily and her husband, Kyle, have two sons, ages 6 and 4. Our mother lives seven doors away, and their old live-in babysitter, Kelsey, lives about a mile away. The other night, they were getting ready for bed and could hear the boys goofing around in the bathroom as they brushed their teeth and donned pajamas. After repeated warnings of “Hurry up!” from Kyle, the older one yelled, “Go away! We don’t need you!” Naturally, Kyle and Emily turned off the lights and hid in the guest bedroom. A few minutes later, the boys emerged, silent at first, then with increasingly alarmed cries of “Mom? Dad? Where are you? This isn’t funny!” Yes, it is! Emily was stifling her giggles to the point of tears.
As fears of abandonment escalated, a plan emerged. Four-year-old: “Let’s go to Kelsey’s.” Six-year-old: “Yeah, good idea.” Four-year-old, now crying: “But we (sniffle) don’t know how (gulp) to get there!” Preschool hysteria ensued, but eventually they checked the last door and unearthed the conspirators. Upon hearing the story, we first congratulated Emily and Kyle. Well played! Then we recognized the cool-under-fire, problem-solving skills of our nephews, though we wondered why they’d failed to consider their much-closer Mamaw, who’s literally around the corner. Questionable spatial awareness aside, though, there’s little better than laughter at a child’s expense. Peace out.
Danielle Wilson is a contributing columnist. You may email her at info@youarecurrent.com.
Questionable spatial awareness aside, though, there’s little better than laughter at a child’s expense.
Editor, In response to Mari Briggs’ letter (published Oct. 27), currently, no test can determine what stage of COVID-19 illness a person is in. Quarantine and isolation periods are entirely dependent on multiple internal and external factors. People over the age of 65 and those with chronic health conditions are more likely to have severe symptoms or die from COVID. Receiving a flu shot would be beneficial because it would decrease the chances of a person having COVID and the flu at the same time. There is currently no evidence to suggest a correlation between flu shots and COVID illness. COVID antibodies fade quickly, suggesting herd immunity won’t exist until a vaccine is available. Allowing the virus to “run its course” and infect mass numbers of people would result in countless, needless deaths. Claire Haughton, Boone County Health Dept. public health educator, Lebanon
Allowing the virus to “run its course” and infect mass numbers of people would result in countless, needless deaths.
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 specialinterest groups, and may not in any way contain a commercial message.
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November 3, 2020
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An explosion of truth bombs Commentary by Dick Wolfsie
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Paul Dickson has written 65 books and I’ve read most of them. During his long career, he collected thousands of HUMOR observations — tiny nuggets of truth — that we can all relate to, and all in a book called, “The Official Rules: 5,427 Laws, Principles, and Axioms to Help You Cope with Crises, Deadlines, Bad Luck, Rude Behavior, Red Tape and Attacks by Inanimate Objects.” Whew! That’s just the title. I contacted Mr. Dickson last week and asked if I could select a few of my favorite entries to share with my readers. He graciously said, “Be my guest,” so here they are. Enjoy! Wife winners When a man says a game is silly and childish, it’s probably something his wife beat him at. More likely to lose The person with the most raffle tickets has the least chance of winning. Always wrong There is no virtue in being consistent, if you are consistently wrong. Heart issues Abstinence makes the heart grow fonder. Slow thinker He who laughs last, thinks slowest. Remain silent If you don’t say anything, you won’t be
called on to repeat it. Choose left Two wrongs don’t make a right, but three lefts do. Parking lottery If you get a great parking spot, you’ve shown up on the wrong day. Cats and dogs If you see a cat and a dog eating out of the same bowl, it was the cat’s food. Speaking disengagement Once you finally overcome your fear of public speaking, you will never be asked to speak again. Three options When asking directions, the first three people will either: 1: Not speak English, 2: Be stupid, or 3: Be dead wrong. Nap first Have a lot to get done? Take your nap first. Funeral attendance Regardless of how much you achieve in your life, the size of your funeral will depend on the weather. Boredom If you knew what you were doing, you’d be bored.
Dick Wolfsie is an author, columnist and speaker. Contact him at wolfsie@aol.com.
Paul Dickson has written 65 books and I’ve read most of them. During his long career, he collected thousands of observations — tiny nuggets of truth — that we can all relate to, and all in a book called, “The Official Rules: 5,427 Laws, Principles, and Axioms to Help You Cope with Crises, Deadlines, Bad Luck, RudeREMODELER Behavior, Red Tape and Attacks by Inanimate Objects.” SINCE 1993
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Zionsville RDC awards grants to eight local businesses By Jarred Meeks jarred@youarecurrent.com The Zionsville Redevelopment Commission has awarded grants to eight Zionsville businesses that were negativePANDEMIC ly affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. The commission, after receiving recommendations from the town’s community development corporation, awarded $10,000 grants by way of the town’s CDC grant program to Blooms by Dragonfly and Casalini Portraits. It also awarded a $7,500 grant to Village Antique Shop and a $6,000 grant to Frances+Parke, among others. The total amount of grants awarded is $73,500. Previously, local retailer Lesley Jane received a $10,000 grant from the grant program to update and enhance the business’s website. To help local businesses impacted by COVID-19, earlier this summer Zionsville launched its CDC grant program. The funding option is available to businesses in the 106th Street Tax Increment Finance District. “With the launch of this grant program this past summer, we have been taking action to support the economic sustainability of Zionsville’s local businesses,” Zionsville Mayor Emily Styron stated. “We are committed to helping lift up this vital sector of our local economy.” Blooms by Dragonfly co-owner Wendi Louks said her flower shop was not dramatically impacted by pandemic-related restrictions. But she said the businesses’ online orders decreased because of the limitations imposed on weddings and similar celebrations. She said her business receives half the number of orders it usually would per wedding because newlyweds have tended to hold smaller events during the pandemic. However, the business’ deliveries have risen, increasing the wear on its delivery vehicle. “This year has been difficult for everyone, and I found our primary need is to change the scope of our business,” Louks said.
Tracy Dull, owner of Frances+Parke, a men’s and women’s clothing store, recognized a need for a formal marketing plan and an improved website while her store was closed for more than a month during the pandemic. She said she planned to use the grant to formulate a marketing plan using a combination of in-house staff and local marketing agency Mundil Marketing. The store’s advertising budget was the first expense cut after the pandemic began, so Dull also plans to use some of the grant money to advertise in local newspapers and magazines. Mike Gogis, a representative of Village Antique Shop, said his store was in need of a website and a new metal sign and lighting to attract customers for the 51 vendors who operate out of the space. Tom Casalini, a fine portrait artist and author who has lived in Zionsville for 47 years, said his business, Casalini Portraits, had been “struck hard” by the pandemic. The business averaged 84 commissioned portraits a year prior to the pandemic. This year, it has received six. He said the grant will help replace nonfunctioning printers and offset costs for the launch of his second book, “The Queerness Doesn’t Matter: A Journey With My Friends of Dorothy.” In addition, grants were awarded to the following Zionsville businesses: • CV Art and Frame - $10,000 grant. Owner Barbara Jennings will use the grant for marketing, to direct people to the website and to pay the salary of an employee assisting with social media efforts to drive people to the business’ website. • Hopwood Cellars - $10,000 grant. Owner Ron Hopwood will use the grant for marketing purposes and to update the business’ website. • zWorks - $10,000 grant. Executive Director Vickie Hall will use the grant to cover lost revenue due to a decrease in membership and in-kind donations and to cover vacant startup office space.
Price checking app — To save some money during the holidays, try the free app ShopSavvy. Whether you’re shopping for groceries or preparing to make a bigger purchase, such as a TV or appliance, if you’ll be visiting a brick-and-mortar store during your search, this app will help you find the best price. While in a store, simply use your phone’s camera to scan an item’s barcode, and the app will show you how much other stores charge for it, both locally and online. Source: BottomLineInc.
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November 3, 2020
HEALTH
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Boone County reports record COVID-19 cases By Jarred Meeks jarred@youarecurrent.com The Boone County Health Dept. reported a single-week record of COVID-19 cases, as cases similarly rise across PANDEMIC the state and nation. During the week ending Oct. 23, the BCHD reported 100 additional cases of COVID-19. The total was the highest single-week figure since the start of the pandemic. The prior week, the BCHD reported 73 additional cases, which was a single-week record at the time. BCHD Public Health Educator Claire Haughton said the department, which tallies positive cases from Saturday to Friday, already knew of 76 additional cases by Wednesday, and she suspected that, if numbers continued to increase, the county would see another record-setting week by Friday. Of the new cases reported for the week ending Oct. 23, Haughton said the BCHD reported new cases originating from Signature Healthcare at Parkwood, a longterm care facility in Lebanon that had an outbreak of the disease starting in early
October. On Oct. 20, the department reported a COVID-19 outbreak in a Boone County longterm-care facility resulting in 37 positive cases and four deaths. More were reported this week. “We had about 10 Parkwood residents who were new active cases and about 10 Parkwood employees,” Haughton said. “However, not all of those employees live in Boone County, so they wouldn’t necessarily go toward that final count.” But Haughton warned most of the new cases were not exclusive to long-term care facilities, indicating increased community spread. BCHD officials said no one city or town in the county had more community spread than the other. Haughton said the spike could be attributed to colder temperatures, but she added that it also could be a result of residents not properly following mitigation protocols. “I think a lot of folks are tired of being cooped up inside,” Haughton said. “They are tired of social distancing. They are tired of wearing masks, so I think it’s a combination of the colder weather and people just wanting to get back to life as it was before.”
DISPATCHES Moving for better health — Sitting for most of the day is terrible for your health, raising your risk for diabetes, obesity, high cholesterol and high blood pressure. For better health, try to get up and do some light activity several times a day, even if you have a sedentary job. Moving around triggers blood flow, clears glucose from the blood and breaks down triglycerides. Source: BottomLineHealth.com Banned artificial flavors you’re still consuming — The good news is, the FDA has banned six artificial flavors that have been linked to cancer. The bad news is, you’re still eating them, and you might be for a long time. As is common with such bans, food manufacturers have two years to remove the banned chemicals from their products. And because manufacturers are still permitted to label all chemicals used to simulate natural flavors as, generically, “artificial flavors,” there’s no way to know which products contain these particular offenders: benzophenone, ethyl acrylate, methyl eugenol, myrcene, pulegone and pyridine.
The ban came in response to a 2016 citizen petition from consumer and environmental groups, including the Center for Food Safety, the Center for Science in the Public Interest and the Natural Resources Defense Council, after the six chemicals were linked to cancer in laboratory animals by the National Toxicology Program. Source: BottomLineInc.com Plasma demand surges in Indiana hospitals — Hospital demand for convalescent plasma throughout Indiana is now far exceeding donations coming in. Demand is 50 percent in recent days compared to what it was just 30 days ago. Convalescent plasma is used by hospitals across Indiana to help treat a surging number of patients diagnosed with COVID-19. Versiti Blood Center of Indiana is appealing to Hoosiers who have recovered from coronavirus to donate their antibody-rich plasma at any one of its donor centers throughout Indiana, in Indianapolis, Fishers, Carmel, Greenwood, Lafayette and Terre Haute.
November 3, 2020
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currentnightandday.com
Carmel resident’s passion for art led to novel on Pompeii priestess By Mark Ambrogi mark@youarecurrent.com A nearly three-decade passion of Sandra C. Hurt’s was ignited by a women’s study group. Hurt attended a lecture by a former AUTHOR Butler University instructor on the topic of women in art through the centuries. “I was taken away by a fresco of a woman,” Hurt said of paintings displayed on the walls on plaster. “I’ve never been the same since. These frescoes really spoke to me. I had an interesting experience. Her face haunted me. I couldn’t get over it.” Hurt began researching the history of Pompeii, an ancient city near Naples, Italy, through numerous books and eventually through visits. Pompeii was destroyed by the volcanic eruption of Mt. Vesuvius in A.D. 79. The disaster killed an estimated 16,000 people. The Carmel resident’s “Priestess of Pompeii, The Intimate Journey” is her first novel. Hurt finished the book in June. It was self-published in August. She is working on a second book in the series. “She really expressed the attitudes of the women of the day,” Hurt said of the fresco. “They know only her name and they think she owned the villa. The frescoes represent a women’s ritual to the (greek god) Dionysus.” A couple years after seeing the frescoes, she took an art history course at the Indianapolis Arts Center. The center organized a trip to Pompeii and the Villa of the Mysteries on the outskirts of Pompeii “I got to see the frescoes in person and was dumbstruck, too,” she said. “I had read a lot about it by the time we went but it was an inspiring experience.” Hurt started the book on Jan. 1, 2000. She presents the priestess, Rufilla Istacidii, as a real person who was adopted by a wealthy family, so Hurt set the story in her historic time of the first century B.C. It was the era of Julius Caesar, who is included in the novel. “But nothing else is known about her, so that’s perfect for a novel,” she said. “The story evolved, and I’ve been there several times and other places in Italy as well as Greece. In the book, she does a coming-of-age journey when she goes to Greece. The only information that I did find is she really was a priestess of Venus, who was the patron goddess of the City of Pompeii, and she was also a priestess of Dionysus. They think she was the one that conducted the initiation ritual.” The priestess’ father was written as a military member and equestrian.
Peanut Butter & Jam “Animal Tales Around the Camp Fire with Silly Safaris,” Peanut Butter & Jam series, 10:30 a.m. Nov. 7, Studio Theater, Center for the Performing Arts, Carmel. For children ages 1-7. For more, visit thecenterpresents.org. Westfield Playhouse “A Raisin in the Sun,” Main Street Productions, Westfield Playhouse, 220 N. Union St., Nov. 12-22. For more, visit westfieldplayhouse.org. Palladium Players Casual discussion and readings of selected scenes from playwright Ian McWethy’s “Bad Auditions by Bad Actors,” 7 p.m. Nov. 9, in person at Studio Theater, Center for the Performing Arts, Carmel, or via Zoom online conference. For more, visit thecenterpresents.org. Performing Arts Connect “Performing Arts Connect: Songwriting 101 Kacey Musgraves Style,” 7 p.m. Nov. 10, via Zoom. Cost is $12. For more, visit thecenterpresents.org.
Weather shuts down ATI drive-in concert By Mark Ambrogi mark@youarecurrent.com Sandra C. Hurt pauses with a copy of her book, “Priestess of Pompeii, The Intimate Journey,” in her home library. (Photo by Mark Ambrogi)
Hurt, who had been trained as a nurse, had not taken classes growing up about the classics, so she took courses at Indiana University in Bloomington and IUPUI. The classes also included creative writing. Hurt had been writing short stories and poetry her entire life. Hurt and her husband, Stan, who owned a distribution center for heating and air conditioning, which he sold, have lived in Carmel since 2008. Her husband went with her on the first visit to Pompeii, but she has since traveled there several other times with women’s groups and a friend. “I took tours with travel companies who hired archeologists to guide and give lectures on the Roman and Greek ruins we visited,” she said. “Pompeii is an ancient city that is still revealing her fascinating history.” For more, visit sandrahurtauthor.com.
Actors Theatre of Indiana co-founder Don Farrell loves Indiana, but not its unpredictable weather. “The weather can change on a dime,” he said. “We were watching the weather minute by minute.” Due to inclement weather on Oct. 23, Carmel-based ATI had to cancel its Drive-In Theatre concert of “Cole With a Side of Hoagy” at the Monon Shopping Center in Carmel. ATI made a livestream production of the Oct. 29, show, which was a tribute to Indiana composers Cole Porter and Hoagy Carmichael. Farrell said ATI officials kept monitoring the bad weather for rain and lightning and had to be careful because they were using rental equipment, including LED lights, and a metal stage. “We set everything up, and then another system came in and we had to take it back down,” Farrell said. “As we were coming up on (show) time, it just wasn’t the safest thing to do. Normally, we would try to do it the next night, but we had scheduling conflicts with a lot of performers and designers.” A third ATI Drive-In Concert is set for Nov. 27 at the Monon Shopping Center. The first one was held Sept. 18. For more, visit atistage.org.
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November 3, 2020
NIGHT & DAY
Current in Zionsville
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Geist man promotes Indy jazz By Mark Ambrogi mark@youarecurrent.com Mark Sheldon has been photographing musicians for 40 years. In particular, the Geist resident is well known for MUSIC photographing jazz musicians. “I don’t remember a time in my life when music wasn’t important,” Sheldon said. “Even as a little kid I was enthralled with music, period. I got my first camera when I was 18. I understood documenting events around your life, (and) in my case it happens to be music. I shoot for various jazz and blues magazines. In the past 20 years, it’s been primarily photographing jazz and blues.” Sheldon has taken photos at the Indianapolis Jazz Festival for several years. Due to the coronavirus pandemic, the festival will be virtual with “Celebrate Naptown,” a four-part online concert series beginning Nov. 13. The concerts will be released free with a fundraising goal of $25,000. Donations are requested. The events are: “Celebrate Naptown All-Star Show,” 8 p.m. Nov. 13, which was recorded at Garfield Park in September in Indianapolis. The all-star
Nesso Italian Kitchen
Mark Sheldon pauses with photos from the Indianapolis jazz scene. (Submitted photo)
mash-up features more than 25 of Indy’s best jazz performers. Native Son, a hip-hop trio featuring Richard Floyd (drums) Brandon Meeks (bass) and Bobby Young (MC), will present a hip-hop/ jazz suite titled “Legalize Being Black” at 8 p.m. Nov. 14. Charlie Ballantine will present his music from his album paying tribute to Indianapolis writer Kurt Vonnegut at 8 p.m. Nov. 20, Jared Thompson & Premium Blend will present a concert at 8 p.m. Nov. 21. All the performances have been recorded but have not been shown anywhere, Sheldon said.
Commentary by Anna Skinner Address: 339 S. Delaware St., Indianapolis What to get: Linguini Nero Price: $22 Anna’s take: Nesso Italian Kitchen recently reopened in downtown Indianapolis, and it’s definitely worth trying. Soft lighting and shadows set the mood for luxurious Italian dining. The food is top notch. I started with the burrata ($13), a mix of cherry tomatoes, candied onions, salsa verde and levain bread with a large ball of cheese in the middle. My main course was Linguini Nero, which is made with squid-ink pasta, which turns the noodles black. It tastes similar to regular pasta, but the color adds a uniqueness to the dish, which also has shrimp, scallops, octopus, oil-cured tomato, garlic, pepper flakes and herbs. I finished the meal with a delectable budino ($10),
Linguini Nero is made with squid-ink pasta, which is black. (Photo by Anna Skinner)
which is similar to crème brulee. It has a caramelized brown sugar custard, pistachios and citrus notes. All the items paired amazingly with a dry red wine.
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November 3, 2020
INSIDE & OUT
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Blueprint for Improvement: Historic Indy fireplace wall Commentary by Larry Greene
THE SOLUTION
After
Before
1. In the living room, the expansive stone wall surrounding the fireplace was missing a major focal point — a mantel. A custom, 16-foot poplar wood mantel was designed and installed to complete the room. 2. Avid art collectors, the homeowners wanted to create additional display space for their many treasures. Custom-built shelving in the breakfast nook creates the perfect backdrop.
THE CHALLENGE
Larry Greene is the owner of Case Design/ Remodeling; email him at lgreene@ caseindy.com. Visit caseindy.com for more remodeling inspiration and advice.
This 1957 home is in Indianapolis’ historic Crow’s Nest neighborhood. The new owners wanted to modernize several of the rooms while honoring the mid-century style of the home’s interior. This is the final installment of a three-part series.
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November 3, 2020
LIFESTYLE
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A history of Sydney’s Anzac Memorial Commentary by Don Knebel Many consider the Anzac Memorial in Sydney to be the most beautiful Art Deco structure in Australia. Two TRAVEL sculptures proposed for the memorial were a little too evocative. Australian and New Zealand troops supporting the Allied effort in World War I were known as “Anzac,” short for “Australia and New Zealand Army Corps.” On April 25, 1915, about 25,000 Anzac troops landed on Turkey’s Gallipoli Peninsula as part of an Allied initiative to seize control of the Dardanelles from the Ottoman Empire. Anzac losses on that first day exceeded 2,000 dead and wounded, and the Allied effort ultimately failed. The huge casualties were a shock to the people of Australia, then with a population of only about 4.5 million. Australians almost immediately began raising money for a memorial to honor the sacrifices and heroism of the Anzac soldiers. In 1930, following extensive debates about the nature of the memorial, C. Bruce Dellit, a Sydney architect, won a design competition for an Art Deco memorial in
1918,” depicted another nude woman, symbolizing Australia, also atop a pyramid of dead soldiers. Hoff abandoned these sculptures after local religious leaders condemned them as blasphemous. The Anzac Memorial was dedicated in 1934. In 1984, it was rededicated to honor all Australians serving their country in war. April 25 is a national Anzac Memorial in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Don Knebel) day of remembrance in Sydney’s Hyde Park. Dellit engaged sculpAustralia and New Zealand. The place where tor Rayer Hoff to create sculptures for the Anzac troops landed on that day in 1915 is memorial, most of which depicted men and named “Anzac Cove.” women of Anzac. Two of Hoff’s proposed sculptures were explicitly anti-war. One, “Crucifixion of Civilization 1914,” depicted an Don Knebel is a local resident who attractive nude woman, symbolizing peace, works for Barnes & Thornburg LLP. For the full column visit donknebel. crucified on the sword and shield of Mars, com. You may contact him at standing over a pyramid of dead Australian editorial@youarecurrent.com. soldiers. The other, “Victory after Sacrifice
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ow-Maintenance Villa! Across 1. Choice of two 5. Cruise stops 10. Grand Ole ___ 14. Part of ZCHS? 15. Indiana Basketball Hall of Famer Foreman 16. Old pop 17. Eric Holcomb’s party 19. Flabbergast 20. Oxymoronic drink from a Big Gulp 21. Competently 22. Dorky sort 24. “___ That Jazz” 25. Classic roadster 26. Butt holder 28. Colts shoe feature 30. Shabby 32. Not post33. Hoosier Hysteria mo. 35. Hit show letters 36. IND curb queue 37. Donald Rainwater’s party 40. Put down 42. Scot’s denial 43. ISP option 44. Eddy’s, e.g. 45. Lab dish 47. Survey option 51. Miser
1 53. San Francisco Hill 14 55. Loneliest number? 17 56. ___ cotta 20 57. Bonus, in adspeak 24 58. Philip Rivers stats 28 59. Religious ceremony 60. Woody Myers’ party 63. Canine in Oz 40 64. Justice 44 Kagan 65. Muldoon’s 51 handout 66. First grandchild 59 67. Noblesville HS math class 63 ratios 68. Book unit 66 Down 1. Lung compartment 2. IU grad who was GW Bush’s Secretary of the Treasury 3. Broad ___
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4. A/C measure 9. Saharan baths | Kitchens withhazard stainless steel 5. “You don’t say!” 10. Beginning 6. Mariner Tinker fridge Bell’s protector appliances, even11. the | Upgraded 7. “Peanuts” girl 12. Fishers Farmers Market | And MORE! 8. Victory hard Field fig.surface flooring stalk 13. Yang’s counterpart 18. Stacked Pickle bill 23. Current reporter’s query 26. Gillette razor 27. Okay 29. Surrounded by 31. Daisylike bloom 34. Rebels 36. “Too busy” 37. Indianapolis Opera script “CURRENT has been instrumental in the success and brand 38. Ironworks Hotel price 39. Kevin Gregory weather recognition of our newest community, Osborne Trails, the line First 55 and Better community in Westfield. We are grateful 40. CD forerunners 6 Colors 4 Home Add-Ons for the opportunity to support a local business such as 41. Wickliff sale with bids ____________________ ____________________ CURRENT while at the same time increasing our profile 45. Trail Blazers on a Pacers ____________________ ____________________ throughout the city. scoreboard ____________________ ____________________ 46. Speak hypnotically ____________________ ____________________ 48. Mandarin House drink “The high level of customer service we have received from ____________________ 49. Conclusion the CURRENT team has been invaluable. Their attention to 3 Illinois Cities 50. Firefighter’s feat ____________________ detail, flexibility and ingenuity has played a big part in our ____________________ 52. Black-and-white cookies advertising success. We look forward to ____________________ 5 St. Elmo’s Meats 54. Black-and-white ____________________ continuing our partnership with CURRENT predators ____________________ 57. Marvel superheroes and highly recommend their services.” ____________________ 59. GPS reading 2 5th District Candidates ____________________ 61. Peyton’s brother ____________________ ____________________ - Laura Givens, marketing supervisor, 62. Mellencamp sound ____________________ ____________________ Indianapolis Division booster Answers on 1 IU Football Coach Page 20 ________________________________
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d are subject to changes or substitution without notice. Items shown are artist’s renderings and may contain options that are not standard on all models or not ot include closing costs and other fees to be paid by buyer (including a builder fee as described in the purchase agreement) and are subject to change without chase agreement for actual features designated as an Everything’s Included feature. Models/lifestyle photos do not reflect racial or ethnic preference. This is not prohibited by law. Copyright © 2020 Lennar Corporation. Lennar, the Lennar logo, Everything’s Included, and the Everything’s Included logo are U.S. registered
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November 3, 2020
Current in Zionsville
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Welcome to Cedarwood, the newest Assisted Living Residential Apartments at Hoosier Village.
The care, amenities, and relaxed lifestyle at Hoosier Village are unmatched in the Indianapolis area, and we’re responding to demand by expanding our assisted living apartments. We invite you to reserve your spot at the Cedarwood now so that in 2021 you’ll be enjoying maintenance-free living in one of the region’s finest communities. Cedarwood features the area’s largest assisted living apartments, as well as a wide variety of organized activities, impromptu gatherings, and much more. Come see what all the excitement is about.
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