Community calendar for week of April 4

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Talk to a lawyer for free at the library April 3

The Brown County Public Library was to host free, short, legal consultations between 3 and 5 p.m. Tuesday, April 3.

Local attorneys were to volunteer their time to help with legal questions on a first-come, first-served basis. The program is sponsored by Legal Aid District 11.

For those who speak Spanish, a helpline was also to be available statewide during the same time at 1-800-266-2581.

For more information, call the library at 812-988-2850.

Question political candidates at local forums

The League of Women Voters of Brown County and Brown County Farm Bureau will host two nights of question-and-answer forums featuring contested candidates on 2018 primary election ballots:

Tuesday, April 3 at 6:30 p.m: 9th Congressional District candidates

Wednesday, April 11 at 6:30 p.m.: Brown County clerk, Brown Circuit Court judge and Brown County commissioner forums, in that order. Citizens should be aware that due to Indiana Code of Judicial Conduct restrictions, the judge candidates will make extended statements, but not take questions on a panel. The commissioners panel will include Republican candidates only, as the League of Women Voters was unable to schedule a Democrat panel.

Both forums will take place in the Salmon Room of the County Office Building, at Gould Street and Locust Lane.

Forums will be broadcast live over the internet at browncounty-in.gov.

Raptors to teach about hazards of littering

Keep Brown County Beautiful and the Indiana Raptor Center will offer a free program at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, April 5 at the Brown County Public Library.

Keep Brown County Beautiful works to educate the community about roadside litter and recycling. The Indiana Raptor Center will explain why litter is not only something we do not like to see, but it is a hazard to wildlife.

The IRC rehabilitates injured and orphaned birds of prey. Three ambassador birds will be present. Staff will talk about how they hunt and care for their young and how litter environmental hazards affect their life cycle, which also affects natural rodent control.

Children are welcome. A free child’s education book will be given away in a drawing.

For more information, call 812-327-9617.

Community band seeks new members of all ages

The Brown County Community Band practices from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Thursdays in the band room at Brown County High School. New members, young and old, are welcome.

The first concert this year will be the annual Habitat for Humanity concert May 12. The next will be the annual Sweetwater Homeowner’s Association concert June 23. All concert dates are Saturdays.

Horse farm to host women’s event April 7

BARGERSVILLE — Brown County-based Hope for Hearts Horse Farm will host its sixth annual Women’s Extravaganza from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, April 7 at the Sycamore of Mallow Run, 7070 W. Whiteland Road.

For a $5 entry fee at the door, moms, sisters, daughters and girlfriends are welcome for a day of spa treatments, shopping and salsa. Shop with unique boutiques and vendors; enjoy free haircuts, styles, manicures, massages and makeovers; try chips and a variety of salsas.

Swag bags will be given to the first 500 women. Other activities include a silent auction, Hug-a-Horse, make it/take it crafts, Jivys BBQ and wine tasting by Mallow Run Winery.

All proceeds go to Hope for Hearts Horse Farm Inc. to support its programs. For more information, visit hopeforheartsfarm.org, call 317-496-0189 or email [email protected].

Fruitdale firefighters plan fish fries, turkey shoot

BEAN BLOSSOM — The Fruitdale Volunteer Fire Company will host fish fries from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. on one Saturday each month beginning April 7 through Oct. 6.

The fire station is at 5200 State Road 135 North.

Other Saturday fish fries include May 12, June 9, July 7, Aug. 25 and Sept. 8.

The menu will include fish sandwiches, tenderloin sandwiches, french fries, onion rings, baked beans, slaw, desserts and drinks.

A turkey shoot is planned at the fire station on Saturday, April 21. For more information, Call 812-720-0442.

Dance barn open Saturdays through April

Mike’s Dance Barn, 2277 State Road 46 West, is open on Saturdays through April.

A cover charge of $8 until 9 p.m. includes dance lessons at 6:30 p.m. and Mike’s house band performing at 7:30 p.m. Food can be purchased from the kitchen.

A dance review with Billy and Carla is planned from 6:30 to 9 p.m. April 21.

Dance lessons for $6 are available Mondays from 6:30 to 9 p.m.

For more information, call the dance barn at 812-988-8636.

Library hosts programs on ‘Frankenstein’

The Brown County Public Library will present six programs in April to celebrate this year’s Brown County Reads book, “Frankenstein” by Mary Shelley.

Brown County Reads is designed to bring the community together for a discussion about a common book. Copies of the book can be checked out at the library.

Thursday, April 12: 7 p.m., “Crimes Against Humanity? Where Does the Gavel Fall for Morality in Science in ‘Frankenstein,'” a mock trial, with audience members acting as jurors at the end of the presentation.

Friday, April 13: 5:30 p.m., family movie “Frankenweenie,” directed by Tim Burton.

Wednesday, April 18: 2 to 3 p.m. and 7 to 8 p.m., book discussions, light refreshments served.

Wednesday, April 25: 3 to 5 p.m., “FrankenTeens,” a hands-on toy creation activity led by children’s and teens’ librarian Emmy Champion.

Saturday, April 28: 2 to 4 p.m., “monster crafts” and “it’s alive” science experiments for the family.

For more information, call the library at 812-988-2850.

Family Heritage Day planned

The Brown County Historical Society, in collaboration with the Brown County Genealogical Society, will host Brown County Family Heritage Day from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, April 14 downstairs in the History Center, 90 E. Gould St.

Brown County’ one-room schools and early high schools will be featured. Images of old schoolhouses and many school class photos will be on display. A research table will be available for those who wish to look up family history. Books will be sold and free handouts will be given.

To reserve a table to display family history, call Rhonda at 812-320-6237 or email [email protected].

Local poets to speak during National Poetry Month

Brown County poets Andrew Hubbard, Carol Marks and John Sisson will host a poetry reading and conversation about poetry in April, National Poetry Month, at the Brown County Public Library.

A program from 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday, April 15 will include question-and-answer time; and people from the community are also invited to bring a poem of their own to read to the group.

Meet in the lower level meeting rooms at the library.

For more information, call the library at 812-988-2850.

Soup Bowl will benefit local food pantry

The annual Soup Bowl to benefit Mother’s Cupboard Community Kitchen will take place from 5 to 7 p.m. Sunday, April 15 at The Seasons Conference Center.

For $25 per ticket, diners choose a bowl made by local potters and sample soups from local restaurants. Tickets for soup in a disposable bowl are $5 per child. Live music will be provided. A silent auction also will raise money during the event.

Mother’s Cupboard provides free hot meals from 4 to 6 p.m. 364 days a year to anyone who asks for food. It also operates a food bank and distributes government commodities. The kitchen is funded by donations from individuals and endowments administered by the Brown County Community Foundation. The kitchen is at 646 Memorial Drive at the fairgrounds.

Soup bowl tickets are sold in advance at the Brown County IGA and by Mother’s Cupboard board members. For more information, call 812-320-3530 or 812-929-6411.

Register now for May Spring Blossom Parade

Spring Blossom Parade day 2018 will be Saturday, May 5 in downtown Nashville. The theme will be Unity in Diversity, to celebrate “who we are as unique individuals and citizens as we come together around shared values.”

All organizations can participate in the event, sponsored by the Brown County Lions Club. While there is no entry fee to be in the parade, signed waiver forms are required from all who will be in the parade. The registration deadline is Monday, April 16.

To be judged, entries must be pre-registered. A confirmation with information will be sent after receipt of each organization’s registration form. Forms are available at the Brown County Purdue Extension Office, Brown County Visitors Center, and online at e-clubhouse.org/sites/browncounty.

With questions about registration, contact Lion Gene Niednagel at [email protected] or at 812-988-6865.

Basic computing class offered at the library

A free basic computing class will be taught by Ryan Ridge from 4 to 6 p.m. Tuesday, April 17 in the lower level of the Brown County Public Library.

Whether a person is just starting with a new device or using a computer as a paperweight, this class will teach the ins and outs of basic computing.

With questions, stop in at the library, 205 Locust Lane, or call 812-988-2850.

Reserve for tea and history program at lodge

A lunch program on the history of Brown County will start at 11 a.m. Thursday, April 19 at The Seasons Lodge.

Brown County Historian Diana Biddle will be the speaker. Light soup, chicken salad and egg salad tea sandwiches, ham wraps, cheeses, vegetables, desserts and teas will be served. The cost to attend is $19.95.

To make a reservation, call 800-365-7327.

Meet candidates at breakfast April 21

SPEARSVILLE — An opportunity to meet candidates for the upcoming election will take place during a sausage gravy breakfast April 21 at Hickory Ridge Civic League and Community Center.

The breakfast will be from 8 to 11 a.m. at 2314 Hickory Ridge Lane off Hornettown Road.

The menu includes biscuits, sausage gravy, fried potatoes, eggs, sausage links, pancakes and drink for $5 per adult and $3 per child 12 and younger.

Litter clean-up day planned for April 21

Keep Brown County Beautiful will conduct a community clean-up day on Earth Day, Saturday, April 21.

To participate, meet at McDonald’s in Nashville at 9 a.m. for free coffee and one free $1 breakfast item provided by KBCB. Afterward, participants will go in groups to pick up litter from Adopt A Roads, their own road, or roads chosen by KBCB for clean-up.

The Helmsburg community also will participate in clean-up day; a meeting place is being discussed.

Keep Brown County Beautiful has tentatively scheduled more community clean-up days for July 21 and Nov. 3. Meet-ups will begin at 9 a.m. at McDonald’s, where free coffee will again be provided.

Plastic gloves, litter grabbers and safety vests will be available. McDonald’s will provide free trash bags and will allow participants to return the litter-filled bags free of charge for disposal.

For more information, call 812-988-0140 or 812-327-9617.

Writers conference planned at History Center

Guest speakers will talk about the business of writing, marketing yourself and your book, and writing for children at a conference in Nashville from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, April 21.

The conference at the History Center, 90 Gould St., costs $35, which includes snacks and drinks. Lunch is on your own downtown. The conference will end with a panel discussion.

For more information, email [email protected]. To register, use [email protected] for PayPal.

Free storm spotter training coming in April

The National Weather Service, partnering with Brown County Emergency Management, will conduct severe storm spotter training from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 24. The free training will be at the Brown County Ambulance Base, 53 State Road 46 East.

NWS meteorologist Dave Tucek will describe cloud patterns, radar signatures associated with severe weather, how to report severe storms and how to remain safe.

“Volunteers observing and reporting severe weather, then distributed by the NWS and local media, helps lead to increased response and safety of everyone in Brown County,” said Susan Armstrong, director of Brown County Emergency Management.

New Poet Laureate will visit local library

From 2 to 3 p.m. Thursday, April 26, the new Indiana Poet Laureate, Adrian Matejka, will give a poetry reading, followed by a question-and-answer session, at the Brown County Public Library, 205 Locust Lane Refreshments will be served.

Two-day plant sale will aid Friends of the Library

From 2 to 6 p.m. Friday, April 27 and 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, April 28, native perennial plants and some annuals will be sold on the lower-level patio of the Brown County Public Library.

Proceeds from the annual sale support the Friends of the Library and the Native Woodlands Ravine Project.

Seed share, plant sale, presentations planned

From 9 a.m. to noon Saturday, April 28, SEED Brown County will share heirloom seeds during the annual plant sale at the Brown County Public Library.

On the lower-level patio of the library at 205 Locust Lane, participants can bring their own seeds to share and learn more about SEED Brown County.

From noon to 1:30 p.m. that day, “Seed Stewardship” and “The SEED Brown County Story” will be presented in lower-level Room B of the library. Concepts of seed saving, what it means to “steward seeds,” necessity and why the work is urgent will be covered.

For more information, visit facebook.com/BrownCountySeedProject.

Community skate night planned for April 30

FRANKLIN — The Brown County Intermediate School Partnership Committee will host a Brown County community skate night from 5:30 to 8 p.m. Monday, April 30 at the Franklin Skate Club, 2680 N. Morton St.

All children must be accompanied by an adult.

There will be a group skate for all who show school spirit. Skaters should wear a school shirt if they have one.

Costs will be $3 per skater and $2 for skate rental. The event will include free face painting by Emily Earnshaw.

For more information, call the Franklin club at 317-738-3775; or with questions, call skate night Chair Dustie Condon at 317-727-5582.

Friday farmers market returns May 4

BEAN BLOSSOM — The Friday farmers market at St. David’s Episcopal Church parking lot will resume on May 4. It will run through Aug. 31.

The market, at state roads 135 North and 45, provides a venue for local farmers to sell fresh produce and meat. It’s open from 4 to 7 p.m. weekly.

It also affords local artisans a place to display and sell handmade creations, and area musicians to showcase their talents. A booth is reserved each week for different nonprofits. The Children’s Garden and Playground offers customers and vendors a safe place for their children to play.

For more information, stop by the market on Fridays or call 812-988-1038.

Mother-Daughter tea time planned at Seasons

The Seasons Lodge’s Fireplace Lounge will host a mother-daughter tea on Thursday and Friday, May 17 and 18, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Dara Delong will present her handmade jewelry. Door prizes will be provided. The menu includes fresh strawberry soup, ham salad on a mini croissant, banana bread, tea sandwiches, white chocolate chips scones with Devonshire cream, rocky road brownies and other treats. The cost is $19.95 per person.

For more information, visit seasonslodge.com or call 800-365-7327.

Bluebird nest boxes for sale this spring

The Brown County Bluebird Club is selling cedar bluebird nest boxes for $15 each or two for $25 to raise money for the club. Email Dan Sparks at [email protected] or call 812-200-5700.

Seed share, plant swap, wild food walk at market

SEED Brown County will provide a mobile seed library for people to get heirloom vegetable seeds for planting at the Sunday, May 20 farmers market at the Brown County Inn.

SEED encourages other people to bring plants and seeds to swap and share at the market, which takes place from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the parking lot at 51 State Road 46 East.

Plants will be sold through market vendors, so what you don’t swap, you can leave. After the swap, a guided wild food walk will take place.

For a current list of seed varieties, visit seedbrowncounty.org. For upcoming events, visit facebook.com/BrownCountySeedProject.

BCHS Class of ’68 seeks alumni names

The Brown County High School Class of 1968 reunion will be at 6 p.m. Friday, June 22 at Creekside Retreat. An alumni banquet will be served Saturday, June 23 at The Seasons.

Alumni are encouraged to bring old photographs, senior “cords” or other memorabilia.

If anyone has contact information on Sandra Badger, Larry Brown, Philip Fox, Deana Norman, Marilyn Reeves, Vicki Sterret, Sharon Stewart, Christanne Swain Traxler or Mike Waltz, let them know about the class reunion. Send contact information to Steve Bright on Facebook or call him at 812-599-6567, or call June Woods Floyd at 812-391-4189.

After-school activities offered Tuesdays for teens

Brown County Enrichment for Teens Association, or BETA, offers after-school programs from 3 to 6:30 p.m. Tuesdays at the BETA Center, 45 S. Jefferson St.

Free, healthy snacks, games, arts and music programs are available to junior high, high school or home-schooled students. Drum lessons are taught from 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. by Guy Knaus and free guitar lessons from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. by Nathan Dillon, director of Everybody Rocks.

BETA also offers free tutoring at the junior high from 3 to 4 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays with paraprofessional Sharon Snodgress, and at the high school before school and during hallway time Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays with National Honor Society students. Call Clara Stanley at 312-310-3617 with questions about tutoring.

For more information, call Guy Knaus at 812-671-5233.

Book-a-Librarian service offered

Individuals or small groups can make an appointment with a Brown County Public Library librarian through the free Book-a-Librarian service. Sessions are limited to 30 to 60 minutes and are best used for instruction on how to use the library catalog, databases, digital resources and the Internet. Call 812-988-2850 for an appointment.

Sheriffs’ Youth Leadership Camp session planned at Waycross

JACKSON TWP. — The 39th annual Indiana Sheriffs’ Association Youth Leadership Camp will include a session at Waycross Episcopal Camp. It will begin with registration from 8 to 10 a.m. Monday, July 9 and conclude at 5 p.m. Wednesday, July 11.

The camp is for boys and girls who are currently in the seventh or eighth grades and interested in learning more about a possible career in law enforcement.

“The camp provides a meaningful experience and relationship with other campers from throughout the state, as well as sheriff officers who serve as counselors and instructors,” said Bartholomew County Sheriff Matthew A. Myers.

Information and application forms have been mailed to every middle and junior high school counselor in the state.

This is not the same camp as the Bartholomew County Sheriff’s Youth Academy, which will be June 4 to 8 at CERAland.

To download an application, visit indianasheriffs.org/youth-leadership-camp.aspx#content.

Seed-saving demonstration planned at market Oct. 7

Torrie Rae of SEED Brown County and Ben Cohen of Small House Farm in Michigan will present a seed-saving demonstration at the Sunday farmers market Oct. 7.

From noon to 2 p.m. at the Brown County Inn parking lot, 51 State Road 46 East, visitors can get lessons on processing homestead-size seed harvests. Rae and Cohen will share information about the seed library and provide plants and seeds to process. Everyone is encouraged to bring plants and seeds to process from the seeds and plants they received through Brown County SEED earlier in the year.

For more information, visit facebook.com/BrownCountySeedProject.

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