Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Indianapolis Star from Indianapolis, Indiana • Page 32

Location:
Indianapolis, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
32
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

FRIDAY, JUNE 6, 1986 THE INDIANAPOLIS STAR- PAGE 32- Lockerbie, Meridian-Kessler to open their doors Painting The Town TMrtttflftfrri) iff stuffed animals, marionette shows, cookie-decorating and a clinic for "over-loved" animals. All this takes place from noon to 4 p.m. at the Zoo. There'll be lots of categories in the stuffed animal contest. The clinic will provide minor repairs and health checks for stuffed critters and members of the Central Indiana Dental Hy-gienists Association will use stuffed animals as tools to stress the importance of oral hygiene.

The Melchoir Marionettes will perform at 12:30 p.m. and 3 p.m. Lynne Villers animal batiks will be shown and she will demonstrate the ancient art process during the picnic. year it became the annual DeMo-lay Brunch, which now is In Its 15th year. In 1976 the attendance record was set: 2.728 persons were there, and four orchestras played.

Rose died at 82 in 1982: her recipes were passed on to Ed's wife, Jane. Now Ed and Jane want to have a Polish party where it all began. So Saturday In memory of Rose Zebrowski and for the benefit of the Scholarship Fund a Polish-style dinner will be served for Antelope members and their friends under a tent in the parking lot just north of the clubhouse. Duane and the Polka Jamboree from Toledo will play for dancing. The cash bar opens at 4:30 p.m.

Dinner begins at 6:30 p.m. and dancing runs from 7:30 p.m. to 1 1 :30 p.m. Those working on the project with the Zebrowskls include club president Dick Shumate, Alex Clark and Jug Eck-ert. Carmel Art Fair The 13th annual Carmel Art Fair will be held in the parking area of Target Mall at 116th Street and Keystone Avenue from 10 a.m.

to 5 p.m. Saturday. The Carmel Woman's Club sponsors the event, with proceeds going to civic and educational projects. More than 100 artists and craftsmen from Indiana and neighboring states will exhibit and sell their work. A special able at Hamaker's Pharmacy or by calling the Meridian-Kessler office, 283-1021.

Cost for tonight's event is $25, which includes tickets for Saturday and Sunday's noon to 5 tour of eight homes. Refreshments and plants will be sold. Tickets for Saturday and Sunday's tours are 66 at the door, or $5 in advance. Children 5-12 will be charged $3 at the door. Tickets are available at Hamaker's, Indiana National Bank at Westfield Boulevard and Illinois Street.

Down by the Ducks and the City Center. Tonight's Twilight Tour includes the homes of David and Mary Liz Freund, Barbara Hart, Larry and Karen Medsker and Dr. Robert and Marilyn Straw-bridge. Wendell Fowler Catering will serve the gourmet buffet. A cash bar will be available.

Saturday and Sunday's tour homes are those of Daniel and Katherine Appel, Jack and Betsey Harvey, Dr. John and Kanda Haslem, Marty and Dede Miles, Dr. Randall and Diana Smith, Dick and Ann Spahr, Lee and Becky Wilhite and the Medskers. Refreshments from the Illinois Street Food Emporium will be available. Trolley rides will cost 50 cents.

For more information call chairman Carolyn Niehaus, 25 1 -1230 or 269-5185. or vice chairman Forrest Jones, 283-7524 or 269-5277. Zoo celebration All the animals we love will get together for a celebration Saturday when the Indianapolis Zoo sponsors a "Stuffed Animal Picnic." There'll be contests for For most families, spring means housecleaning time. But for others the house gets more than the ordinary going-over. Because it's also the most popular time for house touring, a pastime that never fails to attract a large audience.

Two now-traditional events are coming up. Lockerbie Square The 1986 "Summer A'Fair" a Victorian day in Lockerbie Square is scheduled for 1 1 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday. Sponsored by the Lockerbie Square People's Club, it's a melange of food, entertainment, carriage rides and house-browsing.

Seven restored homes and three new structures in the historic Lockerbie Square area (bounded by East, New York and Michigan streets and College Avenue) will be open to view. Residents, including the children, and professionals will entertain. The Common Market will sell food in a Victorian setting. Yellow Rose Carriages will be on hand for horse-drawn rides. Tickets are S4 in advance or S5 Sunday, except for senior citizens, who pay $2 either way.

Tickets are available from residents and the following business locations: Riley and Arena branches of American Fletcher National Bank: the Coffee and Tea House, Bea's Bakery and Libby Deli in the City Market: Jefferson. One North Capitol, Tower and Riley branches of Indiana National Bank, and Historic Landmarks' offices at Crown Hill and in Kemper House. Also Richard's Cleaners. Bo-linger's Watch and Clock Shop, Lockerbie Glove Co. sales office, the Rowland Associates and all Food and beverages will be available.

Also on Paint's palette: Sunday more than 100 Indiana policemen will participate in the Law Enforcement Torch Run for Special Olympics, which begins at Monument Order They'll take the torch relay-style" to South Bend, where more than 2,600 mentally handicapped children and adults will participate in the 1986 Indiana Special Olympics Tuesday through Thursday. Pledges in support of the police runners are encouraged. Rushville Police Chief Ron Cameron, 932-2205. is chairman: Armour Food Companies is the sponsor. Good Sam Club members will provide logistical support for the team.

Ed Marin-aro (remember him from the National Football League and Hill Street Bluest is honorary chairman. The new support group for the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, made up of the 20 to 40 age group, has chosen the name Noteables. Its first official meeting was Thursday night at the Major Taylor Velodrome, prior to the Symphony performance at 8 p.m. The group already is planning several special projects. Nine-hole golf players at the Country Club of Indianapolis have Invited guests for their "Tee Off with Us" day today.

They're featuring all kinds of things that begin with a (recipes for turkey tetrazini, tarts and tea: tomatoes, tortes. turkey salad, tulips in teapots. T-shirts, etc.) Tina Hansford is chairman. any I in rtirjrft ItRrtta yew MINK COAT I wit you woi'f balitvt. I can also RELINE your fur coal for only BROAD RIPPLE pfurs AVE.

255-4080 VV IN BROAD RIPPLE WHERE ELSE? I 816 Polish party Ed Zebrowski can't keep his age a secret. Because everyone who was there remembers that 18 years ago on his 50th birthday his mother came from Hamtramck. to prepare authentic Polish fare for the party at the Antelope Club. There was a disk jockey playing records, including polka music, of course. Ed's 1920 Stutz ladder truck shuttled patrons between the Antelope Club, of which Ed was president, and nearby bars.

A Polish band came from Louisville and Rose Zebrowski, a professional caterer, and a couple of her friends cooked and served the Polish specialties. The party went on from noon to 2 a.m. and was crowded the whole time. The next year the party was moved to the Indianapolis Horse Patrol to accommodate more people: 1.700 attended. The third reluctant to search for a real cure.

Please send me a copy of what you wrote. DEAR READER: Whoever originated that nonsense has absolutely no knowledge of how medical research works. The money for research goes to independent investigators, mostly at universities, throughout the country. They do their research on their own and report their findings to the various medical journals in a free press, independent of either the American Cancer Society or the the National Cancer Institute. The truth is.

because of these Hepatitis antibody may linger after infection visitor will arrive via a fire truck to greet youngsters at 1 1 a.m. A children's art contest will be held. organizations, the cure rate for cancer has been dramatically improved. Whoever originated such malicious ignorance should be ashamed of himself. Have you considered that the "greedy" private industry that stands to profit from any cures available, such as big drug companies, would have won the war and be hawking their cures for profit? Incidently, the best cure for cancer is often prevention.

Over 80 percent of the leading cause of cancer deaths, lung cancer, wouldn't even occur if everyone would quit smoking. Ntwt America Syndicate By DOIMNA S. MULLIMX Union Federal Savings branches. The proceeds support preservation efforts within the Square, such as building brick sidewalks, spraying and replacing dead trees, maintaining public flower beds and decorating at Christmas. Residences on the tour are those of Marty McCormick, Michael Khalil and Mary Anderson.

Pat Traub and Alison Kothe, John and Margaret Thomas, Mike and Jackie Ken-ney and Kevin and Estelle Huston. Also included are Michael D. Moriarty's house where Gary E. Voreis lives: the Treiter-Al-ford house. Lockerbie Flat Partners' place and the Phi Kappa Psi townhouse.

Also open Sunday will be Lockerbie Square United Methodist Church. St. Mary's Catholic Church and the James Whit-comb Riley Home (where a separate admission will be charged). Meridian-Kessler tours The Meridian-Kessler Neighborhood Association's three-day tour event is this weekend too. Tonight, from 7 p.m.

to 1 1 p.m.. ticket-holders will take the Twilight Tour, visiting four homes in the neighborhood and enjoying a buffet dinner and entertainment. Yellow Rose Carriages will be on hand. Tickets for tonight are avail no KXl Lawrence E. Lamb infection, so it is quite possible that you had this even before you got married.

If so. and you still have the antibody, that does not mean you would actually have the active virus. The reason individuals with the core antibody are excluded from giving blood is that some of them do still have an active virus. The risk of a person getting hepatitis from a blood transfusion is significantly increased if the donor's blood contains the core antibody. Some individuals also have chronic hepatitis from hepatitis B.

As you requested in the rest of your letter I am sending you Special Report 27 of the Health Letter, Common Liver Disorders. When you read it remember that "core positive" in your case means you have had hepatitis in the past. Others who want this issue can send SI with their Wi i DEAR DR. LAMB: I am a 27-year-old male and for the last 10 years I have been a volunteer blood donor. After my last donation I received a letter from the Blood Bank which said that they had started using a new test for hepatitis, and my test showed that I had core positive hepatitis B.

It also said I could no longer give blood. My doctor retested me and it also showed "core positive." I had my wife checked and she was negative. A nurse practitioner told me that I was not contagious and not to worry about it. Will I ever be able to give blood again? Is it possible to have contracted this while I was married for the last seven years and not have given it to my wife? We have had regular sexual relations. Why didn't I know I had this before? I don't recall ever having any symptoms.

DEAR READER: The test that you took demonstrated antibodies to the center (core) of the virus that causes hepatitis B. It indicates that you have had hepatitis B. It does not mean you have it now. The core antibody can persist for years after' the acute i Gerdf Furniture's 3 Pay order to the Health Letter, in care of The Indianapolis Star. P.O.

Box 19622. Irvine, Calif. 92713. Please allow four to six weeks for delivery. If you do not have any other evidence of liver disease, and had hepatitis several years ago, the likelihood is that it will never cause you any problems.

DEAR DR. LAMB: I believe you have published some information on the American Cancer Society and the National Cancer Institute preventing a cancer cure from being found. When a cancer cure is found, they will be out of business. So I would expect those officials to be this Coupon DISHWARESALEj MELMAC Service for 4 Reg. $14.99 Sale 8.99 I China 20 pc.

set Reg. 69.99 SALE 24.99 Anchor Hocking Stoneware Reg. 49.99 Only 29.99 CUTLERY CORNER Union Station Lbb Bring this CouponBH arrived inns i.wm Ssi piirimv a spectacular group of new Summer Sweaters has just starts riday regularly $34. to $68. sensational at $12.99 $ii Vs I'iL BASSETT YOUNG Jr AVr-Y 1 FLEXSTEEL HINKLE fj AT LEAST hammary la-z-boy If XMmJSvl HEKMAN PENNSYLVANIA nt Wm "umne' house LTT.

SOMMA TEUITY II THOMASVILLE 1 rT CKJ jy LAMPS WATERBEDS ImiY MOIYIE I SAVE AT LEAST 30 FusnrasM- 6do ms who came in while the remodeling V. RECLINERS CHAIRS was going on. But now that the dust fmd SECTIONALS has settled, we're lowering prices CUKIOS SOFAS 30 to 60 storewide. For a limited time only DESKS you will save at least 30 on the cream of the crop from DINING ROOMS SOFA SLEEPERS America's finest manufacturers. ENTERTAINMENT In addition, you'll be saving 40 to 60 on discontinued, CABINETS 1 of a kind and overstocked merchandise.

PATIO TERMS OF More than likely, you will never buy better quality FURN. SALE' homefumishing for less than you will right now at Gerdt's. 1 I I. Cafcorctedk 2. 90 dor WW ca (WW.

onty I limn) ifEl- 1PYTP I Hours: I -T vTlPjrl 1 FURNITURE INTERIORS closed Sunday 4- ffetsr-7" rrKZZ Since 1959 1 Monday 9 10 8 1 5- ttr- mSSJ? 202E.SOvTHPORTRD. 788-4236 6" VW UltIt ON THE OF MNANAPOUS cool cotton fully fashioned summer short sleeve sweaters and tank tops, multi color intarsia patterns on white grounds, this collection is from one of America's foremost stylists, seen in many fashion magazines. fashion at a fraction 4233 Lafayette Rd. 297-0522 next to Value City, near Lafayette Sq. Glenlake Plaza (Keystone 65th) 253-6725 Sun.

Visa MasterCard Layaways Gift Certificates Ibaclirdoinri.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Indianapolis Star
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Indianapolis Star Archive

Pages Available:
2,551,945
Years Available:
1862-2024