IN|Northeast News March 2018

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Lenten season provides reminder of humanity

By Megan Knowles

FAME Festival brings the arts together

By Meghan Schrader For IN|Fort Wayne

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. Palms come from suppliers in tropic and subtropical climates around the world, according to an article on Catholic.org. Trinity English Lutheran Church sources its palms from a supplier or local florist, Senior Pastor Gary Erdos said. The church typically needs about 500 for Palm Sunday, he added. Ideally, parishioners would take the palms home and keep them in their home as a reminder of Palm Sunday, Erdos See ASHES, Page A4

March 2018

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. This is the second year the church has hosted the event at the ballpark, Erdos said, with about 40 people attending in 2017. “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.

RADIANCE SHINES IN ‘SHATTER ME’

PHOTO BY GARTH SNOW

Bishop Dwenger High School junior Sarah Malone performs with the Radiance Guard on Feb. 3 at the Carroll High Winter Guard Show. The show is entitled “Shatter Me.” Winter guard units and show choirs are moving toward state competitions in March. Find more photos of Bishop Dwenger, Concordia Lutheran, Leo and Snider high schools’ groups inside this edition and at infortwayne.com.

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 Founda-

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. tion for Art and Music in Education. It began with the single question: “How can we get the kids’ artwork and See FAME, Page A4

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Northeast News • March 2018

BISHOP DWENGER ELEGANCE IN CONCERT

PHOTOS BY GARTH SNOW

The Bishop Dwenger Elegance women’s show choir performs at the Northrop Classique show choir festival. Bishop Dwenger’s mixed choir, Summit Sound, placed fourth in the mixed division. Eligible choirs will compete March 17 at the Indiana State School Music Association finals in Indianapolis; visit issma.net for schedules and admission prices. The final local show choir festival will be held March 10 at Bishop Luers High School, with shows from 9 a.m.-6 p.m., and the evening competition at 7:30 p.m. Elegance will compete at 1:30 p.m. and Summit Sound will compete at 3:30 p.m. Tickets, sold at the door, are $15 for all day, or $10 for students. For more photos from Elegance’s show at Northrop and the full schedule of the show at Luers, follow infortwayne.com. Christi Maloney directs the Bishop Dwenger High School show choirs.


INfortwayne.com • A3

Northeast News • March 2018

FWCS students to offer free music at South Side By Garth Snow gsnow@kpcmedia.com

Fort Wayne Community Schools will welcome the public to hear student instrumental and choral groups in a free concert celebrating Music in Our Schools. The music will fill South Side High School, 3601 S. Calhoun St., on Saturday, March 24, from approximately 9 a.m.-5 p.m. The exact schedule will depend on the number of ensembles participating. “I’m still getting commitments from schools,” coordinator Bruce Schneider said Feb. 12. FWCS will release the complete schedule to infortwayne. com and other media in the days before the concert. “Right now I have 13 instrumental groups and one choral group that have committed,” Schneider said. “So hopefully I will have another four to six instrumental groups and hopefully a lot more choral groups.” The inaugural program in March 2017 attracted commitments from 12 FWCS schools. Schneider said he is pleased with the response to the invitation. “I feel

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Students can play “a good quality instrument for their whole time with Fort Wayne Community Schools” thanks to the b instrumental program, says Bruce Schneider, coordinator.

very good about it,” he said. “It’s a great opportunity to show off what we do as far as music education and our commitment to expand and improve instrumental music and choral music in Fort Wayne Schools.” “The students get to borrow an instrument from the seventh-grade year and they keep the same instrument until they graduate,” he said. “So instead of going

from year to year or school to school getting a different instrument, they’ll have a good quality instrument for their whole time with Fort Wayne Community Schools.” Schneider is in his second year as the coordinator of the “b instrumental” program, which provides instruments to students at the five high schools and to several middle schools.

In 2016, it reached only Lakeside, Miami and Shawnee middle schools. “With the fundraising efforts and the Sweetwater donation, we’re expanding to seven middle schools as of this semester and we hope to be in all 11 middle schools as of next year,” he said. He said b instrumental now reaches 213 students. In August, Sweetwater founder and President

Chuck Surack and his wife, Lisa, announced they would donate $500,000 to the FWCS Foundation’s b instrumental program. The couple also donated 100 band and orchestra instruments. The Chuck and Lisa Surack and Sweetwater Challenge will match donations from the community in a $3 million fundraising campaign for the b instrumental program. “A successful campaign raising $3 million will allow the foundation to purchase 4,000 to 5,000 instruments over 12 years, as well as cover refurbishing and repairs,” Sweetwater said in a statement at that time. “The program will allow participation by students for whom purchasing or renting an instrument is not an option.” “We just started a program in the elementary schools with the Fort Wayne Philharmonic called the Club O and that is a string program,” he said. The name stands for “Club Orchestra.” That program began about the first of November. He said the Music in our Schools concert is another opportunity for

middle school musicians. “It’s exposure that they may not get in some of the schools,” he said. “So it’s an opportunity to show off what they’ve been working on the first half of the school year going into the last half of the school year.” It’s also a recruiting tool, he said. “The middle schools perform and then they go into the audience and watch the high schools. So those students are exposed to what the older students are doing,” he said. Those performances will include “everything in band and orchestra,” including some mass music. Schneider said his role is quickly expanding into more of an instrumental music coordinator. “I’m dealing with the inventory and purchase and repair of instruments and just supporting the instrumental music directors,” he said. Schneider said he worked in the private sector with a music accessory company before applying to be the b instrumental coordinator. He has taught percussion and worked with percussion ensembles at three FWCS high schools.

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Northeast News • March 2018

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music out there for performance and for people to see these amazing talents of these young kids?” FAME Executive Director “T” Irmsher said. FAME incorporates art and performances from 62 different schools in northeast Indiana including private schools, home school children and the Boys & Girls Club as well. Forty-five choir, band and dance group performances from all these schools will come together to show off the talent of 3,000 children. Fort Wayne Community Schools will have a collaborative dance group of nearly 120 children performing. A large part of FAME is its Fusion program in which students in kindergarten through eighth grade listen to music written within the scope of their culture focus, have teacher-guided discussions, and then paint by making emotional connections between the music and the visual arts. “One of the big things about the Fusion is music and art are so much together and there’s rhythms and patterns. So, that is a common theme that you will see throughout this art,” Board President Ann Gordon said. “You will see the rhythms and the patterns and when you

FILE PHOTO

Students perform at the 2017 FAME Festival in Fort Wayne. The arts and music festival returns to the Grand Wayne Convention Center March 17-18.

listen to the music you hear the same kinds of rhythms and patterns going. So, that’s sort of how it came together.” This year, students have entered 108 art pieces for the Fusion program, which will be judged by FAME staff and have one winner from each grade level selected. These students will receive a cookies and punch reception at the Grand Wayne Center. There is also a Teacher’s Choice award and Mayor’s Choice award. The student whose artworks is awarded by Fort Wayne Mayor Tom Henry will be treated to a cookies and punch reception at the mayor’s office. “So, everybody interprets it a little bit differently,” Gordon said of the student artwork. “As you can see, some is very abstract and some is

Beth Welty

very realistic and all in between.” A public exhibition is then assembled as the artwork is displayed for all to see at the festival. The Fort Wayne Philharmonic Youth Symphony and Concert Orchestra will then perform the music the students listened to when they created the art in the Celebration of Youth Concert. The Celebration of Youth Concert will take place at 3 p.m. Sunday. The Fort Wayne Philharmonic Youth Symphony and Concert Orchestra, Fort Wayne Children’s Choir and the Fort Wayne Ballet Youth Company will perform. “Sound Walk” will be presented, composed by David Crowe and FAME fourthgrade musicians — who were part of the FAME Composition project in

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which children worked with a composer-in-residence and learned how to write their own music — and choreographed by the Fort Wayne Ballet Youth Company with original choreography by Lauren Ettensohn. At the festival as well will be visiting artist Paul Taylor, a native Australian who will be playing the didgeridoo and entertaining festivalgoers with storytelling focused on Australia. A drama performance by the Fort Wayne Youth Theater can be expected as well. FAME hopes to continue to inspire and culminate passion for the arts in young people. “Especially with art and music going out of schools, it has been very important,” Irmsher said.

ASHES from Page A1 said. About a week before Ash Wednesday, Trinity English invites parishioners to bring palms back, then adds them to the leftover ones from the year before to make the ashes for the beginning of Lent. The process of transforming the palms into ashes is pretty straightforward, Erdos said. “You find a metal bucket, you stick them all in there, put a little paper in and light them,” he said. “They smoke and smolder for the better part of 45 minutes and that’s it. It’s a very, very practical kind of thing.” “Usually you’d want to mix them, what’s traditional is you mix them with a little olive oil so that they form a little paste,” Erdos said. “There is nothing about the process that is very glamorous.” This process seems fitting, however, when one considers the sober nature of Ash Wednesday itself. “Lent, at least in Christian traditions, is what we would call a penitential time. What that means is it’s a time to think about who you are as a person and what life is about and where you’re going and what you’ve done with your life,” Erdos said. “The words that you use when you give the ashes are, ‘remember you are

With this in mind, the FAME Festival offers an Imaginarium that features 15 make-andtake hands-on crafts for children centered on this year’s culture focus, a scavenger hunt of questions and answers regarding Australia that ends in a treat or trinket, and an instrument playground with Quinlan & Fabish where children can try out new instruments, as well as the Sweetwater Sound Rock Academy. “Both those booths are very busy,” Irmsher said with a laugh. Additionally, New American Ballet comes each year to teach children ballet. FAME also hosts a Summer Arts Camp from July 1-6 at Camp Potawatomi, in which children explore a variety of art and music options. Admission to the FAME festival is $5 for adults and free for children 18 and younger and participation in most of the activities is free of charge. Parking can be found at the Civic Center for $5 and Harrison Square for $4. The Anthis Career Center parking is free on the southeast lot. Student artwork will be on display in the main exhibit hall of the Grand Wayne Center. Art boards and sculpture garden tables are arranged by school. dust and to dust you shall return.’ Those are the words that God said to Adam in Genesis 3 after the first sin. God’s judgment on humanity is that we’re going to die, so Ash Wednesday is a reminder of that, when you die you return to the dust of the ground that God made humanity out of. So in that way you say Ash Wednesday is a reminder of our humanity.” In this way, the cycle of joy and somberness, life and death represented in recycling palms to ashes is another important reminder of the lessons of Lent. “Part of all of Lent and Ash Wednesday and even Palm Sunday is really trying to take our humanity seriously and talk about what it means to be a human … good things and struggles,” Erdos said. “These are all really important before you get to Easter because we say Jesus rose from the grave. If you don’t take the rest of the story seriously it’s ‘like, yeah so? Good for him.’ “Part of it is trying to get ready to take seriously what does Jesus’ resurrection mean for me? What does my mortality mean, what does my humanity mean? What does Jesus’ suffering mean, what does his death mean, what does his resurrection mean for me as a human being as opposed to just a theoretical idea.”


Northeast News • March 2018

CONCORDIA CELEBRATES ‘BEST FRIENDS’

PHOTOS BY GARTH SNOW

The Concordia Lutheran High School Winter Guard performs the show “Best Friends” at the Carroll High School contest. Concordia earned a Silver Award in Divisional Regional A. Brittany Satterthwaite directs the CLHS winter guard, with assistance from Brittany Quinn and Mike Beights. Groups present themed shows to recorded music, as students tell their stories with props and choreography. Schools compete in several categories. For photo galleries from local schools, visit infortwayne.com. Winter guard units competed in area shows each weekend in February. Concordia will participate in the Divisional Regional A/Cadet Divisional Finals on Saturday, March 10, at Center Grove High School, 2717 S. Morgantown Road, Greenwood, Ind. Admission is $9 for adults, $7 for students in K-12, free for under age 5, and free to infants in lap. Visit ihscga.org for details.

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‘THE DOLLS WILL PLAY’

PHOTOS BY GARTH SNOW

Leo Jr./Sr. High School’s winter guard presents ‘The Dolls Will Play’ at the Carroll High School Winter Guard Show on Feb. 10. Leo competed in Divisional Regional A, earning a Gold rating. Jordan Krudop and Christian Ashby direct the guard. Morgan Thoma coaches movement. Leo will compete in the Divisional Regional A/Cadet Divisional Finals on Saturday, March 10, at Center Grove High School, 2717 S. Morgantown Road, Greenwood, Ind. Admission is $9 for adults, $7 for students in K-12, free for under age 5, and free to infants in lap. Visit ihscga.org for details. For more photos of Leo’s performance at Carroll, visit infortwayne.com.

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Northeast News • March 2018

RADIANCE IN ACTION

PHOTOS BY GARTH SNOW

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Tickets $50 Tables of 10 available. Visit fwbusines.com under the Events tab. The Bishop Dwenger High School Radiance Winter Guard performs the show “Shatter Me” at the Carroll High School Winter Guard Show on Feb. 10. Radiance earned a Performance Award in Regional A competition. Danielle Burgett and Jordan Stevens direct the Bishop Dwenger guard. Radiance will compete in the Indiana High School Color Guard Association Regional A preliminaries March 3 at Mooresville High School, 550 N. Indiana St., Mooresville. Admission is $9 for adults, $7 for students in K-12, $3 for children younger than 5, and free to infants in lap. Watch ihscaa for schedules and follow infortwayne. com for updates on local winter guard units.

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A8 • INfortwayne.com

Northeast News • March 2018

SNIDER GUARD COMPETES IN CLASS A

PHOTOS BY GARTH SNOW

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The Snider High School winter guard performs at the Carroll High School Winter Guard Show on Feb. 10. Snider competed against 10 other schools in Class A, earning a Performance Award. Decatur Central High School of Indianapolis placed first. Snider will compete in the Indiana High School Color Guard Association Class A Prelims on Saturday, March 3, at Mount Vernon High School, 8112 N. 200W, Fortville, Ind. Admission is $9 for adults, $7 for grades K-12, $3 for younger than age 5, or free to infants in lap. Visit infortwayne.com for more photos from the Carroll competition.


INfortwayne.com • A9

Northeast News • March 2018

Northrop celebrates style of original Dixieland jazz By Garth Snow

gsnow@kpcmedia.com

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 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 most popular.” He said Farmland usually consists of about seven musicians. Its roster includes: Alan Parr and Todd Ward, trumpet; Scott Rogers, William Frazier and George Kaiser, trombone; Ed Renz, clarinet; Matt Cashdollar, C melody saxophone; Zach Kohlmeier, tuba; Brad Kuhns and Colin Taylor, bass; Kenny Taylor and Dan Weirich, banjo; and John Renz, drums. Take a closer look at Farmland at farmlandjazzband.com. Wilson said student musicians will rehearse throughout the day, and Farmland musicians will present a clinic with students at 4:45 p.m.

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.

The entire group will perform for the public at 7 p.m. in the Northrop auditorium. Admission is

$5, or $3 for students and seniors. A single admission price is good for the entire day. Northrop

H.S. is at 7001 Coldwater Road, Fort Wayne. Between clinics and performance, students will

be busy from about 9 a.m. until about 9 p.m. “There will be awards for outstanding soloists, outstanding members of different sections, the best middle school band, best combo and the three top honor bands,” Wilson said. As of Feb. 12, Wilson had one or more groups signed up from John Adams, Carroll, Homestead, Leo, Northrop, North Side, Norwell, Snider and South Side high schools, Anderson Preparatory Academy, and Jefferson and Memorial Park middle schools. Wilson said Northrop students are excited to be playing jazz and hosting the Northrop festival. “We just got back from Snider, and we’ll be at North Side next week, so they’re playing very well, working very hard,” he said.

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Science Central is offering a spring break camp that entire week for children ages 5-11, with options to attend daily sessions or the entire week. Check-in begins at 8:30 a.m. and the program runs from 9 a.m.-4 p.m. daily. Registration is required at least one week before each camp day. The cost is $30 per day for nonmembers and $25 per day for deluxe members. Campers supply their own lunches. On April 2 the theme is Jurassic Adventure. Campers will create volcanoes, design their own dinosaurs, examine fossils and discuss extinction theories. On April 3 campers will explore “Seussian Science.” “Stack the hats belonging to the cat, brew the goo of Bartholomew and plant truffula trees to put the Lorax at ease,” Science Central’s website states. Campers will discover outer space on April 4 with “Out of This World!” Youth will explore the solar system and learn about the moon with Science Central’s Science on a Sphere exhibit. They will also build and launch rockets, “eat the phases of the moon” and examine extraterrestrial life. On April 5 kids will learn about animal tracking, dissecting scat, the water cycle and more at the “Wild Things” camp. Finally, on April 6, campers will “journey to a land of noble knights, dragons, kings

and queens” during the “Medieval Marvels” camp. They will engineer catapults, learn about magic and explore medieval inventions.

Fort Wayne Parks & Recreation If an outdoor outing is more your family’s thing, the Fort Wayne Parks & Recreation Department has several offerings during spring break week. On April 7, Sunrise Saturday Hikes at Lindenwood Nature Preserve return. There will be hikes from 7-8 a.m. and 10-11 a.m. “See what is happening in the natural world as we welcome the spring season. Each hike will have a different focus that highlights our local ecology while connecting to broader lessons in biology,” according to the parks department. The Foellinger-Friemann Botanical Conservatory is also hosting its Easter in the Garden family event March 30 from 10 a.m.-3 p.m., where kids can play games, make crafts, pot a plant and get their pictures taken with the Easter Bunny. There will also be live animals including chicks, ducklings, rabbits, sheep and goats. It will also be the last week of the conservatory’s “Fairy Tales” winter garden exhibit, which runs through April 8. “When the conservatory converts its Showcase Garden to a winter play space, visitors can pretend to be Jack on a bean stalk, look for Rapunzel in the castle tower, trip-trap over the troll’s bridge, or take goodies to Grandma’s house,” the conservatory’s website states. “This participatory garden exhibit encourages active pretend play and a gentle exploration of moral virtues for children and adults alike.”


A10 • INfortwayne.com

Northeast News • March 2018

Composer to conduct joint handbell ensemble KPC NEWS SERVICE Approximately 60 to 70 handbell ringers from five area churches will join in a free, public concert featuring an internationally recognized performance arts educator. The music will begin at 4 p.m. Saturday, March 3, at Trinity English Lutheran Church, 450 W. Washington Blvd., Fort Wayne. The concert will be in the church nave. Participating ringers will be from: Emmanuel Lutheran Church, New Haven; First Mennonite Church, Berne; and First Wayne Street United

Methodist Church, Plymouth Congregational Church and Trinity ELC in Fort Wayne. The massed handbell ensembles will play under the direction of conductor, composer and performance arts educator Tim Waugh. Mitch Rorick is the associate director of music at Trinity ELC, and the director of the two handbell choirs. “Tim’s conducting, workshop and performance travels have taken him to almost every U.S. state and Canada, England, Ireland, Hong Kong and Puerto Rico,” Rorick said. “His composition ‘CreationEtere,’ a

piece for handbells, brass and organ to memorialize the space shuttle Columbia and her crew, was electronically played aboard the International Space Station.” Waugh retired from a career spanning 33 years of public school music education. He serves with award-winning choral groups in southern West Virginia and churches in West Virginia and North Carolina. Waugh is the artistic director and founding conductor of Charlotte Bronze Handbell Ensemble, a professional community choir, based in uptown Charlotte, N.C.

COURTESY PHOTO

Tim Waugh composed “CreationEtere,” a tribute to the space shuttle Columbia and her crew. Waugh will direct a handbell concert March 3 in Fort Wayne.

Jesters group explores idea of community By Meghan Schrader For IN|Fort Wayne

The University of Saint Francis Jesters present a universal theme of community with a unique twist in their upcoming spring performance. The Jesters, a performing arts group made up of people with developmental disabilities, got its start in 1978 when two professors from the University of Saint Francis sought to create a community program for children with physical disabilities. It has since expanded to include more than 80 people, ages 8 through senior citizen. “The purpose of the Jesters is to enhance quality of life for people with disabilities by

engaging them in the creative arts. The vision is to develop self-expression, self-esteem, socialization and other life skills while providing learning opportunities to the USF community and the community at large,” a press release from the organization stated. “It’s important to the community because we then empower these individuals to have a voice,” Jesters Director Allison Ballard said. “We also give them a forum to showcase their strengths and I think that’s really important.” This year’s show, “Heads or Tails, Hands and Hearts,” will explore the idea of community using music, dance, theater, improvisation,

visual art, animation and green screen technology. The story involves everyday characters who feel threatened by Godzilla and other monsters that have been created by Jester participants throughout the season. The performers interact to ask the questions: In what kind of community do we want to live? How do we create it? What are its values? How do we protect it? Throughout the performance, humans and monsters alike learn to reconcile between intellect and force — the “heads and tails” — and realize the beauty in hands and hearts. They come together as a community through

acceptance, belonging and understanding, portraying a lesson that’s important to everyone. Each show is co-created by the professional teaching artists staff and the performers as they voice ideas and concepts, work through the storyline and develop the script for months before its final copy is written in November. The idea for this year’s show came about in the previous season when a participant frequently referenced Godzilla — explaining that though Godzilla was viewed as mean and destructive, he was actually misunderstood and just wanted to be accepted. “I just thought that was such a profound

storyline,” Ballard said. “It was such a universal theme and such a beautiful symbol that we can all identity with.” As the teaching staff and participants explored the idea, it quickly became less about monsters and more about community. A wide variety of music can be expected as songs from nearly every genre are implemented in the show along with the instrumentals and singing by cast. This year, the cello and violin have been added along with past instruments such as drums, guitars and harmonicas. Each season the group selects several visual artists to study and use as references points for their

own artwork to be used in the show. For this performance, artists Robert Indiana, Keith Haring and Jean-Luc Bozzoli were chosen. Art students from the University of Saint Francis also create pieces to be used in the show. The Jesters of the University of Saint Francis will present their annual spring performance on Saturday, March 10, at 6 p.m. and Sunday, March 11, at 3 p.m. at the USF North Campus auditorium, 2702 Spring St. Tickets are $10 and are available at the door. To buy advance tickets or to be put on the Jesters mailing list for the next participant registration, call (260) 399-7700, ext. 8001.

Purdue Glee Club brings 55 voices to Woodlan Contributed The Purdue Varsity Glee Club will present a concert at Woodlan High School on Friday, March 23. In addition, the Woodlan High School Ambition Show Choir

will perform. The concert begins at 7 p.m. The doors open at 6:30 p.m. There is no reserved seating. Tickets at the door are $20 for adults, $10 for students, and free to children younger than 5. Tickets

can be ordered online at purdue.edu/pmo/ calendar. Woodlan High School is at 17215 Woodburn Road, north of New Haven and west of Woodburn. Five of Purdue’s

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Hathaway

Reynolds

55-member ensemble are from the Fort Wayne area. Sam Hathaway, a senior studying building construction management, is a graduate of Woodlan High School and the son of Steven and Linda Hathaway. Senior Micah Reynolds, a Concordia Lutheran High School graduate, plays bass guitar in the backup ensemble and is the son of Douglas and Natalie Reynolds. He’s studying civil engineering. Junior Stephen Wirtner, a Homestead High School graduate, is studying electrical engineering technology. He’s the son of Greg and Cindy Wirtner. Sam Simpson is a sophomore

Wirtner

Simpson

studying social studies education. He graduated from Bishop Dwenger High School and is son of Sam and Virginia Simpson. Zach Bucher is a sophomore studying management. He’s an Adams Central High School graduate and son of Trent and Kelli Bucher. The men of the Glee Club have served as ambassadors of the university for almost 125 years. They have entertained across the state, the country and around the world with a musical repertoire that ranges from gospel, jazz, swing, religious and contemporary music to romantic ballads, barbershop

Bucher

harmony, folk tunes, patriotic selections and novelty numbers. They also showcase small groups specializing in a variety of popular music. Widely known as a world class engineering institution, Purdue does not have a music degree program. Glee Club members study a wide variety of majors ranging from photography, education, health and fitness, accounting and management to sciences and numerous engineering disciplines. “They participate in the Glee Club because of their love of music and do not receive academic credit,” the ensemble said in a statement.


INfortwayne.com • A11

Northeast News • March 2018

News briefs: Make reservations, mark your calendar WOMEN PLAN DAY OF PRAYER

Fort Wayne/Allen County Church Women United will host their annual World Day of Prayer at 1 p.m. Friday, March 2, at Community of Christ Church, 3223 Hobson Road, Fort Wayne. Reservations are $3 and may be obtained by calling (260) 637-1842. The theme for the day is “All God’s Creation is Very Good” and the Bible study leader is Ashlyn Kipper from The Awakening Church in Huntington. Church women from all denominations are invited to attend.

753 AWARDS FOR ART, WRITING

The Fort Wayne Museum of Art announced the regional recipients of the 2018 Scholastic Art & Writing Awards. The winners include 753 students from middle and high schools in northeast Indiana and northwest Ohio. Their original works of art and writing are featured in a special exhibit at the museum now through April 8. The FWMoA is at 311 E. Main St., Fort Wayne. Visit fwmoa.org for hours and admission prices.

Presented by the Alliance for Young Artists & Writers, the 95th Scholastic Art & Writing Awards is the country’s longest-running recognition program for creative students in grades seven to 12. This year, almost 350,000 works of art and writing were submitted to more than 100 affiliate partners across the country.

scholarships that offer students opportunities to see and experience places outside of Fort Wayne.” Walk-ins are welcome, but reservations are recommended and can be made by emailing doppiozerofortwayne@gmail. com or calling (260) 267-6351.

STUDENTS OFFER ITALIAN CUISINE

The Young Leaders of Northeast Indiana Farmers Market will return to downtown Fort Wayne each Saturday from May 19 through Sept. 29. For the 14th season, YLNI will partner with the History Center to host a unique, urban outdoor shopping experience on the corner of Barr and Wayne streets. Almost 2,500 people attend the market each week. The YLNI Farmers Market will feature dozens of local vendors who will sell fresh produce, handmade baked goods, crafts, artwork and much more. Every vendor is local and comes from Allen County or surrounding counties. In a statement, the YLNI said more street closures, more children’s activities and entertainment options will be offered. Food trucks will be on-site.

Indiana University– Purdue University Fort Wayne students in the Department of Hospitality and Tourism Management are serving up rustic Italian cuisine at Doppio Zero, this semester’s student-run restaurant. Doppio Zero will be located inside the Holiday Inn, 4111 Paul Shaffer Drive. It is open from 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. every Thursday through April 26, with the exception of March 8 due to the university’s spring recess. “It is so important to give the students this realworld experience,” said John Niser, chair of the Department of Hospitality and Tourism Management. “Not only do our students manage and run the restaurant, they also benefit from the profits, which go toward travel

YLNI LISTS MARKET DATES

IVY TECH OPENS MASSAGE CLINIC

The student-run massage clinic at Ivy Tech Community College Northeast is open to the public through May 8. Healthy Essence is located in Room CC1783 on the Coliseum Campus, 3800 N. Anthony Blvd., Fort Wayne. Appointments are available on Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays and some Saturdays. To make an appointment, email fw-tmsclinic@ivytech.edu or call (260) 480-2094. Clients may schedule no more than two massages a month. The clinic will be closed over spring break, March 12-16. The hourlong, full-body relaxation massage will be from a student in the therapeutic massage program. Massages run $25 for the community and $20 for Ivy Tech employees and students, military personnel and those 55 and older. Tips are not accepted, but those who wish to tip can choose to donate to a charity chosen by the students. Visit IvyTech.edu/northeast/massageclinic to learn more.

Challenge Seminar featuring Dr. Kathleen Heimann. The program will be from 9-10:30 a.m. Saturday, March 3, at the Allen County

DOCTOR’S TOPIC IS INFERTILITY

The Fort Wayne Area Lutherans for Life will present the Infertility

Right to Life building, 2126 Inwood Drive, Fort Wayne. For registration and more information, call (260) 471-1849. See NEWS, Page A12

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A12 • INfortwayne.com

NEWS from Page A11 Inwood Drive is south from East State Boulevard, just east of North Coliseum Boulevard. Heimann, a family practice physician in Decatur Family Medicine, will define infertility and describe the common infertility problems that arise in married couples attempting to have children. She will also speak about common medical options to solve the infertility problems: medications, surgery and lifestyle changes.

ARTLINK SHARES LGBTQ STORIES

An exhibition at Artlink Contemporary Gallery documents the everyday lives of the LGBTQ community in Fort Wayne. In 2017, Mel Sealy of Columbus, Ohio, and C.A. Neal of Chicago became artists-in-residence at Artlink. Sealy and Neal conducted interviews with LGBTQ individuals, highlighting their personal stories, experiences and histories. The exhibition “In Love/This Body” runs through March 23. Gallery hours are Tuesday-Saturday, noon-7 p.m., and Sunday, noon-4 p.m. Artlink is at 300 E. Main St., Fort Wayne. Visit artlinkfw.com for more information.

IPFW MUSICAL IN FINAL SHOWS

IPFW Department of Theatre continues the production of “I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change.” Performances are at 8 p.m. March 1, 2 and 3 at the Williams Theatre of the Indiana University-Purdue University Campus at 2101 E. Coliseum Blvd., Fort Wayne. Tickets are $5 for IPFW students, high school

students and children younger than 18, $18 for adults, $16 for seniors, faculty, staff and alumni, and $14 each for groups of 10 or more. Patrons are encouraged to call in advance to reserve their tickets. Buy tickets online at ipfw.edu/tickets, by phone at (260) 481-6555, or in person at the box office in Gates Athletic Center Room 126. Children younger than 6 will not be admitted. Craig A. Humphrey directs, with musical direction by Holly Knott.

FACULTY SHOWS FINE ARTS

The IPFW Department of Fine Arts Faculty Exhibition continues through March 23 at the Visual Arts Gallery of the Department of Fine Arts, 2101 E. Coliseum Blvd., Fort Wayne. The exhibition is free and open to the public. Gallery hours are 8 a.m.-9 p.m. weekdays and 10 a.m.-5 p.m. weekends. For more information, call the Department of Fine Arts at (260) 481-6705 or visit ipfw.edu/fine-arts. Faculty members and emeriti from the Department of Fine Arts will exhibit their work as a group prior to becoming the new Department of Art and Design. On July 1, both art departments in the College of Visual and Performing Arts will re-unify into one department offering both fine arts and digital arts. Faculty artists participating in the exhibition include: Laurel Campbell, Seth Green, Dana Goodman, Audrey Ushenko, Christopher Ganz, John Hrehov, Derek Decker, Sara Nordling, Robert Schroeder, Don Kruse (emeritus), Hector Garcia (emeritus) and Nancy McCroskey (emeritus).

SNIDER ALUMNI PLAN FOR 50TH

In preparation of its 50th class reunion, the Snider High School Class of 1968 is in search of past classmates. The 50th class reunion will take place Saturday, Aug. 4, at Goeglein’s Homestead, 7311 Maysville Road, Fort Wayne. The event planning committee asks that all classmates register whether they can attend the reunion or not, so the committee can update the class list. Registration for the event is available online at www. rnsnider-classof-68.com/. For more information, call Linda Scrimshaw at (260) 312-6837.

AARP PREPARES TAX RETURNS

AARP Foundation Tax-Aide is offering free tax assistance in Allen and some adjacent counties. “We offer free tax help to those needing assistance in preparing and filing their 2017 federal and Indiana state tax returns,” the group said in a statement. “Our volunteers are trained and IRS-certified in U.S. tax code including tax provisions of the Affordable Care Act and its reporting requirements for the 2017 tax year.” Taxpayers may visit these Allen County sites for assistance: Allen County Main Library and branches; Concordia Lutheran Church, 4245 Lake Ave., Fort Wayne; Fort Wayne Community Center, 233 W. Main St., Fort Wayne; and St. Joseph Township Community Hall, 6033 Maplecrest Road, Fort Wayne. To locate a site and its operating hours, a taxpayer should visit aarp. org/taxaide, or call (888) 227-7669 or call 211.

GROUPS FOSTER MENTAL HEALTH

Mental Health America

of Northeast Indiana offers a variety of support groups. For more information, visit mentalhealthfrontdoor.org or call (260) 422-6441 or email info@mhaac.com. Groups include: • Success with ADHD, the first Thursday of each month, 6:30 p.m., The Summit, 1027 W. Rudisill Blvd., Fort Wayne. • Parenting Support, the first and third Mondays, 6:30 p.m., Allen County Public Library Aboite Branch, 5630 Coventry Lane, Fort Wayne. • Living with Anxiety, every Wednesday, 6 p.m., The Summit, 1027 W. Rudisill Blvd., Fort Wayne. • Teens Helping Teens, for ages 13-18 with an emotional challenge or mental health condition. A new group starts every 16 weeks.

CORNERSTONE SETS BIG MEAL

Cornerstone Youth Center, 19819 Monroeville Road in Monroeville, will host its eighth annual fish and chicken strips dinner from 4-7 p.m. Friday, March 16. The cost is $10 for adults, $6 for youth 6-10 and free for children 5 and younger. Burns Catering & Fish Fry will provide the fish and chicken. All meals will include a baked potato, applesauce or coleslaw, dessert, roll and butter and beverage. Drive-thru and carryout are available for adult meals only, but drive-thru meals will feature coleslaw rather than a choice between coleslaw and applesauce. Drive-thru meals will also include two cookies and choice of all fish, all chicken or half fish and half chicken. Cornerstone needs volunteers to help bread fish, direct parking, clean tables, etc. People able to

Northeast News • March 2018

assist that evening should call Volunteer Coordinator Kevin House at (260) 623-3972, ext. 190.

model railroading.

COLLEGE AND CAREER FAIR

The University of Saint Francis Department of Philosophy and Theology has announced the dates and speakers for its Spring Philosophy and Theology Lecture Series. Lectures take place in the Historic Woman’s Club on the third floor of the USF Business Center, 826 Ewing St., Fort Wayne. These lectures are free and open to the public. For more information, contact Angie Springer at (260) 399-8066 or aspringer@sf.edu. • Thursday, March 1, 12:15 p.m. — “Truth, Consumerism and Democracy,” featuring Lewis Pearson. • Sunday, April 15, 3 p.m. — “Karl Marx at 200: Who Cares?” by Adam DeVille, Barry Jackisch, Doug Meador and Lance Richey. • Tuesday, April 24, 7 p.m. — “An Introduction to Social Ontology,” by Vincent Wargo. The lecture series began Feb. 20 with “Confirmation: A Sacrament Out of Time and Place?” by Nicholas Denysenko.

Homestead High School, 4310 Homestead Road, Fort Wayne, will host its annual college and career fair from 6-7:30 p.m. Monday, March 5. There is no admission charge. The program is open to the public. One junior or senior student, in attendance, will win a $200 scholarship. “We anticipate over 80 four-year universities, two-year colleges and vocational schools located throughout the United States to be in attendance,” a school spokesperson said in a statement. “We have invited representatives from various careers to participate, as well as the armed services and financial institutions.”

MODEL RAILROAD SHOW MARCH 3

The Maumee Valley Railroad Club will sponsor a model railroad show from 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturday, March 3, at Coliseum Bingo, 911 W. Washington Center Road, Fort Wayne. Admission is $5 for adults and $7 for families. Children 12 and younger get in free. There will be dozens of tables of model railroads present, including one operating model railroad layout, an on-site concession stand and free parking. People can call (260) 482-2203 or or email mvrrc.ri@gmail. com for more information. MVRRC members are residents of northeast Indiana and northwest Ohio who are members of the National Model Railroad Association. One of the club’s goals is to promote the hobby of

USF LISTS LECTURE DATES

ZETA PHI BETA PLANS LECTURE

Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Beta Upsilon Zeta Chapter, has announced the sixth annual Women’s History Month Brunch, at 10 a.m. Saturday, March 10, at Link’s Wonderland, 1711 E. Creighton Ave., Fort Wayne. Guest speaker Ruby Cain’s topic will be “Nevertheless She Persisted: Women Who Fight All Forms of Discrimination Against Women.” Tickets are $20 and are available by calling Sheryl at (260) 493-1534. — Compiled by Garth Snow gsnow@kpcmedia.com

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INfortwayne.com • A13

Northeast News • March 2018

School assembly celebrates airman’s emotional return

By Garth Snow

gsnow@kpcmedia.com

Sparty, the Homestead High School mascot, seemed right at home on the Lafayette Meadows Elementary School stage. He greeted a few selected students and staff as part of the “Be Kind” campaign. Media specialist Rachael Vanengelenhoven smiled and accepted a hug from the hulking mascot. The very animated foam Spartan made her curious when he made something of a dance move. “When he dabbed I thought ‘That’s something that Jesse would do,’ ” she said minutes later. “But I didn’t really think that was Jesse in there.” Her husband of just one year, after all, was stationed in southwest Asia with the U.S. Air

Force. Then Sparty turned briefly toward Principal Jenny Fedele. He turned back toward Rachael and loosened the giant foam helmet, revealing himself as Tech Sgt. Jesse Vanengelenhoven. Rachael gasped and stared. They hugged a few seconds for each of the six months they had been apart. The sergeant had been scheduled to return soon, but he returned just a little earlier than expected. Fedele helped to coordinate the surprise. Rachael’s computer tech partner, Jennifer Fritsch, had kept the secret to the very end, even accompanying Rachael onto the stage when Southwest Allen County Schools communications director Stacey Fleming seemed

PHOTO BY GARTH SNOW

Rachael and Jesse Vanengelenhoven hug at Lafayette Meadows Elementary School, where she is a media specialist. The tech sergeant made a surprise early return from deployment in southwest Asia and entered the school assembly in the costume of Sparty, the Homestead High School mascot.

to choose them at random from the 30-some staff members. The children clapped and cheered. The adults

clapped and cheered. Then a parade of children filed past the airman for highfives and even a couple salutes.

The surprise return marked the end of Vanengelenhoven’s second deployment. His second and last, he said. After helping other airmen to get situated in Asia, and after helping those airmen begin their journeys home, he was home to stay. He returns to similar work stateside, with the 379th Air Expeditionary Wing at Grissom Air Reserve Base near Peru. Rachael graduated from Wayne High School, Jesse from Elmhurst. They dated for seven years before being married. Jesse had been deployed once before. “I was shocked. I’m shaking and I’m completely surprised,” Rachael said. “It’s been a long six months and I’m very happy to have him

home.” “My heart was pounding,” Jesse said. “I tripped over myself in that costume. But it’s good to be back home.” “It was a little rough because our first anniversary I was gone,” he said. “That and the holidays, it was a little rough. But it’s worth it for big moments like this.” He said he looks forward to “just being back with family and friends, getting back to normalcy. With all the hustle and bustle going on, I’m ready to get back.” “I’ve got a good month off before I get back to my normal job, getting people out and deployed,” he said. Asked where they were going after the school bell, Rachael said, “We’ll get food. He hasn’t had decent food in six months.”

Rotary fundraising feast celebrates the Big Easy

KPC NEWS SERVICE The Rotary Club of Fort Wayne put on a party and even offered a custommade brew to celebrate Mardi Gras. The Lincoln Financial Event Center at Parkview Field was transformed into the Rotary Big East Feast, complete with a menu appropriate for the holiday. The event, raising money for the splash pad at Riverfront Fort Wayne,

Club of Fort Wayne and Rotaract Club for young adults developing the brew for the feast. Lunch and dinner feasts offered favorites such as seafood etoufee, andouille stuffed pork roast, dirty rice, Creole hash, charred Cajun cream corn and smothered okra. The Rotary Club of Fort Wayne brings more than 150 business, professional and community leaders together for service on the

featured jazz music, Creole foods and plenty of beads.​ Proceeds will help fund water jet fountains on the south plaza just east of the Compass Pavilion, said Jeff Krull, a former club president and the head of the Big Easy Feast event. The feast featured the Rotary Big Easy Brew from the Gnome Brewing Co. This was the second year the Hoppy Gnome has been a sponsor of the feast, with members of the Rotary

BUSINESS SERVICES DIRECTORY

local, national and international levels. The Rotary Club of Fort Wayne meets at noon each Monday at Parkview Field, on the 2nd Floor suite level. For more information, contact Jane Wilks at fwrotarysecretary@gmail.com, or visit fortwaynerotary.org.

PHOTO BY LUCRETIA CARDENAS

Parkview Field takes on a New Orleans theme for the Fort Wayne Rotary Club’s Mardi Gras celebration.

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A14 • INfortwayne.com

Northeast News • March 2018

YMCA spreads awareness of teen dating violence By Meghan Schrader For IN|Fort Wayne

One out of three teenagers will experience physical, sexual or emotional abuse by someone they are in a relationship with before they become adults, according to information from the YWCA. Preparing for Teen Dating Violence Awareness Month in February, YWCA Northeast Indiana created tools that can be helpful yearround. The free, user friendly toolkit contains ideas and resources to help engage youth in talking about dating violence and healthy relationships. The toolkit, which can be found on their website, designated six days throughout the month of February for learning, discussion and activities surrounding the issue and also included website links to further the education such as videos, articles, statistics, quizzes and

more. The toolkit has suggestions regarding announcements and activities to do on each day, but encourages teachers and parents to get creative and come up with their own activities, expanding the education beyond the designated six days. Some of the discussion and activity ideas include raising awareness for what this month means; resources, tools and people youth can turn to for help; the importance of self-care and self-love; wearing orange on Valentine’s Day to show support for the cause; submitting sketches, poems and music that express healthy relationships; and encouraging students to embrace friendships and show support for one another. This is the sixth year the YWCA has released the toolkit, and they are constantly looking to update and adapt it with the increasing use of social media, Director of

Empowerment Jennifer Rohlf said. “That’s where a lot of the abuse will take place,” she explained, adding that the YWCA has incorporated hashtags into the toolkit, utilizing social media platforms “to help spread the word.” Beyond the toolkit, the YWCA is involved with local organizations and task forces to spread awareness and resources to teens in unhealthy relationships. These domestic violence task forces are collaborative groups of people who are involved in helping individuals dealing with domestic violence including law enforcement officials, social service agencies, the prosecutor’s office and others. The Wells County Domestic Violence Task Force helped set up a proclamation reading at Bluffton High School, where teens read the official proclamation in front of students and

adults at the school, Rohlf said. More events were planned at Columbia City High School, DeKalb High School, East Noble High School and others, as YWCA partners with schools in the six counties they serve to spread awareness. Beyond the February events, the organization provides a program all year long called Eyes Wide Open in which they discuss healthy relationships versus unhealthy relationships in high school classrooms. “We help them understand what abuse really is because people often think of physical and that’s just one part of it,” Rohlf said. In the program, they ask questions such as how to be in a healthy relationship, how to set boundaries, how to communicate with a partner, what respect looks like and more. The YWCA also has domestic violence

services and dating violence services that are provided to individuals and families of any age in which they provide one-on-one support. “That could be just somebody to talk to, or that could be legal processes where we will help get a protective order in place, or helping them press charges, or going to court with them for a custody hearing. So, whatever they might need, we try to be there for them throughout that process,” Rohlf said, adding that YWCA can connect victims and their families to those who can provide financial assistance, food resources, counseling and more. The YWCA also met with mayors from Bluffton, Huntington, Auburn, Kendallville, Columbia City and Fort Wayne to have February declared as Teen Dating Violence Awareness Month.

“[It] makes a very public stance that the mayor is supporting that this is an important cause, we need to do something about it,” Rohlf said. If someone is experiencing dating violence, a crisis hotline is available every day, 24 hours a day through the YWCA main office at (800) 441-4073. Each year, YMCA presents Heather’s Hope Award in memory of Heather Norris, who was murdered by her estranged boyfriend in 2007. The award recognizes a person younger than 25, who is bringing hope to the community. This individual is someone who gives back to their community as well as promotes positive healthy relationships among their peers. This year’s award nominations were due Feb. 9. For questions, or to register your activities, contact Rohlf at jrohlf@ ywcaerew.org or (260) 242-4908, ext. 235.

Food, music, flags tell global students’ stories KPC NEWS SERVICE The music and food of many nations awaited guests at the Global Student Celebration at Indiana-Purdue University Fort Wayne Feb. 9. Host students also presented the flags of their native countries in a ceremony at the Walb Union Classic Ballroom. Homestead High

School graduate Angel Pallares serves with the IPFW International Student Organization publicity committee. He and friends David Viesca and Guestavo Figueroa represented Mexico in the Parade of Nations. “They walk up and say hello in their native language,” Pallares said in announcing the ceremony. “For me it would

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be ‘hola,’ and they would say ‘hola’ back.” Pallares also emceed the event for the second year. IPFW has witnessed a Global Student Celebration each year since 2014, coordinated by the Office of International Education. But this year, the student group coordinated the “completely student-run and student-produced” celebration. Pallares said students would be “singing, dancing, reading poetry, even lip-syncing pop songs from Korea” during the celebration. He said a friend from French-speaking African nation Gabon would sing a song in French, “Tu Trouveras.” A rap from Gabon was also presented. Viesca, Figueroa and Pallares sang “Cielito Lindo/La Bamba” and played drums for their performance. “I’m very happy and very proud of being able to represent my nation so far north in the United States,” Viesca said. “It’s pretty exciting,” Figueroa agreed. “The event celebrates the diversity of the city,” Pallares said in an email. Students from Ivy Tech and Indiana Tech also were slated to perform and celebrate. Participants were also able to celebrate different cultures through their cuisine, as different stations offered foods ranging from vegetarian

PHOTOS BY MEGAN KNOWLES

Students distribute literature and greet visitors at the Global Student Celebration at Indiana-Purdue University Fort Wayne.

samosas from India to Egyptian falafel and baklava from Greece. There were also several stations focusing on individual countries, with students talking to inquisitive visitors about those cultures. Helena Carvalho Schmidt, a fourth-year student from Brazil, said she was excited to represent her country at the Global Student Celebration. “I personally think that this is one way to show American students that they don’t have to go abroad to go international. There are plenty of ways to meet international students here at IPFW,” she said. “It’s not that scary. People tend to be hesitant to interact because they don’t know what to expect.”

The sampling menu illustrates the diversity of the hosts at the Global Student Celebration at Indiana-Purdue University Fort Wayne.

Carvalho Schmidt studies English, commu-

nications and political science at IPFW.


Community Calendar

INfortwayne.com • A15

Northeast News • March 2018

Include news of your group, too

Send news of your group to gsnow@kpcmedia.com by March 8 for the April issue. Items will be selected and edited as space permits.

March

Community Calendar 2018

Easter

Tax Day

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April

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Community Calendar 2018

MAR.

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THURSDAY, MARCH 1

“Hamlet.” First Presbyterian Theater, 300 W. Wayne St., Fort Wayne. 7:30 p.m. Special preview night tickets are $12 at the door; reservations are not accepted. IPFW bands concert. IPFW Campus, 2101 E. Coliseum Blvd., Fort Wayne; in the Auer Performance Hall, Rhinehart Music Center. 7:30 p.m. This evening will highlight artist-in-residence and award-winning guest composer Steven Bryant’s masterpiece “Ecstatic Waters” and professors Andrew Lott and Pavel Morunov performing Copland’s “Quiet City.” Other works by Grantham, Markowski and MacBeth will be performed. Daniel Tembras, conductor. The bands are joined this evening by the Goshen High School Wind Ensemble. Free admission for IPFW students with ID and students 18 and younger, $7 for adults, $6 for ages 60 and older and $4 for non-IPFW students. Call the IPFW Box Office at (260) 481-6555 or buy tickets at ipfw.edu/ tickets or visit ipfw.edu/music.

FRIDAY, MARCH 2

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“Hamlet.” First Presbyterian Theater, 300 W. Wayne St.,

Fort Wayne. 7:30 p.m. Tickets $20 or less; visit firstpresbyteriantheater.com or by calling the box office at (260) 426-7421, ext. 121. Fish and tenderloin fry. Southwest Conservation Club, 5703 Bluffton Road, Fort Wayne. 5-7 p.m. $9. All-youcan-eat fish and tenderloin fries are served the first Friday of and third Fridays of each month. The meal includes green beans, corn, french fries, coleslaw, dinner rolls and pudding or Jell-O. Coffee and cash bar available. The club has been safeguarding local wildlife and habitat since 1938. southwestconservationclub.org.

SATURDAY, MARCH 3

“Hamlet.” First Presbyterian Theater, 300 W. Wayne St.,

Fort Wayne. 7:30 p.m. Tickets $20 or less; visit firstpresbyteriantheater.com or by calling the box office at (260) 426-7421, ext. 121. Comedian Michael Jr. County Line Church of God, 7716 N. County Line Road, Auburn. 7 p.m. Tickets $15-30. Visit TrinityCommunications.org for tickets and details.

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SUNDAY, MARCH 4

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THURSDAY, MARCH 8

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George R. Mather Lecture. The History Center, 302 E. Berry St., Fort Wayne. 2 p.m. Free admission. Cynthia Thies will discuss “Lesser Known First Ladies – 1865-1892” and “From the Farms to the Factories – The Age of Invention and Industry.” The Mather lectures are free to the public and made possible through the support of the Dunsire Family Foundation. Breakfast on the Marsh. Indiana Wesleyan University

Education and Conference Center, Room 102/104, 8211 W. Jefferson Blvd., Fort Wayne. 8:30-9:45 a.m. Well-seasoned nature lovers (50+) are invited to enjoy a

light breakfast and nature presentation presented by Little River Wetlands Project, the governing body of Eagle Marsh. Today’s topic is environmental landscaping. Business owner Laura Stine will discuss the importance of environmental landscaping. Learn the steps you can take to improve your yard by joining in a talk led by her team. Register with Dana Claussen at (260) 478-2515 or d.claussen@lrwp.org to help ensure that enough food is provided.

FRIDAY, MARCH 9

“Hamlet.” First Presbyterian Theater, 300 W. Wayne St.,

Fort Wayne. 7:30 p.m. Tickets $20 or less; visit firstpresbyteriantheater.com or by calling the box office at (260) 426-7421, ext. 121. All-you-can-eat fish fry and pork tenderloins. Park Edelweiss, 3355 Elmhurst Drive, Fort Wayne. 4:30-7 p.m. $9 for adults, $5 for children. German beer and wine and soft drinks available. Enjoy dinner accompanied by live, German music. Sponsored by Fort Wayne Mannerchor/ Damenchor.

SATURDAY, MARCH 10

“Hamlet.” First Presbyterian Theater, 300 W. Wayne St., Fort Wayne. 7:30 p.m. Tickets $20 or less; visit firstpresbyteriantheater.com or by calling the box office at (260) 426-7421, ext. 121. “Hamlet.” First Presbyterian Theater, 300 W. Wayne St., Fort Wayne. 2 p.m. Tickets $20 or less; visit firstpresbyteriantheater.com or by calling the box office at (260) 426-7421, ext. 121.

TUESDAY, MARCH 13

IPFW faculty jazz combo. IPFW Campus, 2101 E. Coliseum Blvd., Fort Wayne; in the Rhinehart Music Center. 7:30 p.m. The IPFW Faculty Jazz Combo is described as a unique collective of musicians who bring their own individual style and a wealth of experience to the group as soloists, bandleaders and composers. The members are: Ken Johnson, guitar; Jim Steele, piano; Farrell Vernon, saxophones; Brad Kuhns, bass; and Eric Schweikert, drums. These IPFW professors create original works and arrangements of jazz and pop standards for each concert. Free admission for IPFW students with ID and students 18 and younger, $7 for adults, $6 for ages 60 and older and $4 for non-IPFW students. Call the IPFW Box Office at (260) 481-6555 or buy tickets at ipfw.edu/ tickets or visit ipfw.edu/music.

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14

Short Hikes for Short Legs: Show Me the Green. Eagle Marsh barn, 6801 Engle Road, Fort Wayne. 9-10 a.m. Free. Little River Wetlands Project sponsors this part hike, part interactive educational activity with a curriculum and trail length appropriate for kids ages 3-5 years. Visit www.lrwp.org for more information.

FRIDAY, MARCH 16

Fish and tenderloin fry. Southwest Conservation Club, 5703 Bluffton Road, Fort Wayne. 5-7 p.m. $9. All-youcan-eat fish and tenderloin fries are served the first Friday of and third Fridays of each month. The meal includes green beans, corn, french fries, coleslaw, dinner rolls and pudding or Jell-O. Coffee and cash bar available. The club has been safeguarding local wildlife and habitat since 1938. southwestconservationclub.org.

SATURDAY, MARCH 17

National Organ Playing Competition. First Presbyterian Church, 300 W. Wayne St., Fort Wayne; in the sanctuary. 1 p.m. Free-will offering. The nation’s longest running organ competition returns for its 57th year, as part of

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Legal Notice

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SUNDAY, MARCH 11

Allen County Soil & Water Conservation District Annual Meeting will be held on March 5, 2018 at the Orchid Events & Catering located at 11508 Lincoln Hwy. East, New Haven, IN 46774 beginning at 6 PM (free-will offering dinner provided). Dr. Christopher Winslow will give an insightful report about Lake Erie, Harmful algal blooms, and the current work being done in the Western Lake Erie Basin.

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www.addjoyoflife.com Cheryl.Gigler@addjoyoflife.com

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the church’s celebration of 60 years of its Music Arts Ministry program. Sports card and collectibles show. Ramada Plaza Hotel, 305 E. Washington Center Road, Fort Wayne. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Free admission. Dealers from three states will buy, sell or trade sports cards and other cards and collectibles. The public may bring items to be appraised. For more information contact Brian Mayne at (260) 824-4867 or mcscards@icloud.com.

SUNDAY, MARCH 18

Spring Coin and Currency Show. Allen County Fairgrounds, 2726 Carroll Road, Fort Wayne. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Free admission and free parking. The Old Fort Coin Club will host at least 35 dealers at 65 tables. Food available. Newsboys 30th Anniversary Tour. Allen County War Memorial Coliseum, 4000 Parnell Ave., Fort Wayne. 6 p.m. Tickets $18-$100. With special guest Zealand. Visit TrinityCommunications.org for tickets and details.

THURSDAY, MARCH 22

Special interest lesson: Soaps and lotions made with essential oils.

Allen County Extension Office, 4001 Crescent Ave., Fort Wayne. 7-9 p.m. Five make-and-take demonstrations available; costs vary. Get details at extension. purdue.edu/Allen. IPFW choral ensembles. IPFW Campus, 2101 E. Coliseum Blvd., Fort Wayne; in the Auer Performance Hall, Rhinehart Music Center. 7:30 p.m. The ensembles join forces with visiting LaPorte High School choral ensembles to present an evening of choral works, both separately and together. Free admission for IPFW students with ID and students 18 and younger, $7 for adults, $6 for ages 60 and older and $4 for non-IPFW students. Call the IPFW Box Office at (260) 481-6555 or buy tickets at ipfw.edu/tickets or visit ipfw.edu/music.

FRIDAY, MARCH 23

Purdue Varsity Glee Club. Woodlan High School, 17215 Woodburn Road, Woodburn. 7 p.m. Tickets are $20 for adults and $10 for students at the door and can be purchased at purdue.edu/pmo/calendar. Just click on tickets. There is no designated seating. IPFW music faculty recital. IPFW Campus, 2101 E. Coliseum Blvd., Fort Wayne; in the Rhinehart Recital Hall. 7:30 p.m. Featuring Hamilton Tescarollo, piano. The associate professor of music and director of keyboard studies has performed extensively in the United States and Europe, as well as in South America. His solo recital will feature Beethoven’s “Les Adieux” sonata and Schumann’s “Carnaval, Op. 9,” as well as works by J.S. Bach, Olivier Messiaen and Heitor Villa-Lobos. Free admission for IPFW students with ID and students 18 and younger, $7 for adults, $6 for ages 60 and older and $4 for non-IPFW students. Call the IPFW Box Office at (260) 481-6555 or buy tickets at ipfw.edu/tickets or visit ipfw.edu/music.

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A16 • INfortwayne.com

Jim Marcuccilli Chairman & CEO, STAR Financial Bank

Legend of Leadership Awards Breakfast Friday, March 9, 2018 7:30 - 9 AM Memorial Coliseum Conference Center (Official venue for all 2018 Business Weekly events)

For tickets visit fwbusiness.com under the Events tab. Outstanding sponsorship opportunities are still available. For more information call 260-426-2640 x3324 or email events@kpcmedia.com.

Tributes provided by: Mike Packnett, Parkview Health Lena Yarian, Junior Achievement Tom Marcuccilli, Star Financial Bank Indiana State Senator Travis Holdman Kristin Marcuccilli, Star Financial Bank

Sponsored by:

Northeast News • March 2018


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