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INfortwayne.com
Serving Southwest Allen County & Roanoke
January 2, 2015
Girl Scouts ready for cookie sales By Garth Snow gsnow@kpcmedia.com
Connie Frederick and Maryann Kummer begin separate conversations about their special roles in the business of Girl Scout Cookies, then turn to a subject even more dear to them — their daughters. Frederick is product manager for the 22-county Girl Scouts of Northern Indiana-Michiana. “My daughter was the shy little girl who hid behind her order card to sell cookies,” Frederick said. “It is a learning experience, and we’re teaching these girls how to market,” Frederick said. “It’s a girl-led business. They learn money management, people skills and business ethics,” she said. “Little girls come in here with their mothers, who pick up cookies, and I always ask them ‘How many cookies have you sold?’ And by the third time they don’t have to look at Mom and ask how many cookies they’ve sold. They know I’m going to
By Garth Snow gsnow@kpcmedia.com
PHOTO BY GARTH SNOW
Tony Belton and Connie Frederick show some of the Girl Scout cookie varieties that will go on sale again Jan. 9. Belton is communications manager for Girl Scouts of Northern Indiana-Michiana. Frederick is product manager for the 22-county district.
ask them that question.” Sarah Frederick, who once wore the sash of Troop 200 in Fort Wayne, now applies the skills she gathered in Girl Scouts and other experiences to the business of operating a traveling museum in the city across the bay from Seattle. As collections manager for Eastside Heritage Center, in Bellevue,
Wash., she takes the museum’s exhibits to the public. “Our exhibits go into places like shopping centers, libraries, schools, and our programming is done basically the same way,” she said. “We take it to the people.” “The appreciation of community — that’s one of the things that’s really great about Girl Scouts,
Singer to ‘bridge worlds’ with choir in Fort Wayne By Garth Snow gsnow@kpcmedia.com
is you have to go out and engage with people,” she said. Sarah Frederick was involved in Girl Scouts from elementary school through high school, and holds a lifetime membership. “I always have a soft spot for when the troops approach me,” she said. “I See SCOUT, Page A4
Fort Wayne City Utilities water has begun flowing to portions of the city service area purchased from Aqua Indiana. More of the southwest territory will begin receiving city water by mid-January. Customers in the affected areas of Aboite and Lafayette townships became City Utilities customers effective with the signing of the documents on Dec. 3, and began receiving water bills from City Utilities on about Dec. 20. City Utilities spokesman Frank Suárez stressed that customers whose water payments have been drafted automatically need to set up payments based on new account numbers. Aqua Indiana’s sewage service area is not changed, and customers will continue receiving bills from Aqua Indiana.
City water began flowing to about 2,200 customers in a section of eastern Aboite Township on Dec. 4. Fort Wayne Mayor Tom Henry joined residents in the Abbey Place Villas neighborhood near Illinois and Hadley roads to flush a fire hydrant and to drink a toast with City Utilities water. Suárez said customers should have noticed a change in water quality by the following day. That service area extends from Bass Road south to Jefferson Boulevard. That area was designated Phase 1. Visit cityoffortwayne. org/aquatransition for a map of the conversion phases and for answers to frequently asked questions about the Aqua Indiana purchase. “[Phases] 2A and 2B will switch over the same week, and we expect that they both will be in operaSee WATER, Page A13
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COURTESY PHOTO
Senior Kirsten Overdahl of Fort Wayne wears her choir robe for a photo provided by St. Olaf College. The 75-voice choir will perform in Fort Wayne on Feb. 12.
the past couple of years it has become very important to me that Fort Wayne is a very community-oriented place. We’re moving onward and upward and we’re nurturing values for our community. And I’m very proud of that, and that’s something that I want to share with our choir.” Overdahl said she had
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looked forward to joining the choir even before its concert at First Presbyterian in 2010. “I had grown up hearing the recordings of the choir, because my parents also graduated from St. Olaf,” she said. Her father, Michael, graduated from the four-year liberal See CHOIR, Page A12
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When the 75-voice St. Olaf Choir visits Fort Wayne in February, senior Kirsten Overdahl hopes to share something remarkable about her hometown. The choir will visit Atlanta, Chicago, Cleveland, New York, Minneapolis and 12 other cities between Jan. 24 and Feb. 15. “In many of those places, a choir member will be in their hometown,” Overdahl said. “So it’s going to be bridging a lot of different worlds and bringing people together.” Overdahl will get her chance to celebrate her hometown on Feb. 12, when the mixed-voice, a cappella choir sings a 7:30 p.m. concert at First Presbyterian Church. “I’m excited to point out the buildings that we’ll drive by,” she said. “But in
City Utilities water flows to former Aqua territory
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