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Never underestimate an old man who loves fishing and was born in March shirt, hoodie, tank top

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If you were young enough to be her grandchild, she was “Nana.”

Before her retirement, she worked at local factories and fast-food restaurants. She was a member of the Crescendos Chorus and Red Hat Society and was serious about her faith, regularly attending two churches. She was an avid viewer of “Days of Our Lives.”

Like her daughter Dee, who died from COVID-19 in July, she enjoyed traveling. She once booked an excursion with a travel agency to Arizona, where she met another woman named Sharon and took in a hot air balloon festival.

Her grandson, Luke Fettig, spent summers with his cousins at the grandparents’ house where their names were carved into the posts of the swing set Carr asked for as a Mother’s Day gift.

“It was a lot of love, and that’s what hurts the most is all the love I’m missing out on,” Fettig said.

Days after being exposed to the virus in October, Carr, who had a underlying lung condition, began experiencing a cough and shortness of breath. She required full-time oxygen treatments by the time she was hospitalized and was later hooked up to a ventilator.

“Her lungs just turned to cement,” Fettig said.

Contributed by the Journal Review in Crawfordsville

Provided Thomas Popcheff

Never underestimate an old man who loves fishing and was born in March shirt, hoodie, tank top

Thomas Popcheff’s first job was cutting grass for the Speedway Parks Department in the 1960s. Decades later, as president of the development commission, he was still doing essential work for Speedway.

And in between, Popcheff reveled in everything the town offered.

“The month of May was something special,” daughter Nikki Popcheff, 41, said. “There’d be 50, 100 people at our house on Indianapolis 500 race weekend. Every inch of floor space was taken, and tents were in the yard. He’d get up at 4:30 each morning, scope out the track and bring back a report.”

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