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Area resident helps police make arrest

The Columbus Police Department credits an observant local resident with helping officers catch an individual they say burglarized Harold’s Car Wash.

Police were called about 4:20 a.m. Sunday to the car wash in the 2700 block of Brentwood Drive by an observer who reported a suspicious vehicle in one of the wash bays, said Sgt. Matt Harris, police department spokesman.

As Lt. Jeff Williams approached, a man wearing dark clothing left the building and refused to stop when Williams ordered him to do so.

Williams pursued him on foot across the Rural King parking lot and onto Middle Road, where he caught the man near U.S. 31, Harris said.

The man was identified as Arnold Wesley Harrison, 50, 311 Hege Ave., who is being held on preliminary charges of burglary and resisting law enforcement, Harris said.

He is being held in the Bartholomew County Jail in lieu of $150,000 bond, jail officials said.

Teen, 12-year-old arrested after carjacking, pursuit

Staff Reports

A 12-year-old girl and a 19-year old man were arrested in Bartholomew County after a carjacking and vehicle and foot pursuits by police.

Bartholo-mew County Sheriff’s deputies later learned that the girl was reported as a runaway from Jacksonville, Florida.

At approximately 4:20 a.m. Saturday, deputies were informed the Columbus Police Department was investigating a crash near the 66-mile marker on Interstate 65 North. During the investigation, a driver stopped to see if the occupants of the crashed vehicle needed assistance.

The girl and Rodolfo Gonzales Ramirez, of West Palm Beach, Florida, stole the driver’s gold Buick Rendezvous, according to a news release from the sheriff’s department.

The sport-utility vehicle was observed heading north on I-65. Ramirez then exited I-65 and traveled south on U.S. 31. Deputies Gary Knoef and Nick Martoccia initiated a felony stop near the Red Roof Inn. Knoef yelled verbal commands to the driver, but Ramirez quickly drove away. Several police units pursued, the release stated.

Stop sticks were requested, and Columbus Police Department officers placed them in the area of U.S. 31 and Lowell Road. Deputies believe the vehicle struck the stop sticks, although Ramirez continued southbound on Indianapolis Road, according to the release.

Approaching the curve, just north of the roundabout, at a high rate of speed, Ramirez drove over the curb and wrecked the SUV just off the south side of the roadway.

Ramirez and the juvenile girl fled on foot running through the parking lot of Mill Race Center. Deputies Knoef and Martoccia gave chase on foot. Edinburgh Police Department Officer Junior Little, who assisted in the chase, stopped the girl, the sheriff’s department said.

Ramirez stopped running and turned to face Knoef and Martoccia. Ramirez said he did not have any weapons, but he would not follow the deputies’ directions. Ramirez eventually laid face-down on the ground and was arrested.

Columbus police took the girl and Ramirez into custody. According to Bartholomew County Jail officials, he was booked on preliminary charges of:

Auto theft, a Level 6 felony.

Contributing to the delinquency of a minor, a Level 6 felony.

Resisting law enforcement with a vehicle, a Level 6 felony.

Criminal recklessness, a Class A misdemeanor.

Resisting law enforcement, a Class A misdemeanor.

Leaving the scene of an accident, a Class C misdemeanor.

Ramirez was being held on a $7,500 surety bond.

The girl was arrested on a preliminary charge of auto theft and is being held at the Bartholomew County Youth Services Center, according to the sheriff’s department.

D-Vine Winter Wine & Beer Festival planned

If you’ve got a taste for fine wines and smooth microbrews, then perhaps you can drink to Developmental Service Inc.’s annual D-Vine Winter Wine & Beer Festival from 1 to 7 p.m. Feb. 28 at The Commons, 300 Washington St. in Columbus.

DSI, a nonprofit agency established in 1975, helps individuals with developmental and physical challenges reach their greatest level of independence at home, work and in the community.

Wine can be purchased by the bottle or the case. Tickets are $20 in advance at dsiservices.org or $25 at the door.

Confirmed wineries and breweries are: Ertel Cellars, Quibble Hill Winery, Holtkamp Winery, Best Vineyard, Butler Winery & Vineyard, Winzerwald Winery, Huber Orchard & Winery, Chateau Thomas Winery, Buck Creek Winery, Blackhawk Winery & Vineyard, Mallow Run Winery, Simmons Winery, 450 North Brewing Company and Smith Winery.

Singer/songwriters Kristen Wright and Natalie Royal will provide live music.

Auto supplier gets abatement to double warehouse space

A local automotive equipment distributor has received a tax abatement to expand its warehouse in the Woodside Industrial Park.

TechTop Realty LLC, which leases the 55,000-square-foot warehouse to LHP Technologies, plans to spend $2 million to add 60,000 square feet of space.

It received an abatement Tuesday night from the Columbus City Council for additional taxes that come about as a result of the investment.

Once the warehouse is complete, the company will see gradual increases in its tax bills during the next 10 years, rather than paying taxes on the improvements immediately. The company also received an abatement in 2008.

Ryan Hou, CEO of both companies, said the expansion is necessary because the existing warehouse is full, mostly with products from all sections of the automotive industry waiting to be distributed to area customers.

It also will mean adding at least two jobs, a conservative estimate for the additional hands needed to work in the larger space, by August 2016, he said. Those jobs will bring the total number of workers at LHP Technologies to 12.

Mayor Kristen Brown and city council members congratulated Hou and LHP Technologies general manager Steve Gilley on the growth and thanked them for providing more local jobs.

Even though LHP Technologies is small, it is growing, and the expanded facility will enable the company to attract more customers and partners to the city and to the state, Hou said.

It’s also part of a greater family of companies, including LHP Software and LHP Solutions, both at 305 Franklin St., headquartered at LHP Corp., at 1888 Poshard Drive near the city’s municipal airport. Overall, the companies employ upward of 200 employees, according to the Columbus Economic Development Board.

A result of the first Chinese investment in Columbus, the company’s original commitment and expansion demonstrate the importance of the Columbus Economic Development Board’s annual delegations to Asia, Hou said. He and his wife, Jean, a former Cummins Inc. executive, regularly join the board on those trips.

[sc:pullout-title pullout-title=”About LHP Technologies” ][sc:pullout-text-begin]

LHP Technologies LLC warehouses and distributes automotive equipment for and to various local and regional manufacturers. Organized in 2006, it and TechTop LHP Realty are both at 6889 S. International Drive in the Woodside Industrial Park.

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‘Stars’ fundraiser earns nearly $60,000

Last weekend’s “Dancing with the Stars … Columbus Style” drew a combined crowd of about 900 people for two shows and nearly $60,000 in receipts.

Fundraising totals fell short of $100,000 brought in last year, when a bigger field of dancers generated more donations. Members of the audience vote for their favorites, making a $1 donation for each vote cast.

Children Inc. and Family School Partners will receive about $25,000 each after event expenses are paid, said Brenda Flanagan, executive director of Children Inc.

While they hoped to raise more, Flanagan said organizers were nonetheless pleased with the outcome.

“$60,000 really is in line with what we did in the previous years,” she said.

The funds will go toward Children Inc.’s child care program and early childhood education programs at Family School Partners.

Flanagan said the money Children Inc. receives will pay for anything from costs of operations to school supplies.

“If we have children who are on our waiting list and are needing scholarships, we will use some of those dollars,” she said.

Stacy Findley, program coordinator at Family School Partners, said the funds make up about 25 percent of the organization’s annual budget. Getting the money means more families will have the opportunity to use the group’s services.

Those opportunities are available to families with children who are infants and up to 5 years old. The program is free, Findley said, and wouldn’t be possible without the dancing event.

“Dancing with the Stars is very important for our organizations because we actually rely on the funding,” Findley said. “Where it is just a great event for the community, essentially it is an event that funds our programs.”

Flanagan said the success from last year’s dancing contest could be attributed to a variety of circumstances:

There were eight dancing groups compared with five this year.

There were more voters involved last year.

Early voting was successful last year.

All seats for last year’s matinee and nighttime performance sold out.

Organizers said they were appreciative of the community support and the commitment from dancers and event volunteers.

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Here’s a list of the couples who danced who finished in the top three at the “Dancing with the Stars … Columbus Style” competition, ranked by amount of donations:

1. April Williams and Brent Byers

2. Christopher Bartels and Jana Bartels

3. Brett Vanderkolk and Charlotte Battin

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Brand announces plans to seek 2nd term

Columbus City Council member Ryan Brand has filed for the GOP nomination for a second term in District 2.

Brand, 41, has represented the District since defeating Democrat candidate Max Lemley in the Nov. 8, 2011, municipal election.

He also serves as a member of the Columbus Area Arts Council board and The Commons board, something he plans to continue if re-elected.

Brand said he still has a lot of work to do for district constituents and is seeking a second term to represent their concerns.

Attracting new economic development, jobs and businesses to Columbus is something Brand plans to pursue, specifically with the help of the city’s accumulating tax-increment financing funds, he said.

He also would like to continue working toward enhancing services offered to residents, whether it be to city employees or users of the city’s public facilities.

Brand said one of his greatest strengths as a councilman is his ability to moderate conversations between the council and the boards he serves on.

[sc:pullout-title pullout-title=”About Ryan Brand” ][sc:pullout-text-begin]

Age: 41

Address: 422 Ninth St.

Employment: Business development manager at Elwood Staffing Services Inc. Tradesman division.

Current office held: Columbus City Council, District 2, 2011-present

Past office held: None

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Comic’s goal at fundraiser: Yucks for bucks

Comic Phil Palisoul is as straightforward as he is humorous.

“Aren’t you a little disappointed that this is how I turned out?” he sometimes asks an audience, requesting that they sufficiently eye his balding head, short stature and unimposing physique.

Actually, as stand-up acts go, Palisoul’s career has turned out quite nicely.

He has appeared on “The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson,” “The Tonight Show With Jay Leno,” “Last Comic Standing” and Comedy Central during the past two decades.

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He also has headlined fundraisers from Wounded Warriors to the American Heart Association.

Friday, the Colorado-based comic has top billing for the Ivy Tech Community College Foundation’s annual fundraiser, “An Evening of Stand-up Comedy,” from 7 to 10 p.m. at The Commons, 300 Washington St. in Columbus.

Call it yucks for bucks.

Jeff Kuehl of Greensburg, who works as regional services director for the Columbus Area Arts Council, will open the show with his own bit of comedy.

Kuehl has performed at folk music concerts and elsewhere. He also has performed in productions at Indianapolis Repertory Theatre and most recently directed a comic play at Columbus’ Harlequin Theatre.

Ivy Tech’s near-sellout event last year raised $10,000 for scholarships and other assistance for students in financial need, said Amy Ables, the Ivy Tech Foundation’s event specialist.

She said this year’s event, expected to attract about 250 people, boasts three new sponsors.

Sally Pankratz, an Ivy Tech Community College adjunct lecturer in English and a member of the fundraiser’s organizing committee, explained the gathering’s success succinctly.

“People just really like the idea of supporting something focused on the good of education,” Pankratz said.

But Ables mentioned they also like to have a good time, too.

Palisoul, whom Ferguson called “the funniest comedian in the universe,” aims toward that goal.

“You — you people seem to be having a great time at a comedy show,” he told a recent audience. “Me? I have to work.”

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What: An evening of stand-up comedy with comic Phil Palisoul. The event is for people 21 and older.

Why: A fundraiser for the Ivy Tech Foundation at Ivy Tech Community College-Columbus.

When: 7 to 10 p.m. Jan. 23.

Where: The Commons, 300 Washington St. in Columbus.

Food: Light dinner and cash bar by 450 North Brewing Company/Simmons Winery.

Tickets: $45 per person in advance or $80 per couple at 812-374-5342 or $50 at the door.

Information: aables@ivytech.edu.

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John W. Toll

Columbus

John W. Toll, 94, of Columbus, died at 9:30 p.m. Monday, January 19, 2015, at Kindred Transitional Care and Rehabilitation.

Mr. Toll retired from Curtiss Breeding Service as district manager.

A former dairy farmer in Shelby County, he was a member of Bethel Baptist Church where he was a former deacon and Sunday school teacher.

He was a member of the Eagles Lodge in Shelbyville and a life member of American Legion Post No. 24.

A World War II Army veteran, he served with the 101st Airborne, making eight jumps during the war, and served on the Bartholomew County Veterans Honor Guard.

The funeral will be conducted at 10 a.m. Friday at Barkes, Weaver & Glick Funeral Home on Washington Street with the Rev. John McKay officiating.

Family and friends may call from 4 to 7 p.m. Thursday and from 9 a.m. to time of service Friday.

Burial will be at Bethel Baptist Cemetery with military honors presented by Bartholomew County Veterans Honor Guard.

Memorial contributions may be made to Our Hospice of South Central Indiana.

Online condolences may be sent to the Toll family at www.barkesweaverglick.com.

Born in Hartford City, April 23, 1920, Mr. Toll was the son of William J.B. and Mable Gaunce Toll.

He married Florence M. Julian August 9, 1975.

Survivors include his wife of 39 years, Florence M. Toll, sons; Kenneth (Vicky) Toll of Shelbyville, Keith W. (Carolyn) Toll of Brown County and Kevin L. (Margaret) Toll of New Palestine; stepsons, Larry R. (Shirley) Elgar of Columbus, Gary L. Elgar of Elizabethtown and Harold W. Elgar of Elizabethtown; stepdaughters, Nancy K. Wolfe of Columbus and Nyla J. (Dave) Barnes of Shelbyville; brothers, Fred (Dorothy) Toll of Shelbyville, Bryan (Donna) Toll of Florida and Marvin Thomas Toll of Shelbyville; a sister, Dorothy (Bob) Primavera of Florida; and several grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

He was preceded in death by his parents; sisters, Lola Ortel, Margaret Belter, Barbara Sauer, Nettie Murray and Linda Lou Toll; a brother, Roy Toll; and a grandson, Bradley C. Toll.

www.barkesweaverglick.com

Whipker files for second term in at-large council seat

Columbus at-large city councilman Kenny Whipker has filed for a second term.

Whipker has served in one of the council’s two at-large seats since being chosen by the party caucus to replace Aaron Hankins near the end of 2013.

He’s the first to file for an at-large council seat for the May primary.

The 59-year-old Republican said he wanted to run so he could continue providing service to the community.

“It’s pretty much what I’ve done most of my adult life,” Whipker said.

If elected to a full term, Whipker said, he would work to ensure there’s continued efforts toward strong infrastructure, public safety and other things that help attract good workers and new businesses, which generate the necessary revenue to enhance the city’s quality of life.

The former Bartholomew County sheriff, now a liaison to the Indiana Department of Correction for sheriff’s departments and county jails, said he’s familiar with managing budgets and personnel.

Whipker said he has had a learning curve for some things related to city government, but many are similar to things that he’s done with the county and the state.

[sc:pullout-title pullout-title=”About Kenny Whipker” ][sc:pullout-text-begin]

Age: 59

Employment: Executive liaison for Sheriff and County Jail operations at the Indiana Department of Corrections

Current office held: Columbus City Council, at large, 2013-present

Past office held: Bartholomew County Sheriff, 1999-2006

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SHOW UNITY

Even though Jesus’ final recorded prayer in Scripture stands as a petition for unity among his followers, area teens understand that reality sometimes differs from biblical guidelines. Which explains why people such as teenager Elizabeth Andrews meets Protestants who don’t quite get parts of her Catholic doctrine.

Or hears of other believers unaware of elements of their peers’ beliefs.

On the one hand, she sees education and awareness as important. On the other hand, she ultimately sees all Christians under one banner of God’s love and grace.

“That’s why I wanted to be part of something to unify Christians,” Andrews said.

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The Columbus North High School senior has joined with friend and fellow North senior and Catholic Connor Boyle on a shared senior project, “Unity Praise and Worship Night,” 7 p.m. Jan. 31 at Columbus’ Judson Erne Auditorium, 1400 25th St. Andrews will be one of the vocalists in a teen praise band composed of musicians and singers from a variety of churches.

The gathering also will feature booths from local churches highlighting different outreaches and efforts. The event, with a $5 admission charge, will benefit the local Horizon House homeless shelter on Chestnut Street.

“I care about issues like unity so much because Christ is about the unifying love of God,” Andrews said. “And I love how music can bring people together.”

The music group will perform songs such as Hillsong United’s “Oceans (Where Feet May Fail),” Casting Crowns’ “Life Song” and songs from other Christian acts such as Rend Collective and Matt Maher.

Boyle, music and technical director for the concert, said he, like Andrews, has seen faith sometimes keep people at a distance.

“Religion tends to be a dividing force among high school students and adults,” Boyle said. “Denominational differences often discourage gatherings among the Christian community. With this concert, we hope to bring Christians from different backgrounds together for a night of praise and worship.”

He mentioned that supporting the homeless shelter, which provides a place to stay for 20 people, excluding infants, “is one way we can give back.”

Boyle also said there’s a chance the concert can become an annual event if other students are willing to get involved next year.

“We hope that this event can bring about the realization that we are not so different from one another,” Boyle said, “and that interdenominational awareness and support can strengthen this community.”

Teens have been a leading force in unity praise gatherings locally in recent years through events called Synergy, coordinated through the Columbus Area Youth Ministries Alliance. That’s an organization of a variety of local church youth ministries. Some of those events have attracted nearly 200 people.

High schoolers also have become far more visible locally in recent years supporting social services causes through senior projects and similar efforts supporting everything from food pantries to Turning Point Domestic Violence Services.

Michelle Lee, homeless prevention department director for Human Services Inc. operating Horizon House, said she is especially happy with the teens’ support since the shelter recently saw a decrease in state funding. She said any money raised can go toward a mix of needs such as administrative costs, including heating expenses.

“We’re open to the idea even if people can’t attend the concert and want to make in-kind donations of food or supplies,” Lee said.

Student Erica Le, who has been handling publicity for the event, said she is optimistic about the night.

“I guess I hope by the end,” Le said, “that people would feel a real sense of unity and community.”

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What: Unity Praise and Worship Night, a Christian concert with a teen praise and worship band with members from several churches.

When: 7 p.m. Jan. 31.

Where: Columbus North High School’s Judson Erne Auditorium, 1400 25th St.

Admission: $5. Proceeds will benefit Columbus’ Horizon House homeless shelter.

To give to the cause if you can’t attend the concert: Donations can be mailed to Horizon House, 724 Chestnut St., Columbus IN 47201.

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