Monthly Archives: February 2018

HSE’s Hamilton Named To Girls Junior All-Stars List

Hamilton County Reporter

Hamilton Southeastern’s Amaya Hamilton is one of 24 players that have been
selected for the IndyStar Indiana girls Junior All-Stars for 2018.

Hamilton is in the Central group, which also includes Jordyn Barga of Monroe
Central, Cyndi Dodd of Warren Central, Carissa Garcia of Fort Wayne Concordia,
Sylare Starks of Homestead and Cameron Tabor of New Castle.

Players in the core group include Jorie Allen of Bedford North Lawrence, Shaila
Beeler of Warren Central, Rikki Harris of North Central, Lilly Hatton of North
Harrison, Maddie Nolan of Zionsville and Hannah Noveroske of Michigan City.

The North group players are Sydney Freeman of Central Noble, Tai-Yanna
Jackson of East Chicago Central, Morgan Litwiller of Northridge, Riley Ott of LaPorte
and Emma and Sophia Nolan of Marquette Catholic.

The South group players are Addy Blackwell of Bloomington South, Trinity
Brady of Lawrence North, Savaya Brockington of North Central, Kinnidy
Garrard of Pike, Makinzi Meurer of North Knox and Grace Waggoner of Vincennes
Rivet.

The coaches for the Junior All-Stars have not yet been announced.

The Junior All-Stars will play two games against the Kentucky Junior All-Stars
on June 1 and June 2 at sites to be announced. The Junior All-Stars also will
play one game against the Indiana All-Star senior girls on June 6, also at a site to be
announced. All three games will be doubleheaders with the 2018 Indiana boys
Junior All-Stars, who will be chosen during March.

The players listed as core group players will play in all three games. The players
listed as South group will join the Core group and play against the Kentucky Juniors
in Kentucky (on June 1). The Central group and North group also will join the Core
group and play one time each — either against Kentucky Juniors in Indiana
(on June 2) or against the Indiana Seniors (on June 6). The night and opponent for the Central and North groups will be determined later.

The Indiana senior All-Stars will play the Kentucky senior All-Stars on June 8 at
a site in Kentucky that has not yet been announced. The Indiana senior All-Stars
will play Kentucky’s seniors again on June 9 in Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis.

The Junior All-Star team is determined by the 20-member Indiana Basketball Coaches Association all-state panel in conjunction with its selection of the IBCA/Subway Underclass All-State Team. The selection process allows all IBCA-member head coaches to nominate players through the IBCA all-state process. Representatives from 16 regional areas from across the state, three district representatives from the three IHSAA districts (one each from District 1,
District 2 and District 3) and the committee chair then meet to review the
nominations, vote and finalize the selections.

The IBCA/Subway girls basketball Senior All-State and Underclass All-State teams for 2018 will be released later this week.

Cigar-Cocktail Lounge Coming To The Yard

Artist’s rendering of The Yard

The Havana Lounge will take up some prime retail space at The Yard culinary project, according to developer Thompson Thrift.  The cigar and cocktail lounge will be located next to the 1933 Lounge by St. Elmo and be adjacent to Sun King Brewery and the culinary incubator space.

Those four tenants will form the anchors for the public Greenspace area of The Yard.

“The upscale cigar and cocktail lounge will be built with urban-industrial inspired materials, comfortable furnishings and lavish appointments in décor and privacy,” according to the Owner and President of Havana Lounge Inc. Omar Barham

Havana Lounge will feature more than 4,700 square feet of total space, an outdoor
patio, a 12-foot ceiling and what the owner describes as a state of the art ventilation system.

According to Thompson Thrift, The Yard will include 252 luxury apartment homes, roughly 120,000 square feet of retail, two hotel concepts and a three-story podium-style parking garage.

The Yard will be located in the same general area near 116th Street and I-69, near IKEA and TopGolf.

FHS Juniors Honored For Screenwriting

Whitney Roberts accepts the Pigasus screenwriting honor, along with her writing partner Cynthia Foulke (on the left) (photo provided by HSE Schools)

When I was a junior in high school, a surprise was usually a pop quiz or new assignment I didn’t want from one of my least favorite teachers.  But two Fishers High School students received a very nice Monday morning surprise when they were presented with the announcement as winners of a statewide screenwriting competition for students in grades 9-12.

Co-writers Whitney Roberts and Cynthia Foulke accepted the honor from Pigasus Pictures,  a Bloomington, Indiana based film company, for their screenplay, “As We Begin.”

“We chose this screenplay because it has a compelling story and real heart,” said Pigasus Pictures co-founder and COO John Armstrong. “It addresses the fears that high school students have as they begin to think about life after school and the effect it will have on their relationships. The humor of dialogue was also very real and natural, which is hard to generate. It was also apparent in the pitch video that these girls had a great friendship and would be really fun to work with.”

“As We Begin,” set in Fishers, Ind., follows the story of 17-year-old Jordan Smith and her best friend, 18-year-old Dakota Hawkins, through the navigation of family-related issues, preparation for college and angst about the future. The film will be fully produced by a professional film crew and area students will be invited to apprentice on set, learning every aspect of professional film-making. The film will be submitted for consideration to major film festivals nationwide, and screened in select theaters and distributed online.

“The purpose of Project Pigasus is to find those students who were just like us,” said Pigasus Pictures CEO and co-founder Zachary Spicer. “Growing up in Indiana, you often feel so far removed from the film industry. We want to show young people that you don’t have to be from a coast, or move to one, to be able to work in this field. And, by producing this short film entirely in-state, our hope is that Project Pigasus will inspire young Hoosier filmmakers, provide opportunities for in-state talent, and generate greater exposure for Indiana’s growing film industry.”

One of Pigasus’ recent movies, filmed in Bloomington, “The Good Catholic”, is streaming now on Netflix.

The 2017 Project Pigasus winner was “Through the Window,” written by Kira Daniels of Southwestern High School in Madison, Indiana.  You can view that film at this link.

 

Fishers News Coverage

Once my retirement party was history and I looked at what to do next, after a few personal matters were resolved, I looked around at how I could volunteer my time and make a difference in the community where I had lived since 1991.

When my twin girls were growing up in Fishers, I subscribed to a daily newspaper, the Noblesville Daily Ledger.  I could follow municipal government, as well as the local school board and county government news.  It’s always good to know what is happening in the community around you.

Then the media landscape began changing dramatically.  The Ledger, which had been publishing for about 100 years, became a 2-day-a-week publication, then stopped publishing.  The Noblesville Daily Times made a go of it as a 5-day-a-week newspaper, but fell victim to the 2008 economic downturn.

The Times is still around today but not as a daily newspaper,

The bottom line is this….people living in Fishers had access to regular local news but as the economics of the media business started to change, news sources began to dry up.

That was the media environment I found when I considered starting a volunteer news blog centered on Fishers in January 2012.  I had been a journalist from the early 1970s to 1983.  Was I too rusty or could a take a leap and go back to covering local meetings and news events?

This little news blog has become much more than I ever expected.  But I was thinking the other day – what news sources are available to people in Fishers yearning for local journalism?

Here is a rundown of where people get their Fishers news, other than this news blog.

Current in Fishers….Anna Skinner is the editor of this weekly publication.  It has the most penetration of any local news source,  because it is mailed to everyone with a Fishers mailing address.  Anna works hard to get you the best and latest news.  However, Current in Fishers has a couple of challenges.  First, the paper is put together 4-5 days (most weeks) before you see it in your mailbox, so the news is a bit dated in many instances when you read it.   Second, Current in Fishers  relies heavily in feature stories…there is nothing wrong with that, but that limits space for other local news.

The Indianapolis Star….As I started this blog, the Star had no reporter covering the Fishers beat.  There had been one, but the newspaper underwent one of its many reorganizations of the editorial staff and only occasionally assigned a reporter to cover happenings in Fishers. Lately, the Star has taken more interest in Fishers.  Emma Kate Fittes has been covering the northern suburban education beat and has paid a lot of attention to the Hamilton Southeastern Schools.   John Tuohy has been busy covering Fishers on a regular basis, along with some other nearby communities.  Tuohy’s most memorable piece so far was all about whether Fishers had become the “no fun city.”  As you might imagine, Mayor Scott Fadness took issue with that assertion.  All-in-all, the Star has taken more interest in covering Fishers.  Let’s hope that continues.

The Indianapolis Business Journal (IBJ)….The IBJ started a “North of 96th” beat to cover business and political news in the northern Indy suburbs.  Andrea Davis was the first reporter assigned to this beat, then Lindsey Erdody took it over once Andrea made the decision to leave journalism as a profession.  Lindsey is moving to coverage of state-wide politics and government.  IBJ is in the process of hiring a new North of 96th reporter.  The IBJ has generally paid attention to Fishers because of its unique economic development strategy and development as a city.  But Fishers is just one of many communities north of 96th Street.

Hamilton County Reporter….The late Don Jellison and his son Jeff started this paper and worked to grow it, in circulation and news content.  It is fairly easy to subscribe, you just send a message at their Web site ReadTheReporter.com.  I did that about a year ago, and immediately received a message from Jeff Jellison.  He was looking for more Fishers content in his newspaper and I was trying to figure out how to better cover county government.  That led to a news-gathering partnership between the Reporter and LarryInFishers.com.  That’s why you find the Reporter’s content on my blog, and my blog content in the Reporter.

Local Television Stations….With four local television news operations, you will occasionally see coverage of Fishers, but only as news developments determine it.

One of the reasons I started this blog was because Fishers was getting little coverage from other area media outlets in 2012.  Things are a little better today, but not where I would like to see it.  I do plan to continue this blog, but maybe, just maybe, other media will provide the regular news coverage local residents deserve.  Then, I would be able to retire – again.  But I don’t see that happening anytime soon.

State Lawmakers Honor Fishers HS We The People Team

State Rep. Todd Huston (R-Fishers) presents a resolution on Feb. 22, at the Statehouse in Indianapolis honoring the We the People team from Fishers High School for winning the state championship. The team will represent Indiana at the national championship in April. (Photo provided)

State Rep. Todd Huston (R-Fishers) honored students from Fishers High School with a resolution recognizing their top-place finish in this year’s We the People state competition during a Thursday Statehouse ceremony.

According to a story published by my news-gather partner, the Hamilton County Reporter, More than 600 stmdents from 14 high schools across Indiana participated in this year’s state competition. After securing the top title, the Fishers team will travel to Washington, D.C., to compete nationally in April.

“When students learn more about democracy, they are more likely to be civic-minded adults,” Huston said. “These kids are studying and discussing complex issues facing our country today and developing skills that will be an asset throughout their lives. I wish them luck as they represent Indiana at nationals.”

Led by teacher Liz Paternoster, 27 students participate on the team.

Huston said the We the People program was developed to teach students about the Constitution and civic responsibility through a combination of classroom curriculum and simulated congressional hearing competitions.

For more information about House Concurrent Resolution 49, visit iga.in.gov. To find out more about the We the People program and the national invitational, visit civiced.org.

Tigers Overwhelmed By No. 1 Warriors

Fishers’ Terry Hicks scored 16 points, including a key second-quarter 3-pointer, to lead the Tigers in scoring during their Thursday game with Warren Central at the Tiger Den. (Reporter Photo by Richie Hall)

Hamilton County Reporter

The Fishers boys basketball team played its Senior Night game Thursday, and it was
also trying to play the role of the spoiler.

The Tigers took on Class 4A No. 1 Warren Central, which came into the Tiger
Den looking to complete an undefeated regular season. Fishers gave the Warriors a
battle, but Warren proved to be too much to handle, beating the Tigers 67-39 and
finishing its regular season at 25-0.

The Warriors got off to a fast start, leading 21-14 after the first quarter. Fishers
quickly cut that lead to 21-19 early in the second period, with Terry Hicks hitting a
3-pointer along the way. But Warren reasserted itself by the end of the half, leading
33-22 at the break.

“I don’t think you can win a game in the first half, but I think you can lose a game in
the first half,” said Tigers coach Matt Moore. “We dug too big of a whole early
and then didn’t close the half out well.”

The Warriors rolled through the second half, extending its lead to 20 points (46-26)
midway through the third quarter before Fishers cut it slightly, 47-29 at the close of
the period. Warren kept going in the fourth quarter, outscoring the Tigers 20-10.

“I thought we had a lot of good shots, I thought we got the ball in the basket area,
which is what we wanted to do,” said Moore. But the coach said a physical game
usually goes to the aggressor, and that’s what the Warriors were Thursday night.

“We’re a man or two down with injuries and other things, and so I was proud of our
guys that played, got us back in that game that first half,” said Moore. “Our crowd was awesome and hopefully we can carry that on into next Friday.”

Hicks scored 16 points for the Tigers, while Jeremy Szilagyi added 10 points.
Szilagyi got off to a great start, with seven first-quarter points. Hicks totaled six points in the second period. Josiah Matthews added eight points.
Fishers finished the regular season 11-11 and will await the winner of Tuesday’s
first-round sectional game between host Noblesville and Anderson. The Tigers will
play that winner next Friday, March 2, in the sectional semi-finals.

 

Harter Sisters Enjoy The HSE State Experience

Sisters Abby and Olivia Harter are the latest siblings to make it to state for the Hamilton Southeastern swim program. Sophomore Abby placed third in the backstroke and 10th in the individual medley at state, while freshman Olivia also competed in those two events at the state meet. (Photo provided

by

Richie Hall

Sports Editor

Hamilton County Reporter

Over the years, several fantastic siblings have graced the Hamilton Southeastern swim teams.

Now, here come the Harter sisters.

Sophomore Abby and freshman Olivia both competed at the IHSAA state swim meet for the Royals on Feb. 9 and 10 at the IU Natatorium. Not only did both girls swim for HSE, they swam in the same events: The individual medley and the backstroke.

The sisters didn’t swim at the same time in the Friday, Feb. 9 preliminaries – they were in different heats in both events. Still, it was a fun experience for them both.

“I thought it was fun,” said Abby. “I really liked the competitiveness of it.”
“We already know Abby’s going to win every time,” said Olivia. “It’s still fun.”

Abby Harter finished in the top 16 in both events on Friday, so she came back to swim each one in the Saturday, Feb. 10 finals. Abby placed third in the backstroke and 10th in the IM.

“I’m really excited and I think next year I can do even better,” said Abby.
Olivia placed 18th in the IM prelims and 21st in the backstroke, just missing the finals. But she is a freshman, so there are still three more years to go. Abby said her younger sister “did really well” and would “be back next year better.”

And of course, Olivia was on deck during the finals, cheering her sister and all of the HSE swimmers on.

“It was really fun and it was just fun for the experience, and just being with our team is really fun,” said Olivia.Both girls are already gearing up for next season.

While there were several seniors providing leadership for the Royals this year, Southeastern also had many swimmers who will be back next year, and the Harter sisters can’t wait to see what’s next for their team.

“I’m really excited,” said Abby. “We have some people coming up as freshman too, so I think we can only go up.”

“We have some really good rising freshmen and it’s going to be really fun to see how we do with them,” said Olivia.