September 10, 2015

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Richard Sullivan went from professional baseball player to extraordinary artist.

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Louisville Ballet

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SATURDAY

SEPTEMBER 12, 2015

Go in to the studio and party with the dancers of LouisviLLe BaLLet.

RAISE COMMITTEE 2014 RAISE THE BARRE COMMITTEE 20142014 RAISE THETHE BARRE COMMITTEE 2014 RAISE THE BARRE COMMITTEE 2014 RAISE THEBARRE BARRE COMMITTEE CO-CHAIRS CO-CHAIRS CO-CHAIRS CO-CHAIRS CO-CHAIRS DOUGLAS RIDDLE & WALLACE WHAYNE DOUGLAS RIDDLE & SUZANNE WALLACE WHAYNE DOUGLASDOUGLAS RIDDLE & RIDDLE SUZANNE WALLACE WHAYNE WALLACE WHAYNE DOUGLAS RIDDLE&SUZANNE &SUZANNE SUZANNE WALLACE WHAYNE COMMITTEE MEMBERS COMMITTEE MEMBERS COMMITTEE MEMBERS COMMITTEE MEMBERS COMMITTEE MEMBERS ANNIE LOCKE DEPASO LORI ANDRIOT ANNIE LOCKE ANNIE LOCKE LAUREN DEPASO LORI ANDRIOT LORI ANDRIOT LAUREN LAUREN DEPASO ANNIE LOCKE ANNIE LOCKE LAUREN DEPASO LAUREN DEPASO LORI ANDRIOT LORI ANDRIOT SARAH MIZUGUCHI VIKI DIAZ SUMMER AUERBACH VIKI DIAZ SUMMER AUERBACH SARAH MIZUGUCHI VIKI DIAZ VIKI SUMMER AUERBACH SARAH MIZUGUCHI SARAH MIZUGUCHI VIKIDIAZ DIAZ SARAH MIZUGUCHI SUMMER SUMMERAUERBACH AUERBACH ERIKA PARAMORE STEPHANIE LAURA MELILLO BARNUM ERIKA PARAMORE STEPHANIE FELLON LAURA MELILLOLAURA BARNUM ERIKA PARAMORE STEPHANIE FELLON FELLON MELILLO BARNUM ERIKA PARAMORE ERIKA PARAMORE STEPHANIE FELLON STEPHANIE FELLON LAURA MELILLO BARNUM LAURA MELILLO BARNUM LIBBY RUSH SANDRA FRAZIER TRACY BLUE LIBBY RUSH TRACY BLUE LIBBY RUSH SANDRA FRAZIER TRACY BLUE LIBBY LIBBYRUSH RUSH SANDRA SANDRAFRAZIER FRAZIER TRACY TRACYBLUE BLUESANDRA FRAZIER FRAN THORNTON BECKY FREYTAG BRAD CALOBRACE FRAN THORNTON BECKY FREYTAGBECKY FREYTAG BRAD CALOBRACE FRAN THORNTON BRAD CALOBRACE FRAN THORNTON FRAN THORNTON BECKY FREYTAG BECKY FREYTAG BRAD CALOBRACE BRAD CALOBRACE ANDY VINE RACHEL GREENBERG C.F. CALLIHAN ANDY VINE RACHEL GREENBERG C.F. CALLIHAN C.F. CALLIHAN ANDY VINE RACHEL GREENBERG ANDY VINE ANDY VINE RACHEL RACHELGREENBERG GREENBERG C.F. C.F.CALLIHAN CALLIHAN BETSY WALL AUGUSTA BROWN HOLLAND JULIA CARSTANJEN BETSY WALL AUGUSTA BROWN HOLLAND JULIA CARSTANJEN BETSY WALL AUGUSTA BROWN HOLLAND JULIA CARSTANJEN BETSY WALL BETSY WALL AUGUSTA BROWN HOLLAND AUGUSTA BROWN HOLLAND JULIA CARSTANJEN JULIA CARSTANJEN CALLIE WALL JODY HOWARD AMY CIMBA CALLIE WALL CALLIE WALL AMY CIMBA AMY CIMBA CALLIE WALL CALLIE WALL JODY JODYHOWARD HOWARD AMY AMYCIMBA CIMBA JODY HOWARDJODY HOWARD CHERI COLLIS WHITE LAURA JONES SHANNON CHERI COLLIS WHITE LAURA JONES LAURA JONES SHANNON COGAN CHERI COLLIS WHITE SHANNON COGAN COGAN CHERI COLLIS WHITE CHERI COLLIS WHITE LAURA JONES LAURA JONES SHANNON COGAN SHANNON COGAN RON WOLZ LORI KOMMOR ELAINE CROCKETT RON WOLZ LORI KOMMOR LORI KOMMOR ELAINE CROCKETT RON WOLZ ELAINE CROCKETT RON RONWOLZ WOLZ LORI LORIKOMMOR KOMMOR ELAINE ELAINECROCKETT CROCKETT OUR GENEROUS SPONSORS OUR GENEROUSOUR SPONSORS GENEROUS SPONSORS OUR GENEROUS SPONSORS OUR GENEROUS SPONSORS mr. & mrs. John f. cunninGham

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A staple for fall in Louisville is the arrival of the St. James Court Art Fair. It’s crazy to think that the 59th annual fair is right around the corner, as it runs the first weekend of October. And, lucky for us, we got to sit down with Richard Sullivan who created the poster for the annual event. Making the official St. James Court Art Fair poster is just one of Sullivan’s many achievements. He has a tremendous history as a professional baseball player and only recently gave it up to be an artist. Browse the pages of this week’s feature to get a glimpse of his truly breathtaking watercolors. Another staple for fall is scarves. In this week’s Mixing It Up, we gathered some of the city’s newest and trendiest fall scarves. These scarves are an added bonus to your wardrobe and can be tied many ways to give a fresh and different look. Throw a scarf over your tee and you have turned your summer look into one for autumn. We are getting closer and closer to Raise the Barre, taking place September 12 and benefiting the dancers of the Louisville Ballet. We sit down with Artistic Director Robert Curran to talk about what goes into the production of a ballet and what it takes to bring a vision to life. One of those factors is certainly funding, and much to the delight of the entire Louisville Ballet team and the community as a whole, the company just recently received an anonymous $1 million donation to be used exclusively for the artistic aspect of the Louisville Ballet. I would like to graciously thank the donor for allowing this organization to keep producing such tremendous art and enriching the culture of the city. Speaking of culture, what would Louisville be without its food? This week we traveled to one of my favorite local restaurants, North End Cafe, to check out their delicious menu. Although I am a sucker for their delicious brunch menu, North End also offers exquisite items for lunch and dinner. And as they’re on the brink of being a part of the Urban Bourbon Trail, it looks like the best is still to come from this darling cafe. In galleries this week we were in full Cards mode as we went to several viewing parties for UofL’s first football game against Auburn. Although the game wasn’t the outcome we had hoped for, Card Nation infected everyone from here to Atlanta. It’s also all about the Cards in this week’s sports, as we chat with Lamar Jackson, UofL’s starting quarterback. Kent Taylor has a one-on-one Q&A with the rising star, and Mike Rutherford explores what the outcome of the game against Auburn means for the rest of the season. Elsewhere, Steve Kaufman discusses UK’s season opener, and John Asher mourns the retirement of Wise Dan while celebrating this horse’s incredible career. Lastly, I can’t thank you all enough for all the positive feedback regarding Modern Louisville. Thank you to everyone who came out to the Modern Louisvlle Launch Party and the numerous Facebook posts, texts and calls I received. This magazine wouldn’t be as successful if it wasn’t for the community rallying behind it. Keep your eye out for the next issue, coming November 1.

Relax & Enjoy

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Sports Catnip ������������������������������������������������������������������ 24 Card Chronicle �����������������������������������������������������26 Taylor’s 10 �������������������������������������������������������������28 Horse Sense ���������������������������������������������������������29 Game of the Week �����������������������������������������������30 High School Sports ���������������������������������������������� 31

Society NAWBO Public Policy Luncheon ��������������������������34 Mayor’s Art and Music Series ������������������������������35 Kentucky Bluegrass & Bourbon Experience �������38 First Friday Trolley Hop ����������������������������������������39 Card Nation ATL Headquarters �������������������������� 40 Flea Off Market ��������������������������������������������������� 42 UofL Watch Party ������������������������������������������������ 44 Mayor’s Healthy Hometown Subway Fresh Fit Hike, Bike & Paddle ������������������������������45 WorldFest �������������������������������������������������������������46 Modern Louisville Launch Party ��������������������������48 Kentucky and Southern Indiana Stroke Association Tasting Event ������������������������50

Life A R T W O R K F E AT U R E D H E R E A N D O N T H E C O V E R C O U R T E S Y O F R I C H A R D S U L L I VA N

Fashion �����������������������������������������������������������������56 Spotlight: Bike Trek to Shakertown ���������������������57 Film �����������������������������������������������������������������������64 Arts & Entertainment ��������������������������������������������65

Features Pitching a Dream

We sit down with artist and retired baseball player Richard Sullivan ���������������������������������� 8

The Production of Success

Robert Curran discusses the process of creating a Louisville Ballet production ��������������������� 16

The Art of Smiles

We visit Natural Smiles to talk to Dr. Gill about her innovative approach to dentistry ����� 18

Essentials Masthead �������������������������������7 Business ������������������������������ 19 Obituaries ����������������������������20

Dear Abby ��������������������������� 53 Event Calendar �������������������66 Classifieds ���������������������������68

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Puzzles �������������������������������� 70 Pets of the Week ����������������� 70

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story IGOR GURYASHKIN

| photo CHRIS HUMPHREYS

If you go to this year’s St. James Court Art Show on the first full weekend of October, you’ll more than likely see the poster that advertises the event. It depicts the famous fountain at the center of St James Court. The painting is a watercolor, a collection of droplets of colored water, pushed expertly around the canvas. The image is loose and light and captures the charm of the fountain in the heart of Old Louisville. If you squint, you may even think Edward Hopper had taken time a hundred years ago to paint the same fountain. But instead, the painting is the work of Louisville artists Richard Sullivan, who is only recently coming to terms with calling himself an “artist.” The reason? Sullivan has spent the majority of the past seven years of his life playing professional baseball.

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a full athletic program at the time and a place that offered Sullivan the chance to play baseball and pursue art, even though baseball ultimately won out.

For nearly his entire life, Richard Sullivan and baseball were inextricably linked. He played it growing up – from the moment he could hold a ball and bat to his time at Ballard High School, culminating in being drafted by the Atlanta Braves in 2008 as a junior out of college. But today, the left-handed pitcher does not play baseball. His right hand does not have a mit, and his left does not contain a ball. Rather, his new tools of the trade are paints and brushes.

“I was baseball 110 percent until, all of a sudden, I said to myself, ‘Okay, this is not fun anymore, this is not what I want to do,’” explains Sullivan, who retired last year at the age of 28, having spent six years traveling the country with the Atlanta Braves’ minor league affiliates. “I did not want to be 35 years old and still be in the minor leagues. For many players, baseball is all they have, but I knew I needed to go and explore something else. If I did not have art, I would probably be coaching somewhere, but I think I was very lucky that I had art.” For Sullivan, art was an unlikely presence in the first place, with neither of his parents artistically inclined. And yet, when he was not on the mound pitching in high school, he found himself drawing and sketching everything that was in front of him. So the solution was to marry the two passions at the only place that could offer it – Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD), the only art college with S E P T E M B E R 1 0 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

“I think I knew very quickly that all I wanted to do was play baseball,” recalls Sullivan. “I had this other thing [art] but I didn’t want to study business or anything else. I’m glad

mourning the loss of baseball, Sullivan may still look back fondly on a career that includes some real highlights and personal milestones. “I got to play against the [Minnesota] Twins at Turner Field in 2010,” beams Sullivan. “And I actually got the win. I had always wanted to pitch at Turner Field, and so I am glad I got that chance. That was the biggest high I ever got to experience. When I was in the bullpen, I thought to myself, ‘I’m probably going to go in.’ And when they shouted ‘Sully, get out,’ I was s----ing my pants in the bullpen warming up. But once you get out it’s just a regular game.” And it’s these pressures that Sullivan is certain inform him in his new life, especially as so much of the art he has produced in the last

R E D S V S P I R AT E S 30 x 40 Watercolor

that baseball kind of took over. I was so focused on baseball because it was my love and my passion.” But art would be something that Sullivan would return to the moment his baseball career ended. More than good enough to ply his trade in the minor leagues but self-aware enough to know he was not good enough for The Show, it was a sobering moment for Sullivan – as it is for any athlete – when he realized his “best” did not correlate with reality or ambitions. Despite

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year has focused on baseball. “I think one reason why my paintings have been so well received is that you can get action and details when you are drawing from life,” he explains. “You can see that a particular moment of a game might be the most tense, and I would know that because I have that connection. I know what the players are feeling, and I want to create that connection.” In the past year, Sullivan’s art has been feaARTWORK COURTESY OF RICHARD SULLIVAN


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S T. J A M E S C O U R T WINNING POSTER 22 x 30 Watercolor 100 Limited edition signed and numbered prints will be for sale for $50 in the Poster Merchandise Booth SJ-226. Unsigned Print $25.

ARTWORK COURTESY OF RICHARD SULLIVAN

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LSU VS GT 22 x 30 Watercolor

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ARTWORK COURTESY OF RICHARD SULLIVAN


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D E V O N TA F R E E M A N 22 x 30 Watercolor

ARTWORK COURTESY OF RICHARD SULLIVAN

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SELF-PORTRAIT Watercolor

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ARTWORK COURTESY OF RICHARD SULLIVAN


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tured in the National Baseball Hall of Fame, and at Slugger Field, and he’ll soon have an exhibition in Los Angeles. Such a momentous year can no doubt be credited to the drive he put into his newfound career, which is so inspired by his former. “I think baseball teaches you everything about life,” explains Sullivan. “I think it taught me about working hard. Obviously, you need some degree of talent, but if you work hard at something, you can pursue it. All I wanted to do with baseball was reach my full potential and see where it went. And now that’s what I want to do with art – reach my full potential and keep learning.” He continues: “My goal is honestly to be going to games and drawing and painting from life and being part of the atmosphere. I have been doing football and basketball too, but I started with baseball so I could grow and build that connection. Pitching and watercolors are similar. In pitching, you can’t really control the ball after you throw it, and with a watercolor, you can’t control it either – you just have to let it go. There is some excitement because of that. Every time I start to paint, I am afraid because I know I need to

ARTWORK COURTESY OF RICHARD SULLIVAN

AMERICAN PHARAOH 24 X 34 Watercolor on Clayboard

Though baseball is his focus, Sullivan has started to branch out into other sports. Here he tackles the “Sport of Kings” – horseracing.

focus here.” And while his work has started to gain traction, Sullivan has also started an artist’s agency, Sullivan Moore, with his girlfriend. The goal is to foster talent and help other artists get their work noticed. So far, so good with 20 art-

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ists signed and with work featured in The New Yorker, Rolling Stone and Boston Globe. It’s what keeps Sullivan going further in his journey – away from baseball but also, arguably, as close as he’s ever been. He’s just playing a different position now. VT

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Fang. For “Coppélia,” Heustis is hen one attends a designing the set and is bringing a performance by unique perspective to the position the Louisville Balfrom his visual arts background. let, he or she encounters treCurran was especially drawn to mendous dancing, dazzling Heustis for the project due to the artists’ fascination with the same costumes, extraordinary Staff historical time period as when the sets, wondrous lighting and Writer ballet takes place. This rendering of enchanting music. When so “Coppélia” is set in 1917, just after engulfed in the spectacle, REMY the cubists and futurists arrived in it’s easy to overlook how the the United States, “So Jake’s pasSISK sion for that era of cubism has product being witnessed is the result of months – and often years added a fantastic element of design to this – of preparation by a team that is both production and another layer in the story that makes it more rich and valuable and helps collaborative and creative. me tell the story,” Curran exudes. “And his

Artistic Director Robert Curran is busy prepping for the ballet’s season opener, “Coppélia,” which runs October 2-3 in The Brown Theatre – and has been doing so for five years. He began drafting his concept for the ballet long before he was hired at the Louisville Ballet and has been fine-tuning his vision for the last several months. When preparing for the production of a ballet, Curran will often collaborate with professionals and designers in very early stages in order to jointly formulate a vision. For “Coppélia,” however, Curran knew exactly how he wanted to tell the story and, for him, “It was just about finding a team of people I felt really comfortable sharing that vision with.” One of those people is Jacob Heustis, a visual artist and bassist for local band Wax

research process combined with my research process has delivered a product that is very, very unique and very abstract. It’s going to be a feast for the eyes.”

But before Curran can even move forward with a designer or collaborator, one of the first steps of any production is securing funding. “Like, can you afford it?” he poses. “You have to start with whether or not you have the kind of budget that you need to create the vision that you want to create or whether you have to start the tug-of-war process.” At times, however, Curran enjoys the challenges faced when funding isn’t so easy to acquire and in fact relishes the opportunities that they present. “When you start to get some obstacles in your way, you start to think more creatively about how you can communicate what you’re trying to communicate,”

he asserts. “Which can stimulate some really interesting conversations and some really good ideas, so I’m not really scared of limitations, be they financial or otherwise.”

Fortunately for Curran and the entirety of the Louisville Ballet, financial limitations won’t be a problem in the immediate future thanks to an anonymous $1 million gift made to the ballet in the middle of last month. There are parameters, though, of the gift in that it is intended to be used to support the artistic vision of the organization. “Really, it’s to support our first two mission statements,” Curran explains of the gift. “The first being to deliver traditional offerings to the community in our subscription season – the “Coppélia”s, the “Nutcracker”s, all of the traditional repertory evenings that we normally deliver to the community. And it’s also to support the second part of our mission statement, which is a commitment to new work.” Beyond the obvious financial reasons, there are other factors of the gift for which Curran is exceptionally grateful, not the least of which being the art it allows him to deliver to his dancers. “I’ve been given some very good advice over the years that there are two really important things you need to deliver to stimulate an artist,” he describes. “You need to deliver really good quality work. Dancers don’t do it for the money. They do it for the quality of the art, and that’s where this gift is helping me.” Although tremendously important, art is not always enough. “But the other thing you have to deliver is a quality of life,” Curran contends. “You have to be constantly striving that they can pay the bills, that they can have existence, that they can have families, and that’s why things like Raise the Barre are so important.” Raise the Barre, currently in its fourth year, is the company’s way of bolstering its dancers’ salaries – the average salary of a Louisville Ballet dancer is $15,000, a figure this event seeks to improve. It will take place on September 12 at the Louisville Ballet’s studio, and all proceeds will go toward the salaries of the dancers. Whether preparing for Raise the Barre or rehearsing for “Coppélia,” Curran is always on his toes, working to ensure the operation of a successful arts organization and the artistic and physical fulfillment of its dancers. After all, as Curran puts it, “I don’t think it’s too tongue in-cheek to say they are the most valuable 48 feet in the city.” VT

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The Production of Success W


Business

The Art of

SMILES B

orn into a long line of physicians, it’s no surprise that Kiran Gill has always been fascinated with medicine. But no one would’ve expected her to end up in Louisville.

Gill operates a dental practice called Natural Smiles, at 4010 Dupont Circle, Suite 469, in St. Matthews.

When they married in 2013, Gill moved to Louisville.

Business Profile WES KERRICK

At Natural Smiles, she follows her passion: building her patients’ self-esteem by giving them beautiful, authentic smiles.

A graduate of Nova Southeastern University in South Florida and Spear Education in Scottsdale, Arizona, Gill opened her first practice in Miami. Then, in pursuit of the best training in cosmetic dentistry, she moved to Los Angeles and started a second practice there. And it was there she met her husband, Ankur Gopal, who is the founder and CEO of Interapt, a Louisville-based technology company. While Gopal was in Los Angeles for a conference with Google, he saw Gill in a bar and struck up a conversation. “He came up to me and was like, ‘Are you from here?’ “I said, ‘Yeah, I moved here from Miami. “And he said he was from Louisville. “I said, ‘Where is that?’” S E P T E M B E R 1 0 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

After about a year, she bought the practice that was formerly Ideal Dentistry, kept most of the staff and changed the name to Natural Smiles. Gill draws from her extensive training in cosmetic dentistry to provide a service called Smile Design. First, she takes several photos of a patient’s smile from different angles.

Then she sits down with the patient to discuss the images. “I basically ask them, ‘What is it that you don’t like about your smile?’” She seeks to discover where they’re coming from, and she asks them about their goals. “It’s not a cookie-cutter smile,” Gill says. “What fits one person’s smile would be completely different in the other person, and that’s what we’re trying to achieve in cosmetic dentistry.” Whether she’s doing major procedures or regular dental maintenance, Gill keeps her office mercury-free. She works with materials that are more biocompatible – and thus less likely to cause allergy issues – than those traditionally used in dentistry. “We have a lot of like what we call green patients that really care so much and are very knowledgeable with what they want,” Gill says. Gill has found that for patients, anxiety is the

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biggest obstacle that keeps them from care. A lot of that anxiety, she says, was triggered by childhood experiences. “Do they remember the sound? Do they remember the smell of the dental office? Do they remember hearing someone else next-door screaming?” For Gill, it’s vital to help patients overcome that. Using aromatherapy, essential oils, warm pillows and noise-canceling headphones, she provides a “Dental Zen Experience” – a relaxing atmosphere that doesn’t feel like a hospital. Gill participates in many hours of continuing education, far exceeding the requirements of the American Dental Association. “With the technology in dentistry and how it’s advancing, every six months there are new products, better products, faster ways of doing it,” she says. “… I think it’s very important, for any career, to always keep that fire alive in what you do, or else it becomes routine.” It’s worth the effort for Gill because she knows she’s helping her patients get excited about life again. “I get a lot of phone calls [from] patients coming back and saying, ‘Because of this new smile, I found a new job. You’ve changed my life. I’ve been waiting for this for so many years.’ So that’s really what it’s all about.” VT For more information, call Natural Smiles at 502.893.5225, visit naturalsmilesky.com or check out facebook.com/NaturalSmilesKy.

PHOTO BY TIM VALENTINO | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER


Business

business briefs WHAS CRUSADE FOR CHILDREN DONATES $35,000 TO SUPPORT SPECIAL NEEDS CHILDREN THROUGH THE KENTUCKY CENTER’S ARTS IN HEALING AND ARTSREACH PROGRAMS The Kentucky Center for the Performing Arts recently received a $35,000 gift from WHAS Crusade for Children. This grant will be used to expand The Kentucky Center’s education and community arts programs Arts in Healing and ArtsReach and Access Services, in order to support more children with special needs. These programs provide transformative experiences to those with limited access to the arts. “The generosity and support of our corporate community is powerful,” said Kentucky Center President Kim Baker. “Grants like this one from WHAS Crusade for Children make it possible for The Kentucky Center to change the lives of children with diverse backgrounds and circumstances through the arts.” This grant from WHAS Crusade for Children will impact more than 5,000 children with special needs through Arts in Healing and ArtsReach. The funds will provide access services, including a ramp to Bomhard Theater’s Quiet Room. Arts in Healing currently serves patients recovering from substance abuse, movement disorders and the wounds of war, children facing physical and emotional abuse and abandonment, seniors embracing the end of life, families dealing with homelessness, and patients undergoing cancer treatment. Participants engage in instrumental music, vocal music, storytelling, dance, drama and visual arts – providing a creative outlet for stress and difficult circumstances. ArtsReach is a vital program for our community as it takes the arts to where youth live, play and attend school. The program works with community centers throughout Metro Louisville to empower youth through studio arts instruction in dance, violin and visual art. The program also provides youth with affordable tickets to performances and the opportunity to perform on The Kentucky Center’s professional stages. Participants of ArtsReach learn new skills, expand their horizons and develop a sense of self, well-being and belonging. As the individual is empowered, the arts simultaneously build and strengthen the community. UOFL THEATRE ARTS ANNOUNCES 2015-16 SEASON The University of Louisville’s Theatre Arts Department has announced its 2015-16 season, which offers a range of performances, from August Wilson’s iconic “The Piano Lesson,” to Harold Pinter’s provoking “Betrayal” along with two never-performed-before pieces by UofL faculty. “This season is about collaboration,” said Nefertiti Burton, who chairs the program. “We have two new, exciting pieces that highlight the collaborative process, including my work with Pan-African Studies Professor John Chenault on his play “Bloodline Rumba” as well as Erin Leigh Crites’ improv piece, which showcases the kind of immediate, transparent collaboration that unfolds in the devising process.” The season kicks off with “Polaroid Stories,” a powerful adaptation of Ovid’s “Metamorphoses” set in contemporary New York, where the characters are street kids based on interviews with prostitutes and runaways. Next is “The Piano Lesson,” written by Wilson and directed by Baron Kelly, director of UofL’s African American Theatre Program. The play follows Berniece and her brother, Boy Willie, in depression-era Pittsburgh as they argue about the family piano and its tumultuous history. Following is Chenault’s “Bloodline Rumba,” which was written following a study-abroad trip to Cuba with the Theatre Department and has Afro-Cuban influences. It will be directed by Burton, whose research interests focus on the experiences of people in the African Diaspora. The department will then present “Betrayal,” critically regarded as Pinter’s masterpiece and directed by Russell Vandenbroucke, as it explores love and relationships. It follows the lives of Jerry and Emma, as they reminisce about times past. Finally, adding levity to the season, is an improv piece from

to submit your business brief email circ@voice-tribune.com guest artist Crites, whose work focuses on stand-up, sketch comedy, clown, vaudeville, Commedia Dell’ Arte, ensemble creation/playmaking and physical storytelling, with emphasis on visual presentation.

extraordinary archive and rare book library and a center of historical and cultural education open to everyone. Craig’s skills, experience, intellect and deep knowledge of our community and region make him an ideal leader for The Filson.” Buthod’s professional career spans 40 years as one of the country’s leading librarians and authorities on institutions of education and knowledge. After serving in library leadership positions in Seattle and Tulsa, Buthod spent the last 16 years as Director of the Louisville Library where he developed the system’s Master Capital Plan and raised significant funds for the system’s expansion, including the new Fairdale, Newburg and Southwest Regional libraries.

ALEX RANKIN JOINS GLENVIEW TRUST BOARD OF DIRECTORS The Glenview Trust Company proudly welcomes Mr. R. Alex Rankin to its team as the newest member of its Board of Directors. The board will officially elect Rankin to membership at its meeting on Thursday, Aug. 27, 2015. The addition of Alex Rankin to the Board of Directors comes during a time of continuing significant growth for The Glenview Trust Company. Since opening in April of 2001, the company has accumulated more than $6.4 billion in assets under management.

Buthod’s technology and services innovations, including new computers and online access increased library usage by up to 55 percent and he developed major cultural and educational programming that has included reading incentives, author appearances, and curated exhibits, such as Gutenberg in Louisville and the Declaration of Independence Road Trip, that have attracted thousands to library branches each year.

“Alex’s diverse areas of expertise and significant engagement in the Louisville community make him an excellent addition to our Board of Directors,” said J. David Grissom, Chairman of The Glenview Trust Company Board.

In 2010, Buthod was named the nation’s Librarian of the Year by the Library Journal. That same year, the Center for Nonprofit Excellence presented him with its Pyramid Award for the Art of Leadership.

Alex Rankin is a dedicated businessman and philanthropist. He currently serves as president and CEO of Louisville insurance agency The Sterling G. Thompson Company, and president and CEO of the James Graham Brown Foundation.

Buthod will take over administrative and management duties of the 131-year-old historical society effective late September and will work with The Filson’s board and staff to realize the potential of The Filson by expanding historically significant collections, growing membership and completing its Old Louisville Campus Expansion Project.

“It is an honor to be asked to join the Board of this respected and high performing financial institution,” said Rankin, who is also actively engaged in Kentucky’s Thoroughbred industry. He currently serves as a director of Churchill Downs Inc., and president of Upson Downs Farm in Goshen, Kentucky. Rankin previously served as president of The Kentucky Derby Museum, The Kentucky Thoroughbred Association, and The Kentucky Thoroughbred Owner and Breeders Association.

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THE FILSON NAMES NEW PRESIDENT AND CEO Craig Buthod, recently retired Louisville Free Public Library Director, has been named President & CEO of The Filson Historical Society as announced by The Filson’s Chairman Carl Thomas. The announcement was made following an extensive national search that drew highly qualified candidates from across the country. Said Thomas, “As The Filson moves forward with its extensive transformation, including renovation of our current campus and the completion of our new Owsley Brown II History Center, we feel that Craig has demonstrated the leadership, creativity, vision and commitment to preserving our region’s history that are exactly the qualities we need to take The Filson well into the future. At our very core, The Filson is an

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obituaries Sally Parsons Roby Kampschaefer Bohannon (In Memoriam) Sally Parsons Roby Kampschaefer Bohannon, passed away July 5th, 2015 in Danville, Ky. A memorial celebration of Sally’s life will be held on Sunday, Sept. 13, 2015 from 3:00-5:00 P.M. (Service 3:30-4:30 P.M.) at Sacred Heart Academy Gym, 3176 Lexington Rd., Louisville, KY, 40207.

Anne Chanda (Pruzinsky) Anne Chanda (Pruzinsky), 96, of Louisville died September 3, 2015. She was a native of Bridgeport, CT, an avid gardener known throughout her community as the “Daylily Lady.” Anne is survived by sons, William D. (Wanda) Chanda and John S. (Sue) Chanda, her daughter, Catherine A. (Glenn) Corbell, along with four siblings, 12 grandchildren and 23 great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her husband, William Chanda, their infant daughter, Barbara, and Anne’s four siblings. Visitation will be at Arch L. Heady at Resthaven Funeral Home, 4400 Bardstown Road, Louisville on Saturday, September 12, 2015 from 10am until time of service noon. Memorials to Susan G. Komen Foundation appreciated.

Daniel Childress Daniel Childress, 80, of Okolona, returned to his Heavenly

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

Father on Saturday September 5, 2015. Mr. Childress was a native of Edmonson County Ky. and a retired foreman from Louisville Gas & Electric, LG&E Local 2100. Among those who preceded him in death include his parents, Dewey and Ola (Glass) Childress; brother, David Childress; sisters, Rosemary Oller and Betsy Philpot. He leaves to cherish his memory, his sons, Christopher Childress (Patti), and Craig Childress (Betty); grandchildren, Christopher Childress ll, Bruce Childress, Benjamin Childress; great grandchildren, Christopher Childress lll, Macy Childress, Zane Childress; brothers, Delano Childress, Tony Childress, Merle Childress Joby Childress; sisters, Magaline Meredith, Pearl Haynes and Gertrude Bratcher. Funeral service were conducted Wednesday 10 a.m. (CST) at Cherry Springs Church; Cub Run Ky. Friends paid their respects on Tuesday at Schoppenhorst, Underwood and Brooks Funeral Home (Preston Hwy at Brooks Rd.) with a prayer service Tuesday at 7 p.m. at Schoppenhorst. Interment followed the service Wednesday in Cherry Springs Cemetery.

James Dallas Croft James Dallas Croft, 83, of Louisville passed away Saturday September 5, 2015 at Lincoln Hills Health Care in New Albany, IN. James was born in Salem, KY to the late Edith and Ray Croft. He was a U.S. Marine veteran of the Korean War and had retired from The Courier-Journal as a machinist. He is also preceded in death by his daughter, Debbie Meadors; a sister, Shirley Roland; a broth-

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er, Carol Croft; and two grandchildren. Survivors include his two daughters, Teresa Smith (Bobbie) and Dana Hammer (Duane); two brothers, Kenny and Herschel Croft; six grandchildren; 10 great-grandchildren; and angel caregiver, Delsie Ransdell. Funeral services were be held 1 pm Tuesday at Owen Funeral Home 5317 Dixie Hwy with burial in Louisville Memorial Gardens West. Memorial gifts to WHAS Crusade For Children.

Paul Lawrence Freibert Freibert, Paul Lawrence, 91, died Wednesday, September 2, 2015, in his home and surrounded by love following a brief illness. “Pop” was born in the lower Highlands of Louisville, KY, the son of Mame and Leo Freibert. He spent 40 years in the elevator business after graduating from Ahrens Trade School, always taking great pride in his work. In 1947, he married his wife of 45 years, Estelle Mudd. Paul was an avid fisherman and enjoyed sharing his hobby with his friends. He was raised in the Catholic church and stayed devoted to his faith all his life. God was good to Paul in many ways, and he passed that grace on to everyone he met. He was a kind and generous gentleman and a fine example of the “Greatest Generation”. Paul was preceded in death by his wife, Estelle, and his siblings Leo, Jim, Mary Jo, and Betty. He leaves his son, Allyn (Pam); daughter, Sara Sievert (Mark); and loving companion of 20 years, Patricia Schmitt. He also leaves his dearest brother, Edward; and sister, Rosetta Lowry Duke; grandchildren, Gregory Freibert (Kimba), Dana Freibert, Jes-

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sica Sievert, and Olivia Sievert; and great-grandchildren, Sabrina Freibert, and Megan Freibert; plus many adoring nieces and nephews. A memorial funeral Mass will be held on Friday, September 11th, 2015 at 3 p.m. at St. Brigid Catholic Church, 1520 Hepburn Avenue, 40204. Highlands Funeral Home in charge of arrangements. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions are welcomed and can be made to Hosparus of Louisville or Home Instead Senior Care.

Dr. Ronald J. Horvath Dr. Ronald J. Horvath, 76, died on Thursday, September 3, 2015, at Seneca Place. He was President Emeritus of Jefferson Community College (now Jefferson Community and Technical College), in Louisville. Born in New York City, he was preceded in death by his parents, Joseph and Helen (Unger) Horvath, and brothers, Gerald and Joseph. Ron, as he preferred to be called after retirement, is survived by his wife of 53 years, Gladys (Albright) Horvath; children, Timothy Horvath (Nancy), of Huntsville, AL, and Anne T. Horvath, of Birmingham, AL; and two granddaughters, Erica and Nicole Horvath, of Huntsville. He grew up in Pennsylvania and New Jersey and received a BS and MS in education from Kutztown University and an EdD in Higher Education from Lehigh University. He was the first in his family to earn a high school or college diploma. An educator throughout his professional life, he was an English teacher at Parkland High


Under his leadership JCC received numerous recognitions and rankings by national organizations, most notably the #2 national ranking of JCC in 1985 from the University of Texas Community College Leadership Program and National Panel. Ron always credited the excellent faculty and staff for these awards. One of his highest priorities was growing JCC. He was instrumental in the development of the JCC Southwest campus and establishment of another campus at Carrollton. Promoting an associate degree program for inmates at local prisons was one of the accomplishments of which he was most proud. Ron was a strong believer that the community college belongs to the community. Just a few of the many personal awards and honors were: election to the national Board of Directors of the American Association of Community and Junior Colleges, Outstanding Alumnus of Kutztown University in 1990, and secretary/treasurer of the Board of Trustees of the Southern Association. Over the years he served on numerous civic boards and committees in Louisville. Family members wish to acknowledge the outstanding medical care he has received from doctors, nurses, and medical staff during the recent years of difficult health problems. The family scheduled a private service but later will announce a memorial service to be held in the Ronald J. Horvath Auditorium at Jefferson Community and Technical College Southwest. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be sent to the JCTC Foundation, 109 East Broadway, Louisville, KY 40202; the Kutztown University Foundation, P.O. Box 151, Kutztown, PA 19530; or a

Charles E. “Charlie” Little II Charles E. “Charlie” Little II, passed away August 4, 2015 at his home in Charleston, WV. He was born November 23, 1952 a son of the late Charles E., Sr. and Maxine Justice Little. Charlie is survived by his four children, Charles Parker, Shelby (Lindsey) and Taylor (Lauren) Little all of Louisville, KY and Tabor Louise Little of Lexington, KY. He is also survived by his former wives, Patti B. Strickler and Jennifer C. Little. Charlie was a food enthusiast and served many fine meals to his family and friends. He loved laughter and to dance. His hobbies included golf, horse racing and running. (He once ran the Marine Corps Marathon finishing in the top 25%.) He also attended the University of Kentucky.

Harold Edward Shrout Harold Edward Shrout, 82, of Louisville, passed away Thursday, September 3, 2015 at his home. He was born in Bath County, KY and graduated from Fleming County High School and UK College of Engineering. Harold was a U.S. Army veteran of the Korean conflict. He was formerly employed by the Stellite Metals Division of Union Carbide, and subsequently worked for 28 years with ExxonMobil Corporation. He was a longtime member of St. Mark United Methodist Church and a lifetime member of the former Middletown Optimist Club.

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sister, Mary. He is survived by his loving wife of 52 years, Janice Sue Clingenpeel; sons, Mark Shrout (Kelly) and David Shrout; brother, Dale Shrout (Nell); grandsons, William and Andrew Shrout; nephews, Stephen Martin (Nancy) and Troy Shrout (Tracy); niece, Teresa Gillum (Rodney); brother-inlaw, Phillip Clingenpeel and many grand-nieces and nephews. His funeral service was at 10 a.m. Wednesday, September 9, 2015 at Highlands Funeral Home, 3331 Taylorsville Road with private burial. Expressions of sympathy may be made to St. Mark United Methodist Church, or Hosparus of Louisville. The family wishes to express their thanks to Hosparus of Louisville, and their love and appreciation to Melissa Alford, and her children, Allie, Paige and Michael.

Harold was preceded in death by his parents, Hobert and Bethel Shrout; brother, Kenneth; and A family-owned

Among the many things that Charlie did in his life; he brought Plainview Wine and Cheese to Louisville, the first of its kind selling fine wines and cheeses to the city. He also served as the executive director of the Thoroughbred Club of America at Keeneland Race Track. There will be a celebration of his life Sunday, September 20, 2015 from 3-6pm at Midlane Farm, home of Charles and Kim Laramore Stephens, 2834 Hikes Lane, Louisville, KY. Please bring a written story that his children and can read and cherish. Please park in the church parking lot to the west of the property and enter through the red gate. You may also share sympathies with the family by visiting www.chapmanfuneralhomes.com. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions can be made to The Healing Place, 1020 Market Street, Louisville, KY 40202. Chapman Funeral Home, family-owned and located at 3941 Teays Valley Road, Hurricane,

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Sam Is Helping To

Put The Freeze On Neuroblastoma After a summer in remission, Sam Rosebrock’s cancer came back. The family of this ice cream-loving 5-year-old was referred to Dr. Kenneth Lucas, whose advanced research into treatments for children with relapsed cancer is creating new hope for patients and parents. Learn more about Sam’s story and other research breakthroughs at UofLForKids.com.

University of Louisville faculty doctors are leading the way to healthier kids by providing specialized care, performing advanced medical research and teaching the next generation of physicians.

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9/8/15 11:48 AM


24 Catnip | 26 Card Chronicle | 28 Taylor’s 10 | 30 Game of the Week

SPORTS

The University of Louisville women’s soccer team lost 1-0 to rivals Kentucky last Friday night at the Bell Soccer Complex in front of a record crowd of 3,371. The result saw the Cardinals’ record fall to 1-2-1 while Kentucky moved to 4-1-0. PHOTO BY VICTORIA GRAFF | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER


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S

o what kind of impact did Kentucky make on the first football Saturday of the year?

UK’s Win Filled with Unanswered Questions University of Louisiana-Lafayette, 17-point underdogs. And when Stanley Williams went BOOM for 75 yards on the first play from scrimmage, it appeared the Cats were going to do just that.

And then the air just sort of On Sunday morning’s ESPN Catnip seeped out like in a Patriots’ footweb site, amid headlines about ball. Lafayette crept back from a UCLA’s quarterback, Temple’s STEVE 33-10 deficit to tie the game. Lafayupset, BYU’s Hail Mary and AlaKAUFMAN ette made the critical two-point bama’s decisive win against a ranked opponent, the Kentucky game cov- conversion it had to make. Lafayette made erage was all about a drone that crashed into all the stops on defense in the fourth quarter – an interception and a three-and-out, plus a Commonwealth Stadium prior to the game. missed Austin MacGinnis field goal. At least the headline wasn’t, “UK Loses – The defense was worrisome. The offense Here They Go Again!” felt like the same-old-thing in parts – strong After all the anticipation, it would have crisp patterns and gaping holes for ball carbeen great for Kentucky to go out and make riers mixed with collapsing pockets and overa big statement against the Ragin’ Cajuns of thrown receivers. Placekicker MacGinnis, S E P T E M B E R 1 0 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

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who made many SEC pre-season all-star teams, missed an extra point that for a stretch at the end could have been HUGE! Patrick Towles completed only 16 of 34 and was sacked three times. (Though his gritty recovery of a fumbled snap in the fourth quarter was vintage Towles, still the yin and yang of this quarterback that we’ve become so familiar with.) Those highly touted freshmen? C.J. Conrad didn’t catch a pass, George Asafo-Adjei was singled out for getting turned around on one of the ULL sacks, linebackers Jordan Jones and Josh Allen played like freshmen. Drew Barker never appeared despite Mark Stoops’ apparent resolve to get him into the game, no matter what the score. Stoops told the media, after the game, “It was really a great night. I could not be more

PHOTO BY VICTORIA GRAFF | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER


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proud of this football team. The way they hung in there and played a hard-fought game. We knew it wasn't going to be easy.” I’m not sure that’s what he told the players in the locker room. I’m not sure that was the atmosphere this week in practice. Towles said, “I’ve got be more consistent for sure, but we won. We’ll take the win and we’ll never take those for granted.” That sounds a bit way too much like 2014. I was going to write about Matt Stinchcomb picking the Cats to go 8-4 on an SEC Network season preview show. I thought I’d be writing about how UK made that prediction, and all of Big Blue Nation’s hopes and expectations look good. Instead, there’s a recurring theme already beginning: We just don’t know this team yet. There’s certainly no reason to be over-opti-

mistic going on the road to South Carolina this weekend. Look, lots of teams struggle early and then go on to successful seasons. (Ohio State of a year ago being Exhibit AAA.) And Towles is right: It’s a win, and they’ll take it. If the goal is six wins, it’s one down, five to go. At the end of a successful season, every win is remembered as 59-10. But Georgia (51-14), Ole Miss (76-3), Arkansas (48-13), Missouri (34-3), Tennessee (59-30), Florida (61-13) and Mississippi State (34-13) did have those kinds of wins. And Alabama (35-17 over Wisconsin) and Auburn (31-24 over Louisville) won decisively against quality opponents. It’s just a reminder of how difficult it is to play winning football in the Southeast Conference. VT

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ON WASTING TEBOW On another SEC note, I continue to be stunned by how the NFL has again botched the career of conference icon Tim Tebow. We knew, even as the phenomenal youngster was dominating the SEC for four years, that he was at best a marginal quarterback. But maybe we’d never seen a better athlete strap on the pads. So team after pro team has continued trying to force him into the round hole of NFL quarterback. And he’s not that. I can’t believe some smart coach – and everyone feels Chip Kelly at Philadelphia is one of those – couldn’t have seen his potential as a running back or defensive back. Maybe Tebow has refused those options. Maybe everyone continues to be put off by his sunny religious and charitable lifestyle. Surely, today’s NFL doesn’t need anyone who lives that kind of life. W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M • S E P T E M B E R 1 0 , 2 0 1 5


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PHOTO BY GAIL KAMENISH | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER


A

fter an offseason loaded with more unanswerable questions than any other in recent memory, Louisville football fans got their first two major answers of 2015 last Saturday from inside the Georgia Dome in Atlanta.

Jackson’s supporters off and on the field.

MIKE RUTHERFORD @cardchronicle

The first wasn’t the one they wanted to hear. Despite appearing to be of Auburn’s caliber for the duration of the four-quarter game, a handful of those correctable mistakes that plague young teams at the beginning of seasons kept UofL from pulling the upset of the sixth-ranked Tigers. The second answer, though, that’s the one that still has Cardinal fans buzzing about the potential of both the next three months and the next three years. Lamar Jackson, the forgotten man in the oft-discussed battle to be Louisville’s starting quarterback in 2015, will now head into his second college game with a stranglehold on the job. That’s what happens when you become the first Cardinal freshman to rush for more than 100 yards in your first game and nearly lead your team out of a 24-0 hole to stun the preseason favorites in the Southeastern Conference. Jackson was dazzling in front of both the 79,000 fans inside the Georgia Dome and the even larger national television audience watching on CBS. He treated the Auburn defense like the high school defenders seen by so many on his viral YouTube and Vine highlight videos. When the dust settled and the shimmying, shaking and, yes, throwing, all ended, Jackson had left Louisville fans feeling optimistic about the rest of the season and the future of the most important position on a football team. The answer to the biggest question of the summer has spawned some new ones. Can Jackson do this in a non-desperation situation where he has the freedom to improvise? Can he throw well enough to thrive in a standard Bobby Petrino offense? Or will Petrino have to mold the offense to his strengths? Can a quarterback who likes to run that much stay healthy for an entire season of major college football? The follow-up answers will come soon enough, but for now, the initial response has successfully sparked the enthusiasm of both

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“Lamar is the most exciting quarterback in college football right now,” contends freshman wide receiver Jaylen Smith, who is Jackson’s roommate. “He has an incredible arm. He can probably throw a ball 85 yards. His throws are very accurate, and they have high velocity. It gets there very fast.”

How Jackson reacts to the added weight of having all week to prepare for a game as a starter will be discovered in five days as Petrino announced publicly on Monday that the freshman would be under center for the first play against Houston. So how did we get to this point where a freshman many believed would play another position at the college level has already beaten out Reggie Bonnafon, Kyle Bolin and Will Gardner – three players who all helped the Cardinals win big games last fall? My first indication that this was at least possible came three months ago. In May, before the freshmen and other newcomers had arrived on campus, Bobby Petrino came into our ESPN Louisville studio for an interview on the Ramsey & Rutherford program that I co-host. The topic of the quarterback battle came up, and when Petrino was asked about Jackson, he was almost dismissive. He said that the freshman was a great athlete but that they’d have to see if they could work on his release and figure out whether or not he could grasp the offense and command the respect of his peers. Fast forward a month, and Petrino is back in the studio and asked the same question. If we had been playing poker, I would have folded out of turn because the man did a terrible job disguising the fact that he was pretty sure he’d drawn a winning hand. “Lamar’s going to be a factor,” Petrino said with a slight smile. “He’s picking things up faster than we thought, and honestly, he’s throwing the ball better than we thought. We might not have a choice but to play him right away.” Against Auburn, Jackson showed the rest of the world what he showed Petrino during the summer, and on Saturday he’ll have his first chance to show a home crowd. His first chance of many. VT W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M • S E P T E M B E R 1 0 , 2 0 1 5

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Lamarvelous


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A Strong Start for Lamar Jackson

Lamar Jackson was impressive in his first college football game. The UofL freshman quarterback completed nine of 20 passes for 100 yards with one interception and rushed for 106 yards in the Cards 31-24 loss to No. 6 Auburn. As a high school senior at Boynton Beach High School in Florida, Jackson passed for 1,293 yards and 20 touchdowns and rushed for 1,039 yards and 19 scores. He was ranked as the No. 30 dual threat quarterback in the country. The Cards host Houston this Saturday at noon at Papa John’s Cardinal Stadium. I did, but at the same I didn’t because I wanted to bring my team back and win the game. Yeah, I think I accomplished something but not all the way.

What was it like to play your first college game in this environment? Well the first play of the game, I really wasn’t prepared for the ball. It was snapped too early, and then I was shocked that it was in my hand because that was my first time in a college game. So I was just looking and rolling, and I should have just threw it away.

Taylor’s 10 KENT TAYLOR

Coach said that the plan was to play you at some point in the game. Did he tell you that beforehand?

Actually, I didn’t know that. I was just looking forward to the first play, to hopefully get in or something. All week, in practice, we were practicing me like on certain plays, not like, the rest of the game, the second half.

WAVE3 Sports

Did anyone tell you that Teddy Bridgewater’s first pass was an interception too? Yeah, they were telling me that on the sideline. That didn’t really matter to me because I don’t like to throw interceptions. I hoped that I could have gotten it back sooner. Your first college game, you rush for over 100 yards, you throw for 100 and you got your team back in the game. Did you prove something to yourself? S E P T E M B E R 1 0 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

How supportive are the other guys in that quarterback room – because they’ve all played, they’ve all won big games? They’re very supportive. They’re like big brothers to me. They tell me what to do and what not to do on the field. What I should look at and what I should not look at.

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How talented is this receiving corps? Very talented, even the veterans. We’re just coming out here to show coach what we could do. Do you and Devante Peete have some chemistry already? Yeah, we’re from the same place, grew up together. How much are you looking forward to playing in front of the home fans? An average amount. Just to compete with the quarterbacks. What did Coach Petrino say to you after the first play? Just not to worry about it, to stay in the game because everyone throws picks. What is your fastest 40? A 4.4 VT

PHOTO BY GAIL KAMENISH | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER


Sports

This dramatic photo of Wise Dan splashing through a driving rain to win the 2013 Firecracker Handicap earned an Eclipse Award for photographer Jamie Hernandez.

Farewell, Wise Dan; Hello September

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ne of the outstanding sagas of success in Kentucky and all of American racing came to a jarring, but happy, end on Monday with the arrival of word that the racing career of two-time Horse of the Year Wise Dan has reached its conclusion.

Horse Sense JOHN ASHER

The 8-year-old gelding had been training beautifully toward a return to racing this Sunday in a bid for a third career victory at the $1 million Ricoh Woodbine Mile at Toronto’s Woodbine. The race was to have been his first since an ankle injury was detected last fall following a win in the Keeneland’s Grade I Shadwell Turf Mile that knocked him out of a bid to score a third triumph in the Breeders’ Cup Mile, which will be run this year over his home track at Lexington’s Keeneland Race Course. But trainer Charles LoPresti noticed some swelling in the veteran’s tendon while his star took a bath on Labor Day morning. A veterinarian was called and a scan detected what LoPresti described as a “tear on the outside edge” of the gelding’s tendon. Wise Dan had returned in brilliant fashion after two earlier injuries, but LoPresti and owner-breeder Morton Fink discussed the situation and Wise Dan’s looming ninth birthday, and they made a decision: it is time for Wise Dan to go home. P H OTO B Y R E E D PA L M E R | C H U R C H I L L D O W N S

The son of Wiseman’s Ferry has been a remarkable horse and story since LoPresti made a life-changing decision – for the both the trainer and the horse – to switch Wise Dan from dirt to the turf in 2011. Wise Dan had displayed some promise in his races on dirt, but he was a different horse on grass, and it didn’t take long for him to become a brilliant runner on the new surface.

His first work on grass on the Matt Winn Turf Course at Churchill Downs was a head-turner, and it was followed shortly by a victory in Wise Dan’s debut over the new footing in the Louisville track’s one-mile, Grade II Firecracker Handicap on July 4, 2011. He would race 16 times on grass through 2014, and all but one of those races resulted in a victory. The lone blemish was a fourth-place finish in Keeneland’s Shadwell Turf Mile in the fall of 2011. He earned $6,458,069 on that surface along with his Horse of the Year titles in 2012 and 2013, which were accompanied by Eclipse Awards in both of those years that honored him as champion grass horse and champion older horse. He won a Grade I race on dirt when he took the 2011 Clark Handicap at Churchill Downs and just missed another over the Churchill Downs surface when Ron the Greek nipped him by a head in the Stephen Foster Handicap the following year. Final career statistics for Wise Dan include a record of 23-2-0 in 31 races with overall earnings of $7,552,920. Heroics at Churchill Downs

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included a pair of wins in the Grade I Woodford Reserve Turf Classic on Kentucky Derby Day and two wins in the Firecracker. Wise Dan was a dazzling star, and LoPresti handled him brilliantly. He enjoyed long restful breaks over his winters and came back ready to fire in the spring. He won on the lead and, as in his final Breeders’ Cup Mile win in 2013 at Santa Anita, rallied from far back to get up just in time. It’s a thrill to watch good horses, but an uncommon experience to have the honor to watch a great one. Wise Dan is in the latter category, and those who enjoyed his work at Churchill Downs, Keeneland or any other track over which he competed can be thankful that he has been in caring and talented hands, is heading home safe and happy and is just waiting for a spot in racing’s Hall of Fame. While bidding farewell to Wise Dan, we welcome September racing at Churchill Downs for a third consecutive year. The 11-day racing meeting opens on Friday, September 11 and continues through Sunday, September 27. One Downs After Dark night racing program is scheduled for Saturday, September 19. Four stakes events on Saturday, September 12 include Breeders’ Cup “Win and You’re In” races in the Pocahontas for 2-year-old fillies and Iroquois for 2-year-olds. The headliner on Saturday, September 26 is the renamed $175,000 Lukas Classic, 1 1/8-mile race of older horses that honors four-time Kentucky Derby winner and Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas. VT Information is available at the revamped web site at churchilldowns.com. W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M • S E P T E M B E R 1 0 , 2 0 1 5


Sports

Trinity starting QB Jake Woosley zeroed in on a receiver.

Trinity Trounce Lafayette

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rinity continued their winning ways this season when they trounced Lexington Lafayette 70-14 last Friday, as the Shamrocks’ Rodjay Burns scored five touchdowns on his way to 187-yard all-purpose yards.

Trinity quarterback Jacob Woosley, in the meantime, threw for 201 yards with four touchdowns. Trinity’s defense was also key in the victory, holding a usually potent Lafayette offense at bay and preventing a single offensive score. Trinity extended their season record to 3-0 with their next game scheduled against Male in what promises to be one of the games of the season in Louisville.

Rodjay Burns ran the Trinity sideline to the end zone, posting another Trinity touchdown.

LOOKING AHEAD Another chapter to the thrilling match up between No. 1 Trinity and No. 2 Male will be written Friday, September 11 at 7:30 p.m. Male (3-0) will host Trinity (3-0). The Bulldogs, who have a ton of experience, have only given up 13 points on the season. The defending 6A state champions Trinity comes in with a lot of guys returning as well. They defeated Male last season on their home field in the second round of the Russell Athletic/KHSAA Commonwealth Gridiron Bowl 38-31 in a game that went into overtime. VT S E P T E M B E R 1 0 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

Jailen Reed kept ahead of the Lafayette defense.

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P H OTO B Y D A M O N AT H E R TO N | C O N T R I B U T I N G P H OTO G R A P H E R


Sports Senior setter Morgan Elmore, senior middle blocker Ashton Meckle and junior opposite hitter

I

Jaguars Still Showing No Mercy

a 5-2 record on the season, Mercy is n Kentucky volleyball, it ensuring that no laws are being brogoes without saying that ken within its team bond. the Mercy Jaguars stand Kelly O’Neil, who is a defensive as one of the most elite prospecialist libero is one of the capgram in the state. The defendtains of the team as a junior. In her ing 2014 state champions role, she ensures that the team stays High School motivate themselves with connected and motivated. “I just Sports Report try to do my best to help my team this motto: “1, 2, 3 Mercy as captain. I know that is a big leadPride Be the Best.” Every RANDY time these girls go to com- WHETSTONE JR. ership role. So I do my best to help my team through everything. If we pete, even the sweat of their are down, I know that I have to be brow is consumed with Mercy the one on the court to push the team to strive pride. Head coach, Matthew Thomer- for the best.” son, is in his first season as head coach O’Neil, who has gained attention from Arizona, NC State, Marquette and Morehead, and says it all starts in practice. “Everything we do in practice is competitive and has a goal in mind. Everything is like a game-like situation, preparing us to be winners. We set an aggressive mindset with them, play by play.”

says that nothing gets in the way of the girls’ camaraderie. “We have a really good bond because we come together and work together as a team no matter what. If we make mistakes, we tell each other to shake it off. So it is awesome how we come together.”

Thomerson, who is a graduate of Holy Cross High School in Louisville, has been coaching volleyball for 15 years. During his four years coaching at Holy Cross, he was named Coach of the Year of the sixth region in 2010 and 2011.

Mercy has come off a season where they not only won the state championship but also had a player in Merideth Jewell who was named 2014 Miss Kentucky Volleyball. Although Jewell has graduated, her leadership and legacy has instilled a far-reaching confidence in supporters.

What’s intriguing about Mercy’s new coach is that he has also been a police officer for 16 years. Perhaps his upholding of the law has filtered into the play of the Mercy Jaguars. With

Coach Thomerson says, “Anytime you have a player of that caliber that graduates from your high school, it sets the bar for what other kids want to be. If you mention Meri-

PHOTO BY RANDY WHETSTONE JR. | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

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deth Jewell’s name at our camps, kids know who she is and they want to be that. They look up to her as an icon. Some of our girls even look up to that.” Discipline is one the major reasons the Mercy volleyball program has been able to maintain its success. The senior captains strive to be exemplary role models for the team and the community. In addition, they must withstand the pressures of leading a group of underclassmen toward the team’s overall goals. Ashton Meckle, who is positioned as middle blocker and opposite hitter, expressed her role as captain on the team and the duties she performs. “It is always difficult being a senior. You have to constantly encourage everyone else and make sure they are doing their part. I don’t like to think as a senior that you can tell everyone else what to do, but it is our job to make sure everything goes smoothly and everything goes well.” Meckle, who is headed to Georgetown College next year, says the drive of the players who come into the Mercy program is what makes the team so special to her. She argues that, “Every single girl that is picked for a team has a drive like anyone else. When we step on the floor, no one is going to outwork us. That’s our main goal – that no one will outwork us. I can look at each person on the court with me and just say they’ll never give up and neither will I.” VT W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M • S E P T E M B E R 1 0 , 2 0 1 5


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Kentucky Bluegrass & PAGE Bourbon Experience 38


S O C I E TY

NAWBO Public Policy Luncheon The National Association of Women Business Owners held its Annual Public Policy Luncheon at NOAH’s Event Venue on September 1, where Congressman Thomas Massie served at the keynote speaker for NAWBO’s 40th anniversary celebration. U.S. Representative Massie has served Kentucky’s Fourth Congressional District since 2012.

NAWBO Louisville President Denise Jerome, Executive Director of NAWBO Louisville Stephanie Geddes, Kentucky Congressman Thomas Massie and NAWBO Louisville Public Policy Chair Marisa Neal.

Vicki and Livvy Feinn.

Angie Wagner and NAWBO Louisville founding member Rita Scott.

Shellie May and Stacie Rockaway.

Angie Hollander and Stacey Shepard.

Sarah Davasher-Wisdom and Ashley Penn.

Judith Bartholomew, Kathy Brown and Carol Caldiron.

Gwen Cooper and Erin Hinson.

S E P T E M B E R 1 0 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

Chris McCane, Kelsey Cooper and Jim Milliman.

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PHOTOS BY BILL WINE | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER


This session of the Mayor’s Art and Music Series featured the music of Will Oldham “Bonnie Prince Billy” at the Mayor’s Gallery Listening Room in Louisville Metro Hall. Each meeting spotlights Louisville musicians and artists alongside offerings with of local food and drink. Shows take place the first Thursday of every month and are always free and open to the public. Doors open at 11:30 a.m.

Mark Hamilton, Steve Sizemore, Rebecca Kessler, Danny Kiley and Yanni Vogos.

Drew Miller, Mayor Greg Fischer and Teddy Abrams.

Amber Beems and Kendrick Jones.

Nina Rodahaffer with Cheyenne Mize of Strive Arts and Wellness.

Summer Auerbach and Brandon Coan.

Carrie Sweet and Mark Hamilton.

Anthony Smith, Ebony O’Rea, Jennie Jean Richardson and Jane Walsh.

PHOTOS BY TIM VALENTINO | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Cheyenne Mize plays with Bonnie Prince Billy.

Tania Vardain and Elsa Hansen.

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Dennie Humphrey, Matt Weir and Vanessa Swiggart.

W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M • S E P T E M B E R 1 0 , 2 0 1 5

S O C I E TY

Mayor’s Art and Music Series


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Kentucky Bluegrass & Bourbon Experience Bourbon, bluegrass and barbecue fans gathered at Waterfront Park for the Kentucky Bluegrass & Bourbon Experience during Labor Day weekend. The festival featured pit-smoked barbecue, a Bourbon Tasting Lounge, traditional fair favorites and a selection of live bluegrass music from musicians across the nation. Over three days, guests heard music from Lonesome River Band Relic, Hickory & Friends, Whiskey Bent Valley, Blind Corn Liquor Pickers, Hog Operation and more.

Carolyn Clifford, Bill Guido and Don Clifford.

Zach Hubbard, Lauren Reischorf and Beth Martin.

Carolyn Williams, Joe Ley and Bob Wells.

Casey Cook, Emily DeBrock, Jacob King and Reba Bungasser.

Bernie Lubbers, Hickory Vaught, Jennifer Hall, Leigh Likins and Greg Paulin.

S E P T E M B E R 1 0 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

Derrick Rose and Kiska LaCour.

Justine Cox and Mitchell Payne.

Relic.

Kelly Compton and Julie Hall.

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Joe and Pam Howard.

PHOTOS BY TIM VALENTINO | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER


Shane Williams and Jessica Smith.

Joy Lewis and Beth Ryan.

Barb and Tom McDevitt.

Nick George and Ashley Robinson.

Lauren Culbertson, Seamus Pugh and Emma Malueg.

Susan and Mark Wettle.

Tim and Janet Adams.

Artist Nate Michaels.

PHOTOS BY BILL WINE | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Guests get a glimpse of NuLu every first Friday of each month during the First Friday Trolley Hop, which now shuttles patrons via the farefree electric Zero bus instead of the trolley. During the September 4 event, restaurants, galleries and retailers downtown extend hours and offered specials, discounts and refreshments.

Melanie Fraley, Barry Hestermann, Shanna Cahill and Greg Adamson.

Karen Welch and David McGuire.

Kathy Werchowski and Tom Cole.

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S O C I E TY

First Friday Trolley Hop


S O C I E TY

Card Nation ATL Headquarters Fans gathered atop The W Hotel Atlanta-Buckhead at Whiskey Blue on September 4 to kick off the UofL game against Auburn. Maker’s Mark, 93.9 The Ville, Bird Gang Clothing and J Wagner Group sponsored the event, which offered VIP tables, a cash bar and food. Bill Moad, Steve Moad, Susan Wentzel, Joni Moad, Nancy Shircliff, Pat Harris, Alison Harris, Patrick Ernst and Dan Maupin.

Ted and Leesa Ennenbach with Jennifer and Kevin Corum.

Larry Sinclair and Joey Wagner.

Alex, Rick and Patrick Hayden with Charlotte Kyle.

Elizabeth Rees and Tony Scarpino.

Jessica and Jennifer Young.

Dave and Camille Loughlin.

Andrew Ryan, Cara Caputo and Eran Kreitman.

S E P T E M B E R 1 0 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

Rob Philpott, Sheila and John Rose and Sharon Philpott.

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PHOTOS BY GAIL KAMENISH | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER


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S O C I E TY

Flea Off Market The Flea Off Market is more than your average flea market; It’s a community event and street party. Local art, food trucks, antiques, terrariums, pet adoptions, used items and more make up the array of booths for perusing at its East Market District location, which took place between September 4-6. There was also disc jockey and a live band playing throughout the day.

Robert Stallard, Amber Shelmidine and Yehya and Dawn Senousy.

Mackenzie and Keli Kaskie and Tammy Renn.

Jamie Ingram and Amy Carlson.

Marissa Thomas and Phebe McDermott.

China, Degi and Komi Lasisa.

Heather Spurgeon, Nancy Kirchner, Adam and Jordan Bartholow and Mona Winebrenner.

Kerry Atkins, Ali Longmire and Bill Branch.

S E P T E M B E R 1 0 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

Hayley Murphy, Krista Mudd and Morgan Sheehy.

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Laura Read and Trent Burdick.

PHOTOS BY TIM VALENTINO | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER


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S O C I E TY

UofL Watch Party ESPN hosted the Official University of Louisville Game Watch Party at Fourth Street Live! for fans to watch the Cards take on the Auburn Tigers in Atlanta on September 5. The party kicked off at noon with the Deener Show live on stage featuring Louisville icon Marques Maybin, followed by the game and the band Soul Circus at 7 p.m. The event featured a cornhole tournament, contests, giveaways, the Louisville cheerleaders and hotdogs and burgers while the game played on a 20-foot LED screen.

Ryan Blais, Ashley Kathcart, James Anslow and Julia Christiansen.

Marques Maybin and Drew Deener.

Joyce Walker and James Young.

Bruce Spear.

Tom Enghe, Rachel Goga and Melissa Koll.

Julie, Cindy and Rob Ott.

Phil Baker, Ashley Canan and Nick McNeil.

S E P T E M B E R 1 0 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

James and April LaBelle.

Brooke Mensah, Julie Sequeira and Kanashe Gray.

Mandy and Stewart Lee with Drew Mays.

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Kenise Bittle and Jonathan Darrell.

PHOTOS BY TIM VALENTINO | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER


S O C I E TY

Mayor’s Healthy Hometown Subway Fresh Fit Hike & Bike Every Memorial and Labor Day weekend, thousands of participants flock to Waterfront Park’s Great Lawn for the Subway Fresh Fit Hike, Bike & Paddle. This free, family-friendly event includes fitness demonstrations such as yoga, tai chi, zumba, pickleball and more. Participants choose a 5K hike, a 10-mile bike ride or a paddle on the Ohio River as part of Mayor Fischer’s Healthy Hometown initiative.

Joe Turner, Beth Harrison, Bryson Thurber, David and Owen Green and Gail Schell.

Brady, Karen and Ben LaMontagne.

Debora and Glenn Gray.

LaMont and Brian Warfield.

Roy Potts and Congressman John Yarmuth.

Gia and Valerie Combs.

Amber Maloney and Chelsea Inger.

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Brown-Forman’s

Twilight in the Garden ~Friday, October 9, 2015~

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S O C I E TY

WorldFest One of the region’s largest international festivals, WorldFest, celebrated its 13th anniversary with four days of food, music, culture, dance and education from around the world. The free festival, held on the Belvedere at Fifth and Main Street, explores and celebrates the diverse cultures of Louisville, Mayor Greg Fischer describes on the city government’s website. There are more than 90 languages spoken in Louisville’s public schools, and 50 percent of the city’s population growth the last 15 years comes from international residents.

Jim and Kerema Benson.

Andy Sweeney and Niki Mallory.

Lauren, Josh and Waylond Dell.

Paula Gudger and Bill Driver.

Justine, John and Liz Dugger.

Eric and Claire Sinnott.

Mayor Greg Fischer and Guy Tedesco.

Jerry and Mimi Sims.

S E P T E M B E R 1 0 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

Kearra Downs and Taylor Yager.

Andre and Latoyia Lackey with Brandi Hill.

Tony and Chantay Wickliffe.

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Marca Smith and Jill Hines.

PHOTOS BY BILL WINE | CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER


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S O C I E TY

Modern Louisville Launch Party Modern Louisville launched its first issue on September 3 at Play Dance Bar. Emcee and Play drag queen extraordinaire Leah Halston hosted and performed. There were dazzling party favors, a purple drink special and incredible giveaways that featured items from local businesses and Modern Louisville subscriptions.

Bobby Petrino Jr. and Leah Halston.

John Gray, Brent Gettelfinger and Remy Sisk.

Eve Mitchum and Nadia Melaisis.

Clay Cook, Blake McGraw, Bethany Hood, Isidro Valencia, Josh Eskridhe and Mario Rocha.

Steve Van Hooser and Wayne Jenkins.

S E P T E M B E R 1 0 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

Ryan Bratcher and Amy Smock.

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Kenneth Ballard and Jeff Wagoner.

Hollis Gargala and Tracy Blue.

Larry Shapin and Ladonna Nichols.

P H O T O S B Y C H R I S H U M P H R E Y S | T H E V O I C E -T R I B U N E


S O C I E TY

Jess Malloy, Danielle Chase, Kimberly Cherry and Josh Johnson.

Craig Stevenson, Douglas Riddle and Don Wenzel.

Remy Sisk and Charlie Meredith.

Mariah Kline and Sara Troxel.

Wil Heuser, Natalie Davis and Melody Levin.

Joanna Hite Shelton, Hollis Gargala and Laurie Lennon.

Mike Ice and PLAY co-owner Chris Galla.

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Kentucky and Southern Indiana Stroke Association Tasting Event The Kentucky and Southern Indiana Stroke Association held its annual Extravaganza Tasting Event on August 25 at The Olmstead. In addition to food, wine and beverages, there was a silent auction provided by local businesses to delight guests. All proceeds benefited the local Stroke Association.

Alicia and Rick DeLuca and Miriam Burich.

Dr. Gregory and Patrice Pittman. Carrie Orman, executive director of the Stroke Association with Rip Hatfield and Lou Ellen Williams.

Charles Whaley and John Pfeiffer.

Nik Short and Mary Proctor.

Lowry Watkins and Harold Adkins.

Becca Burrus and Kelly Hawthorne.

Bri Jarboe, Jill Phillips, Charlene Cayton, Robin Byrd and Keith Johnson.

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Susan Lawson and Valerie Goss.

Stroke Association board President Yvonne Adkins and John Adkins.

P H O T O S B Y J O H N H A R R A L S O N | T H E V O I C E -T R I B U N E V E T E R A N P H O T O G R A P H E R


You’re Invited... to join the Lisette L team and The Willow Tree Thursday, September 17 Friday, September 18 10am-6pm New styles and designs on-site to choose from with assistance from the Lisette L team. No waiting! OVER 500 pant pieces shipped in! Live Video Production each day Surprises for all attendees and light refreshments

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Louisville & Kentucky State Numismatic Association Inc. Coin Show Buy/Sell/Trade • Coins/Gold/Silver Fern Valley Conference Center 2715 Fern Valley Road • Louisville, KY

Open to the Public Free Admission Thurs., Sept. 17 • 1 p.m. - 5:30 p.m. Fri., Sept. 18 • 10 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Sat., Sept. 19 • 10 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. For Information Call: 502.551.7530


Terri Bass, Jeff Howard, Mark Eliason and Steve Bass at the Lomickas’ party in Cherokee Gardens.

The Filson Historical Society Presents

Music Under the Trees at Oxmoor Farm

Friday, September 18 | Gates open 6:00 p.m. Advance Tickets: $10 Filson members | $15 general public Children 12 and under free For more details, visit filsonhistorical.org

BYOB: Bring your own blanket

classic style | modern sensibility

grand opening september 12th FURNITURE HOME DECOR ART RUGS LIGHTING GIFTS LOCATED IN CHENOWETH PLAZA

3626 BROWNSBORO RD. 40207 HOURS: TUESDAY-SATURDAY 10-5 502.742.5380

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Heading Into Fall

arol and Bill Lomicka took advantage of the fading days of summer turning into fall with a super supper party at their summer home in Cherokee Gardens. The sun was setting into the west end of Cherokee Park, and there was a cooling stillness in the air.

copal Church on Frankfort Avenue. It was interesting to learn that the meeting room was the site of all of the strategic planning for the area after the tornado in the 1970s.

It seems that the September meeting each year is the meeting when the Partyline “Spirit of Crescent Hill” award-winCARLA SUE ners are honored and presented with their award mementos. This year, the BROECKER awards were presented to St. Mark’s Church, Mark Gaff, Marie Goodwin, The Louisville Water Company and, posthuGuests gathered in the charming house for mously, to Steve Disney. cocktails and fabulous hors d’oeuvres, and then, Mrs. Goodwin is 100 years old and cute as she as the sun was setting, they adjourned to the can be. Besides having lived all over Crescent marvelous terrace that overlooks lush greenery, Hill, currently residing on Eastover, she is a regthe fringes of Cherokee Park and the lights of ular at the Crescent Hill Garden Club. town. The roofed terrace is two stories tall and Steve Disney, who learned advertising and catches any errant breeze. It was delightful. concert promotion in his spare time while attendSuper chef Mark Stevens had prepared scrumptious hors d’oeuvres, which were served inside. Tiny pizza slices, bite-size Greek salad cups, Chinese dumplings with hoisin sauce and other goodies I can’t remember completed the spread.

When darkness fell, Sally Abel, Mark Eliason, Jeff Howard, David and Annie Lohr, Gary and Carla Reichenberg, Steve and Terri Sautel, Christine Bohn, Terri and Steve Bass, Betty and Tom Haag, Andy and Alice Dzenitis, Jill and Gary Hanrahan and Billy and Jean Shewciw were enjoying a delicious dinner of haddock, veal picatta, roasted Brussels sprouts, mashed potatoes and Caesar salad. Mark’s wife, Susan, prepared individual fresh fruit tarts for dessert. OMG. Carol and Bill are the most thoughtful, interesting and delightful hosts. When they leave for the holidays for their fabulous home in Arizona, they are sorely missed. But then it is great to visit them in their home at the foot of the Santa Catalina Mountains in Tucson. CRESCENT HILL COUNCIL Crescent Hill’s town council is extremely active. Last week, its chairman, Bill Hollander, called the meeting to order at St. Mark’s EpisS E P T E M B E R 1 0 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

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ing Vanderbilt as an undergrad, led the development, promotion and growth of the Peterson-Dumesnil historic home. His proud wife Cathy, mother Jane, brother and lots of other odds-andends relatives were there to honor Steve. Mayor Fischer showed up on time at just about 8 p.m. to make appropriate “Mayorial Remarks” and enjoy refreshments of ice cream and homemade pastries. Joyce Cossavella was the spark plug who promoted the meeting when she wasn’t volunteering at Fabulous Finds, the resale shop just a few blocks down Frankfort Avenue.

QUATRA4 If you missed last year’s designer jewelry & wearable art for the “Dynamic Woman”, presented by Quatra4 at the Louisville Boat Club, here is fair warning: Don’t let it happen again. Last year was great. This year will be spectacular. Hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. It is on Saturday, September 26, and admission is free. Participating artists include Sharon Major, Gunnar Deatherage, Lona Northener, Sue Spencer, Roxy Lentz, Frances Lewis, Lesley Rahner Ewald, and Sara Havens. A portion of the sales benefit the Heuser Hearing & Language Academy. VT COURTESY PHOTO


Daughters Unite in Resisting Mom’s Domineering Demands DEAR ABBY: At what point does a parent no longer have the right to know who their child’s friends are?

DEAR SILENTLY PRAYING: Yes, there is. In restaurants, praying should be done quietly and inconspicuously to avoid distracting other diners.

I have three grown daughters, all on their own, living on the other side ••• of the country. During a recent visit DEAR ABBY: I love my friends and home for their grandmother’s birthDear Abby enjoy going out to dinner and attendday, I asked each of them to give me ing plays and movies with them. Howall of their friends’ phone numbers, in JEANNE ever, something really annoys me. My case I couldn’t reach them. I also wantPHILLIPS husband and I are usually early, and ed to know who they were exactly, how when we go to the movies, our friends well they knew them, etc. I was simply ask us to pick up the tickets if we arrive first. After thinking of their safety. If I can’t reach my girls, I the movie we’ll grab a bite to eat and at the end want to know who might have seen them last and, of the evening say goodbye. if need be, give that information to the police. Abby, all three of them told me NO! They said they are grown women and can take care of themselves, and besides, if, God forbid, they didn’t want to answer their phone when I called, I sure as h--- didn’t need to be pestering their friends. They say they are adults and that we (their dad and I) no longer have the right to “dictate” who they are friends with. I say I’m their mother and no matter how old they get, I will ALWAYS have the right to know who they are friends with. I would appreciate your thoughts. – RENEE IN OREGON DEAR RENEE: I agree that you are their mother, but you are not your daughters’ parole officer. They are self-supporting, self-sufficient adults. Perhaps if you were less overbearing, your daughters would be living closer, would answer their phones more often when you call and would open up to you about their friendships. Frankly, I think you should apologize for giving them such a heavy-handed third degree. ••• DEAR ABBY: My wife and I had dinner with some other couples at an elegant, white linen tablecloth restaurant. After the meals were brought to the table, someone said, “We need to pray.” In this quiet, candlelit setting, a “Bless us, oh Lord ...” was spoken aloud by most of the people in our party, causing heads to turn at a number of nearby tables. Undoubtedly, the din sounded like chanting. I was embarrassed. Please understand, we are religious and we pray aloud in church, but not in restaurants. I have seen people bow their heads and pray privately, which seems more appropriate. Is there a rule of etiquette about praying in a restaurant? – SILENTLY PRAYING FOR ADVICE

The question is, how do we ask them for the money we laid out for the tickets if they forget to offer it? This has happened three times with different friends, and we’re out the money. – ANNOYED IN TEANECK DEAR ANNOYED: There are a couple of ways to do it: As you hand the tickets over, you might say, “That’ll be $20, please.” But if that’s uncomfortable for you, the following day, you or your husband should call these “forgetful” friends and ask them to send you a check. ••• DEAR ABBY: For the past year I have been married to a man I love with all my heart, but we have yet to reside in the same house. He lives in another city with his child’s mother and gives me excuse after excuse as to why he won’t leave. It’s either that he’s scared to have to pay child support, he’s afraid of my temper (which I’m seeking help for) or it’s just not the right time. I think I should take priority over his child’s mother because I am his WIFE. I am fed up with the excuses and ready to call it quits. What should I do? – MARRIED BUT ALONE IN MARYLAND DEAR MARRIED: Keep working on your anger issues, but call it quits. Obviously, your “husband’s” priorities lie elsewhere. Whether in the legal sense or the emotional, he appears to be very much married to his child’s mother. As it stands, you are already living as a divorcee, so make it official and move on. ••• 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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56 Fashion | 58 Mixing It Up | 66 Calendar

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Hudson Jeans are the perfect fit for dancers. Available at Rodes S E P T E M B E R 1 0 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

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PHOTO BY ANDREW KUNG


The Bike Trek to Shakertown is a premier regional bicycle tour and an outstanding fundraiser, which has raised over $3 million for the fight against lung disease. This year it take place on September 19-21. We caught up with event organizer Carolyn Embry get all the details. What is the Bike Trek to Shakertown? The Bike Trek is a fully supported luxury ride featuring a two or three-day trip through gorgeous Kentucky countryside, a choice of routes each day, full sag support and on-road repair service, rest stops with high energy snacks, free massages and live nightly entertainment, including Ben Sollee on Sunday and a visit to historic Shakertown (Shaker Village of Pleasant Hill). What do you think has been the enduring appeal of the Bike Trek event? The Bike Trek to Shakertown has been a success from day one because it has all the essential elements for a great charity ride: a spectacular route, first-class service, famous Kentucky landmarks and

Bike Trek to Shakertown a worthy cause, the fight against lung disease. The American Lung Association pulls out all the stops to accommodate Bike Trek participants. Beginners can choose the basic route of 30-35 miles each day, while those wanting a greater challenge will enjoy a 65-mile, moderately hilly ride on Saturday and a similar option on Sunday. Monday’s routes will be shorter. This year is the 30th anniversary of the Bike Trek. It must be so rewarding how much support the American Lung Association gets in this city. We are very grateful for the community’s support of the Bike Trek to Shakertown and the American Lung Association. In fact, we have riders registered from 10 states and counties all across Kentucky. Kindred Healthcare is the event’s presenting sponsor. Local co-sponsors of the Bike Trek include KentuckyOneHealth, Humana, WAVE 3, Byerly Auto Group, Stifel, Bicycle Sport, New Country Q103.1, 107.7 The Eagle and Lite 106.9.

Is there still time to register? It is not too late for people to register for the ride if they can make some quick plans. Participants pay a $65 registration fee and raise pledges for the fight against lung disease. Pledge minimum: $300 for the 2-day ride; $400 for the 3-day ride, including dinner and overnight at Shaker Village. The pledge minimum must be turned in at least several days before the September 19 start date. Riders wanting to register may go to our website: BikeTrektoShakertown.org. They may also call our office for more information 502.363.2652. Is there any other way people can get involved with the American Lung Association? Certainly! We thrive on volunteer assistance for help with our various fundraising events and advocacy efforts. People interested in volunteering may visit our Kentucky website (kylung. org) for information about our programs, and they may call us anytime to explore volunteer opportunities.

FOOD-DRINK-LIVE MUSIC

Art Fair

SEPTEMBER

AT MELLWOOD

SATURDAY & SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 12 & 13 10AM - 6PM FREE ADMISSION FREE ONSITE PARKING MELLWOOD ANTIQUES & INTERIORS mellwoodartcenter.com

ALSO SPONSORED BY:

OVER 165 JURIED ARTISTS

1860 Mellwood Avenue

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SPOTLIGHT


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mixing

IT UP

With fall fast approaching and the temperatures expected to drop soon, what better way to stay warm while still looking effortlessly elegant than to accessorize with a colorful scarf? We scoured the city’s best boutiques for their most dazzling selections.

S I L K PAT T E R N E D S C A R F . A V A I L A B L E AT MERCI BOUTIQUE, 3911 CHENOWETH S Q U A R E , L O U I S V I L L E , K Y 4 0 2 0 7.

K N I T P O C K E T S C A R F . A V A I L A B L E AT MERCI BOUTIQUE, 3911 CHENOWETH S Q U A R E , L O U I S V I L L E , K Y 4 0 2 0 7.

ORANGE PLAID S C A R F . A V A I L A B L E AT SASSY FOX, 150 CHENOWETH LANE, LOUISVILLE, KY 40207

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LIFE G R E E N R U F F L E S C A R F. AVA I L A B L E AT S A S S Y F O X , 1 5 0 C H E N O W E T H LANE, LOUISVILLE, KY 40207

C H E V R O N PAT T E R N E D M I S S O N I S C A R F . A V A I L A B L E AT S U N N Y D A I Z E , 1 1 8 0 9 S H E LBYVILLE ROAD, LOUISVILLE, KY 40243.

Fashion Forward without spending a Fortune. M E R I N O WO O L M I S S O N I S C A R F. A V A I L A B L E AT S U N N Y D A I Z E , 11809 SHELBYVILLE ROAD, LOUISVILLE, KY 40243.

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Hours Mon–Sat 10–5 pm Thurs 10–8 pm

502.895.3711 150 Chenoweth Lane


MONDAY

Domestic Beers $1.75

TUESDAY

Well Drinks $3.00

WEDNESDAY Jim Beam $3.75

THURSDAY

Imports 75¢ OFF Jack Daniels $3.75

10 20 30 40 50 40 30 20 10

10 20 30 40 50 40 30 20 10

30 YEARS IN THE ORIGINAL HIGHLANDS!

SUNDAY NFL TICKET

KITCHEN OPEN ‘TIL 3AM

1250 Bardstown Rd • 502.451.0659

www.thebackdoorlouisville.com

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Lamb chop.

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North End Cafe

ed the whole dish. If you order this ouisville is a breakfast dish, be ready – it’s filling. As for town; hence one of the the huevos rancheros, it’s hard to staples has been North beat rice and two eggs, black beans End Cafe. Open since 2003, and gooey queso fresco. North End has sought to do The other offering was the migas, something seemingly simple, three scrambled eggs atop corn torTastes but, in reality, very hard to tilla chips, garnished with a generous handful of jalapeños as well execute – create a fresh, comIGOR forting menu on a consistent GURYASHKIN as cheddar cheese, home fries and fresh pico de gallo. The result was basis. Well, for the past 12 another creation that was equalyears, they have done just that. And ly filling and immensely pleasurable. A little although they may be synonymous spicy and very zesty, it’s an additional excelwith breakfast and brunch, there is lent breakfast choice. also little doubt that North End Cafe North End Cafe original aim when it first has become a destination for dinner – opened was to become a premier breakfast and bourbon. So we decided to stop by place in a city where breakfast and brunch and check out what was new at one of Louisville’s favorite eateries. On this particular visit, we tried a few breakfast staples – the chilaquiles as well as the migas and huevos rancheros. The chilaquiles – corn tortillas cooked with tomato sauce and topped with fresh cilantro, red onions, queso fresco and housemade chorizo – was phenomenal. The addition of two eggs, which we ordered runny, was perfect as the yolk mixed with the chorizo to create a creamy and savory concoction that was cut beautifully with the freshness of the cilantro and red onions. The queso delightfully lift-

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Pancakes.

COURTESY PHOTOS


If that wasn’t enough, Christopher Seckman, chef and co-owner of North End, added that the team will soon have one more feather in its cap with the construction of a pizza joint at the back of their Bardstown Road location. With no pizza location in that entire neighborhood, it seems like a smart move. But add the fact that North End Slice (as it’s likely to be called) will uphold North End’s established standards, and you’ve got a foolproof scheme.

Three bourbon inspired dishes are set to debut at the North End Cafe in recognition of them becoming part of the Urban Bourbon Trail.

“We will sell New York style pizza by the slice,” explains Seckman of the upcoming eatery. “But the pies and slices will be made with higher quality ingredients than you would expect at most places, and we will maintain our dedication to high quality.” Seckman and his fellow partners, Walt and Whitney Jones, are also keen to stress that North End Cafe has a catering business. So with pizza and more bourbon on the horizon, it’s hard not to think that North End Cafe will only continue to rise for years to come. VT

Migas.

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Huevos rancheros.

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North End Cafe is located at 1722 Frankfort Ave, Louisville, KY, 40206 and 2116 Bardstown Road, Louisville, KY 40205. For more information call 502.690.4161 (Frankfort Avenue) or 502.896.8770 (Bardstown Road) or visit northendcafe.com.

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culture had not yet taken off – and in a part of town where there really wasn’t much else. The place was and still is situated on the far end of Frankfort Avenue, and it quickly became a staple for locals. It’s popularity grew so quickly that after only a few weeks, the breakfast service was extended to lunch and dinner. In fact, it’s the dinner program that will soon be further developed with the induction of North End Cafe to the Urban Bourbon Trail. With well over 50 bourbons in their selection, and soon three dishes that will be added to the menu that incorporate bourbon, North End Cafe will cement its reputation even further as a top destination for dinner.


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The New Face of Laser Tag

Asylum Xtreme is generally known hen one thinks of for its Paintball Asylum offering yearlaser tag, he or she round and its multifaceted haunted probably thinks of house attraction every October. But a dark, expansive room with when they noticed the indoor paintblack lights that illuminate ball arena wasn’t getting much use, the team had an idea to not only neon accents and decorations Out & About make use of the space but also cater suggestive of outer space. The to a wider audience. “A lot of people game is usually played with REMY come in with younger children who any number of players entering SISK want something to do,” Reinsmone an arena and “shooting” their explains. “And this really opened our opponents via wireless transmitters. horizons as far as involving more of the family. Although the traditional aesthetic of the And not everyone wants to go get dirty and run game is somewhere between “Star Trek” around in the woods.” And now that alternative is nearly ready to and “Alien,” Xtreme Laser Tag Combat, based out of Xtreme Asylum, is offering make its public debut. The arena and guns are a different kind of game. Gone are the set; all they’re waiting on is a headband, which is worn like a crown and replaces the traditionclunky vests, and in are guns fashioned to al vest. Equipped with LED sensors, receivers resemble real battle rifles. and transmitters, the headpieces will create a sort

“We’re not from the 80s,” asserts Operations Manager Matt Reinsmone. “We’re your favorite video game. The arena is set up like a modern battlefield. There’s not a dinosaur in one corner and a panda bear in the other.” Tony Horn, laser tag coordinator agrees, “Here, you can play a video game in real life.” The two have been part of developing Xtreme Laser Tag Combat since January and are thrilled about the arena’s imminent opening. S E P T E M B E R 1 0 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

of aura for players and allow for more in-depth interaction. Until then, the team is perfectly content to use the sensors contained within the guns to test the rest of the system. You enter the arena, which is within an enclosed outdoor space, similar to a green house, and immediately feel immersed in a 21st century first-person shooter video game. Instead of alien tanks and rocket ship lookalikes, there are walls covered with graffiti and ammo crates piled to create cover struc-

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tures. A discarded van sits near the entrance of the arena, suggesting an urban warfare setting. Horn describes the development process as an unending quest for realism and crispness. “What we used to say is, ‘If this place existed at Disney World, what would it look like?’” The attention to and passion for detail is evident. From the second story catwalk that runs the perimeter of the arena, players can aim their guns through the barred windows and target an opponent crouching behind a discarded oil barrel. The realism is exceptionally palpable and makes for a laser tag experience unlike anything ever before. What’s more, every game can be different as the technology allows for each aspect of the game to be customized – from lives and time to magazines and bullets. Additionally, players have the option of switching their weapon. The physical piece remains the same, but it can have the range, effect and capacity of a shotgun, machine gun and more. Reinsmone contends that the site can replicate a HALO game to give players the ultimate video game in real life experience. Furthermore, scattered about the arena are small digital boxes waiting for players to discover them. Each one has a button, and what happens after a player pushes the button is different every time. Some are an explosive, immediately costing you a life. And some simulate finding a weapon and subsequently upgrade what you’re shooting with, just like in a video game. The Xtreme Laser Tag Combat Arena can’t open until the headbands are acquired, but Horn assures that that should be any day now. So get your kids off their Xbox and take them into the arena where they can (safely) start to experience their onscreen activities in real life. VT

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Heating a Home with Character and Warmth

here are certain aspects of a home that give it its character. It could be the layout. The window treatments. The décor. For the folks at Eastwood Stove & Outdoor Shoppe, it’s a wood-burning stove.

Staff Writer

tends. “Ladies in particular who are very cold-natured find that gas and electric heat never quite get them warm, so the wood heat is a benefit to them.” Furthermore, the aesthetic provided is unmatched, and, as Nallia describes, more and more models of stoves are being made with glass so users can actually see the fire as it burns.

Although they may seem simple, REMY The shop touts itself as a full-service there’s actually a great amount of techhearth store, and its primary business is SISK nique and education required to properwood-burning stoves and wood-burning ly operate a stove. “What we try to do – because we inserts. Over the last two years, however, the busi- do consider ourselves a specialty hearth store – is to ness has expanded to other related products such as make sure that they know there is a correct way to fireplaces, fire pits, grills and outdoor furnishings. “If burn, that there are correct products to burn,” Nalthey need it, generally we have it, and if we don’t, we lia explains. One way to ensure proper operation is can get it,” asserts Vicky Nallia, the store’s sales and to use a moisture meter to determine the usabilioperations manager. ty of the wood – too wet will extinguish the fire as Nallia has been working for the shop ever since it’s building; too dry will make it go up like a torch. the ownership changed in 2010 and prides herself As of late, Eastwood Stove & Outdoor Shoppe and the company on the commitment to customer has been tremendously busy, due at least partially service and satisfaction. “I want to make sure what to the unending expansion in the east end. Accordwe’re doing is the best thing for the homeowner,” she ing to Nallia, residents are, “looking to expand their explains. Customers will often come into the store usable space and to go outside and take the inside and select a stove that they want, but rather than just outside. We’re seeing lots of outdoor kitchens, fireselling it to them, Nallia and her team will take every places, seating spaces that will accommodate their necessary step to ensure it’s the right product for the social gatherings.” Indeed, to cater to this burgeonright home. ing interest in outdoor social spaces, the store is grad“There’s a lot of qualifying questions to answer ually expanding its inventory to include more and before we guide them to the product that’s going to more outdoor furnishings over the next year. be the very best for them,” she describes. Such facBut the team doesn’t want the store to get too big. tors are if the stove will be providing primary or “Bigger is not always better when you get so autosupplementary heat and how large the space to be mated that it takes the personal touch out of everyheated is. Thus, before any major steps are taken, a thing,” Nallia notes. “It’s been very important to team from Eastwood Stove & Outdoor Shoppe will both [Owner Keith McHolan] and I that we keep visit the home, free of charge, to assess the wants, the small, independent-owner feel to it.” That cerneeds and limitations. “Some stores are product-on- tainly does not mean, however, that they do not want ly, and the customers have to go elsewhere for the to grow. Such items on Nallia’s wishlist are a wareinstallation,” Nallia relates. “One of the things that’s house for the product stock and another technician important to us is that we can provide the service team to keep up with demands. before, all the way through and the maintenance Whether you’re a builder looking to incorporate a thereafter.” wood-burning stove into your home or a homeowner Although it can be quite a process, Nallia believes it is entirely worth it as stoves provide a myriad of benefits for a home. Primarily, the electric bill will inevitably be cheaper. Additionally, “Wood is a very dry heat and it’s a warm heat,” she con-

PHOTO BY CHRIS HUMPHREYS

looking to renovate or add, Eastwood Stove & Outdoor Shoppe has you covered. You can undoubtedly count on reliable and personal service and a product that will infuse your home with character, charm and warmth. VT

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Life

“Mistress America” – Fun But Flawed Film BENNETT DUCKWORTH

bennettduckworth.blogspot.com

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Bennett Duckworth is a film fanatic who lives in Louisville and goes to see a movie in the theater at least once a week. He has kept a movie review blog since September of 2011 with the mission of writing about every new release he sees, as well as new trends in film making and classic films he loves. Read more of his reviews at his website.

nly months after the release of the very funny “While We’re Young,” Noah Baumbach already has another film – this time returning for another collaboration with his girlfriend, actress/writer Greta Gerwig, with whom he made “Frances Ha.”

I feel as though Baumbach is entering a stage where he’s aiming for a broader audience, and I like this. His celebrated early films like “The Squid and the Whale” earned him acclaim, but they were so steeped in the world of problems faced by upper-class academics that they could be a little alienating. His older films also had an atmosphere of bitter realism, but “Mistress America,” like his last movie, seems to exist somewhere between the unf lattering realistic details and dry humor often seen in indie films and the absurd scenarios usually found in big-budget comedies. If there’s one conventional trope Gerwig and Baumbach thankfully dodge in this middle area, it is the warm-hearted manipulative score that gets applied to so many comedies. The two clearly have an affinity S E P T E M B E R 1 0 , 2 0 1 5 • W W W . V O I C E -T R I B U N E . C O M

for 80s-style synth-pop music, which helps enliven this film. The story follows an aspiring writer named Tracy (Lola Kirke) beginning her freshman year at New York’s Barnard University and having a tough time finding a place among the students. She finds brief romantic interest in a fellow writing student (Matthew Shear), who then strangely starts dating someone else just as the two start becoming close. Out of loneliness, Tracy, whose mother is engaged, chooses to meet her soon-to-be stepsister, Brooke (Greta Ger wig), who resides in Manhattan. Upon their meet in Times Square, the film picks up the manic pace of the ADHD socialite that is Brooke. Tracy’s fascination with Brooke is rather instant even if it’s obvious what a mess she is. When Brooke is around, her dialogue is rapid and often lacks any sense of direction, as she

2.5 OUT OF 4 WHOLE STARS

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often says things like, “I wasn’t brought up that way,” to justify her objection to anything – whether the reasoning makes sense or not. Tracy acquires valuable writing material as words constantly spill from the mouth of this silly 30-year-old. The entire time I watched the movie, I found myself wondering if Baumbach might have improved the film by using a brighter aesthetic than his trademark dim and desaturated look. Somehow, it’s easier to accept dialogue that’s more fun than realistic if the look of the movie feels a little removed from reality as well. The movie’s vivacious spirit climaxes at a strange point when all the characters find themselves in a large house for a long duration of the film, which takes the tone of an absurd one-act farce. It’s an amusing section, but it also feels like a movie (or play) of its own. The cast is great. Kirke (who may possess one of the prettiest sad-looking faces I’ve ever seen) made a great impression last year, as a sleazy Ozarks thief in “Gone Girl.” Her beautiful straight-faced screen presence is a wonderful contrast to Gerwig’s wide-eyed obnoxiously cute shtick. Overall, “Mistress America” is a fun, dialogue-heavy comedy that suffers a little from minor structural and stylistic flaws. I recommend it because it represents a lot of value that seems to be deteriorating from most comedy movies, whether they’re independent or mainstream. VT


W

pers, the musical will be the perhat’s new in local fect Halloween treat for the whole theatre? Is that family. what you’re askAnd it’s all for a good cause. ing? Oh, no problem, let me Acting Against Cancer is actually tell you. There’s an army capa nonprofit company that uses its tain with an ambivalent heart, productions to raise funds that will Arts & a family that celebrates Halgo toward treating pediatric canloween every day, an orphan Entertainment cer. Profits earned from “The Addams Family” and the group’s whole who learns how to steal and PETER a family with some unfortu- BERKOWITZ season will benefit the art therapy program of The Addison Jo Blair nately-fated sisters. Does this Cancer Care Center at Kosair Chilseem like a lot? Let’s break it down and dren's Hospital. To learn more about what Actexplore what’s happening on the the- ing Against Cancer does and how you can help, find them online at actingagainstcancer.com. atre scene in Louisville this fall.

Directed by Gil Reyes from Philip Dawkins’ script, the show is set in 1928, the year all of the Fail sisters met their demise. The story strives to remind us that love is all that ultimately remains by chronicling the lives of these sisters with a comical yet moving tone.

A PASSIONATE PRODUCTION

Always breaking new ground, Theatre [502] is sure to deliver a truly engaging production with a quality that is absolutely unassailable.

“The Addams Family” runs October 16-25.

With music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim, “Passion” is opening September 17 in the Henry Clay Theatre (604 S. Third Street, 3rd floor, downtown) and is based on an Italian film “Passione d'amore.” The musical follows the handsome Captain Girogio as he is transported to a remote military outpost and away from his married mistress Clara in 1863 Italy. Once he becomes the object of the obsessive, unrelenting passions of Fosca at his new post, Giorgio is forced to re-evaluate his beliefs about love. The Best Musical Tony-winner was the final collaboration of Sondheim and playwright James Lapine. The duo had previously worked together on “Sunday in the Park with George” and “Into the Woods,” a fantastic beginning to an exciting partnership. Pandora’s imagining of the modern classic promises exceptional performances from Andrew Newton, Deborah Mae Hill and Annette Hill McCulloch under the direction of Michael Drury and musical direction of Doug Jones. The show runs September 17-26. Dates and times can be found at pandoraprods.org. THEY’RE CREEPY AND THEY’RE KOOKY On a lighter – and darker – note, the new musical adaptation of “The Addams Family” returns to The Kentucky Center for the Performing Arts (501 W. Main Street, downtown) with a production by Acting Against Cancer for all who love Halloween-inspired entertainment. The musical follows the classic clan as the usually morose Wednesday brings home a “normal” boyfriend to meet Gomez, Morticia, Pugsley, Uncle Fester, Lurch and Grandma. Filled with lots of laughs, heart and toe-tap-

CONSIDER YOURSELF ENTHRALLED Speaking of kids, CenterStage at the Jewish Community Center (3600 Dutchmans Lane) is producing “Oliver!” as the third show of their 2015-16 season. The musical is based on Charles Dickens’ novel “Oliver Twist” and follows the downon-his-luck orphan as he searches for love. Oliver’s journey from the workhouse to the pick-pocketing streets is droll, heartwarming and full of twists, always keeping the audience on its toes.

Acting Against Cancer’s “The Addams Family” will debut at The Kentucky Center for the Performing Arts Oct. 16-26.

downtown) later this fall.

Whether your preference lies in lovelorn army captains, spooky and macabre relatives, pluckish orphans or dying sisters, there is something for you this fall season in Louisville theatre. What else do you need? VT

Under the direction of John Leffert, CenterStage’s production will undoubtedly make a splash, just as “The Who’s Tommy” and “9 to 5” already have this season. The show runs October 22 through November 8. Tickets are available at centerstagejcc.org. ALL’S ART IN LOVE AND DEATH Also dealing with love is Theatre [502], which will bring “Failure, A Love Story” to the Baron’s Theatre (131 W. Main Street,

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Life

The Fall Going-Ons of Local Theatre


LIFE

event calendar

to submit your event, visit www.voice-tribune.com

THIS WEEK’S VOICE CHOICE RAISE THE BARRE

An event now in its fourth year, Raise the Barre was founded with the intention of bolstering the salaries of the dancers of the Louisville Ballet. This year’s event will take place Saturday, September 12 at the ballet studio downtown from 9 p.m. to 2 a.m. In addition to a full bar and food from Butchertown Grocery, guests will enjoy a brief performance by members of the ballet put together by Artistic Director Robert Curran. The evening will conclude with the dancers mingling with partygoers on the dance floor. All proceeds benefit the dancers of the Louisville Ballet. MORE INFO louisvilleballet.org

T H U R S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 1 0 PRIMP STYLE LOUNGE ONE-YEAR ANNIVERSARY Primp Style Lounge is celebrating its one-year anniversary on September 10. Louisville’s premier blowout bar delivers stylish blowouts, gorgeous makeup applications and wardrobe consulting. Join for a Primptini happy hour from 5 to 7 p.m. Enjoy 15 percent off all packages and up to 70 percent off select hair and makeup products. MORE INFO 502.384.7043

F R I DAY, S E P T E M B E R 1 1 43RD ANNUAL MIDDLETOWN FAMILY FUN FESTIVAL AND CRAFT SHOW The City of Middletown invites you and your family to join in for this annual event featuring hundreds of activities for the entire family! Booths, games, a parade, rides, kidz fun zone and entertainment offers fun for all! There will also be a dog show and fireworks, and Betty and James Daigrepont will be the grand marshals of the parade. The event takes place on Old Shelbyville Road between Clarland Drive and Harrison Avenue. It runs 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Friday and 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Saturday, September 12. MORE INFO middletownsfamilyfun.com

S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 1 2 ACTORS THEATRE OF LOUISVILLE PRESENTS FIFTH THIRD BANK’S “DRACULA” His fangs are bared. His eyes glow crimson. Louisville’s favorite vampire is back! Based on Bram Stoker’s Gothic tale of the immortal Transylvanian count and his unexpectedly feisty human prey, this fast-paced, fright-filled adaptation is a Halloween treat that drips with suspense and even more, blood. The show runs through November 1, and tickets start at

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$25. MORE INFO actorstheatre.org MELLWOOD ART FAIR The Mellwood Art Fair kicks off Saturday and runs through Sunday at The Mellwood Art & Entertainment Center. The event will feature over 165 artist vendors, 200 resident artists, live entertainment, a children’s art activity tent and local food and drink. The fair always prides itself on displaying the work of new artisans that have never shown in Louisville before. This year, there will be over a dozen of these new faces at the art fair. Also, Mellwood resident artisans will be in their studios or in booths at the art fair selling their work, and many will also be working. MORE INFO mellwoodartcenter.com

S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 1 3 HUNTINGTON’S DISEASE SOCIETY OF AMERICA TEAM HOPE 5K RUN/WALK Join the HDSA KY chapter at the Team Hope 5K Run/Walk at Iroquois Park. All proceeds support HDSA’s mission to improve the lives of people affected by HD and their families. Registration begins at 3:30 p.m., and the walk kick-off begins at 4:30 p.m. The HDSA KY Chapter is asking for support from the community to become a sponsor, form a team, walk as an individual, donate products or volunteer to coordinate the event activities. MORE INFO tholloway@cipky.com or 502.548.3418 CORKESTRA AT NORTON COMMONS By popular demand, the Louisville Orchestra is heading back to Norton Commons for one of the its few outdoor performances of the year. Corkestra aims to pair jazz and showtunes with specialty bourbons and wines. General admission tickets are $25 in advance. The specialty bourbon tasting selections for 2015 have been expanded to feature the Sazerac

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family tasting, including Blanton’s and EH Taylor Small Batch, among others for $10. Both red and white Jackson Family wine tastings are available for purchase for $10. Gourmet food trucks will also be on site. Gates open at 2:30 p.m., and the 90-minute performance begins at 3:30 p.m. Visitors should pack their own blankets and lawn chairs. Original Makers Club has a limited offering of VIP tickets available that include a special post-concert cocktail hour and Latin fusion dinner by Allan Rosenberg. Dinner will take place in the middle of Meeting Street. MORE INFO corkestra.com

W E D N E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 1 6 PARKINSON SUPPORT CENTER EIGHTH ANNUAL TRIVIA BOWL It’s time to form Trivia Bowl teams and participate in a free and friendly Trivia Bowl competition. This year, Louisville Trivia will emcee the Parkinson Support Center’s Eighth Annual Trivia Bowl competition at Saints Pizza Pub & Sky Bar, 131 Breckenridge Lane (in St. Matthews Station) on Wednesday, September 16 from 7 p.m. to 9 pm. Participation is free, with no limit to the number of teams or team members on a team. There will be an optional $10 raffle with proceeds supporting the Parkinson Support Center. MORE INFO 502.254.3388 or info@parkinsoncenter.org GALA FOR GOOD Goodwill Industries of Kentucky will hold its Gala for Good from 5:30 to 8 p.m. at The Olmsted, 3701 Frankfort Ave. The event – Goodwill’s only fundraiser of the year – will highlight the organization’s Cars to Work program, which helps working Kentuckians purchase affordable, reliable vehicles. Without access to a car, everyday tasks are made much more difficult – including getting to work on time and keeping a job. Dick Swope, retired president/CEO of Sam Swope Auto


T H U R S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 1 7 “PASSION” PRESENTED BY PANDORA PRODUCTIONS Pandora Productions presents the first show of their 2015-16 season: Stephen Sondheim’s “Passion.” A remote military outpost in 1863 Italy becomes a wondrously rich and complex metaphor for the landscape of the human heart. A handsome army captain, separated from his beautiful – but married – mistress, is forced to re-evaluate his beliefs about love when he becomes the object of the obsessive, unrelenting passions of Fosca, his Colonel’s plain, sickly cousin. The show runs through September 27 in The Henry Clay Theatre. Tickets are $20 in advance or $22 at the door. MORE INFO pandoraprods.org GERRY STRIBLING BOOK SIGNING In “Buddhism for Dudes,” Gerry “Strib” Stribling, former Marine and all-around good guy, answers questions on life and living with a healthy dose of Buddhist wisdom for the regular guy. Strib takes a good look at who the Buddha was, meditation, karma and more. With good humor and without sentimentalism (plus a sprinkling of hilarious cartoons), he explains these down-to-earth insights in everyday language. Join Strib at Carmichael’s Book store on Frankfort Avenue at 7 p.m. for a discussion and book signing. MORE INFO carmichaelsbookstore.com LISETTE L PANT TEAM ARRIVES IN LOUISVILLE The Lisette pants have been flying off the shelves at The Willow Tree (657 S. Hurstbourne Pkwy., beside Bonefish Grill). Now the Lisette L team is coming for a twoday trunk show/giveaway event on Thursday September 17 and Friday September 18 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. The Willow Tree will be receiving 500 new pieces specifically for the event and will also be offering light refreshments and giveaways during the celebration. MORE INFO 502.423.9822

F R I DAY, S E P T E M B E R 1 8 KENTUCKY KICK DOWN Anyone who loves old motorcycles, great music, food and greasy culture is invited to the 2015 Kentucky Kick Down, a gathering of motorcycles 25 years and older along with their riders and those who love old motorcycles. The Kick Down takes place at The Barret Bar, 1021 Barret Ave. from noon to 10 p.m. All makes and years are welcome, but show judging will be limited to vintage motorcycles only.

The event will also include an art show featuring local and regional artists, live music, vendors, food trucks, a pool tournament, plenty of local food and drink, and the Miss Kentucky Kick Down Contest. Registration is $25 until Friday, September 4. It will be $30 after that. MORE INFO kentuckykickdown.com “MACBETH” PRESENTED BY THE KENTUCKY OPERA Macbeth and Lady Macbeth burn with ruthless purpose in Verdi’s opera based on Shakespeare’s classic thriller, “Macbeth.” After they take the crown, their reign of terror and corruption is engulfed by their doomed fate. With magnificent sets and costumes from the Pacific Opera Victoria, this production offers a terse and vivid portrayal of Verdi’s richly emotional score. Make sure to come early for the opera preview. Start your opera experience one hour before the curtain rises with a discussion preview. Get insights to the production and into the mind of the composer. Learn about the social and historical context of the opera and get behind the scenes details of the production process. The opera itself will be performed in Italian with English supertitles and runs through September 20 in The Brown Theatre. MORE INFO kyopera.org

S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 1 9 BIKE TO BEAT CANCER Hundreds of cyclists will put mettle to pedal at the 2015 Bike to Beat Cancer event, Saturday, September 19. Some who ride are cancer survivors. Some have lost a family member or friend. Some have a loved one fighting right now. Many just want to be part of helping individuals and families whose lives are touched by cancer. The start and finish lines are at the Kosair Children’s Medical Center, 4910 Chamberlain Lane. The opening ceremony kicks off at 8 a.m. for the regular ride. The family ride starts at 10 a.m. Day-of registration and last minute packet pick-up is 6:30-7:30 a.m. MORE INFO 502.629.8060 INAUGURAL LOUISVILLE PRIDE FESTIVAL Not to be confused with the 15-year-old Kentuckiana Pride Festival hosted by the Kentuckiana Pride Foundation, this event is brand new. The first ever Louisville Pride Festival hosted by the Louisville Pride Foundation will take place 11 a.m. until 11 p.m. on Bardstown Road from Grinstead Drive to Beechwood Avenue. It will have stages with live music headlining local and national entertainers, artists and craftspeople, food from Louisville eateries, a family fun zone and a wellness activity zone. There will be an art installation in the center of the festival to display the history of pride and give people an opportunity to share what pride means to them. The Louisville Pride Festival will also feature a beer garden showcasing Louisville

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breweries. The event benefits the Louisville Visual Arts Association’s “Open Doors” programs, the Louisville Youth Group and the Louisville Pride Foundation. The festival is free and open to the public. MORE INFO louisvillepride.com 11TH ANNUAL NATIONAL JUG BAND JUBILEE The National Jug Band Jubilee was created to celebrate the legacy of jug band music in the River City. Louisville is the acknowledged home of jug band music, a pre-war jazz style that features traditional and homemade instruments. This year’s festival will feature a recognition of the 50th anniversary of the Juggernaut Jug Band, a band formed at Waggener High School in 1965 that has toured the nation with concerts and workshops. There will also be other performances by several jug bands from around the country, a children’s jug band performance, workshops and more. The festival will run from noon to 11 p.m. at the Brown-Forman Amphitheater in Waterfront Park. Admission is free. MORE INFO jugbandjubilee.org

S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 2 0 LOUISVILLE AIDS WALK & PET WALK This is Kentuckiana’s largest annual HIV/AIDS awareness and fundraising event. Each year, thousands of Louisville and Southern Indiana residents come together in remembrance, celebration and hope. We walk to renew our commitment to the fight for a cure and support of those affected by HIV/AIDS in our community – all funds directly support the individuals served by the Kentuckiana AIDS Alliance! participants will enjoy scenic river views as they walk the three mile course through and around Louisville’s beautiful waterfront. This event is “rain or shine” – and be sure to bring your pets! The walk takes place on the Belvedere at 485 W. Main St. in Downtown Louisville. Onsite registration begins at noon, and the walk begins at 1 p.m. There is no cost to participate in the Louisville AIDS Walk & Pet Walk. Participants are simply asked to seek pledges from family, friends and co-workers to help in the local fight against HIV/AIDS. MORE INFO kyaids.org/walk UOFL MUSIC EX SERIES The University of Louisville School of Music is giving listeners the chance to the hear works of some of the world’s best composers while helping fund Louisville’s next generation of great musicians. The series kicks off September 20, with a piano concert by Dror Biran, a UofL piano professor and artistic director. A major highlight is a concert by Lee Luvisi and Dror Biran on Sunday, October 18. Luvisi, a world-renowned pianist and Louisville native, has played at Carnegie Hall and performed with respected musicians and orchestras of the 20th and 21st centuries. MORE INFO louisville.edu/music/music-ex-series

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LIFE

Group, LLC, will receive Goodwill’s first-ever Drive Award in recognition of his support of Cars to Work and for his philanthropic impact on Louisville’s nonprofit community. All proceeds from the event will benefit Cars to Work. MORE INFO 502.553.6893


Rack Locations A listing of our rack locations may also be found on our website at www.voice-tribune.com

ANCHORAGE

BRECKENRIDGE LANE

Anchorage Café 11505 Park Rd.

Baptist East/ MileStone Fitness 750 Cypress Station Drive

The Village Anchor 11507 Park Rd. Northwest Mutual 10200 Forrest Green Blvd BARDSTOWN RD. & THE HIGHLANDS Andrew Gentile Antiques 1287 Bardstown Rd. Atomic House Of Hair 2201 Grinstead Bearno’s Pizza 1318 Bardstown Road Breadworks 2204 Dundee Rd. Carmichael’s Bookstore 1295 Bardstown Rd.

Baptist Hospital East Waiting Rooms Books-a-Million 994 Breckinridge Lane Client Women’s Diagnostic Center 4004 Dupont Circle John Kenyon Eye Center 4040 Dutchman’s Lane Joseph’s Salon 3988 Dutchmans Lane Wild Eggs 3985 Dutchmans Lane BEECHMONT Beechmont Bombshells 309 W Woodlawn Ave.

Sam’s Hotdog Stand 1991 Brownsboro Rd Vines & Canines 1760 Frankfort Ave. DOWNTOWN 21C Museum Hotel 700 W Main St. 4th & Main Northeast Corner 5th & Main In front of Humana 5th & Market Southeast Corner 6th & Market Northwest Corner Actors Theatre 316 West Main St. Against the Grain Brewery 401 East Main St. Art Eatables 631 South 4th St.

Comfy Cow 1449 Bardstown Rd.

Sunergos Coffee 306 W Woodlawn Ave.

Day’s Espresso 1420 Bardstown Rd.

BROWNSBORO RD.

BBC Theatre Square 660 S 4th St.

Heine Brothers 4901 Brownsboro Rd.

Bearnos 131 West Main St.

Kroger 2219 Holiday Manor Center

Bistro 301 301 West Market St.

Rite Aid 3805 Brownsboro Rd.

Brown Theater 315 West Broadway

BUECHEL

The Café 712 Brent St.

Heine Brothers 3060 Bardstown Rd. Francis Lee Jasper Oriental Rugs 1330 Bardstown Road Homemade Ice Cream & Pie Kitchen 1041 and 2525 Bardstown Rd. Hillbilly Tea 960 Baxter Ave. Kroger 2440 Bardstown Rd. Louisville Free Public Library 1250 Bardstown Rd. McDonald’s 1245 Bardstown Rd. Molly Malone’s 933 Baxter Ave North End Cafe 2116 Bardstown Rd. O’Sheas 956 Baxter Ave. Preston Arts 3048 Bardstown Road Safai Coffee 1707 Bardstown Road Uncle Maddio’s Pizza Joint 2011 Grinstead Drive Uptown Cafe 1624 Bardstown Rd. Urban Attic 1608 Bardstown Rd. Valu Market 1250 Bardstown Rd. Wick’s Pizza 975 Baxter Ave. BON AIR Bearno’s Pizza 2900 Taylorsville Rd. Louisville Free Public Library 2816 Del Rio Place

Bill Collins Ford 4220 Bardstown Rd. Clear Channel Radio 4000 Radio Drive Derby City Antique Mall 3819 Bardstown Road Kroger 3616 Buechel Bypass Steilberg Strings 4029 Bardstown Rd. CLIFTON Carmichael’s Bookstore 2720 Frankfort Ave. Clique Boutique 2846 Frankfort Ave. The Comfy Cow 2221 Frankfort Ave. Heine Brothers 2714 Frankfort Ave. Homemade Ice Cream & Pie Kitchen 2232 Frankfort Ave.

City Café 505 West Broadway City Café – UofL Medical Plaza 500 South Preston St. Down One Bourbon Bar 321 West Main St. Galt House West West Garage Entrance Heine Brothers 462 South 4th St. Louisville Free Public Library 301 York St. Luigi’s Pizzeria 712 West Main St. Manny & Merle 122 West Main St. Marketplace Restaurant 651 South Fourth St. Mrs. Potter’s Coffee 718 West Main St.

The Irish Rover 2319 Frankfort Ave.

Pendennis Club 218 West Muhammad Ali Blvd.

Louisville Free Public Library 2762 Frankfort Ave.

PNC Bank 5th & Liberty PNC Bank Lobby Shop 500 West Jefferson St.

Lyndia R Willis Salon 2850 Frankfort Ave. Vint 2309 Frankfort Ave. Volare 2300 Frankfort Ave.

Patrick O’Sheas 123 West Main St.

FERN CREEK Homemade Ice Cream & Pie Kitchen 5606 Bardstown Rd. Louisville Free Public Library 6768 Bardstown Rd. GERMANTOWN Heine Brothers 822 Eastern Pkwy. Sunergos Coffee 2122 South Preston St. IRISH HILL Come Back Inn 909 Swan Street Red Hot Roasters 1401 Lexington Rd. Spring Street Bar & Grille 300 South Spring St.

Homemade Ice Cream & Pie Kitchen 12531 Shelbyville Rd. Kroger 12501 Shelbyville Rd. Louisville Free Public Library 200 North Juneau Drive Mellow Mushroom 805 Blakenbaker Paul’s Fruit Market 12119 Shelbyville Rd. Sunny Daize 11809 Shelbyville Rd.

Verbena Cafe 10619 Meeting St. NuLu

Please and Thank You 800 East Market St.

Louisville Free Public Library 601 West Woodlawn Ave.

Toast on Market 620 East Market

Sister Bean 5225 New Cut Road

The Voice-Tribune 735 East Main St.

Barnes & Noble 801 South Hurstbourne Pkwy. Kroger 9812 Linn Station Rd. 12611 Taylorsville Rd. Louisville Athletic Club 9565 Taylorsville Rd. Louisville Free Public Library 10635 Watterson Trail

Wild Eggs 121 South Floyd PEWEE VALLEY Forest Springs Dental 12466 LaGrange Rd. Kroger 12450 Lagrange Rd. POPLAR LEVEL Kroger 4009 Poplar Level Rd. PORTLAND Louisville Free Public Library 3305 Northwestern Pkwy. PROSPECT

Manpower Services 1221 South Hurstbourne

Blackstone Grille 9521 West Highway 42

Music Go Round 3640 South Hurstbourne Pkwy.

Burning Bush Grille 13206 West Highway 42

Paul’s Fruit Market 3704 Taylorsville Rd. Sam Swope Autoworld Sam Swope Center Drive Snap Fitness 3831 Ruckriegel Pkwy. Tou-che Boutique 1249 S Hurstbourne Pkwy. Valu Market 315 Whittington Pkwy.

Red7E 637 West Main

MIDDLETOWN

CRESCENT HILL

Regalo 562 South 4th St.

Dairy Queen 11806 Shelbyville Rd.

Mellwood Antique Mall 1860 Mellwood Ave.

Saint Stephens Church 1018 South 15th St.

The Fresh Market 10480 Shelbyville Rd.

North End Cafe 1722 Frankfort Ave.

Wild Eggs 121 South Floyd St.

Heine Brothers Coffee 801 Blankenbaker Pkwy.

Big O Tries 3623 Lexington Rd. Blairwood 9300 Blairwood Road Bluegrass Burgers 3334 Frankfort Ave.

Celebrations 3632 Brownsboro Road

Harvest 624 East Market St.

JEFFERSONTOWN

BBC East 3929 Shelbyville Rd.

NORTON COMMONS

IROQUOIS

Valu Market 5301 Mitscher Ave

ST. MATTHEWS

Bruegger’s Bagels 119 Breckinridge Lane

Ghylsain 721 East Market St.

Sunergos 306 West Woodlawn

Liquor Barn 4301 Towne Center Drive

Wild Eggs 153 South English Station Rd.

Ward 426 420 Baxter Ave.

Iroquois Ampitheater 1080 Amphitheater Rd.

Kroger 9440 Brownsboro Rd.

Captain’s Quarters 5700 Captains Quarters Rd. Homemade Ice Cream & Pie Kitchen 9561-B US Highway 42 KingFish 3021 River Rd. Kroger 9151 US Highway 42 US Post Office 9523 US Highway 42 SPRINGHURST Barnes & Noble 4100 Summit Plaza Drive Homemade Ice Cream & Pie Kitchen 3608 Springhurst Blvd.

Cox’s Smokers Outlet 294 North Hubbards Lane CVS 3721 Lexington Rd. The Fishery 3624 Lexington Rd. Heine Brothers 119 Chenoweth Lane 4305 Shelbville Rd. Homemade Ice Cream & Pie Kitchen 3737 Lexington Rd.

Tafel Mercedes 4156 Shelbyville Rd. Thorntons #97 4500 Shelbyville Rd. Tin Roof 3921 Shelbyville Rd. Tom + Chee 111 Saint Matthew Ave. UofL Churhill Downs 700 Central Ave. The Comfy Cow 337 West Cardinal Blvd. Quills Coffee 337 West Cardinal Blvd. Tom + Chee 319 W Cardinal Blvd. UofL SAC 2100 South Floyd St. WESTPORT RD. Camelot Family Dental Center 7420 Westport Rd. The Comfy Cow 1301 Herr Lane #18 Ghyslain 1215 Herr Lane

Jewish Community Center 3600 Dutchmans Lane

Kroger 9501 Westport Rd.

Kroger 291 North Hubbards Lane

Louisville Athletic Club 9463 Westport Rd.

Lenihan/Sotherby’s 3803 Brownsboro Road Lotsa Pasta 3717 Lexington Rd.

Louisville Free Public Library 8100 Westport Rd.

Highland Fish Market 3941 Chenoweth Square

Norton Immediate Care Center 1321 Herr Lane

Louisville Executive Aviation 2700 Gast Blvd.

Thorntons #34 605 Lyndon Lane

Louisville Free Public Library 4030 Grandview Ave.

Wild Eggs 1311 Herr Lane

Lucky’s Market 200 N Hurstbourne Pkwy. Mellow Mushroom 3920 Shelbyville Rd. Molly Malone’s 3900 Shelbyville Rd Nanz & Kraft 141 Breckenridge Lane Plehn’s Bakery 3940 Shelbyville Rd. Rainbow Blossom 3738 Lexington Rd. Sam Swope Fiat 4311 Shelbyville Rd. Sassy Fox 150 Chenoweth Lane Schmidling Silversmithing 104 Cannon’s Lane Speedy Mart 316 Wallace Ave.

INDIANA Bristol Bar & Grill 700 West Riverside Drive, Jeffersonville Comfy Cow 109 East Market St., New Albany Derby Dinner Playhouse 525 Marriott Drive, Clarksville Homemade Ice Cream & Pie Kitchen 3113 Blackiston Mill Rd., Clarksville John Kenyon Eye 519 State St., New Albany Kroger 305 Lewis & Clark Pkwy., Clarksville 2956 East 10th St., Jeffersonville Perkfection Cafe 359 Spring St., Jeffersonville

St.Matthews Jewelers 3634 Brownsboro Road

Quills Coffee 137 East Market St., New Albany

St.Matthews Library 3940 Grandview Ave

Toast On Market 141 East Market St., New Albany


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Petrino Jr.’st Coming Ou $3.75 SEPT//OCT

$3.75

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)

“I’m Alive... because of organ donation!” Say YES when you renew your license.

Megan,Transplant Recipient Supported by

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www.trustforlife.org 866-945-5433

Call 502.897.8900 or visit voice-tribune.com to subscribe today!

One Year for just $39

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PUZZLES

pets of the week Eight-year-old Shiloh is a Domestic Shorthair mix who would love to meet you! Shiloh would prefer to remain safely indoors because she is frontdeclawed. She is a quiet, shy girl who likes to take it easy and relax. She has gotten along well with other cats in the home, and we believe she would do fine in a multi-cat household. She’s an independent soul. While loving, she doesn’t need a lot of attention to be happy. All she needs is a comfy bed (preferably yours) and a little space to roam. Shiloh is spayed, microchipped and up-to-date on her vaccinations. Come visit her today at the Kentucky Humane Society’s Hikes Point Feeders Supply adoption center, 3079 Breckenridge Lane. Looking for someone to cuddle up with during the fall months? Eight-year-old Annie would love to help you out with that. Annie is a cuddly, loving Beagle mix who has never met a stranger. She is a sprightly 8-year-old who will give younger dogs a run for their money. She loves a good walk with her human friends and wants nothing more than a snuggle and some pets afterward. Do you have some nice toys and a comfortable bed waiting for a dog to use them? Let Annie be the one! She’s spayed, microchipped, up-to-date on her vaccinations and ready to go home today. You can meet Annie at the Kentucky Humane Society’s Hikes Point Feeders Supply adoption center, 2079 Breckenridge Lane.

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

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Make family feel like family again. The memory care experts at Masonic Home of Louisville go above and beyond to provide both practical and emotional support not only for your loved one, but also for you. So you can focus on what really matters – making new memories. Schedule your private tour of our communities at 502.897.4907 or masonichomesky.com.

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From filling baskets to earning your degree. Where are you headed? If you’re ready to get what you want out of your job—out of your life— well, the smart, fast, fun route is at UPS. And with our Earn and Learn program, you’ll get help with your college expenses—a bonus of up to $25,000 for part-time employees. You’re focused on your future, and we’ll get you moving in the right direction. And even after you graduate, UPS has many career opportunities available!

Hiring Part-Time Package Handlers in Louisville to work the Daytime Shift from 10:00 AM - 4:00 PM

$100 Weekly Bonuses!

Other shifts also available (especially nights).

*By participating, you consent to receive text messages sent by an automatic telephone dialing system. Consent to these terms is not condition of purchase. Message and data rates may apply. T&C Privacy Policy: www.SMS-terms.com

UPSjobs.com/print Text “Bonus” to 68398

UPS is an equal opportunity employer – race/color/religion/sex/national origin/veteran/disability/sexual orientation/gender identity.


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