november 29, 2011
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Current in WestfieldTRANSCRIPT
Pediatric experts close to home.©2011 IU Health 10/11 HY73511_4467
73511_4467_IUHN_10.375x1.25_4c_CIC_RileyLocal_PediatricExperts.indd 1 9/30/11 11:50 AM
Tuesday November 29, 2011
GraNd park GrouNdbreakiNG / p6 • clothing drive / p7 • it’s golden / p21
Westfield in Lights serenades the sounds of the holidays / P9
Photo by Robert Herrington
basile gift shop shop hours, Monday–saturday, 11 aM–4 pM
no trip to the Center is complete without visiting the new Basile Gift Shop. you’ll find a wide variety of musical gifts, apparel, compact discs and more.
basile café Café hours, Monday–saturday, 11 aM–2 pM
With a menu this tasty, why wait until the performance? stop by the Basile Café during lunchtime and enjoy a delicious salad, sandwich or wrap.
the michael feinstein great american songbook archive & gallery Gallery hours, Monday–friday, 11 aM–4 pM
The Michael Feinstein Great American Songbook Archive & Gallery is one of the greatest collections of music memorabilia ever assembled. the current exhibit, GI JIVE, features photographs and rare footage of the music and entertainers of World War ii.
Day or Night, the PallaDium is always at the CeNter of the aCtioN.
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MEDIA: Current
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www.youarecurrent.com Current in Westfield November 29, 2011 | 3
Founded Jan. 29, 2008, at Westfield, INVol. IV, No. 45
Copyright 2011. Current Publishing, LLCAll Rights Reserved.
30 South Range Line RoadCarmel, IN 46032
317.489.4444Managing Editor – Lindsay Eckert
[email protected] / 489.4444 ext. 204
Associate Editor – Terry Anker
Art Director – Zachary Ross [email protected] / 489.4444
Associate Artist – Andrea Nickas
[email protected] / 489.4444
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Senior Sales Executive – Dennis O’Malia
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Business OfficeBookkeeper – Heather Cole
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Publisher – Brian Kelly
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General Manager – Steve Greenberg
[email protected] / 847.5022
The views of the columnists in Current In Westfield are their own and do not necessarily reflect the positions of this newspaper.
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Our nation has all sorts of arcane, nonsensical laws on the books. Each week, we’ll share one with you.
In Augusta Maine, to stroll down the street playing a violin is against the law.
Source: Weird Laws (iPhone application)
Photo Illustration
strange laws
Every week, we will print a por-tion of the U.S. Constitution, fol-lowed by a portion of the Indiana Constitution. We encourage you to benchmark government policies against these bedrock documents. Today: the U.S. Constitution.
Article. I. Section. 2. Clause 4: When vacancies happen in the Repre-sentation from any State, the Executive Authority thereof shall issue Writs of Election to fill such Vacancies.
Clause 5: The House of Representatives shall chuse their Speaker and other Officers; and shall have the sole Power of Impeachment.
Section. 3. Clause 1: The Senate of the United States shall be com-posed of two Senators from each State, chosen by the Legislature thereof,
(See Note 3) for six Years; and each Senator shall have one Vote.
Clause 2: Immediately after they shall be assembled in Consequence of the first Election, they shall be divided as equally as may be into three Classes. The Seats of the Senators of the first Class shall be vacated at the Expiration of the second Year, of the second Class at the Expiration of the fourth Year, and of the third Class at the Expiration of the sixth Year, so that one third may be chosen every second Year; and if Vacancies happen by Resignation, or otherwise, during the Recess of the Legislature of any State, the Executive thereof may make temporary Appointments until the next Meeting of the Legislature, which shall then fill such Vacancies. (See Note 4)
The views in these editorials are of reader participants. They do not represent those of Current Publishing ownership and management.
COnstItUtIOn ClOseUP
Who doesn’t enjoy the holidays. . . a time for celebration and reflection, spending quality time with those we love, and boy oh boy the food! The moment has come when our calendars are beginning to be filled for the remainder of the year with parties, relating anywhere from our employers, neighbors, children’s schools, to our own families. Each of which will certainly come with an assortment of sweets and treats. Rather than just accept the fact that for the next 90 days, we walk around with our belts notched a bit looser than usual, please take time to consider the following easy steps to account for the seasonal bump in calories.
Some simple suggestions include, using the stairs as opposed to the el-evator, enjoying a tall glass of water with your food so you feel full quicker and offering healthy food options if you are hosting the party.
Utilizing some of these simple steps can be the difference to keeping our weight steady, versus gaining that uncomfortable “holiday pounds.” And don’t forget that just being mindful of what we are eating can go a long way as well. Best of luck and Happy Holidays!
Loosening our belts Poverty in our countyIt is our position that the holidays can be a
tough time on the less fortunate. Everyone needs a helping hand everyone once in a while, thus, we believe that if you, or someone you know who fits the criteria then you should take advantage of the service provided.
Township assistance, or temporary assistance, is a unique service provided by the Clay Township Trustee’s office. The program is available for anyone who lives between 96th street to the south, 146th to the north, White River to the east and the Hamilton/Boone County line to the west. The assistance helps pay for things such as rent, utilities, prescriptions, medical, school books and supplies, food, fuel, transportation and moving expenses as well as other things.
Those in need of assistance can call the Clay Township Trustees office at 846-2773 or walk into their office, which is located at 10701 N. College Ave. For more information, visit www.claytwp.org. There, you can get the application needed to begin the process of receiving assistance.
OUr VIews
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4 | November 29, 2011 Current in Westfield www.youarecurrent.com
We hope everyone had a wonderful Thanksgiving Day and extended weekend, but we’re guessing not very many were as thoroughly thankful as Hamilton County Sheriff Mark Bowen, who the week before had a “just in time” heart procedure. It saved his life. Bowen, a slim-and-trim avid runner and fitness enthusiast, unknowingly was bat-tling heredity. He is successfully and quickly recovering, and he said he will be cleared to resume running in the very near future. “I’m lucky,” he told us. We’ll take it!
• • •This is disgusting, disheartening and down-
right inhumane. There’s an overflow of pets at the Hamilton County Humane Society. That’s not the real headline, though. Consider this: Capacity is overflowing, because selfish humans that went over the river and through the woods last week, decided to dump their pets on the shelter instead of being respon-sible pet owners and arranging for their care at a kennel or by a family member, friend or neighbor. Rebecca Stevens, the humane soci-ety’s executive director, and her staff actually held the shelter’s first-ever Black Friday sale with drastically reduced adoption pricing in response to the overflow of pets. (The event began after our press time, but we hope it was successful.) As for those former pet owners, we hope they take a good, long look in the
mirror. It. Just. Blows. Our. Minds!• • •
Put down the leftovers and get into the spirit of the season! Westfield in Lights is Fri-day from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. on North Union Street. Downtown Westfield Neighborhood Association, in partnership with the City of Westfield, will bring the second-annual tree-lighting festival to life. Beginning in the late afternoon, North Union will be closed just North of Penn Street to just South of Cathe-rine Street to accommodate foot traffic safety and carriage rides. Mayor Andy Cook will be judging the JoSheWe Gingerbread House Competition (open to the public at The Fern) and then conducting the annual tree-lighting at 7 with one of Westfield’s Olivia Carpenter, who will flip the switch. For more information, please visit www.dwna.org.
FrOM tHe BaCKsHOP
Brian Kelly & steve greenberg
Sheriff giving major thanks these days
Terry Anker is an associate editor of Current Publishing, LLC. You may e-mail him at [email protected].
CommentaryBy terry anker
Experience teaches that winning football coaches are amongst the most unbeatable of political adversaries. If they choose to run for office, they put together a plan, organize a quali-fied, trained and loyal team and execute without mercy. Likewise, there is an adage in politics that such a formidable personage is “unbeatable unless they are found in the company of a dead girl or a live boy.” While unmitigated in its crassness, the saying sheds an interesting perspective on the appalling turn of events in Penn State University’s storied gridiron program and its much-honored head coach, Joe Paterno, and his staff.
In thinking about this column, I read the 20-plus page grand jury report that finally brought media attention to a situation that seems to have permeated the Penn State team for years. One can only hope that the issue here is not that Paterno and his merry band are all debauched pedophiles – in fact, it is highly unlikely it will be so simple. Yet the fact remains that this op-eration appears to have not only protected itself
from accountability but continued to allow circumstances to occur that would lead to more irresponsible “horse-play,” at best, and criminal depravity, at worst, on the part of central figures to the institution.
Aside from reck-lessly over-promising and under-delivering on many of their commitments to students, parents and others, universities have a
long history of believing themselves exempt from external review. The mantra – we will handle this internally – leads to a culture of secrecy and superiority. The fervent belief that outsiders (that means all of us) couldn’t possibly understand the ivory tower breeds contempt for transparency. Lynching Paterno may satisfy the mob but isn’t a significant review of sustained institutional corruption within these mega businesses what is really needed? Perhaps better said – also needed.
The crass truth
The mantra – we will handle this internally – leads to a culture of
secrecy and superiority.
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COMMentarYBy lindsay eckert
As the sun sinks into a tryptophan-induced sleep and Thanksgiving day comes to a close our Thanksgiving begins. Grandparents, cousins, aunts and uncles flood the kitchen while cooking din-ner, trying to snatch the first spoonful of my gran’s poetically-whisked mashed potatoes and my mom’s layered mac and cheese. By the time we sit down to enjoy the turkey, whether it’s injected with Cajun spices, fried or the latest turkey-cooking trend we have already snacked our way through dinner. So we put the food in the fridge and retire to football games, searching ads and overhearing competitive yells of grown men playing video games.
But, come 9 or 10 p.m. everyone snaps out of their Thanksgiving Day haze and the real Thanksgiving begins.
Mom makes her famous “concoction,” an ac-cidental recipe she discovered when she was a teenager and didn’t know how to heat a turkey. She throws some stuffing in a pan, pulls off pieces of turkey and mixes it together on a yeast roll.
The “concoction” is the fuel that ignites some major competitiveness during the annual Euchre tourney. Thanksgiving night is crucial for Eu-chre success. Our family tournament starts with pairing up with your partner and you’re stuck with that person for every euchre game until the grand finale on New Year’s Eve night.
My 80-year-old pap and 78-year-old gran are some serious contenders, who mean business,
they’re not afraid to throw some trash talk out or give a few sneaky winks to get them over the edge. My mom is the secret weapon, the one ev-eryone steers clear from because her talk to play ratio is way more talk than paying attention to the cards. However, she and my cousin really did a number on the family two years in a row; her table chatter is her winning weapon.
My uncle was always the star of laughter, “The Allan Show” we would sit on the floor in pjs eat-ing pie laughing about the stories of yesterday. This year will be the first year without my uncle, he passed away unexpectedly in January and the exciting spirit that comes with preparing Thanks-giving has been substantially dimmed. It’s hard to find thankfulness on Thanksgiving when you’re looking at the empty seat where a great man once sat every year. I’m thankful I can hear the stories he told, I’m thankful I was able to smile back at him when his smile lit our lives.
Whether you’re celebrating new beginnings or honoring a type of ending find thankfulness in the moments you have. Take pictures in your mind and cherish the people around you. Find thankfulness this holiday season, even if it’s not in the way you expected to.
Finding thankfulness
Lindsay Eckert is the managing editor of Current in Westfield. You can reach him via e-mail at [email protected].
www.youarecurrent.com Current in Westfield November 29, 2011 | 5
COMMentarY By Danielle wilson
’Tis the season. Hunting season, that is. And like many women around this deer-filled state, I was abandoned last weekend by my darling husband to single-parent our kids while he galli-vanted in the woods with his rifle and beef jerky. Years ago, if you’d asked me how I felt about this annual ritual, I would have complained incessantly about the selfishness of men who ditch domestic responsibilities to go “play” with Bowie knives and tree stands. Then I would have martyred myself for the whole month of November while Doo relived his childhood dream of becoming Jeremiah Johnson. Finally, I would have held his hiatus over his head until I’d had equal amount of fun time.
But guess what? Now that my kids no longer wear diapers or take naps, I kind of like hunting season. In fact, I’ve been looking forward to it for a few weeks now. Wha-aaaat? Yeah, I know. It’s crazy.
But lately Doo and I have been getting on each other’s nerves on the weekends. He’s been swamped at work and so spends most of Satur-day and Sunday either sitting at his desk or on the couch. When he isn’t cranking it out, he’s tuning-out with television or Angry Birds. All well and good, except that I’m a guilt-ridden working mom who feels like the only chance I have to clean the house and have fun with our
four children is on the weekends. Did I mention I’m also a control freak? So you can imagine the cuss-word cacophony inside my head when I see Doo − noise-reducing headphones on − “work-ing” on something that looks very similar to a CarMax page while I’m trying to vacuum. And Doo, understandably, gets honked off by my obnoxious bossiness. He tells me to relax and “let things slide,” to enjoy my days off, but that, of course, only makes me more irritated.
Luckily, hunting season is here, providing us a much-needed break from each other. He gets to have manly man time with his NRA posse, and I get to rule the roost without interference from “Fun Parent.” And since my children can all sleep through the night and toast a waffle, I don’t feel abandoned anymore. The house stays clean, I get to hang out with the kids, and we arrive at church and soccer games on time. With Doo gone, there’s no Doo’s “To Do” list to not get done. Make sense?
So yes, ’tis the season for shooting Bambi, but it’s no longer the season for mommy bitterness. Yay, hunting! Peace out.
Hunting season, yay!
Danielle Wilson is a Carmel resident and contributing columnist. You may e-mail her at [email protected].
“Like” us on Facebook and follow uson Twitter for a chance to win a free iPad!
Join us as Santa visits the dentistand get your picture taken with him!
SATURDAY, DEC. 3RD, 9AM - 12PM
1040 N. Range Line Road, Carmel, IN846-3436 | www.kristoffdds.com
Prizes • Refreshments • Fun with the elves!All Santa-believers are welcome!
DENTISTRYKristoff Hanson
Family and cosmetic dentistry for theCarmel area for over 25 years.
For every child that comes to visit Santa, we will make a donation to Free to Smile Foundation, a charity that does cleft palate surgery for children.
Friday, December 2nd,5:30pm - 8:30pm
WWW.DWNA.ORG | FREE EVENT!
» Water woes? – A water tower near 161st Street and Spring Mill Road was drained last week, it may affect water pressure and color. Call 804-3150 for questions.
» Maple Glen Elementary – Blue, the Indianapolis Colts’ mascot visited Maple Glen Elementary to share information about student pride during a convoca-tion last week“Take P.R.I.D.E. in Yourself”! Blue shared his message that focused on physical fitness, respect, intelligent deci-sions, diet and education. Students took a pledge to take pride in themselves.
» Westfield Spell Bowl teams ranked top 10 – Both Westfield Intermediate School Spell Bowl teams placed in the top 10 in Class 1 of the state Indiana As-sociation of School Principal’s Elementary Spell Bowl contest last week. WIS Team 1 captured fourth while Team 2 finished in tenth. Team 1 correctly spelled 55 words, while Team 2 finished with 52. In Class 4, Maple Glen Elementary placed 24th in the state and Oak Trace Elementary was 30th. More than 5,400 students on 440 teams competed across the state to cor-rectly spell 56 words in eight rounds of competition.
» New in Westfield – Westfield Public Works Dept. implemented a new online water and sewer bill comparison last week on its web site. To see how your water and sewer bills compare to other Indiana cities visit, www.westfield.in.gov.
» City of Westfield meetings – West-field in Bloom all committee meeting- City Services building at 7 p.m. Dec. 1 Advisory plan commission first meeting- City Hall at 7 p.m. Dec. 5.
DIsPatCHes
Maple Glen Elementary students Zach Purtle-baugh, Breanna Koester, Rachael Urquhart, and Physical Education Teacher, Matt Prib-beno with Blue, the Colts mascot.
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6 | November 29, 2011 Current in Westfield www.youarecurrent.com
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Mayor Andy Cook to more than 200 attendees about the future of Grand Park
From left, Craig Wood, former landowner of where Grand Park will stand, Gov. Daniels and Mayor Cook
Gov. Daniels and Cook at the groundbreaking ceremony for Grand Park
Gov. Daniels addresses attendees during the ceremony
From left, Councilman Bob, Craig Wood, Gov. Daniels and Mayor Cook make the first dig on Grand Park soil
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Snapshot: Grand Park Groundbreaking
Back in the saddle!
eCommunity.com/north
Brianna is a happy, healthy kid. But not long ago she stepped on a plant that punctured her foot and created a life-threatening infection. Her journey back to health started at MedCheck, then she was connected to her pediatrician and her pediatric surgeon at community Hospital North. Brianna’s parents and her entire medical team were connected and coordinated throughout her care with Community’s electronic health record. So her journey had a happy ending, and now she’s back to being a healthy kid again.
Convenient, coordinated and comprehensiveCommunity Health Network has been named one of the most connected health organizations in the country. Our electronic health records insure that your care is convenient, coordinated and comprehensive. The most complicated cases become collaborative because the entire team is instantly aware of every step that has been taken.
Children’s Health Services at Community Hospital North. The official healthcare provider of your neighborhood.
Visit eCommunity.com/children to learn about Children’s Health at Community Hospital North.
8 | November 29, 2011 Current in Westfield www.youarecurrent.com
David Bowden ConductorAngela Brown VocalistJoin us for a family-friendly performance featuring world-renowned soprano Angela Brown. Program includes traditional holiday favorites and an audience sing-along!
ST. VINCENT FOOD DRIVE!Please help St.Vincent Carmel Hospital and the CSO in stocking the food pantries in Hamilton County by bringing a non-perishable food item to the concert.
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Washington Woods El-ementary has been the heart of donating to needy families for 10 years. The school’s annual clothing drive brings hundreds of clothes to the school and stu-dents fold and sort the clothes for Westfield families.
Brian Sawa, Washington Woods school counselor, said the clothing drive helped more than 150 people last year. Sawa said the students’ dedication for helping families is inspiring.
“They are so excited to help others by folding and sorting the clothes, it’s funny because parents will mention they wish their kids were as enthusiastic to fold and sort clothes at home; but this is one of the ways they can contribute and they like it,” Sawa said.
Brisa Martinez, a Washington Woods fourth grade student said she likes the feeling of help-ing others.
“It makes me happy and full of joyness,” Mar-tinez said. “We are helping people so they don’t have to stay cold and they can get clothes to stay happy and warm.”
Arianna Teles, a Washington Woods fourth grade student, said it’s important to give back.
“You help people by donating old clothes and you can make a bunch of people happy, that feels good,” Teles said. “It’s good to let people know other people care about them.”
Sawa said watching the students is a neat ex-perience and builds a foundation for students to understand the value of giving back.
“It’s exciting to be able to involve students at an early age because they are more likely to help in the future,” Sawa said. “It shows regardless of who you are or how old you are you can always contribute.”
Students bring warmth to community
Fourth grade students Cristan Dodson and Brisa Martinez sort clothes at Washington Woods elementary
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www.youarecurrent.com Current in Westfield November 29, 2011 | 9
By lindsay eckert [email protected]
Downtown Westfield will be lit up with holi-day spirit Friday as the city celebrates its second-annual tree-lighting festival.
Although the tree is the main attraction, there will be many other festivities happening on North Union Street in the gathering area inau-gurated by this summer’s Farmer’s Market.
The Downtown Westfield Neighborhood As-sociation, in partnership with the City of West-field, transplanted the hand-picked tree to its new, permanent location in Hadley Park, which DWNA President Anne Poynter said represents the “heart of the community.”
“We want to establish the Farmer’s Market and community garden area near City Hall as our community gathering spot,” Poynter said. “Having grown to 30,000-plus residents, we need a large area for the community to get to-gether, and this is a beautiful spot for it.”
Although tree-lighting festivities may unite communities during the holiday season, Poynter said the new City Tree, planted last month, will unite the community all year around, and its presence honors the city’s history.
“Planting a live tree in an area of celebration always carries symbolism of new growth and continuity,” Poynter said. “I think this tree will signify our unity as a community throughout the year. In the winter, it will symbolize our giving spirit and in the summer it will remind us of our growth and endurance as a city. West-field’s roots are very deep, and I’m so proud of all the family legacies who still participate in helping us thrive as well as the new ‘transplants’ who have stepped up in making Westfield their hometown.”
The 20-foot spruce tree, and star of the show,
will now have a permanent home at the center of Hadley Park, Union Street and Ind. 32, and it is designated as the City Tree for all Westfield future events. Now that the tree has a perma-nent home Poynter said the city is looking for an official sponsor to give the tree its permanent name.
“We decided that this year we wanted to put a permanent fixture into the downtown,” Poyn-ter said. “We want to secure a sponsor for the tree, and the opportunity is still available.”
Wendy Vivirito, Westfield in Lights founding chair, said the event’s location is a true celebra-tion of Westfield during the holidays.
“The evening is all about bringing the com-munity together to celebrate the beginning of the holiday and sharing the spirit with our downtown merchants and restaurants,” Vivirito said.
Along with the tree lighting, some featured festivities include the live nativity scene in Had-
ley Park and the Girl Scout gingerbread house contest.
Westfield Mayor Andy Cook will be judging the JoSheWe Gingerbread House Competition, open to the public at The Fern, 135 N. Union St.
“The Girl Scouts bring a sense of youth to the event, Westfield in Lights is all about bringing the community together to celebrate the holiday season and the girl scouts help represent that,” Vivirito said. “It also gives Girl Scouts and other youth the opportunity to know there’s more than just their troop or school.”
Poynter said the community will also be decorating the tree that will symbolize the heart of its character for the event.
“We have the community coming out to help us put up lights around the area and on the tree. The WHS Band Boosters will be selling large bows the night of our event for the com-munity to place on the tree with special inten-tions,” Poynter said. “Anyone can decorate a tree with fancy lights and ornaments, but that’s not who we are as a community. We are very intimate in our intentions and everything we do strives to have meaning and roots attached.”
Vivirito said the personal touch of decorating is the core of the holidays.
“People can attach notes to their bows in honor of a loved one or something they are thankful for,” Vivirito said. “Giving people a chance to take part in decorating the tree is what Westfield in Lights represents, people coming together.”
Westfield in Lights serenades the sounds of the holidays
Tree lighting at 7 p.m. at Hadley Park
Other festivities for Westfield in Lights will take place in downtown Westfield from 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.:•Historic carriage rides on North
Union Street sponsored by Wittler Orthodontics, MaxIT and Duke Energy
• Indoor winter market at Christ United Methodist Church with 34 craft vendors Westfield Friends living nativity in Hadley Park
•Gingerbread house competition by the JoSheWe Girl Scouts at The Fern Mr. and Mrs. Claus at the Santa House with photos by the Westfield Rotary Club
•Merchant Light Competition sponsored by the “Westfield in Bloom” committee Local nonprofit organization sponsored planters on Main Street and Ind. 32 Fire Pits sponsored by various community groups
•Bows to decorate the City tree provided by Westfield High School Band
•Boy Scouts canned food drive•Amanda Strong drop off location•Carolers and dance performances by
local ballet studios
sCheDuLe
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Gingerbread houses competing for the winning title in last year’s Westfield in Lights
Girl scouts caroling through downtown during Westfield in Lights festivities
Carolers from local churches join in song
Santa’s elf invites kids into the
Santa house for some sweet treats
10 | November 29, 2011 Current in Westfield www.youarecurrent.com
By lindsay eckert [email protected]
Mayor Andy Cook spoke to Westfield com-munity residents during the State of the City last week at The Bridgewater Club. Although Cook touched on the major developments for the Grand Junction and Grand Park, he made it about the city employees.
The speech focused on the different depart-ments within the city and the goals they reached during the past year.
“He wanted to address the city employees for all they’ve achieved this year,” City Spokes-woman Carrie Cason said. “The city employees are the ones making Grand Junction and Grand Park happen so he wanted to focus on them.”
Department Accomplishments in 2011. City of Westfield’s government agencies have earned grants, developed new technology and improved communication with the city. The agencies’ achievements are listed below:
Westfield Fire Dept. The department won a $1.4 million SAFER grant. The department re-cently opened the new station, 83. Construction has begun on the public safety training facility.
Communication Dept. Communications employees added two Facebook and Twitter accounts and a new website to expand the way the city communicates with its residents. The department created a new monthly newsletter to all residents and created a new logo for the city.
Westfield Police Dept. The department
implemented 1,000 more traffic stops in 2011 than in 2010. Accidents in Westfield have de-creased 15 percent since 2009. The department established a new initiative to get officers into the community, resulting in1,386 foot patrols and 134 bike patrols
Westfield Parks and Recreation Dept. The new Midland Trace trail was built. The trail runs from Union to Carey Street. The Monon was extended from161st Street to Quaker Park. The department completed the reconstruction of Old Friends Cemetery Park.
Informatics Dept. The department intro-duced the city’s first flex map. Informatics implemented a GPS grid system using mile markers for trails for police to locate the person quickly and accurately to improve public safety.
Public Works Dept. The department con-structed and opened Cool Creek Park Road and the new roundabout at 151st Street in a ribbon cutting ceremony last month. The department earned grants to construct roundabouts at 156 Street and Springmill Road and 161st Street and Oak Ridge Road.IRWA voted the public works department as the best tasting water for the sec-ond consecutive year.
Clerk treasurer’s office. The office imple-mented a paperless financial system to maintain finances more efficiently. They also developed a P-card system to precisely track spending throughout government departments.
State of the cityViews | COmmunity | Cover story | education | Diversions | Anti-Aging | Dough | it’s Golden | Pets | inside & Out | Laughs | Puzzles | Classifieds
www.youarecurrent.com Current in Westfield November 29, 2011 | 11
[email protected] Forrest, a Westfield High School
business teacher, was awarded the Indiana Emerging Professional Award for Business Edu-cators by the Indiana Business Education Asso-ciation last week.
“Lindsay was nominated because she is an in-credible role model for her students, is a creative teacher, brings real-world business experiences into the classroom, and her energy for teaching is contagious,” said WHS Principal Stacy Mc-Guire. “Lindsay is the type of teacher that every parent dreams of having for his or her child.”
Lindsay joined the WHS teaching staff in 2008. She is a graduate of Florida State Univer-sity and received her master’s in business educa-tion from Ball State University.
The award is for business teachers who have taught for five years or less. The nominees are judged on teaching abilities, service to the school and leadership.
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By lindsay eckert [email protected]
Get your snow clothes ready. Westfield Parks and Recreation Dept. has created a new sledding hill for the snowy season.
“The Hill” will be the center attraction at Simon Moon Park when Mother Nature leaves hermark on Westfield.
The sledding hill will open for the first time this year after the first accumulative snow fall. Although the sledding hill will make its slick debut this year, the parks department has been working on the hill far for some time.
The parks department planted approximately 475 trees that will be used to designate sledding paths and ensure safety while sledding at Simon Moon Park.
Although “The Hill” will keep kids sledding all winter, the fun won’t stop when the last snow hits.
According to the parks department “The Hill” should bring fun all year long.
“It will also be good for picnics in the spring and summer or just good old rolling down the hill,” Stephanie Fix, a parks and recreation em-ployee, said.
Parks and Recreation gets ready for sledding season
WHS business teacher awarded IBEA Emerging Professional Award
Westfield High School Business Teacher Lindsay Forrest and Indiana Business Education Association President John Dawson
Views | COmmunity | Cover story | education | Diversions | Anti-Aging | Dough | it’s Golden | Pets | inside & Out | Laughs | Puzzles | Classifieds
12 | November 29, 2011 Current in Westfield www.youarecurrent.com
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Name: Mary-jo IversonGrade/Subject at what school: Third Grade, Carey Ridge ElementaryNumber of years teaching: 32Background/Schooling (col-lege & high school): North Muskegon High School, Mich.Bachelor’s Western Michigan University, Ka-lamazoo, Mich.Master’s Education, Western Michigan Univer-sity, Kalamazoo, Mich.Why did you become a teacher? My second grade teacher was a widow that was caring for her mother-in-law during that year. She pro-vided such wonderful instruction, but shared part of her home with us and the importance of compassion and hard work. She made each stu-dent feel as if there was nothing that they could not tackle with hard work.
What goals do you have for your students? To truly become life-long learners; taking every opportunity they are given to do their personal best.What do you encourage parents to do at home to help their children strengthen par-ticular skills? Parents, give your children re-sponsibility and time management skills early in life. Read and talk to them even before they are born. Use every experience to teach, ex. grocery store, museums, nature hikes, carpooling. Pro-vide children with clear expectations concerning education.Name your favorite movie: “The Notebook”Name your favorite musician or band: Point of GraceWhat’s something your students might not know about you? I am a cancer survivor. One of my former students is now Michigan State University’s quarterback.
Meet Your Teacher: Mary-jo Iverson
graMMar lessOn By Brandie Bohney
Perhaps that headline is a bit of a hyperbole; this column will not end confusion in its entire-ty. It won’t even end the whole of grammatical confusion. It is, however, the end of the reader-suggested confused-words series.
I have three topics to cover this week. Two are a repeat of columns past (and they both follow the same general rule), and one is new to the Grammar Guru series. Let’s start with the new material, eh?
First up is the difference between stationary and stationery. I had a couple of readers email to ask about this one, and I had a third reader email with a terrific trick to remembering which is which. Reader Paula suggests that it is easy to remember that stationery (with an e) is the stuff you write on if you remember once it’s written on, you can send stationery (again, with an e) in an envelope (also with an e).
I don’t know any tricks to remember that sta-tionary (with an a) means still or immobile, but if you remember the envelope thing, you’ll be
able to whittle your options down.The other topic for today is the difference
between affect and effect and the difference be-tween accept and except. I’ve relatively recently covered this topic, but I continue to get ques-tions about both sets of words, so here it is again.
In both cases, the trick is the same: A = Ac-tion. Affect and accept are both verbs. Verbs generally indicate action, and both affect and accept begin with a, as does action. So in these two cases, a is for action. Effect is generally a noun, and except is generally a preposition or conjunction.
And there you have it: the end of your sug-gestions for confusing word pairs. Feel free to keep the emails coming, though! I’m happy to answer your grammar questions.
The end of confusion
Brandie Bohney is a grammar enthusiast and former English teacher. If you have a grammar-related question, please email her at [email protected].
Views | Community | Cover story | eDuCAtiOn | Diversions | Anti-Aging | Dough | it’s Golden | Pets | inside & Out | Laughs | Puzzles | Classifieds
www.youarecurrent.com Current in Westfield November 29, 2011 | 13
» Favorite recipes – Have a tasty holiday recipe you’d be willing to share with the community? Current is looking for residents to submit their holiday recipes, which will run in editions throughout December. Reci-pes can be emailed to [email protected] and please include your name so we can give your culinary skills credit.
» ‘Arrested Development’ returning in 2013 – For the first time since “Arrested Development” was canceled in 2006, the dysfunctional Southern California clan will return for all new episodes. The show will be available exclusively to Netflix members beginning in 2013. The cult hit aired for three seasons, 2003-2006, on Fox and won an Emmy for best comedy.
-www.thewrap.com
» Don’t refrigerate bread – Store bread in a cool, dry place, away from direct sunlight. Store your bread in a bread box if you have one, or keep the bread in its original packag-ing (whether plastic or paper). The shelf life of bread will vary by type but should keep anywhere from two days to a week. What-ever you do, don’t refrigerate your bread —
refrigeration can actually cause the bread to stale faster.
-www.miamiherald.com
» First class getting better? – U.S. airlines, profitable again after a disastrous decade, are spending almost $2 billion to upgrade amenities for their highest-paying customers. On the most profitable international routes, high fliers are being treated with preflight champagne, flat-screen TVs and seats that turn into beds. Flight attendants greet them by name, hang up jackets and serve meals on china. The lavish treatment is intended to create loyalty among passengers who do not shop based on price.
-Associated Press
» Site matches cocktails, music – There’s now a website that will suggest cocktails based on the music you happen to be lis-tening to. The site’s called Drinkify and cre-ates drink suggestions by combining technol-ogies from Echo Nest and music catalog Last.fm with a “proprietary Drinkify database.” This means that you can enter an artist name or a song title in order to receive a simple drink recipe. Entering “Johnny Cash,” for ex-ample, you might be told to combine some whiskey and honey.
-www.digitallife.today.msnbc.com
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LIVE MUSICMickey’s Irish Pub, 13644 N. Meridian St. For more information call 573-9746.
Friday – Aberdeen ProjectSaturday – Living Proof
Mo’s Irish Pub, 13193 Levinson Lane in the Hamilton Town Center, Noblesville. For more
information, call 770-9020.Friday – 3:1Saturday – My Yellow Rickshaw
Moon Dog Tavern, 825 E 96th St., In-dianapolis, 46240. Call 575-6364 for more information.
Friday – Living ProofSaturday – Bobby Clark Band
Now to Dec. 20 – Continue a family tradition and take a hayride to the field to choose and cut your own Christmas tree during Stonycreek Farm’s Country Christmas, 11366 Ind. 38 East, Noblesville. You will also find a wide selection of freshly cut trees, fresh wreaths and garland at the greenhouse. For more information, call 773-3344 or visit www.stonycreekfarm.net.
Thursday – Celebrate the official welcome of the holiday season by joining family and friends as the town of Fishers lights the Holiday tree and decorations from 6:30 to 8 p.m. in front of Fish-ers Town Hall, 1 Municipal Dr. Enjoy a visit with Santa, caroling with Sister Cities’ Dickens Carol-ers, refreshments and other surprises.
Thursday to Dec. 31 – Tempt your taste buds as you stroll through a wonderland of gingerbread creations in all shapes and sizes at Gingerbread Village at Conner Prairie, 13400 Allisonville Rd.,
Fishers. Gingerbread village will be open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday and 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday. For more information, call 776-6006 or visit www.connerprairie.org.
Saturday – The Winter Market at Carmel City Center will feature 20 vendors from the Carmel Farmers Market from 9 a.m. to noon. The Win-ter Market will be held in a storefront at 719 Hanover Place on the interior of Carmel City Center, located on the southwest corner of City Center Drive and Rangeline Road. For more in-formation, visit www.carmelcitycenter.com.
Saturday – Come enjoy a festive Holiday Farmers Market with all the craft and food vendors from the Noblesville Farmers Market just in time for Christmas. The market will be held from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Exhibition Halls at Hamilton County 4-H Grounds, 2003 Pleasant St., Noblesville. Admis-sion is $1 with no charge for children 10 and under.
Views | Community | Cover story | education | DiVersiOns | Anti-Aging | Dough | it’s Golden | Pets | inside & Out | Laughs | Puzzles | Classifieds
www.youarecurrent.com Current in Westfield November 29, 2011 | 15
Did you ever wonder, while proceeding in near bumper-to-bumper traffic as you approach the stadium, how far some of your fellow drivers have driven on game day? My staff did parking lot surveys across the country and found that the average tailgater, for Division One college games, drove 79 miles. If you think about it, schools like Ohio State, Minnesota and Michigan have huge amounts of these drivers that only drive a handful of miles. This skews the averages to a lower num-ber. For schools like Indiana, Notre Dame and Purdue, the numbers would probably be much
higher.We interviewed a man who travels to all Illini
games from Philadelphia. Another Illini fan drives from Aspen. There’s a family that drives to IU from Traverse City, Mich., every game. I’ve met Notre Dame fans who drive from Pittsburgh. There are pictures on my website of North Carolina residents who drive to Wisconsin games. The draw, for all these college grads, is tailgating, football, and a love of the days of college.
You don’t have to be a Buckeye fan to enjoy these peanut butter tailgate treats.
Joe Drozda is a Carmel resident and an author about sports and food. You may contact him at [email protected] or visit www.tailgatershandbook.com.
The Scoop: For nearly a decade, Matteo’s Ristorante Italiano has been a cornerstone of downtown Noblesville. Elegance and tradition combine to give customers a truly fine dining experience. Plush décor, subtle lighting, and a rich sampling of both art and music from Italy provide an atmosphere of authenticity. Matteo’s also offers a menu that features the best of Italian cuisine providing a large assortment of favorites for both lunch and dinner. Matteo’s is prepared to meet the dining of needs of couples, families, large parties, and also offers off-sight catering.Type of Food: ItalianPrice of Entrees: $13 to $30Specialties: Italian dishesReservations: Not required, but appreciated
Matteo’s Ristorante Italiano
Smoking: Smoking not permittedDress: CasualHours: Lunch: 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday to Friday; Dinner: 5 to 10:30 p.m. Monday to Saturday and 4 to 9 p.m. Sunday.Phone: 774-9771Website: www.matteosindy.comAddress: 40 N. Ninth St., Noblesville
MexicocoaDaniel Bennett, general manager, RAM Restaurant & Brewery
Where do you like to eat? Stacked Pickle
What do you like to eat there? They’ve got the best fried pickles in the state!
What do you like about Stacked Pickle? I just love the atmosphere. It has really good atmosphere
Stacked Pickle is located at 11621 Fishers Station Dr., Fishers. They can be contacted at 578-1236 or www.stackedpickle.com.
Ingredients: 1 tbs. unsweetened cocoa powder; 1 tsp. cinnamon; Pinch of chili powder; Pinch of cayenne pepper; 3/4 cup Irish Creme; Splash of agave nectar; 1 oz. Silver tequila; PaprikaPreparation: In a saucepan over low heat add the cocoa powder, cinnamon, chili powder and cayenne pepper. Toast until spices begin to release their aromas. Slowly incorporate the Irish creme. Bring to simmer. Stir in the agave nectar and remove from the heat. Rim a mug with paprika. Pour in tequila. Add hot cocoa mixture.
-www.foodnetwork.com
They come from near and far
Ingredients•1 1/2 cup favorite peanut butter•1/2 cup margarine•2 1/2 cups Powdered Sugar•1 tsp. vanilla•Melted Semi Sweet Chocolate Chips for coating
Directions: Mix peanut butter, margarine, va-nilla and sugar until semi-dry and crumbly. Form mixture into small balls the size of “Buckeyes”. Slowly dip the balls into chocolate to coat
leaving the top uncovered to resemble a buck-eye. Place the buckeyes on waxed paper and refrigerate. These are great for that sweet tooth at the tailgate and even better for the long drive home.
Views | Community | Cover story | education | DiVersiOns | Anti-Aging | Dough | it’s Golden | Pets | inside & Out | Laughs | Puzzles | Classifieds
16 | November 29, 2011 Current in Westfield www.youarecurrent.com
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» Space out pregnancies – The ideal spac-ing between an older and younger sibling is at least two years — at least when it comes to intelligence. Older children who are born at least two years before a younger sibling’s debut are smarter, according to research that is due to be published in an upcoming issue of the Journal of Human Resources. They score higher on math and reading tests than children born closer together. Researchers at the University of Notre Dame looked at a data set of about 3,000 women who gave birth to 5,000 sibling pairs and found that expanding spacing by one year increases older siblings’ reading scores on the Peabody Individual Achievement Test by .17 standard deviations.
-www.time.com
» Beer for good heart health? – The bene-fits of a glass of wine in warding off heart dis-ease have been much discussed, but a new analysis indicates that some of those same benefits may be gleaned from a beer. Re-searchers analyzed 16 studies involving more than 200,000 participants and found that the heart disease risk for moderate beer drinkers – those who drank about a pint a day – was reduced 31 percent on average. And, as in the case of wine consumption, the
risk surged with an increase in alcohol intake.-www.livescience.com
» Red meat and cancer – There’s something about eating red meat—a lot of it—that seems to harm the intestines. Numerous studies have linked red-meat consumption to a higher risk of colorectal cancer, as well as diets heavy in processed, salted, smoked, or cured meats such as bacon, sausage, and hot dogs. If you just can’t live without red meat, limit yourself to two 4-ounce portions each week, but choose lean cuts, trim the fat, and don’t char it on a grill.
-www.health.com
» Relieve stress naturally – While pas-sionflower has long been considered a “folk remedy” for anxiety and insomnia, a few studies have shown that the herb may actually be comparable in effectiveness to benzodiazepine drugs, which are used to treat stress. Though not proven, it is believed that passionflower works by increasing levels of a chemical called gamma-aminobutyric acid in the brain. This lowers the activity of some brain cells, making you feel more re-laxed. Passionflower is available in a variety of forms, including infusions, teas, liquid ex-tracts and tinctures.
-www.foxnews.com
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www.youarecurrent.com Current in Westfield November 29, 2011 | 17
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COMMentarYBy april Conard
I would love to tell you that when we decide to be healthier, that is reason enough to get fit and eat healthy. This is usually not the case – nine times out of 10, this will only motivate you for a short period of time. We are a goal-oriented society and we are motivated by deadlines. Having an objective gives you reason to exercise.
How about a 5k run? If you sign up for a 5k, your com-petitive spirit will want to make sure you do not finish dead last. There alone is motivation to put on some running shoes and hit the road. Remember that this is not the Olympics and training doesn’t have to be time consuming. Just make a plan and stick to your schedule. This in turn will make other changes easier to make. It is amazing how you will start to make better food choices once you get your-self into a regimen. The discipline you gain from something like this is very empowering.
A couple weeks ago I wrote about something called the Tough Mudder. Well, I will be par-ticipating in this event. Since signing up I have been training and I am amazed at how I am holding myself accountable for my actions, or
lack thereof. Not everyone is into climbing through mud or running through fire but there are plenty of 5k runs around here that you can sign up for. Not only are you keeping your-self in shape, but you are help-ing out a cause.
Bad knees? Running not your thing? Not an issue here – you can still sign up and walk. The object is to keep you mov-ing, and moving for a reason. Whether you run or walk, these events are for everybody. Once you feel conditioned enough you may start to slack off after a few events. Try to beat your time. Better yet, join with a
friend and see who finished first, loser buys dinner!
The bottom line is you need a target, some-thing to shoot for. Once you finish that first 5k, hurry up and sign up for your next. Keep pushing yourself forward. Give yourself reason to keep going.
Try a 5K run for exercise motivation
Noblesville resident April Conard is an NETA- certified trainer and Group Fitness Director at the Noblesville Athletic Club. You may contact her at [email protected]
Views | Community | Cover story | education | Diversions | Anti-AGinG | Dough | it’s Golden | Pets | inside & Out | Laughs | Puzzles | Classifieds
18 | November 29, 2011 Current in Westfield www.youarecurrent.com
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[email protected] are finding that it may be worth-
while to train your brain to focus on something as simple as your breath, which is part of mind-fulness meditation.
A new study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, is the latest in a hot emerging field of research exam-ining how meditation relates to the brain. It shows that people who are experienced medi-tators show less activity in the brain’s default mode network, when the brain is not engaged in focused thought.
The default mode network is associated with introspection and mind wandering. Typically, drifting thoughts tend to focus on negative subjects, creating more stress and anxiety. It has also been linked to attention-deficit hy-peractivity disorder and Alzheimer’s disease.
Researchers looked at experienced meditators and trained novices. There were 12 in the “experienced” category, with an average of more than 10,000 hours of mindfulness meditation experi-ence (Malcolm Gladwell’s “Outli-ers” suggests that it takes 10,000 hours to be an expert at something), and 12 healthy volunteers who were novices
in meditation.Each volunteer was instructed to engage in
three types of meditation: concentration (at-tention to the breath), love-kindness (wishing others well) and choiceless awareness (focus on whatever comes up). Scientists looked at their brain activity during these meditations with functional magnetic resonance imaging.
Across all of these types of meditation, the experienced meditators showed less activity in the default mode network than in the novices. The experienced participants also reported less mind wandering than the novices. Interestingly, experienced meditators also showed increased
connectivity between certain brain networks during meditation and non-meditation.
From this particular study, researchers can’t say whether meditating is beneficial to the brain. But, viewed in conjunction
with other studies showing the positive effects of mindfulness training for
depression, substance abuse, anxi-ety and pain disorders, it seems
to have promise. Also, a 2010 study found that people tend to be more unhappy when they their
mind is wandering.
-www.thechart.blogs.cnn.com
Can meditation help your brain?
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www.youarecurrent.com Current in Westfield November 29, 2011 | 19
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» Tax strategy seminar – Somerset CPAs will host a seminar on year-end tax strategies for contractors Dec. 1, 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., at the Somerset Conference Center, 3925 River Crossing Parkway, Indianapolis. Price is $149 for individuals. For details or to register, visit www.somersetcpas.com.
» Gold demand at all-time high – Global demand for gold rose 6 percent to 1,054 metric tonnes for the three months ended Sept. 30, setting an all-time high of nearly $58 billion in value terms, the World Gold Coun-cil said last week in a new report. The jump in demand for gold was driven primarily by investors seeking shelter from global fiscal and macroeconomic uncertainty. Investment demand for gold rose 33 percent year-over-year to 468.1 tonnes, generating record quar-terly demand of $25.6 billion, WGC said.
-MarketWatch
» Telecommuting study – Recently, Stanford University published the preliminary results of a study it conducted on the benefits of a telework program, comparing a group of employees allowed to work from home with a control group of people who wanted to tele-work but were required to stay in the office.
The study clearly showed that the telework group outperformed the in-office group by a wide margin -- about 15 percent -- and not just in aggregate work performed, but also in the overall quality of the output. Not only were workers more productive per unit time, but they worker longer hours, suffered fewer sick days, and even had less overall attrition.
-www.cbsnews.com
» Spot air leaks, save money – You can use an incense stick to spot air leaks. Turn on your home’s exhaust fans (or wait for a windy day) and hold an incense stick near your windows, doors, and electrical outlets. If the smoke blows sideways, you’ve got a leak that should be plugged with weatherstripping, caulk, or expandable foam. The incense trick can slash your energy bills by hundreds each year while chasing away the chills.
-www.consumerreports.org
» Get in on government contracts – The cur-rent administration has increased the amount of government contracts provided to small business to 30 percent and is improving timely payment to terms of Net 60. Contact your local trade association to find out how to land gov-ernment contracts or check out the listings on the government’s website (www.fbo.gov).
-www.foxbusiness.com
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Views | Community | Cover story | education | Diversions | Anti-Aging | DOuGh | it’s Golden | Pets | inside & Out | Laughs | Puzzles | Classifieds
20 | November 29, 2011 Current in Westfield www.youarecurrent.com
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COMMentarY By David Cain
Nothing is ever as important later as you think it is when it happens. We are wired to assign the most emphasis to the things that are happening right now. Live events are the most important. Real-time is top of mind. The past is neatly archived to be accessible for future situations, but as for the right-now, we give it priority. It’s how we survive; you deal with current problems first. If someone is at your desk, they take priority over an email. And, as time passes, everything becomes less important. Everything fades away and is forgotten.
Our brains are designed to help us forget. Our brains archive things in a catalog of experiences that can be accessed when we need to decipher another situation. Let’s say you encounter a prob-lem that you don’t understand right away. Your brain will search through your memory looking for something that will help you make sense of your current problem. If you don’t have an exact match, you’ll find what’s close and draw conclu-sions from it. People with more experiences gen-erally get to better conclusions because they have a larger database of stimulus and response.
It’s easy to get caught up in the moment – it’s actually required. Historically, survival is achieved
by dealing with the moment, not the future. So your brain tells you to deal first with real-time. As a result, what is going on right now – the problems, the pains – will always seem more im-portant now as compared to the future when you look back at today. People are resilient, and you are designed to forget and move on. You are built for finding balance and not dwelling in the ups or downs. Instead, you snap back to equilibriuml, never spending too much time in the highs or
lows. This is the reason effec-
tive selling and marketing requires that you always be in front of your cus-
tomers. They are built to forget. They are built to move on. They are built to call on prior experi-ences to formulate conclusions about future ones. Luckily, that also means they are built to repeat the past. If you provide great experiences and per-sistent emphasis, you will enjoy greater success. If you remember that your customers only care about now, and thus deliver a great now, you’ll be more successful. If you remember that they won’t remember, you’ll be more successful.
Fantastically forgetful
David Cain works at MediaSauce, a digital media and online marketing company in Carmel. David wel-comes your questions or comments at [email protected].
You are built for finding balance and not dwelling in the ups or downs.
Views | Community | Cover story | education | Diversions | Anti-Aging | DOuGh | it’s Golden | Pets | inside & Out | Laughs | Puzzles | Classifieds
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Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2011Vol. 1, No. 6
By Margaret sutherlinCurrent Publishing
Author John Steinbeck and composers Richard Rogers and Os-car Hammerstein had all made up their minds: Patricia Wilson was meant to play Suzy in the newest Broadway musical Pipe Dream.
So when the director of Pipe Dream, Harold Clurman, objected to the casting decision, and Wilson was forced out, it was her first devastating blow in show business. Depressed and hurt, Wilson received a special copy of Steinbeck’s Sweet Thursday, which the musical was based on, from the author with a rather fat drawing of Pegasus and note for her.
“It was from the legend where a man rode on the back of Pega-sus, the winged horse, to reach heaven. When the gods saw him, they pushed him off Pegasus and he fell back to earth,” said Wil-son. The Pegasus story was enough to remind her to stand up and try again.
The loss of the Pipe Dream role in 1955, a role that would have without a doubt fast-tracked her career, was the first of a many valuable lessons for Patricia Wilson about the best and worst the entertainment business could hand an actor.
Starring on Broadway in the Tony Award and Pulitzer Prize win-ning Fiorello, staring opposite Gene Kelly in Take Me Along, and then transitioning to film and television, famously in A League of Their Own and others, Wilson made her return to the Midwest after living in Hollywood and New York for the past 50 years.
Now a grandmother and new Carmel resident, Wilson is a rosy faced, white-haired lady who is as excited to spend time with her
grandchildren and finish decorating her apartment as she is to hear from her agent on the West coast about potential work. She sits in her living room with binders and books filled to the brim with photographs, and her grandmother’s scrapbook of reviews predat-ing 1900, and her long-haired Chihuahua Pete, whose ears are as expressive as his eyes.
Wilson’s stories in entertainment begin long before her birth in Columbus Ohio, as the theater was more of a family busi-ness. Her grandfather and grandmother met while performing together at the turn of the century, and her father was born on a showboat, so for Wilson, theater was almost an inevitable career choice.
“My father said no more actors in the family. He hated it. But my mother would take me outside and we’d lie in the grassy field on my grandparent’s farm and look up at the clouds and she’d teach me to sing.”
coast to coast: Broadway Bound and hollywood Actress
Wilson’s Broadway career started as soon as she graduated col-lege and moved to New York City with her first husband, Rick.
“It used to be if you could sing, you’d find work no problem,” she said. “As soon as I was there, I had work within the week thanks to my mother teaching me how to sing.”
Starring in reviews around town and going on national tour with future famous choreographer, Bob Fosse, in The Mighty O! a show whose stars were the 1954 and 1955 Oldsmobile cars, not future Broadway sensations. Fosse noted for Wilson she wasn’t much of a dancer with her feet, but could make up for it “by dancing with her face”. Wilson noted for Bob Fosse he wasn’t much of a signer himself.
Once the tour was over, Wilson returned to the city only to lose the opportunity with Pipe Dream and instead went on a nation tour of Supper Clubs, a lost part of American culture according to Wilson. Fancy dresses and costume jewelry also meant years on tour and a grinding experience for the relatively new actress.
Her biggest moment came with the musical production Fiorello in 1959, where Wilson landed the lead female role in the hottest show of the season.
“Fiorello was a wonderful show. We had so much fun and it was the cast you could only imagine,” Wilson said. “I remember when Eleanor Roosevelt visited the show and it was such a big moment for all of us.”
Fiorello won the Tony Award for Best Musical and Pulitzer Prize for drama. It tells the story of Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia’s success breaking up the corrupt political machine running New York City.
“I decided I wanted to leave the show at the end of my con-tract in a blaze of glory,” she said. “So when the run was over, I left and pursued other things, like commercials and different shows.”
As she tells the story of Fiorello and highlights the cast, Wilson stops at a picture of her co-star Tom Bosley and points him out specifically. “We lost him last year,” she said tapping his picture. “Sometimes I get phone calls before I see it on the news, some-times I don’t, but there are not many of us left you know.”
After performing in a variety of shows from Dennis the Menace, Follies, Gay Divorce, among others Wilson moved her family to California to pursue film and television, which was not only more lucrative to support her family, but also seemed the best fit after Broadway was forever changed by arrival of Hair and other con-temporary musicals. The classic Rogers and Hammerstein, Rodgers and Hart, and Lerner and Lowe favorites were a thing of the past by the 1960s.
“Film was a hard thing to adjust to,” she said. “I didn’t know where to stand or how to let the light hit my face.”
The closest Wilson ever came again to the stage was the 1974 national tour of Take Me Along, where she and co-star Gene Kelly became fast friends. Wilson’s second marriage had recently ended and Kelly’s wife had died suddenly.
“We needed each other and to laugh,” she said. “The tour was an opprotuntiy to make a hard time one of growth and fun.”
Once in Hollywood though, Wilson had roles in films such as The Sting and A League of Their Own, and on television was in Days of Our Lives, and played a variety of recurring roles in The Mary Tyler Moore Show, Designing Women, and replaced Joyce Randolph on The Honeymooners.
She doesn’t spend much time talking about Jackie Gleason though, considering it one of the more challenging moments as a newcomer in Hollywood. “He wasn’t very nice. At the time I don’t think I realized how troubled he was, but oh, he was so mean,” she said. “It was a good lesson to learn and taught me to be a little less arrogant as the big Broadway star moving to Hollywood.”
A new Act“I never sought celebrity status and fame,” Wilson said firmly
looking at the extensive playbill list and her Hollywood experi-ence. “I could have because I had the resume to, but it just wasn’t a priority. I wonder if I should have now, but I’m not sure it would have been right.”
The stage for Patricia Wilson was as much an opportunity to do something she loved, as it was a means to support her family. Before celebrity, before her career, and before everything, Wilson said her children were her priority.
“I always knew how much our mother loved us,” said Kate Quinn, Wilson’s oldest of two daughters. “She picked us first, always over work, but also did what she needed to support us. I remember just being in awe of her when she was on stage sing-ing or performing. Of course, we were on the road with her and always included in productions. She didn’t have an easy time of things, especially when her second marriage dissolved. But she is in many ways a pioneer and her kindness and other qualities were things she passed to me that have helped make me successful in my own life.”
Quinn currently works as a senior vice-president at WellPoint and recently was transferred to Carmel for work. Once here she knew her mother could easily fall in love with Carmel and make it her new home.
“This is growth for me. Some of my friends out west may not think so, but Carmel is a wonderful place and it has everything I’d need: the amenities and my grandchildren and my family. It’s new and it’s growth.”
Patricia Wilson’s extraordinary career in entertainment took her to
Broadway, Hollywood, and to Carmel
22 | November 29, 2011 Current in Westfield www.youarecurrent.com
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HealtH By Jugnoo Husain
Almost everyone is familiar with diabetes, but may not have heard of pre-diabetes, a condition in which blood glucose levels are higher than normal, but are not yet high enough to be diag-nosed as full-blown diabetes. Pre-diabetes is also sometimes called impaired fasting glucose, or impaired glucose tolerance.
Pre-diabetes can be a precursor of type 2 diabetes, and is estimated to affect 79 million Americans. It usually occurs in middle-aged or older, overweight and sedentary adults, but is also increasing in overweight children. Because people with pre-diabetes often have no symptoms, most don’t know they have it. Screening for pre-diabe-tes is important because an estimated two-thirds of people with this condition are at high risk of developing type 2 diabetes within 10 years.
Diabetes is a group of diseases characterized by high blood glucose levels. There are two main types of diabetes: type 1 and type 2. In type 1, the body’s immune system destroys the pancre-atic cells that produce insulin. In type 2, the body either resists the effects of insulin (insulin resistance) or doesn’t produce enough insulin. Insulin is necessary for glucose to enter cells to be used for energy. Without insulin, the glucose accumulates in the blood, damaging blood ves-sels and nerves. Uncontrolled diabetes can lead to complications like heart disease, strokes, kid-
ney disease, blindness, impotence, amputations and death.
Some risk factors for both pre-diabetes and type 2 diabetes include age over 45, family history (genetic predisposition), non-white ancestry, a sedentary lifestyle, high blood pres-sure, high blood triglycerides and LDL (bad) cholesterol, a history of diabetes during preg-nancy, and being overweight or obese, especially around the abdomen.
The good news is that having pre-diabetes doesn’t mean that diabetes is inevitable. Progres-sion to type 2 diabetes can be avoided or de-layed by making lifestyle changes. Getting blood glucose screening, improving your diet, modest weight loss (5-10%), and moderate exercise, such as walking 30 minutes a day, can yield tremendous benefits. One study found that pre-diabetics reduced their risk of developing diabetes by 58% through such lifestyle changes. Although drugs are available, early intervention and lifestyle modifications remain the corner-stone of disease management because they are more effective than medications at reducing diabetes risk.
Dr. Jugnoo Husain is a board certified anatomic and clinical pathologist. She currently resides in Hamilton County. Dr. Husain can be reached at [email protected].
What did i come in here for? - How many times have you asked yourself that question after for-getting why you entered a room? It might not be old age. A new study suggests the simple act of passing through a doorway causes frustrat-ing memory lapses. When you go from room to room, your brain identifies each room as a new event and sets a new memory trace to capture the new event, University of Notre Dame said. The researchers found that subjects (college students) forgot more after walking through a doorway - whether it was real or virtual.
-www.cbsnews.com
happier senior couples - Older married cou-ples who engage in sexual activity are more likely to be happy both with their relationship and their lives than those who have more in-frequent sex, according to new research. The research is based on the 2004 General Social Surveys, a nationally representative public opinion poll of English- and Spanish-speaking Americans ages 18 and older. Among the survey respondents were 238 married indi-viduals who were 65 and older.
-www.livescience.com
Phones for seniors - Clarity announced last week that supercenter chain Meijer will begin selling two of its amplified cordless phones designed and engineered to address age-re-lated health concerns. The phones were re-cently awarded the Ease-of-Use commenda-tion from the Arthritis Foundation. Meijer will
offer the Clarity D712 at a discount of $10 for $69.99 through Dec. 3 and the Clarity D702 at a discount of $5 for $47.99 between Dec. 4 and Jan. 31. Both phones address hearing loss, low vision, and limited mobility caused by arthritis, stroke or other conditions.
-www.marketwire.com
Margarine lowers cholesterol – Love butter but hate the unhealthy fat that comes with it? Switch to a margarine with plant sterols, such as Prom-ise activ or Benecol, to help lower cholesterol. Plant sterols are compounds that reduce choles-terol absorption. In April 2008, AJCN published a study that found that women who had a high-er plant sterol–based diet were able to lower total cholesterol by 3.5 percent.
-www.prevention.com
Weight loss a sign of Alzheimer’s? - Re-searchers shows middle-aged people have a higher long-term risk of developing Al-zheimer’s if they’re overweight, while older people have a lower risk if carrying excess weight. A new study in the journal Neurol-ogy found that non-overweight seniors who have no outward symptoms of Alzheimer’s are more likely than their heavier peers to have biological markers of the disease. This finding raises the possibility that weight loss or a low body mass index later in life may be an early warning sign of mental decline, the researchers say.
-www.health.com
Pre-diabetes a rising warning sign among adults
it’s GOLDen | Current PubLishinG sPeCiAL seCtiOn | it’s GOLDen
www.youarecurrent.com Current in Westfield November 29, 2011 | 23
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At The Stratford we don’t have to go outside to get to our granddining room for a delicious, hot meal. We don’t have to drive anywhere to pick out a good read from our library. No one has to hit the sidewalk to travel to the wellness center for some exercise (ours is just down the hall in the clubhouse). We don’t even have to clean up after our parties because the amazing staff here does it for us.
In short, while the rest of the area is digging out—we‘ll be living it up! This could be you this winter, so call 317-733-9560 now and ask our Lifestyle Advisors about the benefits of living at The Stratford. By the first snow of this year—you’ll be glad you did!
HealtH By Dr. lauren Hendrickson
Hearing loss has always been a touchy subject within families. We all have at least one family member who will constantly ask for repetition or pretend they understand the conversation and respond inappropriately. However, if you comment about their hearing they become de-fensive, agitated, and come up with an excuse as to why they misunderstood. This is a very frustrating situation for both the family member with the hearing loss and the rest of the family trying to communicate with them.
New information is now available that has made it more important than ever to get that family member to an audiologist for a hearing evaluation. Recent research from two different studies has found a link between untreated hearing loss and an increased risk of developing dementia.
A study out of the University of Pennsylvania shows that declines in hearing ability may ac-celerate gray matter atrophy in auditory areas of the brain and increase the listening effort neces-sary for older adults to successfully comprehend speech. Basically, the brain matter in the listen-ing center of the brain begins to decrease in size as hearing loss progresses making it more and more difficult to understand speech. Once the
brain matter is gone, it cannot be regenerated. There are studies that demonstrate an increase in discrimination scores after amplification is introduced to an unaided ear.
The second study was a longitudinal study out of Johns Hopkins Hospital. They tracked 639 adults from 1990 to 2008. By the end of the study, 58 of them had developed dementia. The participants that had hearing loss from the begin-ning of the study were significantly more likely to develop dementia by the end. The researchers found that an untreated severe hearing loss placed participants at a fivefold greater risk of develop-ing the debilitating disease. Even a mild hearing loss placed participants at a twofold greater risk.
Any licensed audiologist can provide a com-prehensive hearing evaluation. Most insurance plans, including Medicare, will cover the cost of the exam as long as there is a doctor’s order. It is important to discuss your concerns with your physician and make an appointment to see your audiologist.
antI-agIngBy Marcia wilson
Did you notice that the gravitational force has become stronger over the years? How else can you explain going from “Pick yourself up and dust yourself off” to “I’ve fallen and I can’t get up?” We literally trip and stumble through life without worry, then suddenly, it’s serious business. A fall can be the difference between independence and dependence, home and nursing home, life and death. Whether it’s the statistics or the potential embarrassment, our confidence starts to waiver and so do we. Then we start restricting our activi-ties, thereby increasing our risk of falling.
While falls are more common in the older population, don’t even think about blaming it on “old age.” Most fall prevention initia-tives focus on environmental factors, which are important, but even if all the throw rugs are gone, the lighting is good, your eyes have been checked, medications adjusted and all the stars and planets are aligned, gravity happens! As long as gravity is in the mix we need to be on friendly terms with the ground, and that means learning to get down to the ground (on purpose) so we can practice getting back up. It is a lifetime skill we can’t afford to lose.
It takes confidence to be comfortable get-ting up and down, and confidence comes from knowledge, practice, strength, flexibility, range of motion and balance. As you build these skills not only are you less likely to fall, but if (when)
you do fall, your bones should be more resilient. Here is a safe, simple exercise to build leg
strength and practice getting near the floor without committing to time on the ground: Using a sturdy chair (or table), turn sideways so the chair is on your left. Place your right leg about 18 inches in front of your left leg in a forward-backward stride. With your left hand on the chair, keep your shoulders up and your back straight as you bend both knees, keeping your weight evenly distributed. Start out just bending the knees a little. Now come back up. Eventually the left knee should touch the floor, but it may take some practice. Now turn around and try it with the other leg in front. This is a great exercise to build strength and flexibility without overloading the knees, and just one of many ways to get up and down.
No excuses. It doesn’t matter how old you are or if you have issues with your knees, hips, shoulders or back. There are many ways to rise up from the floor, but it takes a little exercise and practice.
Gravity happens. Whether you’re upright or on the ground, the knowledge that you can get up is priceless!
Marcia Wilson holds an M.A. in gerontology and teaches exercise courses for aging adults in Fishers. Wilson can be reached at [email protected].
Lauren Hendrickson is a doctor of audiology with Northside Hearing Care. Hendrickson can be reached at [email protected].
Be prepared, gravity happens!
Untreated hearing loss linked to increased risk of dementia
it’s GOLDen | Current PubLishinG sPeCiAL seCtiOn | it’s GOLDen
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NL Industries Inc. (NL) – NL operates in the com-ponent products industry in the United States, Canada, and Taiwan and has a market cap of $648.15 million. Its dividend yield is at 3.75 percent; payout ratio is at 19.99 percent. Net insider shares purchased over the last six months are at 52.89K, which is 0.81 percent of the company’s 6.56 million share float. The stock is a short squeeze candidate, with a short float at 5.15 percent (equivalent to 10.09 days of average volume). The stock has gained 16.33 percent over the last year.A. Schulman, Inc. (SHLM) – SHLM is in the specialty chemicals industry and has a market cap of $617.48 million. Dividend yield is at 3.24 percent; payout ratio is at 47.29 percent. Net
insider shares purchased over the last six months are at 21.42K, which is 0.08 percent of the com-pany’s 28.38 million share float. The stock has had a good month, gaining 10.23 percent.Kronos Worldwide Inc. (KRO) – This company engages in the production and marketing of ti-tanium dioxide pigments in North America and Europe. Its market cap is $2.22 billion. Dividend yield is at 3.13 percent; payout ratio at 44.81 per-cent. Net insider shares purchased over the last six months are at 15.29K, which is 0.07 percent of the company’s 21.46 million share float. It’s been a rough recently for the stock, losing 13.47 percent in one week earlier this month.
-www.seekingalpha.com
whAt’s it wOrth
my OPiniOn$370K
Type: Traditional 2-story home with finished basementAge: Built in 2002Location: Near Hazel Dell Parkway and 126th StreetSquare Footage: 3,992 Sq. Ft. of finished living space including Finished BSMT.Features: Immaculately maintained three bed-room, 3.5 bath home with four-car tandem garage. Main floor master bedroom in low maintenance community. Looks brand new. Great, open floor plan. Hardwoods throughout main level. Spacious family room with wood burning fireplace and built-ins. Den with floor-to-ceiling built-ins. Italian porcelain in family room and kitchen. Master featuring huge walk-in-closet and bathroom with double sinks, garden tub and separate shower. Finished base-ment with daylight windows. Rec room with wet bar, full bathroom and office. Two large bed-
rooms upstairs with spacious, full bathroom.Strengths: Four-car tandem garage, main-floor master, low-maintenance communityChallenges: No granite on countertops, backs up to road.
Keith Albrecht is a Realtor with RE/MAX serving Hamilton County and Indianapolis. Contact the Albrecht Team by phone at 580-9955 or via e-mail at [email protected].
High dividend stocks insiders are buying
Views | Community | Cover story | education | Diversions | Anti-Aging | DOuGh | it’s Golden | Pets | inside & Out | Laughs | Puzzles | Classifieds
26 | November 29, 2011 Current in Westfield www.youarecurrent.com
Papier Mache Sculptures byDiVitto and Andrea Kelly
Unique, long-lasting sculpturesfor your home, children’s room,
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slithers or hops, we’ll make it!”
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(954) 927-9514
“If it walks, runs, swims, flies, crawls,
316 S. Range Line Rd., Downtown CarmelMon - Fri 9-6 | Sat 10-3 • 317-867-0900 • www.CTCarmel.com
Apple imacs and Macbooksstarting at $899
Dell/HP/Asus Desktops, Laptops,and monitors starting at $299
All New & Refurbished PCs and Macs come with full warranties. Holiday offer includes any additional service at $49 with purchase. Accept all major credit cards.
Computer Troubleshooters is a locally owned and operated franchise offering a full line of computer sales and services for residential and business customers.
Your Local Tech Source for Cool Holiday Gifts
Need help with your computers?All types of computer repairs, onsite
and at our service center.
izzysplacecarmel.com $ave Bucks at Izzy’s with our “Frequent Shopper and Izzy/s Customer Appreciation Rewards”
Be sure to come in and see our huge selection ofholiday dog treats, toys, and ourfresh baked dog biscuits!Call and order your Holiday Poinsettias.All proceeds go to “Sheltie Rescue”
Flavor ofthe Month:• Gingerbread Man• Mint & Cranberry
Closed Thanksgiving day. Open 12pm Friday, Nov. 25.Regular hours Saturday, Nov. 26.
» Stew for dogs – Chicken soup cooked with spinach, green beans, mushrooms and beets makes a great treat and top dressing for regular dog food. A bit of garlic for flavor is fine, too, as it contains vitamin B. Just don’t overdo as too much of onion or garlic can cause anemia in some dogs.
-www.pawnation.com
» Jerky making dogs sick – Chicken jerky treats may be to blame for dozens of new reports of mysterious illnesses and some deaths in dogs, prompting a renewed warning for pet owners by the Food and Drug Administration. At least 70 dogs have been sickened so far this year after reportedly eating chicken jerky products imported from China, FDA officials said. That’s up from 54 reports of illness in 2010. Some of the dogs have died, according to the anecdotal reports from pet owners and veterinarians. FDA officials say they have not been able to find a cause for the illnesses. Extensive chemical and microbiological testing has failed to turn up a specific contaminant and of-ficials did not identify a specific brand of treats. They note that the reports of illness have not conclusively been tied to chicken jerky products, also sold as chicken tenders, chicken strips or chicken treats.
-www.msnbc.com
DIsPatCHes Easing winter aches and pains
John Mikesell, owner of Izzy’s Place, A dog Bakery in Carmel, can be reached at [email protected].
Pets By John Mikesell
WHAT YOu CAN DODon’t be too quick to dismiss your old dog’s
inactivity or stiffness as normal for his age; he may have an acute condition that requires treat-ment. Have your older dog examined by your holistic veterinarian twice a year; discuss your dog’s diet and supplements with the vet at that time. Try an improved diet and natural, gentle treatment before using prescription pharmaceu-ticals. Vitamin C helps many dogs with arthritis; use sodium ascorbate, rather than ascorbic acid.
DIET IS THE KEYGood quality protein –
based on its digestibility and completeness of its amino acid composition – is at the nutritional core of arthritis prevention. However, many commercial dog foods (especially the inexpen-sive ones) are made with poor quality ingredi-ents. Whether you care for an arthritic elder or are planning long-term prevention strategies for a new puppy, start feeding the best food you can afford right now. At the very least, avoid foods that utilize by-products (meat and grain) as their main ingredients, and those with chemical preservatives or artificial flavorings.
ENzYMES AND PROBIOTICSIt is also important to optimize the digestive
elimination of the good food you feed. This is easily accomplished with a sprinkle or two of a digestive enzyme and probiotic supplement with
each meal.ESSENTIAL FATTY ACIDS
It is also important to supplement each meal with an essential fatty acid (EFA) supplement that is balanced to meet the nutritional needs of dogs. The best will contain both vegetable oils and whole body fish oils.
GOING WITH GLuCOSAMINEIf, like my dog Karma, your companion is
already experiencing the effects of old injuries or chronic arthritis, you should consider a few other supplements as well. At the top of the list is glucosamine. As a bare minimum, most dogs will need at least 350mg of glucosamine per day to realize the
benefits of the supplement, but those with pre-existing joint problems may need considerably more.
HERBS AND JOINT REPAIRYou might also consider adding a few herbs
to the mix, to help your canine pal heal and find relief from his aching. Yucca root (Yucca Shad-ier)), alfalfa, licorice root and other herbs that contain rich concentrations of phytosterols and other anti-inflammatory compounds are among the most popular of the herbal anti-arthritics.
LAST BuT NOT LEASTThe next thing to bring into action is the
proper type and amount of exercise. It is very important that like any athlete, he or she needs to stretch and warm up before any strenuous exercise. Stiff joints and sleepy muscles are easily injured
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www.youarecurrent.com Current in Westfield November 29, 2011 | 27
Larry Greene is the president of Case Design/Remodeling, a full-service design/build firm serving Hamilton County. Contact him at [email protected].
COMMentarY By larry greene
ORIGINAL PATIO: This home was built in 2002 in the Centennial Subdivision in West-field. The current homeowner moved in about two years ago. According to the homeowner, “When I bought the house, I knew I wanted to eventually add a porch. There was a small con-crete slab and there just wasn’t any shade in the backyard.”
FAVORITE FEATuRES: When asked what they like most about their new screened porch, they said, “Screen porches are livable space throughout the year. You can sit, read and eat without being bothered by bugs.” She even had a doggie door built-in for her pet. “The dog hasn’t quite figured out how to use it yet but we’re working on it,” she said.
PROPER FOuNDATION: The new porch struc-ture (approximately 240 square feet) was built with a proper foundation including compacted stone base and a 4-inch-thick concrete slab with broom finish. 12-inch-diameter concrete piers were in-stalled below each structural column to a depth below the frost line.
PORCH DETAILS: The porch was designed with maintenance free materials. James Hardie
fiber cement panels and cedar trim were used around the perimeter of the new porch. The knee walls include smooth Hardi-panels with cedar trim at approximately 24 inches high. New fiberglass screens were installed in each window along with a new screened door. The porch ceiling includes painted beaded plywood ceiling with cedar trim to conceal the joint pat-tern. The base molding is also cedar trim.
ELECTRICAL uPGRADES: The electrical up-grades include new weatherproof receptacles and a ceiling mounted ceiling fan/light with switch to control the light and fan. Finally two new
exterior mounted flood lights were installed.FINAL RESuLT: The homeowner commented,
“The porch looks like it has always been part of the house. You cannot tell it was an addition. I’m very pleased with the end result.”
Adding new outdoor living space
BeforeBefore
After
Views | Community | Cover story | education | Diversions | Anti-Aging | Dough | it’s Golden | Pets | insiDe & Out | Laughs | Puzzles | Classifieds
28 | November 29, 2011 Current in Westfield www.youarecurrent.com
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laUgHs By Dick wolfsie
Ouch!Ow!Ooh, that really hurts…Please stop. Are you trying to kill me?We can all agree that having a lousy dentist
can be an agonizing experience. But I don’t have a lousy dentist; I have a very good one. The only yelp ever heard at one of my appointments was Dr. Smith’s when I bit his finger.
Now, my massage therapist is a totally differ-ent story. She is not simply good. She is superb.
“Does that hurt?” she’ll ask.“Yes, just a little.”“How about this?”“A lot: that hurts a whole lot.”“Good. Now we’re getting somewhere.”I try to see her about once a month because I
spend several hours each day sitting in front of my computer. As a reader of this column, you realize just how painful the results of that can be. I’ve tried everything to relieve my neck and back soreness: a chiropractor, an acupuncturist, a physical therapist, even a ghost writer, but nothing has worked.
My massage therapist’s name, by the way, is Dee. Her business is called Touch by an Angel, but you have to go through a little hell in order to get to the heavenly part. I think she should change the name of her business to DEE…P Massage, but I am literally in no position to have a normal
conversation with her, because I’d be talking to the carpet. Each session begins with me lying on my belly with my head in this device at the end of the massage table. Do you know what this contraption is called? It’s a face cradle, which ex-plains why after about two minutes of DEE…P massage, I’m wailing like a baby.
Dee is a big fan of water. Lots of water. She thinks many of my problems come from not be-ing properly hydrated. She suggested I drink 10 glasses of H2O a day, and it has actually helped my back! I am in the bathroom so much now that I don’t get to sit in front of the computer for any stretch of time.
After the last session, I mentioned to Dee that the next time I get a massage, I’d like a relaxing therapeutic experience rather than the DEE..P kind that can be excruciating at times. Dee thought that sounded like a wonderful idea, “But who’s going to give it to you?” she asked.
When I left the other day I gave her a copy of my new book. Why wouldn’t I? She’s not only been an excellent health care provider, but a loyal friend. “Thanks, Dee,” I wrote, “You al-ways have my back.”
The medium is the massage
Dick Wolfsie is an author, columnist, and speaker. Contact him at [email protected].
laUgHs By Mike redmond
A round of applause, please, for Margaret Ellen Moores, a Canadian woman who re-cently made headlines, and not just because she reached her 106th birthday.
No, what made Margaret’s story so great was the gleeful way she has lived her life to acquire all those 106 years, at least when it comes to her diet.
We’ve all hear the stories about people who lived to ripe old ages by existing on salads and spring water. Then along comes Margaret, hit-ting 106 years and getting there eating sweets, salted beef, pizza and French fries.
You go, girl. I mean ma’am.She’s not alone, either. The story about her men-
tioned these other examples of centenarian diets:• Elizabeth (“Ma Pampo”) Israel, who lived
to be 128 years old in the Dominican Re-public, attributed her longevity to her diet of eating lots of dumplings and drinking bush tea.
• Gertrude Baines, 114, said she enjoyed life’s simple pleasures such as crispy bacon, sweets and Jerry Springer.
Of course, cases like these are the exception, not the rule. They shouldn’t be taken as an ex-ample for the rest of us:
“I can drink all I want. Great-aunt Heloise drank a pint of gin every day and she lived to a ripe old age.” Of course she lived to a ripe old age – she was pickled.
The fact is, some people live longer than oth-ers, regardless of what they eat and what they watch on TV. I know people who deny them-selves all kinds of pleasures and wear themselves out with exercise in an effort to live longer.
That’s all right, for them, I guess, but I couldn’t do it. A life given over to a Spartan diet and physical punishment doesn’t strike me as much fun. In fact, it sounds miserable. Why would I want it to last longer?
Margaret’s explanation for her longevity was that it simply wasn’t up to her, but to a higher authority.
“He put me here, I suppose, and that was it. I had to stay till I went,” she said. “After being to the door a few times ... He told me to go away, there was no place there for me yet.”
I think the idea is to live as well as you can with the time you have – and by living well, I don’t just mean bacon and chocolate and par-ties. I mean being a decent person, too, and working hard. Have a good life and figure that the length of it isn’t your call.
Although just to be sure, I think I’ll go get a pizza and fries. But I’m skipping Springer. Life’s too short.
Pizza, Springer keys to long life?
Mike Redmond is an author, journalist, humorist and speaker. Write him at [email protected] or P.O. Box 44385, Indianapolis, IN 46244.
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www.youarecurrent.com Current in Westfield November 29, 2011 | 29
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Down1. Morse Reservoir fishing spot2. An area about the size of a football field3. Not hearing4. One falling behind5. Indianapolis Fencing Club weapons6. SS. Peter & Paul Cathedral recesses7. Opposite of dis8. Clear a whiteboard at Clay Middle School9. Ward off10. Bratislava resident11. Fishers’ River ___ Country Club12. Noblesville HS track event13. Very small21. ET’s craft23. Westfield-to-Muncie dir.26. One way to be taken27. Air again on WXIN28. Part of MGM30. Envelop in mist31. Easley Winery process32. One over par at 11-Down40. Wetland41. Urban problem42. Dooley O’Toole’s menu heading43. Indiana barn hooter45. Fictional Hoosier town on
bone-chilling TV show46. Static ___47. Like much testimony at the Hamilton County Courthouse48. Resembling notebook paper at Oak Trace Elementary49. Rumple50. Norway’s capital
51. City Council thumbs-down votes53. Nile wader54. Narrow margin of victory at Indiana Downs55. Football contest58. Alphabet ender
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
1) Popular Candy Bar (2)
___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___
2) Main Indy Street (3)
___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___
3) Penguin Movie (3)
___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___
4) Purdue Nickname (4)
5) Wordy Board Game (2)
___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___
HARVARD,
build the words
Use all the letter segments below to fill in the answers to the clues. The number of segments you will use in each answer is shown in parentheses. The dashes indicate the number of letters in each
answer. Each segment is used only once.
BBLE BOI EET ERS HAP IAN ID KERS LER MAK MER PYF SCRA SNIC
___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___
BALLARD
__________________ __________________
__________________ __________________
__________________ __________________
__________________ __________________
__________________ __________________
__________________ __________________
__________________ __________________
__________________ __________________
__________________ __________________
__________________ __________________
__________________ __________________
Indiana Wordsmith Challenge
Using the letters in (Indy Mayor Greg) BALLARD, create as many common words of 3+ letters as you can in 20 minutes. No proper
nouns or foreign words.
12+: Word wizard 8-11: Brainiac
4-7: Not too shabby <7: Try again next week
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www.youarecurrent.com Current in Westfield November 29, 2011 | 31
Answers to BuILD THE WORDS: SNICKERS, MERIDIAN, HAPPY FEET, BOILERMAKERS, SCRABBLE
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CARMEL | FISHERS | NOBLESVILLE | WESTFIELD
ADOLESCENT MEDICINE | DEVELOPMENTAL PEDIATRICS | CARDIOLOGY | DIABETOLOGY/ENDOCRINOLOGY | GI | NEPHROLOGY
PULMONOLOGY | CRITICAL CARE | ALLERGY | PLASTIC SURGERY | UROLOGY | HEMATOLOGY/ONCOLOGY | NEONATOLOGY
DERMATOLOGY | SLEEP LAB | SURGERY | EARS, NOSE, THROAT | ORTHOPEDICS | NEUROLOGY
©2011 IU Health 10/11 HY73611_4467
2011 U.S.News & World Report rankings
Riley Hospital for Children is close when you need it. Just the words offer peace of mind. But we offer much more than convenience. We provide nationally recognized pediatric medicine and surgery. Unmatched pediatric expertise. And absolute con� dence that no matter what your child’s medical issue, we’ll do whatever it takes.
Pediatric specialists who work tirelesslyso everyonesleeps better.
Find your strength at iuhealth.org/north
Access to Indiana’s most experienced pediatric experts is closer than ever at Riley Hospital for Children at Indiana University Health North Hospital.
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