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Feb. 6, 2013 : 89
Ladies’ Night Thursday’s 8-12
Karaoke Friday Nights 9-1
7637 Ivory Ave. • St. Louis • 314-544-4900 www.facebook.com/ivorycoaststl
Mardi Gras Shuttles!
Ride in STYLE to and from the Grand Parade. Call for details.
GET
The Goat TO GO!
The Goat
Mardi Gras Open at 8am • Breakfast from 8am to 11am Shuttle to and from 9:30am to 5:30pm Live music starting at Noon!
Happy Hour
FRieD CHICKen
Monday - Friday: 3pm - 7pm $2 Bottled Beer, $2 Rails
From Noon Until Close
7529 Michigan Ave • 314-932-7774 www.southsidegrillstl.com • Like us on Facebook
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Saint Louis
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BLUES Hockey FEB 7 FEB 9 FEB 11 FEB 13 FEB 15 FEB 17 FEB 19 FEB 20
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@ Texas A&M vs Ole Miss @ Mississippi St. @ Arkansas vs Florida
SLU Basketball FEB 9 FEB 16 FEB 19 FEB 22
@ Richmond vs Charlotte vs VCU @ Butler
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SOUTH COUNTY: 4481 Lemay Ferry Rd., St. Louis, MO 63129 • Phone: 314-892-8333
CENTRAL WEST END: 22 N Euclid Ave., St. Louis, MO 63108 • Phone: 314-367-9333 stlouis.thegreatframeup.com • www.facebook.com/thegreatframeupstl
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M
W o C H m W c
W r t e t A R h W p
S U d T M a T fi W t t t t S b
W ( t o T t c $ m t
A S
Happy Hour Friday’s only from 4-7PM
$1.50 Domestic Bottles $4 Bombs
Mardi Gras FAQ: Factoids What is a Krewe? The word “Krewe” is a generic term used to describe any carnival organization or club. The word was coined by the oldest such organization in New Orleans, the Mystik Krewe of Comus who believed in 1857 that the word gave the club’s name an “olde-English” flavor. Here in St. Louis the Soulard Mardi Gras Grand Parade is made up of many Krewes. Each float or marching group represents the efforts of an individual Krewe. Who can have a Krewe? You and your friends. With some effort and creativity you and your friends can be the object of desire of hundreds of thousands of screaming revelers. What a rush!
Why Do They Throw Beads from the Parade? Why Not Throw Money? Throwing beads traces its roots to an old English custom where the local nobles would parade down the village main street and toss candies and glass beads to the peasantry. Given Mardi Gras’ unique sense of humor, New Orlinians expanded on the mock King or Rex idea with ordinary people, dressed as nobles tossing candy and trinkets to the crowd, thereby poking a bit more fun at the well-heeled. At Soulard Mardi Gras, more than 17 million beads will fly from the Lumière Place Grand Parade Route in 2009. Clearly, Mardi Gras beads have become a big business. We’re not certain what you have to do to get beads, but we sure see a lot of people wearing them after the parade. We have had some recent requests from automakers and financial titans to throw money from the parade route. We’ll stick with beads. So Why isn’t Mardi Gras The Same Date Every Year? Can You Guys Just Not Remember One Date? Unlike most annual holidays, which are a fixed date in the calendar, the date for Mardi Gras is dependent upon the date of Easter Sunday. The season itself at least begins on a fixed date, Twelfth Night, January 6. This is the day the three Magi arrived in Bethlehem to see the baby Jesus. This is also the origin of the King Cake tradition, and the reason for the toy baby inside the cake. One guess as to who it is. The end of the Carnival season, Fat Tuesday, isn’t so simple. Of course Easter always falls on the first Sunday following the first full moon of Spring. Now in truth, it’s not quite so easy as that. We’re sure you all remember Pope Gregory XIII. He was a real stickler for calendars—so much so that he threw out Julius Caesar’s calendar and made his own (we certainly wouldn’t have wanted to mess with Caesar’s calendar, but that’s another story). So the real date of Easter also deals with the difference between an astronomical full moon and an ecclesiastical full moon. But if you are that interested in all this, you should probably be reading something else. So Easter is the key to determining the date for Mardi Gras, or Fat Tuesday, which is always the day before Ash Wednesday, 47 days before Easter Sunday. Who Runs This Party, Anyway? Mardi Gras, Inc., a 501(c) (4) not for profit organization, is responsible for producing the Mardi Gras celebration in St. Louis, recognized as one of the largest pre-Lenten celebrations in the United States. The Regional Chamber and Growth Association estimated the festival economic impact to businesses and public coffers across the entire St. Louis region at more than $21,000,000—for those counting along at home, that’s more bucks than beads, as a measly 17 million beads are thrown on River City Grand Parade Day.
Fish Fry
on Ash Wednesday and Fridays during Lent.
Served all day long.
Come and watch the Blues win on 1 of our 9 BIG HDTV’s!
The Mack is a Smoke Free Establishment
4615 Macklind Avenue • 314-832-8199
1730 S. 8th Street • St. Louis, MO 63104 314-932-1280 • www.sassyjacs.com
Mardi Gras!
Join us Saturday, February 9 for the River City Casino Grand Parade. We’re only 1 block off the parade route at 8th and Soulard.
Valentine’s Day Make your Valentine’s Day reservation early. Call for the details of our incredible specials!
We have food, drink, and event specials frequently. Please feel free to contact us or view our website or Facebook.
A census of downtown St. Louis hotels determined that over 20,000 hotel room nights are sold the weekend of the Grand Parade. Soulard Mardi Gras generated nearly 1,500 media placements in the U.S. and Canada, with more than a dozen front page stories.
Mon-Thu: 11am - 11pm • Fri-Sat: 11am - 12am • Sunday: CLOSED
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OPEN DAILY mon-fri: 11 AM - 3 pm mon-thu: 4:30 PM - 10 PM friday: 4:30 PM - 11 PM saturday: 12PM - 11 PM sunday: 5 PM - 9:30 PM
Mardi Gras
check out our happy hour online
Start Mardi Gras here and walk on down to then parade.. Homemade Hurricanes, Gumbo,Shrimp and Grits, Cinnamon Roll Bread Pudding, Beads and FUN!
1/2 Price Sushi! Tuesday, Wednesday , Thursday • 4:30pm to 6:30pm
2321 Arsenal, St. Louis, MO 63118 • In Historic Benton Park
3024 S. Grand BLVD.
(p) 314-776-5889 • (f) 314-664-5699 • luvyduvys.com follow us on Facebook and twitter
314-772-0002 www.sekisuiusa.com
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KITCHENS & BATHS
2 Locations 3122 S. Kingshighway Blvd. St. Louis, MO 63139
314-772-1611 (f) 314-772-3163 14381 Manchester Road Manchester, MO 63011
636-394-3655 (f) 636-394-1609
Come & See Our Beautiful Selection of Home Furnishings at South Kingshighway!
www.modernkitchensandbaths.com 4
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SPORTS BAR & GRILL
Thank You St. Louis!
CATCH ALL THE GAMES ON OUR NEW ENCLOSED, CLIMATE CONTROLLED PATIO!
Catch every game & every team here! Friendly’s can satisfy the sports fan in you!
BLUES ARE BACK!! FREE HOME TEAM SPECIALS during BLUES HOCKEY
1/4 lb. Hamburger, Ballpark Hot Dog, Bratwurst, Nachos with Cheese LIMIT: 2 per Fan per Game • Through February!
Buckets of Natty Light & PBR: $10.50 Buckets of Domestic Beer: $12.50
3503 Roger Place (at Potomac) • 314-771-2040
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HOLY TRINITY SERBIAN CHURCH FISH FRY
GEORGES BRAQUE AND THE CUBIST STILL LIFE, 1928–1945 January 25, 2013 - April 21, 2013
Georges Braque and the Cubist Still Life, 1928–1945 offers the first detailed examination of Braque’s experiments with still lifes and interiors during the years leading up to and through World War II. During the period between the wars, Braque exhibited a freer style of Cubism, intensifying his color use and a looser rendering of objects. However, he still remained committed to the cubist method of simultaneous perspective and fragmentation. Braque employed the genre of the still life to conduct a lifelong investigation into the nature of perception through the tactile and transitory world of everyday objects.
FISH FRY FRIDAYS Your choice of baked or fried fish, served with two sides, bread, a dessert, and drink ticket.
Served Fridays during Lent, starting February 15th.
4:30-7:30 PM DINE-IN • CARRY-OUT
Attending to the cyclical nature of the artist’s work, the exhibit examines the transformations in Braque’s creative process as he moved from painting small, intimate interiors in the late 1920s, to depicting bold, large-scale, tactile Cubist spaces in the 1930s, to creating personal renderings of daily life in the 1940s. It was after WWI when Braque resumed painting in late 1916 that he began to moderate the harsh abstraction of cubism. He developed a more personal style characterized by brilliant color and textured surfaces. His many still life subjects painted during this time maintain his emphasis on structure.
HOLY TRINITY SERBIAN CHURCH
1910 Serbian Drive at McNair Avenue
314-776-3262 • serbianchurchstlouis.com
3707 S. Kingshighway Blvd.
314-832-9009 Large Outdoor Patio Washers • Specials
The invention of Cubism was a joint effort between Picasso and Braque who were the style’s main innovators. After meeting in 1907, Braque and Picasso began working on the development of Cubism. French art critic Louis Vauxcelles first used the term Cubism, or “bizarre cubiques”, in 1908 after seeing a picture by Braque. He described it as ‘full of little cubes’, after which the term quickly gained wide use. Both artists produced paintings of monochromatic color and complex patterns of faceted form, now termed Analytic Cubism. Unlike Picasso, Braque was interested mainly in developing Cézanne’s ideas of multiple perspectives. Braque’s essential subjects were the ordinary objects of life with which he created luminous, other-worldly still life and figure compositions. Georges Braque and the Cubist Still Life, 1928–1945 is a collaboration with The Phillips Collection in Washington, DC, the exhibition will consist of more than thirty-five paintings, produced between 1928 and 1945, drawn from public and private collections in the United States and Europe. Following its showing at the Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum from January 25 to April 21, 2013, the exhibition will travel to The Phillips Collection, where it will be on view from June 8 to September 1, 2013. The Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum, part of the Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts at Washington University, is located near the corner of Skinker and Forsyth Boulevards directly west of Forest Park on the Danforth Campus of Washington University in St. Louis. For more information on the exhibit and the Kemper please visit kemperartmuseum.wustl.edu
Mardi Gras
Shuttles
Mardi Gras Grand Parade Saturday, February 9
Southtown Pub will be open at 9:00am Mardi Gras shuttles will be running to and from starting at 9:30am to 10:30pm.
HAPPY HOUR! M-F: 4-7PM • $8 Domestic Buckets
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fridays 4:00PM to 7:00PM • during lent
Baked or Fried Fish or Shrimp and More! Dinners come with your choice of 2 sides dishes and a dessert.
No Long Term Contracts 30 Min Total Body Circuits Supervised Kids Room
2000 sq. �. Free Weights
Mega Cardio Center
Free Personal Training
Also Available:
Crab Rangoon and Cheese Pizza 4323 S. Kingshighway (Kingshighway at Sutherland)
4701 Delor St. (near Burlington Coat)
314-832-0019 • fitness19.com
A New Year .. A New You!!
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To Join
$ * See gym for details
$
Per Month*
FREE 7 DAY PASS! Non-Member & First Time Guests Only • Local Residents Only Must be at least 12 years or older.
www.FITNESS19.com 6
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314-352-2111
THIS MAP SPONSORED BY THE PARTNERSHIP FOR DOWNTOWN ST. LOUIS stlcityedition.com • facebook.com/stlouiscityedition.com • twitter.com/stlcityedition.com • sales@stlcityedition.com • 314-267-9979
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SAINT LOUIS ORCHESTRA
Robert Hart Baker, Conductor Friday, March 1, 2013, at 8:00 PM
J. Scheidegger Center for the Arts at Lindenwood University 2300 West Clay Street • St. Charles, MO 63301
Overture to “Roberto Devereux” ~Gaetano Donizetti The Heavens Are Telling Them from “The Creation” ~Franz Joseph Haydn Cantique de Jean Racine, Op. 11 (arr. John Rutter) ~Gabriel Fauré All Things Bright And Beautiful ~John Rutter O Clap Your Hands ~Ralph Vaughan Williams Featuring the Choirs of Lindenwood University, Pamela Grooms, director
Don Quixote, Op. 35 ~Richard Strauss Richard Hirschl, cello - Lawrence Neumann, viola
For ticket information or assistance, please contact: P.O. Box 220437 • St. Louis, MO 63122 or call 314-421-3600 www.stlphilharmonic.org
MISSOURI BAR & GRILLE 701 North Tucker Blvd.
314-231-2234 missouribarandgrille.com
Did you know Missouri Bar & Grille offers complimentary Wi-Fi for our guests?
Featuring THE most overworked Jagermeister machine this side of the Mississippi!
FREE shuttle to & from all Blues games!
Celebrate Missouri Bar & Grille’s
30th Anniversary on Valentine's Day! FREE Appetizers starting at 4:00 PM.
FREE roses & chocolate covered strawberries for the ladies. Drink specials all day! • Live Music! Full Menu until 2:00AM
H
join missouri bar and grille on facebook H
OPEN TILL 3AM DAILY Private Parties Up to 100 People
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Q: If I get my phone wet, what's the best way to bring it back to life? A: Even if a wet cellphone seems dead, there's a good chance it can be resuscitated. Just make sure you act fast--the longer the water sits inside, the greater the likelihood it will destroy the phone for good. This is a DIY moment. While consumers are conditioned to send back broken merchandise, your phone's warranty probably doesn't cover water damage. And you may not have much luck pulling a fast one on your phone company--most of today's phones come with a "water sticker" that permanently changes color if it gets wet. The first step: Immediately cut the power by removing the battery. I know it's tempting, but resist the urge to power up your phone to see if it works-just turning it on can short out the circuits. If you have a GSM phone (the type used by AT&T and T-Mobile), you'll want to remove the SIM card as well. Even if your phone turns out to be beyond repair, the SIM should retain a lot of its onboard information, such as the contacts in your phone book. With the battery safely set aside, you now have one goal--dry your phone, and dry it fast. If you let the moisture evaporate naturally, the chance of corrosion damaging the phone's innards increases. Instead, blow or suck the water out. But don't use a hair dryer--its heat can fry your phone's insides. Instead, opt for a can of compressed air, an air compressor set to a low psi or a vacuum cleaner (a wet/dry Shop-Vac would be perfect). The idea is to use air to push or pull moisture out through the same channels it entered. Finally, use a desiccant to wick away any leftover moisture. The most convenient choice is uncooked rice. Just leave the phone (and its disconnected battery) submerged in a bowl of grains overnight. If you're worried about rice dust getting inside your phone, you can instead use the packets of silica gel that often come stuffed in the pockets of new clothes. But acting fast is far more important than avoiding a little dust, so don't waste time shopping if you don't already have a drawer full of silica gel. The most important thing to remember is to avoid heat. That means no hair dryers, ovens, microwaves or extended periods in direct sunlight. While heat will certainly evaporate the moisture, it could also warp components and melt adhesives. Those fragile glues are also why you'll want to avoid dunking the phone in rubbing alcohol (an oftÂprescribed tip on the Web). Alcohol is a solvent and can dissolve the internal adhesives. (If you drop your phone in the toilet, it's okay to wipe the outside with alcohol to disinfect it.) One final, perhaps surprising, note: If your phone gets soaked in salt water, you should probably flush the whole thing in fresh water before it dries. When salt water evaporates, it leaves crystals that can damage a phone's fragile components. Just be sure to remove the battery before flooding the device.
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ST. LouIS HAPPENING Sense and Sensibility (Dates Vary)
Wednesday, February 6, 2013 Until Sunday, March 3, 2013 The Repertory Theatre Of St. Louis Mainstage Season On The Browning Mainstage At The Loretto-Hilton Center. When their father’s death leaves two sisters with uncertain prospects, they must navigate the unpredictable seas of courtship with only their hearts to guide them. The course of true love winds through flirtation, folly, scandals and secrets as reserved, sensible Elinor and romantic, impulsive Marianne attempt to find their way in the world. This lovely, intimate adaptation of Jane Austen’s first novel is a charming journey through hope and heartbreak as two young ladies find that when sense and sensibility meet, love can’t be far behind. Performance times are at 7:00 p.m. Tuesday and select Sundays, 8:00 p.m. Wednesday-Friday, 1:30 p.m. select Wednesdays, 5:00 p.m. Saturday, 9:00 p.m. select Saturdays, 2:00 p.m. Sunday http:// www.repstl.org/, (314) 968-4925
Soulard Mardi Gras - Lumiere Place Fat Tuesday Parade
Tuesday, February 12, 2013, Downtown St. Louis Celebrate the last call before Lent with a Fat Tuesday Parade featuring premiere Krewes from the Mardi Gras festival. The beads will once again be flying as the Mardi Gras season enters its final hours. www.stlmardigras.org/, (314) 771-5110
St. Louis Symphony Orchestral Program: City Noir
Friday, February 15, 2013 Until Saturday, February 16, 2013 At Powell Symphony Hall In Grand Center. Taking inspiration from 1940s Los Angeles, John Adams’ City Noir, portrays pockets of high energy that are nested among areas of leisure in the famed west coast city. Often described as cinematic, the lyrical work combines sassy and savvy together offering a glimpse of a bygone era in a great American city. 10:30 a.m. (15), 8:00 p.m. (16) www.stlsymphony.org, (314) 534-1700 or (800) 232-1880
Stray Haven Rescue, a non-profit foster-network cat rescue
Friday February 22 at The Chapel: Sanctuary for the Arts 6238 Alexander Drive 63105. Just off Skinker Blvd by Forest Park -a block south of Washington University. Cost is $20 per person or $30 per couple or family from 6:30-9:30 For tickets and more information www.strayhavenrescue.org This fundraiser is casual and will help us spay/neuter lots of cats this summer. You can contact Dawn at 314-580-6103.
NEW SPACE
AVAILABLE!
6 North
4055 Laclede, St. louis 63108 ph : 314-533-8061
lifestyle
J & A’s Bar&Grill
INCREDIBLE
LUNCH SPECIAL!
7
1/2 lb. Burger $ French Fries Draft/Beverage
00
UNTIL 3:00PM
6 Pitchers
$
For all Blues Hockey Games
$1.00 PBR
NATTY LIGHT BUSCH 7-9PM DAILY
Homemade Pizzas • Salads • Chili Soups • Sandwiches • Daily Specials! SMOKING PERMITTED HERE Monday-Saturday • 10am - 1:30am
10 North Newstead Ave.
314-534-0335
“St. louis’ best steaks” - rft readers poll 1999-2012
TDD# 800-545-1833 ext. 850
Professionally managed by
St. Louis, Missouri
Contemporary Work/Live Space 1,142 sq. ft.
Located in the CWE in the 6 North Apt. Complex! A great way to save by living and working in the same place. Large, open area in the front can be used for retail or divided for living. Cool, sliding wall separates the private area. High ceilings, wood flooring, great kitchen with island, large tiled bath plus washer & dryer. Access to fitness room. $1,250/mo + electric. W/S/T paid. Six North Coffee Co.
View our entire menu and specials online at: tuckersplacestl.com Monday: Industry Night! Happy Hour From 3pm Until Close. Drink Specials. 1/2 Price Appetizers & Pizzas.
Thursday: Trivia Night! Starts At 9pm. Drink Specials! Prizes Every Round.
Tuesday: Prime Rib Specials All Day Long!
Friday: Frugal Friday!!!!!! 9pm Until Close. $1 Beer Specials. $3 Bomb and Shot Specials.
Wednesday: Can Beer Night! 16 Ounce Cans $2. Many Varieties. 9pm Until Close.
HISTORIC SOULARD • 1/2 block south of Russell
2117 South 12th St. • 314-772-5977
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TAKE A BREAK: CROSSWORD, SUDOKU & SCRAMBLE
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It’s Our Annual
Mardi Gras Kegs & Eggs Party Feb. 9, 2011
9:00 AM - 12:00 PM
FREE SHUTTLE
Buses will pickup at Lindell and Vandeventer Ave. starting at 8:30 AM and they run until 11:30 AM
Enjoy Food, Friends, & fun!
gyros • dolmades kabobs • baklava OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK AT 11:00 AM
olympia kebob house & tavern 1543 McCausland Ave. • 314-781-1299 12
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