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ECRWSS Residential Customer Local Presorted Standard U.S. Postage Paid Carmel, IN Permit No. 713 ECRWSS Residential Customer Local Presorted Standard U.S. Postage Paid Carmel, IN Permit No. 713 ECRWSS Residential Customer Local Presorted Standard U.S. Postage Paid Carmel, IN Permit No. 713 Saturday November 8, 2014 Election Day results / P2 RDC talks Creekside Corp. Park update / P3 Veterans Day: Honoring those who served / P15 One local veteran recalls his flying missions in Europe during WWII / P14 Make Thanksgiving a heart-healthy holiday. For more details, see our ad on the back page. Join us at the Bolt For The Heart Run/Walk and help care for hearts in Indiana. ©2014 IU Health 10/14 HY12414_0948

November 8, 2014

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ECRWSS

Residential CustomerLocal

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Carmel, INPermit No. 713

ECRWSS

Residential CustomerLocal

PresortedStandard

U.S. Postage Paid

Carmel, INPermit No. 713

ECRWSS

Residential CustomerLocal

PresortedStandard

U.S. Postage Paid

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Saturday November 8, 2014

Election Day

results / P2

RDC talks Creekside Corp. Park update / P3

Veterans Day: Honoring those who served / P15

One local veteran recalls his flying missions in Europe during WWII / P14

Make Thanksgiving a heart-healthy holiday.

For more details, see our ad on the back page.

Join us at the Bolt For The Heart Run/Walk and help care for hearts in Indiana.

©2014 IU Health 10/14 HY12414_0948

©2014 IU Health 10/14 IUH12414_0948BOLT for the HeartStrip Ad 10” x 1.5”

12414_00948_10x1.5_IUHNORTH_4c_FrontStrip.indd 1 11/3/14 2:46 PM

2 November 8, 2014Current in Zionsvillewww.currentzionsville.com

To stay on top of which roads are closed when, and why some roads are under con-struction, visit www.currentzi-onsville.com. Current staff updates these road guidelines daily as con-struction proj-ects change.

Last year Zionsville Girl Scout Troop 1880 raised enough money to send five veterans on an Indy Honor Flight trip to Washington D.C. This year, that money was used. To see photos of the Girls Scouts greet-ing the veterans, and to learn more about Indy Honor Flight, visit www.currentzionsville.com.

To read about up-coming activities for Boone Co. senior citizens, visit www.currentzionsville.com. Next week there will be art classes at Zions-ville Town Hall, an exercise class at Zionsville Meadows, options for counsel-ing, and more.

Last weekend students from Zi-onsville Community High School finished off the lacrosse travel sea-son. To read about their victory and a wrap up of their year, visit www.currentzionsville.com.

RoadsScouts send veterans to D.C.

Activities for seniors

Lacrosse champs

COMMUNITY

ON THE WEBON THE WEB

Founded March 20 2012, at Zionsville, INVol. III, No. 37

Copyright 2013. Current Publishing, LLC

All Rights Reserved.30 South Range Line Road

Carmel, IN 46032317.489.4444

[email protected]

The views of the columnists in Current in Zionsville are their own and do not necessarily

reflect the positions of this newspaper.

Want to advertise?Current in Zionsville reaches 100 percent of the households in 46077 by U.S. Postal Service every Tuesday. For more information about how to reach that audience, call Rob Schaefer at 677.5244 or e-mail him at [email protected].

On the Cover Fred Hampton at his home in Zionsville. He flew 29 bombing missions in Europe during World War II. (Photo by Ward Degler)

Contact the EditorHave a news tip? Want to submit a cal-endar event? Have a photograph to share? Call Sophie Pappas at 489.4444 ext. 208 or e-mail her at [email protected]. You may also submit information on our website, currentzi-onsville.com. You can find the Contact Us form under About Us in the upper-left corner. Remember our news deadline is typically eight days prior to publication.

Join our communitywww.facebook.com/currentinzionsvillewww.twitter.com/CI_Zionsville

Wanna write us a letter? E-mailing it to [email protected] is the quickest and easiest. Keep letters to 200 words max (we may make exceptions), and be sure to include your home ZIP code and a daytime number for verification.

• Number of machine ballots: 9,858• Number of precincts: 53• Number of absentee ballots: 4,577• Number of registered voters: 44,618• There was a 32.35 percent voter turnout. • More than 3,900 Zionsville residents voted

in favor of the reorganization, while 2,938 voted against it.

• More than 300 Perry Township residents voted in favor of the reorganization, while only 34 voted against it.

The reorganization with Perry Town-ship, although voted in by voters in the general election, is still in ques-tion since Whitestown filed a lawsuit against Zionsville, claiming that the proposed reorganization was illegal and not an option for a town that is adjacent to the township. Last month, Boone County Judge Rebecca McClure voted in favor of Whitestown, and now the town of Zionsville is expected to appeal this decision in the state appel-late court.

The Indiana Dept. of Local Govern-ment Finance told town officials this summer that the Zionsville town council should prepare two budgets for 2015; one if the reorganization is put in place and one if it is not. Both budgets have been approved by the council.

Thoughts from secretary of state winner Connie Lawson:

“I am honored that Hoosiers have placed their trust in me. Our team in the Secretary of State’s office will work tirelessly to pro-tect Hoosiers from identity theft, financial fraud and scams,” said Secretary of State Connie Lawson. “Additionally, I am committed to encouraging voter participation and protecting our democracy while also ensuring the integrity of our election process.”

United States Representative, District 5•Susan Brooks (R) 74%• Shawn Denney (D) 21%• John Krom (L) 4%

United States Representative, District 4• Todd Rokita (R) 71%• John Dale (D) 28%

Secretary of State•Connie Lawson (R) 70%• Karl Tatgenhorst (L) 3%• Elizabeth “Beth” White (D) 26%

Auditor of State• Michael Clayton (D) 21%•Suzanne Crouch (R) 73%• John Schlick (L) 4%

Treasurer of State•Mike Boland (D) 21%• Michael Jasper (L) 5%• Kelly Mitchell (R) 72%

State Senate, District 29•Mike Delph (R) 67%• J.D. Ford (D) 32%

State Senate, District 23•Philip Boots 75%• Bob Burkett 24%

State Representative District 28• Jeffrey Thompson 79%• Sean Shanley 20%

County Sheriff•Mike Nielsen 78%• Dennis Brannon 21%

School Board- At Large•Debbie Ungar 62%• Marc Mitalski 37%

School Board- Eagle Township• Jim Longest 52%• Meei-Huey Jeng 47%

Public question regarding reorganization with Perry Township:•Yes 59%• No 40%

ElECTION rEsUlTs

BY THE NUMBErs

WHaT’s NExT IN rEOrgaNIzaTION?

Congresswoman Susan Brooks stands with campaign volunteer Julia Evinger at Traders Point Christian Church, one of the two Zionsville voting centers on Election Day, the morning of Nov. 4. (Submitted photo)

Thoughts from school board at-large winner Debbie Ungar:

“I have to say that Zionsville rocked the vote today! All of the voting centers were busy all day and there are still people in line at all of them right now. Thank you all for making the effort on this lovely day to get out and cast a vote. Thanks too to everyone who supported our campaign. I really cannot express how much everyone’s hard work, good wishes and kind words meant to me. Thank you!”

Ungar

Lawson

2014 Election recap2014 Election recap

3November 8, 2014Current in Zionsville

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COMMUNITY

Compiled by James Feichnter

City officials are still looking to determine any conflicts of the construction around the wet-

lands of Creekside Corporate Park, and the issue was discussed during last week’s meeting of the Zionsville Redevelopment Plan Commission.

RDC talks building updates

Beams are going up at the Hat World LLC/Lids lot. (Submitted photo courtesy of Boone Co. EDC Corp.)

Building updates:• The Re/Max building is

beginning its construc-tion in its designated 4,000 square-foot lot.

• Also continuing its constructing is the Hat World LLC headquar-ters. Most of the beam structures are in place and the site should be seeing concrete mov-ing in as early as this month.

What happened: The Bennett parkway extension is going through its final stages of inspection.

What happened: The 106th Street road project and 106th Street signal projects were discussed.

What happened: The Creekside Corporate Park common area was discussed, in regards to how it will be plowed, incorporate trails, picnic tables and possibly have a basketball court.

What it means: An emergency siren was tested and found to have a faulty rotation component.

What it means: A stoplight is being constructed at the intersection of Zionsville Road and 106th Street.

What it means: The next step will be calculat-ing the cost of trails and estimating the land value.

What’s next: This is scheduled to be repaired.

What’s next: The traffic signals are expected to be completed by the end of the year.

What’s next: Discussions over what areas could po-tentially be covered by the Parks Department are still underway.

Façade grant updates:• Rosie’s Place reno-

vations are continu-ing at their vacant lot on South Main Street. They have filed for a façade grant to complete the project.

• Greek’s Pizzeria has also filed their façade grant to ex-pand into the back part of their space.

4 November 8, 2014Current in Zionsvillewww.currentzionsville.com COMMUNITY

This week, officials of National Merit Scholarship Corporation and National Achievement Scholarship Program announced the names of more than 16,000 Semifinal-ists in the 60th annual National Merit Scholarship Program and more than 1,600 Black American high school seniors who have been designated Semifinalists in the 51st annual National Achieve-ment Scholarship Program.These academically talented high school seniors have an opportunity to continue in the competitions worth about $35.5 million that will be offered next spring. To be considered for a Merit or Achievement Scholarship award, Semifinalists must fulfill several require-ments to advance to the Finalist level of the competition. Ninety percent of those attaining Final-ist standing, and more than half of the Finalists will win a National Merit or Achievement Scholar-ship award. Top row, from left: Abigail Roberts, Will Brewer, Ashlee McBride, Caleb Hill; middle row, from left: Scott Eckart, Bryan Wilson, Katharine Moran; bottom row, from left: Anna Baker-Olson, Jack Horn; not pictured: Billy Chien, Zefan Tang and Mia Trana.

ZCS recap

On Oct. 31, Zionsville Community High School U.S. History students dressed up in early 1900s cos-tumes as part of their Progressive Era project. The students participated in a tea party and dis-cussion that portrayed the election year of 1912.

ZCHS PTO members (from left) Sandy Sifferlen, Karlee Moore, and Shannon Ross offered treats to students as a fall celebration last Friday. This is just one of many PTO sponsored activities that they provide throughout the year with the help of ZCHS parents. (Submitted photos)

ZCHS Spanish IV students from Lindsay Alessandrini’s and Jennie Galasso’s classes celebrated the Day of the Dead last week. This is a joyful celebration and tradition honored in central Mexico on Nov. 1 and 2. The Aztecs developed the ritual 3,000 years ago. The altars are dedicated to a loss of a beloved ancestor who has passed. Instead of grieving they would celebrate their lives by creating altars that may con-tain foods that were their ancestors’ favorite meals, seeds, photographs, candles and much more.

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5November 8, 2014Current in Zionsville

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ByStevenAldrich•[email protected]

Is your recently carved pumpkin sitting in the trash right now? Anyone with old pumpkins

can take it over to Zion Nature Center. Zionsville residents are encouraged

to have a smashing good time destroying Hal-loween pumpkins in the designated area outside of the nature center.

Why smash your pumpkins rather than leave them out for the trash? According to Mindy Mur-dock, Nature Center Director: “It is a great way to reduce the amount of waste in landfills.”

Think of all the pumpkins that are sitting on porches right now just waiting to be thrown out. Murdock said if you want to help reduce

the amount of waste in landfills, then smashing pumpkins at the center is a great option.

“The decaying pumpkins provide a good source of food for the wildlife,” Murdock said, also noting that pumpkins can provide a healthy source of food for wild animals for more than a year.

Often times birds, squirrels, and even nearby house cats enjoy the pumpkins.

“The pumpkins attract more wildlife around the nature center,” Murdock said.

Anyone can help to significantly reduce the amount of waste in landfills, provide a healthy source of food for the wildlife, and even attract more animals to the nature center. The nature center is at 1100 W. Oak St. in Zionsville. The next pumpkin smashing is from 2 to 4 p.m. Nov. 8 and 9.

ENvIrONMENT

The smashing pumpkins of ZionsvillePumpkin smashing remnants show how these gourds decompose into the ground year-round. (Submit-ted photo)

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The third annual Do It Again Recycled Art Mar-ket is from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. Nov. 8 at Zionsville

Town Hall. A variety of Central Indi-ana artists and crafts persons have been selected to participate in this

event scheduled to be just in time for holiday shopping. It also corresponds with America Re-cycles Day on Nov. 15.

The one-of-a-kind items that are available for purchase are repurposed from discarded or recy-cled materials, showing that such work is often more interesting and equal in quality to products made of new materials.

Cynthia Young, Art Center Director at Sullivan-Munce Cultural Center juries the show.

“The quality and diversity of the work submit-ted always amazes me and makes it difficult to narrow the field down to the set number of spaces we have available,” Young said.

The Do It Again Recycled Art Market is a project of the Zionsville Cultural District in part-nership with SullivanMunce Cultural Center and Boone County Solid Waste Management.

There is no charge to visit the Do It Again Art Market and free parking is available in the lot behind the Zionsville Town Hall at 1100 West Oak St. For more information, visit www.facebook.com/DoItAgainRecycledArtMarket.

Art market to feature reclaimed items

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8 November 8, 2014Current in Zionsvillewww.currentzionsville.com

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atalie & Byron were ready to downsize. They had one child off to college and the other in high school, and there simply was no reason to maintain the huge home on its sprawling acreage

anymore. So they called in Jennifer, a little nervous about selling. Jennifer helped them see that inventory was in short supply, and buyers were snapping up well-priced & well-staged homes in order to capture the crazy low mortgage interest rates that the summer offered, and there had literally never been a time so perfect for them to sell. She was right! The house was sold in 8 days for nearly list price. The second buyer who walked in the door loved it, bought it and has now moved in. The process wasn't easy on Natalie & Byron, because Jennifer had given them many, many homework assignments to complete before the house was presented to the market, but the work was worth it! Now they’re moving to the lake, which will soon be another Story of Sold.

When you’re looking for the perfect ending to your own housing saga, trust Jennifer to write it for you!

COMMUNITY

Carney is teacher of the [email protected]

October’s Teacher of the Month winner is Beth Carney, a fourth-grade teacher at Pleas-ant View Elementary. She was nominated by student Anjali Gupta. As a reward, Gupta won a pizza party for her class and Carney won a $100 cash voucher from Teacher of the Month sponsor BMO Harris bank. Pizza was sponsored by Amore Pizzeria.

Here is Gupta’s winning essay:Mrs. Beth Carney should be teacher of the

month. Everything about her fourth-grade class is exciting, thanks to her. Mrs. Carney is good at helping all students if they are stuck on something and don’t understand. She helps students and gives them lots of pointers.

Mrs. Carney is a great teacher and makes school exciting. She has a Harry Potter-themed room and people are even more excited about that. She also reads us en-thralling stories that the class enjoys.

Mrs. Carney loves her students and all kids, and is loved back by kids. That makes the best teacher. Mrs. Carney is the best teacher ever, and I’m very lucky to have her.

To submit an essay and nominate a teach-er for the November Teacher of the Month, email a 100-word essay to [email protected]. All essays are due by Nov.15.

Beth Carney with essay winner Anjali Gupta. Carney teaches fourth grade at Pleasant View Elementary. (Photos by Rob Schaefer)

From left, Katherine Aeschliman, Beth Carney and Sa-vanna Fay, from Amore Pizzeria attend the pizza party for Carney’s fourth-grade class last week.

9November 8, 2014Current in Zionsville

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National Neighborhood Toy Store Day is Nov. 8 in the village

kIds

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By Sophie Pappas • [email protected]

Every year, American Specialty Toy Retailing Association member stores celebrate play in all

its shapes and forms with Neighbor-hood Toy Store Day. More than 500 stores from coast to coast will par-

ticipate. This free event, held every year on the second Saturday in November, reminds consum-ers of the importance of independent toy stores and the value of shopping within their local com-munity. Locally, it is running from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Nov. 8 at Earth Explorer Toys at 27 E. Pine St., Zionsville.

“We have been participat-ing in Neighborhood Toy Store Day since it first started, and we love it,” said Terri Bracken, owner of Earth Explorer Toys. “It is a great way to remind folks to shop local, especially in a town like Zionsville. Did you know that Zionsville was just ranked the second best suburb in America by Business Insider? We have this beautiful, safe town with its brick street, full of locally owned and operated small businesses. It is so important to support your community.”

As a part of the festivities, all toy stores will join forces to promote “Toys for Tots” with the Boone Co. Marine Corps. A Marine in Dress Blues will be at the store in the morning to shake hands and have their photo taken with children. Also, any toy purchased for “Toys for Tots” will have an automatic 20 percent discount. There will also be free games and science demonstra-tions for visitors.

“Neighborhood Toy Store Day is a showcase of the expertise and quality care that you receive when you shop at a local toy store versus a big chain,” Bracken said.

• Lego Building Contest, with winners receiv-ing gift certificates

• Rock Zionsville Scavenger Hunt • Free Crafts • Game Contests, including Brave Rats and

Xoom• Loop de Doo friendship bracelet demos

throughout the day• Outside Slackline Demo • Science Demos • Wish list mailings to Santa Claus

EvENTs aT EarTH ExplOrEr TOYs, ON NEIgHBOrHOOd TOY sTOrE daY:

10 November 8, 2014Current in Zionsvillewww.currentzionsville.com

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Fall Frolic set for Nov. 15

EdUCaTION

By Devynn Barnes • [email protected]

For nearly a decade now, the Zionsville Educa-tion Foundation has been celebrating fall and

simultaneously raising money for the Zionsville Community School system. Fall Frolic, an

event held to raise funds for educational oppor-tunities and grants, is on Nov. 15, and the night’s agenda is full of fun things to do.

“We call it an ‘upscale tailgate party,’” said Beth Ann Kaltenmark, a member of the ZEF board of directors . She said considering the large amount of food and fun activities on the agenda, the event looks like it will be an “upscale tail-gate” no one will want to miss.

Kaltenmark has been involved with ZEF’s Fall Frolic, formerly titled “Octoberfest,” for seven years. Each year the event brings the community together to benefit Zionsville’s schools as well as enjoy themselves and the beginning of the holi-day season. This year, the night will begin at 6:30 p.m. and feature displays of ZEF grant-winning projects, a live DJ, a silent and live auction, the Sun King beer truck, dinner for all guests, and some words from the ZEF board president, Bob Spoonmore.

Proceeds from the event, which will take place at the Indianapolis Executive Airport in Zionsville, will be used as classroom grants, to promote excellence and innovation in the school system. With these grants, ZCS can stay up with the lat-

est educational trends and teachers are able to expand upon students’ learning experiences.

“It’s just a night to have fun and raise money for the teachers and students of Zionsville Com-munity Schools,” Kaltenmark said.

Tickets are $100 individually, and tables for groups up to 10 people are encouraged. The tickets can be purchased online at www.zions-villeeduationfoundation.org/fallfrolic, or by visit-ing the Education Service Center near the high school and stopping by the ZEF office.

The event will run until 11 p.m. at the India-napolis Executive Airport, at 11329 E. SR 32 in Zionsville.

Zionsville Education Foundation president Bob Spoonmore speaks at last year’s Fall Frolic. (Sub-mitted photo)

11November 8, 2014Current in Zionsville

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FIvE MINUTEs WITH ENrIQUE pENagarCIa

By Melissa Hicks

Meet Enrique Penagarcia, he is a student of Zionsville Community High School and Employee of Earth Explorer Toys, and has been a resident of Zionsville for two years.What has been your best vacation and why?

My best vacation was to Mexico, because I get to see my family.

Which would you choose to go to a concert, play, or sporting event, and why?

A concert, definitely. I like the sense of it. Especially flash music, it’s a bunch of people dancing to music.

What is your favorite quote?

“You get what you get and you don’t throw a fit.”

Do you have a pet?“I do. She’s a beagle. … She’s lazy, like Snoopy.”

Have you had a teacher who inspired you and how?

“Inspire me, no. But a teacher that I thought was one of my best teachers was Mr. Sobo-leski from Zionsville High School.”

Five Minutes With is a recurring feature of Current in Zions-ville. If you or someone you know would like to be featured, please e-mail [email protected].

Book signing – Cheryl Soden will be signing books from 3 to 5 p.m. Nov. 15 at Black Dog Books, 115 S. Main St. Soden’s newest book, “Kokomo Kid,” is the inspiring story of the atypi-cal childhood of a midwestern girl. Soden is a full-time writer and part-time model as well as a community volunteer. Her friends include Kurt Vonnegut and Wendell Berry. Writing this book possibly saved her life as she battled a life-threatening illness.

Barbershop chorus – Circle City Sound, a premier barbershop chorus, will have its annual Christmas show at 2 p.m. Dec. 13 at Pike H.S. Perform-ing Arts Center, 6701 Zionsville Rd. The all-male chorus will perform such songs as “Christmas Eve in My Home Town,” “Hallelujah,” “Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silent,” “Jingle Bells” and “The Night Before Christ-mas.” Tickets are $15 for general admission ($18 at the door) and $20 for premier seating. Children 12 and under are free. Call 849-0324 to order tickets.

ZCHS Veterans Day pro-gram – The community is invited to the Zionsville Community High School Veterans Day Program. On Nov. 11 the ZCHS choirs/orchestra/band will be performing their annual Veterans Day Pro-gram. The program will run twice. The first show begins at 12:29 p.m. and the second one begins at approximately 1:15 p.m.

12 November 8, 2014Current in Zionsvillewww.currentzionsville.com

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Compiled by Sophie Pappas

On Nov. 3 the Zionsville Town Council hosted its monthly meeting at town hall.

Zionsville Town Council recap

What happened: The council approved the two proposed 2015 budgets, in a vote of 5-to-1, with councilman Tim Haak not present and councilwoman Candace Ulmer voting ‘no.’

What it means: As requested by the Dept. of Local Government Finance, the town must submit a budget for the reorganization with Perry Township if it is passed and a budget if it is not passed.

What’s next: No further action is required from the council, however councilwoman Susana Suarez said to ease Ulmer’s concerns with the budget, the budget review committee should meet earlier next year to evaluate possible funding disputes, such as in the case of this year’s increase of funds for the Zionsville Chamber of Commerce.

What happened: The council approved a resolution for additional appropriation of funds totaling in $5,007.69 for the Police Operating Fund.

What it means: This comes as a result of a state audit.

What’s next: No further action is required, however these funds are avail-able for appropriation via a September balance in the POF of $1,218,229.38.

What happened: The council approved an increase in the wastewater utility budget in the amount of $126,900. This is a 5.38 percent increase.

What it means: The wastewater utility de-partment is a contracted, separate entity that the town pays yearly for maintaining waste-water services. According to town manager Ed Mitro, there are “pretty sizable increases in the projects needing to get done.”

What’s next: While there is an increase in the town’s contracted wastewater utility budget, council president Jeff Papa emphasized there is no need for any waste-water utility rate increases, which would request more money from the taxpayers. Suarez said the balanced budget for wastewater utility is “very impressive.”

dIspaTCHJohnson to head audit committee – Zionsville resident and owner of Allman Johnson Company LLC, Shel-ley Johnson CPA, CGMA, CTC, has been elected by the Board of Directors of United Methodist Foundation of Indiana to serve as Chair of Audit Committee. UMFI serves and partners with local churches and with the ministries of the Indiana United Methodist Church to assist in raising and multiplying financial resources to support the spiritual work of the church. For more information about UMFI, visit www.umfindiana.org.

13November 8, 2014Current in Zionsville

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WWII Army nurse heads to D.C.

vETEraNs daY

Norma Nelson (far left) alongside other Army nurses during WWII. (Submitted photo)

By Jen Thomas • [email protected]

Norma Nelson couldn’t have imagined that, on her first deployment as a World War II Army Nurse Corps first lieutenant, she’d end up being

the one receiving medical care.

Unfortunately, the ship Nelson boarded, the then-nearly-40-year-old Army hospital ship Shamrock, broke down sev-eral times on the way to the Philippines and was then swept up in a typhoon. After drifting at sea for days, the ship was finally found and towed back to California, where Nelson and many of the other 300 nurses on board had to be treated for scurvy since they hadn’t been able to bathe for a month.

Nelson’s travel conditions will undoubtedly be better today, as she travels as a guest of the Indy Honor Guard on a day trip to Washington, D.C., to visit the National World War II Memorial. She is among 70 veterans who will fly from In-dianapolis to the nation’s capital, where they will visit the memorial and also see the changing of the guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery. Each veteran will bring a companion. Nancy Jones, Nelson’s daugh-ter, will accompany her.

“I’m looking forward to the entire trip, but I’m especially eager to look up the names of friends who didn’t return in the WWII Registry at the WWII Memorial, as well as the Women’s Memorial

at Arlington National Cemetery,” Nelson said.Nelson, 91, lives at Hoosier Village retirement

community in Zionsville, where she remains a serious bridge player and participates in water aerobics and volunteers. She has a lot of memo-rabilia and photos from her time in the Army and enjoys talking about it.

She talks often about her granddaughter, who is continuing the family tradition of armed forces service. Leslie Jones of Indianapolis is serving in the Army National Guard 1413 Engineering Division in Afghanistan. An IUPUI engineering student, she’s one of seven women in the 150-person unit working to deconstruct American installations near the border.

“I’m extremely proud of my granddaughter’s service and I pray daily for her safe return to Indianapolis,” Nelson said.

14 November 8, 2014Current in Zionsvillewww.currentzionsville.com COMMUNITY

By Ward Degler • [email protected]

Veterans Day honors all veterans of all Ameri-can wars, those who returned home triumphant,

and those who remained behind.

Fred Hampton, of Zions-ville, is one of the former; a quiet, unassuming man who never considered himself a hero in spite of flying 29 dangerous bombing missions over Nazi-occupied Europe during the last des-perate years of World War II.

Like thousands of other young men, Hamp-ton’s plans for college and an engineering degree were cut short when he was drafted in the fall of 1943.

“I figured I’d wind up in the infantry,” he said. “Sleeping in muddy foxholes.” But a need for fresh bomber crews to relieve the battle weary pilots, gunners and navigators of the 8th Air Force in England found Hampton transferred to the Army Air Corps.

“I first trained to be a navigator,” he said. “And I even got some pilot training.”

Ultimately, Hampton wound up in gunnery school where he was assigned as a tail gunner.

“My height probably had something to do with that,” he said.

At 5-foot-2, Hampton was just small enough to squeeze into the cramped tail compartment of a B-17.

“I had to kneel during the entire mission,” he said. “Sometimes for nine to 10 hours.”

By the time Hampton and the rest of his crew got to England, the Air Corps had switched from B-24 Liberators to the older B-17s for most of the bombing missions.

“The B-17 could handle a lot more damage than the B-24,” he said. The planes were famous for limping home after being riddled with anti-aircraft flak and bullets from enemy fighters. The crew of one plane in Hampton’s outfit counted 365 bullet holes in their plane after a single mission.

The war became a reality for Hampton with his very first mission. “Up till then it was all train-ing,” he said.

On Feb. 3, 1945, however, it all changed. “That day we were part of the biggest raid of

the war,” he said. “We were one of 1,500 planes loaded with bombs headed for Berlin.” Hampton recalls that the flak over the German capital was “terrible.”

“We lost a lot of planes that day,” Hampton said, “And we were all scared. We prayed a lot.”

Hampton and his crew flew 28 more combat missions during the last months of the war, bombing German factories, bridges, railroads and airfields in places like Hamburg, Bremen, Munich

One local veteran recalls his flying missions in Europe during WWII

COvEr sTOrY

(Above) A display chronicling Hampton’s career as a tail gunner in B-17s during World War II. The collage was as-sembled as a history project by a student at Zionsville Community High School. (Right) B-17s like this one dropped 640,000 tons of bombs on German targets during World War II. (Submit-ted photos)

and Dresden. “We got hit by German fighters over Dresden,”

he said. “We lost one engine and the wing was shot up pretty badly.”

Despite being crippled, the plane finished its bombing run and limped back to England on three engines.

None of Hampton’s crew was injured in com-bat. But their most memorable mission was one they didn’t fly.

“Our crew was grounded and another crew

was assigned to our B-17,” Hampton said. “That day our plane was shot down over Germany. We never learned what happened to the crew.”

Hampton came home in 1945 and picked up where he left off, went to college and got his degree in engineering. He married his wife Mary Lou in 1948 and settled down to the business of raising a family. In 1985 Hampton retired from Al-lison Transmission in Indianapolis where he had spent much of his career working on military contracts.

After retiring, Hampton returned to Europe for a visit. He toured a rebuilt Berlin and saw almost no evidence of the devastating raid he had been part of in 1945.

In England he drove out to the airfield where he had spent so many chilly mornings being

briefed for missions. “It was eerily quiet,” he said, and the only reminder of what had happened there was a bronze plaque bearing the dates of the airfield’s existence.

Still healthy at 89, Hampton plans to observe Veterans Day 2014 as he has every year since his return. “With thanksgiving and respect for every-one who served,” he said.

During World War II, B-17s dropped 640,000 tons of bombs on German targets. Four-thou-sand-six-hundred planes were shot down and 47,000 crew members died.

Veterans Day, enacted by Congress in 1954, grew out of Armistice Day, a day honoring those killed during World War I.

15November 8, 2014Current in Zionsville

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Army veteran finds best friend through Pets Healing VetsBy Mark Ambrogi • [email protected]

Justin Seifried certainly believes in love at first sight. It happened for Seifried and his Dutchess.

Seifried, a U.S. Army veteran who served in Afghanistan, went looking

for his lost cat in May at the Humane Society for Hamilton County and the animal lover couldn’t help but take a peek at the dogs.

Dutchess, a mixed breed of collie, corgi and beagle, caught his eye. She was let out to play and snatched Seifried’s heart.

“I felt so bad. I knew I couldn’t go anywhere else without her,” said Seifried, a 24-year-old Fishers resident. “There was no way I could get a different dog because I found my best friend.”

When Seifried asked about adoption proce-dures, Amanda Ryan, manager of community outreach for Humane Society for Hamilton Coun-ty, informed him about the Pets Healing Vets program. The program pairs qualifying veterans with symptoms of post-traumatic stress disor-der or traumatic brain injury with shelter animals in need of homes. The program is open to vets throughout the state.

Ryan explained to Seifried how the emotional support animals can be adopted for free and bills would be paid for spay/neuter and vaccines. The humane society also provides training and ongo-ing behavior counseling if needed.

“It blew my mind how amazing that program

is,” said Seifried, who later had his lost cat re-turned to him. “You don’t see many businesses and human societies go all out for veterans like that. It really touched me.”

Seifried, who was driving, suffered a seri-ous concussion when his truck was hit by a 500-pound roadside bomb in Afghanistan.

“It was so big. I just blacked out,” Seifried said. “My squad leader thought I was dead because I was out cold. Later when I got back, I was told I’d have permanent brain swelling, which means my brain got jarred so bad that it’s constantly bruised. My memory has started to slip a bit. I have some complications in my left eye.

she’ll smile.”The two friends rescued each other.“I like to say she needs me as much as I need

her and I need her a lot,” he said.AlphaGraphics, a Carmel printing business, is

a big supporter of the two-year-old Pets Healing Vets program

Every day, 22 veterans commit suicide. Each year, approximately 2.7 million animals (1.2 million dogs, 1.4 million cats) are euthanized.

“This is a way to put these two populations together and help both of them,” said Rhonda Kile, who owns the business with her husband Michael.

A Pets Healing Vets fundraising event will be held at AlphaGraphics, 12955 Old Meridian St., Carmel, from 3 to 7 p.m. Nov. 8. The event is also hosted by A Cut Above Catering and Halo Salon. There will be a silent auction, food and drinks, raffle and entertainment. Silent auction items are donated by a Humane Society for Hamilton County, the program’s sponsor, and a variety of area merchants. Visit the website, www.us605.alphagraphics.com/AG_PetsHealingVets for a list of items.

Kile said during the month of November they are asking businesses to help by donating a per-centage of an item or service or trade coupons for a donation. Kile said AlphaGraphics will provide a full-color, personalized poster for the business’ door or window and will print and distribute flyers with each business and its offer.

FUNdraIsEr

“It made me who I am today. It made me see the little things and appreciate what a soldier goes through over there.”

Seifried had various other injuries and wounds during his tour. A grenade went off near his ear, causing some hearing loss.

“My body definitely took a beat down over there,” Seifried said.

His 101st unit was part of the biggest missions in Afghanistan history called Operation Strong Eagle III in 2011.

“I lost six of my best friends in six hours,” Seifried said. “I wear this bracelet to remind me of them.”

Seifried had enlisted in the Army, 10 days after graduating from Livermore (Iowa) High School in 2009. He took a medical discharge on Sept. 1, 2012. He served one 13-month tour of Afghanistan.

“I was in on at least 150 firefights and high-profile missions and definitely saw my action as a 19-year-old kid,” he said.

Dutchess can sense when Seifried needs support.

“We’ve had our rough times thinking about the memories overseas,” Seifried said. “She knows when I’m upset. She’ll come to me when I’m lay-ing on bed thinking. She’ll lay her head on my chest and get really close to me. An emotional support dog is exactly what she is. She’s loving and caring. She does this thing where you can actually see her smile. When she knows I’m sad,

Justin Seifried found a best friend with his dog, Dutchess. (Photo by Mark Ambrogi)

vETEraNs daY

16 November 8, 2014Current in Zionsvillewww.currentzionsville.com

17November 8, 2014Current in Zionsville

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A sales person will be present with information and applications. For accommodation of persons with special needs at sales meetings, call 317-379-3126, TTY 711. Plans are insured through UnitedHealthcare Insurance Company or one of its a�liated companies, a Medicare Advantage organization with a Medicare contract. Enrollment in the plan depends on the plan’s contract renewal with Medicare. UnitedHealthcare Insurance Company pays royalty fees to AARP for the use of its intellectual property. �ese fees are used for the general purposes of AARP. AARP and its a�liates are not insurers. You do not need to be an AARP member to enroll. AARP encourages you to consider your needs when selecting products and does not make speci�c product recommendations for individuals. AARP does not employ or endorse agents, producers or brokers.

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vETEraNs daY

By Robert Herrington • [email protected]

The Hamilton County Veterans organization has rescheduled its Ladder UPP Workshop to 10

a.m. to 3 p.m. Nov. 15 at the Fishers Ameri-can Legion, 9091 E.

126th St. The program is a workshop for the anyone who wants to learn more about helping veterans who are strug-gling to make the transition home.

“It is a program that has been pre-sented to our military, veterans and first responders across the country and it works,” said Hamilton County veteran Bill Doss. “Mr. Sil-ouan Green was a Marine who struggled with his own demons after being injured in the war and he used these steps to help him adjust to being home. Over the years he has honed this program, ‘The Ladder UPP,’ and now teaches our young men and women how to adjust and live a more productive life.”

Doss said the program also will feature special

guest speaker, Dr. Donna Lazarick from the Rich-ard Roudebush VA Hospital. Lazarick has been treating trauma clients for more than 25 years and military and veterans with post-traumatic

stress disorder and traumatic brain in-jury for six years.

“She will be able to help you better understand what PTSD is and how one would be able to get signed up for treat-ment with the VA,” Doss said.

Doss said an average of 22 veterans die each day as a result of suicide and hopes the workshop can start making a

difference for local veterans.“This is an epidemic that we all must work

together to help guide our veterans out of the dark,” he said. “If you know of a veteran who is struggling or hear of a family member who could use this workshop, please have them call 776-9610 and reserve their seat.”

Doss said the workshop is free to the first 50 reservations and $12 for others to pay for the workbook.

Workshop to assist transition home

Doss

EdUCaTION

CHarITY

CHarITY

[email protected]

Members of the community can help make winter a little warmer and assist United States

Veterans in the Indianapolis area that are homeless or at-risk of homelessness by donating

money and requested items to the Hope for He-roes Project. Hope for Heroes is coordinated by the Kappa Theta Chapter of Epsilon Sigma Alpha. All donations received benefit Veterans receiv-ing services from Hoosier Veterans Assistance Foundation. 

The collection runs until Dec. 19.Collection sites include:• Akard True-Value Hardware (Boone

Village Shopping Center – Zionsville)• Hussey-Mayfield Public Library, 250 N.

Fifth Street, Zionsville• Wooden Key Hallmark stores in:

Carmel West (Weston Shoppes-106th Street & Michigan Road)

Zionsville (Boone Village Shopping Center – Zionsville)

Requested items: All items should be new. Men’s Winter Wear, Men’s Jeans (waist sizes 32-36”; length 34”), Men’s Khaki pants (size 34-36), Men’s Thermal Underwear, Men’s Underwear & Undershirts, Socks, Gloves, Hats

Personal Care Items: Toothbrushes & Paste, Deodorant, Shampoo, Shaving Supplies

All retail collection sites also have a collection can at the register for donations of monetary gifts.

The project, in its sixth year, has a goal of col-lecting over $4,500 in cash and donated goods. In its five-year history, the project has collected over $11,000 in goods and cash donations.

Individuals or businesses wanting to make larger donations or submit a gift by check should contact Kappa Theta [email protected] or 372-2585. Project updates and informa-tion about the group can be found by visiting www.facebook.com/ESAKappaTheta.

Collection to benefit homeless and at-risk veterans

 [email protected]

To pay tribute to active and retired military, all 11 full-service YMCA locations in Greater Indianap-

olis will welcome veterans and their families for free on Veterans Day, Nov. 11.

Veterans simply need to show a photo ID and badge or other indication of current or past military service, and they and their families will

be able to participate in classes, swim, work out in the wellness center, and enjoy everything else the Y has to offer.

Plus, veterans who join the Y on Nov. 11, will pay no joining fee. Veterans always receive a discounted monthly membership. During de-ployment, military families receive respite child care at participating centers. For a list of the 11 full-service Y locations, visit  www.indymca.org/centers/.

11 YMCA locations free for veterans, their families on Nov. 11

18 November 8, 2014Current in Zionsvillewww.currentzionsville.com

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5540 Pebble Village Lane, Suite #300 Noblesville, IN 46062

1375 Parkway Drive, Zionsville, IN 46077 • 317.873.3000 • www.zeyecare.com

WITH SINCERE APPRECIATION WE EXPRESSOUR GRATITUDE AND PAY TRIBUTE TO OUR

U.S. ARMED FORCES VETERANS ANDCURRENT SERVICE MEN AND WOMEN

vETEraNs daY

Veterans Day by the numbersAccording

to the U.S. Dept. of Veterans Affairs, Hamilton County has 17,110 veterans as of Sept. 30. It ranks

fifth highest in the state behind Marion,

Lake, Allen and St. Joseph coun-ties. It also was an increase of 22 veterans from Sept. 30, 2013.

*Each symbol represent 40,000 armed services solldiers currently serving

Army- 508,210Navy- 326,054Air Force- 316,332Marine Corps- 187,891Coast Guard- 40,347

Total U.S. armed services soldiers currently serving

92.5% Male

7.5% Female

MalE-TO-FEMalE raTIOVietnam War149,330

Post 9/1151,945

World War II20,499 Korean War

39,290

Gulf War139,873Wars sErvEd IN

Hamilton County Veterans

State Veterans

Several local restaurants are thanking active and retired military personnel with free food on Veterans Day. To receive the free items or discounts, places require valid military ID, proof of service or for cus-tomers to be uniform. The specials listed are for Nov. 11 unless otherwise noted.• Applebee’s – From open to close, free menu

item.• Bob Evans – Free all–you-can-eat hotcakes.• Boston Market – Free whole chicken with the

purchase of a family meal.• Buca di Beppo – Free individual pasta.• Carrabba’s – Free appetizer at participating

locations Nov. 8 through 11.• Champps – Free handcrafted burger and fries

all day. Choose from a select menu. Participat-ing locations only, check to confirm.

• Cheeseburger in Paradise – Receive a compli-mentary All-American Burger with fries. Dine in only and must purchase a beverage.

• Chili’s – Free meal from a special menu. • Denny’s – Free all-you-can-eat pancakes.• Einstein Bagels – Free signature or classic

bagel and shmear, or any other topping.• Famous Dave’s – Free meals and discounts.

Offers vary by location.• Fox & Hound Tavern – Free burger.• Handel’s Homemade Ice Cream and Yogurt

– Free single-scoop ice cream cones.• Hooters – Free meal, up to $10.99 in value, with

any drink purchase. • Little Caesars – Free Crazy Bread.

• Longhorn Steakhouse – Complimentary Texas Tonion appetizer and non-alcohol beverage.

• Max & Erma’s – Free cheeseburger combo meal with dessert.

• Menchie’s Free Frozen Yogurt – Free six-ounce frozen yogurt any time of day.

• O’Charley’s – Choice of one of nine meals on the O’Charley’s “$9.99er” menu.

• Olive Garden – Free meal from a special menu.• On The Border – Free “Create Your Own Combo

menu.”• Orange Leaf Frozen Yogurt – Free cup of

froyo, up to 11 ounces.• Outback Steakhouse – Free Bloomin’ Onion

and a beverage. Plus, all military personnel get 15 percent off from Nov. 12 through Dec. 31.

• Red Lobster – Complimentary appetizer from a special menu. Proof of service required.

• Red Robin – Free tavern double burger and bottomless steak fries.

• Starbucks – Free tall brewed coffee.• Texas Roadhouse – Free special veterans

lunch menu including a beverage and sides.• TGI Fridays – Free lunch.• Tucanos Brazilian Grill – Free Churrasco meal.

Also, get 10-percent off the entire bill for veter-ans and troops who dine with their families.

• Uno’s – Free entrée or pizza with a purchase.Discounts are listed but subject

to restaurant’s participation. To read more, visit http://militarybenefits.info/veterans-day-discounts-sales-deals-free-meals.

Restaurants offer ‘thank you’ to veterans

[email protected]

Fifth Third Bank has launched its annual “Honoring Our Veterans” cam-paign dedicated to providing comfort items and necessities for injured and recovering military members. From loose-fitting clothing to cover substan-tial burns to iPods that help drown out constant ringing in the ears from a combat explosion, many recovering veterans finds themselves in need of resources oftentimes not covered by their health insurance. This year’s cam-paign will fund The American Legion’s Operation Comfort Warriors, a program dedicated to filling those gaps for vet-erans when government resources fall short. Now through Nov. 14, Fifth Third customers can purchase an “Honoring Our Veterans” star ($1 minimum dona-tion), with all the proceeds going to OCW (www.legion.org/ocw). The bank will match all donations up to $10,000. For more information, visit www.53.com/military.

Bank kicks off ‘Honoring Our Veterans’

campaign

Source: U.S. Dept. of Veteran Affairs and Dept. of Defense

19November 8, 2014Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

The American Legionand

Veterans Day 2014The American Legion - America’s Veterans Service Organization

salute our military veterans of all wars this November 11 - and every day. The Legion supports our veterans throughout the year:

3,000: The number of veterans who received bene�ts assistance at Legion-led Veterans Outreach Centers since the VA scandal broke.

$1 million: The amount raised for scholarships for children of active-duty service members who died since 9/11.

We thank you for serving America with honor, courage and commitment.

This Publication

• Estate Planning• Asset Protection• Long-Term Care Planning• Medicaid Planning• Veteran’s Aid & Attendance• Business Succession Planning

Susan Hunter

10412 Allisonville Rd., Ste. 113, Fishers, IN 46038 • (317) 863-2030

Is your family protected? Are your assets safe?Is your will current?

Join us for an educational workshop!November 18, 2014 • 6-8 p.m.

Delaware Township Government Center9090 East 131st Street, Fishers, IN 46038

Westfield site receives renovations

MEMOrIal

In observance of Veterans Day, some ser-vices will be suspended Tuesday.• Federal, state, county, and city of-

fices: Closed.• Courts: Closed.• Postal service: There is no regular

mail service or collections Tuesday.

All branches also will be closed. There will be regular service Monday and Wednesday.

• License branches: Closed.• Schools: Open.• Banks: Most closed, check your branch.• Stock markets: Open.

Holiday closings

Noblesville – Noblesville will host its cere-mony at 11 a.m. Nov. 11 at War Monument at the Hamilton County Courthouse Square in Noblesville. The ceremony will be put on by American Legion Post No. 45 and Veteran of Foreign Wars Post 6246 and will include a 21-gun salute, opening and closing prayers and speeches. Because City of Noblesville government offices will be closed for Veterans Day, parking in the city parking lots will be free Nov. 11.

Carmel – The city will host its “Home of the Brave” themed Veterans Day ceremony at noon Nov. 10 at Tarkington The-ater in the Center for the Performing Arts, 3 Center Green. Participants include Mayor Jim Brainard, The American Le-gion Department of Indiana District 6 Commander Yvonne Kraemer as keynote speaker, Carmel VFW/American Legion Honor Guard, the Carmel Elementary School Choir and the Actors Theatre of Indiana. The city-wide “Home of the Brave” poster and essay contest winners also will be recognized. Students will read their winning essays at the ceremony. The event is free to the public.

vETEraNs daY CErEMONIEs

By Robert Herrington • [email protected]

What started more than a decade ago as a temporary garden of crosses made to honor

Indiana’s fallen soldiers in the front yard of Donald and Carol Peed turned into a perma-

nently memorial at 401 N. Union St., Westfield. The Fallen Hoosier Heroes Memorial for Enduring Freedom, which was created in 2002, is now undergoing another renovation.

The memorial was started by Vietnam Veteran Command Sgt. Major Donald E. Peed after Sept. 11.

“He wanted to go to Iraq,” said his wife, Carol. “He wanted to be there if the guys needed some-body to talk to. He was told no so he came up with the idea of the crosses.”

Carol said the memorial had 66 white crosses when Donald, 67, died from a heart attack caused by the effects of Agent Orange in Sep-tember 2005.

“He was a very patriotic person,” she said. “When we put the first cross in the ground we never dreamed it would amount to what it has become.”

As a result of the harsh winters and time, Carol said the crosses began to deteriorate and the memorial committee felt it was not a fair honoring of the deceased soldiers.

“Some were starting to rot,” Carol said.“We took them down and are trying plaques

for now. It’s a lot of work,” said Bill Doss, an Air Force veteran of the Vietnam War. “The crosses made a big impact, but I feel just as much of an impact with the stones. It opens it up more.”

Doss said the future is uncertain as the me-morial committee has a vision to create a unique memorial in a larger area.

“With 206 kids we’ve run out of space. Two hundred and forty-eight have died on duty while serving … We don’t want to see any more die,” he

said. “We’d like to find ground to put it on. We’d like to keep it here in this area.”

Dennis Zavada, a U.S. Marine Corps veteran, assists with the maintenance and care of the memorial.

“We’ve had help from a variety of different people. There is a lot of good people volunteering – veterans, nonveterans, kids and the elderly,” he said.

Zavada said mementos left by family members were collected and will be returned once all renovations are finished.

The first cross placed was in memory of U.S. Marine Sgt. Jeannette L. Winters, 25, of Gary.

Ron Wilson leads a Memorial Day ceremony at Riv-erside Cemetery in Noblesville. (File photo)

vETEraNs daY

20 November 8, 2014Current in Zionsvillewww.currentzionsville.com vIEWs

the lives of many hundreds of thousands of Jews – likewise, many thousands more Poles, Catho-lics, homosexuals, and others deemed inferior or even evil. Some adhere to the adage that we must study history or we are doomed to repeat it. Perhaps they have a point. But isn’t it more likely that we must study history to predict what we are likely or even inevitable to do again so that we can guard against it. Genocide, as stun-ningly unfortunate as it is to say, it not restricted to one time or to one race. Is it possible that the human urge to destroy is every bit as strong as the desire to build? Is the ISIS tribal extermina-tion in the Middle East and the Christian slaugh-ter in Africa simply a continuation of the worst in us? Even as we mourn the past, how do we defend our future?

Q U O T E O F T H E W E E k

F r O M T H EB a C k s H O p

Commentary by Terry Anker

“And man, whose heav’n-erected face; The smiles of love adorn, – Man’s inhumanity to man; Makes countless thousands mourn!” observed famed Scottish poet Robert Burns in 1784. Man-kind has long inflicted an abundance of inhuman-ity upon itself. For centuries we humans, even as we imagine art, science, literature and civiliza-tion, seem compelled to segregate and destroy ourselves. When no logical division is apparent, we will fabricate one.

In Poland for business, I extended the trip to visit the Nazi concentration camps at Auschwitz and Birkenau. Words fail to adequately describe the jarring reality of walking the lanes and into the chambers wherein so very many innocents were murdered. It is a shameful place. But, it is an important one. Our abject ability to commit unimaginable acts is only eclipsed by our desire to forget, or even in some cases deny, that they occur. The physical reminder challenges those who would eagerly forget.

These perditions brought a tortuous end to

Hope for not-for-profits?

Terry Anker is an associate editor of Current Publishing, LLC. You may e-mail him at [email protected].

Brian Kelly, publisher, and Steve Greenberg,

general manager, are co-owners of

Current Publishing, LLC. Write them at [email protected].

We’re going to take a partial break from our weekly bashing of politicians and government waste to share with you something we see as vitally (and equally, if not more) important. You may recall the horrific tragedy that struck the O’Malia family in July, when her ex-husband killed Shannon O’Malia Hall before he turned the gun on himself. Instantly, that left her sons, Connor and Danny, 10 and 8, respectively, adrift. Maternal grandparents Danny and Rita O’Malia raced into the breach to parent their grandsons, certainly with the help of a host of others, while managing their own grief. They say time heals all wounds. For some, it simply doesn’t, but we all have an opportunity to apply a virtual salve, and here’s how: Cur-rent Publishing, 3Ds’ Pub and Café in Carmel, Dwight Lightning and the Conch City All-Stars and Main Event Sound and Lighting are band-ing together in an effort to raise money for college-education funds for the boys. Opera-tion Send Connor and Danny to College - 7 to 11 p.m. on Nov. 21 at 3Ds’ - will be a night of dancing, dining, thirst quenching and silent auctioning, all with the goal of raising a chunk of change for these innocent boys. It’s also a night when we band together to prove you win with people. Help us out, please! We need silent auction items. We need cash. We need YOU in attendance. So, please, put this impor-tant event in ink on your calendars, and bring as many friends as you’re able. For all the O’Malia family has given the northern suburban tier of Indianapolis down through the years, it’s a golden opportunity to pay forward, Join us, won’t you? For more information, write us at [email protected].

•••Now, back to bashing. The Republican Party

made a statement with huge, controlling gains on Election Day last week. This is good news, mostly because we’re banking on gridlock coming to Congress, and that means they won’t be able to spend your money or ours on yet another meaningless program.

Let’s prove youwin with people

We are masters of the unsaid words, but slaves of those we let slip out.

– Winston Churchill

B E l I E v E I T !Our nation has all sorts of arcane, nonsensi-cal laws on the books. Each week, we’ll share one with you. In Barber, North Carolina, fights between cats and dogs are prohibited.

Source: dumblaws.com

Remembering the Berlin Airlift

Commentary by Ward Degler

One of the most heroic efforts of World War II happened almost two years after the war ended. The Berlin airlift operated for only 11 months, but is credited with saving the lives of nearly 3 million people in a city devastated by the war.

When Germany surrendered, the country was divided into four occupation zones: British, United States, France and the Soviet Union. The Soviets got the eastern portion. The capital city of Berlin was likewise split into quarters. Again, the Soviets got the eastern half.

The problem with Berlin was, it was 100 miles deep into the center of Soviet East Ger-many. Soviet Premier Josef Stalin boasted that he would drive out the western forces and bring the city under communist rule.

At the end of the war, Berlin was a city in ruins. Allied bombing had leveled just about everything. The population, which was 4.3 mil-lion before the war, was reduced to 2.8 million by the end of it.

And the people needed everything. The only supply lines came from the west by air, rail, truck and river barge, and at any given time the city had no more than a month’s supply of anything.

And on June 24, 1948 the Soviets shut down all land supply lines and blockaded the city. Two days later the United States and Britain launched the Berlin Airlift.

The needs were overwhelming. To survive, the city needed a daily minimum supply of 646 tons of flour, 125 tons of cereal, 109 tons of meat and fish, 180 tons of sugar, nearly 300 tons of dehydrated potatoes and vegetables, 19 tons of powdered milk, three tons of yeast for baking, and 38 tons of salt. Added to that was nearly 3,500 tons of coal and gasoline. Altogether, some 5,000 tons of supplies had to be flown into Berlin every day.

Planes arrived every three minutes round the clock, seven days a week.

The Soviets reluctantly acknowledged the airlift’s success, and lifted the blockade in May 1949. In less than a year 270,000 flights deliv-ered 2 million tons of goods to the city.

A sidebar to the airlift came from an American pilot named Gail Halvorsen. As he approached the airfield, he noticed German children outside the fence. To give them a treat, he started dropping chocolate to them by para-chutes made from handkerchiefs. It caught on and soon all the planes were dropping candy.

An unofficial estimate added a ton of choco-late to the airlift totals.

Ward Degler lives in Zionsville

with his wife and dog. He is author of “The Dark Ages of My Youth ... and Times More Recent.”You may contact him at [email protected].

21November 8, 2014Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

Huntington is accredited by Middle statesAssocation of Colleges and Schools (MSA).

2440 E. 146th Street Carmel, IN 46033(Behind Regal Cinemas)

With a lot of hard work and a little help from Huntington Learning Center, Emily achieved a perfect 36. Less than 1% of all students in the country will achieve a 36 this year.

CONGRATULATIONS, EMILY!ON YOUR PERFECT 36 ON THE ACT!

Join us for the 2014 Artisians’ FareSaturday, November 22nd

10 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Featuring Indiana’s Premier Food & Visual Artists

Preview Partyfeaturing

Live Jazz | Hors D’oeuvresChampagne Bar, Wine & Craft Beers

Please join us for a festive eveningfor food lovers bene�ting the

SullivanMunce Cultural Center.Taste, enjoy and shop for these

specialty items for yourself and thoseon your holiday gift list.

Friday, November 21st6 p.m. to 9 p.m.

SullivanMunce Cultural Center225 West Hawthorne Street

Zionsville, Indiana

$50 per person | $225 Artisan Sponsorship(sponsorship includes 2 tickets to

Preview Party & Saturday admission)

Call for tickets: 317-873-4900

Shop Saturday, too�e Artisans’ Fare will be open

10 a.m. - 3 p.m. onSaturday, November 22nd.

Admission is $5 for adults andyouth, ages 12 and over;

Preview Party ticket-holderswill be admitted free.

For advance-sale tickets orto RSVP for the Preview Party:

www.sullivanmunce.org

Sponsored by:

Wulber CPAs | John & Roberta MartinThe National Bank of Indianapolis

Boone County Convention & Visitors BureauDavid Rausch Studio | Jan-Pro

Steve & Liz Hoover

No time for mid-life crisisCommentary by Danielle WIlson

I think I’m having a mid-life crisis and I’m only partially kidding. I’m constantly feeling discon-

tented at work and at home, and I can’t seem to stop the anxiety over things that are completing

out of my control. World events, mean people, physical signs of aging . . . it all has me thinking that a sabbatical in Saint Barts is just the ticket.

My husband Doo went through one last year. He started working out excessively, talked of buy-ing a convertible Porsche, and seriously contem-plated how to make bank and retire early. He was engaged in parenting only partially, and even then complained of the carpools and the expense and the general time commitment of raising four chil-dren. His “manopause” lasted about six months, and I’m thrilled to report he is completely back to his more realistic and happy self.

Now it’s my turn. The problem is, a mom’s col-lapse is far worse than a dad’s. I’m the default parent, the go-to adult who helps with homework and makes lunches and signs permissions slips and coordinates transportation and cleans toilets and settles arguments and schedules appoint-ments and creates magical birthday parties. When I’m in a bad mood, which of late seems to me the norm, “stuff” doesn’t get done, and consequently, everyone’s world turns upside-down. Then my mommy guilt kicks in, and the cycle begins again.

Exacerbating the situation, my family is com-

Danielle Wilson is a contributing columnist. You may e-mail her at [email protected].

pletely disregarding my “buttons,” though they resemble bright orange traffic barrels. They truly don’t seem to care that the house is a disaster, that despite my best efforts I can’t improve my 5K time, or that my profession no longer carries the same joy it once did. Jeeze! When did I turn into Danny Downer?

I am trying. I’ve come to terms with the read-ing glasses that taunt me from my bedside table and the fact that my first floor will never appear in Architectural Digest. I recognize that it’s not too late for a career change, and that it’s within my power to delegate many of my responsibili-ties, both domestic and professional, to lift some of the weight I carry. And I’ve become much better at setting priorities, with the top three pertaining to actual humans rather than tasks. Still, lately I’ve definitely been in a funk.

Alas, one of my daughters is smirking at me, playing a haunting tune on her tiny air violin to signal that this descent into self-pitydom must end. Now. But I do enjoy a good Woe-Is-Me party! Wallowing in despair always makes me feel a tad bit better. Or maybe that’s the pinot finally kick-ing in. Regardless, thanks for “listening.” I might not need that tropical escape after all! Peace out.

HUMOr

vIEWs

22 November 8, 2014Current in Zionsvillewww.currentzionsville.com

November 8, 2014 • currentnightandday.com

22

“Fiddler on the Roof” – The Great American Songbook Foundation and Heartland Film

partner to present the third annual Great American Song-book Film Series. The next

film is “Fiddler on the Roof” at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 14. The series will bring classic award-win-ning movies to the big screen on the stage of the Palladium. In addition to the movie, guests will have the opportunity to explore music and memorabilia from the Songbook Foundation archives and gallery exhibit. Cost is $10. For more information, visit www.thecenterfortheperformingarts.org.

Conner Prairie at Dawn – Photographers, artists and birdwatchers have a chance to

get a beautiful early-morn-ing view of Conner Prairie, 13400 Allisonville Rd., from

7 to 10 a.m. Nov. 15. The event provides a unique opportunity to see the early morning scenery at Conner Prairie. Cost is $10 for dawn event only; $15 for all-day pass; $9 for members. For more information, call 776-6006 or visit www.connerprairie.org.

Hamilton Town Center Holiday Festival – Kick off the holiday season with Hamilton

Town Center from 1 to 9 p.m. Nov. 15. Enjoy two stages

of entertainment with live bands, strolling entertainment and food vendors for a fun-filled day of holiday cheer. The event also in-cludes Santa’s arrival, tree lighting and the grand finale Fireworks show. Guests can register to win prizes. For more information, call 214-6956 or visit www.facebook.com/HamiltonTownCtr.

Preschool gathering – Bring the children to Cool Creek Park, 2000 E. 151st St., to get to

know nature. Parents stay with their children and explore alongside them. After circle time

and a craft, the group will head outside rain or shine, so dress for the weather. The first theme is “Fall Harvest for Animals.” Times are 10:30 a.m. Nov. 12 and 13. To pre-register, call 774-2500 or e-mail [email protected].

“God of Carnage” – Off-Main Street will present “God of Carnage” at 8 p.m. Nov. 8,

14 and 15 and 2:30 p.m. Nov. 9 at Zionsville Town Hall, 1100 W. Oak

St. After their 11-year-old boys get in a fight on the playground, two sets of Brooklyn parents meet to put the matter to rest. After a polite beginning to the evening, the drinks begin to flow and the parents discov-er differences of their own in this hilarious black comedy. Cost is $12. For more informa-tion, visit http://offmainstreetplayers.org.

CarMEl

FIsHErs

NOBlEsvIllE

WEsTFIEld

zIONsvIllE

T H I s W E E kYoung Zionsville actress takes on ‘Millie’

THEaTEr

By Mark Ambrogi • [email protected]

Grace Tucker had her first taste of acting in a Zionsville Christian Church play at age 6. She

hasn’t had her fill yet.“I played one of the angels

during the Christmas extrava-ganzas,” Tucker said. “I remember I was doing cartwheels on the stage. I really loved all the attention from our congregation.”

From there, Tucker did community productions and then started musicals. Now 13, the Zionsville Middle School eighth-grader has the title role in the Christian Youth Theater’s junior version of “Thoroughly Modern Millie,” showing Nov. 14-16 at Westfield High School.

Performances will be at 7 p.m. Nov. 14 and 15 with 2 p.m. matinees on Nov. 15 and 16.

“I love the show because it’s in such an awe-some era,” Tucker said. “I love the 1920s and flapper costumes. It’s just one of my favorite decades and also the music is very catchy.”

Tucker watched the “Thoroughly Modern Millie” movie with Julie Andrews in the title role. She also watched videos of Sutton Foster’s 2002 Tony Award-winning performances in the Broad-way remake.

“That gave me a lot of inspiration for creating my version of Millie,” Tucker said.

As a bonus, there is lots of tap dancing in the

show, which Tucker has done for a couple years.“So that’s been a lot of fun,” Tucker said.

“I’ve been in a few plays but musicals are my favorite.”

Tucker, a member of Christian Youth Theater for three years, also portrayed “Miss Hannigan” in her middle school’s production of “Annie” as a seventh-grader.

Coincidentally, her middle school is putting on “Thoroughly Modern Millie” in the spring. Tucker said she likely will audition or perhaps be part of the technical stage crew.

Ryan Shelton, a Noblesville resident, is direct-ing CYT’s production of “Thoroughly Modern Millie.”

“Grace is very talented. She can sing, dance and act. This is an extremely talented group of young people,” Shelton said. “We don’t practice through the week. But they always know all their lines. If we get a dance, they keep practic-ing until they know it. They work really hard.”

Shelton said the main cast members include Tucker as Millie Dillmount; Michael Krauter, Jimmy Smith; Kaycee Beck, Mrs. Meers; Brooke Bucher, Dorothy Brown; Lexi Esterle, Miss Flannery; Tom Schrock, Trevor Graydon; Jacob Wenthe, Ching Ho; Mary Kate Temple, Bun Foo; Sophia Petts, Muffy, and Jarrett Yates, Astor.

Grace Tucker has the lead in “Thoroughly Modern Millie.” (Submitted photo by One Eyed Jack Studios)

School of Rock students on tour

CONCErT

[email protected]

For two-and-a-half years, since their opening, School of Rock Carmel has given local kids the op-

portunity to perform live on stage in front of hundreds of adoring fans around the greater India-

napolis area; this month, they’re furthering the dream of young musicians by touring to Cleveland, Ohio to perform with two other School of Rock locations at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

 School of Rock’s focus is on community as well as music, both within their local walls as well as within the larger School of Rock network of over 140 schools worldwide. Tours that span different cities and states are exciting and unique opportu-nities for student musicians, but are part of what makes School of Rock unique. School of Rock Car-mel students have traveled to Milwaukee twice to perform at Summerfest, the largest music festival in the world, and the Cleveland School of Rock’s house band performed with Carmel students in July at Wolfies Grill in Carmel.

“This is an opportunity for these students to take their music on the road, to meet and per-form with School of Rock students from different cities, to get experience touring, and to get a

chance to perform at a premier venue completely dedicated to recognizing the world’s best musi-cal acts and performers,” said the Carmel School of Rock’s general manager Elyse Causey.

 Students performing on this tour from Car-mel are members of the House Band, Carmel’s auditioned student band made up of some of the best student musicians and role models at

School of Rock Carmel. Seven of these House Band members will be performing at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nov. 15; they will trade stage time with members from the House Bands from School of Rock Mason (Cincinnati-area school) and the Schools of Rock Strongsville, Rocky River and Highland Heights (Cleveland-area schools).

Members of the Carmel House Band perform at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway earlier this year. (Sub-mitted photo)

23November 8, 2014Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

Fall Exhibit: Autumn Attractions •CoolCreekParkandNatureCenter presents fall exhibits and

showcases the beauty of the season. Learn about the amazing journey of monarchs, how the leaves change colors and participate in scavenger hunts. •2000E.151stSt.,Carmel•Todayfrom10a.m.to5p.m.•Free.•774-2500•www.myhamiltoncountyp-arks.com

Santa’s Mailbox •Twospecialmailboxes are set up in Fishers to make sure kids’ Christmas lists

make it to the North Pole. Santa’s mailboxes are at the Parks & Rec office and at Town Hall. Kids of all ages up to fourth grade who drop letters in these mailboxes will get a reply from Santa himself, so make sure the letters include a self-addressed stampedenvelope.•FishersParks&RecOffice,11565 Brooks School Rd., Fishers, and Town Hall, MunicipalDr.,Fishers•TodaythroughDec.15•Free•595-3150•www.fishers.in.us

GEORGE WINSTON THURS., NOV. 20 AT 7:30PM THE PALLADIUM

CELTIC THUNDER SYMPHONY TOUR WEDS., NOV. 26 AT 7:30PM THE PALLADIUM

TAFT JAZZ & BLUES SERIES

BIG BAND HOLIDAYS: JAZZ AT LINCOLN CENTER ORCHESTRA with WYNTON MARSALIS and SPECIAL GUEST CÉCILE MCLORIN SALVANT SUN., NOV. 30 AT 7:30PM THE PALLADIUM

DAVE KOZ & FRIENDS CHRISTMAS TOUR 2014 FRIDAY, DEC. 5 AT 8PM THE PALLADIUM

DREWRY SIMMONS VORNEHM POP & ROCK SHOWS

BIG BAD VOODOO DADDY THURS., DEC. 11 AT 7:30PM THE PALLADIUM

For tickets, call 317.843.3800 or visit TheCenterPresents.org

SPEND YOUR HOLIDAY SEASON AT THE CENTER!

Join the e-club for special holiday offers! Visit the website for full schedule.

NIgHT & daYStudio Artist Showcase•The artists who have stu-dios at Nickel Plate Arts

will display their works for the public and some pieceswillbeavailableforpurchase.•107S.8thSt.,Noblesville•Todayfromnoonto5p.m.;Nov.13and 14 from noon to 5 p.m.; Nov. 15 from 10 a.m. to 5p.m.•Freeadmission.•452-3690•www.nickel-platearts.org

Beef & Boards Presents: “Fiddler on the Roof”•This year marks the 50th anniversary of the famed Fiddler on the Roof musical. This classic show tells the story of holding on to traditions in a changing world.•9301MichiganRd.,Indianapolis•Todayat1 and 8 p.m.; Nov. 13, 14 and 15 at 8 p.m., Nov. 16 at 1:30and7p.m.•Ticketsstartat$38.50.•872-9664•http://beefandboards.com

sUNdaY

MONdaY

TUEsdaY

WEdNEsdaY

THUrsdaY

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Follow the North Star•ConnerPrairie’s nationally acclaimed and award-winning program

reenacts the experiences of fugitive slaves hop-ing to find freedom. Learn about the perils of the journey and about the generosity of the families who helped shelter the slaves along the way. This powerful program also applies to modern day is-sueslikehumantraffickingandbullying.•ConnerPrairie Interactive History Park, 13400 Allisonville Rd.,Fishers•Tonightfrom6:30–8:30p.m.;Nov14and 15 from 6:30 – 8:30 p.m. Times are staggered every15minutesandprogramlasts90minutes•Reservationsrequired•$20/nonmember,$17/mem-bers•776-6006•www.connerprairie.org Actors Theatre of Indiana Presents: “Pete ‘N’ Keely” •Relivethevarietyshowsofthe‘60sascharacters Pete and Keely perform as America’s Swingin’Sweethearts.•TheCenterforthePerform-ingArts,1CenterGreen,Carmel•Tonightat7:30p.m.; Nov. 14 at 7:30 p.m.; Nov. 15 at 8 p.m.; Nov. 16 at 2p.m.•Adulttickets$40,discountsforseniorsandstudents.•843-3800•www.thecenterforhteper-formingarts.com

Conner Prairie at Dawn•Take advantage of this unique opportunity to witness the

beautiful early morning scenery at Conner Prairie. Photographers, artists, birdwatchers and more are welcome.•13400AllisonvilleRd.,Fishers•Todayfrom7–10a.m.•$10fordawneventonly;$15foralldaypass;$9formembers.•776-6006.•www.connerprairie.org

HCAA’s 64th Annual Fall Art Show & Sale •TheHamilton County Artists Association’s annual show takes place at the Noblesville Library. Stop by for a chance to see and purchase the works from tal-entedlocalartists.•OneLibraryPlaza,Noblesville•Openduringnormallibraryhoursthroughtoday.•Freeadmission.•773-5197•www.hcaa-in.org Bingo Bonanza •BingocomestotheMononCom-munity Center & Waterpark at Central Park. Family and friends can gather for fun bingo games plus pizzaandprizes.•1235CentralParkDr.,Carmel•Tonightfrom6-8p.m.•Tickets$5.•848-7275

Hamilton Town Center Holiday Festival •Kickoff the holidays with music, entertainment, food vendors,Santa’sarrivalandfireworks.•13901TowneCenterBlvd.,Noblesville•Todayfrom1–9p.m.•Free•214-6956.•www.facebook.com/hamiltontowncenter

Fall Harvest Beer Tasting Dinner•ThePrairieGuest House serves up a five-course fall harvest mealwithbeerpairingsfromlocalbreweries.•13805AllisonvilleRd.,Fishers•Tonightat6p.m.•$50perperson•515-7414.•www.smallpotatoesin-dy.com

Beef & Boards Theatre for Kids Presents: “Sleeping Beauty”•Theclassic fairy tale comes to life on

stage in a show especially for kids. Doors open 30 minutes prior to show and ticket price includes juiceplusasnack•9301MichiganRd.,Indianapolis•Todayat10a.m.;Nov.15at10a.m.and1and3:30p.m.•Tickets$15.50.•872-9664•http://beefand-boards.com

Zionsville’s Community Theatre Presents “God of Carnage” •TheOff-MainSt.Playersperform“Godof Carnage” at the Zionsville Town Hall. This award-winning play features two sets of parents who come together to resolve their 11-year-old son’s fights. This black comedy features strong language andisappropriateforadults.•Tonightat8p.m.;Nov.15at8p.m.•Ticketsare$12,seewebsitefordetails.•1100W.OakSt.,Zionsville•595-3700•off-mainstreetplayers.org

The Great American Songbook Film Series Pres-ents: “Fiddler on the Roof”•ThePalladiumhostsa viewing of this classic film that will be shown on ascreenonthestageoftheconcerthall.•1CenterGreen,Carmel•7:30p.m.tonight•Tickets$10•843-3800•www.thecenterfortheperformingarts.org

The Center Presents: Tania Perez-Salas Compania De Danza •TheTarkingtonhostsavisuallystun-ning show from Mexico’s premier choreographer. Ticket price includes Q&A with the artistic director anddancersaftertheshow.•3CenterGreen,Car-mel•Tonightat8p.m.•Ticketsstartat$15.•www.thecenterfortheperformingarts.com

saTUrdaY

Mass on Main Holiday Pop Up Shop in Carmel •AgroupofIndy’sMass Ave. retailers are creating

shopping opportunities in Carmel. Stop by to see displays by Silver in the City, Crimson Tate, Nurture Baby and Handmade Promenade; these special shopswillbeopenthroughDec.31.•110W.MainSt.,Suite130,Carmel•Todayfrom11a.m.to5p.m.andeveryWed.–Sat.from11a.m.to8p.m.•Free•face-book.com/massonmain

24 November 8, 2014Current in Zionsvillewww.currentzionsville.com

One of Indiana’s favorite holiday traditions!Journey by train to the North Pole.Visit Santa. Enjoy a story and a treaton the way. Hurry! Seats sell quickly.

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NIgHT & daY

‘Pete ‘n’ Keely’: a must for this month

THEaTEr

Commentary by Jillian Albrecht

Seasonal affective disorder starts to affect all of us this time of year. To combat our SAD symp-

toms, we can use spe-cial lights, take vitamin D, or move to a tropical

island. However, I think it’s at least worth a try to take in a fabulous musical comedy before I start shopping for Ber-muda shorts. I’ll have the opportunity to do just that this month in The Studio Theater at The Center of the Performing Arts when “Pete ‘n’ Keely” opens.

The show centers on Pete and Keely reuniting for a television special that’s meant to capitalize on their former success as a singing duo. The only possible issue: the two haven’t said a word to each other since their explosive break-up five years ago. Will they fall in love all over again, or will they end up on tabloid covers in handcuffs? Either way, the show must go on, and you’ll have

to come to the show to see how it all works out.The production is brought to us by Actors

Theatre of Indiana, and is underwritten by Bose McKinney & Evans, LLP. Judy Fitzgerald, who also

stars as ATI Co-founder and Associate Artistic Director, and Michael Ehlers will play the leads in this variety-show-inspired musical. Matt the Miller’s Tavern will be sponsoring the Sunday Talkback, titled “Behind the Curtain” after the 2 p.m. performance on Nov. 16.

Tickets are available through the website: actorstheatreofindiana.org, or

by phone at 843-3800. In addition to supporting the arts, come support your mood.

“It’s hysterical! The music is fantastic. I hate to keep saying it, but it’s just fun!” Fitzgerald said.

If you remember loving Lucy and Desi, Sonny and Cher, or “The Carol Burnett Show” you’ll be in for a nostalgic treat. If not, you can fall in love with the music, the jokes, and the comaraderie of that era in entertainment for the first time.

Fitzgerald

Performers Michael Ehlers, Judy Fitzgerald, Brent E. Marty, and their band practice. (Submitted photo)

25November 8, 2014Current in Zionsville

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NIgHT & daY

Your weekly serving of TABLES

The Scoop: Opened in 2003, Matteo’s Ristorante Italiano is a classy yet relaxed little Italy on the Noblesville Square. They have been dishing out authentic and Americanize Italian food since. Chef Matteo DiRosa was born and raised in Sarleno, Italy and owns the restaurant with his wife, Emily. The atmosphere is romantic with a high tin ceiling, chandeliers and warm orange walls.Type of Food: Authentic ItalianAverage Price: Lunch prices range from $8 to $19. Dinner prices range from $14 to $35.Food Recommendation: The Tortellini Matteo’s, a cheese stuffed tortellini in a cream sauce with ham, mushrooms, onion

and parmesan cheese.Reservations: Recommended for Friday and Saturday evenings.Hours: Lunch – 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through Friday. Dinner – 5 to 10:30 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 3 to 9 p.m. Sunday.Address: 40 N. Ninth St., Noblesville.Phone: 774-9771

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26 November 8, 2014Current in Zionsvillewww.currentzionsville.com

presents

For tickets: 317.843.3800 or actorstheatreo�ndiana.orgNovember 7 - 23, 2014

SHOW UNDERWRITER

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NIgHT & daY

IWS summons heroes for Nov. 15 show

CONCErT

By Jay Harvey • [email protected]

The task of building a thematically cohesive program is all part of the musical adventure

Charles P. Conrad enjoys as di-rector of the Indiana Wind Sym-phony. Before a note is sounded,

public performances by the all-volunteer concert band are designed to help sell themselves.

“We’re always thinking what would be a good theme and what would work musically,” Conrad said in a phone interview. “Not every piece has to fit the theme, and some are tangential to it. If you try too hard, all of a sudden a program doesn’t work.” He’s been crafting themes and preparing music for the ensemble’s concerts since founding it in 1997.

“Summon the Heroes,” the concert Conrad will conduct at the Palladium on Nov. 15, is built around a piece of the same title that film compos-er John Williams wrote for the U.S. Marine Band. It was conceived for the centennial of modern Olym-pic Games in Atlanta. The 1996 work was recently released for general performance, so Conrad snatched it up for the Indiana Wind Symphony.

Different kinds of heroes are part of this con-cert’s focus. Mark Camphouse’s “Movement for Rosa” honors Rosa Parks, whose refusal to move to the back of the bus in 1955 started one of the triggering actions of the civil rights movement, the Montgomery Bus Boycott. The composer

conducted the IWS in a performance of the work about 10 years ago.

Great music for orchestra has been tran-scribed for band, and one such piece in particular fits this month’s theme. Beethoven’s “Egmont” Overture “works extremely well in band tran-scriptions,” Conrad said. “The themes are in the winds and the piece is based on melodies that don’t get too hard.” The work is the most fre-quently performed piece of incidental music the German composer wrote to accompany a play about a 16th–century Dutch nobleman who op-posed Spanish repression of his homeland.

The heroic theme is also carried out by the “Colonel Bogey March,” which became familiar to a wide public as whistled by British soldier-cap-tives in the 1957 World War II movie “The Bridge on the River Kwai.”

To read an extended version of this preview, visit currentnightandday.com

Who: Indiana Wind Symphony conducted by Charles Conrad, with piano soloist Kelleen Strutz.When: 7:30 p.m. Nov. 15.Where: Palladium, the Center for the Perform-ing Arts.Tickets: $20, $27, $40 ($5, students); www.thecenterfortheperformingarts.org

‘sUMMON THE HErOEs’

[email protected]

Blues artists from the Greater Indianapolis area will be featured in a casual, blues-style

concert from 6 to 8 p.m. on Nov. 8 at The Warehouse, 254 1st Avenue SW, Carmel.

The evening’s musical acts include the Tommy Baldwin Trio, featuring up-and-coming blues gui-tar sensation Tommy Baldwin with songs from his latest album. Also on the must-see list will be renowned Indianapolis bluesman Benito DiBartoli, known for his solo work, performances with The Black Voodoo, and recent position as touring guitarist for Eddie Money.

This event welcomes all ages and is open to the public, with a “pay-what-you-want” cover charge, to allow audience members to stay for as much music as they like, while also having

time to see their favorite local galleries during the Second Saturday Gallery Walk in the Carmel Arts & Design District. The bar will be open for guests 21 years of age and older.

“We are excited to continue in our mission of bringing great live music acts to our unique venue,” said Heather Ramsey Clark, who co-owns The Warehouse with her husband, Blair Clark. “In our performances so far, audiences are already rav-ing about the sound quality in the room, as well as the ‘vibe’ in the whole place. It’s just a blast to participate in our shows, both for performers and audience members (as well as the staff, we love live music!), and we know the folks who make the quick trip down 1st Avenue to visit us will be in for another incredible musical treat on Nov. 8.”

For more information about The Warehouse, and for bookings and rental information, visit liveforthemusic.com.

Art, harmony and blues

From left: Elijah Pollard, Tommy Baldwin and Gali-leo Asher are part of the Tommy Bald-win Trio who will perform tonight in Carmel. (Submitted photo)

MUsIC

27November 8, 2014Current in Zionsville

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For years, Elisabeth Hasselbeck, the television host and former “Survivor” contestant, couldn’t

figure out what made her sick with unrelenting bloating, cramps and diarrhea.

Then while starving as a contestant on “Survi-vor,” her symptoms vanished. The culprit, it turns out, was celiac disease, an abnormal reaction to gluten.

Ninety-five percent of celiac sufferers go undiagnosed or misdiagnosed, according to the National Foundation for Celiac Awareness. CD is a genetic autoimmune response to gluten, a protein found in wheat, barley and rye, among other grains, that damages the small intestine and hinders food absorption. Left untreated, CD can trigger complications ranging from infertility to osteoporosis and small intestine lymphoma, among others.

Symptoms vary widely, says Dr. Jianmin Tian, a gastroenterologist with St.Vincent Medical Group. Patients may experience recurring abdominal pain, diarrhea, anemia, and delayed development in children. Infertility, joint pain, skin rash and fatigue also plague some patients, who tend to fall into four categories:

Gut check: Is it celiac disease?• Classic: Characterized by classic symp-

toms like diarrhea, malabsorption, weight loss, and abdominal discomfort.

• Atypical: May have minor intestinal symp-toms, but may also have anemia, dental enamel defects, osteoporosis, arthritis, increased liver enzyme levels, neurological symptoms or infertility.

• Silent: Symptom-free, but abnormalities show up in blood test and small intestine biopsy.

• Latent: Also symptom-free, but only detect-able in blood tests.

“Unfortunately, classic cases are the tip of the iceberg,” Tian said. Many cases are difficult to diagnose, partly because symptoms mimic other conditions, such as irritable bowel syndrome. Type 1 diabetics and people with a first-degree relative with CD are at higher risk. Otherwise, the general population has approximately a one-in-140 chance of developing CD.

Once diagnosed, a lifelong gluten-free diet is the only treatment. The Celiac Disease Founda-tion (www.celiac.org) has more information. Armed with knowledge, celiacs can heal their problem and enjoy a vibrant, symptom-free life.

For more information, contact St.Vincent Gas-troenterology at 582-8931.

WEllNEss

Achievement - Community Health Network becomes the first healthcare organization in the nation for each of the five hospital locations providing qualified cancer services to be certified by MD Anderson Can-cer Network. To read more visit currentzionsville.com

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28 November 8, 2014Current in Zionsvillewww.currentzionsville.com

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Golf cart showroom now open

Pit Pro Custom Carts is at 9850 N. Michigan Rd. in Carmel. (Submitted photo)

NEW BIz

By Sophie Pappas • [email protected]

The owners of Pit Pro Custom Carts are hop-ing Carmel and Zionsville residents ‘rev’ their

engines and head over to their new business at 9850 N. Michi-gan Rd.

“Pit Pro Custom Carts has a 15-year history of building specialty golf carts for the racing com-munity” said Mike Nelson, who owns Pit Pro with his wife Pau Nelson. “With our new showroom we have the vision of providing high quality golf carts and neighborhood vehicles featuring the most iconic brands in motorsports. We are the only licensed golf cart dealer of Ford Motor Company and Shelby American in the state of Indiana.”

At Pit Pro customers can rent or purchase golf carts for community events, school events, sporting events, weddings, and parades.

More and more towns are making golf carts street legal and residential communities are now using them as an alternate way of transportation.

“We have been residents of Zionsville for a few years now, so we love our new location just down the road between Zionsville and Carmel” said Mike, “We build everything from a 1929 Ford Street Rod and a Shelby 427 Cobra, to a 2014 Ford Shelby Mustang GT500.”

Pau, who is a native of Mexico City, Mexico, is a Spanish teacher at Traders Point Christian

Academy, said she is excited for this new busi-ness venture.

“My husband has owned businesses before, but this is a very great opportunity,” she said.

Pit Pro is hosting its grand opening all day to-day. For more information visit www.pitpro.com.

29November 8, 2014Current in Zionsville

www.currentzionsville.com

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lIFEsTYlE

Commentary by Jordan Fischer

Question: “I was corrected the other day at the office when I used the word ‘snuck.’ My co-

worker insists that the correct past tense of ‘sneak’ is ‘sneaked’ – but

that sounds so weird to me. Would you really say, ‘I sneaked out of the house to see a movie?’ Can you settle this debate for us?”

Answer: I’m afraid you’ve stumbled into one of the great grammar debates of our time – one that pits us against our fine British friends across the pond.

Right out the gate, I will say this: “Sneaked” is the formal, standard and “most correct” past tense of “sneak.” I don’t have any Ian Fleming novels lying around, but if I did, I would bet the word “snuck” doesn’t appear on a single page.

That is, unless Mr. Fleming’s works go through an American copy editor these days.

The Oxford Dictionaries describe the origins of “snuck” as dialectical (U.S.) and non-standard.

Merriam-Webster – the American company, mind you – takes a much harsher tone, saying that “snuck” first appeared as a “dialectical and prob-ably uneducated form.” Ouch.

Both Oxford and Merriam-Webster go on to recognize that, however inauspicious its begin-nings, “snuck” has gone mainstream. “’Snuck’ has risen to the status of standard and to approxi-mate equality with ‘sneaked,’” Merriam-Webster says. Oxford notes that there is now evidence of “snuck” being used by British speakers as well.

At the end of the day, I would probably lose my unofficial Grammar Guy badge if I did not reaffirm “sneaked” as the standard past tense of “sneak.” That being said, don’t be afraid to use “snuck” in less formal contexts and with our nation’s trademark stubborn pride.

Sneaking into the language

graMMar gUY

Jordan Fischer is a contributing columnist for Current Publishing. To ask Jordan a grammar question, write him at [email protected].

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lIFEsTYlE

Commentary by Don Knebel

The Cathedral of Notre Dame is perhaps the most famous church in the world. Its current con-

figuration has links to an ancient vision and a famous novel.

In 1160 the Bishop of Paris want-ed a cathedral befitting the most populous city in Europe. For the location of his new cathedral he selected the Île de la Cité, an island in the Seine, previously home to a temple to Jupiter and an early church. Pope Alexander III laid the foundation stone in 1163 and workers began constructing the east end, surrounding the altar, so Mass could be said during construction of the remaining sec-tions. As the eastern walls designed to accommo-date large altar windows rose higher, they began to flex outwardly. The solution included buttresses extending from upper points on the walls to the ground, an idea suggested by the vision of a re-stored Temple reported in the Book of Ezekiel but not employed previously.

When the cathedral was finally completed in 1345, it was 420 feet long and had massive twin towers, each 230 feet tall. Colorfully painted gar-goyles directed rainwater away from the walls. Notre Dame’s flying buttresses, pointed arches, and rose windows became the model for sub-

Notre Dame: Famous supporters sequent French cathedrals, a style Renaissance writers pejoratively labeled “Gothic.”

During the French Revolution, opponents of the Catholic Church obliterated visible symbols of Christianity and converted Notre Dame into a “Temple of Reason.” Guillotine-inspired revolution-aries beheaded statues of Biblical kings of Judah, mistaking them for despised French kings. In 1801, Notre Dame was again usable as a church but was in a serious state of disrepair. Victor Hugo wrote “The Hunchback of Notre Dame” in 1830 to call attention to the value of Gothic architecture and the urgency of rescuing the cathedral. The popular novel spurred a controversial 20-year restoration that added a spire but left the famous gargoyles unpainted.

Notre Dame is the most popular attraction in Paris, welcoming twice as many visitors as the Eiffel Tower. Far fewer people visit the National Museum of the Middle Ages, where the stone heads of the cathedral’s decapitated kings, redis-covered in 1977, are on display.

TravEl

Don Knebel is a local resident who works for Barnes & Thornburg LLP. For the full column visit donknebel.com. You may contact him at [email protected].

West End of Notre Dame from Seine River Bridge. (Photo by Don Knebel)

31November 8, 2014Current in Zionsville

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INsIdE & OUT

Commentary by Larry Greene

EXISTING KITCHEN: Located in the Bay Hill subdivision in Carmel, these homeowners were

feeling cramped in their 20-year-old kitchen. “Not only did the kitchen not fit our personal style,

it also lacked storage space and did not provide enough seating.” The existing cabinets were still in good shape, so the owners decided to keep them.

CABINET MODIFICATIONS: “We desperately needed a larger fridge; however, the existing cabinets were custom built around the old fridge.” To accommodate the larger French door style refrigerator, the existing cabinetry was modified. The cabinets and double ovens that originally sat to the left of the fridge were re-located. A custom 12-inch pull out cabinet was installed adding dedicated storage space for spices and cooking oils. Moldings and new hard-ware was installed for a custom look. The origi-nal white cabinets were then painted a creamy white to add warmth.

EXPANDED ISLAND: To give the homeown-ers additional countertop space and seating, the original u-shaped island and bulkhead were removed and replaced with a new island stretch-ing almost 10 feet in length. The island was constructed using semi-custom cabinetry in a contrasting chocolate finish including two deco-

Cabinet modifications transform a kitchen

BlUEprINT FOrIMprOvEMENT

Larry Greene is the owner of Case Design/Remodeling Indy, a full-service design/build remodeling firm serving Boone, Hamilton, and Marion counties. Contact him at 846-2600 or [email protected]. Visit caseindy.com for more info.

rative pendants in a bronze finish.GRANITE & BACKSPASH: Neutral “Bianco An-

tico” granite countertops and “Legno Scuro Petite Strips” tile was selected for the backsplash to pair with the two-toned cabinetry.

BEVERAGE STATION: “Being entertainers, it was important to have a dedicated area for guests to grab drinks without interrupting the cook or making an inconvenient walk to the garage.” To accomplish this goal, the previous family room off the kitchen was converted into

RESULT: : “Our favorite part is the beverage station. It creates a separate adult entertainment area and also gives us more storage space for large serving platters and glassware that we didn’t have before the remodel.”

a beverage station. The chocolate finish of the cabinetry and matching granite countertops give the beverage station a consistent look with the kitchen island.

32 November 8, 2014Current in Zionsvillewww.currentzionsville.com lIFEsTYlE

Across1. Type of school, like Brebeuf5. Colts kicker Vinatieri9. Suspend an Indiana attorney from practicing14. Completely demolish15. Children’s Museum building block16. Wear away a White River bank17. Give off light, like an IU Health laser18. Mimicked19. Indy 500 sound20. Pacers supporter21. UIndy sheepskin holder22. Finish Line shoe part23. Half of Purdue’s football stadium

name24. Big bird at the Indianapolis Zoo25. Profoundly knowledgeable29. Like a 100-level class at Butler31. Go back and forth in deciding33. Resembling some scientists34. Go downhill at Paoli Peaks36. Hogheads BBQ offering37. Spellbound at an IUPUI lecture38. College football rivalry that began in 1890 (3 wds.)42. Drawn tight43. Chase Bank sawbuck44. Westfield Farmers Market corn unit

45. ___ and outs46. Long-tailed parrot48. Beauty’s mate52. Relapse54. Apiece, at a Fishers HS tennis match56. First lady57. Be in the cast of a CRT show58. HSE band woodwind59. Susan Brooks’ pos.60. Le Peep egg beater63. Mitchell’s Fish Market catch64. Zionsville Nail tool65. Like Crown Hill Cemetery at night66. Prepare to sing the anthem at the

Brickyard 40067. Dinner and a show at The Palla-dium, perhaps68. Itsy-bitsy69. Cries at the Noblesville Fireworks Festival70. Barley Island Brewing Company quaffs

Down1. Kind of house2. Big name in motels3. Online publications4. Uncle Bill’s ___ Center5. Super 8 wake up call6. One of the participating schools in 38-Across7. Resembling a fine wine at Kahn’s8. Trendy, like a downtown bar9. Gobble up10. Miscalculated11. Memorial Stadium sound of displeasure12. “Much ___ About Nothing”13. St. Vincent Sleep Center acronym21. Geico lizard22. Bass counterpart25. Good’s opposite26. Nur Allah Islamic Center leader27. Record a show on WRTV, old style28. Indy summer clock setting30. Cole Porter song: “It ___ Done”32. Hinkle Fieldhouse or Joyce Center, e.g.35. Undamaged37. Pinkish at St. Elmo38. Locks in a Hoosier Park barn?

39. Remove from the Indiana Senate40. Call’s companion41. The Old Northside house feature42. “___ the season ...”46. Purdue basketball venue47. One of the participating schools in 38-Across49. WFMS reception aid50. Alluringly slender51. Eiteljorg Museum homes

53. Place to wash up55. Miner’s quests58. Indiana neighbor60. Freshly painted61. “___ Haw”62. Intense anger63. Clowes Hall box office letters64. Lilly govt. overseer

Answers on Page 35

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13

14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22

23 24 25 26 27 28

29 30 31 32 33

34 35 36 37

38 39 40 41

42 43 44

45 46 47 48 49 50 51

52 53 54 55 56

57 58 59

60 61 62 63 64

65 66 67

68 69 70

9 4 1

4 5 1 8

4 7

3 1 6 9

2 6

2 6 8 4

5 4

9 3 5 8

3 7 1

JX O A

N A B R US C A N D A L

T T O I R R A M EY E L S I A P O H I O

Y M O T A N A S Y E R G RR E D N A X E L A E H T EC K Y Y K U N S A C M C V

R R N E K N N A I N A C O EE I N C A D S O A S G N N

E A G S U T E H N I T R R G0 N H E T K R V I D L A A E

T H N R W I L N E W DC E A O L L I D R

K H O L I Q LS D E V E

Q E UF

6 WRTV Shows 4 Midwest States__________________ ____________________________________ ____________________________________ ____________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 3 Downtown Hotels

__________________5 Country Music Stars ____________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 2 IU Basketball Coaches__________________ ____________________________________ __________________

1 Indy Hockey Team__________________

Find the items in the puzzle going up, down, sideways or diagonally and list them. Each letter is used no more than once.

33November 8, 2014Current in Zionsville

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34 November 8, 2014Current in Zionsvillewww.currentzionsville.com

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35November 8, 2014Current in Zionsville

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seeking full-time technician to assist business and residential customers with all aspects of computer support. Send resume

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are you LooKinG For a ProFessionaL Part-tiMe sCHooL year Position?

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Answers to HOOSIER HODGEPODGE: Shows: CASTLE, GREY’S ANATOMY, NASHVILLE, REVENGE, SCANDAL, SHARK TANK; Stars: CHESNEY, MCGRAW, PAISLEY, UNDERWOOD, URBAN; States: ILLINOIS, INDIANA, KENTUCKY, OHIO; Hotels: CONRAD, MARRIOTT, THE ALEX-ANDER; Coaches: CREAN, KNIGHT; Team: FUEL

©2014 Xerox Corporation. All rights reserved. Xerox® and Xerox and Design® are trademarks of the Xerox Corporation in the United States and/or other countries. BR7307

Job FairWednesday, November 12th9am - 7pm

Questions? Please contact Tessa at 765-778-6219

Apply in person:2828 Enterprise DriveAnderson, IN 46013

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Must pass background and drug screen

Xerox Services has immediate positions for Customer Service Representatives

Build a Career You Can Be Proud OfNow HiringFishers

8300 E 96th Street, #1557Indianapolis

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2001 E 151st Street, #1601• Cashier• Overnight Stocker• Receiving• Sales Associate• Food Areas*Evenings and Weekends preferredFill out an application at our hiring kiosks in the stores or apply online at www.walmart.com/apply.Wal-Mart offers competitive pay and benefits. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. offers reasonable accommodation in the employment process for individuals with disabilities. If you need assistance in the application or hiring process to accommodate a disability, you may request an accommodation at any time. Please contact any member of management at your nearest Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. facility.Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. is an Equal Opportunity Employer- By Choice

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36 November 8, 2014Current in Zionsvillewww.currentzionsville.com HEART AND VASCULAR SCANS FROM THE STATE’S EXPERTS

Don’t ignore your concerns. Listen to your heart.Why put it off any longer? A $49 heart scan or $75 vascular scan is an important � rst step in your heart health. Find out if you’re at risk of heart disease at the state’s only heart and vascular program on U.S.News & World Report’s 2013-14 National Honor Roll.

Is a heart/vascular scan right for you? Call 1.800.265.3220 or visit iuhealth.org/heartscans

©2014 IU Health 10/14 HY12314_0948

As a proud sponsor of Bolt For The Heart, we hope you’ll join us Thanksgiving Day at the 5K run/walk to help raise funds for defi brillators in Central Indiana. Register for the event with Heart Smart Registration at BoltForTheHeart.com.

12314_0948_10x11_IUHNORTH_4c_BackCover.indd 1 11/3/14 2:45 PM