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March 2018
INfortwayne.com
FAME Festival brings the arts together
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PHOTO BY MEGAN KNOWLES
Trinity English Lutheran Church Senior Pastor Gary Erdos administers ashes to local attorney Rich Karcher during the church’s Ashes to Go event at Parkview Field on Ash Wednesday, Feb. 14. “We’ve come to recognize for a lot of people they don’t necessarily make it to us in church but if we can make some of the religious sense of Lent available to other people they would come by and take advantage of that,” he said.
Lenten season provides reminder of humanity By Megan Knowles mknowles@kpcmedia.com
As with many things in the church, the cycle
of Palm Sunday palms to Ash Wednesday ashes and can offer a powerful lesson about our own humanity.
Northrop to celebrate Dixieland style of jazz By Garth Snow gsnow@kpcmedia.com
COURTESY PHOTO
The Farmland Jazz Band delivers the Dixieland sound of the New Orleans streets where jazz originated, according to Northrop band director Rob Wilson, who chose the band as the guest artists and clinicians for a March 10 festival.
decades. “It’s more like a street band or a brass band kind of feel,” he said. “Usually it’s smaller than the big bands we
have at the high school. It’s kind of the music and the style of the teens, ’20s and ’30s when it was See JAZZ, Page A10
3306 Independence Drive, Fort Wayne, IN 46808
INfortwayne Publications
The Farmland Jazz Band will serve as the guest artists and clinicians at the Barry A. Ashton Jazz Festival on Saturday, March 10, at Northrop High School. Northrop instrumental music director Rob Wilson said Farmland is one of the few local groups performing the Dixieland jazz style. “They’ve been doing a lot in the area,” he said. The ensemble has entertained thousands of people at the Three Rivers Festival and other events in the Fort Wayne area. “It’s the original [style],” Wilson said. “It started in New Orleans and that’s where jazz originated.” He said Dixieland has kept its personality through the
Palms come from suppliers in tropic and subtropical climates around the world, See ASHES, Page A8
Student performances and displays of dance, music and art, as well as guest artists, craft areas, a scavenger hunt and concert will all be a part of the Fort Wayne FAME Festival on Saturday, March 17, and Sunday, March 18, at the Grand Wayne Convention Center. This year’s festival will spotlight Australia and Oceania, culminating with National Youth Art Month and Music in Our Schools Month. What started in 1987 with just two teachers — Dorothy Kittaka and Mike Schmid — has grown to include more than 6,000 art pieces of all types and 15,000 children and adults performing and attending the weekend-long festival presented by The Foundation for Art and Music in
FAME Festival
Grand Wayne Convention Center, 120 W. Jefferson Blvd., Fort Wayne Saturday, March 17, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Imaginarium: 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Instrument Playground: 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Sunday, March 18, noon-5 p.m. Imaginarium: noon-5 p.m. Instrument Playground: 1-4 p.m. Celebration of Youth Concert: 3 p.m. Admission is $5 for adults and free for children 18 and younger. Education. It began with the single question: “How can we get the kids’ artwork and music out there for performance and for people to see these amazing talents of these young kids?” FAME ExecSee FAME, Page A10