Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

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Transcript of Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

Page 1: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014
Page 2: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

Setting The Standard For Security & Elegance!

QUALITY SERVICE • INTEGRITY

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VISIT OUR SHOW ROOM

Page 3: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

3Newburgh on the OhioMagazine | Summer 2014

Warrick Publishing Co.204 W. Locust Street

Boonville, Indiana 47601(812) 897-2330

PUBLISHERGary Neal | [email protected]

MANAGING EDITORTim Young | [email protected]

BUSINESS MANAGERDebi Neal | [email protected]

PRODUCTION MANAGERAmanda Kipp | [email protected]

EDITORIAL STAFFEmily May | [email protected]

Travis Rockhold | [email protected]

SPECIAL CONTRIBUTORSJulie Rosenbaum-Engelhardt | [email protected]

Dereck Dowdle | [email protected]

ADVERTISINGKaren Craig | [email protected] Lewis | [email protected]

LEGALS/CLASSIFIEDJoy Harter | [email protected]

CIRCULATIONAlicia Goodwin | [email protected]

ACCOUNTINGKristina Morris | [email protected]

Page 4: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

4 Newburgh on the Ohio Magazine | Summer 2014

TABLE of CONTENTS

[20]

Brew in the ‘BurghCastle High School graduate Dustin Gunter is in the process of bringing craft beer to Newburgh.

[8]

Cooling OffBeat the stifiling summer heat at a local watering hole.

Real TalkBill Maher wowed a local audience with his honesty, humor and emo-tion.

[24]

[26]

From player to peerFormer Castle High School pitcher Beth (Harmon) Zachary got to relive her state softball championship with her former coach, Pat Lockyear. Only this time, they were on opposite sides of the field.

A life of loveLaura Warner was born on the land she still lives on. She’s faced divorce, death and everything in between. She married her husband, Edward, a decade ago but refuses to settle down.

[42]

Passion becomes careerRick Mitchell has made a career of digging in the dirt and mak-ing things beautiful. He’s traded a life of luxury for a life of necessity.

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Also insideWelcome.............................................7

Newburgh Events...............................14

An Unwanted Staycation....................12

Youth First..........................................18

Taking back the outdoors...................10

Seeing the World................................32

Keeping it Going................................46

Newburgh Wine, Art & Jazz Fest.......53

[on the cover]

[34]

A Star amongst usJanet Stout grew up in the Appalachian Mountains with no indoor plumbing. She then made her way in Hollywood designing some of the biggest celebrities’ costumes. Now, she calls Jennings Street in Newburgh home.

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Serving the Citizens of Newburgh Serving the Citizens of Newburgh

Newburgh Town Officials Town Council

William Kavanaugh Tonya McGuire Alonzo B. Moore Anne Rust Aurand Leanna K. Hughes

District I District II District III District IV Council at Large

853.3050 853.5088 842.0398 853.7538 858.5028

Utility Dept. Business Office Utility Office Mgr. WWTF Superintendent

Susan Helms Leon Key

853.7496

Street Dept. 853.6648 Maintenance Facility

Police 853.1723 Emergency Only 911 Information

Fire 853.7651 Emergency Only 911 Information

Clerk-Treasurer Jon Lybarger 853.7111

Administration Town Manager 853.3578 Lori S. Buehlman

Page 7: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

Summer along the Ohio River is the definition of picturesque. The calm waters of the river, coupled with greenery of the Rivertown Trail make for an experience that is unlike any other in the area. This is why on any given day that you might see hundreds of people walking through the quaint rivertown. No where else

in the tri-state can you experience what a Newburgh summer has to offer.This summer’s edition of Newburgh on the Ohio Magazine takes a look at a story of rags to riches. With the help

of writer Julie Rosenbaum-Engelhardt, we are able to peak through one of Hollywood’s decorated stories. New-burgh’s own Janet Stout moved from the mountains of eastern Kentucky to the back lots of movie studios. From Sunset Boulevard to where no man has gone before, Stout’s career in Hollywood made her into the woman that she is today.

Next, we’ll take a look at a continued rising star in the golf arena, Castle’s Kayla Katterhenry. Now a student at the University of Evansville, Katterhenry continues to drive for perfection on the links.

Writer Emily May pops the top on the story of Dustin Gunter’s dream of opening a microbrewery in Newburgh.Sports editor Travis Rockhold chronicles the story of former student athlete Beth Harmon, who now finds herself

coaching against her former softball coach.Writer Dereck Dowdle gives us a glimpse into the worldly travels of retired schoolteacher Judy Dukes. From Peru

to the Galapagos Islands, Dukes has seen it all.We’ll also take a look at why you are never too old to fall in love with the story of Laura Warner-Johnson.This is just a highlight of the great stories in this edition of Newburgh on the Ohio Magazine. Enjoy the magazine

and have a safe and happy summer.

Tim YoungManaging Editor

7Newburgh on the OhioMagazine | Summer 2014

WELCOME to SUMMER

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For the past few weeks an unmistakable aroma has permeated the air in Warrick County. As warmer weather (finally) finds a steady foothold across Southern Indiana, a fragrant mixture of freshly cut grass, honeysuckle, and sweet, smoky barbecue wafting through the area can only mean one thing: summer is here!

As temperatures continue to climb, edging closer and closer to triple digit readings on the thermometer,and local schools allow students a reprieve for the next several weeks, a problem unique to this time of year presents itself: what to do to cure those ol’ summertime boredom and blues? Any parent knows, per chance all too well, that Apple, Playstation, Xbox, and that old standby, Nintendo, offer up a plethora of options to waste away these hot days. However, as much as my smart phone, tablet, and laptop may belie the fact, I personally cannot help but feel that a summer vacation expend-ed by staring wide-eyed and slack-jawed for hours upon hours at an LCD screen is time misspent. Where the high defi-nition television may offer millions of colors to delight the eyes, Mother Nature gives infinitely more to delight upon, and although the technology present in modern video games allow a player to recreate nearly any experience, a swimming pool or a campsite will invariably leave a memory that lasts longer.

The challenge of motivating the kids to step out of virtual reality and into “actual reality” is undoubtedly formidable. Nevertheless, if you as a parent are up to the challenge, our fair community offers several opportunities to get out and get a healthy dose of vitamin D. Starting right here in Newburgh and working outward, listed below are few choices to make the Summer of 2014 a bit more memorable.

First, the Newburgh Community Pool begins their season on Saturday, May 24 and is open until Sunday, Aug. 10. Hours run from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday, Saturdays from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m., and Sundays 12 p.m. to 7 p.m. General admission is $3 for children ages 3 to 15 years old, $6 for those between the ages of 16 and 54 years old, and $2 for adults 55 and older. Children under 2 years old are admitted free of charge. Season passes are also available, cost-ing $50 for those residing inside the town of Newburgh and $75 for non-residents. Family season passes are $125 for residents and $175 for non-residents.

Additionally, the pool offers swimming lesson for those not yet comfortable in the water. Offered to those with any degree of skill, instruction takes place for 40 min-utes a day Monday through Thursday (with Friday as a make-up day in the case of severe weather). Participants can choose between a 9:15 a.m. to 9:55 a.m. ses-sion, a 10 a.m. to 10:40 a.m. session, as well as an evening session from 6:05 p.m. to 6:45 p.m. Four separate sessions are scheduled, with the first running from June 2 to June 12, the second from June 16 to June 26, followed by June 30 to July 10 and the final session taking place from July 14 to July 24. Please note that partici-pants are required to pre-register at least one week before the session they wish to attend.

The Newburgh Community Pool also is home to the Newburgh Dolphins Swim Team, allowing those wishing to join the opportunity to improve their techniques and endurance and participate in competitive swim meets. The season runs from June 9 to July 17 with practice scheduled Monday through Thursday 7 p.m. to 8 p.m., with a one time registration fee of $50. For more information about the New-burgh Community Pool, please call 812-853-0051 or visit www.newburgh-in.gov/

Splashing intoSplashingsummer[by Dereck Dowdle]

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pages/parks_pool.php.A little further down the road, Richards Pool in Boonville opens on Wednes-

day, May 28 and runs Monday to Friday 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Daily admission costs $2 per person, with children under the age of 2 admitted free. The last day of operations for Richards Pool is scheduled to be Thursday, Aug. 7.

Thinking about throwing a summer shindig but don’t have the space? Rich-ards Pool is available for rental during the evening hours and the weekend. Cost to do so is $25 per hour with a two hour minimum required. To ensure the safety of swimmers, two lifeguards are on-duty during pool rentals, cost-ing $10 per hour per lifeguard. Additional information about Richards Pool can be attained via calling 812-897-6990 or by pointing your web browser to www.cityofboonvilleindiana.com/pool.htm.

If you’re seeking to get a bit more personal with Mother Nature, Scales Lake in Boonville offers a variety of activities for those wishing to get down and dirty. The beach and swimming area opens to the public on Saturday, May 24 and does not close until Sunday, Aug. 10. Admission to both the swimming area and adjacent water slide are $3 Monday through Friday and $4 for the weekend and holidays. Children under the age of 5 are always admitted free of charge.

In addition to swimming and sliding, Scales Lake also offers a petting zoo, a full campground with or without water, electricity, sewer hook ups, rental cabins and literally miles upon miles of trails to hike or ride through. For directions as well as full details about the park’s offerings, the office may be reached via tele-phone at 812-897-6200 or through their website: www.scaleslakepark.com.

Regardless of how you choose to spend the summer, I urge you to take a moment (at least) to get outside and enjoy the sunshine and warmth while they’re here. After all, if southern Indiana has proven anything in the past sever-al months, it is that this is the land of dysfunctional weather, and as such, there exists the very real possibility that we’ll all be by snowed-in come August.

summer

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If April showers bring May flowers, then what will May and June showers bring? The answer is mosquitos. Spring rains in May this year have created conditions conducive to heavy outbreaks of mosquitoes. What have rains and mosquitoes to do with each other, you might ask. It is true that standing water promotes mosquitoes.

Eggs are laid on the surface of existing water or in low lying places where water is likely to accumulate. Common breeding places are flood waters, woodland pools, slow-moving streams, ditches, marshes, and around the edges of lakes. Mosquitoes may also develop in tree cavities, rain barrels, fish ponds, bird baths, old tires, tin cans, gut-tering and catch basins — in other words, in anything that holds water. Eggs hatch and develop through their larval stages in as few as seven to 10 days when temperatures are high. Females can lay up to 400 eggs and thus begins the cycle all over again. As you might expect, a few weeks of good mosquito weather and lots of standing, stagnant water and presto, there will be huge populations of the hungry little beasts.

Most mosquitoes remain within a mile of where they hatch but some, can fly several miles from their breeding sites especially if there is a bit of a wind. Because they can move so far, local eradication programs are generally ineffective. Mosquito control in a city or town is a community-wide problem and can be solved only as an entire community. The most effective control of mosquitoes around the home is to prevent them from breeding. This can be done by eliminating or altering existing breeding sites as follows:

•Destroy or dispose of tin cans, old tires, or any other artificial water containers.•Make weekly inspections of the water in flower pots and plant containers. If mosquito larvae are seen, change

the water. Also, be sure to loosen soil in flower pots regularly to ensure that water penetrates through the soil instead of forming a stagnant pool on the surface for mosquitoes to breed in.

•Change the water in bird baths and wading pools once or twice a week. Drain wading pools when not in use.

•Stock garden and lily ponds with top-feeding minnows.•Keep rain gutters unclogged and flat roofs dry.•Drain and fill stagnant pools, puddles, ditches, or swampy places around

the home and property.•Keep margins of small ponds clear of vegetation.•Place tight covers over cisterns, cesspools, septic tanks, fire barrels, rain

barrels, and tubs where water is stored. •Remove all tree stumps that may hold water.In addition to the elimination of breeding sites, it may be necessary to con-

trol adult mosquitoes that migrate in from surrounding areas. The adults like to rest in vegetation. Therefore, do not allow weeds to grow uncontrolled near the home, and keep weeds in nearby lots well-trimmed. Leave insecticide treat-ments to trained mosquito control personnel. For one time events like picnics or deck parties, a granular repellent containing napthalene compounds, Mos-quito Beater, can be applied on lawns and other mosquito-infested areas. It effectively keeps mosquitoes repelled for several hours. More long term solu-tions need to be done by a trained professional. Remember that mosquitoes are most active at dawn and dusk. If you are going to be working near areas of high mosquito infestations, especially in shaded areas near heavy vegetation, wear long-sleeved shirts and long pants thick enough to prevent mosquitoes from reaching the skin. Wear light colors which tend to attract mosquitoes less than darker colors. In addition, use registered insect repellents to keep mos-quitoes at bay. For concern about products for use on children, choose those

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Taking back the outdoors

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When I started noticing black crud around the

tops of my walls and ceil-ings, I was quite concerned. Each day it got worse, so I decided to call my insur-ance company. Because I had a new roof put on only months before, I thought that might be the problem. However, after roofers, an engineer, an environmen-talist and a man from the furnace company all came and went, I was really getting scared. After two insurance adjusters came and still seem puzzled, I thought I would live in this unknown phenomenon forever.

Finally, an engineer said what we had was “ghosting,” something I did not understand. But if they were going to fix it, I was euphoric.

David Jones from the cleaning service said they would have to get all this soot stuff off my walls, ceilings, furni-ture and carpeting. He also said they would take down all my pictures and drapes and just about everything in my house. What was I going to do? We had to go to a hotel.

As my husband and I agonized over leaving our cat at the vet, we thought it would only be for a couple of days. My rescue dog, Spencer, was allowed to stay at the hotel with us. Because he had such a horrific life before we adopted him, we did not want him to think he was being deserted. I felt like the Clampetts from the “Beverly Hill-billies.” We had clothes in the car. Toothpaste, hair sup-plies, laptops, notebooks, along with a huge bag of dog food and many cans and treats, as well, were seemingly strewn everywhere.

The hotel was wonderful. They did not charge us extra for Spencer and gave us a lovely room right by a door, leading to grassy area outside. They also had free wine and beer in the early evenings Monday through Thursday and a lovely breakfast bar with hot food in the morning. Although it seemed like a mini-vacation on one hand, both of us had to work. I had two book signings and inter-views. Although a couple of the days were considered vacation days for my husband, his company also allowed him to work two days from the hotel room.

Of course, there was more than “ghosting” going on at our house. Our sump pump was not working and the cleaning service people had to use their own pump to clean up our crawlspace while working on the house.

[by Julie Rosenbaum-Engelhardt]

Page 13: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

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While all of this craziness was going on, I had still had one thing to look forward to. On the Sunday we thought we would’ve already been back home, we had tickets to see Billy Joel in Louisville and I was so excited. We had planned to leave Spencer at home because there was no way he could be left alone at the hotel.

His behavior had been perfect. There no messes and no barking, but we were with him all the time. When we need-ed to go places, he waited in the car. So when I got the call that our house was still not ready, we were faced with a dilemma. We didn’t want to eat the more than $100 per-person ticket. But I did not want to drive alone at night to parts unknown while Gordon baby-sat Spencer at the hotel. My gal pal Terry jumped at the chance to go to the concert and said she would drive. Gordon assured me that he had plenty of work to do while we were gone and everything would be fine.

When we arrived at the massive KFC Yum Center in Louisville, my friend Kris Griffin, a Newburgh native, was there with his girlfriend, Brandi, and her mother, both forever Newburgians. He offered to buy me a drink. Did I mention we got lost in Louisville, my nerves were shot and a drink was not for fun, it was more of a necessity? I called my husband, upset that our expensive seats were in the nosebleed section. However, when Billy, a native of a town 15 miles from where I grew up in Long Island, hit the stage, I was on cloud nine. I sang and danced and thought it was one of the best concerts I had ever seen — and I have seen many.

After more than a week of living out of suitcases and in limbo, what a wonderful diversion it was. On the way home, Terry and I missed the turn, so we stopped a police officer. He led us all the way over the bridge and to the Indiana line.

While I was in a great mood, my poor dog spent most of the night sitting by the door at the hotel, wondering if mommy was ever coming back. Two nights later, we finally returned home.

People are still coming back to fix things and I still have not gotten my things in order. But we turned an ordeal into an adventure. After all is said and done, there was lots of aggravation but there was lots of laughter and fun as well. In some ways, you can go just four miles from home and it still seems like a vacation.

MAKING the BEST

Page 14: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

14 Newburgh on the Ohio Magazine | Summer 2014

ewburghNWHAT’S HAPPENING IN

United Leasing Championships

June 23-29 • Victoria NationalGive back to the community all

while watching professional golf. Old National Bank’s Golf Gives Back allows local nonprofits — including Historic Newburgh, Inc. — to benefit from ticket sales. To purchase tickets and participate, visit www.ulcgolf.com. Tickets are $35 for the week. Children 17 and younger are free.

Farmer’s MarketContinues through Sept. 20 • Edgewater Grille Parking Lot

It’s not just a market, it’s a hap-pening! Shop for fresh, local vege-tables and grass-fed beef and pork. There is also artists, plants, flowers and honey. To complete the festival atmosphere, each week will feature live musicians. The market is open every Saturday from 7 to 11 a.m. 812-853-2815.

Page 15: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

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NEWBURGH SPRING LAKE SUB.

Fireworks and Evening in the Park

July 4 • Old Lock & Dam ParkThe annual Fourth of July celebration features

food, music and games beginning at 6 p.m. The color guard and other ceremonies will begin at 8:30 p.m., followed by fireworks at 9 p.m. Buttons to the VIP area are $5 each. The rain date is July 6. 812-853-2815.

Page 16: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

Fiddler FestAug. 22-24 • Old Lock & Dam Park

The 34th annual Newburgh Fiddler Fest won’t change much this year, but that’s by design. Enjoy catfish dinners and live music while enjoying the breathtaking views of the Ohio River. Dinners include two catfish fiddlers or fillets with two sides and bread for $10 per plate Additional fish can be purchased for $2.00 each. Plates for kids 11 and younger are $5. Times are Friday from 5 to 8 p.m., Saturday from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. and Sunday from 11 a.m. until 5 p.m. or the fish runs out. There will also be a beer garden Friday and Saturday night.

ewburghNWHAT’S HAPPENING IN

Page 17: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

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Ghostly Stroll Walking ParadeOctober 25 • Downtown

Trick-or-treat the downtown merchants. At 4 p.m., the streets will close and the walking parade through town will begin. Kids of all ages are encouraged to come in costume and participate in the costume contest and other events. All willing pets are welcome! 812-853-2815.

Newburgh Celebrates ChristmasDec. 6 & 7 • Downtown

Step back in time and see what Christmas was like in the 1880s. Take a ride on the Santa Express and learn about Christmases past. Take part in the Find the Elf contest, a scavenger hunt of sorts, in hopes of winning a downtown New-burgh shopping spree. See Santa and Mrs. Claus. Eat chestnuts roasting over an open fire. See car-olers from another era. All without venturing too far from home. 812-853-2815.

Ghost WalksOct. 17-19 • Preservation Hall

Newburgh gets a little bit spooky with its annual Ghost Walks. Entering it’s 21st year, this annual event gives a glimpse into a little darker part of Newburgh’s history. One tour offers river lore, fam-ily legends, mystery and a sinking ship. Another offers local history, Civil War tales, thrills and things that go bump in the night. Both tours offer their share of historical murder, mayhem and mys-teries. Guided tours leave every 15 minutes from Perservation Hall and lasts approximately an hour. The Rivertown Storytellers will also be on hand to tell scary stories on Saturday night. Tickets are $8 in advance for adults or $4 for children 4 to 12. After Oct. 17, tickets will increase by $1. Tickets go on sale Sept. 1 and can be purchased by calling 812-853-2815.

Page 18: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

18 Newburgh on the Ohio Magazine | Summer 2014

Exciting things are happen-ing in Warrick County! For the past several years Youth

First, Inc., a local non-profit organiza-tion devoted to strengthening youth and families, has been coordinating Communities that Care coalitions in Warrick, Gibson and Posey counties.

Communities That Care is part of a national and statewide initiative to engage community members in the prevention of substance abuse, juvenile delinquency, teen pregnancy, violence and behavioral health issues. The CTC process identifies risk factors that predict problem behaviors and finds protective factors that can help buffer children and teens from risky behaviors.

The Warrick County Communities That Care Coalition began in 2010 under a state grant that brought together orga-nizations and community members who live and work in Warrick County. Working with the Warrick County School Corporation and other area non-profits, the group is addressing several concerns related to underage drinking and its consequences.

These strategies include Strengthening Families, an evidence-based program for families with children ages 3 to 14. This evening program helps strengthen the bonds between parent and child, improves family relationships and increases children’s social and life skills.

Family Connections is another program for families with youth ages 14 to 18 who are in trouble at school or referred by the courts due to problem behaviors. The program helps families develop coping and communication skills and effective ways to handle discipline. The program assists the family in identifying and carrying out the appropriate consequences if the teen’s detrimental behavior reoccurs or continues.

Project ALERT is a program implemented during the school day for seventh grade students, and it helps youth learn ways to resist peer pressure and substance use.

The coalition received a five year Federal Drug Free Community Support Grant in September 2013 to provide addi-tional support. Environmental strategies work towards changing the whole community, not just a selected group of partici-pants in a program.

Through a campaign called “The Truth Is,” the coalition is working to correct misperceptions about youth underage drinking. For example:

•Youth may believe the majority of their peers drink, but “The Truth Is” the majority of youth do not drink and are not interested in being around teens that do.

•Parents may believe youth aren’t interested in listening to them about the consequences of underage drinking, but “The Truth Is” a recent survey showed that 76 percent of Warrick County teens want adults to talk to them about the dan-gers of alcohol use.

These messages, along with others, will provide accurate information about what our youth really do and what they want to know from adults in the community. Knowledge is power and creates the opportunity for teens to resist the pres-sures to drink. It also helps parents and the community support them.

Through the various strategies, awareness of the coalition and its mission, and the other great things taking place in Warrick County, our communities will be the best they can be! If you want to know more, visit wcctcc.org and youthfirst-inc.org.

Giving local youth a leg up

Page 19: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014
Page 20: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

20 Newburgh on the Ohio Magazine | Summer 2014

Dustin Gunter is trying to turn passion into a career.

Gunter, who will gradu-ate from Purdue in a few weeks,

became interested in brewing beer his freshman year of college. He got a home brew kit and

started experimenting with different recipes. “I got excited about what I was making,” Gunter said. “I really had

a lot of fun while I was doing it. Then, when I got done, I got to give it to family and friends that would then consume it and they really enjoyed it. They loved the taste and the aromas of great beer. I kept doing it, I kept getting better at it and the rest is history.”

Through his experimentation, Gunter has developed four beers — Anecdotes Ale, Dynamite IPA, American Wit and Sister City

Brown — that will be the core of Burgh Brewing Company, a microbrewery he’s establishing in Newburgh.

Gunter grew up between Newburgh and Boonville. He graduated from Castle High School in 2010. Newburgh is

where his family is, where he met his girlfriend — who he hopes will soon be his fiancee — and where he calls home.

“It’s just a great place, has a lot of great people in it,” he said. “I have a lot of friends there, my family’s there. I went to

school and am more or less homesick a little bit. I’ve recognized Newburgh has a lot of great people. Newburgh fits the mold perfectly for craft brewery.” There are a few microbreweries in the area — as well as wineries — and Gunter hopes to bring that economic bolster to Newburgh. The multiple wine trails in the area are also a benefit.

“There’s a large beer tourism trade, more or less, in Indianapolis and also in other large cities — Louisville, Chicago, other large metropolitan areas,” he said. “There’s a really large beer tourism industry.” A craft brewer is defined as “small, independent and traditional.” That means the brewery has to produce six million barrels of beer or less per year, maintain 25 percent ownership by a member of the alcoholic beverage industry and produce beer traditionally.

“You want to be innovative, so that can be encompassed in the traditional because part of the tradition is being innovative,” Gunter said.

He’s been able to look at others in the industry as a source of inspiration. He said Jim Koch of Samuel Adams and Sam Calagione from Dogfish Head have been role models for him, but he has also developed relationships with local brewers.

Bringing brew to the ‘Burgh

[by Emily May]

Page 21: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

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“You want to be innovative, so that

can be encompassed in the traditional

part because part of the tradition is being innovative.”

Dustin GunterFounder, Burgh Brewing Company

Page 22: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

22 Newburgh on the Ohio Magazine | Summer 2014

“I know some of the guys who work in some of the breweries in Indianapolis and they’re great guys,” Gunter said. “I know some of the guys in Laffayette, some in Evansville. It’s a great community of individuals. It’s kind of a mutual respect between everyone that’s in the industry. Everyone learns from everyone and everyone is pursuing the same goals. It’s kind of looking up to those rock stars in the indus-try, as well as looking up to people who are close to you and keeping them close.”

Gunter is using crowd funding to help get Burgh Brewing Company off the ground.

“This is something that we’re really wanting the community to get involved with,” he said. “Our motto, more or less, is we are the sum of the people we’ve met and the experiences we’ve had. We’re really wanting that to be incorporated into the brewery. So, if that means the community can help out, the community can fund it, then that would be great because that means the community has a stake in the brewery itself. That’s really what we want to do is create a place for the community to be.”

Gunter said his ultimate goal is to be brewing beer for great people on whatever scale he’s able.

“Like most brewers, (we) want to grow, but they want to make sure that they maintain the same quality,” he said. “If could grow the brewery to distribute statewide or to the Midwest or even nationally would be great. I’m always wanting to make sure that what I’m doing, or what I’d be doing five years down the road if I were going statewide, I’d want to make sure that I’m still making the same quality as what I made on my stove or what I made on my stove a couple years ago.”

Page 23: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014
Page 24: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

24Newburgh on the Ohio Magazine | Summer 2014

The Victory Theatre was full and people of all ages awaited one of televi-sion’s best-known comics and political humorists. Most were in disbelief that Bill Maher was actually coming to Evansville.

Newburgh resident Bob Wuerth hit the nail right on the head when asked his opinion of the show.

“Bill Maher’s no-holds barred, intellectually stimulating, creative, highly energized, non-stop two-hour one-man show in Evansville was a pure delight and he need absolutely no assistance,” Wuerth said.

He went on to say that Maher’s humor continually spewed out of his brilliant mind.

“I always have my mind wander when I watch any movie or TV show,” Wuerth said. “But my mind was 100 percent attentive for Maher’s entire two-hour show. What he says and his amazing energy had the audience in awe. I left his show with so much new information and with different ways of look-ing at many of my commonly-held views. I love his HBO show (“Real Time”), but his Evansville show makes his weekly show seem run of the mill.”

Along with poking fun at right wingers, Maher’s love of animals is well-document-ed. Maher has two rescue dogs and is a major contributor to PETA. He said he has a good friend who works for PETA and told her, “You guys deal with this up front every day. You see dogs dying, innocent and defenseless. I couldn’t do it.”

Maher also enjoyed talking sports. He is a minority owner of the New York Mets and says, “I have high hopes when the team acquired Curtis Granderson and Bar-tolo Colon (in the offseason). A good pitching staff is the key.”

Like most of us formerly from the New York area, he calls himself a long-suffer-ing Knicks fan. He said Phil Jackson joining the front office could be the start of something big.

“I have lived in L.A. for 30 years, but I am a fan of the team I grew up with,” he said.

Maher’s dad was born in 1921 and the modern New York Giants franchise was born in 1925.

“I grew up watching football on my dad’s lap and I remembered how he loved (listening to broadcaster) Marty Glickman,” Maher said.

In 1986, Bill did not have lots of money yet, but found a way to fly his dad to Pasadena, Calif., so they could watch the Super Bowl together at the Rose Bowl in January 1987. This man, who never appears sen-timental on the surface, said, “I still have a pillow from that game in my office, a great memory.”

Like her husband, Cynthia Wuerth summed up the evening perfectly.“We loved Bill Maher,” she said. “It was the best live show we have ever

seen. His intelligent humor is amazing. His high energy for the entire show was exhilarating! We were so lucky to have him here in Evansville. We would pay top dollar again and again.”

Before Maher even walked on stage, the crowd was already on its feet and gave him a standing ovation. The laughter and applause were non-stop. From here in Newburgh, we can see shows that people in New York and Los Angeles see and only drive 15 minutes to the performance. Bravo, Bill Maher and all the Warrick County people who were at the show.

HONESTY in POLITICS

“I grew up watching football on my dad’s lap and I remembered how he loved

sion’s best-known comics and political humorists. Most were in disbelief that

entire two-hour show. What he says and his amazing energy had the audience in

[by Julie Rosenbaum-Engelhardt]

Photos courtesy of HBO

Page 25: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

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Page 26: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

26Newburgh on the Ohio Magazine | Summer 2014

On June 6, 2001, Castle’s softball made a trip to

Carmel to play for the state championship at the Cherry Tree Complex.

When warm-ups were completed, Castle coach Pat Lockyear handed the ball to Beth Harmon and her job was simple. Go win a state championship.

Seven innings later, she completed her job. Harmon pitched a complete game striking out seven, while giv-ing up one run on four hits. With 20 outs recorded and one out away from a state title, Harmon ended the game with a strikeout and Castle was champions.

The Knights won their first ever softball state champi-onship, beating Pendleton Heights, 4-1.

Since then, Harmon has married, now Beth Zachary with kids of her own and con-tinues to chase a state cham-pionship. Only now she is the head coach of Penn High School, who is ranked third in the state.

Zachary has only been coaching since 2009, but she has quickly become one of the best coaches in the state. She has won six conference championships, three sec-tional championships and one regional championship.

In 2010, she was named

studentThe becomes themaster

Photo courtesy of Todd Kelly - Celtic Photography

[by Travis Rockhold]

Page 27: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

8000 Bell Oaks Drive • Newburgh, IN 47630 • (812) 453-7965 • newburghruggallery.com

masterIndiana’s State Coach of the Year. Two years later she won her 100th game.

Every year, Zachary wanted to find a way to play her former team and coach and so did Lockyear. “I have been working on playing them (Castle) for years,” Zachary said. “I don’t think there’s much more of an

honor for a coach than to have your players go on to give back to the sport you love and coach themselves.”The only problem is the location of the two schools. Castle High School and Penn High School are seperated

by more than 300 miles, making it nearly impossible for the two to play eacher other at home.The best chance for these two teams to meet in the regular season would be in a tournament, somewhere

near Indianapolis.For the past few years, Penn had been playing in the Carmel Tournament and Castle was finally able to get

invited to play in it also. When Castle was accepted to play in the tournament, Lockyear had one question.“I requested to play her (Zachary),” Lockyear.Lockyear’s request was granted and he would get a chance to coach against his former pitcher. This wasn’t the first time Lockyear has coached against a former player or a parent of a former player, but this

time it was different.“Coaching against (Zachary) was better because of her team’s success and because she’s one of the top

coaches in the state,” he said.The two schools may have been as far apart as two schools can get, but Zachary’s team knew all about

Castle.“My players were more excited than I was I think to get to play Castle,” Zachary said. “They have watched my

state championship film and they ask a lot of questions.” On April 25, Lockyear and Zachary returned to the site of their state championship in 2001. Both have played

at Cherry Tree since 2001, but this was the first time they would coach against each other.“I have had the opportunity of playing at Cherry Tree in this tournament for the past six seasons and every

time I walk up to the fields I remember what it felt like to be that teenage girl walking up with my bat bag and my best friend and catcher to this very day, Kacie Stone Wagner, by my side,” Zachary said. “It’s very nostalgic and means a lot to me to get to watch my own players play there, too.”

The complex has been through some renovations over the years, but that hasn’t changed the feelings of those who witnessed the state championship and returned this past April.

“Back then there were only two fields and the one we played on, home plate was out in centerfield,” Castle

Photo courtesy of Todd Kelly - Celtic Photography

Page 28: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

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wrestling coach and Zachary’s father, Bob Harmon said. “I think Scott Fischer (Castle assistant coach) said it best when he walked out to coach first. He looked over at me and said, ‘we’re on hol-lowed ground.’”

Before the game started, there was a little humor between the two coaches as they met at home plate for their meeting with the umpires.

“I called the coin toss and lost,” Zachary said. “Coach Lockyear chose home and I had to laugh and snicker at him. I told him that if I had won, I would have called visitor because during our entire state run - wine or lose - we chose visitors. I think he forgot.”

“I think she was shocked that I picked home,” Lockyear said.As the game got started, Penn jumped out to a 6-0 lead. How-

ever, Zachary didn’t feel at ease.“No lead is ever too big in softball,” she said. “Softball is a game

of momentum and I teach my players to win every half of their inning. I also preach that same motto that my own Castle softball team said, ‘one pitch at a time.”’

Zachary was nervous and in the bottom of the sixth inning, it showed why. Castle struck, scoring five runs.

In the top of the seventh Penn added another run, but wasn’t out of danger yet. The game headed to the bottom of the seventh inning and was the only game still being played as the clock hit 11 p.m.

As Zachary watched her team try to hold on, the hardest part was having to watch.

“Being as competitive as I am I just wish I could get the ball in my hand and get back in that circle again,” she said. “Not having con-trol of every pitch has been the hardest part of transitioning from a pitcher to a coach.”

In the final half inning, Castle mounted one last comeback. The Knights got the bases loaded, but were unable to convert, giving Penn the victory.

“I had so much fun,” Zachary said. “What a great experience we both got to have through all of this. I hope we meet again in June.”

Talking about meeting again in June, Zachary is referencing the state championship. Zachary continues to chase her first state championship as a coach. On the flip-side, Castle has been back to the state championship since 2001, but have been unable to bring home another title.

“There’s no feeling in the world (except marriage and mother-hood) that compares to winning a state championship,” Zachary said. “I think of my players as my own children and I want nothing more than for them to get that experience, too.”

Year Hired as Head Coach: 2008

Overall Record as Head Coach: 147 Career Wins as Head Coach

College: Indiana University-Pur-due University Ft. Wayne

Occupation: Penn High School English Department Instructional Coach

English 9/9H TeacherCoaching Awards: 2009 NIC

Coach of the Year2010 NIC Coach of the Year2010 All-District Coach of the

Year2010 Indiana’s State Coach of the

Year2010 Coach of the North Squad

for North vs. South All-Star GameOverall Record as Head Coach:

6 NIC Conference titles2008, 2009, 2011 Sectional

Championships2011 Regional Championship2011 Semi-State appearanceCoach Zachary received her

100th career win on April 5, 2012

Page 29: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

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Page 30: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

Ryan Mitchell812-455-7229

[email protected] bring a great combination of

market knowledge and real estate experience to the Southern Indi-ana real estate market. I began

with ERA First Advantage Realty over 10 years ago. As a native

Evansville north sider, I know the area, the homes, and the people

that live here. With a vast under-standing of technology and social media in today’s business world, I am a great choice for today’s real

estate agent.

Allen Mosbey812-459-1159

[email protected] I have lived in the Evansville, Chandler area my whole life. I

belong to Good Shepherd Catholic Church where I attended grade school then to Rex Mundi and Harrison High School., then to

USI. I’ve been married 31 years to Pamela, a retired school teacher,

and we have one daughter, Ashton. I’ve farmed my whole life and been in Real Estate with ERA for 8 years.

Cyndi Byrley812-457-4663

[email protected] close to 20 years, I have

been helping buyers and sellers with their real estate needs.

Along with being an expert ne-gotiator, I work to handle each transaction with experience,

determination, professionalism, and diligence. I have lived in

the tri-state area all my life and I currently reside in Newburgh with my husband, Chris, and

my son, Taylor, who is a student at Indiana University.

Donovan Wilkins812-430-4851

[email protected] am a Broker Associate

licensed real estate instructor specializing in Newburgh and Evansville. My experience as a top producer with over 12 years of experience in resi-

dential real estate allows me to offer you a knowledgeable transaction whether you’re buying or selling a home.

Ryan Mitchelly812-455-7229812-455-7229

[email protected] bring a great combination of

market knowledge and real estateg gg

experience to the Southern Indig

-ana real estate market. I began

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with ERA First Advantage Realty g

over 10 years ago. As a native g

Evansville north sider, I know the y gy g

area, the homes, and the people that live here. With a vast under

p pp p-

standing of technology and social media in today’s business world, I

g gyg

am a great choice for today’s realyy

estate agent.

Kim James812-449-0620

[email protected] am a Broker Associate and Ac-

credited Buyer’s Representative. A native of Virginia, I have lived in

the Evansville area since 1998 and decided to make this wonderful

community my home. I have been a licensed Realtor in Indiana

since 2004, currently reside in Warrick County and absolutely LOVE my job of helping people

and consider it an honor to assist them with the most important financial transaction they will

ever make.

Michael Reeder812-760-8996

[email protected] emotion that comes with selling or buying real estate is an integral part of the equa-

tion. I understand that and will make the process as transpar-ent and seamless as possible. Never are you left guessing

about what will happen next. Communication is the key element in building a great

relationship.

Donita Wolf812-204-9255

[email protected] really enjoy assisting buyers

and sellers with achieving their home ownership goals. I began my career in real estate over 28 years ago and recently received the Indiana Women’s

Council of Realtors State Member of the Year award for

2013.“Professional real estate services

making you the leader of the pack!”

Ruth E BrinkleyText/Call 812-455-8216

[email protected]“Trust your Real Estate

needs to an expert!”Full service Realtor since 1984!

Accredited Buyer RepresentativeAccredited Staging ProfessionalCertified Residential Specialist

Bushra Khan812-205-5178

[email protected] a Realtor, I have happily and success-fully served residents from around the area for years. The delight and elation

my clients feel when they get what they desire drives me to perfect my craft and profession as a Realtor. For my clients, I bring to the table a unique blend of

a genuine love of people, international experience, honesty, and dedication. I live by the mindset that the customer is always right and should be treated right. Therefore, come work with me

and make your house hunting or selling dreams become reality.

EVANSVILLE - NORTHSIDE: 2301 N. Burkhardt Rd. • EASTSIDE: 4962 Lincoln Ave • WESTSIDE: 2221 W. Franklin 6 Locations! NEWBURGH: 8711 W. Hwy 66 • BOONVILLE: 3022 W. SR 62 • PRINCETON: 1002 E. Broadway

I have been selling homes in the Evansville area for over 30 years.

I have consistently been rated as a Top 3 All-Around Selling

Broker with ERA for more than 10 years! Being a national trainer for ERA and demonstrating ex-cellence and leadership in every facet of the real estate business, I have been recognized in Realtor Magazine as one of the top 100

Realtors nationally.

Janice Miller812-453-0779

[email protected]

Anita Dhingra812-459-6116

[email protected] have been living in Warrick

County for more than 20 years. Working in real estate, I feel buying a home is the most

important decision of your life. With my continuous and excep-tional training with ERA, I give

my customers and clients the best real estate experience pos-sible. I’m here to help, call me for all your real estate needs!

The Crick Team812-483-2219

[email protected] can feel confident that you will benefit from The Crick Team’s expertise and can

expect a superior level of service during the entire home buying & selling process. Our in-depth consulting and personal attention to home buyers and sellers has allowed us to be consistently recognized nationally for performance and service. Buying or selling... it is the little things that we do

to ensure a smooth transaction. Call The Crick Team for all your real estate needs!

Sherry Hancock812-305-1111

[email protected] the years I have been in Real

Estate, it has been made abundantly clear to me that each client is a gift from the God of my understanding and that my mission is to give each

my highest and best... through complete honesty, updated and

ongoing education, time, energy, and what ever talents I possess, elevated to the highest level of

professionalism that I can attain. This is my promise to you.

Jonathan Weaver

Jonathan Weaver has been asso-ciated with ERA First Advantage Realty, Inc. on and off since 2003. He left in 2007 when he was elected Vanderburgh County Assessor and returned in 2011 to serve the real estate needs of Evansville. In 2013, he was in the top 11% of all South-western Indiana Association of Re-altor members in number of prop-erties closed. Besides a real estate professional, Jonathan was elected to the Evansville City Council and has his own property tax appeals

firm.

[email protected]

The Raber TeamJana Raber - 499-9571

Richard Raber - [email protected]

We’ve been residents of Warrick County for 35 years and have been active in the community. We have

been selling real estate for 11 + years. We offer a very straight for-ward, honest, and skilled approach to real estate. Our experience rang-es from new construction working with a developer in Naples, Fl , to

guiding first time buyers in making an informed decision on that first

purchase.

Bob Higgins812-760-8673

[email protected]• Broker Associate

• Accredited Buyers Agent•Top Gun Academy Graduate

•Multi-Million Dollar Producer

• 10 Year Real Estate Experience

• Your Top Gun In Real Estate

Johnna Cameron812-306-6657

[email protected] the Barrington Development Group in Haw-

thorne Estates, Hamilton Creek, Huntington Creek, Wyngate and Lexington subdivisions. I work with USAA buyers and sellers. Raised in Evansville, Memorial

High School grad, active member of Holy Rosary Catholic Church, and now reside in Newburgh. I’ve worked hard to be a multi-million dollar producer – and I’m ready

to accept you as a new client.

I have been a career woman for over 48 years. I am dedicated to my clients and go above expectations

to help achieve their goals with the least amount of hassle as possible. I hold a masters degree; I am a bro-ker associate, and have real estate CRS and GRI designations. I am

forthright and energetic. I sell and list in Warrick, Vanderburgh and in Henderson and I would love to

be your Realtor.

Teena Weiland812-453-1699

[email protected] roots in real estate began in the 1970’s. Various venues within the

industry such as property management, development and appraising brought

me back to real estate sales over a decade ago. Here I love to represent

both buyers and sellers as well as small business owners. I find myself enjoying new home buyers as well as real estate

investors for all of the specialized assistance I can offer. Please know I would be honored and pleased to be

your personal realtor.

Leanna K. Hughes812-598-5500

[email protected]

Ryan Miller812-598-0477

[email protected] High School Grad 1997

Murray State Alum 2003ERA Leadership Academy Grad

Indiana Associate Broker Over 10 Years Experience with ERA First Advantage

Resident Insurance Producer Non-Resident Insurance

Producer IL, KY, TN

Robin Royster812-449-5688

[email protected] love my job!

Educ. Castle High School 1991

Univ. of Evansville, BS 1996Real Estate License 1997

Accredited Buyer RepresentativeCertified Residential Specialist

Graduate Realtor InstituteReal Estate Broker 1999

Hobbies: Tennis & my rescue pets

Goals: I would love to be your Realtor!

David Talley

I enjoy my job very much working with people in buying and selling real estate. In this

profession, you must work hard for your clients, be true to

them, and make the transac-tion go smoothly. I help people

in buying land, homes, and commercial property and help

in the process of getting property rezoned. I have been in the business for 25 years, so if you need help in your real estate needs, give me a call.

[email protected]

Julie Bosma812-457-6968

[email protected]

Becky Ismail812-483-3323

[email protected]

Dwann Taylor812-455-0744

[email protected] was born and raised in the Evans-

ville/ Newburgh area, giving me first hand knowledge of Southern

Indiana and the Tri State area. Honesty and loyalty are the charac-teristics that are embedded in my

personality. My clients and custom-ers appreciate my total hands on approach. My enthusiasm and

attention to every detail make me #1 in customer service.

“Let Dwann taylor your real estate needs!”

I began my real estate career with ERA in 1996 and am a lifelong res-ident of Southern Indiana. I am a multi-million dollar producer who consistently ranks among the top ten agents in my firm. I am passion-ate about my clients’ goals; my loy-alty, persistence and powerful nego-tiating skills come to the forefront when their interests are at stake. I keep my clients fully informed from contract to closing, thus providing a

smooth transaction.

Julie Bosma has been a team mem-ber of ERA First Advantage Realty since 1997. During her time with ERA, she has won many nation-al awards including Rookie of the Year, The Jim Jackson Award for outstanding customer service, Leader’s Circle Awards (2003 and on) and Beyond Excellence. She is one of the top 20 agents in her local MLS. Julie specializes in residential resale, new construction and relo-cation. She is an Accredited Buyer’s Representative (ABR) and Certified

Residential Specialist (CRS).

Page 31: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

Ryan Mitchell812-455-7229

[email protected] bring a great combination of

market knowledge and real estate experience to the Southern Indi-ana real estate market. I began

with ERA First Advantage Realty over 10 years ago. As a native

Evansville north sider, I know the area, the homes, and the people

that live here. With a vast under-standing of technology and social media in today’s business world, I am a great choice for today’s real

estate agent.

Allen Mosbey812-459-1159

[email protected] I have lived in the Evansville, Chandler area my whole life. I

belong to Good Shepherd Catholic Church where I attended grade school then to Rex Mundi and Harrison High School., then to

USI. I’ve been married 31 years to Pamela, a retired school teacher,

and we have one daughter, Ashton. I’ve farmed my whole life and been in Real Estate with ERA for 8 years.

Cyndi Byrley812-457-4663

[email protected] close to 20 years, I have

been helping buyers and sellers with their real estate needs.

Along with being an expert ne-gotiator, I work to handle each transaction with experience,

determination, professionalism, and diligence. I have lived in

the tri-state area all my life and I currently reside in Newburgh with my husband, Chris, and

my son, Taylor, who is a student at Indiana University.

Donovan Wilkins812-430-4851

[email protected] am a Broker Associate

licensed real estate instructor specializing in Newburgh and Evansville. My experience as a top producer with over 12 years of experience in resi-

dential real estate allows me to offer you a knowledgeable transaction whether you’re buying or selling a home.

Ryan Mitchelly812-455-7229812-455-7229

[email protected] bring a great combination of

market knowledge and real estateg gg

experience to the Southern Indig

-ana real estate market. I began

p

with ERA First Advantage Realty g

over 10 years ago. As a native g

Evansville north sider, I know the y gy g

area, the homes, and the people that live here. With a vast under

p pp p-

standing of technology and social media in today’s business world, I

g gyg

am a great choice for today’s realyy

estate agent.

Kim James812-449-0620

[email protected] am a Broker Associate and Ac-

credited Buyer’s Representative. A native of Virginia, I have lived in

the Evansville area since 1998 and decided to make this wonderful

community my home. I have been a licensed Realtor in Indiana

since 2004, currently reside in Warrick County and absolutely LOVE my job of helping people

and consider it an honor to assist them with the most important financial transaction they will

ever make.

Michael Reeder812-760-8996

[email protected] emotion that comes with selling or buying real estate is an integral part of the equa-

tion. I understand that and will make the process as transpar-ent and seamless as possible. Never are you left guessing

about what will happen next. Communication is the key element in building a great

relationship.

Donita Wolf812-204-9255

[email protected] really enjoy assisting buyers

and sellers with achieving their home ownership goals. I began my career in real estate over 28 years ago and recently received the Indiana Women’s

Council of Realtors State Member of the Year award for

2013.“Professional real estate services

making you the leader of the pack!”

Ruth E BrinkleyText/Call 812-455-8216

[email protected]“Trust your Real Estate

needs to an expert!”Full service Realtor since 1984!

Accredited Buyer RepresentativeAccredited Staging ProfessionalCertified Residential Specialist

Bushra Khan812-205-5178

[email protected] a Realtor, I have happily and success-fully served residents from around the area for years. The delight and elation

my clients feel when they get what they desire drives me to perfect my craft and profession as a Realtor. For my clients, I bring to the table a unique blend of

a genuine love of people, international experience, honesty, and dedication. I live by the mindset that the customer is always right and should be treated right. Therefore, come work with me

and make your house hunting or selling dreams become reality.

EVANSVILLE - NORTHSIDE: 2301 N. Burkhardt Rd. • EASTSIDE: 4962 Lincoln Ave • WESTSIDE: 2221 W. Franklin 6 Locations! NEWBURGH: 8711 W. Hwy 66 • BOONVILLE: 3022 W. SR 62 • PRINCETON: 1002 E. Broadway

I have been selling homes in the Evansville area for over 30 years.

I have consistently been rated as a Top 3 All-Around Selling

Broker with ERA for more than 10 years! Being a national trainer for ERA and demonstrating ex-cellence and leadership in every facet of the real estate business, I have been recognized in Realtor Magazine as one of the top 100

Realtors nationally.

Janice Miller812-453-0779

[email protected]

Anita Dhingra812-459-6116

[email protected] have been living in Warrick

County for more than 20 years. Working in real estate, I feel buying a home is the most

important decision of your life. With my continuous and excep-tional training with ERA, I give

my customers and clients the best real estate experience pos-sible. I’m here to help, call me for all your real estate needs!

The Crick Team812-483-2219

[email protected] can feel confident that you will benefit from The Crick Team’s expertise and can

expect a superior level of service during the entire home buying & selling process. Our in-depth consulting and personal attention to home buyers and sellers has allowed us to be consistently recognized nationally for performance and service. Buying or selling... it is the little things that we do

to ensure a smooth transaction. Call The Crick Team for all your real estate needs!

Sherry Hancock812-305-1111

[email protected] the years I have been in Real

Estate, it has been made abundantly clear to me that each client is a gift from the God of my understanding and that my mission is to give each

my highest and best... through complete honesty, updated and

ongoing education, time, energy, and what ever talents I possess, elevated to the highest level of

professionalism that I can attain. This is my promise to you.

Jonathan Weaver

Jonathan Weaver has been asso-ciated with ERA First Advantage Realty, Inc. on and off since 2003. He left in 2007 when he was elected Vanderburgh County Assessor and returned in 2011 to serve the real estate needs of Evansville. In 2013, he was in the top 11% of all South-western Indiana Association of Re-altor members in number of prop-erties closed. Besides a real estate professional, Jonathan was elected to the Evansville City Council and has his own property tax appeals

firm.

[email protected]

The Raber TeamJana Raber - 499-9571

Richard Raber - [email protected]

We’ve been residents of Warrick County for 35 years and have been active in the community. We have

been selling real estate for 11 + years. We offer a very straight for-ward, honest, and skilled approach to real estate. Our experience rang-es from new construction working with a developer in Naples, Fl , to

guiding first time buyers in making an informed decision on that first

purchase.

Bob Higgins812-760-8673

[email protected]• Broker Associate

• Accredited Buyers Agent•Top Gun Academy Graduate

•Multi-Million Dollar Producer

• 10 Year Real Estate Experience

• Your Top Gun In Real Estate

Johnna Cameron812-306-6657

[email protected] the Barrington Development Group in Haw-

thorne Estates, Hamilton Creek, Huntington Creek, Wyngate and Lexington subdivisions. I work with USAA buyers and sellers. Raised in Evansville, Memorial

High School grad, active member of Holy Rosary Catholic Church, and now reside in Newburgh. I’ve worked hard to be a multi-million dollar producer – and I’m ready

to accept you as a new client.

I have been a career woman for over 48 years. I am dedicated to my clients and go above expectations

to help achieve their goals with the least amount of hassle as possible. I hold a masters degree; I am a bro-ker associate, and have real estate CRS and GRI designations. I am

forthright and energetic. I sell and list in Warrick, Vanderburgh and in Henderson and I would love to

be your Realtor.

Teena Weiland812-453-1699

[email protected] roots in real estate began in the 1970’s. Various venues within the

industry such as property management, development and appraising brought

me back to real estate sales over a decade ago. Here I love to represent

both buyers and sellers as well as small business owners. I find myself enjoying new home buyers as well as real estate

investors for all of the specialized assistance I can offer. Please know I would be honored and pleased to be

your personal realtor.

Leanna K. Hughes812-598-5500

[email protected]

Ryan Miller812-598-0477

[email protected] High School Grad 1997

Murray State Alum 2003ERA Leadership Academy Grad

Indiana Associate Broker Over 10 Years Experience with ERA First Advantage

Resident Insurance Producer Non-Resident Insurance

Producer IL, KY, TN

Robin Royster812-449-5688

[email protected] love my job!

Educ. Castle High School 1991

Univ. of Evansville, BS 1996Real Estate License 1997

Accredited Buyer RepresentativeCertified Residential Specialist

Graduate Realtor InstituteReal Estate Broker 1999

Hobbies: Tennis & my rescue pets

Goals: I would love to be your Realtor!

David Talley

I enjoy my job very much working with people in buying and selling real estate. In this

profession, you must work hard for your clients, be true to

them, and make the transac-tion go smoothly. I help people

in buying land, homes, and commercial property and help

in the process of getting property rezoned. I have been in the business for 25 years, so if you need help in your real estate needs, give me a call.

[email protected]

Julie Bosma812-457-6968

[email protected]

Becky Ismail812-483-3323

[email protected]

Dwann Taylor812-455-0744

[email protected] was born and raised in the Evans-

ville/ Newburgh area, giving me first hand knowledge of Southern

Indiana and the Tri State area. Honesty and loyalty are the charac-teristics that are embedded in my

personality. My clients and custom-ers appreciate my total hands on approach. My enthusiasm and

attention to every detail make me #1 in customer service.

“Let Dwann taylor your real estate needs!”

I began my real estate career with ERA in 1996 and am a lifelong res-ident of Southern Indiana. I am a multi-million dollar producer who consistently ranks among the top ten agents in my firm. I am passion-ate about my clients’ goals; my loy-alty, persistence and powerful nego-tiating skills come to the forefront when their interests are at stake. I keep my clients fully informed from contract to closing, thus providing a

smooth transaction.

Julie Bosma has been a team mem-ber of ERA First Advantage Realty since 1997. During her time with ERA, she has won many nation-al awards including Rookie of the Year, The Jim Jackson Award for outstanding customer service, Leader’s Circle Awards (2003 and on) and Beyond Excellence. She is one of the top 20 agents in her local MLS. Julie specializes in residential resale, new construction and relo-cation. She is an Accredited Buyer’s Representative (ABR) and Certified

Residential Specialist (CRS).

Page 32: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

Planning a trip to another country can be a stressful undertaking. Whether it be for business or pleasure, there are numerous I’s to be dotted and T’s to cross before one embarks to seas to be crossed. Simply put, travel prepa-rations take careful thought and consideration. Have the hotel accommodations been booked? Are the passports in place? Have the plane tickets been bought? Is the itinerary set? And personally, the most tedious of tasks: are the suitcases packed with all the necessities? The prospect of having multiple root canals done holds infinitely more appeal than trying to decide if I’ve crammed enough of my belongings to suffice for a few days out of town. Even when venturing just a few hours away from home, I always arrive at my destination with armloads upon arm-loads of luggage only to find that I forgot at least one crucial item.

It is my educated guess that many, if not all of you, can commiserate with me here. Retired schoolteacher Judy Dukes, however, has never had troubles with ensuring she’s packed appropriately throughout her many journeys across the world. In fact, for Mrs. Dukes, it would seem that she feels most comfortable traveling to the most exotic of locales with as little as possible.

Allow me to explain.For nearly the past 40 years, Judy has crisscrossed the globe, visiting locales that many of us will only ever

learn about in the comfort of our own homes. Her journeys have spanned five continents and over twice as many nations, and she has done so more often than not with little more than minimal gear going along with her. My recent conversation with Dukes has thus turned my idea of “roughing it” via a weekend spent camping in a south-ern Indiana woods (with a smart phone, store-bought food and vehicle within reach) seem like a silly joke.

Since 1974 Judy has slept in thatched roof huts in the Amazon jungles, made her way across the Serengeti, and even been up close and personal to watch the Mount Arenal Volcano erupt in Costa Rica (one of the most active volcanoes in the world, mind you). Yet she began her fantastic adventures doing what many of us envision when the phrase “primitive camping” is used: camping with her sister, Joan Osburne, a retired school librarian, at nearby Mammoth Caves in 1974. Six years would pass before she and Joan began to venture out camping on a regular basis. Then, in 1989, the sisters made their expeditions an annual event. From this point on, Mrs. Dukes began a series of travels across the globe that could easily (and perhaps should) fill the pages of a book with nary a dull sentence.

As I listened to Judy outline her voyages, I felt once more like a boy listening to the tale of a fictional character whose travels were too awe inspiring to actually be real – yet they are as real as the rain that fell nearly continu-ously across Warrick County for much of May. As I attempt to outline the highlights of her trip, please understand that I can only hope that I am able to give you, the reader, a rough idea of the places they’ve been and the experi-ences they’ve had.

Judy and Joan have been to both Brazil and Peru in South America and Ecuador in Central America, making their way through jungles, engaged in canopy walking (imag-ine crossing 110 feet above the treeline with little more than a tiny, wobbly ladder board to support them) and lodged much the same way as the natives do in primi-tive dwellings. A few years later on a trip to Ecuador and the Galapagos Islands (think Charles Darwin), they swam with sea lions and spent a few tense nights at sea as

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Page 33: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

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their boat was pounded by storms.As previously touched upon, she spent time in

Costa Rica at the Mount Arenal Volcano where they witnessed it erupt. From the late 1960s to 2010, this was an active volcano and as such has claimed the lives of several individuals. Although now dormant, the possibility of explosions still exist.

Additionally, Judy and Joan have also made more than one trip to Africa, where they have traversed the Serengeti, journeyed to Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, visited the Ngorongoro Crater, saw zebras and wildebeests, and sat in wonder as lions pawed playfully at the hood of their vehicle. She and her sister also were afforded a literal bird’s eye view of the Serengeti via a hot air balloon ride. What’s more, she has been to the site of the discovery of one of the earliest known human remains in Africa. During her latest trip to Africa, they made it to Zimbabwe where they camped by tent and ran the risk of being attacked by hippopotamuses, one of the most dan-gerous creatures on the continent.

Judy’s husband of 47 years, retired OB/Gyn doc-tor Mike Dukes, has supported her throughout her adventures, although he does not quite share her passion for far-away travels. As loving couples do, they have made compromises to accommodate her trips while allowing Mike to keep his sanity as she deals with the very real threat of disease, wild ani-mal attacks, and violence. Early on both agreed that she would only venture outside of the United States every other year. During the times she has remained stateside, she still has managed to visit Yellowstone National Park, Yosemite National Park, Glacier National Park, and every island in Hawaii.

Mrs. Dukes has no plans of stopping anytime soon. At the end of our talk, she revealed that she hopes to make it to Australia and New Zealand soon to backpack.

Regardless if she never leaves her home for the rest of her life, Judy and Joan have lived a life that most of us will only see played out on the Discovery Channel or through the pages of National Geograph-ic Magazine. In this age of often overwrought tech-nology, what is perhaps most interesting, however, is her true unbridled appreciation for the simpler things on this planet, made not in some overseas factory, but by nature itself. I think we all would do well to take a page from Judy’s book and take a moment to put down the smart phone or tablet, step outside, and enjoy the sun as it shines — wherever we may be.

and back again

Page 34: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

Newburgh on the Ohio Magazine | Summer 201434

ragsFrom

to riches[by Julie Rosenbaum-Engelhardt]

Page 35: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

From attending a one-room schoolhouse and living in a home with no indoor plumbing

until she was 9 years old, Janet Stout has gone on to live a life most could only dream of.

She served as a photographic double for Elizabeth Taylor in the 1957 movie “Raintree County” and later became a costume designer for movies and televi-sion. Stout has associated with the most famous of celebrities, yet remains a self-proclaimed “Appalachian girl” who lives in downtown Newburgh, whose view from the back terrace overlooks the Ohio River.

Far from being egotistical, Stout pointed to the piano in her living room that once belonged to Vincent Price. She was born in Onton, Ky., in Webster County. She soon moved to Hazard, in the mountains of eastern Kentucky.

She gained a full tuition scholarship to Transylvania University in Lexington, Ky., earning a theater arts degree. While she was at Transylvania, she joined the cast as an extra on “Raintree County.”

“They were scouting locations and came to Transylvania,” Stout said. “They were looking for extras. The producer asked me if I would like to be a double for Elizabeth Taylor.”

Part of the movie was shot in and around Danville, Ky. Walking into the wardrobe area on set, Stout noticed two identical costumes from the 1860s hang-ing there.

“One dress had Elizabeth Taylor’s

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Page 36: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

36 Newburgh on the Ohio Magazine | Summer 2014

name on a white piece of paper and the other had Janet Stout,” Stout said. “I was beside myself.”

During filming, Montgomery Clift was involved in a serious automobile accident and nearly died. The damage to his face was apparent in several scenes. The left side of his face was partially para-lyzed. Stout said Clift just wasn’t the same after the accident.

As far as Elizabeth Taylor was concerned, she was nice, but playful, flirty and a jokester on the set, said Stout, who didn’t approve.

“I was a serious actress at age 18,” she said, recalling that Clift bummed cigarettes off her.

It was one of the most exciting times of her life and she was still a college student.

“It was just beyond belief,” Stout said. “We never had an indoor toilet until I was 9 years old.”

But things turned sour when Fred Scott Downing told her she had to attend a party for the cast and crew, which was overwhelmingly male. She was expected to be a party girl.

“He told me if I didn’t (attend the party), that was the end of me,” Stout said. “I packed my suitcase

This piano once belonged to Vincent Price, a prominent actor in the

mid to late-1900s. It now belongs to Newburgh resident Janet Stout (below). Stout was a photographic double for Elizabeth Taylor in the

1957 fi lm “Raintree County.”

Page 37: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014
Page 38: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

38 Newburgh on the Ohio Magazine | Summer 2014

Stout lived in the same apart-ment in West Hollywood

for 21 years. She moved to Newburgh in 1989, but still returns to Hollywood a few

months each year.

Page 39: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

and left on the Greyhound Bus.”Stout went to New York to study acting and met her future husband, Frank Jamus.He was a successful commercial artist who appeared in the 1970 movie, “Airport.” Eventually, he was so discour-

aged he became an alcoholic.“He started drinking too much and didn’t do his artwork,” she said.While in New York, Stout was a stewardess for Pan Am. When she had enough of her husband, she left and

moved to California, working on the ground for TWA. She attended drama school at UCLA, earning a degree in fashion design.

“For 21 years, I lived in the same apartment in West Hollywood (near Sunset Boulevard),” Stout said.She helped design costumes for the play of Ray Bradbury’s sci-fi classic, “The Martian Chronicles.”“He was there every night,” Stout said. “He was very congenial and within himself. He never socialized.”Stout was later costume supervisor for the first two seasons of “Star Trek: The Next Generation.” The first thing

she noticed about Gene Roddenberry was that he had “terrible feet. He could hardly walk. He was a big man, but not obese. He was full-bodied. He definitely knew what he wanted. You get a lot of petty (people) in the film busi-ness. He was in no way petty. He was just the opposite.”

Stout was later president of American Costume Corp., a major period wardrobe company in Los Angeles, which provided costumes for films such as “Titanic,” “The Patriot,” “The Legend of Bagger Vance,” “Back to the Future Parts 1 and 2” and “Django Unchained.”

She continued to live in Los Angeles part-time, but asked herself, “If I had my druthers, where would I want to be? I would like to be in (the Evansville-Newburgh area) with my family.” Her sister, brother, aunt and uncle all lived in the local area.

When she visited the historic Bates-Walden House in downtown Newburgh, “it just hugged me.” She bought it in 1989.

Stout worked in the costume department of several movies and TV shows through the years, including “Fam-ily Ties.” She helped design costumes for the 1990 movie “Sibling Rivalry,” starring John Travolta and Kirstie Alley. Attending a movie party, Stout had a few glasses of champagne. On her way home, she fell asleep at the wheel and drove “up and under a city bus.”

“I have no memory of any of it,” Stout said.She was rescued by the jaws of life, spent three months in a hospital and couldn’t walk for a year. Stout broke

Page 40: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

40 Newburgh on the Ohio Magazine | Summer 2014

Page 41: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

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every bone in her body except for her left arm.

“I came back here (to Newburgh) for nine months to recuperate,” she said.

Stout, who had to undergo facial reconstruction, has had a personal trainer ever since.

She retired in 2003, but designed costumes for the Newburgh play, Alfred Hitchcock’s “The Unexplained” last fall, along with Luster Bayless. He owned American Costume Co., before handing the reins to Stout and served as John Wayne’s personal costume designer the last 15 years of his career.

Stout loves living in Newburgh with her dog, Rosie, and still returns to Hollywood for a few months each year. Her house looks like a scene from an old Bette Davis movie. Walking into her basement, you find tons of authentic costumes from various jobs through the years.

Residents of Newburgh often gather by the river at night, either running, walk-ing dogs or having an ice cream. They always could see thousands of stars in the sky, but now we know we have a bright star in human form living on Jen-nings Street.

“It was beyond belief. We never had an indoor toilet until I was 9 years

old.”Janet Stout

Former Hollywood costume designer

Page 42: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

ifetime

42Newburgh on the Ohio Magazine | Summer 2014

In this day and age, Laura Warner-Johnson remains an enigma in many ways.

Laura still lives on the same property where she was born 97 years ago on Schneider Road, named after her family. In a time when no one ever got divorced outside of Hollywood, Laura did just that. She was a strong woman before the word feminism was ever heard. She and her little son, Fred, left a bad marriage in the 1940s. With the help of her mother, Laura began a career at Mead Johnson and this won-der woman embarked upon a new life and met chal-lenges that were uncommon all those years ago.

She flourishes as a bride from 2004 and remains as smart as a whip. Snapping her fingers, Laura said, “It (the wedding) felt like yesterday.”

People might wonder why a woman 87 years old would decide to embark upon marriage again. After her second husband, Al Warner, and her sister Edna, both died, she and Ed Johnson, her brother-in-law, found they had so much in common and fell in love. The couple holds hands and act like newlyweds in their 30s. Ed and Laura have traveled all over the world, from Bermuda to the Bahamas to Mexico to Hawaii, and several stops in between. They missed a trip to England last year, however, because both Ed and Laura were not in great health.

Overall, they have taken 28 train trips around the United States, said Johnson, who has been to England nine times since serving in World War II and has made several trips to Japan. Asked for advice on someone contemplating a trip, Ed said: “If you go anywhere, you should go to England. If you have the opportunity to go to England, experience it for yourself.”

Some people may just sit back and relax when they retire, but not Ed and Laura. They go out to dinner and take part in several couple-oriented activities. Ed recently traveled to Sault Sainte Marie, Canada, for business reasons.

Loveof aL

[by Julie Rosenbaum-Engelhardt]

Page 43: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014
Page 44: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

44 Newburgh on the Ohio Magazine | Summer 201444 Newburgh on the Ohio Magazine | Summer 2014

Page 45: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

45Newburgh on the OhioMagazine | Summer 2014

The Johnsons got married at Zion Evangelical and Reformed Church in Newburgh on Valentine’s Day. Every year, they would eat dinner at Paradise Pavilion on Oak Grove Road. However, the pavilion was knocked down a few years ago to build a subdivision, so the couple had to find new places to celebrate.

Not too long ago, Laura suffered a minor stroke. But aside from being a bit slower, you would never know it. Her longevity probably has something to do with her genes. Her mother, Catherine, died at 106. Her oldest sister, Rose, died two years ago at 98. Her brother, George, is 99.

“My mother’s mind was as clear as ever, up until a few days before she died, “ Laura said.Ed, who will turn 90 on July 31, is technically savvy. He grew up in north Philadelphia and studied engineering at

Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, N.Y. He met Edna, Laura’s sister, at a dance when he was a soldier stationed at Camp Breckenridge, near Morganfield, Ky., in 1946. He enjoys living in southern Indiana, but there are times he misses the Big Apple.

“One thing I miss is the Easter Show and Christmas Show at Radio City Music Hall,” Johnson said.Growing up, Laura attended a one-room schoolhouse, where Newburgh Elementary School is currently located,

from first through eighth grade. Students rode to school on a school wagon pulled by horses.There were lots of animals on her land, ranging from pigs to cattle to turkey to ducks, geese and chickens. She

served as secretary for Dr. Warren Harned, vice president of research at Mead Johnson. After retiring, she volun-teered at Good Samaritan Nursing Home, took exercise classes and lived life to its fullest. She also belonged to several clubs and associations. Laura lives in the fourth house built on her land, built about 35 years ago.

Through the decades, Laura has seen Newburgh change immensely, from a sleepy little town to a bustling suburb.

“It looks crowded,” she said. “There used to be a lot of space.”Although her family sold most of its 220 acres to Alcoa many years ago, there’s still acreage of beautiful green

fertile land to admire when you take a look out her back door. Ed and Laura are also a couple to admire, showing the world that young love can be shared in their 90s. You don’t have to be a teenager.

Page 46: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

46Newburgh on the Ohio Magazine | Summer 2014

For four years, Kayla Kat-terhenry shined on the golf course for Castle

High School. During her high school career, Katterhenry led the Knights to two SIAC champion-ships and racked up plenty of indi-vidual accompishments.

She qualified for the state high school championships all four years, finishing in the top-15 all four and finished in the top-4 twice. Katterhenry also won the Girl’s Indiana State Junior Cham-pionship in 2011.

She was the runner-up in the 2012 Indiana Women’s State Ama-teur and was also the runner-up at the North South Junior Amateur.

In her freshman season golfing at Univeristy of Evansville, Katter-henry continued where she left off after high school, completing one of the most succesful seasons in history of their golf program.

She became just the third golfer in school history to win a tourna-ment. She was also the second in school history to win multiple tour-naments as she won the Saluki and Bradley Invitational.

By the end of the year, Kat-terhenry had been named MVC Golfer of the Week four times. She then earned All-Conference honors. She was also named the MVC Newcomer of the Year, becoming the first person at Evansville to receive this honor.

“I wasn’t expecting too much,” Katterhenry said. “I just wanted to get a good start, place top-five in a couple events. I wasn’t expect-ing to necessarily to win my fresh-man year.”

In her first collegiate

Carrying on Kayla Katterhenry is picking up in college right where she left off in high school. As a freshman at the University of Evansville, Katterhenry had one of the most successful golf seasons in school history.

[by Travis Rockhold]

Photo courtesy of Todd Kelly - Celtic Photography

Page 47: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

Recycling Site Locations & Hours of Operation

Warrick County Recycling & Resource Management District still accepts residential trash.

Chandler M-W-F 12-5:00 Sat. 8-4:00 Elberfeld M-W-F 12-5:00 Sat. 8-4:00 Lynnville M-W-F 12-5:00 Sat. 8-4:00 Newburgh M-W-F 12-5:00 Sat. 11-4:00 Ohio Twp. M thru F 12-5:00 Sat. 8-4:00

Recycling Centers Hours of Operation Warrick County Pelzer Road Recycling Center Hours of Operation

Mon. 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Tues. 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Wed. 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Thurs. 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Fri. 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Sat. 7:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.

Gates close 10 minutes prior to closing time. Gates close 15 minutes prior to closing time.

1. Chandler 103 Fuquay Rd.

2. Elberfeld Seven Hills Rd. ( S outh)

3. Lynnville 11471 Spurgeon Rd.

4. Newburgh 522 W. Main

5. Ohio Township 3600 Casey Rd.

6. Warrick County Disposal & Recycling Center

South of Boonville 1111 Pelzer Rd. 897-6210

7. Recycling Truck

10:00-12:00 12:30-2:30 3:00-5:00

Thursday: Yankeetown Folsomville Selvin

10:00-12:00 12:30-2:30 3:00-5:00

Saturday: Tennyson 9:00-12:00

Tuesday: Tennyson Selvin Folsomville

9:00-12:30

Boonville Judicial Center Parking Lot

Board Members Don Williams • Richard Reid • Marlin Weisheit • Alonzo Moore Robert Barnett • Greg Richmond • Mayor Pam Hendrickson

Phone: 812-897-6210 • Reduce, Re-use, Recycle!

W RRICK COUNTY Recycling and resource Management DISTRICT

F or further information go to WarrickRecycles.org O r find us on: facebook W arrick County Recycling And Resource Management District

Photo courtesy of Todd Kelly - Celtic Photography

Page 48: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014
Page 49: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

tournament, Katterhenry finished in third place with a score of 219, four shots behind first place. Katterhenry didn’t win, but the conference took notice as they voted her MVC Golfer of the Week.“I was really excited,” Katterhenry said.The following week Katterhenry came in third place again and her expectations were starting to change. She

said it was then she believed she could win a tournament and that she could compete with the other girls.Other people were also changing their expectations on Katterhenry, but that was something she was fine

with.“I like to thrive under pressure,” she said. “Just as Katterhenry was starting to inch closer to her first career victory, her scores started to go up. In her

last two tournaments of the fall season, she finished outside of the top-10.“My scores went up around mid-terms,” she said. “It was hard to stay mentally focussed.”On the course, Katterhenry also had to get adjusted from the difference between high school and college.“The pin location is a lot tougher,” she said. “You can’t always attack the pin. Sometimes you have to play it

safe.”Another change was the difference in a course from one day to the next. One day the course might be soft

and allow for greens to be attacked and the next day the greens are fast.While adjustments were needed from day-to-day, Katterhenry liked playing in tournaments rather than in high

school. In high school, golfers typically only had 18-holes, making every hole important. In college, teams played in two or three day tournaments, creating more room for error.“I liked it in college better because if you have a bad hole you have possibly 35 more holes,” she said. “In

high school you don’t have much time to make up for it.”Before each tournament, golfers were able to get a practice round in. This allowed golfers to get familiar with

the course, something that wasn’t possible in high school.“I would take notes on holes,” she said, “where I could be aggressive and where to take par.”Katterhenry showed the ability to adapt in the fall, but it was in the spring where she took off. One area that

helped her succed on the course was her class schedule.“I planned out my classes better in the spring,” Katterhenry said. Competing in the Saluki Invitational, Katterhenry was able to finally break through. She finished three-above

and won her first college tournament.As Katterhenry inched closer to a first-

place finish, her goal was simple.“I tried to shoot for pars,” she said. “I

knew if I shot par that it was going to be good enough.”

Winning the tournament, Katterhenry said it provided her with a boost of confi-dence. It wouldn’t be long till she would be back in the winner’s circle.

Katterhenry followed up her first place finish at the Saluki Invite with another vic-tory at the Bradley Invitational.

After winning her first tournament, Kat-terhenry said she felt added pressure. When she won her second tournament, she said the pressure dissipated and it proved to her that she belong at the top of the MVC.

With her freshman season over, Kat-terhenry is already looking forward to her sophomore season. One of the areas of her golf game she wants to work on the most is her short game.

She also said she has bigger goals for next year. Katterhenry said she would like to finish higher at the conference tourna-ment next year and at some point in her career be named, MVC Golfer of the Year.

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50 Newburgh on the Ohio Magazine | Summer 2014

One would expect a 1978 graduate of Purdue University with a degree in Landscape Architecture to be a man in a suit and tie, overseeing jobs being done. Rick Mitchell is more likely to be seen wearing his jeans and work clothes, with his hands in the dirt.

Instead of living in an executive home in a pretentious subdivision, Mitchell lives in a little house in downtown Newburgh just big enough for him.

“I have a roof that doesn’t leak, a truck to drive, a good bicycle, all the food that I need to eat, more clothes than I can wear, insurance and I travel,” Mitchell said. “I don’t feel like I live the simple life. I have everything I need. Sure, I want some things or experiences that I don’t have, but that is the human condition.”

He has his computer, his garden, his bike and the Ohio River at his doorstep. To him, that’s like having a fortune. That’s what means the most to a man who has done landscape designs for, to name a few, Orthopaedic Associ-ates, Boston’s Gourmet Pizza, the main entrance to Bristol-Myers and the fountain in downtown Newburgh.

As a kid, Mitchell was a child of the woods, playing with snakes and anything he could find in nature.“I am a success in work in that I have some impressive work and I believe that I do good work,” he said. “I am

not rich at all. I like stuff, but I realized a long time ago that the more things you have, the more time (and money) it takes out of your life to take care of those things. So I traveled light through life (possession wise). I would rather do things than have things.”

An accomplished biker, Mitchell started riding bicycles when he was 15.“Most 15-year-olds were getting their licenses and driving cars. I started driving bicycles,” Mitchell said.He enjoyed the sensation of speed and motion and enjoyed exploring new territory, adding that he still does in

his 50s. Mitchell has ridden 160 miles twice. Once from Evansville through Terre Haute to Brazil on back roads. The second time he rode from the west side of Evansville through Cynthiana and Haubstadt to the east side of Louis-ville. Last fall, he rode across Kentucky from Reelfoot Lake to Middlesboro and up Pine Mountain to Pikeville: 748 miles in 11 days, counting the ride in Western Kentucky from Mayfield to Reelfoot after dropping off the rental car and riding to get his truck where he left it at the start.

Mitchell’s next long ride will be from Evansville to Pikeville, Ky., starting May 15. He started racing at 16 or 17 and qualified for the U.S. Pan Am Trials in 1983. Sixty people qualified and from them the team was selected through a series of races. Although he did not make the team, he said being in the top 60 was “rarefied air.” A usual bike ride for Rick takes an hour and a half to two hours and he rides 20 to 30 miles.

Mitchell is proud of every job he does. He tries to put the same diligence in every project, no matter the size.“I believe my clients deserve that,” he said.Mitchell never becomes tired of talking about design and landscaping with his clients and feels he chose the right

profession for him.Another one of Mitchell’s passions is disc golf.“I always liked flying things and as a boy I built and flew countless model airplanes and lost countless kites in

trees,” he said. “Disc golf is related to my fascination with flying things. I love to watch the discs fly.”He said playing disc golf sort of reawakened the competitive nature that went dormant after he quit bicycle racing.

The sport has gotten really big and there are tournaments in our local area where people from all over come to play.Mitchell could have lived next door to Henry David Thoreau on Walden Pond. He seems to be living in the wrong

era. As you pass his house or his truck or just see him working in the dirt, you can feel his happiness and fulfill-ment. How much simpler life would be and how many less heart attacks would happen if everybody could think like him.

careerturnedPassion[by Julie Rosenbaum-Engelhardt]

Page 51: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

51Newburgh on the OhioMagazine | Summer 2014

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53Newburgh on the OhioMagazine | Summer 2014

products that indicate on their labels that they are safe for use on children. Follow label directions for specific use guidelines. Citronella candles are available, but may be of limited effectiveness because of variable outdoor wind movement. Mosquitoes can be prevented in the home by keeping windows and porches tightly screened. Inspect screens in windows, doors, and porches for holes or tears. Likewise, fill gaps around windows and doors with weather-stripping. Space sprays or aerosols contain-ing synergized pyrethrins are effective against mosquitoes found in the home. Use these materials as directed on the label.

Several species of ticks are found in Indiana. The most frequently encountered outdoor species is the American dog tick (also known as the eastern wood tick). The lone star tick and, more recently, the deer tick may also be found occasionally in out-door, wooded areas. Another species, the brown dog tick, may sometimes become a problem indoors, primarily in association with dogs. For preventing outdoor tick exposure, avoid tick-infested areas, and wear protective clothing. Stay on established trails, and avoid brushing against vegetation. Wear light-colored clothing, long pants, and long-sleeved shirts so that ticks can be more easily seen. Tuck in your shirt, and pull your socks over the pant cuffs. Apply an insect repellent to your shoes, socks, and pants. Effective tick repellents are those containing diethyl toluamide (DEET) or permethrin. Occasionally check yourself and your children for ticks, especially on the head, groin, and underarm area. Showering after coming indoors may help remove ticks that have not yet attached to the skin. Inspect pets after they have been out-doors, and remove ticks found. Our dogs love “tick inspection season” because they think they are getting an abundance of ear and belly rubs. If a tick is found attached on your skin or a pet’s, use the following procedure:

•Use blunt forceps or tweezers.•Grasp the tick as close to the skin surface as possible and pull upward with a

steady, even pressure.•Take care not to squeeze, crush, or puncture the tick.•Do not handle the tick with bare hands because infectious agents may enter via

mucous membranes or breaks in the skin.•After removing the tick, disinfect the bite site and wash hands thoroughly with

soap and water.•Consult a physician immediately if a rash or flu-like symptoms develop. Outdoor control is aimed primarily at the American dog tick, lone star tick, and deer

tick. Keep overgrown and heavy vegetation cleared and cut in tick-infested areas. Eliminate unnecessary vegetation around yards or property, along wood edges, or along the edges of trails and paths. Residual insecticides such as malathion and stirofos (Rabon®) can be applied on infested areas such as along roads, walks, and trails where ticks congregate. Also, treatment can be made near ground level on grass and under shrubbery and trees, and along edges of wooded areas. Follow all label directions and precautions carefully before using any of these insecticides. When using spray formulations, keep children and pets off treated areas until dry. Some residual insecticides are available for use by professional pest control applica-tors only. They include bendiocarb (Ficam-W®), dioxathion (Deltic®), cyfluthrin (Tem-po®), deltamethrin (Suspend®), and lambda-cyhalothrin (Demand®).

Indoor control is aimed primarily at the brown dog tick. It is difficult to control because of its many possible hiding places. Because tick eggs may hatch over a period of up to 5 months, more than one treatment may be necessary to eliminate the problem completely. Available spray insecticides for indoor treatment include: pyre-thrins and carbaryl (Sevin®). Carbaryl is also available as a dust. Apply treatments around sleeping quarters of household pets, around baseboards, window and door frames, wall cracks, local areas of floors, floor coverings, and similar places where ticks might conceal themselves. Do not spray animal quarters directly. These can be treated with carbaryl (Sevin®) dust. Replace bedding in animal quarters after treating.

Taking back the outdoors

[continued from 10]

Page 54: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

54 Newburgh on the Ohio Magazine | Summer 2014

Wine, Art &Historic Newburgh, Inc.

Page 55: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

A POTPOURRI OF SHOPS

5 W. JENNINGS • NEWBURGH

Stop in and see us! Scattered Papers Charmed Beck’s Antiques

& Collectibles Sassy Soap Newburgh Wreaths Vintage Finds

Jazz Fest

Page 56: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

56 Newburgh on the Ohio Magazine | Summer 2014

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58 Newburgh on the Ohio Magazine | Summer 2014

A-1 Power Equipment.........................................33

A Potpouri of Shops ...........................................55

Baker Financial ..................................................49

Benny’s Flooring ................................................59

Cielo ..................................................................49

ERA ...........................................................30 & 31

ERA - Becky Ismail ..............................................8

ERA First Advantage Insurance .........................32

First Bank ..........................................................37

Head to Toe .........................................................5

Heritage Federal Credit Union ...........................12

Hillside Garden.....................................................5

Home Away Pet .................................................41

FC Tucker - Kate Fisher ....................................28

Kim’s Consignment ............................................35

Lance Jewelers ....................................................9

Lynnville National Investments ..........................21

Martin Bros. .......................................................16

Meuth Carpet .....................................................10

State Farm - Mike Mohr .....................................23

Misty Morn....................................................2 & 11

Peoples Trust and Savings Bank...............48 & 60

Pioneer Carpet Cleaning.....................................33

ProRehab ..........................................................21

Romain ..............................................................39

Rug Gallery ........................................................27

FC Tucker - Sharon McIntosh ............................15

Shoemaker Financial .........................................13

Solid Waste.........................................................47

St. Mary’s ...........................................................25

Standard ............................................................11

Sunrise Carpet....................................................33

Town of Newburgh ...............................................6

Town Square Furniture........................................17

Warrick Publishing .............................................52

Wow! ..................................................................29

Youth First ..........................................................19

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Page 59: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014

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Page 60: Newburgh Magazine Summer 2014