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USF welcomes volunteersto King Day service work
By Garth [email protected]
The University of Saint Francis community will share in 10 service projects in observance of Martin Luther King Jr. Day on Monday, Jan. 18.
The public is welcome to participate in those volunteer opportunities and in two related obser-vances.
“It’s our opportunity to reach out to the commu-nity, but we also have projects on the campus for people who would prefer that,” said Katrina Boedeker, who is coor-
dinating the university’s 12th year of MLK Day service projects.
Boedeker said people who have been affected by violence and people who have addressed violence are discussing the need for change. “We’re trying to get people to take some
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Band director treasuresher faith and ‘a good cry’
By Garth [email protected]
For Dianne Moellering, her marching band success is only one measure of her 23 years as Concordia Lutheran High School band director.
“It’s nice, but it’s not who we are,” she said. “It’s the interaction with the kids. It’s the relationships that you develop. For me as a Christian teacher, it’s the opportunity to stand in front of all the good people that I love and share the two gifts that I love — one being Jesus and one being music; that’s what makes my life.”
Moellering, who has directed Concordia’s young musicians since 1993, will retire after this school year.
She instructs the concert band, a younger group whose members receive basic skills training. She directs the symphonic band, whose advanced members work more independently.
“When students come into Concordia, if they want to be in band, I ask them to play for me, because I want to put them in the band where they’re going to have
the best work,” she said.She teaches music
at Saint Paul Lutheran Elementary School, and directs the music programs at all Lutheran schools in
the Concordia network.“And if there are fires
I get to put some of them out and work together to
Concordia Lutheran High School band director Dianne Moellering prepares for a Marching Cadets band practice at Zollner Memorial Stadium on Sept. 3.
PHOTO BY GARTH SNOW
High school winter guardsrefine shows to compete
By Garth [email protected]
High school winter guards are fine-tuning their 4-minute programs for competitive festivals. For many, the season begins Feb. 6 at Goshen High School. Local festi-vals continue through February, with state competitions beginning in March.
After performing with the marching bands through the fall, color guard members find a new outlet in the colder months.
“It’s basically a dance ensemble that incorpo-rates different equipment, whether that be rifles, sabres or flags. You orga-nize time and space for four minutes,” said Brit-tany Satterthwaite, who directs the Concordia Lutheran High School winter guard. “You can take many pieces of
music, or overlay sound bites.”
Satterthwaite is in her fifth year at Concordia. Chris Wray and Satterth-waite are designers and writers/choreographers. “Mike Beights is our wonderful co-designer and staging consultant,” Satterthwaite said.
Concordia will performing a show
called “the beginning” based on the moment of creation. Their music is “Lux Aurumque” by Eric Whitacre.
Concordia will march 23 guard members, including eight seniors: Taylor Welker, Sarah Brennan, Leandrah Miller, Nicole Stauffer,
USF volunteers create Linus blankets for children who are in need or who are hospitalized, as part of the university’s Martin Luther King Jr. Day observance.
COURTESY PHOTO
More information Visit the Community Cal-
endar for Fort Wayne area Martin Luther King Jr. Day activities.
Page A11
Abbey Zelt, left, has performed with the Concordia Lutheran High School winter guard since seventh grade. Sarah Brennan, right, is a senior captain.
PHOTO BY GARTH SNOW
See SHOWS, Page A10
See BAND, Page A6 See DAY, Page A5
By Garth [email protected]
Joe Harkenrider has learned a few things about the business of comedy, but he hasn’t forgotten the true test of comedy.
“They say comedy is about content, and not necessarily what it looks like,” the Comedy Central digital division producer and. “So at the end of the day I think whatever makes me laugh is what I’m going to be looking for.”
The 2002 graduate of Concordia Lutheran High School will return to Fort Wayne as part of the first Concordia Comedy Festival. He is one of three judges for that inaugural competition.
“High production value won’t necessarily win,” Harkenrider said. The winning video will have a point of view and a unique voice, he said.
He said the comics who influenced him earlier in life still remain strong influences. “Bill Murray is unique and has a wide range,” he said. “He’s not necessarily doing the same thing over and over. He’s evolved from being a young guy on ‘Saturday Night Live’ to doing serious films that have a comic undertone.”
He also cited the influ-ences of Chevy Chase,
Steve Martin and Robin Williams. Each has a smart but witty sensibility, he said.
Harkenrider learned about comedy from watching “Saturday Night Live” and from watching National Lampoon films. “My dad would let me stay up and watch those older movies,” he said.
He learned the tech-nical aspect of videos at Concordia. “My teacher, Will Neumeyer, would let me come in to class early because he let me hone my skills in and do
my comedy in what was more of a news oriented program,” Harkenrider said.
He had yet to learn how comedy could be a career.
“In 2002 when I was a senior in high school, I didn’t realize exactly what kind of a job I could have in comedy,” he said. “I knew going into my senior year that when I went to college I wanted to do something in TV or film, but I didn’t know what that was.
“The biggest realization for me was how many jobs there are out there in comedy, from being the executive of a network to being a director or writer, and slowly realizing where my place in comedy was.”
The digital producer returns to Fort Wayne at the invitation of Concordia media arts instructor and comedy festival creator
Nathan Gotsch.Gotsch, too, said he
wants to make people aware of the opportunities in comedy.
He said he wants to do more than just showcase good work and award prizes. “I know a lot of people in the entertain-ment business,” he said. “I said, ‘What if we brought some of them back to be judges and to be able to meet the students and talk about their experiences in comedy and how to have a career?
“OK, my kids love doing this and they have a lot of fun with it, but to them it just isn’t a career path. So I want to do anything I can to encourage people toward careers in the arts, espe-cially if we can give them information to make a decision. That’s what I really hope comes from
this — that there are some kids that say, ‘OK, now this doesn’t seem like just a pie-in-the sky idea.”
Gotsch was able to visit with another of the Concordia comedy video judges, Nick Rutherford, while Rutherford was writing for the 2014-15 season of “Saturday Night Live.”
“I was able to go out there for one of the episodes, which is a really fun experience, and go to the after-party with them,” Gotsch said. “Comedy is a job at that point but it also is really, really fun. I’m really excited for people in the community to get to hear from him about those experiences.”
Harkenrider and Ruth-erford are expected to be on hand at the Cinema Center for a conversation about pursuing a career in comedy following the screening of the winning video. They also will attend a private reception for the finalists.
Julie Kraut, currently writing for Bravo’s TV series “Odd Mom Out,” is the third judge of the Concordia festival.
“We’re hoping for a sellout, although we’re not selling any tickets,” Gotsch said. “I’m excited just to see what’s going to happen. We are trying
to make it as first-class as possible.”
“We want to include as many people as possible. There are a lot of other programs similar to ours,” Gotsch said. He said Carroll and Homestead also have very strong media arts programs.
The Concordia Comedy Festival is open to any student in grade 6-12 attending a school or being home-schooled in Allen, Adams, DeKalb, Huntington, Noble, Wells or Whitley counties. Submissions may not be longer than 3 minutes, including credits, which are not required. Entries should be free of profanity and appropriate for an audience of students and adults.
In a statement, Concordia said students are invited to submit “comedy videos from sketches to parodies to interviews and everything in between.”
Gotsch said Dawn Schuller first suggested the festival. Schuller works with Concordia’s admissions and enroll-ment.
To learn more, visit ConcordiaComedyFes-tival.com or contact Gotsch at [email protected] or (260) 483-1102.
Video fest shows comedy isn’t all play and no workA2 • INfortwayne.com St Joe Times • January 15, 2016
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Media arts teacher Nathan Gotsch works with media students, juniors Emily Mix and Ashley Scheerer, at Concordia Lutheran High School. Area high school students are invited to submit videos to the Concordia Comedy Festival, which Gotsch created.
PHOTO BY GARTH SNOW
CONCORDIA COMEDY FESTIVALHigh school and middle school students in and near Fort Wayne may submit comedy videos by Feb. 12. Entries can be uploaded at ConcordiaComedyFestival.com via FilmFreeway. An adult must sign up for a free FilmFreeway account. The submission fee is $5. Finalists will be announced March 4 and shown on the big screen at a special event March 18 at the Cinema Center in downtown Fort Wayne, when the winners will be an-nounced. Admission is free. Prizes will be awarded.
Rotary Club completesmiddle school in Africa
The Rotary Club of Fort Wayne has completed a three-year project to build an eight-room middle school in the Village of Gléi, Togo, West Africa.
Members of the Rotary Club of Lomé-Lumier in Togo shared photos of the celebration festivities when the last classrooms were complete.
“I’m so glad the local Rotary Club captured the enthusiasm and joy of the day by showing Rotarians, village leaders, the school headmaster, and, most importantly, the students celebrating,” said Jason Daenens, president of the Rotary Club of Fort Wayne and head of the school building project.
The project’s roots date back to 2010 when Daenens, past chair of the Club’s International Service Committee, attended the sixth annual West Africa Rotary Fair in Accra, Ghana. During
the conference he learned the Village of Gléi, Togo, needed a new middle school, books and other supplies.
In 2011, The Rotary Club of Fort Wayne International Service Committee developed an education/literacy plan in partnership with the Rotary Clubs of Lomé-Lu-mier and Atakpamé,
Togo; U.S. Peace Corps — Togo, and Rotary Club of Chicago to support the Gléi middle school.
During 2012 and 2013, the Rotary Club of Fort Wayne bought playground equipment, supplies and textbooks, with the help of other clubs and grants from Rotary District 6540 of Northern Indiana.
Then, in 2013, the board
of directors of the Rotary Club of Fort Wayne unan-imously voted to build the Gléi Middle School as the Club’s Centennial International Service Project. (The Club, which was founded in 1915, celebrated its centennial last year.) Using a model to “build a classroom at a time,” the first two of eight classrooms were built in the spring of 2013, Daenens explained.
The Rotary Club of Fort Wayne International Service Committee coor-dinated a joint funding sponsorship for the new school with the Rotary Club of Chicago and Togo Rotary Clubs totaling over $45,000. Total cost for all Togo-related projects is $59,000. The projects benefit nearly 28,000 Village of Gléi residents.
Today, school atten-dance has grown from around 600 students to more than 880 students.
A celebration marks the completion of a middle school in Togo, West Africa. The Rotary Club of Fort Wayne supported the service project.
COURTESY PHOTO
Gardening classes offer early glimpse of springBy Garth [email protected]
Steve Pawlowski took the first 2016 seed catalog from his mailbox just days after the first hard frost signaled the end of the 2015 garden season. “I just got it this week. I couldn’t believe it,” he said in early December, adding that he expected to see dozens more seed catalogs by January.
That first catalog was from Territorial Seeds. “They have a lot of really diverse heirlooms and hybrids,” he said. “It’s a really nice catalog. They have all kinds of different tomatoes. You can even get a wasabi plant.”
Kathy Lee also has been gearing up for another year of gardening. She plans to start leeks from seed by the middle of February. Lee, too, is studying seed catalogs. “It’s a lot cheaper,” she said. “You can buy a package of seeds that might have 30 seeds in it for the same amount of money that you’d spend for four plants from the nursery or box store. You get a greater variety at much less cost, so you can try new things.”
Both Lee and Pawlowski have earned the rank of Master Gardener. Both will share their enthusiasm and knowledge at February workshops at Salomon Farm in Fort Wayne. Lee will instruct a “Gardening in Winter” workshop on Feb. 13. Pawlowski will instruct the “Backyard Composting” workshop on Feb. 20.
Serious gardeners may warm up by attending “Selling Homemade Edibles: Understanding the Rules.” Steve Niemo-eller from the Allen County Health Depart-ment will direct that Feb. 6 workshop.
Lee said seed pack-ages tell whether to plant seeds after the last frost, or whether to plant inside and move the plants outside. “So you have to count back on your calendar,” she said.
Lee will start leek seeds in mid-February. “March and April are heavy times for starting most seeds. Some are even planted the first part of May,” she said.
“Our weather is so variable, and it’s getting even more variable it seems,” Lee said. “But the plants need to be started inside under grow lights or some kind of lighting so that it can get established.” A heat mat also helps the seeds to germinate. Lee also will explain how mini-green-houses allow some control over humidity.
She might find a flower seed that can be started as early as the workshop, and perhaps even an herb. “You don’t want to plant them too soon or the plant will get too long and spindly before it goes outside — they call it ‘leggy’ — from reaching for the light,” Lee said.
“When you go to the nursery or the box store to buy your plants, you have a very limited number of varieties,” Lee explained. “They get them from distributors, so you might be limited to three or four vari-eties of tomato plants or pepper plants. If you’re going to start your own seeds, you can go online or get a mail catalog and you have 50 varieties of tomato plants to choose from.
“Many of your newer plants are hybrids. That means the seed has been cross-pollinated; two varieties have been crossed in order to get a certain characteristic in the fruit or flower or whatever. So of course the company that has done that cross is going to charge you more for those seeds because they’ve had to work harder and use their resources, their labs and people. And if you try to save seed from that particular tomato plant, those seeds might not be the same tomato plant.
“The heirlooms main-tain their original sweet tomato taste. It’s like the tomato you tasted when you were a kid.”
Lee said many seed companies are no longer owned by the founding families. “I like to believe that they’re still producing the quality seed that they did before,” she said. Lee added that private orga-nizations of everyday gardeners also operate seed exchanges.
In the composting workshop, Pawlowski will share tips on ways to help those plants flourish. The compost adds bulk material to the garden bed. “The soil is like a living organism with fungus and bacteria,” he said. “It acts as a sponge and it will hold water. It’s friable — looser — so oxygen can get to the roots better.”
Gardeners can follow Pawlowski’s lead and solve two backyard problems at once. He gathers up leaves and grass, and then uses the yard waste to enrich the soil. “I break it down in tumbling composters for maybe two and a half weeks, and I put it in an outside composter that’s open-air and I let that work all summer. Then I keep refilling my
tumbling composter,” he said.
He also uses vegetable peelings and sawdust. “You need a mixture of green material and brown material, carbon and nitrogen,” he said. “I try to make a cubic yard of compost every year. It goes into little raised beds. And it just makes for beautiful soil.”
“You divert good organic matter from the landfill and put it back in the soil and grow stuff,” he said. “I have toma-
toes, peppers. I grow garlic. I grow shallots. This year I grew leeks — leeks love compost. I have dill and I do a lot of basil, a couple types of basil.”
Pawlowski volun-teers his time at Salomon Farm, as does “Gardening in Winter” presenter Lee.
Lee has taught the spring gardening class there, and at other venues. “I watched my dad start seeds when I was a kid,” Lee said.
“But I’ve played around with it for most of my adult life.”
The process still fasci-nates her. “I like the idea of the circle of life, so to speak,” she said. “You make the selection for the seed that you want, you get them started, you plant them, care for them as they need care, harvest them, prepare them or preserve to feed yourself and your family with them. And that’s just really valuable to me.”
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Local goods draw crowdsto indoor winter markets
By Garth [email protected]
Doug and Nancy Laslie set up booths and sell hot drinks two Saturday mornings each month at the Fort Wayne Farmers Market.
Their reward is the success of the local vendors who sell meats, vegetables, soap and more.
“I volunteer because I think it’s important,” Nancy Laslie said. “I think people need to support our local growers instead of these big corporate giants who are producing things in Wyoming.”
“We enjoy doing this, and it’s nice to see people taking advantage of the local products,” Doug Laslie said.
The Laslies are marking their third winter as volunteers at the market. Hours are 9 a.m.-1 p.m. the first and third Saturdays of each month at Lincoln Financial Event Center at Parkview Field, 1301 Ewing St.
Vendors offer soap, farm and garden prod-ucts, orchard products, baked goods, crafts,
meats, spices, honey, gluten-free baked goods, jewelry, eggs, plants, fudge, woodworking, herbs, wine and more.
“I think what sets them apart is that these are small-business growers, trying to get themselves established and to get people to know their name and get people to buy their products,” Nancy said.
Leigh Rowan is one of the vendors, and also the market coordinator. Rowan, who bakes bread at her Fort Wayne
home, was instrumental in founding the winter market in 2012.
Rowan opened her bakery in Wabash, but realized the need to locate in a bigger market. She bought a location in Fort Wayne, and began selling bread at the various summer markets. “I woke up and said ‘I’m gong to try to start a winter market,’ and the rest is history,” she said.
“I have a stone mill
and I mill my own flour and then I make home-made breads,” she said.
“It was kind of a cute story. I had an old man approach me and he said he had bought one back in the ’70s and he actually was the original owner. And he would mill his own grain that he grew and make bread for his family. And he approached me because he was in his 90s and they weren’t baking anymore. And he asked if I would like to buy it.
“I had two small stone mills that are about the size of a microwave, and I would have to alternate so the stones didn’t heat up and you didn’t burn the gluten and the nutri-tion.”
She said her Meadows stone mill is the smallest stone mill manufactured for commercial use. “I use wheat berries. I use spelt berries. I use triti-cale rye. I use a variety of grains. Then I also have seeds and other things that I can grind,” she said.
Nancy Laslie said she and her husband volun-teer at each market. “We’re down there selling coffee and tea and hot cocoa,” she said. The money goes toward the rent, to control costs to the vendors. “We want them to make as much money as they possibly can,” she said.
“Some of the best ground beef and chicken that I’ve had comes from our local vendors,” she said.
For a list and descrip-tion of vendors, visit ftwaynesfarmersmarket.com.
A4 • INfortwayne.com St Joe Times • January 15, 2016
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Doug and Nancy Laslie sell coffee and other hot drinks just inside the entrance to the Fort Wayne Farmers Market at Lincoln Financial Event Center at Parkview Field. Security coordinator John Luckey stops for a visit.
PHOTOS BY GARTH SNOW
WATCHING THE MARKETSFort Wayne Farmers Market offers indoor markets from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. the first and third Saturdays of each month through May 21 at Lincoln Financial Event Center at Parkview Field, Fort Wayne. FWFM also spon-sors summer markets at seven locations in and around Fort Wayne. For details, visit ftwaynesfarm-ersmarket.com.
Young Leaders of Northeast Indiana offers indoor markets from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. the second and fourth Saturdays of each month through April 23 at Wunderkammer Company, 3402 Fairfield Ave., Fort Wayne. YLNI also spon-sors summer markets at the Barr Street Market in downtown Fort Wayne. For details, visit ylni.org.
Leigh and Brian Rowan sell home-baked bread at the Fort Wayne Farmers Market. Leigh Rowan grinds grain into flour in a stone mill in the couple’s Fort Wayne home.
personal responsi-bility,” said Boedeker, the director of the USF Office for Service and Social Action.
All programs are free. Volunteers are asked to register at sf.edu/mlkday.
The outreach follows the model of the Corpo-ration for National and Community Service.
Students, faculty and staff participate. “Students are from all different majors,” Boedeker said. “A lot of times the student athletes are participating. It’s not uncommon for me to get a call from a coach, saying ‘I’ve got 20 students.’ “
New this year, some students will serve as co-leaders along with faculty and staff.
“I think the students really enjoy the oppor-
tunity to serve side by side with faculty and staff members, to do something that’s not typical of what they would be doing in the classroom,” Boedeker said. “The students really enjoy seeing the different nonprofits. It’s an oppor-tunity to get inside an agency and see how they operate, find out the kind of services that they offer and then also become involved with that partic-ular agency. A lot of students volunteered and then just continued to volunteer for the rest of their time on campus. That happens quite frequently.”
It’s an additional day for the students. “Using the national model, it’s a day on, not a day off,” Boedeker said.
The USF observance begins with “Connecting With the Dream: Call to
Service and Mass,” from 10:30-11:30 a.m. in the North Campus Audito-rium, 2502 Spring St., Fort Wayne. Lunch will be served from 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. in that same building.
Service projects are assigned from 1-4 p.m. On campus, Linus Blan-kets volunteers will prepare fleece blankets for children in need or hospitalized, crochet or knit warm outerwear for children in need, or write letters to political leaders in support of federal food projects.
Off campus, volunteers will assist seven agencies.
The university will host a related panel discussion from 7-8:30 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 20, at the North Campus Auditorium. The topic is “Why We Can’t Wait: Our Beloved Community Seeks Nonviolence.”
St Joe Times • January 15, 2016 INfortwayne.com • A5
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DAY from Page A1
USF students volunteer at the Saint Vincent de Paul Thrift Store, 1600 S. Calhoun St., Fort Wayne.
COURTESY PHOTO
make sure that our program in the elementaries stays strong and goes in the right direction,” she said. “As a teacher, it keeps me more focused on where they’re going, to be able to work in the elementaries rather than to be just tied to one elementary school and not with the high school.”
She also has earned awards, respect and friend-ships for the most visible element of her career, as director of the Concordia Marching Cadets.
“The major part of my job I see as teaching music and luckily for me and the students the main criteria is how you play. It’s the music,” she said. “The two sit-down bands are still the core of what we do and what we are. It’s not the marching band; the marching band is just a happy offshoot.”
Moellering taught at Denver Lutheran High School before coming to
the Fort Wayne area. Both she and her husband, Tom, taught at Central Elemen-tary School. Her husband is retired.
The Moellerings’ two children and four grand-children live in the Fort Wayne area. “I want to be involved in their lives and they want Grandma and Grandpa to be involved, too,” she said. “And I’ve missed a lot of it.
“I’m looking forward to being a better house-keeper, learning to cook all over. My husband has done most of the cooking the last couple of years. He loves it, but we’re going to have to learn to share the kitchen. But I’m going to stay involved in music. I’m going to pick up my flute and work harder at it. I’d like to do some more classical guitar and get my fingers back in shape. And I’d like more time gardening, so I don’t have to stand in my garden the first week of August and say, ‘I’m sorry, I’m done with you now.’ ”
She has bid that early goodbye to summer each band season, preparing for festivals that begin as early as the Saturday after Labor Day. She has guided the band through Indiana State School Music Association competitions, reaching the 10-band state finals 12 times, including every year since 2007. When Concordia was first runner-up in 2012, she said it was as thrilling as winning the state title. Then, in 2013, Concordia won the state title.
“The marching band thing I’ve loved more than I ever knew that I would love,” she said. “But it’s because of education. Some people look at that as a waste of time; it certainly is not. It does take time, but it doesn’t take any more time for us at Concordia than your varsity sport.
“I really see a ton of not only musical growth during that time because of how picky we are in details and how they have to stand and how they have to hold their instruments, and how they have to breathe. That carries over into the sit-down bands. You can’t play music well unless you have those relationships.”
Each student is made to realize the value of their contribution. “They know that they are important,” she said. “They know that if they aren’t there, there’s a hole out there. They rely on each other and they learn to trust each other and they learn commitment and
responsibility. That carries over into every area of their lives, and that’s something that by the nature of the activity can’t be taught in other classes. To be able to work on positive things and to instill that in their lives – that’s the worth of it.
“I didn’t want that when I came here. The only marching I had done was when I was in high school. Concordia was gracious enough to let me get some people in to help me. And I’ve learned from all the wonderful direc-tors we have in the area. So many of them have been supportive when I’ve needed help and asked questions, and I’ve learned from all of them,” she said. “I’m not shy; I just call.”
DeKalb High School band director Terry Fisher has been among that number. “I consider him a huge friend,” Moellering said.
“When I first met Dianne she was at Central Lutheran in New Haven. I was at Woodlan, down the road,” Fisher said. “Dianne and I throw ideas at each other all the time. We still do that. We all get in a rut now and then, and we say ‘How about this?’ The two of us trust each other an awful lot. We trust the musical judgment. We make sure our kids are given the best opportunities.”
Moellering also listed Homestead High School band director Steve Barber among those who are avail-able to share ideas.
Barber, who has led Homestead’s band to its own share of honors, said Moellering is highly respected among Indiana music educators. “She’s done wonders with the program at Concordia Lutheran, both the marching band program and the concert band program, and has won numerous awards,” he said. “She is respected by all the music educators across Indiana. She has helped countless students throughout her years at Concordia.”
Carroll High School band director Doug Hassell also shares notes with Moellering, as he has done since his days at IPFW.
“I was probably 20 or 21 years old, and she agreed to let me help her with the marching band,” Hassell said. “A good friend of mine and I helped her out, in a crew of three or four. We worked together and put a show together that was beating everybody.
“It was the first time that any of the marching band had gone through anything like that. If you looked at the indicators of whom they were beating, every indication was that we were going to make it to state that year.”
In those years, perhaps 18 bands would compete for the five berths to regional competition. Concordia placed sixth, missing the next round by one-tenth of a point.
Moellering said she and Hassell have remained great friends. “He worked with us in the years when I was still learning how to put it all together,” Moellering said. “He and I have literally laughed and cried together.” The cry happened in 1998, when Concordia fielded its “Ghost Train” show.”
The band members had never made the cut-off. “They didn’t realize what they had not gained,” Hassell said.
“There was a banquet in
the band room that night, and I got to it late. And we each remember this vividly, that each student left one by one and eventually it was just her and I, and we just sort of looked at each other and sobbed and collapsed on each other’s shoulders. And it was humbling that she would welcome me into that community, and I know she will do great things. She’s teaching the kids about music, but she’s also teaching the kids about how to glorify God through music. In everything that she does, she’s doing that well.
“In addition to the great lessons about life, she ingrains in them a real and great understanding of how they fit into the world with their faith.”
Hassell said Moellering cares for the students “not just in a motherly way, but in a supermotherly way.”
“He and I had a good cry about that,” Moellering said. “But we share a similar faith. We both have Christ where he needs to be and we can share a lot of personal things with each other.”
Concordia made its first trip to the state marching band finals in 2001.
Moellering’s current students knew of her deci-sion to retire before the Marching Cadets headed to the 2015 ISSMA state finals, on Nov. 7, where they placed sixth in Class C.
Weeks later, she thanked the many alumni who had returned to perform in her final Concordia Christmas at the Embassy show, on Dec. 13. “You have no idea how much it means to me,” she said at the rehearsal.
“People come up and say, ‘Oh my gosh, what are we going to do without you?’ ” she said. “I just kind of smile. The good Lord had a plan when he put me there, and he’s worked with me and he’s not going to throw the program away now. He still has a plan even though I don’t know what it is. And I think he’s trying to teach me to trust him a little bit more, to relax and know that he does have a plan.
“When the kids get frustrated, I say, ‘I’m not dying. I’m just not going to be here in front of you every day. I will still be your friend. I will still be around to help you, I hope. Depending on who they hire, I’m hoping to make that transition absolutely as smooth as possible.
“I’m not complaining. I’ve loved every minute I’ve spent. But now I look forward to being able to say to my husband, ‘Hey, let’s go away for the weekend,’ and to do different things, and plan different activ-ities. I do love working with bands. I hope to get to work a bit with the Concordia band or maybe even different band or maybe help with the music store, or just be involved with music and share my love of it.”
BAND from Page A1
Dianne Moellering conducts rehearsal before the tradi-tional Concordia Christmas at the Embassy on Dec. 13.
PHOTO BY GARTH SNOW
A6 • INfortwayne.com St Joe Times • January 15, 2016
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About 1,700 Fort Wayne Community School students went home with food to eat over winter break thanks to volunteers from Blessings in a Back-pack. Volunteers from The Chapel gathered at Fair-field Elementary School and worked with Principal Lindsay Amstutz-Martin to help pack bags of food to feed students.
Blessings in a Backpack is a national, nonprofit organization that provides food to children who might otherwise go without food over the weekend.
The local organization is currently serving students at Abbett, Adams, Fairfield and South Wayne elemen-tary schools.
“Community involve-ment is so important,” said Aboite Township resident and volunteer Kathy Lentz. She said 78 percent of the food recipients say they feel cared for by their community.
“You never know how
a program is going to impact,” said Bob Lovell, a member of The Chapel, who coordinates a team of volunteers who fill bags of food at Fairfield Elementary every other week. “The Chapel says to ‘believe, grow, serve and change your world,’ and we are here to serve. I taught in Fort Wayne Community Schools for 35 years. It feels good to
continue to serve these students.”
The charity relies on its partners, Parkview Health and Sodexo, along with individual volunteers and donors.
Blessings in a Backpack is at 111 E. Wayne St., Suite 555, Fort Wayne, IN 46802. Donations can be mailed to this address or made online at blessing-sindiana.org.
Students at Fairfield Elementary School in Fort Wayne helped volunteers from The Chapel to fill backpacks for Blessings in a Backpack.
COURTESY PHOTO
Children receive Blessings of winter break nutrition
Zumbathon 2016 benefitsFWCS Study Connection
Fort Wayne Community Schools’ Study Connection program will host Zumb-athon 2016 on Saturday, Feb. 13. The event will be held from 1-3 p.m. at North Side High School, 475 E. State Blvd., Fort Wayne.
Registration is $20 at the door (cash or check). Participants will be eligible for door prizes from El
Azteca, Empower Sports Club and Mad Ants. The event is sponsored by SODEXO and A Party Apart.
Twelve area Zumba instructors will lead the group of participants in two hours of dancing, sweating and fun in support of FWCS Study Connection. Zumba is a combination
of Latin dancing and cardio-vascular workout. No previous Zumba expe-rience is required for this event.
Proceeds from Zumb-athon 2016 will benefit FWCS Study Connection. For more information about Study Connection or Zumbathon 2016, call (260) 467-8810.
A8 • INfortwayne.com St Joe Times • January 15, 2016
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Kiwanis ChocolateFest tickets on sale for $30The John Chapman
Kiwanis Club will hold its second annual Kiwanis ChocolateFest in part-nership with Fort Wayne Chocolate Fountain from 6-9 p.m. Friday, Feb. 12, at the YOLO Event Center, 4201 N. Wells St., Fort Wayne.
Tickets are $30 in advance. A limited number of tickets will be available at the door, at $35 each.
A silent auction will raise funds to present to Riley’s Hospital for Children and Fort Wayne charities. There will also be hors d’oeurvres, a live band and a cash bar.
For details, to reserve tickets, or to donate silent auction items, contact the John Chapman Kiwanis Club at (260) 749-4901. A limited number of tickets will be available at the door.
“We are delighted to partner with Fort Wayne Chocolate Fountain to deliver such a presti-gious event,” said Holly Barnett, president of the JC Kiwanis Club. “This event is to showcase the Kiwanis mission of improving the world, one child and one community at a time. This Valentine’s Day, we will just happen to do it with chocolate.”
The Kiwanis Choc-olateFest will feature a chocolate fountain buffet with three fountains including white chocolate, milk chocolate, and dark chocolate.
The John Chapman Kiwanis Club is a nonprofit organization dedicated to carrying out the global mission of Kiwanis. JC Kiwanis Club sponsors youth service programs such as Canter-
bury High School Key Club, the IPFW Circle K club, and the Service Club at Lakeside Middle School. Meetings are held at 7 a.m. each Wednesday at the Sunrise Café, 10230 Coldwater Road, Fort Wayne. For more informa-tion, call (260) 749-4901, like the club on Facebook at facebook.com/john-chapmankiwanis, or visit johnchapmankiwanis.com.
By Garth [email protected]
Angel Pallares has found his niche in high school and is working to do the same at Ivy Tech Northeast and Purdue University.
The Mexico native won a $3,000 engineering and mathematics scholar-ship in Chicago. He will need it. Indiana colleges’ in-state tuition rates are not available to undocu-mented residents, he said. The Homestead High School senior has begun seeking permanent resi-dent status.
“I was born in Mexico. I was raised here half my life,” Pallares said. His father is a customer service engineer for an automaker. “I grew up learning English at school and Spanish at home,” he said.
“My sister and two brothers were born here,” he said. His parents and siblings have resident status, he said. His parents moved from Mexico to Fishers, Ind., and back to Mexico. “There was really nothing for us there,” he
said.As a result of the
frequent moves, the budding botanist came to appreciate the variety of plant life across the conti-nent.
“I was exposed to different people, culture and plants,” he said. “I started to develop an interest in cactus and fungus in the Chihuahuan Desert. In Indianapolis, it’s so green compared to Mexico. It’s just so different. I love it.”
He puts that interest to use in Fort Wayne by volunteering at the Botanic Conservatory.
Rebecca Canales is the Fort Wayne Parks Department’s site manager at the conservatory, and supervises volunteers. “He was willing to do what-ever he could to help out,” Canales said. Pallares has picked up leaves, put up Christmas lights, and helped to make ornaments for the holiday display.
Pallares said many flavors and medicines are derived from plants. “So it fascinates me how much we depend on them
and yet not many people highly regard plants. It invites me to like them more,” he said.
Pallares hopes to find a career in agricultural engineering or botany. He plans to attend Ivy Tech for two years while he saves money to go to Purdue his third and fourth years, to study chemical engineering.
He got a boost in November when he partic-ipated in The Hispanic Heritage Foundation’s regional Hispanic Heritage Youth Awards ceremony in Chicago. He placed first in engineering and math-ematics, and was awarded a $3,000 scholarship from ExxonMobil. Students also competed in six other categories. The seven winners will compete against their counterparts at 10 other sites for the chance to travel to the national awards ceremony.
He moved to the school district in the second semester of his sophomore year. “Homestead’s really inviting,” he said. “I was so closed up and I didn’t want to see people. And
during my junior and senior year I started to get more involved in clubs.”
Pallares participated in the We the People program at Homestead, focusing on how Amer-ica’s earliest leaders framed the Constitution.
Conservatory volunteer pursues career in botany
Volunteers Angel Pallares and Kathleen Meyer make ornaments from plant materials for a display at the Botanic Conservatory in Fort Wayne. Pallares, a native of Mexico, is a senior at Homestead High School.
COURTESY PHOTO
St Joe Times • January 15, 2016 INfortwayne.com • A9
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Novel ‘Revenge for Hire’is local author’s secondHarperCollins released
the second novel by local author Natalie Eggeman, writing as Natalie S. Ellis.
“Revenge for Hire” is a romantic suspense set in Fort Wayne.
“This book is filled with the same twists and turns as ‘Fear for Hire,’ with a sassy news photographer as the heroine,” Ellis said. “I really had fun creating
my own riverfront devel-opment next to the Clyde Theatre, complete with a lazy river.”
“Revenge for Hire” is available for purchase at Amazon.com, BN.com, play.google.com, and other online retailers.
For book excerpts and more information about the author, visit natalie-sellis.com.
A10 • INfortwayne.com St Joe Times • January 15, 2016
To find out more about our Care Team, call 877-PPG-TODAY.
Join Parkview’s circle of care.
As an expectant mom, you know the importance of sharing your pregnancy journey
with others like you. At Parkview Physicians Group, we know it, too. That’s why we
offer the region’s only Centering program — a group approach to pre- and postnatal
care. During Centering sessions, after an individual assessment with a care provider,
you’ll “circle up” with other women to discuss health-promoting behaviors, share
personal concerns, and even take part in self-care activities. By receiving education and
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Jan. 26 event to addressneighborhoods’ concerns
The Allen County Neighborhoods Asso-ciation will hold its quarterly meeting from 7-8:30 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 26. The group will meet in the Omni Room in the Garden Level of Citizens Square, 200 E. Berry St., Fort Wayne.
Free parking is avail-able in the public parking area in front of Citizens Square and at meters around the building. Those attending should enter the building at the northwest corner near Clinton Street.
ACNA helps neighbor-hood associations in both incorporated and unin-corporated areas of Allen County access county services and share ideas for resolving common concerns.
On the agenda:• Attorney Robert
Eherenman will answer legal questions pertaining to homeowners associa-tions.
• Chandra Gates, an insurance agent, will discuss insurance options for neighborhood associ-ations.
• Marjorie Stephens, president/CEO of Northern Indiana Better Business Bureau, will point out scams and schemes that homeowners should recognize.
• Kathie Green, past NE Region vice president of the Indiana PTA, will suggest ways to motivate and engage residents in community associations.
• An open forum will address questions and concerns.
For more information, contact ACNA Coor-dinators Dan McCrea ([email protected]), Kris Krishnan ([email protected]) or Joanne Bergman ([email protected]), or Mike Green, Allen County public infor-mation officer, at (260) 449-7671.
Aly Didier, Megan Reid, Lexi Tinsley and Brittany Quinn. this year. Their first show will be Feb. 6 at Heritage High School.
At Snider High School, Ryan Long is directing the guard for the second winter. Trinity Meadows is the assistant director. Mike Beights is the drill designer. Snider’s first show is Jan. 30, at Goshen.
Snider will field 22 guard members. “That’s a huge increase from last year; we had nine last year,” Long said. The guard has done more recruiting and has reached out to incoming students from Blackhawk and Lane middle schools.
“Crack the Code” is the show title. “It’s truly just a series of numbers that are revealed throughout the 4-minute show that would in fact crack the code to open a safe, and
that’s where students actually exit the floor,” Long said.
The show features music by The Piano Guys, including the number “Michael meets Mozart.”
“It’s definitely more
challenging than in seasons past,” Long said.
Snider competed in Regional Class A last year, and placed seventh among 49 guard units. Any group that finishes in the top 10 is encour-aged to move up a class.
Snider will compete in Regional Class AA this year.
“I’ve just seen kids blossom,” Long said. “It takes a different kid defi-nitely to be in the color guard, one that wants to be skilled in dance and the multiple pieces of equipment, whether that be a flag, rifle or sabre.
“It requires them to develop a sense of confi-dence. Outside of that, it gives them a sense of camaraderie; they develop lifelong friend-ships. You take anywhere from eight-graders to seniors, and they’re in a very vulnerable stage
in their lives, and they really develop in their personality in a single season.”
Satterthwaite, of Concordia, also directs the Heritage High School winter guard this year. “I am very excited to be with Heritage. We have already seen so much growth in the program in just a few months. It should definitely be an interesting season,” she said.
Heritage’s show is called “A beautiful day to grow.” The music is “Beautiful Day” by Marie and the RedCat. Heritage has 15 guard members, including one senior, Jessica Watkins.
Jonathan Meader again directs the Homestead High School Spartan guard, which captured second place in the state in its class in 2015. “Coming off of a really strong year, we’re pretty excited about the show that we’re doing,” Meader said. The 2016 show has a different vibe from the 2015 show, which relied on ballads, he said. The theme is taken from music by the band Passion Pit. It’s about relationships, Meader said. “It gives you a sense of belonging to something, belonging to someone and in the end belonging to your-self,” he said.
Guard members begin the show in a central formation, and share in
interactive routines as the show develops. Six returning seniors are among the 22 members of the Homestead guard.
Ashley Mueller, a senior, is in her third season with the winter guard. “It’s a more advanced version of fall guard. We really get to know each other a lot better and we compete on a bigger scale,” Mueller said. “My freshman year I was an alternate and I gained a lot of skill sets. My second year I learned more about myself as a performer. This year I’ve been through it enough that it’s just natural, and it’s nice to be in a place where you’re comfort-able.”
Homestead opens its season Jan. 30 at Goshen.
Erica Widmer and Geoff Goelz are co-direc-tors of the Carroll High School winter guard. This year’s show is titled “… in this universe.” Songs by the group Sleeping at Last include the titles “Sun” and “Moon.”
Widmer said “Moon” is played only on the piano. ” ‘Sun’ sounds a little more rock popish,” she said. “It’s got lyrics and it talks about how we’re all important in the universe, and how we have to be together to make everything work.”
Two seniors are among the 23-member winter guard.
Carroll’s first competi-tion is Jan. 30, at Goshen.
SHOWS from Page A1
Jordan Stevens rehearses with the Concordia Lutheran High School winter guard.
PHOTO BY GARTH SNOW
SCHEDULESMost area winter guard units will begin 2016 competition Saturday, Jan. 30, at Goshen High School, 401 Lincolnway East, Goshen. Admission is $6. In all, 37 guard units will perform in several classes, beginning at 11 a.m.Area units competing at Goshen are: New Haven, 11:24 a.m.; Heritage, 11:38
a.m.; Wayne, 1:16 p.m.; Snider, 1:23 p.m.;Northrop, 3:12 p.m.; Carroll, 3:28 p.m.; and Homestead, 4:19 p.m.Other area contests include: Heritage High School, Feb. 6; DeKalb High School, Feb. 20; and Carroll High School, Feb. 27.Look for other events, event lineups, indi-vidual school schedules and post-season state competition details at ihscga.org.
MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. DAY OBSERVANCES• The Plymouth Music Series presents “A Tribute to Martin Luther King” at 4 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 17. Plymouth Congregational Church of Fort Wayne is at 501 W. Berry St. The concert is free and open to the public; freewill offerings are accepted to offset the cost of program-ming. The program tells the story of King’s dream of justice and peace. Bill McGill portrays the civil rights martyr. The Singers of Heartland participate in the service.• The University of Saint Francis plans several special observances, be-ginning with a call to service and Mass from 10:30-11:30 a.m. Monday, Jan. 18, at the North Campus Auditorium, 2702 Spring St., Fort Wayne. A lunch from 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. at the North Campus Auditorium is open to the public. Students, staff and faculty volunteers will report to service projects on and off campus from 1-4 p.m. Off-campus, volun-teers will report to Mustard Seed Furniture Bank, Associated Churches Food Bank, Saint Vincent de Paul Thrift Store, Science Central, The Community Center, Friends of the Poor or Franciscan Center. On Wednesday, Jan. 20, from 7-8:30 p.m., a panel discussion will address the topic “Why We Can’t Wait: Seeking Nonviolence for Our Beloved Community.” Local leaders will address the challenge of violence in the community and how the community can collaborate more effec-tively to bring about positive change. The panel will be moderated by Heather Jeffries, assistant professor and director of Criminal Justice and Criminology at USF. Panelists will include: the Rev. Bill McGill Sr., pastor of Imani Baptist Temple; Zena Moore-Hollins, mother of a local homicide victim; · Tornell Moore, Allen County court case manager; David Gladieux, Allen County sheriff; and Steve Reed, Fort Wayne Police Department assistant chief. More information about these events and links to register for service events can be found at sf.edu/mlkday.• The MLK Club of Fort Wayne presents Unity Day from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday, Jan. 18, at the Grand Wayne Convention Center, 120 W. Jefferson Blvd., Fort Wayne. Admission is $5. The program includes gospel music performances, a Youth Fest, gospel dancers, health screen-ings, vendors and cash prizes and more. Lessie James of San Jose, Calif., will be the keynote speaker. The celebration follows Breakfast with the Clergy, from 8-10 a.m. The special fellowship is open to the public. Tickets are $20. RSVP to (260) 493-0980.• Ivy Tech Northeast will have a Martin Luther King Jr. time line dis-play on its three campuses: Coliseum Campus, 3800 N. Anthony Blvd.; Student Life Center on North Campus, 3701 Dean Drive; and the Public Safety Academy: Ivy Tech South Campus, 7602 Patriot Crossing. The time line will start with King’s “I Have A Dream” speech and conclude with the election of President Obama, featuring events that show King’s dream coming true in the country.
GARDEN-RELATED CLASSES AT SALOMON FARM— Courtesy Fort Wayne Parks Department
• Selling Homemade Edibles: Understanding the Rules. Salomon Farm Park Learning Center, 817 W. Dupont Road, Fort Wayne. 1-3 p.m. Satur-day, Feb. 6. What are the rules governing the sale of home-grown or homemade edibles? Steve Niemoeller from the Allen County Depart-ment of Health will share information on what is required to sell as a home-based vendor and answer any questions. His presentation will be followed by a brief overview of the Salomon Farmers’ Market and how to become a vendor. Call by Jan. 22 if you plan to attend by calling Amy Hicks at (260) 427-6005 or e-mailing [email protected].•• Gardening in Winter. Salomon Farm Park Learning Center, 817 W. Dupont Road, Fort Wayne. 1-3 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 13. You don’t have to wait for spring to get your garden started. Learn how to prepare for your own garden, what you need to plant seeds indoors, and how to keep your seedlings healthy as they grow. You will receive seeds, starter pots, and soil, in this hands-on class taught by Master Gardener Kathy Lee. Kathy has been a volunteer gardener at Salomon Farm Park for 10 years and begins starting seeds as early as February for the gardens. The course will also feature a Power Point presentation. $10. Registration deadline Feb. 7. Visit fortwayneparks.org.• Backyard Composting. Salomon Farm Park Learning Center, 817 W. Dupont Road, Fort Wayne. 1-3 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 20. Learn how to prepare a compost pile, the materials that you can and cannot compost, different methods of composting and the use of different compost recep-tacles. Presenter Steve Pawlowski is a Master Gardener (in progress), compost enthusiast and Salomon Farm volunteer and has been an active urban vegetable gardener for the past 20 years. For ages 18-plus. $9. Registration deadline Feb. 12. Visit fortwayneparks.org.
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 20State Ballet Theatre of Russia presents “Romeo & Juliet.” The Embassy Theatre, 123 W. Jefferson Blvd., Fort Wayne. Tickets $25 to $55. Buy tickets at
the box office or at ticketmaster.com.SATURDAY, JAN. 235th Grade Scholar Challenge. Canterbury Middle School, 5601 Covington Road, Fort Wayne. 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Area fifth-graders are invited to test their skills. As many as eight $6,000 scholarships toward Canterbury Middle School tuition will be awarded ($2,000 for each year of middle school, grades 6-8). Awards will be based on standardized testing, an essay, school transcripts and a personal interview. Parents of participants are invited to visit the Middle School campus from 9 to 10:30 a.m. for an information session and to meet Canterbury faculty and students. Regis-ter at canterburyschool.org/challenge.“Midwinter Mozart.” Rhinehart Music Center, IPFW Campus. 7:30 p.m. Tickets start at $17. Purchase at fwphil.org. Conducted by Music Direc-tor Andrew Constantine, “Midwinter Mozart” includes the Overture to Don Giovanni, Symphony No. 40, K. 550, G minor and the Piano Con-certo No. 21 in C major, K467, featuring world-renowned pianist Boris Slutsky.Tuffy’s Trivia Night. Bishop Dwenger High School, 1300 E. Washington Center Road, Fort Wayne. 6:30 p.m. Organize a team off 10 and prepare for this annual fundraiser. Tickets are $10 per person in advance or $15 per person at the door. Additional information, registration, and sponsor-ship opportunities can be found at bishopdwenger.com/trivianight or call Molly Schreck at (260) 496-4775.
SUNDAY, JAN. 24Open house. Concordia Lutheran Elementary School, 4245 Lake Ave., Fort Wayne. 1-3 p.m. The school invites the public to tour the school and meet the teaching staff. For more information, call the enrollment direc-tor, Lori Stout, at (260) 426-9922, ext. 208.
TUESDAY, JAN. 26Fort Wayne Women’s Midday Connection. Orchard Ridge Country Club, 4531 Lower Huntington Road, Fort Wayne. 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m. $15.50, inclu-sive of lunch. The theme of the luncheon is “It’s Snow Wonderful.” Kurt Witcher, director of the Genealogy Center, will tell how to trace one’s ancestors. Baby-sitting is available. Fort Wayne Women’s Midday Con-nection is part of Stonecroft Ministries.
MONDAY, FEB. 1“The 5 Love Languages.” Allen County Extension Office, IPFW Campus, 4001 Crescent Ave., Fort Wayne. 1 p.m. The public is invited. Regis-tration is not required.Millions of couples have seen their relationships transformed through learning to speak the five love languages. As you discover your own love language, you will understand yourself better and hold a priceless advantage in the quest for love that lasts a lifetime. Based on a book by Gary Chapman.
MONDAY, FEB. 8Candy making program. Allen County Extension Office, 4001 Crescent Ave., Fort Wayne. 6 p.m. Learn to make various chocolate candies, just in time for Valentine’s Day. Creations will include homemade peanut butter cups, chocolate covered cherries, filled caramels, barks and other confec-tions. Bring two containers to transport candy. Cost: $5. Class limited to 25 people.Kindergarten roundup. Concordia Lutheran Elementary School, 4245 Lake Ave., Fort Wayne. 6:30 p.m. Kindergarten information and registration for the 2016-2017 school year will be available at this meeting. For more information, call the enrollment director, Lori Stout, at (260) 426-9922, ext. 208.
NOTICES / REGISTRATION / MULTIPLE DATESShare your Easter activities. Easter Sunday falls on March 27. Submit your church’s Holy Week activities to Times Community Publications’ Com-munity Calendar. Please include the name of the event, the location and address, the time and date, and a phone number to call with any ques-tions. Send the information to [email protected]. Please include “Easter” in the subject line. Please submit Holy Week notices by Feb. 18 to be included in all four Times publications.“Art You Can Use.” Crestwoods Studio, 314 N. Main St., Roanoke. Through Jan. 15. Artists include Elizabeth Wamsley, Alan Larkin, Nancy McCros-key, Chris and Sayaka Ganz, Norman Bradley, Austin Cartwright, Justin Johnson and Rebecca Justice-Schaab. All mediums are represented. Visit crestwoodsgallery.com for studio hours.Fort Wayne Farmers Market indoor market. Lincoln Financial Center at Parkview Field, Fort Wayne. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. the first and third Saturdays of each month through May.SAT/ACT prep course. High school students in Fort Wayne and the surround-ing area may sign up for this course at Bishop Dwenger High School, 1300 E. Washington Center Road, Fort Wayne. Sessions are Tuesdays and Thursdays from 6-7:30 p.m. Classes begin Tuesday, Jan. 19, and end Thursday, March 3. The 14 sessions will include test familiarity, pacing, strategies, and a review of English, math and science concepts. The winter 2016 session will address components of the new SAT to be administered beginning in March 2016 and the ACT test. The Tuesday sessions will focus on critical reading, writing and grammar while the
Thursday sessions will address math and science. The class fee is $225 and includes both an ACT text and SAT text for the course. Call Bishop Dwenger High School at (260) 496-4700 or click on bishopdwenger.com/SAT-ACT for more info and registration forms.GriefShare classes. New Haven United Methodist Church, 630 Lincoln Highway East, New Haven. A new GriefShare Seminar begins Jan. 26 and runs through April 19. Meetings are in the parlor at 6:30 p.m. Tues-day nights. For more information, contact Margie Williams at (260) 749-9907 or the church office at (260) 749-9565.4-H enrollment. Allen County 4-H clubs online enrollment ends Jan. 15. To register, visit extension.purdue.edu/allen. Anyone who misses the Jan. 15 deadline may call the Purdue Cooperative Extension Service Allen County Office for other opportunities. Call (260) 481-6826.Polar Plunge for Special Olympics Indiana. IPFW Polar Plunge, Saturday, Feb. 13, 10 a.m., IPFW Student Housing Clubhouse. Metea County Park Polar Plunge, Saturday, Feb. 20, 10 a.m., Metea Park Nature Center. Get details and registration information at soindiana.org. Volunteers gather pledges to benefit Special Olympics Indiana. Groups of 10 or more are eligible for the team award. Awards also are presented for best costume, largest team, most money raised by an individual and most money raised by a team. An After Splash Bash with food follows each event. Admis-sion to the bash is free for plungers and volunteers; fans and spectators pay a $5 admittance fee.Girl Scout Cookie Sales. 2016 project kicks off Jan. 16. Follow girlscoutsnorthernindiana-michiana.org for updates on Fort Wayne area projects. Visit girlscouts.org to locate a cookie sales booth in your neigh-borhood.Outdoor Sports, Lake & Cabin Show. Allen County War Memorial Coliseum, 4000 Parnell Ave., Fort Wayne. Jan. 22, noon-9 p.m. Jan. 23, 10 a.m.-8 p.m.; Jan. 24, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. $10 for adults, $5 for active/veteran mili-tary, and free for children 12 or under.Beer & Bacon Fest debuts. Allen County War Memorial Coliseum, 4000 Parnell Ave., Fort Wayne. Jan. 22, 6-10 p.m. Tickets will be available at BeerBaconFest.org after Christmas. Admission $25 each for ages 21+ (or $40 a couple), and designated drivers are $15.Get Fit Expo debuts. Allen County War Memorial Coliseum, 4000 Parnell Ave., Fort Wayne. Jan. 23, 10 a.m.-8 p.m.; Jan. 24, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Life-style seminars, interactive activities and health screenings, vendors and more. $10 adults; children 12 & under free.Mizpah Shrine Circus. Allen County War Memorial Coliseum, 4000 Parnell Ave., Fort Wayne. Seven public performances: Jan. 21, 6:30 p.m.; Jan 22, 7 p.m.; Jan. 23, 10 a.m., 2:30 p.m. and 7 p.m.; Jan. 24, 1 p.m. and 5:45 p.m. Tickets $14 to $22. Buy tickets at mizpahshrinecircus.com, call (260) 422-7122, or visit the Shrine ticket office at 1015 Memorial Way, behind the Casa on Parnell Avenue.Summit City Singers rehearsals. Shawnee Middle School, 1000 E. Cook Road, Fort Wayne. 7-8:30 p.m. Tuesdays, beginning Feb. 16. This SATB community choir is starting rehearsals for the spring season and wel-comes new singers. The choir sings a variety of music and this season will be a celebration of Indiana’s Bicentennial featuring songs from a va-riety of songwriters and recording artists from Indiana. The choir is open to anyone high school age on up. There are no auditions but singers are required to match pitch. Rehearsals are held on Tuesday evenings from 7-8:30 p.m. at Shawnee Middle School. For more information, contact Judy King at (260) 489-4505.
WHAT’S HAPPENING AT THE BOTANICAL CONSERVATORY— Courtesy Fort Wayne Parks Department
Winterval at the Conservatory. Saturday, Jan. 30, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Botanical Conservatory, 1100 S. Calhoun St., Fort Wayne. Make a winter bird feeder and have fun exploring in our “Dig This” exhibit. Other activities will be held around town at the Community Center, the Old Fort, and Science Central. Don’t forget about the Fort Wayne Rugby Club’s annual Snow Bowl at Lawton Park at 1 pm. Winterval is sponsored by the Fort Wayne Parks and Recreation Department, the Downtown Improvement District and Majic 95.1. Regular Conservatory admission applies: $5 for adults, $3 for ages 3-17. Children 2 and under are admitted free. For more information, call (260) 427- 6440.“Dig This!” Through April 10. Botanical Conservatory, 1100 S. Calhoun St., Fort Wayne. This winter, young adventurers can don their explorer vests and pith helmets to explore mysteries hidden underground. Why do people dig? What do they look for? Try out your digging- and-finding skills with different tools and media. Enjoy our active learning garden as a winter retreat, full of lush green plants and colorful flowers. Regular Conservatory admission fees apply: $5 for adults, $3 for ages 3-17. Chil-dren 2 and under are admitted free.Tai Chi in the Garden. Tuesdays, through March 1, 5:30-6:30 p.m. Botanical Conservatory, 1100 S. Calhoun St., Fort Wayne. Whether you’re a begin-ner with very little to no experience or you’re a seasoned veteran, this is a great way to practice Tai Chi while it’s cold outside. Keep your energy level renewed while experiencing the ancient art form of movement and grace. Eight weekly one-hour classes will be held. In each class you will learn the Sun Style 73 Form of Tai Chi. Instructor Sandy Gebhard is certified by master Dr. Paul Lam, and has over 30 years’ experience practicing and teaching Tai Chi. Drop-ins should call ahead to make sure class will be in session. For ages 18-plus.
St Joe Times • January 15, 2016 INfortwayne.com • A11
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A12 • INfortwayne.com St Joe Times • January 15, 2016
“Exploring the Need to Grieve
and Mourn:
Healing Yourself, Your Family,
and Your Friends”
Dr. Alan Wolfelt, Ph.D.
A Grief Seminar for the General Public
April 19th 6:30 – 8:30 pm, Ceruti’s Summit Park
Join us for this evening workshop of hope and
healing. Participants will be able to quietly refl ect on
their losses and honor their own unique grief journey.
For the 25th consecutive year, D.O. McComb & Sons is
please to sponsor this information session with noted
educator, author, and clinical thanatologist
Dr. Alan Wolfelt, Ph.D.
Reservations requested by April 8th.
Call (260) 426-9494 for reservations
and complimentary tickets or
register online at www.mccombandsons.com
******Special Book Signing – April 19, 2016******In recognition of Dr. Wolfelt’s 25th year of coming to Fort Wayne and providing outstanding grief seminars for our community, we will be hosting a public book signing at
our:Pine Valley Park Branch:
1320 East Dupont Rd., Fort Wayne, IN 46825
2:00 – 4:00 pm
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