july 8, 2014

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ECRWSS Residential Customer Local Presorted Standard U.S. Postage Paid Carmel, IN Permit No. 713 Football stadium takes next step to construction / P3 Elected officials discuss heroin issue / P11 Shelter, pets assist veterans with PTSD / P12 Tuesday, July 8, 2014 WHS football coach Jake Gilbert and eight players serve others at Haitian missionary / P5 The most important part of breast health is knowledge . Get a free breast cancer risk screening when you schedule a mammogram. Learn more inside. ©2014 IU Health 05/14 HY05714_0991

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Page 1: July 8, 2014

ECRWSS

Residential CustomerLocal

PresortedStandard

U.S. Postage Paid

Carmel, INPermit No. 713

Football stadium takes next step to construction / P3

Elected officials discuss heroin

issue / P11

Shelter, pets assist veterans with PTSD / P12

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

WHS football coach Jake Gilbert and eight players serve others at Haitian missionary / P5

The most important part of breast health is knowledge.Get a free breast cancer risk screening when you schedule a mammogram. Learn more inside.©2014 IU Health 05/14 HY05714_0991

05714_0991_IUHNORTH_10x1.5_4c_CancerBreastHealth_StripAd.indd 1 5/14/14 11:12 AM

Page 2: July 8, 2014

2 July 8, 2014Current in Westfieldwww.currentinwestfield.com

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Page 3: July 8, 2014

3July 8, 2014Current in Westfield

www.currentinwestfield.com

• Total costs (hard and soft) for stadium bids – $7.6 million

• INDOT settlement – $600,000•City of Westfield investments – $2.5 million

($1.5 million now and another $1 million when development occurs)

•Sale of land west of Shamrock Boulevard – $3.5 million

•Sale of land east of Shamrock Boulevard – $1 million

•Sponsor donations – $165,000 annually from Riverview Health, Estridge Foundation and Sodexho.

The Westfield Washington School Board approved 14 bid contracts equating to $6,615,463 at the July 1 meeting. The bid package, recommended bidder and contract amount include:

•Sitework and paving – Mille-nium - $1,028,652

•Fencing – R&C Fence – $125,960•Synthetic turf – Sprinturf

– $582,200•Synthetic track – Globe Asphalt

– $379,800

•Bleachers – Sturdisteel – $939,700

•Stadium lights – Barton Electric – $168,700

• Scoreboard – Daktronics – $439,553•Concrete, masonry, and

general construction – My-

ers Construction Management – $2,032,000

•Curtainwall – Hoosier Glass – $93,100

•Plumbing/HVAC – Commercial Air -$269,000

•Electrical – Ermco – $556,800

COMMUNITY

“We could easily support the $1 million without going into taxpayer money. We keep our promise (of not using taxpayer funds),” Keen said.

WWS Business Director Nick Verhoff said con-tracts will be issued upon financing and permit approvals.

“The money is there to pay for what we approve tonight,” he said.

Verhoff said the capital campaign has paid $100,000 for engineering fees.

“The capital campaign will continue with more names opening,” Verhoff said. “We have additional facilities to name – soccer fields, baseball and soft-ball and the football field. Hopefully we’ll accelerate now with dirt being turned.”

Verhoff estimates the district will receive $210,000 annually from different signed agreements for nam-ing rights.

Phil Passen of Meyer Najem Construction said the project has a 10-month schedule.

“We’ll have the football field and track available for March 1. We’ll be very close for graduation,” he said.

Keen said the football team will at least be able to practice on the field in the fall.

Lightning recently struck columnist Mike Redmond’s mother’s old farmhouse up in LaGrange County and, according to his brother P.D., exploded just about everything explodable: The TV dish, Mom’s computer, the telephones, you name it. It was pretty extensive. When checking in, Redmond recalls how blown up TVs are kind of a recurring them with his family. To read more, visit www.cur-rentinwestfield.com.

Journey returned to Klipsch Music Center on June 28, giving its fans an-other reason to “Don’t Stop Believin’.” The group performed its catalog of hits along with opening acts the Steve Miller Band and Tower of Pow-er. To view photos of the show, visit www.currentnoblesville.com.

Yes, a room can be thrown togeth-er in a few days but it will look like it. A room that is well-appointed, com-fortable, inviting and attractive requires plan-ning, skill, and some additional planning. It won’t happen overnight, but columnist Vicky Earley has some sugges-tions to help. To read more, visit www.currentinwestfield.com.

A lot of movies want to seem edgy and dark, but for the most part they’re pretenders, inching up to the line of actual rebelliousness and then backing away with a smirk. “Bad Words” is not one of them. It’s a pitch-black comedy that gleefully barrels into offensive territory, then dares you not to laugh. Read more at www.currentnightandday.com.

ON THE WEBRedmond

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Founded Jan. 29, 2008, at Westfield, INVol. VII, No. 29Copyright 2013.

Current Publishing, LLCAll Rights Reserved.

30 South Range Line RoadCarmel, IN 46032

[email protected]

On the coverJake McCrary, Jeffrey Lackey and Zach Radar fix the road in front of the or-phanage. (Submitted photo)

Contact the EditorHave a news tip? Want to submit a calendar event? Have a photograph to share? Call Rob-ert Herrington at 489.4444 ext. 206 or e-mail him at [email protected]. You may also submit information on our website, currentinwestfield.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/currentinwestfieldwww.twitter.com/CI_Westfield

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

reflect the positions of this newspaper.

Want to advertise?Current in Westfield reaches 100 percent of the households in 46074 by U.S. Postal Service every Tuesday. For more information about how to reach that audience, call Dennis O’Malia at 370.0749 or e-mail him at [email protected].

DISPATCHES

THE BrEAk DOWN

BID WINNErS

Fish fry – Christ United Methodist Church in Westfield, 318 N. Union St., will host its annual fish fry, which began in 1941, from 5 to 8 p.m. July 11 and 12 in the church’s Family Life Center. All handmade items are ala carte, including fish sandwiches, coleslaw, baked beans, potato salad, pie, cake and brownies. Carry out will be available, as well as sloppy Joe sandwiches. All proceeds raised will go toward local and nation-al mission programs sponsored by the United Methodist Women. For more information, call 896-5559 or visit www.christwestfield.org.

Honoring veterans – Trinity Baptist Church, 1415 E. 191st St., will be celebrating veterans and active duty members of the military and their sacrifices from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. July 12. For its “Salute Our Soldiers” event, the church will be hosting all branches of the armed forced and plan to have a gun salute, color guard, free food and drinks. Each family or individual that at-tends will also get a free gift bag.

School board accepts stadium bids

DEvElOPMENT

ByRobertHerrington•[email protected]

The Westfield Washington School Board took an-other step to making the new Riverview Health foot-

ball stadium a reality on July 1 by approving 14 bids worth $6.6 million.

In addition to the costs, Westfield Supt. Dr. Mark Keen said soft costs were estimated at $1 million – with one-third of that amount being a contingency fund.

“It’s a flat site so we’re really overestimating,” he said. “We’re reducing the costs as we go forward.”

Keen said the district needs $7.6 million to build the new com-munity stadium without a home locker room. The settlement with INDOT provided $600,000 and the first investment from the City of Westfield of $1.5 million will come later this month. Also later this month, the district expects to close the land sale deal west of Sham-rock Boulevard for $3.5 million.

“That’s $5.6 (million) of the $7.6 (million) that we need. It’ll be a month before we get working and we’ll be building in two months,” Keen said. “That’s enough money to do the field, lights and track. We can’t do anything else but that’s why we don’t need all of the money up front.”

Keen said the district has a few options to raise the remaining $2 million. Half will come from the sec-ond City of Westfield investment, which comes after development begins. The remaining $1 million could come from the sale of land east of Shamrock Bou-levard, which includes the district’s administration building. Another option is to issue a general obliga-tion bond for the amount, which would be paid by naming rights, donations and the capital campaign.

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.

Creating art – Westfield Parks & Recreation Programming Facility, 330 E. Main St., is offer-ing a new program, Glass Fusing Wind Chimes, from 6 to 7:30 p.m. July 17. Westfield Parks is partnering with The Creative Escape to offer a very basic beginning glass fusing class where participants will learn all about the art as well as finishing their own wind chime that they will be able to take home once kiln fired. Cost is $32 and for ages 8 and older. For more information or to register, visit www.westfield.in.gov/parks and click on “View Activities & Register Online” – activity No. 11057.

Achievement – Westfield residents Amanda Paige Brooks, Samantha Joy Carlson, Rachel Lee Goodwin, Ashley Kara Schuman and Jessica Thaman were named to the Anderson University dean’s list for the spring semester. Each stu-dent achieved a semester grade point average of 3.5 or higher.

Keen

Page 4: July 8, 2014

4 July 8, 2014Current in Westfieldwww.currentinwestfield.com

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Page 5: July 8, 2014

5July 8, 2014Current in Westfield

www.currentinwestfield.comCOMMUNITY

DIvErSIONS

ByNavarWatson•[email protected]

Throughout July, Westfield artist Kristin Whit-ney is displaying her “Chromatic Canyon” series

at the Noblesville Visitors Center, 839 Conner St.

The “Chromatic Canyon” is a series of six oil paintings, each of which ab-stracted from photos Whitney took of the Grand Canyon from her various visits.

“I just want to be able to provide [the audi-ence] with something really different,” she said. “Something that brings a lot of life and energy.”

Every month the visitor’s center features an artist from the Hamilton County Artists’ Associa-tion. Whitney signed up to be the artist for July.

Whitney said many artists in Indiana special-ize in painting Indiana landscapes that “look ex-actly like what you would see.” With her art, she hopes the audience will have an idea of what the landscape is, but it will still be enough of a “mys-tery” to draw them in.

Using bright colors, Whitney hopes to capture the “energy” of the Grand Canyon that other art-ists do not seem to portray.

“I want to show people the way that God can see it,” she said. “(It’s) this vibrant, exciting place.”

She said she feels called to produce this type of artwork and dreams of seeing her work in a New York gallery someday.

Whitney holds a degree in graphic design from Kutztown University in Pennsylvania. For the past year and a half, she’s pursued art full time.

For those interested in pursuing art as a ca-reer, Whitney says, “Just be confident.”

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“If you really feel like this is what you want to do, don’t listen to what anybody else says,” she said. “Just pursue it with all your heart.”

Whitney now plans to finish a series she be-gan in January but had to postpone due to her work on the “Chromatic Canyon.” This next series focuses on the different seasons and colors as-sociated with them.

The “Chromatic Canyon” will be on display for all of July. Information will be at the center for anyone interested in purchasing a print of the artwork.

Westfield artist Kristin Whitney painted her “Chromatic Canyon” based on photos she took of her visits to the Grand Canyon. (Submitted photo)

Fundraising – Westfield Washington Historical Society has started a fundrais-ing campaign for its intern, Megan Oaks. The society said Oaks has been working and it needs to raise funds to pay her at least minimum wage. Additional funds above Oaks’ hours worked on projects like accessioning, display creation, post-er creation and extended museum hours will go for collection storage items. Those interested in making a donation may use www.gofundme.com/axhn10. All funds go directly to the WWHS as a check on the 15th of each month.

Page 6: July 8, 2014

6 July 8, 2014Current in Westfieldwww.currentinwestfield.com

Page 7: July 8, 2014

7July 8, 2014Current in Westfield

www.currentinwestfield.comCOMMUNITY

PUBlIC SAfETY

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Despite the Internet, cell phones, e-mail and modern communications, every year whole re-

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even the occasional cutting of fiber optic cables leave people without the means to communicate. In these cases, the one consistent service that has never failed has been Amateur Radio.

“We need nothing between us but air,” said Cicero resident Mike Alley of the Radio Amateur Civil Emergency Service for Hamilton County.

On June 28 and 29, the 24-hour off-the-grid Amateur Radio Field Day exercise successfully tested the full deployment capabilities of the teams to respond to, and operate without the benefit of electrical power. The local exercise, carried out by RACES members, was held at Quaker Park in Westfield. The event simulated potential responses to establishing and main-taining communications following natural or man-made disaster.

“The fastest way to turn a crisis into a total disaster is to lose communications,” said Thomas Sivak, executive director of the Hamilton County EMA and a licensed radio operator. “From the earthquake and tsunami in Japan to tornadoes

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Westfield Mayor Andy Cook receives a briefing about the emergency communications capabilities of the amateur radio group as R.A.C.E.S. Public Information Officer Joe March, call sign KJ9M, connects to a ham station in Cape Town, South Africa, from the Quaker Park exercise site. (Photo by Tim Vermande)

Visitor John Reichmann of Westfield attempts to contact the International Space Station during the Hamilton County Amateur Radio Emergency Service hosted its annual Field Day at Quaker Park on June 28 and 29. (Photo provided by Nancy Reichmann)

in Indiana, ham radio provided the most reliable communication networks in the first critical hours of the events. “

The purpose was to test and refine field op-erations by setting up, transmitting and receiving message traffic from many of the estimated 35,000 other hams around the county holding a similar exercise. During operations, visitors were treated to hearing live communications with NASA Astronaut Reid Wiseman, aboard the In-ternational Space Station during three separate orbital passes over Quaker Park.

Page 8: July 8, 2014

8 July 8, 2014Current in Westfieldwww.currentinwestfield.com

Page 9: July 8, 2014

9July 8, 2014Current in Westfield

www.currentinwestfield.comCOMMUNITY

CHAMBEr

ByAnnaSkinner•[email protected]

City of Westfield Hospitality Coordinator Rhonda Daly spoke to chamber of commerce

members and other Westfield citizens about the importance

of tourism and customer service during the monthly luncheon at the Palomino Ballroom. After a brief introduction and awarding some scholarships, Daly detailed the official ribbon cutting cer-emony of Grand Park that took place June 20 through 22.

Even though they cut the ribbon then, the park has been open for a while. Daly says it has already attracted 385,000 visits.

Westfield’s goal is, through tourism operations like Grand Park, to have 92 cents of every dol-lar spent stay local. Amateur youth travel team sports is an $8.7 billion industry alone, and Grand Park plans on attracting some of that business.

“Tourism matters not only for economic devel-

Service, amenities to drive tourism

Daly

opment, but for the community. It brings commu-nity pride,” Daly said. “It (Grand Park) is putting us on the map in a big way. We had 48 teams play (recently). It’s really beneficial to our community,

and Westfield has officially landed in the sports industry business.”

Westfield hopes to provide the Grand Park visitors with an experience similar to what Indianapolis provided for the Super Bowl. Westfield doesn’t only plan on building more restaurants and hotels to accomplish that, but they plan on educating the citizens as well with an

online program called Super Service.Daly said Super Service is a short online

course that citizens can take to learn good customer service and promote the tourism at-tractions of Westfield and the importance of that tourism. Those who complete the online course will receive a Hamilton County Tour-ism Ambassador certificate. The online course is accessible at SuperServiceTraining.com/HamiltonCountyWestfield.

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Nellie May Hepker, 73, of Westfield, died on June 30, 2014, at Riverview Health in Noblesville. Born Oct. 16, 1940 in Petersburg, she was the daughter of Aubrey and Martha (Williams) Onyett. She taught fourth grade for 25 years at Hawthorn Community School in Vernon Hills, Ill. She was a member of Centennial Bible Church in Westfield. She enjoyed quilting, knitting, reading, journaling, cooking and hospitality. She was a mentor to young moms for many years. Survivors include her husband, W. Carl Hepker; son, Ed (Becky) Hepker; daughter, Laura Hepker; brother, Robert (Helen) Onyett; and grandchildren, Blake and Chloe Hepker. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by three siblings, Ralph Onyett, Mary Hickey and Raymond Onyett. Funeral services were held July 7 at Centennial Bible Church, 720 Liberty Dr., Westfield, with the Rev. Kirk Welch officiating. Burial followed at Memorial Park Cemetery in Skokie, Ill. on July 8.

Page 10: July 8, 2014

10 July 8, 2014Current in Westfieldwww.currentinwestfield.com

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CHAMBEr

ByDevynnBarnes•[email protected]

Elected officials from across Hamilton County and the state gathered together at Noblesville

City Hall to discuss a growing issue in the community on July 1. U.S. Rep. Susan Brooks (R-

Ind.) and State Sen. Jim Merritt brought together those on the frontlines of the Indiana drug war, in order to discuss the state’s increased heroin epidemic.

“If society doesn’t see this as a problem they’re in for a huge wakeup call very soon,” Hamilton Country Sheriff Mark Bowen said.

Brooks began the discussion by telling the panel, “I want to learn from you all what you are seeing,” acknowledging that heroin is “not just a big city problem.”

The talk about the gateway to heroin is easy to attain, and most of the time is sitting in young people’s homes. Abuse of different prescription medicines is often the beginning of heroin ad-diction. In a study done by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, 81 percent of heroin users started with prescrip-tions. The pharmacists on the panel noted that they have seen an increase in pharmacy thefts.

The fear is that dealers are getting young peo-ple hooked on prescription drugs and then turn-ing them to heroin when their prescription habit gets too expensive. Madison County Prosecutor Rodney Cummings said that prison sentence

Leaders discuss heroin growth

From left: State Sen. Jim Merritt, U.S. Rep. Susan Brooks (R-Ind.), Noblesville Mayor John Ditslear, Fishers Police Chief George Kehl and Hamilton County Sheriff Mark Bowen discuss the county’s heroin issue at Noblesville’s City Hall. (Staff photo)

times, a maximum of six years for these dealers, is too short to deter them from the drugs.

“The answer from the state is ‘put less people in prison,’” Cummings said. “The federal govern-ment could help out significantly.”

Indianapolis Police Chief Rick Hite, who said he has seen this problem grow, also said, “We have to look at the root causes.”

Catching dealers and increasing their penal-ties as well as detoxing and rehabbing users is the first step, but it seems to be easier said than done, and it all takes money. Lack of federal funds in the different departments combatting this crisis was the biggest grievance.

“We’re going to go back and see what we should be focusing on,” Brooks said in closing, hoping that the meeting would bring awareness in the community.

Page 12: July 8, 2014

12 July 8, 2014Current in Westfieldwww.currentinwestfield.com

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serves in war, that moral code is broken.

Morseth’s husband, Justin, expe-rienced events “on a level most human beings never do and hopefully never should.” An Iraq vet-eran, he came home a completely different man.

“(Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder) changes the entire dynamic of the family,” Morseth said. “The family has to essentially mourn the loss … of the man or woman that went to combat and … rein-troduce (themselves) to the man or woman who came home.”

But through the help of Samson, their rescue Husky, Justin found a new means of support.

His bond with Samson inspired the couple to start a pets-for-vets program in Indiana. They sent letters to more than 50 different shelters with their idea. The Humane Society for Hamilton County in Noblesville was the only shelter to say “yes.”

After receiving an initial grant from the Tony Stewart Foundation in Indianapolis, Pets Heal-ing Vets officially began in May 2012 and has matched 16 veterans and rescue dogs since.

The program is completely free, HSHC Execu-tive Director Rebecca Stevens said. The $25 adoption fee is waived, and the dogs come spayed or neutered and micro chipped. Training and medical needs are also provided, if the vet-eran cannot afford them.

Iraq and Afghanistan veteran Greg Sexton of Noblesville first heard of the program from a brochure at the VA Hospital in Indianapolis. A victim of PTSD and Traumatic Brain Injury, he decided to try it.

The Humane Society allowed him to pick from five dogs. The fifth one, a black lab named Pat-ton, immediately bonded with him.

“She knew there was a problem with me, so she just pretty much stuck with me,” Sexton said. “That’s how she’s been ever since.”

Stevens said rescue dogs are especially good companions for veterans because they share

Veterans find refuge with dogs

some of the same feelings of abandonment and anxiety. When a veteran adopts a rescue dog, the dog picks up on this connection.

“Rescues know that they’ve been rescued,” Morseth said. “They have an appreciation for that … They want to love and they want to help.”

Dogs are smart, Sexton said. They have a sense where they can understand “what’s wrong with a human.”

Each dog serves a different purpose for each veteran, Stevens explained. The HSHC tries to match the right dog based on a veteran’s spe-cific needs. For example, many veterans suffer from hypervigilance, meaning they never feel safe. With this, Stevens said the shelter pairs them up with a calm, watchful dog – giving them an extra set of eyes.

Other dogs motivate veterans to go outside as some veterans become reclusive after combat, and the dogs bring them out onto the social scene. The response the HSHC receives from the veterans is “the best part of the whole thing,” Morseth said. In one case, a veteran told Morseth that his dog “gave him something to live for.”

Iraq and Afghanistan wars veteran Greg Sexton of Noblesville with his black lab, Patton. (Submitted photo)

Teddy Jarvis was the first veteran paired with a Hu-mane Society for Hamilton County dog in the Pets Healing Vets Program. Jarvis, a Green Beret in the Vietnam War, suffers from PTSD. (Submitted photo)

Page 13: July 8, 2014

13July 8, 2014Current in Westfield

www.currentinwestfield.comCOMMUNITY

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Beth Wood with Indiana WILD showed nocturnal ani-mals and talked about what these critters are up to during the nighttime hours at the recent Cool Creek campfire. The free event by Hamilton County Parks in-cludes songs, presentations and roasted marshmallows. Special speakers entertain guests each week about a variety of nature topics. For more information, visit www.hamiltoncounty.in.gov.

Cool Creek campfire

Parents and children roast marshmallows around the campfire at the close of the event. (Photos by Rob-ert Herrington)

Beth Wood of Indiana Wild explains how Prada the alligator would not make a good pet for children.

Beth Wood of Indiana Wild walks around and lets guests pet a groundhog.

Arielle Fotso stands still so a bearded dragon can safely sit atop her head.

Page 14: July 8, 2014

14 July 8, 2014Current in Westfieldwww.currentinwestfield.com COMMUNITY

By Robert Herrington • [email protected]

The vote to approve funding for the proposed U.S. 31 landmark project will come at the July

14 Westfield City Council meeting. But If the vote on the two free-standing

beacons had been held on June 23, it would have passed 4-2.

After the public hearing portion of the meeting, councilors took turns express-ing their individual thoughts on the proj-ect. Typically this type of open dialogue is held before the vote of topic and not weeks beforehand.

Councilors Cindy Spoljaric and Rob Stokes would have cast the dissenting votes. Councilor Bob Smith was absent.

Spoljaric said that while art is subjective the towers project has “such division (by residents) and is so much money.”

“It flies in the face of our Quaker heritage,” she said.

Stokes said he would prefer to spend the money on the police and fire departments, but said it is not allowed because the utility funds need to be spent on infrastructure.

“In my opinion this is not infrastructure,” he said. “I don’t see how the funds from the utility sale can be put to this when it is not a structure.”

Stokes said he could get behind other “struc-

ture” projects like a museum, botanical gardens or veterans memorial. Another option Stokes is in favor of is investing funds from the sale.

“Just because we have it doesn’t mean we have to spend it,” he said. “I can’t get on board with it. There are more things to benefit the city more than this.”

Proponents of the landmarks said it provides economic development and “once in a lifetime”

opportunities.“I don’t want to have regrets,” Coun-

cilor Bob Horkay said.“We have high taxes because we

have too many residents and not enough businesses. We have to ensure as a council we get more businesses. We believe this will help do that,” Coun-cilor Steve Hoover said. “Ultimately, this

will lower all of our taxes.”City Council President Jim Ake said Westfield

is fiscally strong and provides top notch public safety with a lean work force. He added that the city has established a laundry list of needed improvements and can complete them all and construct the towers.

“We are paving streets and putting in round-abouts. We need to make the world aware of what we have and we have the funds to do it,” Ake said. “Where are we not meeting the needs of the community? Tell me because I’d like to know.”

Bids received by the city for the “Westfield Tow-ers” project range from $2.45 million to $3.07 million.

Council forecasts towers vote

gOvErNMENT

Stokes

A helping HAND – Hamilton County Area Neighborhood Development will host its inaugural golf outing on Aug. 8 at Forest Park Golf Course in Noblesville. Organizers said the event provides something for every-one – from a 9-hole scramble to miniature golf for families. The scramble begins at 3 p.m. and includes fun competitions and business networking opportunities. Miniature golf starts at 6 p.m. and includes games and prizes for all. Proceeds from the event will benefit Neighborhoods NOW – a program with new neigh-borhood partnerships in Fishers, Westfield, Home Place and Sheridan. Registration is available online at www.handincorporated.org or by calling 674-8108.

[email protected]

Hamilton County Photographers Group has announced the results of its inaugural photo

contest. Judges chose the following winners from 33 entries:

First place: Sally Wolfe – Barn and Field

Second place: Megan Ullom – Praying MantisThird place: Michael Jack – Building FaçadeFourth place: Marion Barger – Boat on a LakeFifth place: Jason Carrol – Baby and DadEach contest winner will represent Hamilton

County Photographers by submitting prints to the Nickel Plate Arts’ Aperture Stop photographic exhibit and to the Indiana State Fair Photo Ex-hibition. Aperture Stop runs now through Aug. 30 at the Nickel Plate Arts Campus, 107 S. Eighth St., Noblesville. For more information, visit www.visithamiltoncounty.com.

The Indiana State Fair runs Aug. 1 through 17, with photography competition entries displayed in the Home and Family Arts Building at the state fairgrounds in Indianapolis.

Sally Wolfe’s photo of a barn and field won first place at the inaugural photo contest. (Submitted photo)

County shutterbugs win contest

The Hamilton County Photographers group meets at 6:30 p.m. the first Monday of each month at Hamilton East Library – Noblesville branch. Amateur, professional, retired and be-ginning photographers are invited to attend to share their experiences, learn from one another other, and advance the art of photography.

ArTS

Page 15: July 8, 2014

15July 8, 2014Current in Westfield

www.currentinwestfield.comCOMMUNITY

WHS football coach Jake Gilbert and eight players serve others at Haitian missionary / P5

By Robert Herrington • [email protected]

For eight Westfield High School football players it won’t matter how many touchdown catches they make or open-field tackles they have this upcoming season. These players have already made

a lasting impact on a community during a week-long mission trip to Haiti last month.

“I hope they feel good about what they did so they know, ‘I can make a difference, affect someone’s life by going out of my comfort zone,’” WHS Football Coach Jake Gilbert said.

Gilbert said the trip began as a request from a parent to assist Three Angels Ministry by selling Kenbe Fem (“Stand strong” in Hai-tian Creole) T-shirts last season. The parent was hoping to raise $500 during the “Neon Night” home game in August.

“I know God can do more than that. I was looking for a big sum-mer project for the year and selling shirts made $10,000,” Gilbert said. “We try to teach our kids there are needs in Hamilton County, people to serve right under your nose. We also want to teach them that one person is big enough to impact the entire world.”

Gilbert said the ministry can only house 14 missionaries at a time so he and wife, Christina, joined four parents and eight play-ers on the trip.

“Amazing and astonishing. That’s how I’d describe our mission trip to Haiti. It seemed like there were two worlds competing for one space, almost like Heaven and Hell existing on the same turf. I am positive that those of us who went will be changed forever. We selflessly served the Hai-tian people and they certainly made a difference in our lives as well,” he said.

Gilbert said the goal of the trip was to change the perspective of his players and have them appreciate how good they have it in Westfield.

“They saw how content these people are even though they have nothing. It’s good for all of us to see. These people are really living day-to-day,” he said.

At the Haiti orphanage, Gilbert said the team spent the mornings doing work, connecting and interacting with the Haitian people in the after-noon and doing devotionals at night.

“It was a great mix,” he said, adding labor projects included cleaning gutters, removing and straightening nails to be reused, clearing rocks from farm fields, making meals at the orphan-age and pouring cement and fixing a street “with a crater.” “They had the ability to learn how to work and get nothing back in return but the experience of helping.”

Players’ perspective“I’ve always wanted to go there or a third-world country to

serve the less fortunate than us. When this opportunity came up I couldn’t resist,” said Jake McCrary.

McCrary, who will be a senior in the fall, said he expected to the Haitian people to be beggars before the trip.

Football Coach Jake Gilbert said the team has a platform to positively impact the community and it is their obligation to use it.

“We’re so visible in the com-munity and our school. We have an obligation to help and serve,” he said. “As a coach, I have an obligation to teach these guys to give. We have it so good here we need to teach our guys to give back.”

While the team raises money for organizations or natural disaster victims, Gilbert prefers when they take personal action to assist.

“I like for our guys to roll our sleeves up and become part of the solution. It gives them a new experience to serve and help somebody,” he said. “We use football to make a difference in the lives of others and nothing is mandatory.”

Gilbert said the team has a new message each year. In the past the team has worked with the Hamilton County Cancer Services, Habitat for Humanity, packed 10,000 meals for Af-ricans and raised money for tsunami victims. Gilbert tries to vary the local and international projects so something inter-ests his players in their four years in the program.

“You can have a big impact on others’ lives,” senior Jake McCrary said.

“But they make the best of everything. They always greet you with a smile. They are really nice people and I enjoyed being around them,” he said. “It was so much fun to do the work no one

wanted to do.”McCrary said the team discussions made a

lasting memory of the trip.“The talks we had at the end of the day

about what we learned that day and how to make the lives of the Haitian people better the next day,” he said.

The trip allowed the players to bond togeth-er, which they said might not have happened otherwise.

“I got to know some players a lot better. My views on them are a lot different,” McCrary said.

“I knew most of them,” sophomore Drew Cox, “now I know about their lives. We talked about how it was back at home.”

Cox made his second trip to Haiti. He previously went in October 2012 after the earthquake.

“I like to make people happy. They don’t want to ask for help but need it. They are really

proud people and it was great to help them and see their thank-fulness,” he said. “I was impacted by how grateful everyone was – applauding, clapping and saying ‘Thank you.’”

When Cox and some of his teammates were filling in large crack in the neighborhood road a 60-year-old man volunteered to help.

“He was caring buckets of cement. He wasn’t looking to get paid he was trying to help the community and was doing it for the city,” Cox said.

The mission team consisted of 14 people. Coach Jake Gilbert and his wife, Christina, were joined by parents Darin and Melissa Lickfeldt, Jenny Cox and Nanette Rader; and players: Jackson Garrett, Colton Murphy, Jake McCrary, Brandon Karsnick, Jeff Lackey, Drew Cox, Zach Rader and Ben Huntley. To view more photos from the trip, visit www.currentinwestfield.com.

Who went?

Ben Huntley and Coach Jake Gilbert teach Haitian students during the punt, pass and kick contest. (Photos provided by Darin Lickfeldt)

COvEr STOrY

Why Serve?

Coach Jake Gilbert at the Haiti orphanage.

WHS sophomore Drew Cox with the family of the student he sponsors at Three Angels Christian Academy.

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16 July 8, 2014Current in Westfieldwww.currentinwestfield.com

we miss it, does that feeling set its value? Over time for me, the approach has proven a fairly effective guide. There is so much – some might call it baggage – that we carry along either be-cause we are afraid to let it go or, perhaps even more tragically, because we forget that we even have it. The habit of pruning is a good one. But, the ability to discern what matters from what doesn’t can be tricky.

Can we ever really expect to find happiness if we don’t leave the unnecessary luggage at bag-gage claim? I tend to carry more than is required. It may be time to shake out my emotional hoard and decide what’s worth keeping. A lighter load sounds most appealing.

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

Sometimes, I imagine that my parents must have been clairvoyant. They warned of the inevitable turns that my life’s path might take decades before they happened. Their advice could not have imagined the form that my family or career might adopt, yet I constantly reflect on their insight and am amazed by their prescience. How do the things that we learned as kids come back to us over and over again as adults?

Perhaps our folks simply tapped into the hu-man inevitability of natural pattern and were only passing to us the truisms of a lifetime of experience. The basis of our civilization, some would say, is fully vested in each of us by the time that we enter the first grade. Be nice. Don’t take something that doesn’t belong to you. Care for those weaker and lonely. Value one’s inner character more than the desirous objects or even people that come and go from our domain.

Can we determine the importance to one’s life of another person or thing by taking it away? If

Carrying more than needed

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].

It was a heartening 5-4 vote last week by which the United States Supreme Court ruled public-sector unions in Illinois are forbidden from collecting fees from home-health care workers who don’t want to be part of a union. If there was a failing in the decision, it is that it is limited to health-care workers and not all public-sector unions. Justices sadly abjured the opportunity to curb the act of public-sector unions passing representation costs to non-members. The decision, though, has registered as a setback for unions in Illinois and similarly minded states that force home-health care workers to unjustifiably hand over union dues. We believe it should be extended to the entirety of union members nationwide. A closed shop should not exist, for such an entity obliterates freedom on multiple levels. If someone wants to join a union and pay dues, that’s a personal choice. Labor unions argued, though, that if Illinois is allowed to back out of its collective-bargaining agreement with the union, it would only be a matter of time before workers see their wages cut and benefits dropped. And there it is, a scare tactic. Union leaders are said to also fear conservative judges across the nation using the ruling to strike down laws in 26 states that require public-sector employees, such as teachers and police officers, to fork over dues to the unions that negotiate contracts on their behalf even if the employee doesn’t want to become a union member. And as for unions protecting mem-bers’ employment positions, in our experiences we’ve never witnessed a worker with a poor performance record have his or her job “saved by the union” - although we’re not so naive as to think it doesn’t happen, because we’re certain it does. Regardless, it all boils down to this with respect to union leadership and its trailing zealots: Liberals don’t really care what you do as long as it’s compulsory.

High court sendsa clear message

Sleepless in summer readings

“What torments of grief you endured, from evils that never arrived.”

- Ralph Waldo Emmerson

Commentary by Danielle WIlson

I haven’t slept well in a week thanks to my stupid idea to encourage my kids to read this

summer. Like most parents, I am constantly nagging my children to put down the “electronical”

devices (as my 10-year-old calls them) and pick up a book. Generally they laugh in my face or offer lame excuses like, “I have to read at school. I need a break!” But with two months of salt mine vacation and loads of free time, that pretext no longer applies.

Normally I read fantasy, but my summer default is fluff romance, specifically Nora Rob-erts. Easy reading and just enough smut to whisk me away from suburban parenting. This year, however, I decided to expand my perus-ing to other genres in hopes of inspiring the aforementioned anti-literary offspring. Perhaps they would even read along with me!

I began with The Things They Carried by Tim O’Brien. A student had left it in my classroom, a byproduct of his AP World Lit course, so I as-sumed it was at least decent. Plus, the cover implied a supernatural vibe, like maybe what soldiers carried with them into the afterlife? No. The pseudo-memoir focuses on the dual nature of fighting in Vietnam, both the hor-rible and the beautiful. A far, far cry from Nora, and definitely not an uplifting escape from my soccer mom life. Plus, too many F-bombs for a family book club.

Next up, The Fault in Our Stars. I went into this one knowing it would be sad – my young-est had just finished it – but what I didn’t anticipate was the perfectly injected humor. Somehow this made the story “real” for me. So not only did I empathize with the main characters, as a mom I could also relate to the grieving parents. Double depressing! Another two nights of disturbing dreams and crying-induced headaches, added to a sex talk with my fifth-grader I was not prepared for.

I am now on my latest book, one I was sure would not leave me miserable, Stephen King’s Doctor Sleep. WRONG! It’s a sequel to The Shining, with the protagonist being Jack Nicholson’s now-grown-up son who is trying to overcome his alcoholism despite still seeing dead people. A captivating premise, but one that’s leaving me scared poo-less to use the bathroom at 3:30 a.m. I’d put it down, but in the daylight it’s awesome!

Nevertheless, I need sleep. I’ll be returning to Nora ASAP and my kids can go back to their dumb electronicals. I’ve changed my mind on this summer reading thing. Peace out.

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

HUMOr

B E l I E v E I T !Our nation has all sorts of arcane, nonsensical laws on the books. Each week, we’ll share one with you. In New York a person may not walk around on Sundays with an ice cream cone in his/her pocket.

Source: dumblaws.com

vIEWS

Page 17: July 8, 2014

17July 8, 2014Current in Westfield

www.currentinwestfield.com

‘Mum Mum’ dearestCommentary by Dick Wolfsie

If my grandmother were alive today, she would be 125, and she would still, no doubt, be

walking around in her six-inch-high heels, the ones she asked to be buried in - and she’d have a Marl-

boro in her fingers. She demanded to be called Mum Mum because the term “grandma” suggest-ed an older woman. That wasn’t going to work.

She smoked two packs a day, had a few shots of Johnnie Walker Black before noon and then would ask her doctor if she could put cream in her coffee, “or would that be too much choles-terol for a women of my age?” Not that she ever told anyone her age, but my previous estimate is in the ballpark.

Which reminds me: She loved baseball. She never missed a Mets game on TV. She knew the number of each player and their batting averages, but she really didn’t fully understand the sport. I once took her to Shea Stadium, but due to traffic we were almost an hour late. The scoreboard showed it was a scoreless game.

“Oh good,” she said, “We didn’t miss anything.” Mum Mum was hard of hearing due to a child-

hood illness, and she was always adamant that her disability was not due to age. During meals at our house she spent a lot of time saying: “Speak more clearly!” “Don’t shout.” “Enunciate.” During the inevitable family spat, my father would sometimes whisper under his breath: “She

HUMOr

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Dick Wolfsie is an author, columnist, and speaker. Contact him at [email protected].

can be such a pain in the butt.” “You’re a pain in the butt, too,” she’d shout

back. Yes, Mum heard exactly what she wanted to hear and nothing more.

She and my mother were always fighting on the phone. And, it was even harder for Mum Mum to hear when she couldn’t see the person talking. My irritated Mom could not successfully make a point without having to repeat herself several times. Once when I was a teenager, my mother slammed the receiver down in frustra-tion. Half an hour later when I tried to call a friend, Mum Mum was still on the line, ranting, unaware she had been talking to no one.

This week’s column was inspired by the temporary disappearance of my wife’s wedding ring, which we luckily found on the bathroom floor. The modestly sized diamond was a gift from Mum Mum, whose father back in Germany had been in the gem importing business. The loose stone arrived in our mailbox one day back in 1980—just prior to our engagement—in a plain envelope, wrapped in a square of toilet paper.

Yes, if Mum Mum were alive today, I’d whisper another thanks in her ear. And she would hear what I was saying. Every word of it.

Page 18: July 8, 2014

18 July 8, 2014Current in Westfieldwww.currentinwestfield.com

‘Shrek the Musical’ – Footlite presents commu-nity theatre production of “Shrek the Musical.”

Set in a mythical “once upon a time” sort of land, “Shrek the Musical” is the story of a hulking

green ogre who, after being mocked and feared his entire life by anything that crosses his path, retreats to an ugly green swamp to exist in hap-py isolation. Suddenly, a gang of homeless fairy-tale characters like Pinocchio, Cinderella and the Three Pigs raid his sanctuary to start an epic journey. Shrek the Musical uses an all-new score to expand on the movie’s original story. There’s a lot for the eyes and ears to ogle over: spec-tacular sets, innovative scene changes, puppets of all sizes, plus a very large and energetic cast. There’s also a good moral and traditional happy ending. Kids will love everything about Shrek. The show debuts at 7:30 p.m. July 11 and runs through July 27. Adults tickets are $20, children 12 and younger are $10. For more information, call 926-6630 or visit www.footlite.org.

’Round the Campfire – Dog Days – Ever wondered what the expression “the dog days of summer”

actually means? The Fishers Parks and Recreation staff will answer that question, and

explore wild canines that live at Ritchey Woods Nature Preserve, 10410 Hague Rd. From 7 to 9 p.m. July 11, guests also can enjoy roasting hot dogs or making s’mores around the campfire. Cost is $4 for residents, $6 for non-residents ages 3 and older. For more information, call 595-3150.

Produce market – Sponsored by Noblesville Main Street, this European style market offers locally

grown seasonal produce, ul-tra-fresh meals, small batch artisan foods, handcrafted

products, high quality art and local live music every Thursday from 5 to 8 p.m. through Sept. 18.The green market is in the south alley of the Noblesville Main Street office at 839 Conner St. Admission is free. For more information, call 776-0205.

Historic Underground Railroad Ghost Walk – This two-hour walking tour is filled with stories

of ghosts of the Under-ground Railroad mixed with modern-day gangsters and

spirits from Westfield’s haunted history. The group will meet at 9 p.m. July 12 at Asa Bales Park, 132 W. Main St. Reservations are required and cost is $18 for adults and $13 for senior citizens and children. For more information, call 840-6456 or visit www.unseenpress.com.

Create-a-Plate – Eat off of artwork as the Hussey-Mayfield Public Library, 250 N. Fifth St.,

offers children of all ages the opportunity to draw on special paper which will be

transformed into a melamine plate. The program is available all day this week. Cost is $6.50 per plate. Finished plates may be picked up in six to eight weeks. For more information, call 873-3149.

July 8, 2014 • currentnightandday.com

18

CArMEl

fISHErS

NOBlESvIllE

WESTfIElD

zIONSvIllE

T H I S W E E k

By Jessica Fox • [email protected]

Could you use a summer evening out with your friends? Singers Jennie DeVoe and Carrie Newcomer hope to provide listeners with

music that anyone can enjoy at the free Fishers Amp After Dark concert series.

Growing up surrounded by music, it was only natural for DeVoe to de-velop a musical interest at an early age. Influenced by greats like Ray Charles, Aretha Franklin and Etta James, DeVoe said she tries to infuse old and new music with folk lyrics in a way that would appeal to any age group.

As far as new music goes she said she is influenced by unique voices like Adele and Imagine Dragons, but during her career she has opened for singers like Bonnie Raitt, Jack Johnson and Ray Charles.

DeVoe would describe her genre of music as Americana soul music. But her goal is to write good lyrical content and paint a picture for her audience.

At every show DeVoe tries to mix a set list of her original songs and a few covers depend-ing on what she feels the audience wants to hear at that particular concert.

“If you are a performer at heart there is something inside you that urges you to please the audience,” DeVoe said.

That’s why she doesn’t believe she has ever stuck to an exact set list.DeVoe recently released her newest album Radiator – which she pro-

duced with John Parish in England. Radiator was her third collaboration with Parish, who is most well-

known for his work with singer PJ Harvey. They also plan on producing and recording a new album together in the spring of 2015.

When she is not working on her music, DeVoe is very passionate about animal rights. She supports messages that get people to ulti-

mately think about the care of their own pets. DeVoe gave her song “Give a little love” to Pet-Pals TV to use with their programming.

She is also is passionate about the treat-ment of farm animals.

“Even if they ultimately go to the butcher, they still deserve to have a happy and healthy life,” DeVoe said.

Singer songwriter Carrie New-comer said she has been influ-enced by all kinds of music, but she always comes back to classic singing poets.

Newcomer has received a Grammy for writing the song “I Should Have Known Better.” The band Nickel Creek got a Grammy for

performing this song on their This Side album. She describes herself as an acoustic

singer/songwriter influenced by Joanie Mitchell and Paul Simon.Newcomer has played concerts all over the

country, but she says that Indiana is her favorite outdoor venue.

“There is nothing like an outdoor Indiana summer concert,” she said.

Nationally known singers Jennie DeVoe, Carrie Newcomer to play Fishers stage in July

Jennie DeVoe said her brand of music crosses the genres of folk, pop and blues – but all of her songs have soul. (Submitted photo)

Jennie DeVoe in concert Nickel Plate District in Fishers • 9 p.m. July 11 • Free

Carrie Newcomer in concert Nickel Plate District in Fishers • 9 p.m. July 25 • Free

MUSIC

Page 19: July 8, 2014

19July 8, 2014Current in Westfield

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French Music, Arts & Crafts, Paint in the Park,

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Waiter's Race, Lantern Parade, Laser Light Show, etc.

5THANNUAL PROGRAM:

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TODAY

SATUrDAY

SUNDAY

WEDNESDAY

THUrSDAY

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Make and Take Activities at Conner Prairie • Visit Lenape Indian Camp to learn about beads and make your own

beaded bracelet to take home. Visitors can also check out Barker Brother’s Pottery Shop to work with air-hardening clay and make custom pieces to take home. • 13400 Allisonville Rd., Fishers • Today from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and every Tuesday through Saturday in July. • $5 for each piece plus general admission. General admission is free for members. • 776-6006 • www.connerprairie.org

Aperture Stop: A Photographic Exhibit and First Friday Open House at Nickel Plate Arts •

Visit the Nickel Plate Arts exhibit space to view talented, local photographers’ works. • Today from noon to 5 p.m.; July 11 from noon to 5 p.m.; July 12 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. • Free • 107 S. 8th St., Nobles-ville • 452-3690 • www.nickelplatearts.org

Monon Mixer • Adults-only night at The Waterpark! This event is for anyone 21 and over; come out and enjoy music and fun in the water. Alcoholic beverages will be available for purchase. • 1235 Central Park Drive East, Carmel • Tonight from 7:30 – 10:30 p.m. • $10 per person. • 848-7275 • www.carmelclayparks.com

Noblesville Summer Concert Series • Noblesville Parks and Recreation Department offers free sum-mer concerts through July at Forest Park. Tonight’s

show features Zanna-Doo. •Tonight from 7 – 9 p.m. • 776-6350 • Free• 701 Cicero Rd., Noblesville• www.cityofnoblesville.org

Beef & Boards Presents: ‘A Mighty Fortress is our Basement’ • This fun musical comedy is the latest production from the Church Basement Ladies se-ries. Both heartwarming and funny, this story set in the 1960s tells of ladies’ preparations for church events, a food booth at a county fair and more. • 9301 Michigan Rd., Indianapolis • Tonight at 8 p.m.; July 11 and 12 at 8 p.m.; July 13 at 1:30 and 7 p.m.; July 15 at 8 p.m. • Tickets start at $38.50. • 872-9664 • http://beefandboards.com

Clay Terrace Summer Concert Series • Enjoy a summer night out while listening to live music from local bands. Pizza will be available for pur-chase from Tony Sacco’s. Tonight’s performance is by Phone Club. • Grassy Knoll behind Kona Grill at Clay Terrace • Tonight from 7 – 9 p.m. • Free • 818-0725• www.clayterrace.com

Summer Concerts at the Carmel Gazebo • Outdoor family concerts are back for

the summer at the Carmel Gazebo. Families are encouraged to attend and enjoy outdoor summer music. Tonight’s band is My Yellow Rickshaw. • 1 Civic Square, Carmel • Tonight at 7:30 p.m. • Free • www.carmelgazeboconcerts.org

Easel Into Summer Exhibit • Check out the latest exhibit from the Ham-ilton County Artist Association; it’s a

great opportunity to view local and unique art and take advantage of the great gift shop. • 195 South Fifth St., Noblesville • Today from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. • Free • 773-5197 • www.hcaa-in.org

Marsh Symphony on the Prairie: Beethoven’s Symphony No. 7 • Conner Prairie’s outdoor amphi-theater plays host to the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra as they perform the music of Beehtoven. • 13400 Allisonville Rd., Fishers • Tonight at 8 p.m. • Tickets start at $24; see the ISO website or buy tickets at participating Marsh supermarkets. • 639-4300 • www.indianapolisymphonyorchestra.org

The Amp After Dark at Nickel Plate Amphitheater • The After Dark series is back in Fishers; all sum-mer long adults are welcome to listen to great music and dance under the stars. Tonight’s perfor-mance is from Jennie DeVoe. • Downtown Fishers • Tonight from 9 to 11 p.m. • Free • 595-3150 • www.fishers.in.us/parks

Summer Nights Film Series at the Indianapolis Museum of Art • The IMA’s beautiful outdoor amphi-theater is the place to be for enjoying movies on the lawn. Bring blankets and picnics (no alcoholic beverages); concessions are available. Tonight’s feature is “Vertigo.” • 4000 Michigan Rd., Indianapo-lis • Gates open at 7 for picnicking; movie starts at approximately 9:30. • $10 per person, $6 for mem-bers • www.imamuseumorg

Carmel Farmer’s Market • Fea-turing over 60 vendors that sell only Indiana-grown and/or pro-

duced edible products. Fun for the whole family, this farmer’s market includes cooking demonstrations, music and free parking. • 1 Center Green, Carmel • Today from 8 – 11:30 a.m. • Free admission • 710-0162 • www.carmelfarmersmarket.com Saxony Market • Find fresh produce from local ar-tisans along with prepared food, kids activities and more. • 13578 E. 131st St., Fishers. • Today from 8 a.m. to noon. • Free • 770-1818 • www.saxony-indiana.com

Fishers Farmers Market • Visit a variety of vendors at the new location in front of the Nickel Plate Amphitheater; items for sale include fresh fruits and vegetables, honey, coffee, jams, sweet treats and many hot breakfast options. • 1 Municipal Drive, Fishers • Today from 8 – noon. • Free admission • 578-0700 • www.fisherschamber.com

Noblesville Farmers Market • The Riverview Hospi-tal overflow lot hosts Noblesville’s Farmers Market which includes fresh produce, bedding plants, fresh flowers, honey, baked treats and more. • SR 19 & 38 in Noblesville • Today from 8 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. • Free admission • 776-0205 • www.noblesvil-lemainstreet.org

Zionsville Farmers Market • Plants and flowers plus produce and baked goods are available for sale. • Corner of First and Hawthorne, Zionsville • Today from 8 to 11 a.m. • Free admission • 873-3836 • www.zionsvillechamber.org

Carmel Arts & Design Second Saturday Gallery Walk • Take an evening stroll in along Carmel’s Arts & Design district and enjoy entertainment, mer-chant events and activities and plenty of shopping. • 111 W. Main St., Carmel • Tonight from 5 – 9 p.m. • 571-ARTS • www.carmelartsanddesigndistrict.com

Blue Arrow Train – An Evening Dining Experience Along the Nickel Plate Railroad • Catch the train at Fishers or Noblesville for an evening ride through the countryside that includes time to stop for din-ner in Noblesville, Atlanta or Tipton. Stopover time is about an hour and a half; call for reservations. • Fishers or Noblesville • Various times • Call 773-6000 for prices and reservations • www.itm.org

“Grape to Glass” Winery Tour at Easley Winery • Take this 10-min-ute tour to learn fascinating facts

about wine; tour ends at tasting room where participants can taste 7 different wines. • 205 N. College Ave., Indianapolis • $5 per person • Today from noon to 3 p.m.; tours start every 10 minutes. • 636-4516 • www.easleywinery.com

Page 20: July 8, 2014

20 July 8, 2014Current in Westfieldwww.currentinwestfield.com NIgHT & DAY

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By Joseph Knoop • [email protected]

Legendary R&B group, The O’Jays, with more than 50 charted songs and 24 top-10 hits, will

perform at the Palladium on July 13, bringing more than 50 years of experience to the stage.

The group, formed in Canton, Ohio, in 1958, was inducted into the Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame in 2005.

A stable of songs like “Back Stabbers,” “Love Train” and “For the Love of Money” propelled them to stardom throughout the late 1960s and ‘70s.

Original member Eddie Levert, born in Alabama and raised in Canton, feels like the Midwest has a special quality to it.

“It’s always really great to play the home base and come back to where it all started,” Levert said. “It’s always a gratifying feeling. You take the abuse of running from hotel to hotel, jumping on airplanes. You get home and everybody acts like you’re the hero. They know you so well.”

Despite touring and recording for the better part of a century, Levert knows there’s always room for a hilarious error or two. In a momentary lapse of memory, Levert happened to forget the words to one of the songs he’d been singing for decades while performing in St. Petersburg, Fla.

“The best part is you’re mumbling, so you yell to the audience, ‘Sing it with me!’” Levert said.

Despite rare incidents like that, Levert feels the audience knows what they’re there for.

“Hit records are hit records,” Levert said. “They want to hear that record and hear you sing it like that. If you can put a bit of movement in it, they appreciate that.”

Levert, along with fellow band member Walter Williams founded The O’Jays Foundation shortly after their Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame induction. The foundation provides scholarships for high school, college and even non-traditional adult students.

Levert claims that similar assistance and music education helped launch his career as a musician.

“I think it is one of the atrocities when they cut it out of school, where you could go and kids could learn an instrument,” Levert said. “Of

The O’Jays have continued to build a new genera-tion of fans decade after decade. (Submitted photo)

O’Jays still wowing audiences

course, that’s where I got most of my teach-ing, from fourth grade, making me sing from my diaphragm. These people taught me how to read music, per se. It was a terrible thing when they cut music out of school. Kids need that. They need that to make school interesting.”

That’s one of the reasons Levert has kept working at the age of 72, but the other is be-cause he still has something to prove.

Levert may have been producing music for more than 50 years, but he’d still like to have the band earn a Grammy, he said. It’s a feat the band has yet to accomplish despite a nomination in 2002 for their album, For The Love.

The band’s continued success decade after decade shows that new generations fall in love with The O’Jays in their own time.

And Levert has said the stage is where the O’Jays let it all out – and what better venue than an intimate stage for their music to be heard?

The O’Jays in concert • 7 p.m. July 13 • The Pal-ladium in Carmel • Tickets start at $45 • For more information call 843-3800 or visit www.thecenterfortheperformingarts.org

MUSIC

MOON DOG TAVERN – 4825 E. 96th St., Indianapolis – www.moondogtavern.com July 10 – Marc and Friends

July 11 – My Yellow Rickshaw

July 12 – Catalyst GypsyJuly 13 – Annies Trio

HOPWOOD CELLARS WINERY – 12 E. Cedar St., Zi-onsville – www.hopwoodcellars.com

July 11 – Mini Slaw ExperienceJuly 12 – Pat Brearton with John Macksey

TRADERS POINT CREAMERY – 9101 Moore Rd., Zi-onsville – www.tpforganics.com

July 11 – Bret WisconsCLAY TERRACE MALL – 14390 Clay Terrace Blvd., Carmel – www.simon.com/mall/clay-terrace

July 10 – Phone ClubSEMINARY PARK – between 10th, 11th, Division and Hannibal streets, Noblesville – www.noblesvil-learts.org

July 13 – Indianapolis Symphonic BandCOOL CREEK PARK – 2000 E. 151st St., Westfield – www.myhamiltoncountyparks.com

July 11 – ESBFOREST PARK – 701 Cicero Rd., Noblesville – www.cityofnoblesville.org/parks

July 10 – Zanna-Doo!VOGUE NIGHTCLUB – 6259 N. College Ave., India-napolis – www.thevogue.com

July 11 – The Farewell Audition, Coup D’etat and The Chicago Typewriters

THE CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS – 1 Center Green, Carmel – www.thecenterfortheper-formingarts.org

July 11 – Girls Create MusicJuly 13 – The O’Jays

lIvEMUSIC

Page 21: July 8, 2014

21July 8, 2014Current in Westfield

www.currentinwestfield.comNIgHT & DAY

By Joseph Knoop • [email protected]

The Indiana Wind Symphony has announced its 2014-15 season concert schedule and it will

feature the works of a wide variety of composers and performers.

The Indiana Wind Symphony will perform “Bicentennials – The Star Spangled Ban-ner and the Saxophone,” on Sept. 27, with saxo-phone virtuoso Kenneth Tse.

“I’m really excited to have Tse as the soloist,” said Charles Conrad, director of the Indiana Wind Symphony. “I think he’s one of the really brilliant wind players in the world.”

The show will be a tribute of sorts in celebra-tion of Adolph Sax, inventor of the saxophone. The performance will also feature the works of John Philip Sousa and Frank Ticheli.

Pianist Kelleen Strutz will join the symphony for a performance dedicated to heroism on Nov. 15, featuring John Williams’ “Summon the Heroes,” and Rachmaninoff’s “Piano Concerto No. 2 in C Minor.”

Williams wrote and conducted the Oscar-winning score to “Star Wars.”

The holidays won’t want for music, either. Soprano Jessamyn Anderson, along with Santa and Mrs. Clause will join the symphony for rendi-tions of “O Holy Night” and “A Christmas Festival” on Dec. 6.

Fans of witches, wizards, fantasy and Broad-way will be treated to the songs of “Wicked,”

Indiana Wind Symphony announces new schedule

MUSIC

The Indiana Wind Symphony will host a concert dedicated to heroism on Nov. 15. (Submitted photo)

John’s William’s “Harry Potter” suite, and “The Lord of the Rings” on Feb. 21.

Classic hymns, such as “Kentucky Harmony,” “Power and Glory,” and “Finlandia” will be re-worked into concert pieces by the symphony on March 28.

The symphony’s final performance, featuring a tribute to brass instruments alongside solo-ists James Beckel and Julie Beckel opens May 17. Jame’s Beckel’s own “The Glass Bead Game,”

based on the novel of the same title, and Cop-land’s “Fanfare for the Common Man.”

Season tickets for all performances go on sale July 1, with discounted prices for groups of 12 or more.

With the new schedule, the symphony enters its 16th season, this year under the direction of Conrad.

For more information, call 843-3800 or visit www.thecenterpresents.org.

Register Now!WYSA

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Open to all youth players, ages 4-19,regardless of experience or ability

Walk in registration:Shamrock Springs Elementary

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Sat., July 12, 2014: 10am-noonWed., July 16, 2014: 6:30pm-8:30pm

Sat., July 19, 2014: 10am-noon

Or register online at: www.wysa.org

WYSA is therecreational arm of the

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MLS affiliate club.

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Page 22: July 8, 2014

22 July 8, 2014Current in Westfieldwww.currentinwestfield.com NIgHT & DAY

Cocktail: Pineapple Gin Punch

with MintIngredients: 4 cups pineap-ple juice, 1 cup mint leaves, 3 ½ tablespoons sugar, ½ cup fresh lime juice, ½ cup gin (4 shots total), lime wedges for garnish

Directions: Blend 1 cup of the pineapple juice in blender with mint and sugar until the mint is finely chopped. Pour mixture into a pitcher and add fresh lime juice and the remaining pine-apple juice. Chill until ready to serve. Fill glasses halfway with ice, add a shot of gin in each glass and then fill the rest with juice. Garnish with lime wedges and extra mint. (Courtesy of shutterbean.com)

Ingredients: 2 large heads of broccoli, 2 tablespoons chopped red onion, 3 cloves minced garlic, 1.2 cup shredded cheddar cheese, 6 ounces uncooked spiral pasta, 1.2 cup Greek yogurt, 2 tablespoons mayo, 1 tablespoon red wine vinegar, 1 tablespoon olive oil, 1 tablespoon poppy seeds, salt and pepper blueberries

The Scoop: Located in downtown Noblesville on Logan Street, Courtney’s Kitchen provides old fashioned home cooking at a reasonable price. All of the food is made fresh and the restaurant offers daily specials and homemade pies.Type of food: Traditional AmericanAverage price: $11 to $30Food recommendation: Tenderloin: “It’s hand-breaded, pounded fresh and delicious,” said owner Carrie Courtney.Drink recommendation: Weekends only, but the sunrise mimosa at breakfast timeHours: 10:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday; 10:30 a.m. to 9 p.m.

Friday; 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday; and 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sunday. Closed Monday.Phone: 773-2234Address: 654 Logan St., NoblesvilleWebsite: www.courtneykitchen.com

Courtney’s Kitchen

Directions: Chop up the broccoli into bite size pieces. Combine broccoli, onion and garlic in a bowl. Cook the pasta according to directions on package. Drain and immediately add hot pasta to the broccoli bowl. Combine the yogurt, mayo, vinegar, oil and poppy seeds in a separate bowl. Add a pinch of both salt and pepper, and then add the dressing the broccoli and pasta bowl along with the cheddar cheese. Serve cold. (Courtesy of abeautifulmess.com)

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Page 23: July 8, 2014

23July 8, 2014Current in Westfield

www.currentinwestfield.com

On June 26, J. Razzo’s 2 held its grand opening and ribbon cutting ceremony at 3150 Ind. 32, Westfield. Mayor Andy Cook attended the event to celebrate the new addition to the Westfield business commu-nity and to cut the ribbon. Those in attendance had a chance to sample some of J. Razzo’s appetizers and check out their wine and beer selection. J. Razzo’s 2 focuses on fresh, quality ingredients to make traditional Italian dishes at an affordable price point. J. Razzo’s 2 is open 5 to 9 p.m. Monday through Thursday; 5 to 10 p.m. Friday and Saturday; and is closed on Sunday. The restaurant offers takeout, catering, full bar, half-priced bottles of wine on Wednesday. For more information, call 804-2051 or visit www.jrazzos2.com. (Photo by Lauren Quintanilla)

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Local McAlister’s has best service

ACHIEvEMENT

The highest overall customer satisfaction for McAlister’s Delis in the nation resides at Hamilton Town Center in Noblesville. (Photo by Navar Watson)

By Navar Watson • [email protected]

McAlister’s Deli in the Hamilton Town Center has added an eighth plaque to their shelf of awards

after winning first place in Highest Overall Customer Satisfaction for McAlister’s

Delis across the nation. This is the third year in a row the Noblesville location has won the award, trumping some 320 other stores in the U.S.

“Anticipating the guests’ needs is our number one priority,” General Manager Steve Hon said. “Hot food. Quick service. We just try to win them – give them that ‘wow’ factor.”

The McAlister’s Deli National Conference is an annual event recognizing its stores and their ac-complishments. This year, Indiana locations won four of the 12 awards given.

McAlister’s corporate office measures custom-er satisfaction through online surveys, Hon said, which asks customers a series of questions about their dining experience.

Hon said Noblesville management rewards its staff at least once per week to show their appreciation for the staff’s hard work and good customer service. The rewards range from ice cream for the staff to bowling nights.

Assistant General Manger Michael Pratt said the store’s employees are the main contributors to customer satisfaction.

“The more staff we have, I think the better the satisfaction,” Pratt said. “They take care of people. We try to make everybody feel as special

as we can.”“I treat my guests like family,” said Tina Burgin,

an employee for three-and-a-half-years. “I want to know them on a personal basis.”

Hon called Burgin the “mom” of McAlister’s in Noblesville, both to her customers and her fellow employees.

“I like to have conversations with (the guests),” she said. “I don’t care what we talk about. I just try to know them personally by name. I want them to feel comfortable when they come in.”

Hon said they are aiming to rank first in over-all customer satisfaction again next year. He said the area of focus now is to get employees to actually greet customers the moment they walk in the door so that they feel noticed.

“That’s what we try to improve on everyday – trying to ‘wow’ the guests,” Pratt said.

The highest overall customer satisfaction for McAlister’s Delis in the nation resides at Hamilton Town Center in Noblesville. (Photo by Navar Watson)

DOUgH

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Page 24: July 8, 2014

24 July 8, 2014Current in Westfieldwww.currentinwestfield.com

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Commentary by Kathleen Connelly

Last week I was grocery shopping with my 3-year-old and out of the blue she asks, “Can you

buy me an iPad?” What? I laughed a little but she was serious and I think most kids are when they

ask their parents for some type of electronic device.

We live in a world now that kids use com-puters, iPads, e-readers, TVs, video games and cellphones. Wow, that is a lot! Yes, some devices can be used for educational means and the HSE school district currently has an initiative to have each student have their own iPad. However, maybe it is all too much? If kids are using all of these electronics, when are they playing? When are they being active indoors or outdoors? I re-member playing outside until our parents made us come in for dinner but today it seems that most kids are inside in front of a screen.

A study done in 2010 by the Kaiser Foundation found the following daily media use results for 8- to 18-year-olds:

• Approximately 7.5 hours using entertain-ment media

• Approximately 4.5 hours watching TV • Approximately 1.5 hours on the computer • Over an hour playing video games Of course there is a lot of value in all of the

technical advances we have made over the last 50 years but I do think our kids’, even parents’,

Reduce screen time todaydaily activity is suffering. Can you think of a day that you or your kids didn’t have any screen time at all? So my challenge is for you to reduce screen time starting today!

Some suggestions from www.mayoclinic.com only have electronics in common areas of the house and don’t use screen time as a reward. Another suggestion which I love is to have cer-tain times or days that there is no screen time at all. What would your kids do if there was one day a week that there was no iPad, no DSI or no TV?

If you have kids under 5-years-old, take advan-tage of the PlayFULL Hours programs in Fishers. Older kids can use one of the basketball courts at Holland Memorial Park. For the whole family, rent a kayak at Saxony Beach or visit the Monon Community Center in Carmel for water slides. Take the challenge and see what new adven-tures your family can have this summer without the TV or iPad.

Kathleen M. Connelly is a certi-fied personal trainer and health coach through American Council on Exercise. For health and fitness consulting, individuals or corpora-tions, contact Kathleen at [email protected].

DISPATCHES

6 ways to whiten your teeth: 1. Swap your toothbrush 2. Brush your tongue 3. Rinse with apple cider vinegar4. Eat raw fruits and veggies 5. Use gel trays instead of strips 6. Rinse with water after eating citrus foods

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Extra boost - Caffeine can enhance your athletic performance almost immediately by making you more alert and decreases your awareness of per-forming for a long period of time. It is encouraged to take caffeine no later than an hour before your desired event. - WomensHealth

Stress relief - Spending less than half an hour meditating can help to relieve stress symptoms throughout the day. Mindful meditation that fo-cuses on the present and implements inhaling and exhaling slowly has been proven to relieve tension and relax tight muscles. - WomensHealth

5 heartburn easing foods: 1. Oatmeal 2. Ginger 3. Pasta without red sauce 4. Beans5. Applesauce

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Page 25: July 8, 2014

25July 8, 2014Current in Westfield

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Jerash: Ruins and bagpipes Commentary by Don Knebel

The Roman ruins at Jerash, 30 miles north of Amman, are among the best-preserved of any

ancient city. Because of meticulous restorations, visitors can almost imagine they have returned to the

second century, making Jerash the second most popular tourist destination in Jordan.

People have lived near Jerash for more than 6,500 years, but the city remained small until it was conquered by the Roman Empire in 63 B.C. and joined the Decapolis, the league of cities mentioned in the Bible. Known as “Gerasa,” the city prospered from trade with Petra and began building temples, baths and theaters. When Em-peror Hadrian visited in 129 A.D., Gerasa erected a three-opening arch in his honor and began a golden age of prosperity. Eventually, the city encompassed 200 acres, with a population of about 20,000. When Christianity became legal in the fourth century, Gerasa residents defaced the temples and built churches.

After Persia conquered Gerasa in 614, the city began a slow decline. In 749, Gerasa was virtually destroyed by an earthquake and the ruins were eventually buried under blowing sands and forgot-ten. When the ruins were rediscovered in 1806,

the building materials had not been looted as in other ancient cities, allowing reconstruction of structures from the recovered rubble. Today, after almost 100 years of continuous effort, Hadrian’s arch, temples to Zeus and Artemis, two theaters, public baths and fountains, markets and a hip-podrome have been at least partially restored. The half-mile-ling cardo ends at an unusual 90-meter long paved oval surrounded by Ionic columns, whose original purpose is still uncertain.

Each July or August, entertainers from around the world celebrate their cultural connections with ancient Rome in the restored southern theater during the Jerash Festival of Culture and Arts. Every day, robed Jordanians in red keffiyehs serenade visitors to the southern theater with bagpipes. Surprising to many, bagpipes are authentically Ro-man. Early writings describe Nero playing the tibia utricularis, its pipes probably sewn to the leg and head openings of a sheep skin. The Scots borrowed the idea from invading Roman soldiers. Where the keffiyehs came from is a different story.

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].

Jordanian bagpipers at Jerash’s Southern Theater (Photo by Don Knebel)

Page 26: July 8, 2014

26 July 8, 2014Current in Westfieldwww.currentinwestfield.com

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Object and subject pronouns

grAMMAr gUY

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

Commentary by Jordan Fischer

What is an object pronoun? What’s a sub-ject pronoun? Why are they so confounding to

people?I have no answer for

the latter question, but for the first two I think I can help.

First off: What’s a pronoun? A pronoun is a proform that stands in for a noun or noun clause. In the sentence, “I just called John and he is ready to go,” “he” is a pronoun referring to the noun “John.” The noun a pronoun refers to is called the “antecedent.”

For the purpose of this column, pronouns come in two main varieties: subject and object. A subject pronoun is used when it is standing in as the subject of a sentence. An object pronoun is used as the object of a verb or preposition (which, ultimately, is probably the object of a verb).

In English, our subject pronouns are: I; he; she; we; they; and who. Our object pronouns are: me; him; her; us; them; and whom. The pronouns “it,” “you” and “what” can be used as either

subject or object pronouns, depending upon the context.

How do you figure out is you need a subject or object pronoun, though? Ask yourself: Is this pro-noun performing an action, or is it the recipient of an action? A subject performs an action, while an object is acted upon or receives an action.

Let’s consider this example sentence: “Sally threw the football to Megan.” Sally is throwing the football, so she is the subject. Me-gan is receiving the football (i.e. receiving Sally’s action), so she would get an object pronoun. With pronouns substituted, that sentence would look like: “She threw the football to her.”

Try to remember this going forward: I/he/she/we/who/they do things. Things are done to me/him/her/us/whom/them. And if you hear someone misusing pronouns, try to help them. Only you can prevent pronoun abuse.

lIfESTYlE

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Page 27: July 8, 2014

27July 8, 2014Current in Westfield

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INSIDE & OUT

Commentary by Larry Greene

EXISTING HOME: Located in the Willows subdi-vision in Zionsville, the owners of this home were

tired of their windy and sun exposed back patio area. “Our neighborhood is still under develop-

ment and there are not yet enough homes to block the strong winds. With the sun and winds constantly blowing over our umbrellas, it made it impossible for us to truly enjoy our patio.”

BASEMENT ACCESS: A transition room was added off the kitchen with a staircase leading to the basement. Decorative French doors were added to the design of the transition room - which provides the perfect flow from the kitchen and basement to the backyard patio.

NATURAL LIGHT: Preserving natural light was a priority. Fixed windows were added to the existing hearth room wall, basement wall, and on the exterior wall flanking the French doors. Two large skylights were also added to illuminate the basement stairwell.

SUNROOM DESIGN: To make the room feel bright and open, casement windows were in-stalled around the perimeter of the sunroom giv-ing it an abundant amount of natural light while also allowing the cool breeze to come through the room when opened. Cathedral ceilings also give the room a more spacious and open feel.

CONSISTENT INTERIOR & EXTERIOR FINISH: The addition was designed to give a cohesive look with the existing home. Since the original bricks on the exterior of the home were discon-tinued, new bricks were tinted to perfectly blend with the existing exterior. The interior details were also kept consistent including the rounded wall corners, white painted trim and the antique bronze stairwell balusters.

Four-season addition opens residence up to the outdoors

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.

BEfOrE & AfTEr

RESULT: The homeowners are finally able to enjoy the outdoor weather without the headache of sun and strong winds. “We love using the space in the morning. We open up all of the windows, drink coffee, read the paper and listen to the birds sing. It’s the best way to ease into the day.”

Page 28: July 8, 2014

28 July 8, 2014Current in Westfieldwww.currentinwestfield.com lIfESTYlE

Across1. I searched The Star for a ___ of...6. ...last night’s ___ game.11. Psychic power14. In the know15. Put John Mellencamp on a pedestal16. Ultimate degree in a Fishers HS math class17. Insinuate (2 wds.)18. Stalin’s predecessor19. Grazing area20. Mass Ave joint: ___ Burger Bar22. DePauw and Wabash fans, supposedly

24. Egyptian snake27. Colts owner30. Capri or Wight, e.g.31. Finish Line item33. Stanley Cup org.34. Moistened a turkey36. Nairobi’s land38. On the train40. I bought a ___ at Starbucks,...42. ...then ___ my dreadful schedule.44. ISO chamber group, maybe46. Carmel HS boys basketball coach49. Maximum

52. Gun an IndyCar engine54. Enjoy the Chicken Oscar at Hamilton Restaurant55. Geist fishing spot56. Extend a subscription to India-napolis Monthly58. Toothed tool at Home Depot59. Let go of62. Word on all US coins64. James Whitcomb Riley’s words of praise65. WTHR’s “The Voice” star Shelton68. Draw up new boundaries72. City Council affirmative vote

73. String ties74. Incline75. Bus. opposite76. I must ___ $50 to...77. ...the ___ at the Zionsville HS track meet.

Down1. Merry Maids dusting aid2. Boone County Fair barn female3. Garfield, e.g.4. Desert Wind show horse5. UIndy science class dish6. Buddy7. Half of Purdue’s football sta-dium name8. Brooklyn “Island”9. Redbox rental: “___ Brockovich”10. Russo of “Get Shorty”11. Sign up for the Indiana National Guard12. Former Channel 13 detective show: “Remington ___”13. Discontinued, with “out”21. Leppert Crematory ashes holder23. Wrongdoing24. Query25. Indiana State Fair cow or sow26. Crooked Stick water hazard28. Mine passage29. Our Lady of Grace priestly garb32. Rundown shack, e.g.34. Sound from 2-Down35. St. Louis landmark37. U. of Evansville athletes39. Frequently

41. Fitting43. Ritz Charles speaker’s platform45. Before, to an Indiana Poet Laureate47. Some IMPD forensic evidence48. Habig’s hedge plant49. Commotion50. Hippie T-shirt type51. Donnybrooks53. Relax, with “out”56. Kingdom

57. Least good60. Ind., for Indiana61. Big Red Liquors gin flavor63. McAlister’s, for one66. Hirosaki Restaurant ornamen-tal fish67. Indy winter clock setting69. Dorothy, to David Letterman70. Indianapolis Zoo beast71. Part of MPH at IMS

Answers on Page 31

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 71

72 73 74

75 76 77

7 1 2 8

8 4

5 7

7 9 8

5 3 6 9

1 3 7

1 9

6 3

3 5 2 4

NS F O

R C Q O IB S A K U R H

H A I S J N I E SB U T E T K A U R S A

T Q N P R L R I D K R T FS B T O T E A U Z E S E RU G E S N T P T N I M E L

R G P R T E O D F O X V K TU G D C C N O K N A E E T

E A S E A E S O W E L N S UQ B L R L Q W B L G H N R

U T D C U N Y A I I AA B R A E M R T B

E I R E T E BC E R D I

N G TY

6 Native Indiana Animals 4 Indy-Area Malls__________________ ____________________________________ ____________________________________ ____________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 3 Vacation Souvenirs

__________________5 Shades of Green ____________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 2 IND Airlines__________________ ____________________________________ __________________

1 Summer Month__________________

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

Page 29: July 8, 2014

29July 8, 2014Current in Westfield

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Page 30: July 8, 2014

30 July 8, 2014Current in Westfieldwww.currentinwestfield.com

Servicing:Carmel, Fishers, Noblesville,

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now HirinG – interior painter

Looking for experienced painter with good cut-in skills.

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Call Jonathan 656-7045.

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Updated kitchen. No pets.$1,025.00/month. Call 317-797-6647 or email

[email protected]

FriDay, JuLy 11 & saturDay, JuLy 12

8am - 3pmMen’s clothing, furniture,

kitchen and household items,linens and bedding sheets,

books, and used LPs.751 Hawthorne Drive (north off Smoky Row

Rd. east of Keystone Parkway)

‘94 Corvette Lt1Bright Aqua Metallic, 53,000 miles,

great condition, car show trophy winner,

$12,500.00, 317-867-0661

bus Driver/aCtivity assistant

needed for assisted living. Must have current cdl class C license

(passenger certified bus endorsement). Includes securing wheelchairs, helping residents on/off bus. Apply at Riverwalk

Commons, 7235 Riverwalk Way, Noblesville.

busy CHiropraCtiC oFFiCe seeks customer-oriented person with

computer skills like Microsoft Office and Excel. Must be a self starter and able to work evenings until 6:30 pm and some

Saturday mornings. Please contact [email protected]

to set up interviews

sprinGMiLL riDGe HoMe For saLe!

Steve Wilson custom-built 4 bedroom,3.5 bath home on quiet cul-de-sac. Possible

5th bedroom on lower level. Three car garage, large screened-in porch and deck.

317-844-4325Many recent up dates.

494 Leeds Circle Carmel, In. see “For sale by owner.com”.

Listed at $469,000.

neiGHborHooD GaraGe saLe

Multiple homes participating Oak Ridge Subdivision

Just north of Pleasantview Elementary on 975E Zionsville: Friday, July 11th & Saturday,

July 12th 8am - 2pm

LarGe MovinG saLe- CarMeL

DOWNSIZING to smaller homeLots of furniture - new and in great shape,

rugs, pictures, household,treadmill, bookcases, golf clubs.

Thurs - Sat AM July 10, 11th, 12thTC Steele Lane in Mohawk Crossing

subdivisionEast of 126th and Gray Road

CLarity personaL Care serviCes is looking for a

compassionate, mature, refined lady for full and part time positions.

No experience is necessary, but must be caring, compassionate,

well organized, articulate and educated. Send resume to

[email protected]

Page 31: July 8, 2014

31July 8, 2014Current in Westfield

www.currentinwestfield.com

now Hiring

pUzzle anSwerS

now Hiring now Hiring

aDMinistrative assistant Appointment coordination, Generated

reports, invoice documents, Billing Adjustments, Event and meeting

planning,setting appointments, send your resume and salary expectations to:

[email protected]

now HirinGA luxury Assisted Living in Carmel

is looking for individuals who are customer-service oriented,

dependable, & have a passion for serving others.

Now Hiring CNA’s/HHA’s, Servers, Activity Assistants/Drivers

& Housekeepers to join our team in August.

Please send your resume [email protected]

R E C A P P A C E R E S P

A W A R E A D O R E N T H

G E T A T L E N I N L E A

B R U E N E M I E S

A S P I R S A Y I S L E

S H O E N H L B A S T E D

K E N Y A A B O A R D

D E C A F F A C E D

S E P T E T H E A D Y

U T M O S T R E V D I N E

P I E R R E N E W S A W

R E L E A S E G O D

O D E B L A K E R E M A P

A Y E B O L O S S L O P E

R E S R E M I T T I M E R

Answers to HOOSIER HODGEPODGE: Animals: BAT, BEAVER, FOX, RABBIT, SKUNK, SQUIRREL; Shades: FOREST, HUNTER, JADE, KELLY, MINT; Malls: CAS-TLETON SQUARE, CIRCLE CENTRE, FASHION, GREENWOOD PARK; Souvenirs: MAGNET, POSTCARD, TSHIRT; Airlines: DELTA, UNITED; Month: AUGUST

GrooMer wanteD Full and Part time available.

Est. Client List, near WestfieldSupplies provided. Must have own (2/2)

scissors and trimmerCall 317-440-6139

The George Insurance Agency Located in Fishers, Indiana

CSR for Commercial Insurance• Must have 3-5 years minimum insurance

experience• FT Employment• Email Resume to:

[email protected]

boutique in HaMiLton County

seeking part time retail sales associate. 7 hours/wk (some weeks 14 hours). MUST

be available some weekends & during the holiday season. Email résumé to

[email protected]

Wanted occasional part-time help throughout the year.

General bookstore duties including selling books.

Please call 733-1747 Black Dog Books in Zionsville.

Empowering news and information or older adults (and their loved ones)

in Hamilton and Boone counties.

COMING JULY 28

• Personalities

• Health

• Wellness

• Fitness

• Nutrition

• Travel

• Your money

• Diversions

Page 32: July 8, 2014

32 July 8, 2014Current in Westfieldwww.currentinwestfield.com

©2014 IU Health 5/14 HY05614_0991

Take a test that could save your life.

IU Health North Hospital | 11700 N. Meridian St., Carmel, IN

To schedule a mammogram and get a free breast cancer risk screening, please call 317.688.2955To learn more, visit iuhealth.org/northbreastrisk

Our physicians recommend a yearly mammogram for women 40 years and older. And at Indiana University Health North Hospital, we not only offer mammograms from expert technicians, but a free in-depth risk screening and a prevention program to help fight breast cancer before it even begins. Of course, should you need treatment, you’ll find all the specialists you need in one convenient location, providing comprehensive care, support and education every step of the way.

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