OTMJ
Go Pink!
The Breast Cancer Research Foundation of Alabama is among the organizations holding events to mark Breast Cancer Awareness Month in October. Proceeds will benefit the founda tion.
On Oct. 9, barbecue chefs will compete for bragging rights at the CahabaQue BBQ CookOff at Cahaba Brewing Company. The annual event features teams of backyard grillers and professionals. From 1 p.m. to 4 p.m., guests can try all-you-can-eat samples from each team’s BBQ offerings and vote for their favorite while enjoying craft beer and live music.
For tickets and more information, go to cahabaque.com.
A few weeks later, on Oct. 23, the Pink Up the Pace 5K and Fun Run will be presented by Vulcan Materials Company.
Runners and walkers of all ages are wel come to join in the race and fun run, organized by the junior board of the Breast Cancer Research Foundation of Alabama. The event begins at 2 p.m. at Crestline Field at Crestline Elementary School in Mountain Brook. After
With everything that’s happening “Over the Mountain,” it can be difficult to keep up. That’s why we have launched the OTMJ newsletter.
Published every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday - we’ll give you a quick recap of the latest news, sports and social events as well as a heads up on upcoming events so you won’t miss any of the interesting and fun happenings in the Greater Birmingham metro area.
To sign up for our newsletter, visit otmj.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram, @overthemountainjournal, for daily updates on what’s going on around town, too.
MOUNTAIN
Publisher & Editor: Maury Wald
Copy Editor: Virginia Martin
Features Writer: Donna Cornelius
Staff Writer: Anne Ruisi
Photographer: Jordan Wald
Sports Editor: Rubin E. Grant
Contributors: Susan Murphy, June Mathews, Emil Wald, Marvin Gentry, Lee Walls, Bryan Bunch
Advertising Sales: Julie Trammell Edwards, Tommy Wald, Gail Kidd
Murphy’s Law
Rest In Peace, Queen Elizabeth
Over
mwald@otmj.com.
Mountain Journal, Inc.
Iwill
miss Queen Elizabeth. I didn’t know her personally, of course, but her reliable presence was comfort ing in a strange sort of way.
She was always there in her bright ly colored outfits (saying she “must be seen to be believed”), shaking hands with well-wishers, accepting small bouquets of flowers from children. She seemed, I don’t know, nice, like she was the type of person who might gen uinely listen to your problems and be able to offer a kind and sensible solu tion.
Maybe none of that is true. Maybe she wasn’t like that at all, but I kind of enjoyed feeling like she was. In a world filled with blustering political leaders, Queen Elizabeth appeared quiet and resolved, solid in a world that is anything but.
For 70 years, she held her role as both mom and monarch, weathering the same problems other people do – marital discord, wayward chil dren, encounters with self-serving wannabes – with style and grace. When Harry and Megan announced that they would rather not shoulder the duties of the royal family, Queen Elizabeth said, in essence, “Okey Dokey. Leave your keys and credit cards on the table on the way out.” Then she put on her hat and went forth to shoulder those duties herself. You gotta love that.
Queen Elizabeth knew who she was and who she was not. She didn’t really run the kingdom. The people in Great Britain elect representatives to make all the real decisions just like we do. In the United States, we reconsider our choice for president every four years. In Great Britain, the position of prime minister is more precarious. A person could be ejected from 10 Downing Street during his or her lunch break. The position is always up for grabs. But, whoever showed up in her
Over the Mountain Views
office, Queen Elizabeth brought into the fold, year after year.
I like to imagine that, in her private moments, Queen Elizabeth shook her head about some of the cast of interna tional characters that she was asked to welcome to the palace, but it never showed. She was gracious. She was elegant. I’m going to miss that.
Things will change now. That is certain. But, what happens immediate ly is clear. The Queen’s son, Charles, will succeed her. And his son William will succeed him. The only question in the transfer of power seemed to be who would be given custody of the Corgis. Apparently, Prince Andrew was awarded that job. One brother becomes king. One brother takes care of the dogs. Such is life.
I’m ashamed to admit that I had to do a bit of research on Prince Edward. It seems he has been quiet ly fulfilling his royal duties all the while, a fitting tribute to his mom. I was impressed to find out that Princess Anne had been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1990. It doesn’t get better than that. But, my favorite story comes from 1974, when someone tried to kidnap Princess Anne at gunpoint. When the assailant, who had already shot three people, ordered her to get out of the car, she is reported to have said, “Not bloody likely.” She’s going to be just fine, too.
I hope King Charles succeeds in his succession, although I have to tell you that I cannot say “King Charles” without my mind adding the word “Spaniel.”
The man has big shoes to fill … or maybe, more accu rately, small ones. Quiet ones. Humble ones.
I wish only good things for King Charles. I hope he remembers the lessons his mom put forth. They will serve him well.
The Beat Goes On
Sue Murphy Queen Elizabeth appeared quiet and resolved, solid in a world that is anything but.
Le
Through Oct. 9 Shop, Save & Share
For as little as $40 you can help improve the lives of people all across Birmingham through the Junior League’s 21 community projects. Card entitles you to 20% off at over 250 retailers. Where: shopsaveandshare.net
Through Oct. 21
Watercolor Society of Alabama Exhibition, Workshop
The 2022 Alabama Member
Showcase Exhibition and the city of Vestavia Hills hold a watercolor exhibit of Alabama artists. When: MondayFriday 9 a.m.-5 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday, 1-4 p.m. Where: Vestavia Hills City Hall.
Thurs., Oct. 6
Taste of Hoover
This popular annual culinary event will feature tastings created by local Hoover restaurants, caterers and vendors as well as international spirits, wines and local beers. When: 5-8 p.m. Where: Aldridge Gardens
SPA Trio Alabama-born soprano Susanna Phillips, Violist Paul Neubauer and Pianist Anne-Marie McDermott will perform as part of the Davis Guest Artist Series in Partnership with the Birmingham Chamber Music Society. Where: Brock Hall Brock Hall at Samford University When: 7:30 - 9 p.m.
Fri., Oct. 7
Maestro’s Ball
The Alys Stephens Center’s Jemison Concert Hall will be the setting for The Alabama Symphony Orchestra’s largest fundraiser of the year. Laura and Jesse Vogtle will host and Nick Willis is the corporate chair. When: 6 p.m. Where: Alys Stephens Center
Oct. 7-8
Jason Brown in Concert
Kick off the 2022-23 season with Broadway legend Jason Robert Brown in concert. Hailed by the Chicago Tribune for his “extraordinary, jubilant theater music,” Brown is equally skilled as a composer, lyricist, conductor, orchestrator, director and performer. When: Times vary Where: Red Mountain Theatre
Oct. 7-9
17th Barber Vintage Festival
One of the most highly anticipated motorcycle events in the world. The three-day festival features the fan zone with food and entertainment, a swap meet with hundreds of vendors selling vintage motorcycles. Bike
FALL FESTIVAL COMMUNITY NIGHT OUT | THURS., OCT. 6
The city of Vestavia Hills Police and Fire departments will host a community night out for first responders to network with local businesses, civic groups, churches, schools and community volunteers. Activities will include food, a pumpkin patch, a DJ, jump houses, kids activities, vendors and Halloween costumes are encouraged.
When: 5-8 p.m. Where: Vestavia Hills City Hall
restoration extraordinaire, motocross pioneer and AMA Motorcycle Hall of Famer Brian Slark has been named Grand Marshal Where: Barber Motorsports Park
Sat., Oct. 8
Rescue Run 5K
The Jimmie Hale Mission will host its annual runs, including a 10K, 5K and one-mile fun run followed by awards presentations. When: 7:45 a.m.
Where: Downtown Homewood
Sun., Oct. 9
Three Choirs Festival
The Birmingham Boys Choir, Birmingham Girls Choir and Sozo Children’s Choir will perform at this festival of music. When: 3 p.m.
Where: Cathedral of St. Paul
Birmingham Walking Tours
Vulcan Park and Museum will host walking tours in downtown Birmingham, featuring historical discussions. Tour will include Birmingham’s First Avenue South corridor area, once known as “Railroad Reservation” due to the convergence of multiple rail lines. When: 2-5 p.m. Where: Offsite
MBPC Fall Festival
Face painting, a bounce house, live music with Bob Marston and the Credible Sources, games, food trucks, drinks and more will be featured at the Mountain Brook Presbyterian Church Fall Festival. When: 3 p.m.
Where: Church parking lot
Oct. 12-16
“A New Brain” UAB Theatre
From the Tony Award-winning authors of “Falsettos,” here is an energetic, sardonic, often comical musical
Marlene
Cox with her son Eben at last year’s Community Night Out
Journal file photo by Jordan Wald
about a composer during a medical crisis. Contains strong language and mature themes. Where: The Sirote Theatre, Alys Stephens Center
Thurs., Oct. 13
Tacos for Trinity
The 10th annual Tacos for Trinity is a fundraiser for Trinity Counseling, with food, live music and a silent auction. Children are welcome at the event. When: 6-8 p.m. Where: Cahaba Brewing
Sat., Oct. 15
Charity Golf Tournament
Golf tournament in honor of John Wesley Holley and Brody Key aims to raise awareness of the rare genetic disorder Pitt Hopkins Syndrome and funds for the Pitt Hopkins Research Foundation. When: 8 a.m. Where: Highlands Golf Course.
Managing the Mess
The Women’s Ministry at Riverchase United Methodist Church will hold this workshop for women. Rev. Monica Harbarger, executive director at United Counseling, as guest speaker, will help participants learn ways to manage daily and seasonal feelings of being overwhelmed. When: 8:45 a.m. - 2 p.m. Where: Riverchase United Methodist Church
Little Red’s Most Unusual Day
Little Red Riding Hood is brought to life in a children’s opera performed by Opera Birmingham with music by Offenbach and Rossini. When: 10:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. Where: Avondale Amphitheater at Avondale Park
10th Annual Tall Bike Joust
Sixteen fearless jousters will mount tall bikes and compete for the crowds entertainment and the title of 2022 Tall Bike Joust champion in a
Little Hardware & IT'S TIME TO GRILL!
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fundraiser for Redemptive Cycles. When: Doors open at 6 p.m., event starts at 7 p.m. Where: Cahaba Brewing Company
Oct. 14-16 and Oct. 21-23
At Home Alabama Ballet
A home studio performance of an all-new repertoire that offers a chance to see the Alabama Ballet dancers perform in an intimate atmosphere with complimentary drinks and an affordable ticket price of $20. At Home offers the excitement of live ballet performances in the company’s studio in the Lakeview District. When: Times vary
Sun., Oct. 16
World Ballet Series: Swan Lake World Ballet Series is a unique concept combining the world’s beloved ballets performed live on the most celebrated stages across the nation. A new production of the classic ballet is choreographed by Nadezhda Kalinina. When: 6 p.m. Where: Alabama Theatre
Wed., Oct. 19
Maestro Goes to Motown Maestro Ron Bourdages leads the Young People’s Concert Orchestra and Singers performing Motown hits, presented by the Birmingham Music Club. When: 9:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. Where: Alabama Theatre
The EGG is much more than just a grill … it’s a complete outdoor cooking system engineered to be stronger, more durable and provide better heat retention than any other outdoor cooker on the market.
Oct. 20-30
Beehive: The ‘60s Musical
The show highlights songs by women who sang in the 1960s, from Connie Francis to Janis Joplin. When: Thurs., - Sat., 7:30 p.m., Sun., 2:30 p.m. Where: Virginia Samford Theatre
Thurs., Oct. 20
Stewart D. McLaurin, President of the White House Historical Association
McLaurin will speak on James Hoban, the Irish born designer and builder of the White House, and the skilled Europeans, enslaved workers, and free laborers who built the White House. He will also speak to the current/modern preservation of the White House.
Where: Brock Recital Hall at Samford University When: 7 p.m.
Barktoberfest
Fundraiser for Hand in Paw will feature local beer, fun contests and more to benefit Anna’s Fund, which defrays costs associated with volunteer training and supplies. When: 6-9 p.m. Where: Cahaba Brewing Fri., Oct 21
Harvest of Hope Guests will enjoy cocktails, music and mingling followed by a seated dinner, live and silent auctions, a brief program highlighting Cornerstone’s successes over the past school year and recognize Harvest of Hope Honoree, Ford Hamilton, and the Volunteer of the Year, Melinda Helveston. Benefits the students of Cornerstone School. When: 6:3010:00 p.m. Where: The Club
Sun., Oct. 23
Walk to Remember
As part of Perinatal Loss Month, families who have experienced infant loss are invited to join Little Ones Memory Garden volunteers for a time of reflection and healing amid the beauty of nature. This meaningful service features an information table with community resources and culminates in a walk through the Gardens. All are welcome. When: 24 p.m. Where: Birmingham Botanical Gardens
From left, Kendall Eagan, fashion show chair; Julie Goyer, Linly Heflin president; and Katherine DeBuysfashion show co-chair.
Fashion Show Set for October 12
The Linly Heflin Unit will cele brate its 63rd annual Scholarship Fashion Show on Oct. 12.
The annual cocktail gala is the pri mary fundraiser for the organization and will be held at The Club. This year’s fashion show again will be coordinated with Gus Mayer and will highlight featured designer Jonathan Simkhai. The show’s chair is Kendall Eagan, and Katherine DeBuys is the co-chair.
The Linly Heflin Unit is named in honor of Birmingham resident Linly Heflin, who helped establish a Red Cross surgical unit during World War I so that women at home could sup port the war effort. After her death in 1919, the Linly Heflin Unit was creat ed as a women’s service organization to continue her work.
In 1923, the organization began awarding scholarships to women to attend college. This year, 110 young women will receive scholarships of $10,000 per year up to four years to pursue undergraduate degrees at Alabama universities.
For more information, visit linly heflin.org.
Convenience, ease of use and fantastic cooking results truly set the EGG apart. Once you taste the difference, you’ll agree!Courtesy Linly Heflin Unit
Through Oct. 30
Pumpkin Junction
The Heart of Dixie Railroad Museum will host an old-fashioned family fun event with pumpkins for purchase, food vendors, activities and rides on the Pumpkin Junction. Where: Heart of Dixie Railroad Museum
Thurs., Oct. 13
Bone Bash
The Arthritis Foundation will host this Halloween-themed gala, featuring dinner, music, a silent auction and more, presented by Arthritis Foundation volunteers and staff. Proceeds will benefit the foundation’s research, advocacy and public health programs for those affected by arthritis. When: 6 p.m. Where: Vulcan Park & Museum
Sat., Oct. 15
Hay Hoover
The beloved annual event formerly known as Hoover Hayride and Family
Night is now a daytime free familyfriendly fall festival hosted by the City of Hoover. Kids can wear their costumes. There will be hayrides, face painting and balloon artists and local businesses will provide candy. When: 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Where: Veterans Park on Valleydale Road
Grace House Pumpkin Festival
The junior board for Grace House Ministries will present its 8th annual pumpkin festival to raise funds for the organization’s mission to provide a
home for Alabama girls in foster care. Admission will include a pumpkin, a climbing wall, carnival games, candy giveaways, and food from local vendors including the Milo’s Burger Bus. When: 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Where: Homewood Central Park
Oct. 16 through Oct. 22
Trick or Trot 5K Kid One Transport’s tenth annual run will have both in person and virtual
option. The In Person Race will occur on Oct 22rd at Back Forty Brewing. Virtual event will occur during the week of Oct. 16th. Funds raised will provide transportation to medical care for children and expectant mothers throughout Alabama. When: 8 a.m. Where: Back Forty Brewing
Fri., Oct. 28
Hocus Pocus Night Kickstart your Halloween weekend
with a night of Hocus Poucs fun at O’Neal Library. Fun teen event afterhours library party filled with spooky beverages, pumpkin painting, and an interactive movie activity. Free food and supplies will be provided. Costumes are encouraged. When: 58 p.m. Where: O’Neal Library
Sat., Oct. 29
Ross Bridge Witches Ride Lineup starts at 10:30 a.m. at The Church parking lot, Witches take flight at 11 a.m. and ends at Hometown Fare for brunch apps and drinks. Tickets are required for all riders and passengers. Prizes awarded for best decorated broom (one bike and one cart) and best dressed witch. Benefits Hope for Autumn Foundation Where: Ross Bridge community.
Sun., Oct. 30
Bluff Park Witches Ride Get ready to fly (ride) through the street tossing out cackles and candy. Witches meet in the park behind Bluff Park Elementary school, “fly” through the neighborhood. and end at the new Piggly Wiggly Shopping Center, where there will be more opportunity for fun, food, drinks, and more. Benefits The Wellhouse. When: 4 p.m. - 7 p.m.
LOOK FOR MORE FALL FUN IN OUR OCT. 20 ISSUE!
Three Homewood businesses were named Retailer of the Year by the Alabama Retail Association, and another was named as a Centennial Business on Sept. 21, according to press releases from the association and the Homewood Chamber of Commerce.
Cookie Fix was awarded the Gold Retailer of the Year award in the Annual Sales $1 Million to $5 Million category.
“We believe in having the best product that fills a niche, providing the best customer service with a warm and engaging customer experience, and building a team that goes ‘above and beyond’ and strives for constant and never-ending excellence in every thing we do,” Cookie Fix founder Amy Jason said. “I am thankful for our awesome Cookie Fix customers and our amazing team that makes this dream happen every day.”
GOOD BUSINESS
Homewood Businesses Honored as State Retailers of the Year
“What stuck with me was Cookie Fix’s benevolence and creative sales growth,” noted one of the Retailer of the Year judges.
The company serves fresh baked cookies, bars, seasonal desserts and Frozen Dough to Go, as well as com plimentary baking accessories such as Dough Maker baking sheets and small iron skillets for baking cookies and desserts at home.
Cookie Fix has three retail loca tions, including company-owned stores in Homewood and Cahaba Heights and a franchise in Huntsville. Cookie Fix also operates a production facility in Hoover, and the company’s Frozen Dough to Go products are in four specialty markets in Alabama and one in Georgia. The company has been recognized by Southern Living magazine, the Food Network and numerous other media outlets.
Two other Homewood businesses also were recognized with Retailer of the Year awards.
At Home, Susan Gordon Pottery Awarded
Babbie Styslinger, owner of At Home Furnishings, a furniture, home décor, clothing and accessory retailer, is Alabama’s Bronze Retailer of the Year in the Annual Sales $5 Million to $20 Million category.
Styslinger founded At Home Furnishings 30 years ago on 18th Street South, because she said there were no locally owned furniture stores in the area at the time. The Alabama Retailer of the Year judges noted that Styslinger and her staff used ecommerce and social media during the height of the pandemic to stay relevant and keep serving its cus tomers.
Susan Gordon, founder, chief cre ator and owner of Susan Gordon Pottery, is the Bronze Alabama Retailer of the Year in the Annual Sales $1 Million to $5 Million catego ry.
Gordon’s store offers handmade
pottery in the form of bowls, vases, dishes, serveware, picture frames and seasonal Christmas décor, as well as ceramic jewelry and framed intaglios.
She began selling her pottery online and at festivals in 2013. She first sold to consumers through Etsy, then in 2019 she began selling to con sumers directly from her website. She now operates a store front in Homewood.
“This is a proud moment for all of us here at SGP,” Gordon said. “I want to thank our loyal customers, who keep coming back to purchase with us and help support a team of 30 won derful, gifted artisans.”
Shaia’s, Ashley Mac Recognized
Shaia’s was recognized as an Alabama Centennial Retailer in cele bration of its 100th year in business. J.L. and Ken Shaia represent the third and fourth generation to operate Shaia’s. Both worked alongside their
father and grandfather at some point in their tenures.
“For a business to survive the dra matic changes of the past century is a remarkable achievement. It is fitting to celebrate the enduring first-century contributions Shaia’s has made to Homewood and the surrounding com munities,” Alabama Retail Association President Rick Brown said.
Ashley Mac’s, with five Birmingham-area locations, was named Gold Retailer of the Year in the Annual Sales $5 Million to $20 Million category on Sept. 7.
The Alabama Retailer of the Year awards, started in 1999, honor retail ers who have demonstrated growth, innovation and a commitment to their respective communities. This year’s winners were selected from 42 entries submitted from a pool of 55 nomi nees; 11 businesses were honored as 2022 Retailers of the Year, with Homewood boasting the most winners of any city this year.
Mayors’ Domestic Violence Forum to Focus on Dating Violence
A domestic violence awareness forum set for Oct. 18 and hosted by Over the Mountain mayors has been moved to Vestavia Hills City Hall, Cinnamon McCulley, the city’s direc tor of communications, said.
The forum, “Protecting our Teens and Young Adults from Dating Violence,” is being moved from the Vestavia Hills Civic Center due to
delays in its opening.
Presenters will include LaRhonda Magras, CEO, YWCA Central Alabama; Allison Dearing, executive director, One Place Metro Alabama Family Justice Center; Cleola Callahan, senior director of Domestic Violence Services, YWCA Central Alabama; and Susann MontgomeryClark and Rod Clark, founding donors
of the Megan Montgomery Domestic Violence Prevention Fund at The Community Foundation of Greater Birmingham.
Vestavia Hills Mayor Ashley Curry, along with Mountain Brook Mayor Stewart Welch, Hoover Mayor Frank Brocato and Homewood Mayor Patrick McClusky are hosting the free event.
The forum, “Protecting our Teens and Young Adults from Dating Violence,” is being moved from the Vestavia Hills Civic Center due to delays in its opening.
Photos courtesy Homewood Chamber of CommerceOpening Celebration Savings
Opening
HEALTH
Her Story
A Postponed Mammogram Might Have Made the Difference Between Living and Dying, Cancer Survivor Says
Sally May of Homewood was 53 years old when she was diagnosed with breast cancer. Now 57, she and her husband, Ben May, who works for ESPN and the SEC Network, are the parents of two grown sons, Benjamin and Andrew, who live in Atlanta.
Here, she shares her cancer story.
ONE OF MY EARLIEST CHILDHOOD memories is waiting outside of my dying grandmother’s bedroom while my parents stood at her bedside. She battled breast cancer long before we knew about early detection and cancer typing.
In my early 20s, I had three benign breast tumors surgically removed.
One of my sisters, at the age of 40, was diagnosed with Stage 1 breast cancer.
In my late 40s, I detected a lump through self-examina tion. After a mammogram and an ultra sound, the spot was labeled a mass. By this point in life, I had learned to brace myself for yearly mammo grams, aware of my increased risk based on family history.
Biannual ultrasounds were prescribed to monitor the fibroid.
At age 53, I told my gyn that I feared the lump had grown in size; the mammogram detected a large tumor. More testing led to diagnosis: Stage 3 estrogen/progesterone posi
tive breast cancer with lymph node involvement.
I’ve been in the interior design business most of my adult life. I love the creative process and enjoy longterm client friendships. When I was diagnosed with breast cancer, my first instinct was to put my career on the back burner. However, a dear friend who preceded me in fighting breast cancer, advised me to continue working at a reduced pace.
Thankfully, she understood that staying engaged with people would likely play a vital role in my well-being.
My family, friends and cli ents surrounded me with love and support in ways that made the journey a surprisingly sweet season.
When science looks you square in the eye and says “Stage 3 cancer,” your true values become crystal clear. My faith in God and my relationships with people rose to the top.
My clients extended flexibility to tackle design needs on my good days
and the luxury to rest on bad days. My friends made a schedule of escort ing me to treatment, which they enti tled: Sally’s Spa Days.
Staying engaged with people and creating beauty were healthy distrac tions for me. It’s natural for health to become a consuming preoccupation when you’re given a diagnosis; how ever, relationships carried me over dark days. Numerous kindnesses, which I considered “daily manna,” looked like my favorite coffee order,
cards drawn with crayons and flowers left at my door.
I went to St. Vincent’s for treat ment. We have always used St. Vincent’s doctors. My St. Vincent’s gyn and several physician friends paved the way for my first oncology consultation with Dr. John Piede.
At my initial appointment, Dr. Piede looked right in my eyes while confidently explaining the path for ward. I instinctively knew that he was the person I wanted to guide my fight.
My treatment included five months of chemo … a bilateral mas tectomy … eight weeks of radiation … and reconstruction surgery. A team brought their medical expertise to the equation and caringly walked me through each step.
I am forever indebted to Dr. John Piede, Dr. Susan Saulter, Dr. Tim Bullock and Dr. Al Cohn. Each indi vidual at the Bruno Cancer Center, from the lab techs to the nurses to the valet drivers showed true kind ness and I thought, “Oh wow, these people were made for this.”
Of course, my husband, Ben, was my biggest side-line encourager. There were times when I stayed in the bed all day, but the haul felt bear able with him by my side.
However, an unexpected “plot twist” came when he decided that our leaf-covered yard needed some attention, too. I knew he had gone outside to blow leaves but never imagined that he might tackle the roof. A horrible-sounding “thud” led to me finding Ben, who had fallen 20 feet from the roof onto the concrete driveway.
Our dearest neighbors quickly came to my aid as the harsh reality set in that my biggest supporter had been sidelined. Miraculously, he suf fered no head or spinal-cord injuries, but complex breaks in multiple bones required numerous surgeries, weeks of rehab and three months of con finement to a wheelchair.
A hard season of suffering had just gotten harder. Since my immuni ties were depleted, I could not stay at the hospital with my husband. Our boys immediately came home. In an epic role-reversal, Benjamin and Andrew stepped in and heroically alternated between staying with their father in the trauma center and their mother in chemotherapy.
Ben and I simultaneously experi enced the fragility of life and health and the blessing of living in a worldclass medical community. While life is cursed with disease and accidents, there are steps we can take toward preserving our health such as routine screenings and life-style choices. In my case, a postponed mammogram might have differentiated between a treatable versus a terminal diagnosis.
Cancer Doctor Recommends Mammograms, Shares Tips for Lessening Cancer Risk
By Anne RuisiDr. John Piede, Sally May’s oncologist at Ascension St. Vincent’s Birmingham, can’t stress enough how strategies for early detection of breast cancer are crucial to preven tive care, including mammograms and monthly self-exams.
A woman’s first mammogram should happen at age 35, he said.
“If it’s completely, normal, you can have the next one at 40. If not,
you must follow up appropriately,” Piede said.
Breast cancer is among the top three most prevalent cancers, which also include lung and colon cancer. The odds of developing breast cancer is 1 in 8, or an average of 13%. What can women do to decrease their risk?
Obesity is a risk factor, so main taining a low-fat, low-carb diet and good exercise program are important.
Piede also advises women to stay
away from estrogen products, adding that alcohol and tobacco use can affect health.
When a woman is diagnosed with
breast cancer, she might hear stories about others’ experiences from fami ly members or friends. She should keep in mind that “every case is dif ferent. There is no way to generalize diagnosis or prognosis,” Piede said.
“It’s a very complicated disease to diagnose and treat, but we have had tremendous success with treat ment and to prevent it from coming back,” he said. “We do have high cure rates for breast cancer these days.”
‘Every case is different. There is no way to generalize diagnosis or prognosis.’
DR. JOHN PIEDE
‘Of course, my husband, Ben, was my biggest side-line encourager. There were times when I stayed in the bed all day, but the haul felt bearable with him by my side.’
SALLY AND BEN MAY ABOVE
Forge’s Haute Pink Fashion Show Shines Light on Breast Cancer Patients and Survivors
Forge Breast Cancer Survivor Center is returning Oct. 12 with its Haute Pink Fashion Show to focus a spotlight on the 1 in 8 women and 1 in 100 men in Alabama diagnosed with breast cancer.
The show will feature 10 of Forge’s clients, volunteers and friends modeling custom fashions created for them by 10 Birmingham-area design ers, according to a statement from the organization. It is designed to inspire, honor and remember those affected by breast cancer during Breast Cancer Awareness Month.
Funds raised will go toward Forge’s mission to improve the quali ty of life for Alabama breast cancer patients, survivors, their caregivers and loved ones.
“Last year’s show was not only a fun night but an important night for our models to feel empowered and
PINK
From page one
the race there will be music, refresh ments and children’s activities, including face painting, a petting zoo and an inflatable obstacle course until 5 p.m.
To register or get more informa tion, go to bcrfa.org/events/putp.
The show will feature 10 of Forge’s clients, volunteers and friends model ing custom fashions created for them by 10 Birmingham-area designers, including Kenya Buchanan, above.
seen. The energy in the room was magical, and we can’t wait to see this year’s 10 models and designers take the runway at The Fennec,” Executive
Fire departments around the state are teaming up once again for the Pink Ribbon Project T-shirt cam paign, which raises money for breast cancer research in Alabama and the Breast Cancer Research Foundation of Alabama.
Participating fire departments, including Hoover and Pelham, are selling limited edition T-shirts. Shortsleeve shirts are $15 and long-sleeve
Director Lauren Roberts said in the statement. “We will celebrate every one in the room who has been diag nosed with breast cancer. So put on your pink and help us raise funds to make sure those impacted by the dis ease are supported – mind, body and spirit.”
Tickets are $75 and can be pur chased through the Forge website at hautepink.swell.gives. The ticket includes signature drink tickets, heavy hors d’oeuvres and desserts prepared by Tre Luna Catering and Seasons 52.
The night’s signature cocktail and mocktail is the Prickly Pear margarita created by Sol y Luna. Entertainment will be provided by DJ Coco. This year’s event emcee is Will Lochamy of Birmingham Mountain Radio. There will also be an on-site raffle of exclusive items from local artisans and businesses.
shirts are $20.
The Pink Ribbon Project was offi cially launched in 2011 and since then has raised more than $580,000. Community members and businesses are encouraged to visit a local partici pating fire station, buy a Pink Ribbon Project T-shirt and take a photo with the firefighters. Check on the founda tion’s social media, @BCRFAlabama, if you are interested in being featured.
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Date: Aug. 19
This is your AD PROOF from the OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL for the Aug. 25, 2022 issue.
important for women to get a yearly mammogram, beginning at age 40. And if you have a mother, sister or other close relative who has been diagnosed with breast cancer, ask your doctor at Ascension St. Vincent’s if you should schedule a screening even earlier.
St. Vincent’s,
imaging that’s right for you, including:
More than 500 monarch and painted lady butterflies flitted through the air during the Norma Livingston Ovarian Cancer Foundation’s Together in Teal Butterfly Release at Aldridge Gardens on Sept. 18.
The flutter of the butterflies’ wings represented how the signs of ovarian cancer can seem so slight. But the repercussions can be life changing, and guests during an afternoon event at the garden’s pavilion honored the women whose lives have been affect ed by ovarian cancer.
Live music by Wellington Avenue was featured and there were vendor displays and educational booths to help guests increase their awareness of the disease’s risks, symptoms and treatments.
Above, Ben and Silivia Barnwell. Below, Ruby, Jessica and Joel Shults.
Below left, Isaac, Jacob and Faith Bruner.
Head Over
Laura Crandall Brown 5K/10K Races
The Laura Crandall Brown Foundation held its annual Head Over Teal 5K/10K race on Sept. 24 at The Preserve in Hoover.
This was the 13th year for the event, which is held in September during Gynecologic Cancer Awareness Month. After the race, par ticipants and supporters took part in fall-themed family fun activities and partook of food and beverages.
The event raises funds to provide programs for women who have gyne cologic cancer and their caregivers.
Above, Katlyn, Erica and Lindsay Gappa. Above right, Stephanie Walker and Jim, Emma and Cecilia Crandall. Left, Irene Goddard, Romona Graffeo, Betsy Fetner, Dianne Baer and Cheryl Bourn.
Over Teal Foundation Sponsors
Races in Hoover
The foundation focuses on early detection research, awareness educa tion and support services.
Since it was founded in 2009, the Laura Crandall Brown Foundation has granted more than $605,000 for ovari an cancer early detection research and educated tens of thousands in the community on prevention information and signs and symptoms. It also has provided emotional, educational and more than $200,000 in direct financial support to thousands of gynecological cancer patients and their families.
We’ll help your new family get off to a beautiful start
If you’re pregnant or trying to become pregnant, we know you have questions. The physicians at Grandview Obstetrics & Gynecology are here to help answer them –and with new providers, including Benjamin Rauh, D.O., it’s easier than ever to make an appointment. From nutrition and exercise to birth plans and post-delivery support, we are trained and focused on giving you personalized maternity care. And, we’re proud to deliver at The Birthing Center at Grandview Medical Center.
appointment, call 205-946-0856
Grandview
Artwork Inspired by Women
Charles Billingsley Performs for Portraits of Hope By Anne RuisiNoted Christian singer Charles Billingsley is the headliner of a Nov. 3 concert at Samford University Wright Center featuring the Alabama Symphony Orchestra.
faith-based residential center for women recovering from addiction.
Beverly McNeil of Mountain Brook, who represents artists, is the originator. Her husband, John McNeil, is Lovelady’s COO, and she wanted some of her artists to paint portraits of the women at Lovelady.
“The artists painted the portraits during the pandemic,” McNeil said. “They did it by live sittings, Facetime, Zoom and photos.”
The women pictured wrote their stories to go with the portraits, where they describe their own personal experiences with addiction and of how their lives were transformed through recovery.
The portraits and stories were pub lished in March in a book titled “Portraits of Hope.” The website Portraitsofhope.charity offers a closer look at the book.
Presented by the Samford University Wright Center and Portraits of Hope, the 7 p.m. concert is a departure for Billingsley as it’s an evening of American standards and classics with songs from his recently released album, “The Shadow of Your Smile.”
Portraits of Hope is a collection of original artworks inspired by the women of the Lovelady Center, a
The concert came about after McNeil contacted the ASO and Samford University Wright Center, she said Billingsley is a Samford alumnus, and the Wright Center was happy to make its facilities available. In fact, 20% of the concert’s ticket sales are earmarked for the universi ty’s arts department.
For concert tickets, go to tickets. samford.edu.
We
tirelessly
Soaring Strings
Niv Ashkenazi Brings History to Life on a Violin of Hope
The theme from “Schindler’s List” resonated from the violin played by virtuoso Niv Ashkenazi on the stage at Birmingham’s Red Mountain Theater, producing the heartrending music that won composer John Williams an Oscar.
Ashkenazi’s performance was not only a highlight of L’Chaim, the Sept. 18 program from the Alabama Holocaust Education Center. It was an opportunity to hear an incredibly gift ed musician perform on a violin once played by a Jewish survivor of the Holocaust.
“The best they can figure out is it was owned by a survivor who made it to the U.S. It was probably made in Yugoslavia around the turn of the 20th century. It was one of the first restored,” said Ashkenazi, referring to the collection of instruments known as Violins of Hope.
That restoration was done by Avnon and Avshalom Weinstein, a father- and-son team who work in Tel Aviv and Istanbul. These special vio lins were owned by Jews before and during World War II, according to the Weinsteins’ website, violins-of-hope. com. Many were donated by or bought from survivors or through family members.
A Violins of Hope documentary screened during the L’Chaim program introduced the standing-room-only audience to the Weinsteins and their efforts to preserve the precious instru ments. One of the violins in the col lection was buried by two sisters in The Netherlands during the war and dug up after it ended.
“Some played to survive the war, some were forced to play in the camps even as their family members and others walked to their deaths,” Avshalom Weinstein says in the docu mentary.
The violins are symbols of hope and a way to remember those who
perished and to honor those who sur vived. The Weinsteins’ website notes the violins “present the victory of the human spirit over evil and hatred.”
Significant Marks
Ashkenazi’s violin is embellished on the reverse with a Star of David in mother of pearl, indicating it’s a klezmer violin. Klezmer refers to a style of Jewish folk music from Central and Eastern Europe, but it also refers to the decoration on the instruments. Ashkenazi noted Stars of David were just one type of embel lishments that might be found.
“It’s always very special playing this violin, or any in the collection,” said Ashkenazi, who studied with Itzhak Perlman. “It lets the silenced voice be heard again, as well as the (original) owner of the instrument.”
Gail and Jeffrey Bayer, L’Chaim
honorary co-chairs, went to Tel Aviv in May and met the Weinsteins, and spoke of their experience.
“It’s a history that must be remem bered,” Gail Bayer said.
An Enchanted Story
By Anne RuisiWhat began in 1947 as a Junior League volunteer project to bring a theater experience to Birmingham children is today a professional the ater company that has entertained generations of school-age children.
Birmingham Children’s Theatre is celebrating its 75th anniversary with a
1920s-themed gala benefit, An Enchanted Evening, on Oct 13 at The Fennec.
“It was very much a grassroots effort,” Carolyn Featheringill said of the organization’s early days. Her mother-in-law, Nita Featheringill, was one of the founders.
It was just a few years after the end of World War II when Junior
League members decided on a project that would concentrate on children and introducing them to live theater, Featheringill said.
“Family lore says they made the costumes and traveled around (the Birmingham area) to bring theater to them,” Featheringill, a member of the organization’s board of directors, said.
At times, family members even pitched in to help when needed. In the early 1970s, Featheringill’s husband, who was 6 feet, 6 inches tall, was recruited by his mother to play the giant in a production of “The Brave Little Tailor.”
The first performance was at Philips High School, said Ashley Woods, Birmingham Children’s Theatre executive director. In the first 20 years, the group performed at the Alabama Theatre and Clark Memorial Theatre and was based at the Highland Park Recreation Center for a while.
In 1972, during the theater compa ny’s 25th anniversary season, a fire at
the Highland Park Recreation Center destroyed everything, with two shows left to finish the season, Woods said. By then, there were paid staff and paid actors, and the troupe was scal ing up to larger productions.
Today, Birmingham Children’s Theatre is a fully professional theater company for young audiences, Woods said.
As in its early days, performances are given around Birmingham and have expanded throughout the state, but the theater company is based at the Birmingham-Jefferson Civic Center.
There are eight staged productions a year, with shows directed at children from the toddler years to middle school. “Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star,” which ended its run in late September, for example, is geared to toddlers and is an interactive production incorporat ing movement, play and discovery, Woods said.
While toddlers might seem too young to enjoy theater, they really aren’t, she said.
“It’s a great gateway to get kids
involved” in theater, she said. “It’s a new experience.”
The organization’s nine full-time staff members include the theater group’s Education Department, which conducts after-school classes and sum mer camps, among other responsibili ties. They also offer professional development to educators, Woods said.
One new production that will be performed in March next year is “Miss Fancy: Elephant Queen of the Zoo,” a play based on the elephant who
charmed and delighted Birmingham children in the early part of the 20th century.
The play was commissioned in 2019 but its production was delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Woods said.
“We’re excited to be part of it,” she said.
An Enchanted Evening will include dinner, jazz and performances. For more information or to buy tickets, go to bct123.org/enchanted-evening.
SOCIAL
GALA IN THE GARDENS
in the Gardens Returns With Gala and Programs
An evening of dancing and cock tails under the stars awaited guests at the Birmingham Botanical Gardens’ Gala in the Gardens fundraiser on Sept. 29.
The event, sponsored by Cooper Construction, kicked off the annual Antiques in the Gardens show, which ran through Oct. 2. It’s a premier antiques event that features nationally and internationally known designers and landscape architects and draws visitors from throughout the Southeast.
Gala guests passed through a spe cial garden entrance created by Millhouse Howell. Honored at the gala
longtime botanical gardens
porters Maggie and Will Brooke.
Theresa Miller and Steve HolmesArtistic
Horizon Bank presented Dinnertainment, a fundraiser for The Exceptional Foundation, on Sept. 16.
event, a dinner party billed as
night of exceptional entertain ment by exceptional people,” featured foundation participants who showcased their talents through a variety of musical performances
displays of their artistic abilities.
Exceptional Foundation was founded in 1993 to serve individu als with special needs in the Greater Birmingham area by targeting social and recreational objectives not met by educational institutions
the community
Symphony 30 Picnic
Symphony Takes Its Outreach Mission to the Botanical Gardens
The Birmingham Botanical Gardens was the setting for the Alabama Symphony Orchestra’s Symphony 30 Picnic.
The benefit for the ASO’s outreach mission in Birmingham’s communities featured a buffet picnic from Urban Cookhouse. The symphony performed a selection of music geared to fami lies.
Youngsters could enjoy a kids zone
Rehab Reality...
by Judy ButlerAddiction is a disease
“Addiction runs in my family”, “my father was an alcoholic”, “my mother suffered from depres sion” and so on. In the mind of many people with addiction this is real and they are predisposed to have the same problems. In the world of science it’s not necessar ily true. In the world of insurance it’s questionable.
At Bayshore Retreat, we don’t judge or have an opinion either way. There are many arguments for the disease concept and still others for it being a controllable behavior. One thing is certain that continued use of mind-altering substances does affect the brain and decision-making. This is es pecially true for those who begin in adolescence while the brain is still developing. For instance as one continues to use drugs, the brain adapts to the surges in dopamine by producing less dopa mine or by reducing the number of dopamine receptors in the reward circuit. Finally, resulting a need for more and more drugs. Long-term use also cause changes in other functions of the brain… pain receptors, etc. therefore requiring more drugs to satisfy the need or suppress the pain, ulti mately resulting with addiction.
Ok, so that’s more than you may have wanted to know. Bot tom line, whether you believe that you have a disease or not, believe that there is a cure for it. The holistic approach at Bay shore Retreat begins the healing process physically with sweat therapy, food and vitamins. The varied forms of counseling from individual, to life skills and group sessions help our clients get to the unaddressed issues. The transfor mation that takes place physically, self-esteem, etc. is remarkable.
Most importantly there’s never more than six clients at a time.
Beyond Blue
Doctor Honored at Event for Prostate Cancer Research
Dr. Edward Partridge was the hon oree at the Beyond Blue benefit to end prostate cancer on Sept. 22 at the Protective Life Stadium Club.
Partridge – a former clinician, past president of the national board of the American Cancer Society and director emeritus and distinguished professor at the O’Neal Comprehensive Cancer Center at UAB – is a founding board member of the Mike Slive Foundation. The foundation is the only dedicated prostate cancer nonprofit organiza tion in the Southeast.
Guests partook of cocktails, hors d’oeuvres and music by Eric Essix and his jazz trio. Silent and live auc tions were filled with sports memo rabilia
other
Men’s Hall of Fame
Two Inducted to HOF During Women’s Committee of 100 Ceremony
Where every detail and every moment
The Women’s Committee of 100 held the induction ceremony of the Alabama Men’s Hall of Fame on Sept. 20 during a luncheon at The Club.
Women’s Committee of 100 President Amy Schofield welcomed Chairman Lonnie Burnett and mem bers of the board of the Hall of Fame, committee members and guests.
Inducted into the Alabama Men’s Hall of Fame were Gov. Charles Henderson, 1860-1937, who served as the 35th governor of Alabama from 1915 to 1919, presented by Dr. Martin Olliff; and U.S. District Judge Thomas Virgil Pittman, 19162012, who served as chief judge of the Southern District Court from 1971 to 1981, presented by Frank S. James.
Dignitaries recognized at the lun cheon were former Sen. Doug Jones, District Judge Sharon Blackburn and Ambassador William Cabaniss.
Members of the Women’s Committee of 100 include Ann Vroacher, Amy Scofield, Barbara Shepherd, Becky Keyes, Stephanie Byrne, Molly Bee Bloctcher, Pam Wood, Jean Liles, Annie Green, Irene Collins, Rebecca Mason, Kathy Miller, Audrey Lindquist, Eloise Williams, Carla Roberson, Nan Teninbaum, Carolyn Satterfield, Jeanna Westmoreland, Helen Mills Pittman, Donna Dukes,
Anna Williams, Monique Witherspoon, Nelda Pugh, Dorothy McDaniel, Angela Comfort, Jeanie Box, Dottie Hoover, Amy Tully, Rebeka Taylor and Lisa Roberts.
LEGAL NOTICE
In accordance with the Code of Ala bama, 1975, notice is hereby given that CB&A Construction, LLC, has completed the contract for Hagood Street Sidewalk Project TAPBHTA19(930), and has made request for final settlement of said contract. All persons having any claim for labor, materials, or otherwise in connection with this project should immediately notify City Hall – City of Mountain Brook, 56 Church Street, Mountain Brook, AL 35213-3700. ATTN: City Manager/Purchasing Agent.
When it comes to comfortable living and compassionate care, we’ve thought of everything. The empowering lifestyle at The Crossings allows residents to embrace all our community has to offer — including chef-prepared, all-day dining, life-enriching programs, as well as beautiful and inviting surroundings. And with our newly opened health services neighborhoods, our nurturing staff is committed to helping residents continue living full and vibrant lives so they and the ones they love can enjoy the moments that truly matter.
experience our unique difference and be among the first to see it for yourself. Call 205-210-8969 today.
The ReFrame Party
Summit Meeting
ruled the roost, or rather, a parking lot area at The Summit, at the Sept. 17 Fido Fest to benefit and cele brate dogs.
The area near REI Co-op was filled with pet vendors along with arts and entertainment for animal lovers and their leashed pets. Proceeds bene fited the Greater Birmingham Humane Society.
Nostalgic
A pregame performance and a major announcement at halftime set the tone for the Homewood High School Patriot Band’s 50th Anniversary Reunion on Sept. 23.
Former band members joined the marching band in the perfor mance, held before kickoff at Waldrop Stadium as the Patriots played Pinson Valley. Alumni were treated to a barbecue dinner provided by Two Men and a Pig under a pavilion at the end of the stands near the scoreboard during the first quarter of the game.
At halftime, it was announced that the Patriot Band had been selected to march in next year’s St. Patrick’s Day Parade in Dublin.
“This is a huge opportunity for our students,” band Director Chris Cooper said. “The St. Patty’s Day Parade is a worldwide parade, and we will be marching with music groups from all around the globe.”
The Patriot Band is the largest high school marching band in the state and has appeared in many nationally televised parades, includ ing nine appearances in the Macy’s Day Thanksgiving Parade. The Patriots are not strangers to the St. Patrick’s Day Parade either. The
band marched in Dublin in 1993 and 1997.
Reunion activities continued Sept. 24 with a tour of the high school’s new band room and fine arts facility, with lunch and a video/slideshow presentation of the band’s 50 years.
Edgewood Principal to Be Honored by Music Educators
Her support of innovative music programs has earned Edgewood Elementary School Principal Laura Tate the 2023 Outstanding Administrator Award by the Alabama Music Educators Association.
“I was really surprised and excited,” said Tate, who didn’t know that school music teacher Sadie Wall had nominated her for the honor.
Tate was recognized for her strong support of the school’s music program, which, beyond regular music instruction, includes a choir and drum circle. Wall is the person who proposed the programs, as well as a Fine Arts Night that invites students’ families to join them in playing music.
“I’m really thankful and grateful to Sadie for all she does,” Tate said. “I’m really lucky to have an innovative, smart teacher. It’s an honor to support her.”
The state Music Educators Association honors outstanding administrators who have shown a special interest and dedication to music
Altamont Student Named Young Hero for Work With Homeless
Altamont School seventh grader
Ethan Hill has been named a winner of the 2022 Gloria Barron Prize for Young Heroes, according to a press release from the school.
The Barron Prize annually honors 25 outstanding young leaders in the U.S. who have made a significant positive impact on people, their communities and the environment. Fifteen top winners, of which Ethan was one, each receive $10,000 to support their service work or higher education.
Ethan, 12, created Ethan’s Heart Bags4Blessings to support individuals experiencing homelessness in Birmingham. Since 2017, he and his team have packed and distributed nearly 2,000 survival care bags containing items such as a sleeping bag, cold weather clothing, first aid supplies, food and hygiene products. He works to develop relationships with the people he serves and to refer them to shelters and support services.
Most days on his way home from school, Ethan and his parents drive around area parks and homeless camps to check on the estimated 300 people living there. When needed, they provide essentials from a supply kept in their car or return later to help with specific requests. Ethan also partners with local police, who carry his duffel bags and supplies in patrol cars to distribute in areas unsafe for Ethan to visit. Corporate sponsors and individual donors support his work.
education in Alabama.
“We are thankful for our schools’ strong music programs and for our amazing music teachers and supportive
Each December, he organizes more than 100 volunteers from across the state to pack hundreds of duffel bags. The next morning, his team serves breakfast in a local park and distributes the supplies.
Ethan has also aided a homeless veteran in transitioning to permanent housing and has partnered with a company that makes cots, offering them for free to the people he serves. He began his work as a 6-year-old after noticing a homeless man, whom he now knows as Mr. Marcus, living under a freeway. Ethan researched “emergency needs of homeless individuals,” used his Christmas money to purchase essential items and gave them to Mr. Marcus and others living nearby.
“Those without addresses are disregarded, criminalized and judged, but they’re people who want to be seen, loved and supported,” Ethan said in the press release. “I don’t focus on why a person became homeless. I just look at what I can do to make life a little easier for them.”
Ethan is using his prize money to finish converting a trailer into a free mobile store for the homeless.
The Barron Prize was founded in 2001 by author T.A. Barron and was named for his mother, Gloria Barron. Since then, the prize has honored more than 500 young people who demonstrate heroic qualities such as courage, compassion and perseverance as they work to help their communities or protect the planet.
“Nothing is more inspiring than stories about heroic people who have truly made a difference to the world. And we need our heroes today more than ever,” T.A. Barron said in the press release. “Not celebrities, but heroes – people whose character can inspire us all. That is the purpose of the Barron Prize: to shine the spotlight on these amazing young people so that their stories will inspire others.”
administrators,” a Homewood City Schools press release stated.
While the state does not require music education in elementary schools, Homewood does have music instruction in its three K-5 schools, Tate noted.
Fourth graders at Edgewood, for example, learn to play the recorder and the school has a “wonderful” selection of instruments, she said.
Music is an important component in a school curriculum, Tate said. It’s a discipline that helps students develop focus, for example, and enriches their education.
“Our philosophy in Homewood for an educated student is to maximize their full potential,” she said.
Although the award has been announced, it won’t be presented until after New Year’s. That will happen Jan. 19, when Tate will receive it during the annual Alabama Music Educators Association Professional Development Conference at the BirminghamJefferson Convention Complex.
Hoover Career Connection Center Recognized by Governor
Hoover City Schools Riverchase Career Connection Center has been selected as a Regional Best Practice School by the governor’s office, according to a press release from Hoover City Schools.
This distinction is awarded to career training programs throughout the state that demonstrate the diverse ways work-based learning is being used.
This recognition puts the center in the running for the Governor’s WorkBased Learning Seal of Excellence. Dr. Debra Walker Smith, Hoover City Schools executive director of career and technical education, was surprised and excited about the designation and said it was the result of a team effort.
The center focuses on college and career readiness and soft skills. It serves students at Hoover, Spain Park and Homewood high schools.
“I am very proud that people outside of our school district recognize the quality of our work,” Smith said.
The center focuses on college and career readiness and soft skills. It’s five career training academies are Skilled Trades, Cyber Innovation, Culinary and Hospitality, Fire Science and Emergency Services and Health Science.
The Career Connection Center, which is at 853 Willow Oak Drive in Hoover, opened in 2019 and is a high-tech career center with simulated workspaces. The facility is made possible through a collaboration among education leaders, city officials, and business and industry partners.
It serves students at Hoover, Spain Park and Homewood high schools.
FOOD
By Anne RuisiHomemade savory food and sweets based on recipes handed down through four generations of Birmingham’s Greek community will draw about 30,000 people to the 49th annual Greek Food Festival at the Holy Trinity-Holy Cross Greek Orthodox Cathedral Oct 13-15.
“It’s our expression of comfort and love,” said Fanoula Gulas, president of the church’s Philoptoches Society, a women’s philanthropy group. “Hospitality is important to our culture.”
Sonthe Burge, a longtime parishioner in charge of baking koulourakia butter cookies, agreed.
“We love to cook,” said longtime parishioner Sonthe Burge. “This is a way to share our heri tage, culture and faith with the community.
Menu offerings for the 10,000 people expect ed each day will include longtime favorites, such as souvlakia, pastichio, Greek chicken, spano kopeta (spinach pie), dolmathes (stuffed grape leaves), Greek rice, veggie plates, Greek salad and gyros. Greek pastries on hand will include baklava; kourambethes, also known as Greek wedding cookies; melomakarana, a Greek honey cookie; and koulourakia, or butter cookie twists.
As they have for nearly 50 years, church members prepare most of the food in the church kitchen.
“We do all the baking, the pastries and the pastichio,” Gulas said, referring to the popular casserole dish sometimes called “Greek lasagna,” made with Greek-style bechamel sauce instead of the tomato sauce Italians use to make the signa ture dish.
Baking is a major project involving hundreds of pounds of ingredients and hours of prepara tion.
Burge has overseen the volunteers baking koulourakia, a butter cookie, for 30 years. After mixing ingredients, the dough is hand rolled, cut in strips and twisted before it’s baked.
“We make more than 1,000 dozen each year, probably 1,100 dozen this year,” Burge said.
Volunteers started making baklava in June and continued with cookies at regular baking sessions they call workshops. Sweets were baked in batches. Each batch of koulourakia, Burge said, calls for about 7 pounds of flour and makes 21 dozen cookies.
Burge also helped to make other cook ies and the pastichio, which is prepared in advance.
Constant Cooking
While the pastries and cookies are prepared months ahead of time, the rest of the food, such as Greek chicken, rice and green beans with tomatoes, is prepared fresh every day during the festival, said Pete Graphos, a Crestline resident who has been the festival’s kitchen manager for the past 15 or 20 years.
“Last year we cooked 13,000 pieces of chicken, 500 pans of pastichio – each pan has 24 servings. That’s 10,000 servings,” Graphos said.
About 20,000 dolmathes, or stuffed grape leaves, were served last year and rice was cooked in two 50-pound batches every hour.
The Greek chicken is marinated in lemon juice, butter and seasonings for 24 hours before it is cooked for an hour in one of the church kitch en’s eight convection ovens, Graphos said. Each
From left, Teresa Petelos, Tony Petelos and Irene Tracy hard at work pre paring for the upcoming Greek Food Festival. Below, Finley Evans and Hala Valekis.
‘We Love to Cook’
13,000 Pieces of Chicken, 10,000 Servings of Pastichio, 20,000 Dolmathes and Thousands of Sweets Greek Food Festival Expecting 30,000 Visitors Oct. 13-15
pastichio at once, all automatically. The same goes for the green beans and tomato dish.
“It all comes out perfectly,” Graphos said.
The ingredients help achieve that perfect taste. The lemon juice used for the Greek chicken isn’t domestic; it is imported from Greece and has more flavor, Graphos said. The seasonings, also imported from Greece, are sprinkled on both sides of the chicken to give it more flavor.
“We take a lot of pride in the quality of our food,” Graphos said.
Gulas said there is another element that raises the food to a higher level.
“Every single item is touched with love,” Gulas said.
Food plates will be individually priced and Greek pastries will be pre-packaged and sold in the food lines. Soft drinks and Greek beer and wines will be available onsite to complement the meals.
Music, Tours and Wine
oven can cook 100 pieces at a time, so that’s 800 pieces of chicken cooked every hour.
The cooking is constant during the festival, but the kitchen is like a well-oiled machine, with about 10 volunteers at a time working. Great kitchen equipment, including sophisticated Combi ovens that are programmable, and the vol unteers help make it a success.
The ovens, for example, can cook 20 pans of
Besides good food, there will be entertain ment, with Greek music and dance performances by close to 100 church members, from “sweet lit tle kids to high school,” age, Gulas said.
Mediterranean and Orthodox souvenirs will be available at the festival’s Greek Market Place, as will the church’s cookbook, “The Greeks Have a Recipe for It,” which has been updated several times over the years with new editions, Burge said.
“It’s an easy-to-follow recipe book, it’s not
Koulourakia
Twisted Butter Cookies
½ lb. unsalted butter
¾ cups sugar
eggs 4 cups flour
3 heaping tsp. baking powder
tsp. vanilla
Soften butter and mix with flour. Add baking powder. Beat eggs and sugar and mix well. Add vanilla.
Form dough into a ball. Dough should not be sticky. Roll out into ¾ inch strips and twist to make a braided cookie. Place on ungreased pan.
Place in preheated 350-degree oven on middle rack for 20 minutes until golden brown.
Makes about 6 dozen cookies
hard to use it,” she said. “My copy is from 1981, the fourth printing.”
The Holy Trinity – Holy Cross Greek Orthodox parish was chartered in 1906 and is the fourth oldest Greek Orthodox parish in the Southeast.
Self-guided tours of the cathedral, the only Greek Orthodox cathedral in Alabama, will be
Olexa’s to Be
By Anne RuisiOlexa’s Catering Cafe & Cakes in Mountain Brook will be featured online by America’s Best Restaurants.
America’s Best Restaurants, a national media and marketing company focusing on local, inde pendently owned restau rants, brought its ABR Roadshow for filming to Olexa’s on Oct. 4.
“We’re so excited, it’s so fabulous,” said Olexa’s owner Diane Olexa.
Popular dishes that customers know and love, such as crepes, quiche and cake, will be highlighted, Olexa said. There also will be an extensive on-camera interview with Olexa about the res taurant’s special place in the commu nity.
The episode will be aired exten sively on the website, americas bestrestaurants.com, and social media channels later, with the date to be announced.
Olexa got her start in the food business near ly two decades ago, doing bridal catering with her mother. The cafe opened after wedding guests would ask if she had a restaurant. Once the cafe opened, serv ers would warm cake slices for brides-to-be to try so they wouldn’t have to eat cold cake that had been stored.
“The wait resses were leaving it in (the micro wave) too long and it was being served warm,” Olexa said in a press release from America’s Best Restaurants. “So then it went around town that I was serving warm butter cream cake, before I even knew it,
and then it became all the rage. They were coming for the cake and staying for lunch.”
Olexa’s cakes have been featured in numerous bridal magazines, and the cafe has won several awards for best luncheon.
America’s Best Restaurants is based in Florence, Kentucky, and travels the country telling the stories and highlighting the unique food of locally owned independent restau rants as part of the America’s Best Restaurants Roadshow. Over 700 episodes have been filmed.
GREEK
page 28
available during the festival and parishioners will be available to answer “every single question” between 10:30 a.m. and 9 p.m. Organizers suggest schools and church groups call ahead to schedule a tour.
“We encourage guests to take a look at the beautiful iconography and art” in the church, Burge said.
The festival is not only an opportu nity to share the love of good food and hospitality but is a major fundraising effort for the church. The church, in turn, donates a portion of festival pro ceeds to charities.
This year the sale of 1,300 pans of frozen pastichio at $50 each will go to charity, including Children’s of Alabama, the UAB Comprehensive Cancer Center, Ronald McDonald House Charities of Alabama and the
St Symeon
Church
Avenue in Birmingham
its 4th annual St. Symeon
and Culture Fair on Oct. 8.
The event, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.,
feature an open-air market with baked goods and gifts from cultures around the world. Hot homemade lunches – including pierogies and kielbasa sausage sandwiches – hot Greek doughnuts called Loukoumades (pictured), Slavic tea and Turkish coffee will be among the food items to try.
Firehouse Shelter, which the church supports by providing a meal once a week throughout the year, Graphos said.
The hours of preparation and effort to stage the festival every year are worth it, the volunteers agreed.
“We truly enjoy doing this for Birmingham,” Gulas said. “We’ve worked so hard on this. We’re tired, but we love it.”
Graphos agreed.
“It’s a joyous thing and a lot of fun,” he said.
The Greek Food Festival is open 10:30 a.m.-9 p.m. Oct. 13-15, with drive-thru service from 10:30 a.m.-7 p.m. Online ordering will be available at birminghamgreekfestival.net and orders can be taken and delivered just by driving up.
Those who want to enjoy their food onsite can do so in the tented dining area.
For someone who has played the international game of football — better known in these parts as soccer — prac tically his entire life, Vestavia Hills junior Carter Shirley is beginning to act like the American brand of football is his future.
Shirley has been playing soccer since he was 4 and plays in the Major League Soccer’s elite MLS Next pro gram, but this fall he decided to give football a try as the Rebels’ place-kick er.
He has looked like a natural. Three weeks ago, he kicked three field goals in the first half – covering 36, 23 and 22 yards – to account for all of Vestavia Hill’s points in the half as the Rebels thumped Spain Park 36-7.
Last Friday, he booted a 27-yard field goal in the Rebels’ 52-10 home coming rout of Chelsea.
“All my friends had been telling me for a long time I should play football,” Shirley said. “But it was really my stepdad who told me I should go try kicking.”
Shirley’s stepdad, Heath Boackle, had played football in high school at Huffman and was instrumental in Shirley teaching himself how to kick a football.
“I started off kicking the football with my stepdad,” Shirley said. “I love watching college football, so I watched YouTube videos of college or pro kick ers and saw how it worked, how to generate momentum on a kick and how to be pretty accurate.”
First-year Vestavia Hills head coach Robert Evans had been on the lookout for a kicker since the spring. Shirley arrived on his radar and Evans consid ers him a godsend.
“He really came out of nowhere,” Evans said. “Our kicking situation was unsettled, so I started recruiting guys who played soccer.
“He came to spring training, but he had never kicked before. During the summer, he came up to the school by himself in the heat of the day and kicked. After he kicked a couple, he would take the soccer ball and dribble it to go pick up the footballs and kick again.
“He molded himself into a viable kicker. It’s amazing. I never came
“It was a post corner route,” Parris explained. “I made a double move at the top of the route and Woods put it there and I all I had to do was catch it and run.”
Parris has become Ray’s primary target this season. He finished the Benjamin Russell game with three receptions for 160 yards and two touchdowns. Through six games, he has 29 receptions for 560 yards, averaging 19.3 yards per catch, and three touchdowns. He also has gained 853 all-purpose yards.
“It’s been a pretty good start to the season for me,” Parris said. “Woods and I are connecting a lot
THE NATURAL
a little skip step on your swing through,” Shirley said. “It might not seem like the hardest thing, but I had to learn how to do those skip steps.”
Shirley had it down pat against Spain Park when he made his first three field goals of the season.
“I felt pretty good,” he said. “I wouldn’t say I was nervous. I just focused on the ball and kind of did it.”
Shirley’s second field goal was set up after he forced a fumble on a kick off return.
“I don’t think he’s ever made a tackle in his life,” Evans said, “but he caused a big fumble and we got points off a turnover.”
Shirley stunned himself with the tackle. “That was unbelievable,” he said, “but a big thrill.”
The 5-foot-9, 145-pound Shirley has continued to play soccer this fall. On most days, after he finishes football practice he heads to practice with the Hoover-Vestavia Soccer MLS Next team.
“It’s the top league in Alabama,” Shirley explained. “This is the second year for the MLS Next program in Alabama. We have games like on every weekend. We go to Atlanta and Charlotte and also have games in Birmingham. It’s a 10-monthlong sea son.”
Shirley plays on the wing as an attacker. Since he is involved in the MLS Next program, he is not allowed to play for Vestavia Hills’ high school soccer team, but football is another matter and he’s enjoying himself.
“I love soccer, but there’s just something about football,” Shirley said. “Now that I’ve started kicking I would like to play in college.”
Because of soccer, Shirley won’t be able to attend a kicking camp, but dur ing the offseason he will be working out at UAB with a former kicker.
Meanwhile, Shirley has gotten caught up in Vestavia Hills’ push for a playoff berth. With their lopsided victo ry against Chelsea, the Rebels evened their overall record at 3-3, 2-2 in Class 7A, Region 3.
Vestavia Hills visits HewittTrussville (4-3, 2-2) Friday night in a key region game.
across anybody who did not understand how to kick a football and now can
more than we have in the past.”
The two worked out together fre quently during the spring and sum mer and played in some 7-on-7 games to get better acquainted on the field.
Parris also did some drills to improve his footwork and route run ning, turning himself into the Patriots’ go-to receiver and taking better advantage of his speed. He has clocked 4.45 seconds in the 40-yard dash.
“I like to make big plays and I trust myself to do it more than any body else,” Parris said. “I like to have the ball coming to me.”
Homewood coach Ben Berguson likes the way Parris has become accustomed to his new role.
“He’s by far one of the best all-
The biggest thing Shirley had to
around athletes in the school,” Berguson said. “He has tremendous hand-eye coordination. We don’t mind throwing a 50-50 ball to him because we expect him to come down with it. Him and Woods are the best quarterback-receiver duo we’ve had in a long time.
“He’s got that ‘it’ factor. He’s one of our team leaders. Everybody looks up to him. He’s well liked.”
Eenie Meenie
The 5-foot-11, 175-pound Parris is also a middle infielder on the Patriots’ baseball team. His athletic future beyond high school might be baseball, but he’s not ready to make that decision yet.
“I love both of them,” Parris said. “I couldn’t choose which one is my
learn was perhaps the simplest.
“After you kick it, you have to take
favorite. Right now it’s looking like I’ll play baseball in college, but if I get the opportunity to play football in college I’ll have to look into it.”
Right now, Parris is focused on helping Homewood earn a football playoff berth. The Patriots (4-2) sit atop the Class 6A, Region 3 stand ings with a 3-0 record in region play. They were off last week and will visit Chilton County (3-4, 0-4) Thursday in a region game.
Homewood lost to Pinson Valley 21-13 in a non-region game two weeks ago, but Parris described the game as a confidence builder.
“We learned we could play with anybody,” he said. “If we don’t come out timid or scared and go in with confidence, we can beat any body.”
“This is an important one,” Shirley said. “If we can win out, we’ve got a good chance of making the playoffs.”
Hoover 40, Oak Mountain 0 Tuscaloosa County 38, Spain Park 28
Vestavia Hills 52, Chelsea 10 Helena 31, Briarwood Christian 21 Pleasant Grove 48, John Carroll Catholic 13 Homewood and Mountain Brook were off
WEEK 7 SCHEDULE
Calera at Briarwood Christian Homewood at Chilton County (Thurs.) Tuscaloosa County at Hoover John Carroll Catholic at Ramsey (Thurs..) Mountain Brook at Parker (Thurs.) Oak Mountain at Thompson Spain Park at Chelsea Vestavia Hills at Hewitt-Trussville
plays snare drum in the drum line and Abby plays the saxophone.
They had to miss the game against Homewood last week because of a band competition.
“It’s time consuming and there are some conflicts, but it’s all worth it in the end,” Ella said.
The twins’ dad, James Gallaspy, played in the Million Dollar Band at Alabama, and their older brother Grayson Gallaspy was a saxophone player. They were instrumental in the musical instruments the twins play.
“I chose to do percussions because my dad’s side of the family played drums and I’ve always liked it,” Ella said. “I started playing drums in the sixth grade and have loved it ever since.”
Abby said, “My brother did band and played the sax, so in the sixth grade I started playing sax and real ly enjoyed it.”
If flag football and band weren’t enough, Ella and Abby also play softball for the Rebels. Ella plays center field and Abby plays right field. They have been playing soft ball for 13 years.
Both are trying to decide whether they want to continue their athletic careers in college. Ella said she plans to attend Alabama, where her older brother is a student, but won’t try to play softball in college. She is hoping to play flag football, but right now it’s only an intramural sport at Alabama.
Abby remains up in the air. “It’s been a struggle for me, trying to decide if I want to play college soft ball,” she said.
Looking Toward State
In the meantime, they are trying to help bring Vestavia Hills a state flag football championship.
The AHSAA divided teams into 16 areas this season. The Rebels are in an area that includes Spain Park and Oak
Mountain. Vestavia Hills was sched uled to play at Oak Mountain Tuesday as part of a tri-match that included Carver-Birmingham.
The top two teams from each area will advance to qualifying tournaments. There will be eight qualifying tourna
ments with four teams in each tourna ment. The winner of the tournament will qualify for the season-ending state tournament. The state championship game will be played Nov. 30 as part of the Super 7 Championships in football at Auburn.
“I think we have a very talented team,” Abby said. “We’ve definitely progressed since last year.”
Ella added, “My goal is to get to the state championship game. We have the potential to get there. We’re working hard and we’re working to get better.”
LIONS
Causey, who played at Troy and remains the Trojans’ all-time assists leader, wasn’t new to Briarwood. She was part of the Lions’ volleyball coaching staff from 2015-19, then went to Huntsville for two years as the junior varsity coach at Westminster Christian, a dominant Class 5A program. She returned to Briarwood in 2021 as the strength and
Josey stepped down for family rea sons.
Causey and her husband, Tracey, have lived in Birmingham for more than 20 years and have 15-year-old triplet daughters, Emory, Ellison “Ellie,” and Elizabeth “Lizzie,” who are freshmen at Briarwood. All three play volleyball, with Emory on the Lions’ freshman team and Ellie and Lizzie on the junior varsity.
Skilled Lineup
The Lions’ varsity team includes six seniors, headed by setter Jolee Giadrosich. Giadrosich recently sur passed 1,000 assists for her career and now holds the school record.
“She’s good,” Causey said. “I probably challenge her more than anybody on the team, but she has responded well.”
The Lions’ other seniors are out side hitter Lindsey Weigant, defensive specialist Katherine Jones, defensive specialist Piper Eighmy, outside hitter Siggi Bell and middle hitter Bradford Latta.
she’s finished.
“She’s an all-round good player,” Causey said. “She has skills to play all over the court.”
Juniors Caroline Jones and Lindsey Butler also have been solid contributors.
Briarwood began this week with a 2-3 record in Class 6A, Area 9, which also includes John Carroll Catholic, Pelham and Helena.
The Lions won both of their games against John Carroll and lost both of their games to Pelham. They suffered a 3-1 setback at Helena last week and were set to play their final regular season area game at home Monday night against Helena.
The area tournament is scheduled to begin Oct. 13.
“Our goal has always been to get out of the area, but to get out of the area we have to overcome the mental aspect,” Causey said. “We have all the skills, knowledge and team chem istry, but we have to have mental toughness.
conditioning coach for girls athletics and assistant volleyball coach. She was elevated to head coach in February after former coach Hannah
Versatile junior Stella Helms is the Lions’ leading front row player. She is in line to become the school’s career leader in kills, digs and blocks before
“We see all those volleyball ban ners hanging in the gym. We’re trying to get Briarwood back to where it was and reestablish the tradition of the program.”
‘We have all the skills, knowledge and team chemistry, but we have to have mental toughness.’
LUANN CAUSEY, BRIARWOOD CHRISTIAN VOLLEYBALL COACH
SPORTS
Parris Embraces Role as Homewood’s Go-To Receiver
By RuBin E. GRantHomewood senior receiver Jackson Parris served notice in the Patriots’ first football game that he was ready to have a breakout season.
Parris fielded a punt and weaved 65 yards for a touchdown in the second quarter of Homewood’s season-opening 38-20 victory against John Carroll Catholic. It was the Patriots’ first punt return for a touchdown in three years.
“It all happened so fast,” Parris said. “I made one guy miss and then I cut back. I went from
‘It’s been a pretty good start to the season for me. Woods and I are connecting a lot more than we have in the past.’
one side of the field and reversed it back to the other side and just went into the end zone.”
Homewood head coach Ben Berguson espe cially enjoyed it.
“That was so cool,” Berguson said. “We hadn’t had one in a while, then all of a sudden he busted it.”
Three weeks ago, Parris turned in another spectacular play when he caught a 95-yard touchdown pass from senior quarterback Woods Ray in Homewood’s 31-24 homecoming victory against Benjamin Russell.
PLAYMAKER
By RuBin E. GRantA few months after being named Briarwood Christian’s new volleyball coach, Luann Causey threw down the gauntlet for her play ers.
They accepted the challenge and in the first seven weeks of the 2022 season posted a 33-12 record.
“We have a lot of talent, but they have never been challenged the way I challenged them,” Causey said. “I wanted to get them playing at a high level with the capability of doing more than they thought they could.”
During the summer, Causey scheduled early morning workouts, had her players attend a team camp at the University of South Alabama and played in a competitive local summer league in Hoover.
If that wasn’t enough, she put together a demanding schedule, including a few top tour naments such as the Juanita Boddie Tournament and the Heffstrong Tournament.
“I don’t know if Briarwood has ever played a schedule like this,” Causey said. “I wanted them to play as much volleyball as they could.
Up for the Challenge
“We have good chemistry and I am hard on them, but I love them and they have responded with respect. Right now, we’re a little tired and are fighting some tweaks, such as ankle inju ries, but overall they have done well.”
Double Trouble
Gallaspy Twins Energizing
Vestavia Hills’ Flag Football Team
By RuBin E. GRantIdentical
twins Ella and Abby Gallaspy had been wanting to play football for some time.
They would go out in their Vestavia Hills neighborhood and play throw and catch.
“We had a really good time,” Abby said. “I always thought, ‘Why can’t we play football?’”
When the Alabama High School Athletic Association sanctioned flag football as a sport in 2021, the Gallaspy twins jumped at the chance to play for Vestavia Hills’ team.
“I was super excited when I heard about it,” Ella said. “I’m very competitive and I love foot ball, so I like having the opportunity to play.”
This fall, Ella and Abby, who are seniors, are enjoying splendid seasons, helping the Rebels to an 8-1 record.
They won four games last week, beating Homewood 33-0 and Spain Park 20-0 at home and Central-Phenix City (26-18) and Smiths Station (26-7) on the road.
Ella, who throws left-hand ed, plays quarter back and Abby plays linebacker.
Playing flag football has become a bit of a balancing act for the twins because both also play in the Vestavia Hills marching band. Ella plays snare drum in the drum line and Abby plays the saxophone.
“They are very athletic,” Vestavia Hills coach Debra Broome said. “Ella is a pretty good quarterback. She was our quarter back last year. Abby does a good job collecting flags and we rush her a lot too.”
Ella, the older of the two by a minute, loves being the quarterback. She accounted for several touchdowns in three of the Rebel’s four wins last week.
“It’s a very difficult position from a skill standpoint, learning to make all the throws,” she said. “But it’s also a lot of fun.”
Abby says it’s a funny story how she wound up on defense instead of catching passes from her sister.
“I had a hard time memorizing all the plays,” she said with a laugh. “We don’t have arm bands like you see in football and for the life of me I couldn’t remember the plays, so they put me on defense.”
Music and Sports
Playing flag football has become a bit of a balancing act for the twins because both also play in the Vestavia Hills marching band. Ella