June 9, 2016

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INDEX

Sports Card Chronicle ���������������������������������������������������� 20 Muhammad Ali: Changing America ���������������������22 Taylor’s 10 ������������������������������������������������������������ 24 Horse Sense ���������������������������������������������������������25 High School ����������������������������������������������������������26 Game of the Week �����������������������������������������������27

Society

Hike, Bike & Paddle ���������������������������������������������30 Connecting the City ��������������������������������������������� 31 The Prelude ����������������������������������������������������������32 Grand Finale ��������������������������������������������������������36 Denim & Diamonds ����������������������������������������������38 First Friday Trolley Hop ����������������������������������������39 Summer Jazz at Farmington ������������������������������� 40 Outrunning Autism 5K ���������������������������������������� 42 Butchertown Art Fair ��������������������������������������������43 NCJW Closing Meeting Luncheon ���������������������� 44 On the Town with Veteran Photographer John H. Harralson Jr.

Art Show at Brownsboro Center �������������������������45 Partyline ���������������������������������������������������������������46

Life Spotlight: Jeffersonville Pride Festival ����������������50 Spotlight: Cater Fest �������������������������������������������� 51 Fashion & Beauty �������������������������������������������������52 Health & Wellness ������������������������������������������������53 Tastes: The Weekly Juicery ���������������������������������54 Out & About: Louisville Loop �������������������������������56 Home ��������������������������������������������������������������������57 Film ���������������������������������������������������������������������� 60 Arts & Entertainment ��������������������������������������������61

Features Ali: 1942-2016

We take a look at the life of one of Louisville's most beloved prodigies ������������������������������ 6

Hands of a Healer, Eyes of an Artist

Dr. Julene Samuels is more than just a plastic surgeon – she's an artist �������������������� 14

Painting With Plants

We sit down with John Korfhage, a renowned landscape architect �������������������������������� 57

Essentials Masthead �������������������������������5 Business ������������������������������ 15 Obituaries ���������������������������� 16

Dear Abby ��������������������������� 47 Event Calendar �������������������62 Classifieds ���������������������������64

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Puzzles ��������������������������������66 Pets of the Week �����������������66

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PHOTOS BY ZACHARY ERWIN


ALGO Fall Showing June 16th - 18th

EDITORIAL JOANNA HITE SHELTON

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Deadlines: Display Ads – Noon Monday | Classified Ads – Noon Monday The Voice-Tribune (ISSN 1076-7398) is published weekly by Blue Equity Publishing LLC, P.O. Box 3222, Louisville, KY 40201. Periodicals postage paid at Louisville, Ky., and additional mailing offices. Subscription rate: $39/year. Call 502.897.8900 to subscribe. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: Blue Equity Publishing LLC, P.O. Box 3222, Louisville, KY 40201.

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CASE NO. 22C01-1605-AD-009

TO: NOTICE OF ADOPTION Notice by Publication

CIRCULATION

CIRCULATION ADMINISTRATOR

IN THE MATTER OF THE ADOPTION OF: ARLIE SATTERLEY

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The child born to Jessica Nicole Brown on April 2, 2015, and Zachary Keith Satterley, who has been named the father of the child or any person who claims to be the father of the child born to Jessica Nicole Brown on April 2, 2015, is notified that a Petition for Adoption of the child was filed in the Office of the Clerk of Floyd County, in New Albany, Indiana, 47150. The petition for adoption alleges that the consent to adoption of Arlie Satterley is not required by either parent per Indiana Code 31-19-9-8(a) (2) and (b) as the natural parents have not had meaningful contact or provided for the support for the child for a period exceeding one year and adoption is in the child’s best interests. If the natural mother and putative father seek to contest the adoption of the child, a motion to contest the adoption must be filed in accordance with Indiana Code 31-19-10-1 in the above-named Court within thirty (30) days after the date of service of this Notice. This Notice may be served by publication. If a motion to contest the adoption is not filed by the natural mother, or putative father within thirty (30) days after service of this Notice, the above-named Court shall hear and determine the Petition for Adoption. The natural mother and putative father’s consent is irrevocably implied and the natural parents lose the right to contest the adoption or the validity of the natural parents’ implied consent to the adoption. The putative father loses the right to establish paternity of the child under I.C. 31-14. Nothing that anyone else says to the natural mother and putative father of the child relieves the natural parents of their obligations under this Notice. Under Indiana law, a putative father is a person who is named as or claims he may be the father of the child born out of wedlock but who has not yet been legally proven to be the child’s father. This notice complies with IC 31-19-4.5-3 and IC 31-19-4-4 but does not exhaustively set forth a person’s legal obligations under the Indiana adoption statutes. A person being served with this notice should consult the Indiana adoption statutes. /s/Christina M. Eurton_____________ CLERK, FLOYD COUNTY COURT


F e at u r e

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story ELI KEEL • photography ZACHARY ERWIN

On Friday night when word began circulating that Muhammad Ali, civil rights leader and three-time heavyweight champion of the world, had fallen ill, the worldwide response was immediate sadness, and when his death was announced shortly after,

the grieving began.

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After a decades long fight with Parkinson’s, The Champ’s death shouldn’t have been a surprise, and yet somehow, it was. He was a titan, whose death seemed unimaginable. As tributes accumulate around the world, grief and memes inundate social media and the world wide web, and funeral plans are made for Friday, Louisville mourns the passing of her greatest son. Ali was, of course, born Cassius Clay here in Louisville, Kentucky. Though many celebrities change their names, there have been none whose decision sparked quite as much buzz and gossip – no doubt because Ali’s change actually meant something in a time when America itself was struggling with change.

“SERVICE TO OTHERS IS THE RENT YOU PAY FOR YOUR ROOM HERE ON EARTH.” MUHAMMAD

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Clay started boxing at 12 and began wracking up titles, winning numerous golden gloves. He went to the Olympics in Rome in 1960 and won the gold. At the age of 22, he won his first heavyweight championship, becoming the youngest boxer to ever hold the title. He went on to win the title two more times, once after his ejection from the sport due to his refusal to fight in the Vietnam War. Untold volumes have been written chronicling every jab and step of his storied career. I’ll leave those descriptions to the sports writers.

Many are quick to claim Ali as their own; Louisville sure isn’t quiet about its love for him. But have a care with how you speak. Don’t say he transcended race. Don’t say he belonged to all of us. Though he shared pieces of himself with people of many races and creeds, Ali was unapologetically, happily and beautifully black. It’s in his very name, which most sports writers refused to even use in 1964 when he joined the Nation of Islam

In this day and age of constant celebrity worship, it’s easy to feel like you have a personal relationship with your favorite. Ali is no exception and perhaps even more prone to personal deification than most. The protean puncher was so many different things in his life.

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draft dodges included moving to Canada, enrolling in college or using money or family connections to serve in the Coast Guard. Ali didn’t dodge – he stood his ground.

shortly after his rise to fame. He was friends with Malcolm X, and in fact, Martin Luther King Jr. claimed to have been inspired by Ali to start speaking out against the war in Vietnam.

Ali understood the power of words and deeds, and he used the one to back up the other. He went to jail for what he believed in. He sacrificed his prime fighting years for what he believed in. He waited while his case wound its way through the courts, eventually being settled by the Supreme Court in Ali’s favor. While banned from boxing, Ali toured the country speaking against the draft at universities.

In his autobiography, “The Greatest: My Own Story,” Ali claimed that he threw his Olympic gold medal off the Clark Memorial Bridge in disillusionment after being denied service at a “whites only” restaurant. The story has been denied by some of his friends, but whether or not it’s true, it’s a story that Ali chose to tell and a perfect example of the way that he used his achievements and his voice to champion the cause of equality. He didn’t transcend race; he held it up for the world to see.

The draft ended in 1972. Ali outlived it by three decades. He didn’t dodge; he delivered body blows.

Like many, I am more impressed by the man’s achievements outside the ring. As a pacifist since kindergarten, it meant a lot to me to be able to hold up one of the toughest men who ever lived and point to his conscientious objection.

It’s impossible to know exactly how much boxing took out of Ali and how much it affected his onset of Parkinson’s – expect experts to weigh in and argue in the coming days. It’s also difficult to know if any of The Champ’s symptoms stemmed from non-Parkinson’s related Traumatic Brain Injury. TBI is still being researched, and sports-related injuries are always hotly contested.

At the time, and even now in the days after his death, people called Ali a draft dodger. It’s hard to think of a more ridiculous statement. During Vietnam, popular

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“LIVE EVERY DAY AS IF IT WERE YOUR LAST BECAUSE SOMEDAY, YOU’RE GOING TO BE RIGHT.” MUHAMMAD

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loved one thought he was the greatest.

But there is no question that Ali faded in his later years, beginning with the end of his career and subsequently the announcement of illness a few years after his retirement.

His goodwill and grace through illness makes it easy to forget his spitfire days. Don’t. It’s become easy to focus on his charm and his athletic achievements without consideration to the firestorms he created. Don’t.

In his illness, Ali took fewer bold stances. The Champ was fighting for his life against a degenerative disease. The fact that he kept it at bay for as long as he did is a credit to his strength.

It’s indeed also worth remembering that the young hell-raiser wasn’t without his own faults. His skin was several shades lighter than his long time rival Joe Frazier, and Ali never let Frazier forget it, often taunting him with racially charged terms like “Gorilla” and “Uncle Tom.” Trash talk was a regular fixture of Ali’s fight strategy and easy to admire, but Frazier claims that the verbal abuse had lasting effects on him emotionally.

To a generation of millennials and Gen X-ers, he is a kindly grandfather, not a virile pot-stirrer, not a smart mouth sultan of smack talk. He faded, but there is no end to reports and personal stories, especially in Louisville, that suggest there was still plenty of Ali in there. So many people in this town have little stories about him. They’ll tell you about when they were a kid and an older African-American gentleman approached them, did a magic trick, smiled with a twinkle in his eye and marched off. Maybe they met him at a fundraiser for charity; Ali was always quick to give back to causes in his hometown. Perhaps they got one chance to tell him that their dad always watched the fights with them and that a

Not that his greatness is likely to be forgotten, not around the world and not here in his hometown. The Muhammad Ali Center is a shining jewel in our revitalized downtown. It’s just a few blocks away from Muhammad Ali Boulevard, and if you’re so inclined, you can take Muhammad Ali Boulevard down to the West End and visit Ali’s boyhood home.

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Throughout the weekend, well-wishers and mourners visited both, lining the streets with flowers, boxing gloves and heartfelt homemade signs. On Friday before The Champ’s funeral at the KFC Yum! Center, a memorial procession will wind its way past all the sites. The city has launched a special website, alilouisville.com, to help fans and mourners navigate the city, and foreign dignitaries and celebrities including Bill Clinton, Billy Crystal and Bryant Gumble will speak at the funeral. Ali will be laid to rest in Cave Hill Cemetery, and his grave will no doubt become a destination for tourists and fans who will stand in his final resting place and remember the greatest of all time. For me, I’ll go down to the Second Street bridge and think about the power of words and gestures and standing up for what you believe in – even when it costs. And I’ll go ahead and say we ought to change the name of that bridge. Doesn’t The Muhammad Ali Bridge sound like a winner? VT

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k entu cky count ry day sc hool Congratulates the Class of 2016!

Members of the class of 2016 are attending the following colleges and universities: Auburn University Baylor University Belmont University Bucknell University Butler University Centre College Coastal Carolina University Elon University Florida A&M University

Furman University George Washington University Hanover College Illinois Wesleyan University Indiana University Miami University, Oxford Middle Tennessee State University

Northeastern University Northwestern University Ohio Wesleyan University Savannah College of Art and Design Transylvania University Tufts University University of Alabama University of Chicago

University of Cincinnati University of Colorado at Boulder University of Denver University of Evansville University of Georgia University of Kentucky University of Louisville University of Miami University of Michigan

University of Mississippi University of Puget Sound University of Texas at Austin University of Vermont University of Virginia Vanderbilt University Wake Forest University Yale University

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Business

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Hands of a Healer, Eyes of an Artist

n Dr. Julene Samuels’ office, there is no guessing, no speculation. You’ll never meet a condescending glance. The moment never comes when you need to worry about the doctor’s decisions. It’s a straightforward place.

Business WES KERRICK

On the third floor of The Springs Medical Center on Dutchmans Parkway, Samuels treats her patients with “a skillful, caring approach, with a woman’s touch.” The aesthetic plastic surgeon has a gift for putting people at ease. She attributes that gift to the fact that she is a woman practicing in a field where most patients are also women. She gets them. “It’s the demeanor as well,” she says, “not wanting to appear like I’m superior to them in any way.”

Samuels typically spends an hour to an hour and a half with patients on their first visit. Men, who still account for a small minority of her patients, are turning out in ever-increasing numbers. “If you sit down on your stool and you just have a friendly conversation with somebody and, in the appropriate places, let them get to know you – whether it’s through humor or just honesty – people really appreciate that.”

Having practiced cosmetic surgery since 1994, Samuels has seen aesthetic treatments by other practitioners come and go. Some of them have left patients disappointed. A part-time clinical faculty member at UofL, Samuels stresses the importance of knowing your doctor’s credentials. Looking at the wall in her office, it’s clear she isn’t lacking.

Certified by the American Board of Plastic Surgery. Certified by the American Board of Surgery. Awarded Fellowship in the American College of Surgeons. Member of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons. Member of the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery. The list goes on. Samuels begins by asking patients what aspect of their body they see as a flaw. She asks them to describe the look they’d like instead. And she listens. Then she explains all the options. Instead of just telling them what she thinks they should do, she gives them enough information to make their own decisions. “They have to know the ins and outs or they’re not a partner in the proposition,” she says. “And I am responsible for the result, but if a patient has weighed in on the decision about what the aesthetic goal is, then we’re partners in that decision.” Samuels says the objective of any good aesthetic surgeon is to improve people’s looks while maintaining all the natural characteristics that make them uniquely beautiful. She always goes for timeless beauty, not just what happens to be trendy. “Helping somebody look – in their eyes – better, but not too different, is a goal.” Over the years, as her practice has grown, Samuels has been careful to continue giving every patient her full attention. “They want my time, and I respect that because their time is as valuable as mine,” she says. “Our goal is to have people think they’re the only one we’re taking care of right now.” With expertise and attentiveness, Samuels always aims to create a “boutique” experience that she hopes will exceed her patients’ expectations. “It becomes, then, more like a calling than just a job,” she says. “And that’s the difference – because people can go anywhere and get a filler. They can go anywhere and get a breast implant. They can go to a multitude of offices and get Botox. But at the end of every knife and at the end of every needle is the artist.” Indeed, Samuels likens her work to painting a canvas. It was the synthesis of art and science that attracted her to cosmetic surgery in the first place. “It doesn’t matter if it’s just a filler or Botox. The artistic sense of the person doing that procedure is paramount in terms of the result.” VT For more information, call 502.897.9411 or visit awomanstouchmd.com.

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PHOTO BY WES KERICK


Business

business briefs LOUISVILLE PUBLIC MEDIA RELEASES BUILDING DESIGNS AND LAUNCHES CAMPAIGN Louisville Public Media, the umbrella organization for 89.3 WFPL News, Classical 90.5, 91.9 WFPK Radio Louisville and the Kentucky Center for Investigative Reporting, announced the public launch of its $7 million “Raise Your Voice” capital campaign. At present, the organization has raised $5.25 million toward this goal. The funds raised will go toward renovating the current Louisville Public Media offices and studios at 619 S. Fourth St. in Louisville, upgrades in technology and investments in programming that allow the organization to respond to the growing demand for engagement with its community. Facility renovations include an expanded newsroom, a welcoming lobby space, an updated performance studio, new equipment, updated studios and music library and new offices for staff. In addition, investments have been made in music education outreach to area schools. A full-time education programs manager has been hired to bring the magic of classical music into local classrooms and community centers. A visual media producer enables us to expand

to submit your business brief email circ@voice-tribune.com and share content on a variety of platforms. Additional details on the “Raise Your Voice” capital campaign can be found at campaign. louisvillepublicmedia.org. Louisville Public Media will host an on-air phase of the campaign June 13-18. TRIPLE CROWN OF RUNNING DONATES $142,146 TO CRUSADE FOR CHILDREN In celebration of the 63rd Annual WHAS Crusade for Children Benefit on June 4 and 5, the Louisville Triple Crown of Running donated $142,146 to improve the lives of special needs children. The popular race series, officially presented by Novo Nordisk for the 13th consecutive year, consists of three road races of varying distances: the Anthem 5K Fitness Classic, the Rodes City Run 10K and the Papa John’s 10 Miler. Nearly 16,000 runners participated in all three races. Since 2002, the Louisville Triple Crown of Running has contributed over $1.6 million to the WHAS Crusade for Children. Representatives of the Triple Crown, Novo Nordisk and other sponsors presented the check at the WHAS Crusade for Children Benefit on Saturday evening,

June 4, at the Kentucky Center for the Performing Arts Bomhard Theatre. The 2016 proceeds, by event, include: Anthem 5K Fitness Classic 5K (February 27): $45,500, Rodes City Run 10K (March 12): $41,550, Papa John’s 10 Miler (March 26): $50,650, miscellaneous proceeds: $5,446. ACTIVE DUTY U.S. MILITARY AND THEIR FAMILIES RECEIVE FREE ALI CENTER ADMISSION As a member of the Blue Star Museum program, the Muhammad Ali Center is proud to offer free admission to active duty United States military personnel and their families through Labor Day on September 5. Visitors must show a valid military ID at the admission desk. The promotion applies only to active duty military and up to five members of their family. Blue Star Museums is a collaboration among the National Endowment for the Arts, Blue Star Families, the Department of Defense and more than 2,000 museums across America to offer free admission to the nation’s active-duty military personnel and their families, including the National Guard and Reserve, from Memorial Day through Labor Day.

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Caring for the body. And the person within.

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Obits

obituaries Martha Jane Blake Bean Martha Jane Blake Bean, 68, passed away on June 1, 2016. She is the daughter of the late BJ and Mary Blake. She is survived by her husband of 46 years, Richard Bean. Theirs is a story of Life Long Love, Respect, Honor and Team Work. She is also survived by two sisters, Patricia Blake Vissman (Paul) and Mary Ann Blake Davis (Drew). She is also survived by her second mother, Audrey Bean and another sister Marian Bean and brothers, Kenneth Bean (Margot) and Roger Bean (DeeDee), who all became part of her family. She also has numerous nieces and nephews and great nephews and nieces who she was so proud of. Martha, who was born in Louisville, graduated from Assumption High School and attended the University of Louisville. She started her working career at the old Louisville Mortgage Co. as a loan processor and ended it as one of Louisville’s best mortgage loan originators, having helped thousands of Louisvillian’s obtain their dream of home ownership. Martha and Richard have been graced with some of the finest friends in the world and enjoyed every minute with them. They have seen the world with them, and the memories are those that have made a full life. They cherish special memories of shared days on Green Turtle Cay and on America’s Great Loop. Expressions of sympathy can be made to the Bean Scholarship Fund at the University of Kentucky, William Sturgill Development Building, Lexington, KY 40506-0015. No flowers. A memorial service will be held at a later date.

Robert L. Cecil Robert L. Cecil, 96, of Louisville, passed away Sunday, May 29, 2016 at his home with family at his side. Robert was previously employed J U N E 9 , 2 0 1 6 • V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

OBITUARIES MAY BE PLACED BY CALLING 502.897.8900 OR EMAILING MKOEBEL@VOICE-TRIBUNE.COM

by American Standard as a casting inspector where he had 41 years of service and was a member of St. Rita Catholic Church. He was also a member of the CBI Derby City BASHA Association. Robert served his country proudly during World War II from 1941 - 1945 serving with the 124th Cavalry Regiment at Fort Riley, Kansas; worked on the MARS Task Force completing the Burma Road Project; and had ridden with the Texas Rangers on Border Patrol out of Fort Brown, Texas. Preceding him in death were his parents, Lawrence and Catherine Cecil; his wife of 59 years, Mary H. Kluesner Cecil; a daughter, Kathryn Ann Cecil; and fourteen siblings. Survivors include his children, Doug Cecil, Sandra M. Swartz (Jim), and Bonnie S. Cecil (John); as well as four grandchildren; twelve great grandchildren; and eight great-great-grandchildren. His funeral Mass was celebrated at 10 a.m. Monday, June 6, 2016 at St. Rita Catholic Church, 8709 Preston Highway, with entombment following in Resthaven Memorial Park. Visitation was 2-8 p.m. Sunday, June 5, 2016 at Ratterman & Sons Funeral Home, 3800 Bardstown Road. Donations may be made to Mass of the Air or St. Rita Catholic Church in his memory. Online condolences may be directed to www.ratterman.com.

John J. “Jack” Davern John J. “Jack” Davern, 80 of Louisville, passed away on Friday June 3, 2016. He was a U.S. Navy Veteran during the Korean War, and he was the owner of Davern’s Tavern. He was Catholic by faith. He was preceded in death by his parents John Edward Davern and Helen Nordhoff Davern and his sister Pat Davern. He is survived by his wife Becky Davern. Funeral service was Wednesday, June 8 at 11 a.m. at the Owen Funeral Home-Jeffersontown 9318 Taylorsville Rd. Burial was at Calvary Cemetery. Visitation

was Tuesday, June 7 from 3 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the funeral home. Expressions of sympathy can be made to Cedar Lake or Hosparus. Online condolences can be made at www. owenfuneralhome.com.

Marlene W. Helfrich

Visitation was from 2:00 pm to 8:00 pm Monday, June 6 at Arch L. Heady and Son Funeral Home and Cremation Services - Southern, 3601 Taylor Blvd. Her funeral service was 1:00 pm Tuesday, June 7 at the funeral home chapel with burial following at Evergreen Cemetery in Louisville, Kentucky.

Marlene W. Helfrich, 83, of Sarasota, passed away Friday, May 13, 2016.

Online condolences may be made to www.archlheadysouthernfh.com.

She was born May 11, 1933 in Nanticoke, PA to William and Annie West. Marlene lived some time in Sarasota, FL and in Louisville, KY, where she was a member of St. John Lutheran Church. She was a lifelong member of the Kentucky PTA, past President, and a lobbyist for PTA in the Kentucky State Legislature. Marlene was an avid boater and loved to travel.

Mary Catherine “Katie” McNeil

She was preceded in death by her parents; and her husband, Kenneth G. Helfrich. Marlene is survived by her children, Steve (Julie) Helfrich, and Marla (Tim) Newton; 5 grandchildren, Michael, Marisa, Jacob, Tyler, and Katie; her sister-in-law, Helen Burrill; and her loving dog, Belle. A Memorial Service took place on Wednesday, June 8, 2016 at 11 a.m. at St. John Lutheran Church; 901 Breckenridge Lane in Louisville, KY. Interment at Cave Hill Cemetery followed the service.

Jelotta Riddle Johnson Jelotta Riddle Johnson, 83, died Thursday, June 02, 2016. She was born June 15, 1932 in Cumberland County, Kentucky to the late Willie and Hattie (Cheatham) Riddle. She was a member of Gateway Methodist Church. She was preceded in death by her husband of many years, Richard C. Johnson. She is survived by her children, Sharon McCoy (Rick), Caren Story (Roy), and Richard W. Johnson (Mona), 8 grandchildren and 8 great grandchildren.

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Mary Catherine “Katie” McNeil, 82, passed away on June 3, 2016. She was a retired employee of Valley View Child Care and a member of St. Peter the Apostle Catholic Church. Preceding her in death was her husband, William “Bill” McNeil, her sons-in-law, Tom Walls and David Smith, her parents, Charles Carroll and Ellen East, siblings, Evelyn “Sissy” Wisniewski, Frances E. Harlan, Peter Carroll, and Charles R. “Hotz” Carroll, and brother-in-law, Aubrey Kempf. Survivors include her daughters, Cathy Rieber, Debbie Hagan, Dianna Moore (Tom), Laura McNeil and Susan Smith; 10 grandchildren; 8 great grandchildren; and her sisters, Marion Cramer (Bill), Judy VanWinkle (Donnie), Rose Lee Kempf, and Sandy East. Her funeral Mass will be celebrated 11 a.m. Monday, June 6 at St. Peter the Apostle Catholic Church, 5431 Johnsontown Road with burial in Louisville Memorial Gardens West. Visitation was 12-8 p.m. Sunday, June 5 and after 9 a.m. Monday, June 6 at Owen Funeral Home, 5317 Dixie Highway. Memorial gifts may be made to Hosparus or WHAS Crusade for Children.

Louise Rankin Perry Louise Rankin Perry, 80, entered eternal life Saturday, June 4, 2016.


Survivors include her husband of 65 years, Hubert J. Perry; five sons, Doug (Stephanie), Mike (Betty), Keith (Rhonda), Mark (Michelle), and Tim (Holly); sisters, Sue (John) Trout and Doris Jean Fegin; 7 grandchildren; and 1 great grandchild. Visitation was 2-8 p.m. Tuesday, June 7 at Ratterman and Sons, 10600 Taylorsville Road - Jeffersontown. Funeral services were held 11 a.m. Wednesday, June 8 at Ratterman and Sons. Online condolences may be made at www.Ratterman.com.

Stephen “Steve” Schaller Stephen “Steve” Schaller, 65, of Louisville, passed away Wednesday,

June 1, 2016 at his residence due to heart complications. He was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, on February 13, 1951, to George and Betty Schaller. He was a vibrant business leader with Burke Marketing Research in Cincinnati before founding his private firm, Schaller Market Research, in Louisville. He retired at an early age and was an avid reader, sports fanatic, stock market analyst, and car and fitness enthusiast.

Elizabeth “Betty” (Swann) Truglio

Mary Patricia “Patsy” Carter, Robert “Bobby”, Jerome “Jerry”, and Thomas “Tommy” Swann.

Elizabeth “Betty” (Swann) Truglio, Betty’s prayers have been answered and she is at long last dancing with the Lord’s angels. Beloved Mother, Grandmother and Great Grandmother, Betty passed peacefully in her sleep Saturday, May 28, 2016. She was 82 years old.

Betty’s passions included music, dancing, her grandchildren, great grandchildren, and the special relationships she shared with her parents and over 100 aunts, uncles, cousins, nieces and nephews growing up on the family “farm” known as Watsonville in Louisville, KY. Betty also resided in Follansbee, WV, Naples, FL and most recently New Orleans, LA. She was cared for by the loving staff of Chateau De Notre Dame for the past 4 years.

Steve is survived by his daughter, Sandra (Derek) Halliburton; his son, Seann (Heather) Schaller; grandchildren, Alex and Grahame Halliburton, and Samantha and Sophie Schaller; sisters, Susan (Jim) Vaughan, Stephanie (Dave) Hensley, Sally (Dave) Rankin; a brother, Stuart Schaller; five nieces and three nephews.

Betty is survived by her children, Loretta Larson; Larry Truglio (Jodi); Doris Bonura (Tony); Chuck Truglio (Michelle); and Joseph Truglio, Jr; grandchildren Stephanie Mills Carter, Steven Mills; Myles Truglio, (Kimberly), Abby Truglio (Mike); Nicole and Sophia Bonura; Amanda and Kimberly Truglio; great-grandchildren, Micah Carter, Damion Mills; Alyssa, Addison and Braxton Baker; and Izaiah, Illana and Elijah Truglio.

Steve’s family wishes to celebrate his life privately. Donations are suggested to St. Xavier High School.

She was preceded in death by her parents, Thomas “Doc” and Alice “Granny” Swann, and her siblings,

A funeral Mass will be held at Blessed Teresa of Calcutta, 903 Fairdale Road, Fairdale, KY on June 18th at 11:30 a.m. Interment will be at St. Andrew Catholic Cemetery following mass. A celebration of Betty’s life will take place immediately following the services. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in Betty’s name to www. stroke.org (National ).

family-owned AAfamily-owned funeralhome homewith withdeep deep funeral family-owned rootsA in thecommunity. community. roots in funeralthe home with deep roots in the community.

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She was born in Shelby County to the late Grover C. and Ethel Rankin. She served her family as a homemaker and will be remembered as a loving wife, mom, and Mamaw.


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20 Card Chronicle | 24 Taylor’s 10 | 27 Game of the Week

SPORTS

NCAA Regional: UofL PAGE vs. Wright State 21


Sports

A

Ali’s Legacy in Cards Baseball

the team who has exhibited the fter a wildly sucsame leadership qualities Ali was cessful weekend at famous for. The inaugural recipJim Patterson Staient, senior first baseman Danny dium, the Louisville baseRosenbaum, hit two home runs in ball team finds itself two UofL’s win over Ohio State the day after Ali’s passing and was named wins away from locking up to the All-Regional Team. its third trip to the College World Series in the last four Lonnie and Asaad, who is curMIKE rently working as an assistant years. If that happens, the RUTHERFORD coach at Ellsworth Community Cards will be accompanied @cardchronicle College in Iowa, were in Durham by a hoard of supporters two weeks ago to attend the Cards’ hoping to catch the program’s first games in the ACC Tournament that weekend. national title with their own eyes. Even though that weekend didn’t go as LouisAmong that group will be the Derby ville had planned, the Alis made sure McDonnell was aware that they were expecting to City’s most famous family. Muhammad Ali, whose son Asaad played for Louisville from 2009 to 2012, and his wife, Lonnie, have long been adamant supporters of the baseball program and had been planning on making the trip to Omaha last summer if the Cards had made it to the sport’s biggest stage. Even without the family patriarch, Lonnie Ali wanted to let Coach Dan McDonnell know last weekend that she was still hoping to make that trip in 2016.

have a long and successful summer of Cardinal baseball to follow.

“Even through this sad time, there’s been a lot of correspondence back and forth between myself and the Ali family, and I’ve shared that with the team,” McDonnell said. “Lonnie is closely following us, and that’s a nice distrac-

tion to keep her mind off other things. She’s made it clear that they plan on being with us in Omaha next weekend, and we hope to hold up our end of that bargain.” After Ali’s passing late Friday night, each member of the Cardinal baseball team wrote “Ali” in Sharpie on the side of their hats as a tribute during their games on Saturday and Sunday. McDonnell says the team will have a tribute patch stitched into their cap for this weekend’s super regional series against UC-Santa Barbara and then hopefully again for the College World Series the week after that. “We felt like this is an appropriate thing to do because of his connection to the program but also because of his connection to the university and to the city,” McDonnell said. “We’re the major university here in this great city that Muhammad Ali meant so much to. There’s a real sense of pride that we’re able to wear his name on our hat and let the rest of the world know how special he was to all of us here in Louisville.” VT

Lonnie Ali spoke at the 2014 Muhammad Ali Humanitarian Awards.

“Many people were disappointed that we didn’t make it to Omaha last year, and the Ali family was one of them,” McDonnell said after his team’s 15-3 win over Ohio State last Saturday. “They were planning to meet us out there last year, so Lonnie and I spoke several times throughout the year to say, ‘Do your best to get to Omaha because the Alis want to be to there.’ Lonnie had somebody text me last night to make sure we knew they were thinking about us and that they were still planning to go to Omaha. So I shared that story with the players.” When he was in town during the spring months, Ali was a frequent visitor to Jim Patterson Stadium and a staunch supporter of the baseball program. His appearances in Athletic Director Tom Jurich’s suite behind home plate often provided added inspiration for UofL in big games. “I always knew he was from Louisville, but I didn’t realize how connected he was to the university until I got here,” McDonnell said. “He loved baseball, and he loved supporting this program.” This year, the Ali family introduced the Muhammad Ali Leadership Scholarship, which will be given annually to a player on J U N E 9 , 2 0 1 6 • V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

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PHOTO BY BILL WINE


Cardinal baseball earned a fourth consecutive trip to the NCAA super regional with a 3-1 win over Wright State on June 5. UofL’s Nick Solak pulled off a two-run homer at the top of the fourth and an impressive single at the top of the fifth to put some points on the board. Drew Harrington also dominated with over seven scoreless innings, backing his well-deserved title as AAC Pitcher of the Year.

Louisville’s Blake Tiberi gets some air as he throws the runner out at first.

Louisville’s Will Smith races to first base.

Louisville’s Nick Solak throws the ball to first.

Louisville’s Drew Harrington delivers a pitch.

PHOTOS BY ADAM CREECH

Louisville’s Devin Hairston throws the ball to first.

Members of the UofL Baseball team huddle before the NCAA Regional game against Wright State.

Louisville’s Colin Lyman makes a hit.

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V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M • J U N E 9 , 2 0 1 6

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NCAA Regional: UofL vs. Wright State


Sports

Muhammad Ali w a s

t h e

s t o r y

o f

Changing America

O

ne night, about 15 years ago, my son called me on his cell phone from New York. He had just stepped out of a restaurant in SoHo and said the most famous person on Earth was outside on the sidewalk. I didn’t have to think about who it was for four seconds. The answer was that obvious.

Muhammad Ali.

Sports

By 1967, when Ali refused to stand up for the draft, it only fueled the tension, but it made him a hero to many – especially to young idealists who were also refusing the call to arms in Vietnam.

When he stood in solidarity with other black athletes – Bill Russell, Jim Brown, STEVE the young Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – it made us realize how black anger and bitKAUFMAN terness had been simmering in sports for years and how blind we had been. Ali and I were the same age. I followed his career When he stuck to his principles and was forced to – and his life – for more than 50 years. What a ride relinquish his championship, career and earnings, he it was. became an inspiration to young people of all races. Cassius Clay first entered our consciousness in the And then, when he came back, vindicated by the summer of 1960 as part of the U.S. Olympic team in Rome. It encompassed, probably for the first time, a U.S. Supreme Court, when he fought Joe Frazier in preponderance of African-Americans: made-for-tele- 1971 in what, for once, truly did live up to its claim vision athletes like the lovely and elegant runner as the Battle of the Century, he was truly a hero to Wilma Rudolph, the remarkable long-jumper Ralph all. He had become the emblem of young AmeriBoston, the decathlete Rafer Johnson, basketball ca’s dissatisfaction, frustration and anger – no matlegend Oscar Robertson and the 18-year-old light ter who you were. heavyweight gold medalist Cassius Clay. But then again, he had always transcended normal Clay stood out for the lovably outrageous things rules. He was more than a man. He was Ali. he said. But as he turned professional, “outrageous” Later in his life, the effects of Parkinson’s disbegan to subsume “lovable.” He was boastful, dismis- ease quieted the Louisville Lip and seemingly made sive of opponents, overt with his lifestyle – all things him a silent symbol of grace and dignity. I sat in we were not accustomed to from athletes. the Olympic Stadium in Atlanta in 1996 when he All an act to promote his fights? If it was, it was the surprise choice to light the flame. His hand worked. We watched, with some even hoping his shook involuntarily from his disease, but at that “Louisville Lip” would get shut – even by the thug- moment, he stood as the single definition of Amerigish, mob-controlled heavyweight champion Sonny can pride: a black man chosen to represent his country in its ultimate national athletic participation in a Liston. When Clay upset Liston in February 1964, many city that would once have forced him to use a sepwere shocked. The shock became concern when, arate entrance and sit in a “blacks only” section of shortly afterward, he announced his affiliation with the stands. the Nation of Islam and changed his name to

J U N E 9 , 2 0 1 6 • V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

Mission accomplished. VT

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PHOTOS BY ?????


Sports

One night, about 15 years ago, my son called me on his cell phone from New York. He had just stepped out of a restaurant in SoHo and said the most famous person on earth was outside on the sidewalk. I didn’t have to think about who it was for four seconds.

The answer was that obvious.

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Sports

A Word From New Hall of Famers On Thursday, June 2, the Kentucky Athletic Hall of Fame welcomed the Class of 2016. The new inductees included 2005 NFL MVP Shaun Alexander, Western Kentucky and Kentucky Colonels sharpshooter Darel Carrier, Bellarmine Head Basketball Coach Scotty Davenport, former Oldham County and Tennessee star Kyra Elzy, Belfry High School Head Football Coach Philip Haywood, Kentucky Wesleyan play-by-play man Joel Utley and Lakeside Swim Club. They each will have a plaque on the concourse of Freedom Hall. Is this about as good as it gets for you? Scotty Davenport: As a personal honor, throughout the state of Kentucky, for someone who has coached at all levels – high school to Division I – it is the greatest honor as an individual that I could ever dream of.

wonderful time here just hanging out with high school friends and seeing my family. This is just special – it’s always good to come back to my old Kentucky home.

Taylor’s 10 KENT TAYLOR

Does it take you back to Boone County where it all started?

Alexander: I got to play for a living You’ve read the plaques in legend in coach Owen Hauck, and he WAVE3 Sports Freedom Hall. Did it ever cross just passed a couple months ago. I saw your mind that you could have your own? some old teammates at his funeral, but to come Davenport: No, never. I’ve read them since I was back on a brighter moment, it’s special. 9 years old, and when you go through and you read them and you grow up reading them, you follow those people and you embrace what they stand for. No, you would never dream of this in your wildest dreams. You could be the most optimistic person in the world, but this is a dream come true. You’ve had some honors (NFL MVP), and you were Alabama’s all-time leading rusher until recently. What does this honor mean to you? Shaun Alexander: It’s always special to do anything back where you were raised. I’ve had such a

After you’ve been away from it for a few years and you look back on what you were able to accomplish, does it amaze you? Alexander: I get the opportunity to share a story of a thankful person. I’ve got to be around so many great teammates, so many great coaches, so many great friends that are still friends today – from high school to college to pros. I’m thankful. A lot of times, people have hard times looking back; I just don’t because I get to smile and think about the people that I got to be around.

Derrrick Henry got the Heisman Trophy. Couldn’t he have left the all-time rushing record to you? (Henry rushed for 3,591 yards, Alexander for 3,565 yards) Alexander: He almost smashed every single one of them by the time he got done with that bowl game, but you know, I think at Alabama, it’s just like in high school and in Seattle. You try to grow a team and you pass torches, and so it’s never about what you do – it’s about what you do when you have the torch in your hand. I did all I could do to break every record and leave that place better than when I got there, and that’s what I did. Derrick had to do his job just like he did, and they’ve got a pretty sweet running back down there now from Kentucky. He’s going to get the opportunity to carry the torch. In the big picture of things, where does this rank for you? Kyra Elzy: I am so honored. I am just blessed, speechless. I cannot think of what I want to say – I’m going through so many emotions – but honored. It’s not something that you think about or set as a goal, but does it hit you when you get that phone call? Elzy: I was on vacation when I got the call. I was working out. I started screaming, calling my family, so we’re over-the-top excited. Who are the people that go through your mind when you think about the people who helped you get here? Elzy: My Mom is No. 1. The Elzy family. It takes a village to raise a child. I’ve had a whole village and a great support system, including Coach Mark Evans, one of the best coaches in Kentucky. When you look at the names that you join in the Kentucky Athletic Hall of Fame, is it a little overwhelming? Elzy: I told one of my coworkers, I said, ‘I can’t believe that I’m actually going into a Hall of Fame, the same one that Muhammad Ali is in.’ I’m a girl that couldn’t walk and chew bubblegum at the same time, so I’m thrilled. VT

Scotty Davenport.

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A

s I settled in at my keyboard Monday morning to write this weekly visit with you via The Voice-Tribune, I did so with the goal of offering some thoughts on the sad passing of Muhammad Ali, Louisville’s gift to the world.

My eyes froze on the sixth image, which in my life and career comes as close to the Holy Grail as most anything I could imagine.

over the racetrack on that day in 1963, would likely have had a considerably more difficult time if he was to walk through the clubhouse and grandstand on a regular racing day.

There it was – the image that I and others had created in the mind’s Horse Sense eye but had never seen nor, quite frankly, had any longer hoped to see. From 1963 – the year before he shook JOHN the world with an upset victory over ASHER champion Sonny Liston to earn his In countless speeches and other first heavyweight championship and gatherings in front of groups large and small during months before the public announcement that he my years at Churchill Downs, I have shared sto- would heretofore be known as Muhammad Ali – ries about the 142-year history of the home of the was Gunther’s image of a smiling Cassius Clay Kentucky Derby that, in almost every case, includ- running up the 1,234 1/2-foot Churchill Downs ed this favorite nugget: stretch and past the clubhouse.

The passage and signing of the Civil Rights Act would not occur until 1964, and there was work to be done in our nation and community in the months and years that followed the moment that Gunther captured.

The great Muhammad Ali – then Cassius Clay, and later to be known as Louisville Lip, the Greatest of All Time, boxing’s three-time heavyweight boxing champion and a humanitarian of international impact – toiled in conditioning work early in his career with the Twin Spires of Churchill Downs often as his backdrop. The man who would become the best-known athlete in world history did conditioning runs over the one-mile sandy loam surface over which every renewal of the Derby and Kentucky Oaks have been run since their respective debuts in 1875. That sandy surface was good for building muscles in the legs, one of the future champion’s most dazzling weapons in the ring. It was a great story; although, I – nor any of my predecessors in the communications and publicity offices at Churchill Downs – had ever seen physical evidence that it was true. The story was part of our history section in the old Kentucky Derby and Churchill Downs media guide, but there were, to our knowledge, no photos of the young legend gliding over his hometown track. That is, until Monday, just minutes after I sat to gather my thoughts for this piece, a tweet came in from my friend Paul Rutherford (@horsemanlawyer to you Twitter admirers who’d like to give him a follow), himself a lover of Thoroughbred racing and the history – athletic or otherwise – of our city. It contained a brief message, followed by a link. “Just want to be sure you’d seen this,” the message read. A click on the link opened a CNN story bearing the headline of “Previously unseen photos show young Muhammad Ali at home.” The story included 10 photos by photographer Curt Gunther, who the story said had chronicled most of Ali’s boxing career via the images captured by his Nikon F camera. PHOTO COURTESY OF CHURCHILL DOWNS

Some years back, I had witnessed Ali publicly confirm that he had indeed trained over the track that had been the scene of so many stirring performances by four-legged superstars and their human partners. Karl Schmitt Jr., the executive director of the Louisville Sports Commission who was my predecessor at Churchill Downs (and the guy who hired me to work at the track nearly 20 years ago), told the story about those on-track training runs at a luncheon at which Ali was honored. Schmitt, who had noted the absence of photographic evidence in his story, turned to The Champ to ask this simple question: “Did it happen?”

But from a purely personal viewpoint, this heretofore unseen image of Ali is magical. It depicted a young man who would soon be the self-proclaimed, but then nearly universally-acclaimed, Greatest of All Time at the home of the Greatest Two Minutes in Sports. The moment was neither the first nor the last in which Ali – the Louisville native turned Citizen of the World – would visit his world-famous hometown racetrack. But prior to Monday, my perception of that and similar moments had been the stuff of legend and imagination. Now, it is a real and tangible thing and frozen in time thanks to Gunther’s lens. It is a personal dream come true to see that image, which likely would not have surfaced at this point if not for Ali’s passing. But as much as I love the image and the opportunity to finally have a glimpse of that moment, I’d gladly return it to storage to have The Greatest with us a little while longer. VT

“Yes,” replied the Louisville legend. That was good enough for me and has been since that day. But things changed Monday. Because of the talented eye of Curt Gunther, I have now seen an image of one of those moments. In Gunther’s photo, the young Ali is dressed in street clothes, and his footwear is not appropriate for training. One could speculate that the champion-in-waiting and the photographer had discussed his work at Churchill Downs and then traveled to the track for a photo of an unscheduled training run. As joyful as I was to finally see the image, it also was distressing because of the thought that Louisville’s greatest hometown icon, who ran so freely

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Muhammad Ali at the 1999 Kentucky Derby.

V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M • J U N E 9 , 2 0 1 6

Sports

The Greatest Photograph


Sports

Townsend Caps Off Senior Year in Championship Fashion

W

hether it was rain, hail, sleet or snow, inside of Male High School, the sun was always shinning. The warm and bubbling personality of recent Male graduate Taliyah Townsend would brighten the hallways, classrooms, faculty and peers as she graced Male High with her presence.

High School Sports Report

seconds over Bryan Station’s Brooke Raglin by .01 second. She said she knew it was going to be a tight race, so throughout the week prior, she practiced intently, focusing on starting, finishing and leaning. And by the tip of her nose, she was crowned champ.

“I knew [Brooke Raglin] was going to come because she was runner-up in state last year, so she was the favorite RANDY win the 100 this year. To be honWHETSTONE JR. to est, I didn’t go into it thinking I was going to win it, but luckily, I pushed through, leaned and I won. I was pumped and In her senior year, the National Honor Society excited because I had been working my butt off.” vice president and Beta Club member had anothSetting aside a social life, Townsend worked hard er important responsibility on her agenda, and that her senior year balancing both academics and athwas capturing the attention of everyone in track letics. As a student who completed high school with and field. a 3.8 cumulative grade point average, she grappled In an impressive individual performance win- in her confidence when it came to the 400 meters. ning the 100, 200 and 400-meter state titles at the Her personal trainer and mother, Tamika, who Republic Bank/KHSAA Class 3A State Champi- was a state champion in the 400 at Eastern High onships at the University of Kentucky’s Outdoor School, told her to remember one thing: Always Track Complex, Townsend helped Male win their believe in herself. first state crown in 44 years. She said her goal wasn’t to win the race but to “It means a lot because we haven’t won state run under her personal record of 56.00 seconds. since 1972,” Townsend says. “So for me to go out She finished with a time of 55.46 seconds and says there and work hard, I knew it was going to earn she was proud of herself due to how much work points for my team. Coach Beaumont deserved it she put into the preparation. because she has been coaching for a while, so I With two titles down, there was only one left know she is happy and proud.” to go. Being ranked number one in both the Townsend was in a neck-and-neck race in the 100 meters, getting the narrow victory with 11.95 J U N E 9 , 2 0 1 6 • V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

400 meters and 200 meters brought pressure to Townsend as she strove to live up to the expecta-

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tions. But to alleviate any pressure, she says she reminded herself of how hard she worked and how all she had to do was show up and put it out there. The culminating moment came in the 200 meters. After placing first in two events where winning wasn’t the primary focus, she went into the 200 chasing victory. She finished with a time of 24.63 seconds. “My goal was to just win it because this is my favorite race. In my mind, I said, ‘Let me go ahead and win.’ I have already won two, so let me win this last race so I can make my coach and mom proud.” Townsend adds that her senior leadership was an essential part to her team capturing a state title. As a freshman, she sat under the wings of the senior class understanding she would one day fill their shoes. “Once they left, they all told me that I have to step up,” she says. “I had to step up and be a leader because a lot of people are watching me. I know whatever I do, younger teammates would try to follow in those footsteps, so I had to make sure we were on track of taking care of business and, as a team, being close and confident.” When asked what it meant to win state in her individual events, Townsend embraced her titles seeing them as a “hump that I got over, but I still have business to take care of in college.” Taliyah is leaning toward Baylor University to run track but hasn’t made a decision yet, but she plans to keep running toward success by studying biology to one day become a pharmacist. VT PHOTO BY GEORGE WILLIAMS


On May 31, the DuPont Manual Crimsons varsity baseball team triumphed over the host Male Bulldogs with a 6-5 victory at UofL’s Jim Patterson Stadium in a non-league challenge. Manual’s Chris Gambert (25) shone as he singled home Matthew Holson (2) for the winning run. With the win, DuPont Manual betters its record to 21-16 on the season, and Male falls to 19-17.

Male’s Will Seewer (12) watched the pitch as he led off from second base.

Male’s Noah Thompson (15) collided with Manual catcher Chris Gambert (25) at the plate.

Graham Christian (7) was tagged as he slid into third.

Lagnston Watkins (6) at bat for the Bulldogs.

John Ullom (18) hit the turf to get to third base.

P H OTO S B Y D A M O N AT H E R TO N

Bulldogs’ Jared Leuthart (30) prepared to deliver the next pitch.

Will Seewer (12), second base for Male, eyed his target at first base.

27

V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M • J U N E 9 , 2 0 1 6

Sports

Manual Nips Male


CONGRATULATIONS, GRADUATES!

CLASS OF 2016 Sydney Adkisson Harcourt Allen Lucas Asher Peyton Baker Jacob Blieden Taylor Bouvette Lee Bradley Henry Brousseau Harrison Burckle Raegan Campbell Zoe Carmouche Rebecca Carney Kelsey Cox Allysa Dunbar Caroline Fleming Lily Freytag Brenna Frigo Alicia Furlan Lily Gentry

2427 GLENMARY AVENUE

Sophia Giuffre Alisha Gordon Haniah Griffith Alex Grove Sarah Hall Charlotte Happel Hank Hendrix Emma Hill Katie Hillebrand Abigail Hillerich Patrick Howard George Isaacs Shawn Jeong Clay Knight Aaron Lerner Alana Levitch Nick Maloney Nick Medley

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Alex Oldham Gilly O’Leary Elizabeth Orr Max Papachristou Tim Roszell Jonathan Schmidt Misha Shtapov Diana Smith John Steenrod Jack Stevenson Coley Sullivan Case van der Velde Pavani Veerisetti Lauryn Waddell Kate Weaver Michael Webb Arabella Werner Eleanor White Juels White

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31 Connecting the City | 38 Denim & Diamonds | 42 Outrunning Autism 5K

SOCIETY

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Visit our redesigned website at

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for extended photo galleries and purchase options.

The Prelude

PAGE

44


S O C I E TY

Hike, Bike & Paddle On May 30, Mayor Fischer hosted his twice-annual event: the Hike, Bike & Paddle. The event takes place every Memorial Day and Labor Day and regularly sees thousands of participants choose a 5K hike, a 15-mile bike ride or a paddle on the Ohio River.

James Wampler, Anna Jayjock, Michael Carroll, Steven Schweitzer and Joel Dorsey.

Esther Biro with Wes and Francis Curtis.

Mike Maloney, Janice Cates, Dan Young, Kara Mackey, Monica Sheckles and Parker Henry.

Mayor Greg Fischer with Domenico and Stef Perri.

Stacy, Kenny and Nathan Doyon.

J U N E 9 , 2 0 1 6 • V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

Shine Studio of Louisville.

30

P H OTO S B Y J A M E S E ATO N


Connecting the City On June 1, River Fields hosted the second Connecting the City event at 21c Museum Hotel’s Rooftop Apartment. Guests had the chance to enjoy cocktails and hors d’oeuvres, connect with friends, have fun and take advantage of a rare opportunity to experience one of Louisville’s most unique settings combined with unbeatable views.

Ann James and Bee Jerus.

Dakota, David, Fife and Chelsea Wicks.

Gail and Dave Slater with Executive Director Meme Sweets Runyon.

Tracey and Ted Arena.

PHOTOS BY BILL WINE

Trustee Bea Rosenberg and Alan Rosenberg.

Trustees Von Purdy, Logan Ormerod and Jane Townsend.

31

V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M • J U N E 9 , 2 0 1 6


S O C I E TY

The Prelude Teddy Abrams, Ben Sollee and artists from the Louisville Ballet helped kick off The Prelude, an event to raise funds for the future home of Louisville’s Botanical Gardens at 1410 N. Frankfort Avenue on the evening of June 5. Guests enjoyed festive libations and farm-to-table hor d’oeurves by Atria Hospitality as they basked in the natural beauty of the site.

Gill and Owsley Holland with Mary Beth Brown.

Director of Program Development Kasey Maier and Katherine Halloran.

Winnie Chen and Martha Newman.

Graeme and Meghan Smith.

Donna Rice and Judy Buckler.

Sally and Karl Weidner.

Steve and Terri Bass.

Drs. Mary Helen Davis and Al Martin.

David Stirling, Jennifer Merrick, Lindsey Miller and Mark Campisano.

J U N E 9 , 2 0 1 6 • V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

32

PHOTOS BY BILL WINE


S O C I E TY

Robert Curran, Stephen Lewis, Sandy Gulick and Douglas Riddle.

Hadley and Dean Dimitropoulos.

Constance Story and Larry Pierce.

Chad Tolbert, Ashley Cuyjet, Laura Hufnagle and Tom Wilburn.

Justin O’Dell and Jeffrey Smith.

Kurt, Emil and David Graeser.

PHOTOS BY BILL WINE

Sarah and Alexander MacPhail-Fausey.

Susan and Nick Ochs.

33

V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M • J U N E 9 , 2 0 1 6


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S O C I E TY

Grand Finale Attendees gathered on June 2 at The Olmsted for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society’s Grand Finale event, where the Man & Woman of the Year were announced. The evening also included cocktails, dinner, live music and a spectacular live and silent auction.

Gail Deye and Kimberly Greenwell.

Veronica Glass and Erin Delaney.

Alli Overfield, Bradley Bringardner and Shelly Overfield.

Sandy Montgomery, Winkie Dawkins, Carroll DeHart and Heather and John Hollenbach.

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Deahanna Valentine, Barbara Stewart and Dr. Geetha Joseph. Collie and Reece King with Wyman Marshall.

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6/7/16 11:59 AM

V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M • J U N E 9 , 2 0 1 6


S O C I E TY

Denim & Diamonds On June 3, guests donned their denim and diamonds for the ninth annual Denim & Diamonds Gala at Locust Grove. Attendees enjoyed silent and live auctions and music while benefiting the Parkinson Support Center of Kentuckiana.

Gabe, Dee, Merv and Ashley Huber with Becky and Pat Dugan.

Kellie Sheehy and Laurie Lennon.

Bill Hardy and Joann Blacketer.

Erika Branch and Candace Faulkner.

Helen Combs, Donna Hall Prince, Genna Wafzig, Kim Nichols, Carrie Paar Murphy and Dana Hummel.

J U N E 9 , 2 0 1 6 • V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

Kat Panther with Mike and Mary Sue Doran.

Artie Dean Harris, Lori and Tim Laird and Robin and Shaun Logsdon.

38

PHOTOS BY TIM VALENTINO


BETTER First Friday Trolley Hop TOMORROWS With summer in the air, NuLu saw a wonderful crowd for the June edition of its monthly First Friday Trolley Hop. Dressed to enjoy the weather, participants ate, drank and shopped along East Market Street. Tony Pike, Rhiannon Cruz and Jake Curtis.

Jon Freels and J.D. Fotson.

Alison Sutton and Kristin Thrower.

Larry and Rita French, Rick Horn, Ginny Whitt, Henry and Susan Bunch and Bernadette Sacco.

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Allison Olive, Hannah Aleksevitch, Emily Trager and Olivia Cleary.

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Laurie Huff and Brad Dillingham.

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V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M • J U N E 9 , 2 0 1 6


S O C I E TY

Summer Jazz at Farmington On June 4, guests gathered at Historic Farmington Plantation for the lovely and laid-back Summer Jazz at Farmington. Jazz and swing music featuring members of the Louisville Orchestra and Teddy Abrams delighted attendees, as did light hors d’oeuvres and cocktails.

Tom, Dave and Susan Brand with Bec Lee and Greg and Claire Nelson.

Susa Hoe, Dixie Akers and Laura Zoo.

J U N E 9 , 2 0 1 6 • V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

Bob Roth and Susie Conley.

40

Brian and Swann Lander with Linda Smith.

PHOTOS BY TIM VALENTINO


S O C I E TY

Peggy Grimes and Susan Lindsay.

Adam Fuller and Jeremy Milam.

Dan Zook, Kathy Stammerman, Diane Young and Mike Stammerman.

Kiersten Quick, Teddy Abrams and Lindsey Vallandingham.

Bill Brasch, Charlie Hebel and Speed and A.C. Stodghill.

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Outrunning Autism 5K Families for Effective Autism Treatment (FEAT) of Louisville held its Outrunning Autism 5K at The Parklands on June 4. Proceeds benefited FEAT of Louisville and the many programs they support for children with autism.

Kendall Hurst and Laurie Hellman.

Team Dylan.

East Louisville Pediatrics.

Kendall Hurst, Paul Loheide, Josh Hellman, Skylar Hurst and Laurie Hellman.

Oldham County Middle School cheerleaders.

J U N E 9 , 2 0 1 6 • V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

Erin Gritton and Melissa DeHart.

42

PHOTOS BY TIM VALENTINO


Butchertown Art Fair Guests gathered on June 4 and 5 in Butchertown for the eighth annual Butchertown Art Fair. The event included over 80 art and craft vendors, food trucks, kids’ activities and more. Attendees also brought items to donate to Hildegard House.

Kosair Children’s

Hospital

David King and Alexa Kerley of David Kenton King Ceramics.

n

Jason Floerke and Chris Galla.

Make a big splash to help kids! Saturday, Aug. 6, 2016 9 a.m. Beckley Creek Park

Maggie and Christopher Kaufman.

Runners and walkers can choose to splash their way through a 5k course or a 1k family fun run filled with refreshing ways to cool off in splash zones.

Shaunna, Andelae and Lynn McCoy.

Learn more and register at SplashNDash5K.org or call (502) 629-8060. Proceeds benefit the life-saving care provided to children at Kosair Children’s Hospital, through the Children’s Hospital Foundation.

Gil Stengel and Yuki Muroe.

Presented by:

Dodie Wrocklage-Harp and Gina Greenberg-Moller.

PHOTOS BY TIM VALENTINO

Chris Plummer and Nick Johnson.

43

V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M • J U N E 9 , 2 0 1 6


Your wardrobe fits, shouldn’t your closet?

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NCJW Closing Meeting Luncheon The Louisville Section of the National Council of Jewish Women (NCJW) held their Closing Meeting Luncheon on June 1 at Vincenzo’s. Guests enjoyed delicious Italian dining as well as talks from some of the most distinguished members of Louisville’s legal community such as Jefferson County Circuit Court Clerk David Nicholson.

Pat Gusoff and Jacquelyn Ha.

“LOVE, LOVE, LOVE THE CLOSET” You should have a fabulous closet—a smartly planned personal space that makes every day easier. Closet Factory is the only Kentucky closet company to offer natural wood closets with custom paint or stain finishes as well as state-of-the-art glazed, textured, metallic or high-gloss laminate solutions.

Call 859-277-0277 for a free consultation or visit us online at closetfactory.com Showroom: 246 Walton Avenue (inside WillisKlein)

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Jefferson County Circuit Court Clerk David Nicholson and Madeline Abramson.

Janie Hyman, Marilyn Schorin and Diane Graeter.

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Julie Hardesty, Janie Hyman, President of the Louisville Section of the National Council of Jewish Women Joyce Bridge, Diane Graeter and speaker Chief Judge Patricia Walker Fitzgerald, retired.

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Janie Hyman and Lenae Price.

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Beth Salamon, Jefferson County Circuit Court Clerk David Nicholson and Jane and Bert Emke.

44

PHOTOS BY BILL WINE


Plein Art Painters Artist Reception An open reception was held at the Jane Morgan Studio and Gallery for the “Scenes from The Parklands” exhibit on May 12. The show will run through July 20.

Beverly Morfield, Louise Brown and Donna and Glenn Rief.

Artists Gwen Knight, Carol Fausel and Amy Welborn.

Rhonda Goodall.

Roger Maas, artist Carol Fawsel, Roy Maas and Chuck Fawsel.

Ken Boatwright with Glenda and Randy Neely.

Helen Reddens, Dowey Thompsoli and artist Mary Vander Week.

Carita Warner, artist Sarann Harralson and Bonnie Vatter.

Artist Patricia Retter and Susan Retter.

45

Art gallery owner Jane Morgan and Jenni Deamer.

V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M • J U N E 9 , 2 0 1 6

S O C I E TY

On the Town with Veteran Photographer John H. Harralson Jr.


S O C I E TY The “backyard” at Hampton Court.

The Ashmolean Museum at Oxford.

W

Courtyard at Windsor.

The Royal Conclusion

e realized our excursion to England with our friends Suzanne and Pat was more than half over as we were leaving Hidcote Gardens and headed to Woburn Abbey and Gardens.

Partyline CARLA SUE BROECKER

John Russell, 6th Duke of Bedford commissioned Humphrey Repton to create designs to enhance the Abbey’s gardens and park. Driving through the park you see native red deer and fallow deer plus seven other species

that came from Asia. The Milu, commonly known as Père David’s deer, can be seen here. Originally from China, the species was saved from extinction by the 11th Duke, who brought them back to Woburn. In 1985, the Marquess of Tavistock, later the 14th Duke, gave 22 deer to the People’s Republic of China to reintroduce this species to the former Imperial Hunting Park in Beijing. Their herds now number several thousand.

came finally home to beautiful Kentucky. Pat, Suzanne, Brad and I had a wonderful last trip by car, and the boys did a great job driving on the wrong side. But from now on we are leaving the driving to the captain of a ship! VT

At Bolsover Castle, begun during the reign of James I in 1615, we took a quick walkabout. We then headed south to Windsor Castle, home of the Queen, with a 1,000-year history and site of the recent spectacular equestrian celebration of her jubilee. We toured the state apartments and adored Queen Mary’s doll house designed by the famous British architect, Sir Edwin Lutyens. The State Apartments are used regularly by the Queen for formal events, as is St. George’s Chapel. It was begun in 1475 and finished 50 years later by Henry VII.

Carla Sue with Suzanne and Pat at Hampton Court.

Then we headed to Oxford and visited the famous Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archaeology. It has everything from Andy Warhol to Mongolian coinage to Martin Bros. pottery. Then it was on to Hampton Court Palace, former royal residence of the Tudors, Henry VIII and his six wives, and William III and Mary II, with its splendid 60 acres of gardens. A Windsor watchtower.

J U N E 9 , 2 0 1 6 • V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

We spent the night in a hotel at London’s Heathrow Airport and flew through Atlanta and

46

Entrance to Windsor Castle.

PHOTOS COURTESY OF CARLA SUE BROECKER


S O C I E TY

For the Record: Interpreters Talk and Translators Write DEAR ABBY: I’m writing about your answer to “An International Educator” (December 27), who asked about translators at parent-teacher conferences. Your answer was only partially correct.

DEAR O.W.K.: Thank you for clarifying the difference between the two terms. You were one of many readers who wrote to explain it, and I’m glad you did. •••

Dear Abby

DEAR ABBY: Please tell your readers that even though gay people are more integrated into our lives, it does JEANNE not provide an open invitation to pry PHILLIPS into anyone’s sexual practices. I have been asked many times about the physical mechanics of my relationship, although I would Second, during interpretation, the interpreter never consider requesting such information from is not considered to be part of the conversation, my heterosexual friends, neighbors or co-workers. just a “conduit” through which communication I think the bottom line should be: Keep your takes place. Persons being interpreted for do not noses out of your friends’ bedrooms and everyneed to look at the interpreter while facilitating thing will be just fine. I am a gay 49-year-old man their communication. in Texas and honestly would never dream of asking A professional interpreter will interpret every- any couple – straight or gay – what they do when thing that is said; for example, they will not leave they are alone. It bothers me that some people out curse words or “filter” or embellish anything. think being accepted means I welcome these kinds They also try to approximate the same voice tone. of questions. – MYOB IN AUSTIN I am a professional interpreter and translator. First, I should note that translators do written work; interpreters speak aloud. Different skills are involved, which is why there are different terms.

I should also note that professional interpreters are bound by privacy codes much like doctors and nurses. We are not allowed to divulge any information we have learned from our interpretation jobs. Another thing to realize is that a professional interpreter (or translator) will be completely neutral, regardless of who hired him/her or with which party he/she enters the room. If someone is using a non-professional interpreter, a person who just happens to know both languages but has not had the training to be an interpreter, he/she may not adhere to these privacy or conduct codes, and their interpretations may not be of the best quality. Just knowing two languages does not guarantee that someone is capable of doing accurate interpretations (the same goes for translations). – ONE WHO KNOWS IN KANSAS

DEAR MYOB: There is no end to the nosy and intrusive questions people with poor judgment will ask. However, there is a standard response that may resolve your problem if you say it with a smile. It’s, “If you’ll forgive me for not answering that question, I’ll forgive you for asking!” ••• DEAR ABBY: I’m four-months pregnant by my ex-boyfriend. We ended our relationship six months ago but continued to see each other for sex. He’s in the Army and has been diagnosed with depression and PTSD. At first, he was my knight in shining armor, but after I moved into his house, he become mentally and physically abusive. He is now in a new relationship. He changed his phone number and hasn’t checked on me or our baby in weeks. I want him to have a relationship

How do I get over my feelings and convince him to be in our child’s life? Or are my feelings justified and I’m just being a protective mother? – PROTECTIVE MOTHER DEAR PROTECTIVE MOTHER: What a sad letter. It would be interesting to know how much of his abusive behavior was a result of his depression and PTSD. But if you think that a mentally and physically abusive man, who has changed his phone number and done his best to get out of touch with you, is a suitable father figure for a child, you are kidding yourself. You will, however, have a chance to make him live up to his financial responsibilities to the baby if you discuss this with an individual who is in a position to help you – an attorney. Don’t wait; start the conversations now. ••• DEAR ABBY: When I visited my sister 15 years ago, my brother-in-law tried to rape me. He was drunk and my sister was out with her friends. I have not revealed this to my family or my sister, who is emotionally and financially dependent on him. My niece is now 20 years old and in college. I feel I should tell her what her dad did to me and warn her to be careful. What do you think? – NEVER FORGETTING IN PENNSYLVANIA DEAR NEVER FORGETTING: Frankly, I think that if your brother-in-law was going to assault his daughter, it would have happened already, and you should have told your family what he tried to do to you at the time it occurred. ••• Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

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with his child, but every time I look at him, I see a liar, a manipulator and an abuser who doesn’t care about either of us.

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eople watching p l fu ti u a e b d n a cing, live music ra f o ll ri th e th Enjoy rchill Downs! u h C t a m/SpringMeet. rs o ta s .c s e n w o lD il h under th rc just $10 at Chu Tickets start at k #DownsAfterDar


52 Fashion | 53 Health & Wellness | 62 Calendar

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Painting with Plants

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Life

SPOTLIGHT

Jeffersonville Pride Festival

On June 25, 2016, Jeffersonville, Indiana, will see the first-ever Jeffersonville Pride Festival take place at Big Four Station. The event will kick off with a parade at noon before allowing guests to enjoy the booths, entertainment and other fun all taking place in a safe and positive environment. To get more information about the concept behind the big day, we caught up with Evan Stoner, the 18-year-old festival director who created the event. What is the Jeffersonville Pride Festival? Jeffersonville Pride Festival is Southern Indiana’s first ever LGBT+ pride parade and festival. Jeffersonville Pride’s mission is as follows: Jeffersonville Pride Festival promotes Southern Indiana and its surrounding communities as places where kindness and diversity thrive. It seeks to inspire people to make a positive impact on our community by promoting advocacy and inclusion of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer people and their allies. By coming together as one community comprised of many different kinds of people, we inspire hope for the future and for generations to come. What can guests expect at the event? On June 25, 2016, Southern Indiana and Jeffersonville will make history. Throughout this expe-

rience, I have had the true honor of meeting so many Jeffersonville residents who have expressed to me that they never thought they would see this day come. We’ll get the day kicked off at noon with a parade down the historic Spring Street in Jeffersonville, Indiana. Following the parade, Jeffersonville Pride Festival will take place until 10 p.m. at Big Four Station in Jeffersonville. Many Jeffersonville, Louisville and Indianapolis businesses, organizations and political groups will be hosting booths at the festival, including local food vendors. On the Jeffersonville Pride Festival Main Stage will be a full day of music and entertainment from local bands, artists and a performance by Cabaret La Cage of Pride Bar and Lounge in New Albany. Guests can expect a ton of fun at the family-friendly Jeffersonville Pride Parade and Festival! What prompted you to create the festival? Jeffersonville Pride Festival will be taking place a day before the anniversary of the Supreme Court ruling in favor of marriage equality in the United States. I believe Jeffersonville Pride is an example of just how fast our country is moving forward since that historic decision. However, the conception of Jeffersonville Pride came after an intense situation where discrimination was targeted at the LGBT+ community in Jeffersonville. I decided to speak up on the first and second occurrence of discrimination. At first, I was very upset – I felt lost and unclear about what I could do to really have a positive impact, not just argue on social media. The discrimination prompted me to take a hard look at a time growing up in Jeffersonville. I began thinking again about the discrimination and bullying I endured in middle school for talking in a way that, to some, “sounded gay.” I was called offensive and derogatory terms on countless occasions and even physically threatened.

Evan Stoner.

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I am not alone in my experiences, though. I have many friends who have also been bullied and discriminated against in local Southern Indiana schools. Of course, the administration always reminded me about their “zero-tolerance policy” for bully-

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ing and discrimination; however, my calls for help on behalf of school administrations did not work. Recalling all of this and taking into consideration the social media discrimination, I came to the conclusion enough was enough. That’s when I decided a pride parade and festival was the best way to have a real impact in Jeffersonville. I felt it could shed light on LGBT+ discrimination taking place as well as provide a platform for LGBT+ residents in Jeffersonville to feel loved and welcomed in their community that they know and love. In addition, I believe pride parades and festivals are a great way to bring the entire community together for a truly fun event that everyone can enjoy. How do you think this event will impact Jeffersonville? I envision that one day, Jeffersonville will be a huge, thriving, innovative, award-winning, inclusive city. For Jeffersonville, the sky is the limit. I want all of Jeffersonville’s residents to have the opportunity to live, learn and grow in an environment free from discrimination, bullying and harassment. I believe that in a future Jeffersonville, not one single person will feel like they don’t belong or aren’t welcomed in the city. I believe wholeheartedly that Jeffersonville is better together as a unified city. Jeffersonville Pride is for everyone. Jeffersonville Pride began as an idea that has grown into a movement. However, LGBT+ discrimination is not the only problem facing Jeffersonville and Indiana. I think what this event will do is encourage and empower other people in our community to speak up and take action when they see something wrong in their city as well. There are no limitations to our success as a city, state or country. How do you hope the event grows in years to come? Southern Indiana is home to some of the most hardworking, dedicated people I’ve ever met. I think pride in Southern Indiana is something that we will continue to build on throughout the years. I want to continue finding ways to empower and engage the LGBT+ community in Southern Indiana. In the years to come, I want to reach out to more Southern Indiana communities to keep building a movement and a coalition of people who are seeking equality and fairness. As for June 2017, stay tuned! VT P H OTO B Y A N TO N I O PA N TOJ A


Life

Cater Fest

SPOTLIGHT

On June 15, the Mellwood Arts & Entertainment Center will hold the first-ever Cater Fest, an event designed to showcase some of Louisville’s best catering companies to prospective clients. To get all the details on the event’s inaugural year, we caught up with Scooter Davidson of Mellwood. This is the first year of Cater Fest, correct? Why did you decide to launch it? Yes, this is the inaugural event, and it came about because we always brag about the diversity and quality of caterers that come and service our brides, corporate events and fundraisers here at Mellwood. We are unique in that we do not charge any caterer the typical 15-25 percent that other venues do, so this makes it easier and financially a win-win for the customer at our venue. Lots of times, brides can’t make it to every wedding show and caterers do not participate in every wedding show, so we thought we would throw a totally free event so that brides and other event planners could get more of an idea of what’s out there. What can attendees expect at the event? Top caterers like the Bristol, Ladyfingers,

Naiman’s Catering, Kingsley and smaller catering companies will be here with an array of foods. You can definitely eat your whole dinner here as they are very generous and putting out nice platters of food. Another great side of Cater Fest is that we are doing a giveaway. Everyone who attends can put their name in the ballot box, and at 7:30 p.m., the name will be drawn and that person will win a free rental of our Monet Event Room No. 2 – a $1,000 value. It has the capacity of 160 seated and is perfect for a small wedding, a rehearsal dinner or a fundraiser – really just about anything! The winner will then also choose a nonprofit charity or organization and we will donate that same room on another night so that that charity can have a fundraiser or exhibition at no rental cost. Additionally, there will be people on-hand

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to give us a tour of Mellwood, the three different event rooms and any of the artist studios. We have plenty of free parking as always, and there is absolutely no cost for reservations. We are holding the event in our large Van Gogh Event Room, which accommodates 600-700 people and showcases a totally refurbished bar. Heather Renée, a singer-songwriter, will provide some light music. She has a beautiful voice and has won various awards at local singing competitions. Do you hope this event becomes an annual occasion? Yes, we’re actually having another one in February and then again next June to tie in with the bridal seasons! But the first one will certainly be an event you won’t want to miss. VT V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M • J U N E 9 , 2 0 1 6


Life

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5. 1.

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PRETTY IN PRINT

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2. Colette skort in Out To Sea, $88 3. Laura sandal, $158 4. Shore cosmetic case in Out To Sea, $38 5. Palm beach tote in Out To Sea, $68 6. Tiki palm iPhone 6 wristlet in Out To Sea, $48 7. Jelly tassel necklace, $68 8. Sunglasses in Let’s Cha Cha, $48 AVAILABLE AT PEPPERMINT PALM: 502.896.9190 • PEPPERMINTPALM.COM LOCATED IN THE VOGUE SHOPPING CENTER: 3739 LEXINGTON ROAD, LOUISVILLE, KY 40207

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S

Written by Kevin Sedelmeier

tarted in 2005 under then mayor Jerry Abramson, the Mayor’s Healthy Hometown Movement was designed as a long-term multi-phase program led by the Louisville Metro Health Department to promote healthier lifestyles, better eating habits and increased physical activity. The movement began in part as a response to a 2004 Health Status Assessment Report that included distressing statistics claiming nearly 60 percent of Louisvillians were overweight with almost 29 percent labeled obese. The study also said 78 percent of residents were not eating enough fruits and vegetables and 35 percent engaged in no leisure-time physical activity. May 31 was the deadline for local, small non-profit organizations to apply for a 2016 Healthy Hometown grant from the Mayor’s Hometown Movement. Grants have been awarded for the past 10 years with money coming from the city’s general fund. Grant money totals an estimated $30,000-$35,000 annually. During the past decade, more than a half million dollars have been awarded in grants to over 100 community groups. According to Leanne French, administrator at Louisville Metro’s Department of Public Health and Wellness, for 2016, 20 agencies have submitted applications and a committee is already meeting to review them. Organizations awarded grants will be notified in July. Under Mayor Greg Fisher, the movement and its types of grants have grown. “Last year, we expanded it beyond what had just been healthy

eating and active living to include a number of topics in Healthy Louisville 2020,” French says, referring to a local initiative that tracks hundreds of community health indicators and provides strategies for addressing health challenges. Topics included violence prevention, safe neighborhoods and tobacco use. Providing grants, however, is just one facet of what the Mayor’s Healthy Hometown Movement does. According to French, directors of all metro government agencies including parks, housing, transportation and public schools are now asking what they can do in their policies to make Louisville a healthier place. For example, the expansion of bike lanes around town was initiated by Metro Public Works. Dave Langdon, public information officer at Louisville Metro’s Department of Public Health and Wellness, says, “Every government decision considers the health aspect of its decision. So when you are repaving the streets, you look at the health aspects of that, and one of the health aspects of that is giving the opportunity if they want to use the streets for bikes. So that’s a perfect example of the ‘health in all’ policies approach.” This increased government and public awareness is evident in events like the Hike, Bike & Paddle, whose participation has steadily increased over the years. “We’ve gone from 1,500 people to well over 10,000,” Langdon says. The event is now held each year on Memorial Day and Labor Day – the most recent having just been held on May 30.

the Movement has widened in regard to public health concerns is in the area of smoking. “Such a big issue for Kentucky and specifically in Louisville is smoking rates and exposure to secondhand smoke,” French says. “Metro Parks has taken a big step forward in terms of outdoor air and is making all of their children’s play areas and spraygrounds smoke-free.” Although, the Mayor’s Healthy Hometown Movement might have started as a means of addressing obesity and inactive lifestyles, it has become much more. Langdon says it has now expanded to make policies that will “impact everybody in Louisville to create equal opportunity for healthier choices and healthier living period.” But in expanding, city leaders are not looking past anyone. French asserts, “We really want to make sure these get into neighborhoods and smaller areas.” Now entering its second decade, the Mayor’s Healthy Hometown Movement continues to reach more and more people in our community. VT

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The Movement was designed to change the culture in Louisville to one in which physical activity and healthy eating are the norms, but despite progress and data that shows the number of obese adults and those with hypertension is dropping in our community, over the past couple of years, Louisville has seen some discouraging rankings about its fitness level in national magazines and on websites. But is there any legitimacy to these findings? “One of the things we said in 2005 when this Mayor’s Hometown Movement started is that we didn’t get in this position overnight, and we’re talking about cultural change,” Langdon says. “The change is going to be gradual, but I think we are seeing some changes.”

Participants at this year’s Hike, Bike & Paddle.

P H OTO B Y J A M E S E ATO N

An example of how the scope of

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Life

The Evolution of the Mayor’s Healthy Hometown Movement

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LIFE

Drink Your

Veggies W

hat began as a two-person operation in one person’s kitchen has now become a thriving juice enterprise.

Tastes

ington in May 2012. They now have stores in Cincinnati and here in Louisville on Bauer Avenue in St. Matthews. You can also find their juice at two different Heine Brothers’ locations – one on Blankenbaker Parkway and another on Brownsboro Road. As their retail stores continue to thrive – the company recently signed a lease for a second location in Lexington – they still run the delivery service that got them started.

The Weekly Juicery got its start MARIAH in Kimmye Bohannon’s neighborhood in fall 2011. Since making KLINE juice requires a great deal of time and effort, Bohannon and her neighWhile most juice and smoothie stores rely bor would take turns making each other juice heavily on sugar and fruit for their products, every week. The Weekly Juicery maintains a highly vege“When I didn’t have to make it myself or put table-centric menu and uses exclusively organin any of the labor, I would think, ‘This is so ic produce. The business is currently in the lovely, having juice delivered right to my door,’” final stages of becoming certifiably organic Bohannon recalls. with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, an This convenience inspired the pair to start a endorsement that very few juice companies home delivery service in which they would deliv- ever achieve. er high-quality vegetable juices to their customIf you’ve been curious about the green juice ers’ homes every day Monday through Friday – movement that has emerged in recent years but hence the name The Weekly Juicery. Their orig- haven’t tried it yet, The Weekly Juicery is a great inal 80-person customer base has now grown to place to start. They offer free samples and have 200 weekly clients. But they didn’t stop there. knowledgeable juice guides ready to answer any They opened their first retail store in Lex-

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questions you may have. For a beginner juic-

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er, Bohannon suggests being both open-minded and patient. “I would say nine times out of 10 when someone comes in to our store and works with our juice guides, they can find something that they like,” she says. “If you don’t usually eat a lot of vegetables, you can start out with one of our juices that has a little bit of fruit and then make the transition to juice with no fruit.” The Weekly Juicery also offers smoothies for those who may not be ready to take the plunge into drinking straight green juice. Though Bohannon advises that, for most beginners, the transition is a short one. Even people who are heavily reliant on sodas or unhealthy foods find themselves quickly acclimating and enjoying the taste of green juice. For making juice at home, Bohannon recommends using dark leafy greens as well as lighter ingredients such as cucumbers or green apples. More than anything, she encourages people to be thoughtful about using organic produce since non-organics often have traces of chemicals and synthetic pesticides that cannot be washed away. As for the juice cleanses that many nutritionists and celebrities swear by, The Weekly Juicery COURTESY PHOTOS


LIFE

Owners Kimmye Bohannon and Elizabeth Beal.

has you covered there as well. They offer three types of cleanses designed for beginners and experienced cleansers alike. The best part? This week, all of their juice cleanses are 20 percent off. Until Sunday, June 12, you can purchase their one-day cleanse, which includes four coldpressed juices, for only $52 (usually $65) or their three-day cleanse – their best seller – for $144 (usually $180). Why is doing a juice cleanse such a good idea, you ask?

“The power of the juice cleanse is mostly about giving our bodies an extended period of digestive rest,” Bohannon reveals. “When you drink the juice, your digestive system is getting a sort of vacation. It doesn’t have to break down all of that soluble fiber, and a healing and restoration occurs. Even a one-day cleanse is an excellent way to give your body a vacation from this digestive overload that we experience in the standard American diet.” Bohannon’s best advice for someone who

ZIMMERMAN

COURTESY PHOTOS

“We want people to think about their well-being while they’re still well,” she says. “By drinking one juice a day or even once a week, you’ll be able to tell a difference in the way you feel.” VT The Weekly Juicery’s Louisville location is at 112 Bauer Ave., Louisville, KY 40207. For more information, call 502.785.4215 or visit theweeklyjuicery.com.

SANDERS-MILLER

WEDDING ANNIVERSARY

John and Patty Zimmerman, née Nicolas, of Louisville are pleased to announce their 60th wedding anniversary on June 16. The couple was married at St. Columba on June 16, 1965 and will be celebrating the occasion in Panama City Beach on June 16, 2016. John and Patty Zimmerman are parents of Denise Poukish, Diane McCune, John Zimmerman and Patrick Zimmerman and the proud grandparents of nine grandchildren.

wants to lead a healthier lifestyle and begin drinking green juice is to make it a habit. She firmly believes in the cumulative effect that occurs after drinking juice over time.

ENGAGEMENT

Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. Sanders III of Louisville are pleased to announce the engagement of their daughter, Sara Elizabeth, to Erik Ross Miller, son of Mr. and Mrs. Barry Miller of Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Sara and Erik met as undergraduate students while attending Rhodes College in Memphis, Tennessee in 2009.

attorney with the Gordon McKernan Law Firm in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. The couple is planning a wedding for November 12, 2016 at the Brown Hotel in Louisville.

Sara graduated from Rhodes with a bachelor’s degree in Spanish language and literature. She just recently graduated from Louisiana State University’s Master of Social Work program with honors and will soon begin work as a school-based therapist with the Capital Area Human Services District in Baton Rouge. Erik graduated from Rhodes with a bachelor’s degree in political science. He then earned his juris doctorate from Louisiana State University Paul M. Hebert Law Center in 2013 and was admitted to the Louisiana Bar later that year. Erik is currently employed as an

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O

In the Louisville Loop

the initiative. Finally, in 2011, Mayor ne of the first things that Greg Fischer solidified the plan into a those visiting from out of 25-year vision for Louisville that is now town notice about Loucalled the Louisville Loop. isville is the amount of greenThe overall Loop initiative is to build ery. Everywhere you look, there an approximately 100-mile path sysare trees upon trees, varied and tem for pedestrians and cyclists – and Out & About numerous. While it is true that in some areas for equestrians – around the perimeter of Louisville. About 50 these arboreal wonders are a BEN miles are now constructed and open prominent factor in the Ohio GIERHART to the public – or will be this summer. River Valley’s notoriously bad @BenGierhart_BEP This path system will and does include allergy season, they are also a soft surface trails, on-road bike lanes, blessing, which is perhaps why stream corridors, the original Olmsted Parkways, Metro Louisville has one of the most robust greenways and transit routes. parks systems in the country. The Louisville Loop is a truly transformative First setting things in motion for the city and the breathtaking parks that it has to offer was a project called Cornerstone 2020, led by County Judge Executive David Armstrong and over 600 dedicated citizens. This movement began in 1993, and when Louisville merged with Jefferson County in 2003, Mayor Jerry Abramson furthered

project for Louisville, and it will afford the city an unprecedented integrated transportation system that will be the envy of cities across the nation. According to Louisville Metro Parks and Recreation Senior Planner Lisa Hite, the Loop celebrates Louisville’s history and natural world through public art, complementing special places in the city: “The intent of the Loop is to leverage the impact of the original Olmsted Park System and to help shape the future experience of our community.” The Loop encompasses many different projects and a number of partners who are building various parts of it. Metro Parks and Recreation is the lead agency for planning, design and building most of the Loop, and the current state of affairs regarding the overall projects seems to indicate full steam ahead. As of this article, six and a half miles are currently being designed through Jefferson Memorial Forest. About half a mile of construction will begin this year along Shelbyville Road from Middletown to The Parklands, with another three

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miles to follow in the next year or two. Three and a half miles of Campground Road will be adding a shared-use path to the already existing bike lanes, and serious planning sessions are currently underway for projects that will eventually connect the Big Four Bridge to Prospect as well as a connection for Beargrass Creek Trail to the rest of the Loop. In addition, Metro Parks is partnering with several outside agencies for other aspects of the initiative, such as the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to reconstruct a section of existing paths along the Ohio River near Portland Wharf and Shawnee Parks. 21st Century Parks will also open the last of their 18 miles of their Parklands of Floyds Fork projects this summer, and Metro Public Works is incorporating some segments of the Loop into road projects such as a widening of River Road from Beargrass Creek to Zorn and Cooper Chapel Road from Beulah Church Road to Bardstown Road. If you are looking for suggestions as to where to access the Loop currently and what to expect, Hite offers some insight: “I advise that you experience the Loop on a bike to cover more ground. For a more urban experience, start at the Big Four Bridge, go west and follow the signs through Waterfront Park.” Alternatively, Hite offers some recommendations for a more rural ambiance as well: “Start at Beckley Creek Park off Shelbyville Road and ride south for as long as you want up to about 18 or 19 miles. There are lovely views of woodland, farm fields, wetlands and numerous crossings of Floyds Fork.” The scale of this project is gargantuan. So much so that it seems that it may never be completed. The proposed date of 2036 is a long way away, but the fact of the matter is that slowly but surely, Louisville will have a unique parks system unlike any other. Once completed, most of Louisville will be within one mile of some portion of the loop, giving citizens a singular connectivity not only with nature but with each other. VT For more information and a complete map of the 100-mile trail system, visit louisvilleky.gov/government/louisville-loop or call 502.574.7275.

P H OTO S C O U R T E S Y O F M E T R O PA R K S A N D R E C R E AT I O N


Painting with PLANTS

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er and I worked in the business as ouisville is an area kids. Then I went to UK and got a blessed with interesting degree in ornamental horticulture, and high-quality hortibut I always knew that I wanted to culture. Consequently, the city do design work.” Korfhage says that has no shortage of incredible the university didn’t have a landscaping architecture program when marvels of landscape architecHomes he went there, but the degree he was ture. There are countless busiable to attain and the experience he nesses that perform beautiBEN had and would gain allowed him to ful work in this field, but one become a registered landscape archiGIERHART of the best is Korfhage Land@BenGierhart_BEP tect anyway. scape & Designs, run by veterKorfhage worked in the family an horticulturist and landscape archi- business for several years. He eventually decidtect John Korfhage. Through his busi- ed, however, to open his own location with his ness, Korfhage has had the opportuni- brother, Bob, in Jeffersontown in the late ’70s – what now has become Korfhage Landscape ty to establish a sterling reputation that & Designs. has afforded him the opportunity to “There are more development, office buildwork on such gardening and landscap- ings and higher-end residences there every ing projects as the offices of Kindred day,” says Korfhage of his part of town before Healthcare as well as some of the most adding with a laugh, “Since we started our business here, the whole East End has changed trevaluable residences in Louisville.

“Our family started a horticulture business in 1920,” explains Korfhage. “My father and his brother took over the business, and my brothPHOTOS COURTESY OF JOHN KORFHAGE

mendously. When we moved out there, it was a lot of corn fields.” During that time, not only did Korfhage work hard but he also developed a reputation for excellence. He also sought ways to offer services that his competitors did not.

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V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M • J U N E 9 , 2 0 1 6

BOOK SIGNING TUESDAY, JUNE 14TH FROM 6-8 PM

at BOURBON’S BISTRO 2255 Frankfort Ave, Louisville, KY 40206 Written by DIXIE HIBBS & DORIS SETTLES 16th book written by Dixie Hibbs Itatis sam consect atentia consed quaeria et ommolore, es et enit eosam volum sitati aut quis et ea nobit fugiam niam voluptae. , ius volorro bea nem Ost ommoluptati nulla cumeni aut ratis nis et dolupture imagnis renden is dollorro endanti occusam soloribu am coribusda andeliq volupta quiatec s sinate vel etur aut uatemque consequ alia ab int possum Qui nam nihiliqu i velecepera quam, e rendae. Ne que il etur? odi dolorem perferis mos sinumet, que eiumque preperi namus mos serum rnatum qui nates on et solum et ut ad exerspi cipsand es quamus, quunda ferenimus vero ellatquis eum as e et la moluptatet iliquod nullatatque sequias sita conet endaepre cor magnat i deru rereprehende doluptam es quam, voluptatem es saecta que volupta cum a nes volupti volut aut ant ea Gent fugiandiati sitatur iberupt iorestio dionser aut aut asit qui chilit exerum quia odist adigent laborep niam, si fuga. Ur? Quia es sequamus renderu e nos doluptatiam, senist audaep ant faceprecerro tatiam pis exerovit, ut officiun et, et et, consequ aeceres tiunduc aut is dest es volo t bla doluptae dolloru volorrorum initatur andit ipsae ipis orrovid mo odis cum m quis ipsaecta dolendenis aris s acest, eossunt expliqu magniti dolorum que nobit esed quias quisitib e laboreped qui denit aceaque erchita dunt, quo quam us dia sus, illiquam volorere magnam eiuntur sit volorep Itatis sam consect quis aut laborer atentia consed quaeria sitati aut et ommolore, es quis et ea nobit et enit eosam volum fugiam, ius niam voluptae. volorro bea nem Ost ommoluptati ratis nis et dolupture nulla cumeni aut imagnis renden is dollorro endanti occusam soloribu am coribusda andeliq volupta quiatec s sinate vel etur aut uatemque consequ alia ab int possum Qui nam nihiliqu i velecepera quam, e rendae. Ne que il etur? odi dolorem perferis mos sinumet, que eiumque preperi namus mos serum rnatum qui nates on et solum et ut ad exerspi cipsand es quamus, quunda ferenimus vero ellatquis eum as e et la moluptatet iliquod nullatatque sequias sita conet endaepre cor magnat i deru rereprehende doluptam es quam, voluptatem es saecta que volupta cum a nes volupti volut aut ant ea Gent fugiandiati sitatur iberupt iorestio dionser aut aut asit qui chilit exerum quia odist adigent laborep niam, si fuga. Ur? Quia es sequamus renderu e nos doluptatiam, senist audaep ant faceprecerro tatiam pis exerovit, ut officiun et, et et, consequ aeceres tiunduc aut is dest es volo t bla doluptae dolloru volorrorum initatur andit ipsae ipis orrovid mo odis cum m quis ipsaecta dolendenis aris s acest, eossunt expliqu magniti dolorum que nobit esed quias quisitib e laboreped qui denit aceaque erchita dunt, quo quam volorere magnam us dia sus, illiquam eiuntur sit volorep Itatis sam consect quis aut laborer atentia consed quaeria et ommolore, es et enit eosam volum sitati aut quis et ea nobit fugiam niam voluptae. , volorro ius bea nem Ost ommoluptati nulla cumeni aut ratis nis et dolupture imagnis renden is dollorro endanti occusam soloribu am coribusda andeliq s sinuatemque consequ i

volupta quiatec ate vel etur aut alia ab int possum Qui nam nihiliqu velecepera quam, e rendae. Ne que il etur? odi dolorem perferis mos sinumet, que eiumque preperi namus mos serum rnatum qui nates on et solum et ut ad exerspi cipsand es quamus, quunda ellatquis eum as ferenimus vero e et la moluptatet iliquod nullatatque sequias sita conet endaepre cor magnat i deru rereprehende doluptam es quam, voluptatem es saecta que volupta cum a nes volupti volut aut ant ea Gent fugiandiati sitatur iberupt iorestio dionser aut aut asit qui chilit exerum quia odist adigent laborep niam, si fuga. Ur? Quia e nos dolupta es sequamus renderu tiam, senist audaep ant faceprecerro tatiam pis exerovit, ut officiun et, et et, consequ aeceres tiunduc aut is dest es volo t bla doluptae dolloru volorrorum initatur andit ipsae ipis orrovid mo odis cum m quis ipsaecta dolendenis aris s acest, eossunt expliqu magniti dolorum que nobit esed quias quisitib e laboreped qui denit aceaque erchita dunt, quo quam volorere magnam us dia sus, illiquam eiuntur sit volorep Itatis sam consect quis aut laborer atentia consed quaeria et ommolore, es et enit eosam volum sitati aut quis et ea nobit fugiam niam voluptae. , ius volorro bea nem Ost ommoluptati nulla cumeni aut ratis nis et dolupture imagnis renden is dollorro endanti occusam soloribu am coribusda andeliq volupta quiatec s sinate vel etur aut uatemque consequ alia ab int possum Qui nam nihiliqu i velecepera quam, e rendae. Ne que il etur? odi dolorem perferis mos sinumet, que eiumque preperi namus mos serum rnatum qui nates on et solum et ut ad exerspi cipsand es quamus, quunda ferenimus vero ellatquis eum as e et la sita conet moluptatet iliquod endaep nullatatque sequias i derre doluptam es quam, cor magnatu rereprehende voluptatem es saecta que volupta cum a nes volupti volut aut ant ea Gent fugiandiati sitatur iberupt iorestio dionser aut aut asit qui chilit exerum quia odist adigent laborep niam, si fuga. Ur? Quia es sequamus renderu e nos doluptatiam, senist audaep ant faceprecerro tatiam pis exerovit, ut officiun et, et et, consequ aeceres tiunduc aut is dest es volo t bla doluptae dolloru volorrorum initatur andit ipsae ipis orrovid mo odis cum m quis ipsaectas acest, dolendenis aris eossunt magnit expliqu dolorum que nobit i esed quias quisitib e laboreped qui denit aceaque erchita dunt, quo quam volorere magnam us dia sus, illiquam eiuntur sit volorep Itatis sam consect quis aut laborer atentia consed quaeria et ommolore, es et enit eosam volum sitati aut quis et ea nobit fugiam niam voluptae. , ius volorro bea nem Ost ommoluptati nulla cumeni aut ratis nis et dolupture imagnis renden is dollorro endanti occusam soloribu am coribusda andeliq volupta quiatec s sinate vel etur aut uatemque consequ alia ab int possum Qui nam nihiliqu i velecepera quam, e rendae. Ne que il etur? odi dolorem perferis mos sinumet, que eiumque preperi namus mos serum dae rnatum qui on et nates exerspi cipsand solum et ut ad es quamu s, quunellatquis eum as moluptatet iliquod i

TEETOTALISM IN THE BOURBON CAPITAL OF THE WORLD (IT DIDN'T HAPPEN) We will be selling, signing books and answering questions. To order a book or for more information call Dixie at 502-507-0808 or email Dixie at dixieh@bardstowncable.net


LIFE

“I traveled a lot, looking at gardens around the country and in France and Italy,” recalls Korfhage. “Everywhere I went, I tried to learn what the style of gardening was there. For example, when I went to Dallas, I asked, ‘What is the style? What are they doing here that they are not doing in Louisville?’” In essence, each region uses different plant materials. Each city has a different look. For instance, New England has more hydrangeas, and due to his trip to the gardens of Versailles in France, Korfhage understands how to utilize that sense of color and scale when appropriate. More than just flights of fancy, these trips arm Korfhage with a vast array of ideas and concepts to apply to his projects. “When people build a house with a particular style, I know what it’s supposed to look like. When I look at a house, I know about 10 different looks that will work for it,” he says. With this treasured knowledge in tow, Korfhage will get the dimensions of the building or residence and draw a plan. “I’ve got a blank sheet of paper with the drive and the walks on it, and I just start drawing. After a while, the thought just comes to me and I think, ‘I like this.’ I

draw it up, and I price all the pieces. Then I sub it out, but I supervise all of it. I make it happen. If I’ve drawn it, I’ve imagined it, and that means I’ve seen it.” Korfhage treats each of his projects as an artist would. Every home, office building or

WORK WITH A SOUTHWEST FLORIDA REAL ESTATE PROFESSIONAL.

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industrial complex is a blank canvas waiting for him to take advantage of lines, curvatures and plant materials: “I include flowerbeds, and I like mixing colors. Most flowerbeds in Louisville are uniform in color, but I like to mix. A few clients dictate color, but I most-

MARKETING HOMES. NOT JUST LISTING THEM.

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Send An Email To YourVoice@voice-tribune.com

© MMXVI Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Sotheby’s International Realty and the Sotheby’s International Realty logo are registered (or unregistered) service marks used with permission. © MMXVI Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates, Inc.Each All Rights Sotheby’s International RealtyAnand the Opportunity Sotheby’s International RealtyHousing logo areOpportunity. registered (or unregistered) service marks used with permission. officeReserved. is independently owned and operated. Equal Company, Equal Each office is independently owned and operated. An Equal Opportunity Company, Equal Housing Opportunity.

J U N E 9 , 2 0 1 6 • V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

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PHOTOS COURTESY OF JOHN KORFHAGE


The man also prides himself on never doing the same thing twice: “When someone tells me, ‘I love what you did. Come do my house,’ I usually agree to do it, but it’s not going to look like the house they saw. Another thought’s going to come to me.” Korfhage has tremendous conviction in his abilities and his work. Not only that, but he values the end result for his client, which makes him an incredible asset to the Louisville landscaping community as well as a treasured source of knowledge and advice for the rest of us: “I like to create an environment that is pleasing to be in but also pleasing to look at, and when I do, I feel fulfilled. I feel like I’ve done something nice.” VT You can contact John Korfhage by calling 502.267.0001 or 502.267.0541 or by visiting korfhagelandscape.com.

FOR SALE

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502.420.8065

Semonin REALTORS 600 N. Hurstbourne Pkwy #200, Louisville, KY 40222

PHOTOS COURTESY OF JOHN KORFHAGE

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LIFE

ly get to have at it.” When asked specifically what it’s like for him to work, Korfhage simply offers, “It’s like painting with plants.”


Life

Of Lobsters and Turtles

I

without any level of emotional t’s my fault for not seeoutrage toward their circumstancing any good movies in es. Along with Farrell, the talenttheaters this week, but ed cast includes John C. Reilly, I only have two movies to Rachel Weisz, Ben Whishaw and enter into my report. One Léa Seydoux – all delivering perfect deadpan. was an ambitious art-house Film endeavor, which received I was not so turned off by this film’s irreverent weirdness. Movfestival praise and word-ofBENNETT ies such as Steven Soderbergh’s mouth buzz, while the other DUCKWORTH “Schizopolis” and Quentin Dupturned out to be all the brain- bennettduckworth.blogspot.com ieux’s “Wrong” managed to enterless sugar-buzz loudness one tain me immensely in their abandonment of particular franchise has always deliv- comprehensible narrative structure. I found ered to kids – and overgrown kids. the beginning of “The Lobster” quite funny “The Lobster” is a surreal dark-comedy starring Colin Farrell as a single man living in a world where failed relationships require institutional correction at resort centers where you must find a mate within a given amount of time or you will be transformed into an animal of your choosing. The movie dares to portray its characters

B. Deemer Gallery Fine art • Fine framing

isfaction of a movie somewhere in the middle of artistically ambitious alienation and spectacle-driven idiot food. VT

in its vague premise of people having difficulty following rules or meeting expectations. But at the halfway point, the movie starts over in a completely different setting where people are seeking liberation from society, yet they ironically have their own harsh dogmatic structure.

After this development, the movie became so unbearably miserable and unfunny for me that I saw almost no merit to the early parts that made me chuckle or the ambition of its makers who were clearly so dedicated to such an oddball venture. I didn’t care if I was missing something or misinterpreting its subtext; I thought “The Lobster” was a cinematic suicide note with a couple of funny jokes.

1 OUT OF 4 WHOLE STARS

I can’t claim that seeing the sequel to 2014’s disappointing reboot of one of my favorite things from childhood – which really wasn’t that good in the first place – had any guarantee in lifting my spirits. However, with the promise of a nostalgia high and characters such as Bebop, Rocksteady and Krang all due to make their first cinematic appearances, I couldn’t deny whatever remains of a Turtles fan in me that dumb gratification. Once again, the special effects and color aesthetics are somewhat exciting, but the story is overstuffed with bad exposition that leads from one major set piece to the next. And the epic-sounding orchestral score is totally wrong for the material.

Paintings by

Sandra Phipps MacDiarmid May 14-June 15

2650 Frankfort Avenue Open Mon-Fri 10:00-5:30 Sat 10:00-3:00

www.bdeemer.com

The movie is also over two hours of stupid loudness that leads to the now-standard trope of a portal opening up in the sky above a major city and a bunch of jargon about how to stop it. My disappointment in this franchise’s inability to grow along with its fans is still there, but its new incarnation should still manage to entertain kids in the way the older version once entertained me as a fourth grade boy. For now, I’ll continue to search for the sat-

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2 OUT OF 4 WHOLE STARS


P

hotography is a solitary art form. Despite advancements in technology, a photographer very rarely arrives at a scene, points, clicks and is satisfied. A photograph that is truly a work of art is a product of hours and hours of preparation, the utilization of finely honed skills and, most importantly, patience. It isn’t at all what the average person imagines.

Arts & Entertainment

BEN GIERHART

to take a drive. My wife hadn’t been here in decades, and I hadn’t been here ever,” reminisces Saeed. “We’re riding down Main Street, and we’re like, ‘Hey, this is a great town!’ All these towers and buildings and Museum Row. Then we hit Ninth Street. It’s like ‘The Wizard of Oz’ in reverse. We went from this colorful city to just black and white.”

Saeed recalls that it was this moment that awakened his latent @BenGierhart_BEP photographer’s instincts, and since that day, he has learned about the history of the area and started taking photographs of the abandoned buildings in Portland in an effort to get viewers of his photographs to “I call myself a fine art photographer,” says appreciate the architecture that many in LouisZed Saeed, certainly not the average person and ville take for granted. certainly not an average photographer. “I did a Working in Louisville, however, proved to have lot of fashion photography for a very long time in its own set of challenges: “Being a photographer, Los Angeles. Then I moved to Louisville with my you’re very sensitive to light. You notice the effects wife almost two years ago.” of the weather, and coming from Southern CaliOriginally from Pakistan, Saeed came to the fornia, it’s a huge change. In Los Angeles, you’re U.S. in 1983 to go to college at Hampshire Col- used to this very particular color of light and lege in Amherst, Massachusetts: “In my first the bright sunlight. The first thing you notice in semester, I took a film and photography course, Louisville is that the light is hazy. It’s very soft.” and I never looked back. That was it. I briefly Drawing on his wealth of experience as well as worked in New York, but most of my work was the work and techniques of other photographers in L.A. because I wanted to work in movies.” In fact, Saeed has a decades-long career working in the world of film and television.

Life

A Whole New Light whom he admires, Saeed was able to rise above these challenges and develop his own spin on a technique created by world-famous photographer and Yale professor Gregory Crewdson. “I thought I could use a similar approach to light these buildings,” says Saeed. “The process I use is called light painting. It’s a very counterintuitive process. Even photographers sometimes have trouble wrapping their heads around it.” The one inescapable rule of this technique is that it has to be dark, so you’re going at night: “You set up your camera. You do these long exposures. You open the shutter of the camera, and while the shutter is open, you use flashlights or strobes with gels on them and fire them on the streets or in the buildings. You can take a tiny fluorescent tube and wrap gels on it and paint the walls up down like a painter paints the wall.” Saeed explains the process simply and claims that the tools necessary are not fancy or expensive. The work created, however, speaks for itself: “I want the people of Louisville to see how beautiful these buildings truly are. Sometimes, the weirdest parts of a city are what make it so special.” See his gallery for yourself, and you just might see Louisville in a whole new light. VT The “Colors of the Night: Light Painting in Portland” exhibit opened on June 3 and runs through June 29 at the Tim Faulkner Gallery, 1512 Portland Ave., Louisville, KY 40203.

Essentially a post-production expert, Saeed’s job, in many ways, was the most difficult in the filmmaking process as it incorporates editing, color correction and the laborious addition of effects and sound. Post-production requires a keen eye for detail and accuracy that many do not possess, but Saeed’s work was so notable that it earned him a spot on the team of renowned film editor Walter Murch on his Academy Award-winning film “Cold Mountain” as well as a nine-season stint on the hit comedy “Scrubs.” Upon moving to Louisville with his wife, a Kentucky native, Saeed still manged to find work in town: “I worked on that 360-degree surround sound Derby movie at the Kentucky Derby Museum with Donna Lawrence Productions [“The Greatest Race”]. They’re in town. They worked on that movie for 20 years, and this was their year to update it.” Despite the relative ease with which Saeed was able to return to what he knows best, there is a story Saeed will never forget that rekindled his love for the progenitor of film: photography. “On my very first day in Louisville, we had gone in to stay with our brother. He’d given us a little apartment on the third floor. We decided PHOTO COURTESY OF ZED SAEED

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event calendar

to submit your event, visit voice-tribune.com

THIS WEEK’S VOICE CHOICE BOURBON & BOWTIES

Enjoy hors d’oeuvres prepared by some of Louisville’s top chefs, music and live and silent auctions to benefit Kosair Children’s Hospital through the Children’s Hospital Foundation at Bourbon & Bowties: A Taste of Corbett’s 2016 on Thursday, June 9. A specialty bow tie, tie and bangle have been created for this year’s honoree and are presented by River Road Asset Management. Tickets are $135, and the event will begin at 6:30 p.m. at Corbett’s: An American Place. The event is currently sold out, but a waiting list is available. MORE INFO kosairchildrenshospital.com/bourbonandbowties

T H U R S DAY, J U N E 9 SOCIAL SPEED: SCHOOL’S OUT, SUMMER IS HERE! The monthly Social Speed event kicks off Thursday, June 9 with an after-hours adult cocktail event featuring several fun ways to experience the new Speed Art Museum. This month’s theme: School’s Out, Summer Is Here. Summer Camp isn’t just for kids! Revisit those long, hot days and starry nights as you explore nature via the Speed’s collection, make friendship bracelets, listen to campfire stories and enjoy some great music! The event lasts 6 to 9 p.m., and tickets are free for Speed Art Museum members and $15 general admission. MORE INFO speedmuseum.org

F R I DAY, J U N E 1 0 “TOO MUCH, TOO MUCH, TOO MANY” PRESENTED BY THEATRE [502] Directed by Lucas Adams, this play, written by Meghan Kennedy, will be performed in The MeX Theater of The Kentucky Center June 10-17. Decades ago, James won Rose’s hand with an unforgettable declaration: “You have too much beauty for this lake to hold. Too much beauty for this night. Too many stars you’re outshining.” Now 75-years-old and in self-imposed confinement since her husband’s death, Rose contemplates the importance of a life’s words when all that remains is the quietness of grief. As her daughter, Emma, and the enigmatic Pastor Hidge attempt to coax Rose from her room, the trio navigate the walls that hide their hearts and embrace memories that will only fade with time. Bittersweet, poignant and touchingly funny, “Too Much, Too Much, Too Many” sinks the audience into a world of love too great for words. Tickets are $22. MORE INFO theatre502.org J U N E 9 , 2 0 1 6 • V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

FAIRNESS CAMPAIGN 25TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION On June 10, Brown-Forman presents the Fairness Campaign 25th Anniversary Celebration at The Henry Clay Building at 7:30 p.m. Help honor the Fairness Campaign’s history with volunteers, supporters, leaders and co-founders from across the decades. The evening will feature the popular band Yer Girlfriend, which provided the soundtrack for much of the Fairness Campaign’s early years, and DJ Syimone! A $25 suggested contribution gets you one complimentary drink, a $250 sponsorship gets you an open bar. MORE INFO 502.893.0788 or jamie@fairness.org FOXHOLLOW FARM SUNSET CONCERT SERIES Join in for the third annual Sunset Concert Series at Foxhollow Farm. These family-friendly events take place on the farm lawn set against the verdant backdrop of Foxhollow’s woodlands. Top caliber musicians are invited to perform, as are local food vendors to prepare delicious farm-fresh food. This installment will feature Brigid Kaelin and the Brigid Kaelin Band with The Birdies. The event will run from 6 to 9 p.m. MORE INFO foxhollow.com/sunset-concert-series

S AT U R DAY, J U N E 1 1 HIDDEN TREASURES GARDEN TOUR The Second Street Neighborhood Association presents its 23nd Annual Hidden Treasures Garden Tour on Saturday, June 11 and Sunday, June 12 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day. This year, the tour highlights the Toonerville neighborhood, which encompasses First, Floyd and Brook Streets. The registration and will-call table will be on the lawn of the Conrad-Caldwell House Museum at 1402 St. James Court. Visitors may

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rest, refresh and shop a silent auction for garden-related items, Father’s Day baskets and more – all in air-conditioned Haskins Hall at the house museum. As usual, The DuPont Mansion Bed & Breakfast Inn on Fourth Street will host Art in the Garden, where local artists will paint from noon to 5 p.m. both days of the tour. Tickets are $20 on tour days. MORE INFO oldlouisvillegardentour.com THE COLOR RUN The Color Run, the world’s first COLOR 5K event, was founded in March 2011 as an event to promote healthiness and happiness by bringing the community together to participate in the “Happiest 5K on the Planet.” Now the single largest event series in the world, The Color Run has exploded since its debut event. It is held annually in over 200 cities and 40 countries and will be coming back to Louisville’s Waterfront Park on June 11 at 8 a.m. MORE INFO thecolorrun.com “LOVE SONGS...AND OTHER FAIRY TALES” PRESENTED BY VOICES OF KENTUCKIANA AND PANDORA PRODUCTIONS VOICES of Kentuckiana and Pandora Productions are teaming up for a cabaret collaboration entitled: “Love Songs...and Other Fairy Tales.” The cabaret features singers from both organizations and will be presented for one-night-only on Saturday, June 11 at 8 p.m. at PLAY Louisville. Performers include Lauren McCombs, Russ Dunlap, Laura Ellis, Jason Cooper, Brittany Blau, Eric Sharp and more all performing love songs from Broadway with a twist. All door proceeds benefit both VOICES and Pandora. MORE INFO pandoraprods.org or voicesky.org KOSAIR CHARITIES OPEN CAR & MOTORCYCLE SHOW The Kosair Charities Open Car & Motorcycle


MIGHTY KINDNESS HOOT 2016 The Hoot, which takes place at the Brown-Forman Ampitheater at Waterfront Park from noon to 7 p.m. on June 11, is a free community unity festival where you’ll find local food, music, art, green businesses, neighborhood and social justice organizations, all sorts of art, fun for kids, the healing arts, a music stage, The SpiritWalk, free educational workshops, a massage-a-thon, a movement circle, aerial artists, Mighty Kind Second Line Parades, Community Jam, over 200 Booths and more! The Hoot is all about feeding the peace, love, joy, healing, knowledge, sustainability and strength of our community, so bring your family and friends for a celebration of life and possibility! MORE INFO mightykindnesshoot.weebly.com

S U N DAY, J U N E 1 2 CARMICHAEL’S BOOKSTORE PRESENTS STEPHEN KING Carmichael’s Bookstore is thrilled to host Stephen King, one of the most prolific and beloved writers of our time, on June 12. The event will take place at Iroquois Amphitheater on Sunday, June 12 at 7 p.m. King will discuss his work and read from the third volume in his Bill Hodges Trilogy, “End of Watch.” He will also take questions from the audience. “End of Watch” will be released on June 7 – just days before his appearance in Louisville. The evening will conclude with a showing of one of the most popular films based on his work: “Stand By Me.” Tickets are currently sold out. MORE INFO carmichaelsbookstore.com

T H U R S DAY, J U N E 1 6 URBAN HEAT MANAGEMENT STUDY PUBLIC FORUM Maria Koetter, Louisville Metro director of sustainability, will present the results of Louisville’s Urban Heat Management Study on Thursday, June 16, at 6 p.m. in the Louisville Central Community Center, 1300 W. Muhammad Ali Blvd. The event is free and open to the public. An urban heat island is a city or metropolitan area that’s significantly warmer than its surrounding rural areas due to human activities. It’s common in cities across the nation,

but it’s advancing in Louisville at one of the fastest rates in the country. In the parts of Louisville that feel the urban heat island effect the most, the temperature may be 10 degrees higher than in other parts of the city. To reduce the urban heat island effect, Louisvillians from across the city will have to play a part. MORE INFO louisvilleky.gov/node/60991

Jackson Family Wines, who will be on-hand to answer questions about the wines being served and their special attributes. The cost of the dinner is $65 per person, plus tax and gratuity. Reservations are required. MORE INFO 502.899.9904 or letsdine@varanese.com

F R I DAY, J U N E 1 7

INAUGURAL JEFFERSONVILLE PRIDE FESTIVAL Join Evan Stoner and other LGBTQ advocates with ties to Southern Indiana for the first-ever Jeffersonville Pride Festival on Saturday, June 25. The event will feature live entertainment, booths representing different businesses and organizations and, of course, a parade. The parade will begin at noon and will end at Big Four Station, where the festival will continue until 10 p.m. MORE INFO facebook.com/jeffpridefest

2016 KENTUCKIANA PRIDE FESTIVAL Plan to join thousands in downtown Louisville for the 16th annual Kentuckiana Pride Festival, Parade and Concert on Friday, June 17 and Saturday, June 18. The annual event will feature a Pride Parade through downtown Louisville and a festival/concert with over 100 vendors and two stages. The parade will take place Friday night at 7 p.m., and scheduled performers at the event itself include Jordin Sparks, Mary Lambert, Who Is Fancy and more. Weekend general admission tickets are $10, and multiple VIP options are also available. MORE INFO kypride.com OLD FORESTER SPEAKEASY SERIES This night of Old Forester Bourbon fun at the Frazier Museum will awe guests with experiential circus act performances by CirqueLouis, toe-tappin’ Bourbon Jazz tunes by Louisville’s own Billy Goat Strut Revue, delicious bites by Marketplace Restaurant and a free signature craft cocktail! Master Bourbon Specialist Jackie Zykan will create two signature Old Forester cocktails: a bourbon twist on the classic Charleston Sparkler, and the delicious Juice Joint. Guests will get a chance to taste Old Forester’s special selection of bourbons, including the 1870 and 1897 Whiskey Row series expressions, while exploring the museum’s gorgeous exhibition about Prohibition and Kentucky – including the Old Forester Speakeasy right in the middle of the exhibit! As long as the evening skies are clear, cocktails will also be served on the rooftop with a beautiful, expansive view of the Ohio River and downtown Louisville. Tickets are now on sale! MORE INFO fraziermuseum.org

T H U R S DAY, J U N E 2 3 PORK AND PINOT DINNER Varanese Restaurant, located at 2106 Frankfort Avenue, will host the inaugural “Pork and Pinot Dinner” on Thursday, June 23, with a reception at 6:30 p.m. and dinner at 7 p.m. The six-course dinner will include special guest Ben Smith of

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S AT U R DAY, J U N E 2 5

BIKE MS: BLUEGRASS, BIKES & BOURBON 2016 Enjoy a two-day cycling adventure with The National Multiple Sclerosis Society - Kentucky Southeast Indiana Chapter through the rolling hills of Kentucky. Whether you’re a weekend warrior or an avid cyclist, every pedal stroke will raise money and will make a difference in the lives of people living with Multiple Sclerosis. On the first day, cyclists will ride along the banks of the Ohio River, experiencing historic landmarks and the beauty of our Olmsted Parks System. Cyclists will begin and end the twoday journey at the Louisville Water Tower Park. Sunday boasts a casual ride west to the historic Farnsley-Moremen Landing on the banks of the Ohio River. It’s a fully supported ride with a finish line barbeque party and trolley hop along the Urban Bourbon Trail on Saturday night. Ballotin Chocolate Whiskey and Four Roses Bourbon will be some of the featured spirits at the finish line. The ride starts at 7:30 a.m. on both days. MORE INFO bikemsky.org

S U N DAY, J U N E 2 6 SUMMER ANTIQUES MARKET This annual Antiques Market features professional dealers from the South and Midwest displaying their wares on the lawn at Locust Grove. In addition to American country antiques, the show features formal furniture, books, textiles, jewelry and silver. Admission includes tours of the historic house museum. Concessions are available. Proceeds support the continued operation and preservation of Locust Grove. Admission is $8 for adults and free for children age 12 and under. MORE INFO locustgrove.org V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M • J U N E 9 , 2 0 1 6

LIFE

Show Event is on Saturday, June 11 with registration beginning at 10 a.m. at the Kosair Shrine Center, 4120 Bardstown Road. Registration is $20 per vehicle. This event is open to all cars and motorcycles. The show is from 1 to 5 p.m., and there will be live music by The Monarchs from 3 to 6 p.m. The diner and bar will be open and prizes will be awarded. Tickets for a chance to win a 1957 Chevrolet Z-57 will be for sale for $10. MORE INFO kosair.org


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DISTINCTIVE STONEWORK!

Add a BEAUTIFUL stone wall to your garden! Entrance columns, tuckpointing and more! 30 yrs. experience. Bob Rogers, 241-7340 www.distinctive-stonework.com

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Classified AD POLICIES AND RATES To ensure the best response to your classified ad, please take the time to make sure your ad is correct in the first issue it runs. We are only responsible for one incorrect week, and liability shall not exceed the portion of space occupied by the error. If for some reason your ad is incorrect, call the following day after publication. All ads are subject to proper classification and editing. We reserve the right to revise or reject any ad deemed objectionable or unacceptable and we will not be held liable for advertisement omitted by error. Ad position other than classification is not guaranteed. Deadline: Noon on Monday prior to publication Line Ads: $10.50 for the first 15 words, plus $.25 for each additional word. (4 or more weeks will be discounted $1 per week) Display Ads: $23 per column inch (non-profit rate: $18 per column inch)

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Louisville’s

LGBTQ lifestyle magazine

Subscribe online or call 502.897.8900 www.modernlouisville.com

735 EAST MAIN STREET, LOUISVILLE, KY 40202


PUZZLES

pets of the week Meet Six, a handsome 2-year-old pit bull mix who came to us from another shelter. Six is a big, goofy boy who loves to go on walks and play with his toys. When he gets excited, he will do this cute little jig and bounce around to show you just how happy he is! Six could use someone to teach him some basic manners as well as help him burn some of his energy. If Six sounds like the fun guy for you, come meet him today! He is already neutered, micro-chipped and up-todate on vaccinations. Six is at the Kentucky Humane Society adoption center at the Pewee Valley Feeders Supply, 12406 La Grange Road. Chica is a gorgeous 1-year-old Domestic Shorthair mix who came to the Kentucky Humane Society when she couldn’t get along with the other cat in the home. Miss Chica doesn’t want to share her attention because she thinks she is the only cat you need! This sweet girl loves to play and spend time being loved on. Come meet her today! Chica is already spayed, micro-chipped and up-to-date on vaccinations! Chica is at our adoption center in the Dixie Feeders Supply, 10948 Dixie Highway.

For more on any of our adoptable pets, please call 502.366.3355 or visit kyhumane.org

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